Saturday, December 31, 2011

Oil inches up toward $100 as US economy improves (AP)

SINGAPORE ? Oil prices inched higher toward $100 a barrel Friday in Asia amid encouraging signs the U.S. economy is slowly improving.

Benchmark crude for February delivery rose 23 cents to $99.88 a barrel at late afternoon Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 29 cents to settle at $99.65 in New York on Thursday.

In London, Brent crude was up 11 cents at $108.13 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Crude has traded near $100 since mid-November after jumping from $75 in October as investors eye growing evidence the U.S. economy could avoid a recession next year. The government reported Thursday that claims for jobless benefits fell to a four-week average of 375,000, the lowest level in three and a half years.

The National Association of Realtors also reported that contracts to buy U.S. homes rose last month to the highest level in a year and a half.

Some analysts worry Europe's debt crisis will drag the continent into recession next year and undermine global crude demand.

"From a longer term perspective, we continue to zero in on the euro zone as the primary driver of oil pricing during the first quarter of 2012," energy consultant Ritterbusch and Associates said in a report. "We still view the euro zone debt issues as intractable."

Traders are also closely watching tensions between Iran and Western powers over Tehran's nuclear power program. Iran threatened this week to close the key oil export passage of the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf if the U.S. and other nations tighten sanctions. The U.S. Navy said it would not tolerate any move to limit the strait's traffic.

Energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said oil prices would likely eventually jump by about $50 if Iran, OPEC's second-biggest crude exporter, tried to close the strait.

"Let's start with an easy $20 spike, then add in a risk premium for insurance costs, delays, costs to push oil through alternative routes and the obvious loss of 3.5 million barrels a day from Iran," energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said in a report.

Trading volume was low this week as many investors take vacations around the Christmas and New Year's Day holidays.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil rose 0.7 cents to $2.93 per gallon and gasoline futures gained 0.7 cents at $2.68 per gallon. Natural gas futures were down 1.2 cents to $3.02 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Obamas Chill In Tees, Swimsuits & Flip-Flops At Hawaii's Sea Life Park (PHOTOS)

For Christmas the Obama family got (relatively) dressed up, with sundresses and cardis for the women and collared shirts for Mr. President.

But as the First Family relaxes on their annual Hawaii winter vacation, tee-shirts and bathing suits are inevitable (how else would we have gotten those memorable pictures of a shirtless Obama bodysurfing in Honolulu?)

So a very casual Obama crew headed out to Hanauma Bay yesterday clad in shorts, tees, swimsuits and flip-flops. While FLOTUS stayed behind, Malia and Sasha joined their dad at Sea Life Park, a marine park near Hanauma Bay on Oahu, where the three released four green sea turtles into the Pacific Ocean.

For their act of marine life liberation, Sasha wore an appropriately peaceful shirt: a gray long-sleeve tee featuring the face of John Lennon (who knew the 10-year-old was a Beatles fan?). Malia mixed colors like her famous mother, wearing red and white stripes on top and bright green shorts on the bottom.

And the president, never one to be daring with his fashion choices, opted for a white tee that read "Island Snow," black swim trunks and a black baseball cap. Alas, no pictures of the president splashing around in the water.

Check out the happy family below -- and for pictures of their previous Hawaii stays, full of body surfing, golfing, shaved ice-eating and lots of off-duty fashion moments, click here.

(Getty photo)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/28/obamas-sea-life-park_n_1172325.html

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Jamie Dupree's Washington Insider: Sen. Ben Nelson Retires

By Jamie Dupree

Democrats got some unwelcome election news on Tuesday, when Sen. Ben Nelson of Nebraska announced he would not seek re-election, giving Republicans a good opportunity to pick up a Senate seat in the 2012 elections.

"I want to thank Senator Nelson for his years of service representing the people of Nebraska," said President Obama in a written statement issued by the White House.

Mr. Obama also took time to note Nelsons's middle-of-the-road politics, which often earned him the political stink eye from fellow Democrats.

"Over the course of his career, Ben?s commitment to working with both Democrats and Republicans across a broad range of issues is a trait far too often overlooked in today?s politics," said the President.

But to most in both parties, Nelson's willingness to vote with Republicans was reason number one that many Democrats had been secretly wishing that Nelson would just stay in Omaha.

Nelson is certainly one of a dying breed, the Blue Dog Democrat, as those conservatives are almost extinct now in the Congress.

As of now, this seat would seem to favor Republicans; but a lot of that could well depend on the candidates who end up in the race.

Democrats were already trying to convince former Sen. Bob Kerrey to run again; it doesn't seem that long ago that I was covering Kerrey when he crossed swords with President Bill Clinton on budget policies.

Just as I'm dating myself a little with a mention of Bob Kerrey, it doesn't seem that long ago that the Congress had a big chunk of conservative Democrats and more liberal Republicans.

But both parties have done a very effective job of purging those types from their party ranks.

Chalk up another one with Nelson's departure.

Source: http://www.wsbradio.com/weblogs/jamie-dupree/2011/dec/27/sen-ben-nelson-retires/

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Karen Dionne: Millions of New e-Reader Owners "Fill 'Em Up!" (Huffington post)

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Shipping Containers BecomeSolar-Powered Internet Hubs in Rural Africa


Computer Aid International/Video screen capture

Every now and then when we post on how solar power is bringing the internet to rural Africa, or enabling the charging of mobile phones in poor communities, I'll hear concerns from naysayers who wonder what these technologies might mean for traditional social structures in these remote areas.

Let's leave aside the morally questionable issue of internet-connected critics worrying about access to the internet for others for a moment, and look at the core question?does internet connectivity threaten rural communities? Actually, if UK-based charity Computer Aid is anything to go by, the reverse is true.


Computer Aid International/Video screen capture

From helping farmers to market their crops and communicate with veterinarians, to helping nursing students keep up to date with the latest research, access to the internet is providing rural Africans with the resources they need to keep their communities viable and slow the push of urbanization. Having seen how access to the internet had help support farmers, students and community institutions in the Zambian village of Macha, Computer Aid is now looking at how to bring that access to other communities that do not have the infrastructural benefits that Macha enjoys. (Macha was the location of a research station and Christian mission that facilitated the building of satellite internet.)


Computer Aid International/Video screen capture

The solution is what has become known as the ZumbaBox?a shipping container with satellite-enabled wi-fi and solar panels on the roof, which houses one PC and a number of "virtual desktops" that villagers can use to study, communicate and stay connected to news and cultural events.

Below is a BBC report on what looks like an awesome project, and Business Green has an excellent write up of the use of ZumbaBoxes across Africa. Oh, and if anyone is out there communicating from a ZumbaBox, be sure to drop a note in the comments and tell is how you like it.


Computer Aid International/Video screen capture


Computer Aid International/Video screen capture

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/treehuggersite/~3/5nQqDHMZz0E/solar-powered-internet-hubs-shipping-containers-support-rural-african-communities.html

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Daily App Deals: Get Quickoffice Pro for Android for $2.99 in Today's App Deals [Deals]

Daily App Deals: Get Quickoffice Pro for Android for $2.99 in Today's App DealsThe Daily App Deals post is a round-up of the best app discounts of the day, as well as some notable mentions for ones that are on sale.

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Daily App Deals: Get Quickoffice Pro for Android for $2.99 in Today's App DealsQuickoffice Pro (Amazon Appstore) Previously $14.99, now $2.99 . Quickoffice Pro allows you to create and edit Microsoft Word, Excel, and Powerpoint presentations on your Android device. The app also integrates with Google Docs, Dropbox, and other cloud based offerings so you can access your files remotely. Get it for $2.99. (via Apps-aholic)

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/yBmaVsTmxBY/daily-app-deals-get-quickoffice-pro-for-android-for-299-in-todays-app-deals

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The iPad that saved Christmas

LASD

NBC San Diego

It was a merry Christmas after all for a San Diego County family that had their holiday gifts stolen last week.

Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies have recovered more than 40 presents belonging to the family after arresting their neighbor Sunday in a separate burglary case.

Sheriff's Lt. James Royal says a Westlake Village man reported his iPad stolen by a burglar on Sunday, then traced the device to a nearby location.

After investigating, Royal says deputies arrested 20-year-old Patrick Krewson and recovered the iPad, then proceeded to search Krewson's apartment in Vista.

Royal says deputies found two flat screen TVs, a laptop and Christmas gifts stolen from a family's nearby apartment on Thursday.

Associated Press contributed to this report.

More stories from NBC San Diego:

Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9772550-the-ipad-that-saved-christmas

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Weldon Ruth Hoover, 87, Austin, Texas

Our beloved Weldon Hoover, age 87, passed away in her home on December 26, 2011. Born in Florence, TX on February 18, 1924 to Nealy and Viola Lindsey, Weldon married Clifford Hoover and moved to Austin in the early 1940's.

Weldon is preceded in death by her husband Clifford Hoover and brother Willie Lindsey, and is survived by brother Elmer Lindsey (Betty), sister Ruby Cox, brother Raymond Lindsey (Verlon), daughter Dianne Ottmers (Delbert), son Morris (Lynn), son Don (Elizabeth), grandchildren Lindsey Hoover, Creighton Hoover and Garrett Hoover, and numerous nieces and nephews.

Weldon was a loving mother, genuine friend, consummate seamstress and wonderful homemaker, known for her exceptional cooking by friends and family alike. She loved reading, studying the Bible and leading a women's Bible study for many years. She was a long time member of Ridgetop Baptist Church and recently attended Hyde Park Baptist Church.

The family would like to express their appreciation to Visiting Angels and Austin Home Health Care for their loving friendship and care during the past few years.

Visitation will be held at Weed-Corley-Fish, 3125 N. Lamar Blvd., Austin, Texas 78705, from 4-7pm on Thursday, December 29th. The funeral will be held at Weed-Corley-Fish at 10am on Friday, December 30th. Burial to follow at Capital Memorial Gardens, Pflugerville, Texas.

Source: http://kxan.tributes.com/show/Weldon-Ruth-Hoover-93015127

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GOP's Santorum fighting to contend in leadoff Iowa

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a town hall meeting at the Fort Dodge GOP Headquarters, Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a town hall meeting at the Fort Dodge GOP Headquarters, Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a town hall meeting at the Fort Dodge GOP Headquarters, Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks during a town hall meeting at the Fort Dodge GOP Headquarters, Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, in Fort Dodge, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? Rick Santorum isn't going down without a fight. In fact, that fight might be lifting him up.

The Republican presidential candidate who may have logged more miles than any other rival is more likely these days to be grinding it out on the campaign trail than trumpeting the buzz he's stirring among Iowa's conservative voters heading into the Jan. 3 presidential caucuses.

"We've got momentum," Santorum, a long-overlooked candidate in the GOP race told breakfast diners Wednesday in Independence. He sounded a similar note at a campaign stop Tuesday in Mason City.

But there are hurdles. His cash-strapped campaign has only just started running TV ads, and his organization is small in a state whose contests rely on the ability of campaigns to turn out a slew of supporters.

Still, there's evidence that Iowa Republicans, many of whom are still undecided and looking for a conservative candidate, may be starting to give the former Pennsylvania senator a look at just the right time.

"Rick Santorum could be a real surprise," said former Dallas County GOP Chairman Rob Taylor.

In recent days, Santorum's crowds have started growing as he rallies conservatives with a pit bull's pugnaciousness, and just a touch of anger. He began airing a new radio ad Wednesday that, while less obvious than a television spot, can be effective in reaching niche conservatives in rural Iowa.

He has earned the support of a number of key backers of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who won the 2008 Republican caucuses. They include former gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats, conservative Sioux City radio host Sam Clovis and some influential evangelical pastors.

He landed the endorsement Tuesday of evangelical conservative activists Alex and Brett Harris, founders of Huck's Army, a national group that supported Huckabee's 2008 campaign.

"He's the only candidate in this race I trust," said Chuck Laudner, a veteran Iowa GOP operative who introduced Santorum to more than 100 party activists on Santorum's fourth trip to Mason City. "And he's a fighter."

As if to prove the point, Santorum launched into a speech filled with pokes at the national media and his rivals. For 90 minutes, he tore into President Barack Obama, Hollywood and moderate Republicans ? and, by implication, rival Mitt Romney.

While Santorum's profile in Congress as a social-issues crusader bought him entr?e with influential evangelical conservatives in Iowa, it's his unhesitating attack on liberals that seems to be fueling his rise in internal polls by rival campaigns.

"Let's look at colleges and universities," Santorum said in the ballroom of the restored Frank Lloyd Wright Park Inn Hotel on Mason City's town square. "They've become indoctrination centers for the left. Should we be subsidizing that?"

Santorum tossed out Harvard University's motto, "Veritas," Latin for truth. "They haven't seen truth at Harvard in 100 years."

Santorum refers to Obama as a "radical." Just as easily, though, he calls his own party's leaders "the good old guys you can count on to sell out in the end."

Even in entertaining questions from voters, he is frank and at times pointed.

"No, you're missing my point," he told Mason City Republican Julia Jones, a retired factory worker, as he tried to explain Social Security.

Jones, who walked into the event weighing Santorum and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, liked what she heard ? and decided to support Santorum.

"He doesn't soften the edges, but he doesn't talk down to you either," Jones said. "He's just in-depth."

___

Associated Press writer Mike Glover in Independence, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-28-Santorum-The%20Fighter/id-4e3a26c0e6b64c949cba3f16de0fcbe4

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Prostate Cancer Active Surveillance Conference: Two Perspectives

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{MedPageToday Blogs via BioPortfolio} By Gary Schwitzer

Here are two perspectives on the recent National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference: Role of Active Surveillance in the Management of Men With Localized Prostate Cancer.

The first is from one of our HealthNewsReview.org medical editors, Richard M. Hoffman, M.D., M.P.H., Professor of Medicine at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine and Staff Physician at the New Mexico Veterans Affairs Health Care System.? Hoffman spoke at the conference on ?Improving the Communication of the Benefits and Harms of Treatment Strategies.? He writes these after-thoughts:

?I just returned from attending an NIH State-of-the-Science conference on active surveillance (AS).? AS is a strategy for monitoring men with low-risk prostate cancers using PSA tests, digital rectal examinations, and prostate biopsies in order to avoid or delay undergoing active treatment with surgery or radiation.? The rationale for AS is that many men with low-risk cancers are unlikely to ever suffer any clinical problems.? Therefore, aggressively treating these men, which can adversely affect urinary, sexual, and bowel function, is unnecessary.? However, identifying patients who are truly low-risk is challenging.? In contrast to the often unwelcome approach of watchful waiting, which provides only palliative treatment for symptomatic cancer progression, active surveillance allows men with low-risk cancers to initially avoid treatment and still be able to subsequently undergo attempted curative therapy if there are signs of cancer progression or they change their mind.

Active surveillance is being evaluated in an ongoing randomized trial in the United Kingdom, but data from observational studies and randomized comparisons of surgery with watchful waiting suggest that AS can be a safe and effective strategy.? The NIH convened a panel to evaluate the evidence.? Their final draft report, issued on December 7, is a thoughtful document that generally supports AS with the caveats that more research is needed to identify optimal patient selection criteria, monitoring strategies, and triggers for active treatment while also measuring the benefits and harms of active surveillance that matter most to patients.

This rigorous scrutiny of an innovative treatment strategy is laudable.? Ironically, I?m not aware of any similarly stringent review being conducted ? or expected ? when urologists began performing robot-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy or radiation oncologists began offering CyberKnife and proton-beam radiotherapy ? expensive technologies which offered uncertain additional benefits and harms compared to standard treatments.? Meanwhile, a conservative strategy designed to minimize the harms of unnecessary treatment receives a cautious endorsement.

If our society is committed to improving patient-centered health outcomes and controlling health care costs, we cannot afford this double standard.? We must address the unbridled dissemination of new technologies.? Such a daunting effort may require regulatory changes for introducing new technologies, reconsidering how care is reimbursed, creating expectations for documenting clinical effectiveness, and providing counter detailing for the public and patients -- who all too often are seduced by the marketing hype that innovation and high-technology equals effective, safe, and necessary care.? The second perspective comes from journalist Laura Newman, who wrote, ?Let?s Not Call it ?Prostate Cancer.? ? Excerpts:

?The Panel said that terminology matters and that men who have PSA screening results that read 10 ngs or less with a Gleason Score of 6 or less should no longer be told that they have ?cancer.? ?The word ?cancer? sets off an emotional response,? said Barry A. Kogan, MD, part of the Consensus Development Panel, and chair of urology, Albany Medical Center, Albany, NY, during the briefing. According to the Panel?s preliminary report, more than 100,000 men fit within the thresholds above, and are candidates for active monitoring.

If active surveillance gained visibility and credibility, it would be a sea change in practice. The Panel declined to say what term should replace ?cancer,? instead leaving it to expert pathologists and urologists? to sort out the science and meaningful language?.

Some doctors are simply too entrenched in treatment for a variety of reasons so that active surveillance is anathema. Further, many physicians claim that they have active surveillance protocols, but the exact thresholds beyond which they would advise treatment and whether they are based in science or opinion are not easy for patients to pinpoint. For example, many doctors may be uncomfortable with cutpoints as high as 10 ng PSA and Gleason Score of 6 less for ?cancer.?

I asked Ashutosh Tewari, MD, Director of the Robotic Cancer Institute, Cornell University Medical Center, N.Y., to clarify his position on active surveillance. He has gone on record at urology meetings as supporting active surveillance and has invited leading researchers who back it to speak with residents. He emailed me back: ?Active surveillance?is the right treatment and we do it here all the time.? Later, he called me to tell me that he has ?hundreds of men on active surveillance.?? Tewari is a leading robotic prostatectomy physician internationally. Robotics is an extremely lucrative field. Many people might wonder whether people invested in robotics could be totally objective. One physician who asked not to be named, remarked: ?There is too much money to be made to really push it [active surveillance].?

Perhaps one day, volume of procedures will not be so inextricably linked to physician income. Health care reform with incentives for value and good outcomes would be a start.? The bold emphasis in each person?s comments was mine, pointing out how a physician and a journalist came to the same topic of expensive technologies and questions of evidence and outcomes.

Original Article: Prostate Cancer Active Surveillance Conference: Two Perspectives

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