Thursday, November 29, 2012

AGA members tell lawmakers -- stop the cuts

AGA members tell lawmakers -- stop the cuts [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2012
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Contact: Aimee Frank
media@gastro.org
301-941-2620
American Gastroenterological Association

Dec. 4 is AGA Virtual Advocacy Day

Bethesda, MD (Nov. 28, 2012) As the deadline for sequestration gets closer, the looming threat of across-the-board budget cuts becomes more real. While these cuts will have repercussions across all sectors of the U.S. economy, medical researchers and health-care professionals will be adversely affected by these major budget issues. If Congress does not take action, medical practice reimbursement will be slashed by 29 percent and research funding will be cut by 8 percent.

On Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012, members of the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) from across the country will participate in the first-ever AGA Virtual Advocacy campaign. Gastroenterologists will flood Congress with calls for them to stop the cuts.

"There is an enormous amount at stake in the next few weeks with impending cuts that will have devastating impacts on clinicians and researchers," said Loren Laine, MD, AGAF, president of the AGA Institute.

Clinicians are facing nearly a 29 percent reduction in reimbursement from Medicare when the proposed 26.5 percent cut from the Medicare sustainable growth rate is combined with the automatic, acrossthe-board 2 percent cut from sequestration. The proposed 8 percent cut to federal research funding due to sequestration will affect major drivers of medical innovation in this country, stall scientific progress and kill an important economic engine in the U.S.

"Cuts to clinician reimbursements will mean a drastic reduction in income for medical practices that will struggle to pay staff, provide benefits and invest in the infrastructure needed to run a business," according to Dr. Laine. "Additionally, the proposed cuts to federal research funding will cripple laboratories across the country and will cost America jobs at a time when our nation can't afford to lose anymore."

###

Learn more about the AGA Virtual Advocacy Day and how to get involved at www.gastro.org/stopthecuts.

About the AGA

The American Gastroenterological Association is the trusted voice of the GI community. Founded in 1897, the AGA has grown to include 17,000 members from around the globe who are involved in all aspects of the science, practice and advancement of gastroenterology. www.gastro.org.

Like AGA on Facebook.

Join AGA on LinkedIn.

Follow us on Twitter @AmerGastroAssn.

Check out our videos on YouTube.


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


AGA members tell lawmakers -- stop the cuts [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Aimee Frank
media@gastro.org
301-941-2620
American Gastroenterological Association

Dec. 4 is AGA Virtual Advocacy Day

Bethesda, MD (Nov. 28, 2012) As the deadline for sequestration gets closer, the looming threat of across-the-board budget cuts becomes more real. While these cuts will have repercussions across all sectors of the U.S. economy, medical researchers and health-care professionals will be adversely affected by these major budget issues. If Congress does not take action, medical practice reimbursement will be slashed by 29 percent and research funding will be cut by 8 percent.

On Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012, members of the American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) from across the country will participate in the first-ever AGA Virtual Advocacy campaign. Gastroenterologists will flood Congress with calls for them to stop the cuts.

"There is an enormous amount at stake in the next few weeks with impending cuts that will have devastating impacts on clinicians and researchers," said Loren Laine, MD, AGAF, president of the AGA Institute.

Clinicians are facing nearly a 29 percent reduction in reimbursement from Medicare when the proposed 26.5 percent cut from the Medicare sustainable growth rate is combined with the automatic, acrossthe-board 2 percent cut from sequestration. The proposed 8 percent cut to federal research funding due to sequestration will affect major drivers of medical innovation in this country, stall scientific progress and kill an important economic engine in the U.S.

"Cuts to clinician reimbursements will mean a drastic reduction in income for medical practices that will struggle to pay staff, provide benefits and invest in the infrastructure needed to run a business," according to Dr. Laine. "Additionally, the proposed cuts to federal research funding will cripple laboratories across the country and will cost America jobs at a time when our nation can't afford to lose anymore."

###

Learn more about the AGA Virtual Advocacy Day and how to get involved at www.gastro.org/stopthecuts.

About the AGA

The American Gastroenterological Association is the trusted voice of the GI community. Founded in 1897, the AGA has grown to include 17,000 members from around the globe who are involved in all aspects of the science, practice and advancement of gastroenterology. www.gastro.org.

Like AGA on Facebook.

Join AGA on LinkedIn.

Follow us on Twitter @AmerGastroAssn.

Check out our videos on YouTube.


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/aga-amt112812.php

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The art of research

The art of research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2012
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Contact: Clea Desjardins
clea.desjardins@concordia.ca
514-848-2424 x5068
Concordia University

Concordia explores the grey zone between academic and artistic creation

Montreal, November 28, 2012

Concordia University researcher Louis Patrick Leroux is one scholar whose work often results in that type of outcome. A professor of creative writing and literature in Concordia's Department of English as well as its Dpartement d'tudes franaises, Leroux has spent years intimately involved in what is known as "research-creation," a process that fosters the development and renewal of knowledge through aesthetic, technical, instrumental or other innovations.

"There's a real need to bridge the gap between the creative and interpretive disciplines." Leroux says. "If we can make that connection, we can link the humanities more closely to arts communities and create an important dialogue between academic and artistic creation." He is now doing just that with his new book, Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus, published by Prise de parole.

By blending dramatic dialogues and thoughts on the creative process, Leroux gives his readers a new take on what it means to create as both a passionate and academic exercise. Before being compiled into a book, Leroux's Dialogues were the fodder for a series of performative explorations, some theatrical, some filmed, others flirting with peformance art and installations at the Hexagram Concordia Centre for Research-Creation in Media Arts and Technologies.

Dialogues fantasques offers an artistic way to understand the creative process and, in so doing, helps unpack the mysteries behind research-creation. Equal parts academic treatise and work of fiction, it is constructed in a way that makes the reader part of the research-creation experience. Even the book's layout, designed by Concordia design professor Nathalie Dumont, invites the reader to think more about what it means to create and experience.

"There's a lot of fascinating work that goes on in universities around the world that never makes it into peer-reviewed journals," adds Leroux. He has been taking this message far and wide in recent months, thanks to lectures and keynote conferences on research creation at both Quebec City's Universit Laval and the Pontificia Universidad Catlica in Santiago, Chile. He has also explored these ideas as a Visiting Scholar at Duke University's Centre for the Study of Canada, as well as through his current position as scholar-in-residence at the National Circus School in Montreal.

Leroux's new book, Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus, will be launched on Thursday, November 29 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Librairie Le Port de tte, 262 Mount Royal Avenue East.

###

Related Links:
Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus http://resonance.hexagram.ca/dialogues-fantasques/
Resonance Lab http://resonance.hexagram.ca
Les ditions Prise de parole http://prisedeparole.ca/
HEXAGRAM http://hexagram.concordia.ca
Matralab http://matralab.hexagram.ca
Le dpartement d'tudes franaises l'Universit Concordia http://francais.concordia.ca/
Concordia's Department of English Literature http://english.concordia.ca/index.php
Louis Patrick Leroux's Research @ Concordia profile http://www.concordia.ca/explore/#!/profile/70/

Source:
Web: concordia.ca/now/media-relations
Twitter: @CleaDesjardins


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


The art of research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Clea Desjardins
clea.desjardins@concordia.ca
514-848-2424 x5068
Concordia University

Concordia explores the grey zone between academic and artistic creation

Montreal, November 28, 2012

Concordia University researcher Louis Patrick Leroux is one scholar whose work often results in that type of outcome. A professor of creative writing and literature in Concordia's Department of English as well as its Dpartement d'tudes franaises, Leroux has spent years intimately involved in what is known as "research-creation," a process that fosters the development and renewal of knowledge through aesthetic, technical, instrumental or other innovations.

"There's a real need to bridge the gap between the creative and interpretive disciplines." Leroux says. "If we can make that connection, we can link the humanities more closely to arts communities and create an important dialogue between academic and artistic creation." He is now doing just that with his new book, Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus, published by Prise de parole.

By blending dramatic dialogues and thoughts on the creative process, Leroux gives his readers a new take on what it means to create as both a passionate and academic exercise. Before being compiled into a book, Leroux's Dialogues were the fodder for a series of performative explorations, some theatrical, some filmed, others flirting with peformance art and installations at the Hexagram Concordia Centre for Research-Creation in Media Arts and Technologies.

Dialogues fantasques offers an artistic way to understand the creative process and, in so doing, helps unpack the mysteries behind research-creation. Equal parts academic treatise and work of fiction, it is constructed in a way that makes the reader part of the research-creation experience. Even the book's layout, designed by Concordia design professor Nathalie Dumont, invites the reader to think more about what it means to create and experience.

"There's a lot of fascinating work that goes on in universities around the world that never makes it into peer-reviewed journals," adds Leroux. He has been taking this message far and wide in recent months, thanks to lectures and keynote conferences on research creation at both Quebec City's Universit Laval and the Pontificia Universidad Catlica in Santiago, Chile. He has also explored these ideas as a Visiting Scholar at Duke University's Centre for the Study of Canada, as well as through his current position as scholar-in-residence at the National Circus School in Montreal.

Leroux's new book, Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus, will be launched on Thursday, November 29 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Librairie Le Port de tte, 262 Mount Royal Avenue East.

###

Related Links:
Dialogues fantasques pour causeurs perdus http://resonance.hexagram.ca/dialogues-fantasques/
Resonance Lab http://resonance.hexagram.ca
Les ditions Prise de parole http://prisedeparole.ca/
HEXAGRAM http://hexagram.concordia.ca
Matralab http://matralab.hexagram.ca
Le dpartement d'tudes franaises l'Universit Concordia http://francais.concordia.ca/
Concordia's Department of English Literature http://english.concordia.ca/index.php
Louis Patrick Leroux's Research @ Concordia profile http://www.concordia.ca/explore/#!/profile/70/

Source:
Web: concordia.ca/now/media-relations
Twitter: @CleaDesjardins


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/cu-tao112812.php

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"Youths are passed through schools that don?t teach, then forced to search for jobs that don?t exist..."

Youths are passed through schools that don?t teach, then forced to search for jobs that don?t exist and finally left stranded in the street to stare at the glamorous lives advertised around them.

??Huey P. Newton (via nirvikalpa)

(Source: pacificpixiee)

Source: http://knowledgeappliedispower.tumblr.com/post/36752578132

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Publishers brace for authors to reclaim book rights in 2013 ...

The book publishing industry, already facing disruption from Amazon and ?e-books, will confront a new form of turbulence in 2013. Starting in January, publishers face the loss of their back lists as authors begin using the Copyright Act to reclaim works they assigned years ago.

These so-called ?termination rights,? which let authors break contracts after 35 years, have already made the media thanks to a court squabble between the Village People and music studios.?On the book front, publishers ?and agents are staying mostly mum even though the bestseller lists from 1978 reveal some very big names eligible to reclaim their work ?? Stephen King, Judy Blume, John LeCarre and so on. Here?s a plain english overview of how the law works and why (for now at least) we?re likely to see literary types negotiate rather than litigate.

A Second Bite of the Apple

The law in question is Section 203 of the 1978 Copyright Act which allows authors to cut away any contract after 35 years. Congress put it in place to protect young artists who signed away future best sellers for a pittance.

?People have had 2013 circled on their calendar for a while,? said Andrew Bart, a copyright lawyer at Jenner & Block, in a phone interview.

Termination rights are not a new idea and have been the subject of famous court cases involving John Steinbeck, Lassie and Superman. The difference is that these older cases are based on a pre-1978 law that often required an author to exercise renewal rights which, in many cases, the author had signed away.

The new law has fewer such loopholes and will also mean that what has been a drip-drip of old copyright cases could turn into a flood as nearly every book published after 1978 becomes eligible for termination.

The 1978 law also means a threat to the back list of titles that are a cash cow for many publishers. The threat is amplified as a result of new digital distribution options for authors that were never conceived when the law was passed ? these new options mean authors have more leverage to walk away from their publishers altogether.

Publishers contacted for this story were reluctant to discuss termination rights and several sources said they want to deflect attention from it. That may not be possible for much longer.

?Grist for the Litigation Mill?

Even by the standards of copyright law, the author reclamation rules are a messy cat?s cradle of ambiguous rules and technicalities. The math makes your head spin.

For instance, authors have a five-year window to exercise the right but must also provide advance notice at least two years but no more than 10 years beforehand. For 1978 authors ? who are eligible to reclaim in 2013 ? the window is already closing.

It?s unclear how many understand the rules. Several literary agents contacted for this story appeared to be unaware of how they worked or even of their existence. This is not true of copyright lawyers, some of whom are rubbing their hands at the prospect of a legal trainwreck.

?This will provide grist for the litigation mill,? said Bart, comparing the law to the 1999 safe harbor rules that tied courts in knots for a decade.

For musicians, the reversion rights issue has spilled into court already. Since last year, studios have been claiming that the lead singer of the Village People is ineligible to reclaim copyright. The studios argued the music is an ineligible ??work for hire? and that the whole band ? as joint authors ? must together trigger the termination. The arguments have failed so far as the first judge to hear them sided with the singer in May.

While the ?right to hire? issue may not affect most book authors (who are typically not employees), it may affect some of the country?s most famous writers.

Copyright lawyer Lloyd Jassin?says that some publishers may try to pull a legal ace from their sleeve by pointing to the personal corporations that prominent authors use to license their work. These corporations mean that ? technically at least ? the author may be ineligible since they are employees of the corporation not authors.

Another potential flashpoint for famous authors is what happens to film and merchandise rights if they reclaim copyright. While the law lets studios keep rights to films that are already made, it?s less clear who controls sequels and individual characters.

A Bomb or a Bargaining Chip?

The long awaited (and dreaded) new termination regime kicks in for real in just over a month. For now, though, it?s still too soon to say if the rules will denude backlists in a big way. A?cursory search of the copyright registry suggests that termination notices have yet to flood in (copyrights are public records and a termination and transfer would have to be recorded).

This quiet may mean that many authors are simply unaware of their option to have a second bite at the apple.?Or it may mean that quiet negotiations are taking place behind the scenes. While authors have the option to bolt their publisher, many may prefer to simply seek a sweeter deal rather than fly solo or risk triggering a lawsuit. And, as Law360 notes (sub req?d), there may be only a relative handful of works that are valuable enough to justify expending millions in legal fees.

Details about the rulers are still scarce but, for now, the Authors Guild and Jassin, the copyright lawyer, have very good plain english good primers.

Finally, via Hawes.com, here is a list of the New York Times bestsellers from November 1978:

1 WAR AND REMEMBRANCE, by Herman Wouk

2 CHESAPEAKE, by James A. Michener

3 FOOLS DIE, by Mario Puzo.

4 THE FAR PAVILIONS

5 SECOND GENERATION, by Howard Fast.

6 PRELUDE TO TERROR, by Helen MacInnes

7 THE EMPTY COPPER SEA

8 EVERGREEN, by Belva Plain.

9 ILLUSIONS, by Richard Bach.

10 EYE OF THE NEEDLE, by Ken Follett.

11 BRIGHT FLOWS THE RIVER, by Taylor Caldwell.

12 THURSDAY THE RABBI WALKED OUT, by Harry Kemelman.

13 THE SILMARILLION, by J.R.R. Tolkien.

14 WIFEY, by Judy Blume. (Putnam?s, $8.95.)

15 SCRUPLES, by Judith Krantz.

NON-FICTION

1 IF LIFE IS A BOWL OF CHERRIES ? WHAT AM I DOING IN THE PITS?
by Erma Bombeck.

2 A DISTANT MIRROR, by Barbara W. Tuchman.

3 IN SEARCH OF HISTORY, by Theodore H. White.

4 THE COMPLETE BOOK OF RUNNING, by James F. Fixx.

5 AMERICAN CAESAR, by William Manchester.

6 THE SNOW LEOPARD, by Peter Matiniessen.

7 THE WOMAN DOCTOR?S DIET FOR WOMEN, by Barbara Edelstein, M.D.

8 GNOMES, text by Wil Huygen, illustrated by Rien Poortvliet.

9 A TIME FOR TRUTH, by William E. Simon.

10 ROBERT KENNEDY AND HIS TIMES, by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.

11 PULLING YOUR OWN STRINGS, by Wayne W. Dyer.

12 THE COUNTRY DIARY OF AN EDWARDIAN LADY, by Edith Holden.

13 THE ONLY INVESTMENT GUIDE YOU?LL EVER NEED, by Andrew Tobias.

14 JACKIE OH! by Kitty Kelley.

15 PURE AND SIMPLE, by Marian Burros.

Source: http://paidcontent.org/2012/11/27/publishers-brace-for-authors-to-reclaim-book-rights-in-2013/

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PHOTO: Anna Nicole Smith's Daughter Models for Guess

Dannielynn Birkhead, the daughter of the late Anna Nicole Smith, is already walking in her mother's shoes. The 6-year-old has taken a gig modeling for Guess, a company that hired Smith as a model in the '90s.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/anna-nicole-smiths-daughter-dannielynn-birkhead-guess-model/1-a-504680?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aanna-nicole-smiths-daughter-dannielynn-birkhead-guess-model-504680

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Pakistan plans to hold national elections in May

ISLAMABAD (AP) ? Pakistan's information minister says the government plans to hold landmark national elections next May.

Qamar Zaman Kaira's comments on Tuesday were the first indication of a timing for the vote.

The election would be a milestone for Pakistan because it would represent the first time that a civilian government has completed a full five-year term.

Past governments have either been deposed in military coups or dismissed by presidents allied with the generals.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-27-Pakistan/id-d7d627909f1f443db6c14399393b8359

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Energy efficient windows ? Home Improvement: House Plans

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://soumajitdas42.blogspot.com/2012/11/energy-efficient-windows-home.html

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GM takes cue from Apple to address in-vehicle tech glitches

AUSTIN (Reuters) - General Motors Co rolling out its own version of Apple Inc's Genius Bar to prevent frustration over its in-car technology from driving away potential customers.

Touch-screen and voice-activated entertainment and navigation systems play a pivotal role in attracting car shoppers, but so far companies, including GM, have struggled to make their systems intuitive and effective.

GM believes the real problem stems from the lack of training provided to new drivers. As a result, the No. 1 U.S. automaker is dispatching 25 tech-savvy specialists to its 4,400 U.S. dealerships to show how to teach customers about technology.

"You see a lot of people get into the vehicle, and they can't figure out the damned system," said Mark Harland, manager of GM's connected customer team.

"They get frustrated, and they get online and bash it, and that ends up on J.D. Power and Associates," he said, referring to the leading U.S. researcher into consumer satisfaction in the auto industry.

GM's specialists, who are mostly in their 20s, will communicate with GM engineers on software improvements. GM also has a dedicated team at its call center in Austin to answer questions about in-car technology.

GM is also requiring that its dealers have at least one staff member trained in all of GM's in-car systems - MyLink, CUE and IntelliLink - by the end of this year.

"Some customers don't utilize all the features on these new cars," Robert Ruiz, general manager of Capitol Chevrolet in Austin, said. "If we don't know to use them either, we can't teach them."

Earlier this year, a Booz & Company survey showed that 85 percent of auto executives predicted in-vehicle technology would see widespread adoption over the next five years. But many of the current systems have been poorly reviewed.

Last week, Consumer Reports magazine panned GM's new CUE system for its Cadillac lineup, calling it "convoluted and frustrating." The magazine also lambasted Ford Motor Co's Touch system.

Harland said GM should adopt strategies from consumer electronics companies like Apple or Best Buy Co Inc to help consumers manage and understand their vehicle's features. It's up to the car companies to offer ongoing support if they're going to be competitive, he said.

"It's not good enough to just give someone a set of keys and say, 'See you later'," Harland said. "We need to help people with the technology."

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gm-takes-cue-apple-address-vehicle-tech-glitches-013139919--finance.html

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Shock: Pat Robertson Is Not a Young Earth Creationist (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/266743649?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Demi Moore: Delaying Divorce to Spite Ashton Kutcher?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/11/demi-moore-delaying-divorce-to-spite-ashton-kutcher/

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Finding a new branch of my family tree in Thailand | Seattle Globalist

by Sara Stogner ? November 26, 2012 ? 0 Comments

My second cousins John (center) and Nakon (right) show me family pictures with familiar faces during a reunion/introductions of sorts in Bangkok, Thailand. (Photo by Dacia Saenz)

BANGKOK, Thailand? They were complete strangers, but it instantly felt like a family reunion.

One week before I departed for my first?international reporting trip,?my grandmother Cece and my great aunt Karen casually drop to me on Facebook that, oh by the way, I have relatives in Thailand.

Come again?

Now I?m from a long and proud line of auto factory workers, mechanics and nurses from Flint, Michigan. But other than trips to Canada, I was one of the few people in my family to travel and live outside the U.S. since our ancestors came through Ellis Island. Or at least I thought.

So to learn that I have Thai relatives was not only a major revelation, but one that profoundly altered how I view my family in the world.

But the facts were fuzzy at first. I wasn?t exactly clear how my little branch of the tree spanned to this corner of the world.

So I sent a Facebook message and a few days later I was off to meet these mysterious family characters in the bustling city of Bangkok.

The experience was surreal to say the least. As an adult, I believed I had a mostly complete picture of my family, who they are and how we all fit in the world. But meeting John, Nakon and their family has forever connected my heart to Thailand and to these people who made me feel like I was home. (Photo by Dacia Saenz)

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Sara Stogner and Dacia Saenz are currently reporting from Thailand for ?The Cost of Gender,? a documentary exploring transgender health care discrimination in the US and why Americans are traveling abroad for better options.

Sara Stogner is an editor and visual journalist for The Seattle Globalist. She worked for several daily midwest newspapers including The Flint Journal, The Columbia Missourian and The Boone County Journal before moving to Seattle. Sara trains the next generation of journalists through the Globalist Apprenticeship Program and is a graduate of the Journalism School at the University of Missouri.

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Related posts:
  1. Northwest expats in Thailand cheer Obama victory with locals
  2. Healthcare and LGBTQ debates collide in trans medical tourism, Globalist launches new project
  3. Dinner with Alma: Stories of family and reunification abroad

Source: http://www.seattleglobalist.com/2012/11/26/finding-a-new-branch-of-my-family-tree-in-thailand/8160

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Innovation vs. Magic: Why Apple and Microsoft Need James Bond

After seeing the new Microsoft offerings, Steve Wozniak recently lamented that Microsoft is now out innovating Apple. Wozniak is the surviving founder of Apple, and his perspective clearly is important, but he was the guy who got the product to work. It was the other Steve who was largely responsible for creating the entity that was Apple and making it a huge success.

Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/25f8f5dd/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C766770Bhtml/story01.htm

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U.S. Healthcare: Newly insured patients may have trouble finding primary care physicians

ScienceDaily (Nov. 26, 2012) ? Implementation of the Affordable Care Act -- now assured by the re-election of President Obama -- is expected to result in up to 50 million currently uninsured Americans acquiring some type of health insurance coverage. But a study by researchers at the Mongan Institute for Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) finds that a significant percentage of the primary care physicians most likely to care for newly insured patients may be not be accepting new patients. The investigators note that strategies designed to increase and support these "safety-net" physicians could help ensure that newly covered patients have access to primary care.

"This study raises very serious concerns about the willingness and ability of primary care providers to cope with the increased demand for services that will result from the ACA," says Eric G. Campbell, PhD, of the Mongan Institute, senior author of the report to be published in the American Journal of Medical Quality. "Even with insurance, it appears that many patients may find it challenging to find a physician to provide them with primary care services."

In 2000 the Institute of Medicine published a report on the health care "safety net" -- physicians and organizations caring for a significant proportion of uninsured or Medicaid-covered patients -- that noted a lack of enough safety-net providers and the chronic underfunding of Medicaid. The Affordable Care Act was designed to ensure almost universal health insurance coverage, including expanding the number of individuals eligible for Medicaid. The authors of the current study note that many newly covered patients are likely to turn to physicians in the already-stressed health care safety net and that areas where such patients are likely to live often have limited primary care services. In addition, studies have suggested that physicians caring for disadvantaged groups of patients may provide lower-quality care.

The authors set out to better understand the physicians in the primary care safety net, to determine their willingness to accept new Medicaid patients and to assess their attitudes about and interest in quality improvement activities. As part of a 2009 survey of medical professionalism, physicians were asked to indicate the approximate percentage of their patients who were covered by Medicaid or were uninsured and unable to pay. They also were asked whether they were accepting new Medicaid or uninsured patients, along with several questions regarding services they provided to vulnerable populations and their attitudes towards and participation in quality improvement activities. Because of their focus on the primary care safety net, the investigators restricted their analysis to responses from internists, pediatricians and family practitioners.

Of 840 primary care physicians responding to the survey, 53 percent were safety-net providers, defined as having patient panels with more than 20 percent uninsured or Medicaid patients. Half of all responding primary care physicians indicated they were accepting new patients who either were covered by Medicaid or had no means of paying for their care. But safety-net physicians were considerably more likely to accept both patient groups, with 72 percent taking new Medicaid patients and 61 percent taking new patients with no medical coverage. There were no significant differences between the physician groups in reported attitudes about or participation in quality improvement efforts, and safety-net physicians reported greater awareness of and efforts to address disparities in health care than did non-safety-net physicians.

The authors note that the concentration of care for Medicaid and uninsured patients among a limited number of safety-net physicians and the fact that 28 and 39 percent, respectively, of those physicians are not accepting new Medicaid and uninsured patients indicate that the current health care safety net may have reached its capacity. In addition, they note, safety-net physicians' interest in quality improvement and attention to health care disparities suggests that reported differences in the quality of care they provide probably reflect limited resources available to their practices or barriers to care within the local communities.

"We found the attitudes of safety-net primary care physicians are consistent with providing equitable, universal care, and they were almost twice as likely to look out for possible racial and ethnic disparities within their practices," says Lenny L?pez, MD, MPH, MDiv, of the Mongan Institute, corresponding author of the report. "We're already aware of the need for more primary care physicians, and these results make it apparent that the need for safety-net PCPs is even more critical. We also found that safety-net physicians were more likely to be women, under-represented minorities or foreign medical graduates, so efforts to bring more such physicians into primary care, along with efforts to close the income gap between safety-net and non-safety-net PCPs, could help expand the safety net."

L?pez is an assistant professor and Campbell an associate professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Additional co-authors of the study, which was support by the Institute on Medicine as a Profession, are Christine Vogeli, PhD, and Lisa Iezzoni, MD, Mongan Institute of Health Policy at MGH; Catherine DesRoches, PhD, Mathematica Policy Research, Princeton, N.J.; and Richard Grant, MD, Kaiser Permanente Northern California.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/ogdY6-Qgxrk/121126164413.htm

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Vettel wins 3rd straight F1 title in Brazil

Essential News from The Associated Press

AAA??Nov. 25, 2012?1:37 PM ET
Vettel wins 3rd straight F1 title in Brazil
By TALES AZZONIBy TALES AZZONI, AP Sports Writer?THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES?

Red Bull driver Mark Webber, left, of Australia, looses control of his car after colliding with Sauber driver Sergio Perez of Mexico, right, during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

Red Bull driver Mark Webber, left, of Australia, looses control of his car after colliding with Sauber driver Sergio Perez of Mexico, right, during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain goes briefly off the track during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

Red Bull driver Mark Webber of Australia, right, McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button of Britain, front second from left, and Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain (5), at left, steer their cars during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo)

Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain goes briefly off the track during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany, front, steers his car ahead of Mercedes Grand Prix driver Nico Rosberg of Germany. center, and Toro Rosso driver Daniel Ricciardo of Australia as they drive by a car debris from Mark Wabber's car during the Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix at the Interlagos race track in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sunday, Nov. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan)

(AP) ? Sebastian Vettel overcame a first-lap crash Sunday to capture his third straight Formula One championship.

He finished sixth in the Brazilian Grand Prix, which won by Jenson Button, and at 25 became the youngest three-time champion in Formula One.

Vettel held off Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, the only other driver contending for the title. Alonso had a superb start on a hectic first lap at Interlagos. He finished second but that wasn't enough to erase Vettel's lead in the standings.

Lewis Hamilton was leading in his final race with McLaren when Nico Hulkenberg crashed into him while trying to pass on a slippery track with 17 laps left. Michael Schumacher, F1's most successful driver, finished seventh in his final race after 19 seasons.

The race finished behind the safety car after Paul Di Resta crashed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-25-CAR-F1-Brazilian-GP/id-250354e401274146875374844af65baf

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Valley sports and recreation calendar | Clovis Independent ...

Nov 23, 2012, 12:45pm

Central San Joaquin Valley recreational opportunities and announcements. Submit items and search for events using planitfresno.com. All numbers in 559 area code unless otherwise noted.

BASEBALL

ADP 14-U Tournament: Friday-Sunday. Figarden Loop Park, $400. Also accepting new players, 5-8 p.m. Grades 8-11. 4265 N. Figarden Drive, 549-4487, adpbaseball.com.

Bullard Cal Ripken Spring Sign-Ups: Dec. 1, 8 and 15. Ages 4-12 and 7-8th grade prep. Starr Elementary cafeteria or bullardcalripken.org, 289-8630.

Central Valley Baseball Coaches Clinic: 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Dec. 1, featuring ex-Fresno State coach Bob Bennett, UCLA?s John Savage, Long Beach State?s Troy Buckley and others. Reedley College Dining Hall. $100. Jason Murrietta (714) 943-1565 or Josh Labandeira 901-8912.

BASKETBALL

Lil Riders Sign-Ups: 6-7 p.m. today. Ages 7-15 for boys and girls, East Fresno Boys & Girls Club, 266-7605, bgclubfc.org, $25.

Youth Basketball: 7 p.m. Jan. 5. Six-week program for boys and girls ages 3-6. Ted C. Wills Community Center. 621-7529, parksonline.fresno.gov, $50.

Junior Basketball: 7 p.m. Jan. 12. Eight-week program for boys and girls ages 7-9 and 10-12. Holmes Neighborhood Center. 621-7529, parksonline.fresno.gov, $50.

Bullard Little Knights League: 8 Jan. 19-Feb. 23. Boys and girls grades K-8. Bullard High. 213-2533, bullardbasketball.com, $75.

FOOTBALL

Youth camp: Cream of the Crop Youth All-Star, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday at Computech Middle School. Ages 7-13, Mighty Mites/Pee Wee/Juniors. $30. Registration info at ccyafootball.com or (888) 407-2611.

GOLF

Junior Golf Tournament: 1 p.m. Dec. 2. Ages 6-17, 9 holes. Riverbend Golf Club, Madera. 269-6369, cvjrgolf.com.

Start Smart Golf: Jan. 19, 10 a.m. at Orchid Park, 12:30 p.m. at Selma Layne. Parent participation program for children ages 5-7. 621-7529, parksonline.fresno.gov, $50.

LACROSSE

Girls team seeks players, coaches: Register by Jan. 12. Six weeks, plus playoffs. Hoover High cafeteria. 621-7529, parksonline.fresno.gov, $50.

Central California Lacrosse Club: 9:30 a.m.-noon Saturdays. Men?s club seeks players. San Gabriel Park, Clovis. 388-4428, fresnolacrosse@gmail.com.

MARTIAL ARTS

West Clovis Judo Club seeks members: 7-9 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Kastner Intermediate. 434-3459, jtakedachukajudo.org.

Clovis Judo: 7-8:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. Alta Sierra Intermediate. 299-3739.

Japan Ways Traditional Karate: Mondays-Saturdays. Beginner, intermediate and advanced. 432-7817, japanways.com.

Karazenpo Karate: 6:30-8:30 p.m. Tuesdays. 225-2199, karazenpofresno.org. $25 monthly, $10 additional family member.

MISCELLANEOUS

Oakhurst Pentaque Club: 9 a.m. Saturday. Oakhurst Elementary. 683-6540. Free. oakhurstpetanque.org.

Clovis Rugby Club: 5:30-7:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. Bicentennial Park, Clovis. 322-9160.

Dart tournaments: 7:30 p.m. second Saturday each month. Classic Billiards, Clovis. 765-9540. $15.

Fresno Petanque Club: Game days 1 p.m. Wednesdays, 10 a.m. Sundays and 5 p.m. Tuesdays. Cary Park, 4750 N. Fresno St. Beginners welcome. 431-5944, fresnopetanque@gmail.com.

Fresno Scuba Club: 6:30 p.m. first Wednesday each month, Marie Callender?s, 1781 E. Shaw Ave., centralvalleyscubafrogs.com.

Pickleball: All ages, skills. 834-2688.

Tulare County Trap Club/Shooting: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Sundays. Trap, wobble trap, skeet. 772-2334.

RUN/WALK

Fresno Turkey Trot 5K run, 2-mile walk: 8 a.m. today, Woodward Park, 433-6750, fresnoturkeytrot.eventbrite.com, $20-$35.

Jingle Bell Run, Toys for Tots: 9 p.m. Dec. 15. Christmas Tree Lane, 322-9371, fresnojinglebellrun.com, $30, $20 Children.

SOFTBALL

Madera Destroyers fast-pitch tryouts: Available through Jan. 26. Ages 8-15. Also seeking coaches. 363-6035, leaguelineup.com/maderadestroyers12u.

Fresno Force tryouts 12-U-Rodriguez team: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Dec. 1-2. Keith Tice Memorial Park, fresnoforce.com.

Fresno Blaze Club: Seeking players and coaches. Ages 12-18. Bullard High school, 970-0935, fresnoblaze.com.

TENNIS

Start Smart Tennis: 5:30 p.m. March 5. Parent participation program for children ages 5-7. Orchid Park. 621-7529, parksonline.fresno.gov, $50.

The Fresno Bee

Source: http://clovisindependent.com/2012/11/23/valley-sports-and-recreation-calendar-3/

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kukabotla: Great Seeking Casino Houses - Arts and Entertainment ...

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Source: http://blog-arts-entertainment.mysurechoice.com/3863/great-seeking-casino-houses/

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Regardless of how our economic situation fares, the pharmacy technician career will have an easier time staying afloat and the demand for it will only continue to grow. Pharmacy technician jobs are teeming all over the place, but the heavy competition may make things had for you. So if you want to find yourself being sought after by an employer, receiving proper training and certification is necessary.

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Freed Russian scientist: 'Nothing has changed'

Gray, pale and thin, Valentin Danilov has changed more than the country that jailed him in 2004 for selling state secrets to China.

The 66-year-old Russian physicist, whose face is now criss-crossed with deep wrinkles, could not be blamed for suffering from "deja vu" when he was released on Saturday from a Siberian penal colony on spying charges he says were politically motivated.

President Vladimir Putin, now 60, is back in the Kremlin for a third term, corruption is rife, the unreformed economy is creaking under the weight of its dependence on energy exports, and opponents are still being imprisoned.

Danilov, whose case human rights activists say is evidence that Putin uses Russia's weak courts to persecute his enemies, sees little hope of rapid change.

"Nothing has changed," Danilov said in an interview, putting some of the blame on Russia's 143 million people.

"The authorities do not descend on us from the moon. They are the choice of the nation. So the authorities reflect the state of the nation," he told Reuters a few hours after his release from the high-fenced penal colony.

News of one major change did reach him during his last year in the colony in a grimy industrial area outside the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, 4,000 miles east of Moscow - reports that people had taken to the streets to protest.

Demonstrations against Putin in Moscow and other big cities began a year ago, caused by anger over allegations of fraud in a parliamentary election won by the Kremlin leader's party, but they have largely lost momentum and the opposition is divided.

Reflecting on the possibility of free and fair elections, and the possibility of political upheaval, Danilov said: "The nation is not yet ready."

New crackdown?
Dressed formally in a red tie and grey jacket, Danilov was speaking in an apartment in the city where he was born and jailed, and which was once part of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's network of Gulag prison camps.

A researcher at Krasnoyarsk State University, he was first arrested in 2001. He admitted selling information about satellite technology to a Chinese company but he, other scientists and human rights activists said the information had already been available from public sources.

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An initial decision to acquit him was overturned, and he was sentenced to 14 years in prison in a second trial. A Krasnoyarsk court granted him parole earlier this month, citing good behavior and poor health.

Asked how he felt about finally stepping outside the prison walls, he said "there were no feelings," but added that he had no regrets and that he regarded himself as a political prisoner.

At the time of Danilov's trial, Putin's opponents said the president was clamping down on academics who had contacts with foreign countries. They say his release showed that the Kremlin no longer regarded the physicist as a threat.

Opposition members see similarities between what happened to Danilov and the pressure being put on them now in Moscow.

Citing legal cases such as the sentencing of members of the Pussy Riot punk band over an anti-Putin protest in a Russian Orthodox Church, they say the Kremlin is using the legal system to smother dissent.

Putin denies this but several opposition leaders face criminal charges and the parliament has adopted a slew of laws over the last half year which opponents say could be applied against them.

These include tightening checks on lobby and campaign groups that have foreign funding, forcing them to register as "foreign agents," and broadening the definition of treason.

"As for President Putin, I guess everybody would be the same as him in his place. The court makes the tsar," Danilov said, avoiding direct criticism of the president but condemning the circle around him.

"The problem is not one of law but of how the judging is done."

He read widely about Russia's legal system during his time in prison, and said the judiciary was still open to political manipulation.

No plans to enter politics
After nearly a decade behind bars, including in colonies populated by murderers, Danilov's brown eyes are still penetrating and his wits sharp. He deflects questions about his health but is not a broken man.

He does not want to look back, refusing to go into detail about his life in prison or his health.

"It's like serving in the army, only that a man in the army has fewer rights. By taking the military oath, a soldier gives up some of his rights. While in prison, the prisoner can at least call in a lawyer and make complaints about abuse of rights," he said.

Among people he admires, he listed several Putin critics - opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, former world chess champion Garry Kasparov and human rights campaigner Lyudmila Alexeyeva.

He praised the entry into politics of Mikhail Prokhorov, a rich tycoon who challenged Putin in the March presidential election while denying accusations of being a "Kremlin stooge."

Beyond retirement age, worn down by his years in prison, Danilov signals that starting a new fight with the state or taking on a role in opposition is the last thing on his mind.

He wants to return to work to try out ideas he developed while he had time on his hands in jail. He also says he is ready to play an advisory role on how to reform Russia's outdated penal system.

He aims to rebuild his strength and family ties with his daughter, granddaughter and wife of 41 years who lives in Novosibirsk, also in Siberia.

Danilov said he had no plans to flee Russia or deal with space research again. He plans to keep in touch with people he met behind bars, including a man sentenced for murder whom he helped to obtain higher education.

Putting a positive spin on his years in jail, he said: "They say that to get to know a country well, one must visit its cemeteries and prison. I used to visit cemeteries often and now I've been to prison too.

"So you can really believe me when I say I know perfectly fine now what Russia is," he said.

He paused for a moment and, smiling, switched to English to quote the title of a Shakespeare play: "All's well that ends well."

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Check for restrictions at: http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49956709/ns/world_news/

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