Monday, October 31, 2011

Eagles right back in NFC East mix

Super Bowl XLVGetty Images

It?s the midpoint of the season, sort of.? Eight weeks are in the books, but only eight teams have played eight games.? For the other 24, the season won?t hit the turn until next week.

And while we?re starting to get a feel for the good teams and the bad teams and the in-between teams, the any-given-Sunday vibe remains alive and well ? and the fortunes of teams can change quickly, for good or bad.

Until we crown a champion, we can dabble only in a series of snapshots as to where teams are right now.? Here are 10 of them, plenty of which may fade to black by the time January rolls around.

1.? Super Bowl rematch coming?

In August, as teams scrambled to slap together game-ready rosters without the benefit of an offseason program or traditional two-a-day workouts, it was believed that the teams who played deep into the 2010 season would have a real benefit.

And the two teams that played the deepest presumably had the biggest benefit.

From the start, the Packers showed that they?d be able to pick up right where they left off.? For the Steelers, they needed a month to find their groove, but they?ve found it in a huge way, with four straight wins punctuated by a table-turning, trend-reversing victory over Tom Brady and the Patriots, highlighted by defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau?s long-con rope-a-dope in which he convinced the Pats based on years of stubbornness that the defense wouldn?t change despite chronic struggles against offenses that spread things out and quarterbacks that could make decisions faster than the Steelers could get to the quarterbacks.

Now, nearly two months into the season, the Steelers and Packers appear to be on a collision course for a rematch, 18 years after the last time the two Super Bowl teams got back together for a second straight year.

Yes, everything is subject to change.? But when the dust settles on the 2011 season, there?s a chance that, at the very top, there will be no change at all.

2.? Eagles may have something to say about that.

After Sunday night?s thrashing of the Cowboys, there?s a new team that could disrupt Green Bay?s run to the Super Bowl.? And it?s the team that many were ready to hand the Lombardi without even playing the season.

The Eagles finally put it together on both sides of the ball in that 34-7 win over the Cowboys, and if the Eagles can keep it up they could beat the Packers in Green Bay in January.

Tony Dungy of Football Night in America pointed out after the game that the Eagles match up well with the Packers.? Indeed, the Eagles nearly knocked off the Packers in the wild-card round last year.

This year, the Eagles would be the underdog.? It?s a role they seem to relish much more than being dubbed a Dream Team.

3.? Ravens may have something to say about it, too.

Yes, they lost to the Jaguars a week ago.? Yes, they fell behind the Cardinals by three touchdowns on Sunday.? But the Ravens still have the pieces to put together a deep run into the playoffs, and they play up (and, unfortunately for them, down) to the level of the competition.

The Ravens match up well with the best teams in the conference, as long as they can get past the Steelers.? And they can go a long way toward getting past the Steelers if they can beat them next Sunday night in Pittsburgh.

Either way, the Steelers and Ravens seem destined to play again in January, for the third time in four years.? And the Ravens could be the only AFC team that could defeat the Steelers come the postseason, whether the game is played in Maryland or Pennsylvania.

4.? Tony Dungy said it the right way.

On Sunday, Bill Cowher said he doesn?t ?plan? to coach next year, and that he ?plans? to be in the same seat at CBS next year.? It?s a different twist on Jon Gruden?s approach to keeping his name out of circulation during a season.? Gruden signed an ?exclusive? contract with ESPN, and ESPN won?t say whether ?exclusive? means he can?t leave the network for a coaching job.

Neither man has said unequivocally that he won?t be coaching in 2012.? Tony Dungy showed them how to do it during Football Night in America, stating without doubt or ambiguity or wiggle words that he won?t be coaching next year.

So until Cowher and Gruden follow suit, they?ll be regarded as potential candidates for coaching jobs once January comes around.

5.? Chris Johnson is doing it the wrong way.

It?s hard to pinpoint the reasons for Titans running back Chris Johnson?s struggles.? Apart from the holdout and the new offense and the new offensive coordinator and the new quarterback, one thing is clear:? Johnson lacks the explosiveness that we used to see on a weekly basis.

It was obvious today when Johnson caught a pass and had some space with which to operate, after weeks of taking a handoff and being swallowed up by defenders before he could make it to daylight.? The old Chris Johnson would have rocketed to the endzone untouched.? The new Chris Johnson was swallowed up by defenders.

Something?s wrong with Johnson, and the question isn?t whether he?ll get it back this year.? The question is whether he?ll get it back ever.

6.? Time for a new position for Tebow.

I?ll admit it.? I was caught up in the Tebow story from last week.? Making the dramatic closing moments of the home-away-from-home game at Miami even more compelling was the fact that Tebow had been so terribly awful in the three-plus quarters before the offense woke up.

But Tebow managed to take down one of the worst teams in the league.? Sunday?s game at home against the Lions showed that Tebow simply isn?t ready to be an NFL quarterback.

It?s easy to say that he?s a work in progress.? But not every unfinished painting becomes a masterpiece.? Tebow, once fully developed, could be a .500 quarterback at best.

And that means it?s time for the Broncos to consider their alternatives.? The ultimate team player probably would move to a new position, especially if no other team wants to let him play quarterback.? But maybe it simply won?t work to take a guy who had been a quarterback and move him to a new spot on the same team.? Maybe the Broncos simply need to dump him after the season.

Either way, this experiment is well on its way to failing.? After a few more weeks ? and a few more damning columns in the hometown paper ? the Tebowmaniacs in Denver likely will agree.

7.? Temporary end of the bye-week blues.

Through Week Seven, teams emerging from byes were 3-9.? In Week Eight, the teams with byes last Sunday won five and lost only one.

It was believed that the five days off mandated by the labor agreement had been a factor in the 25-percent winning percentage.? But now, with the total success rate up to 40 percent, it?s hard to tell whether the time off actually hurts.

It definitely didn?t hurt the Eagles, especially since Andy Reid is now 13-0 after the regular-season bye.

Moving forward, count on the teams that lost to look at the things done by the teams that won in the hopes of finding a way to win after the bye week in 2012.

8.? Breaking a ?Suck for Luck? deadlock.

So with the Colts at 0-8 and the Dolphins at 0-7 and their paths not crossing in 2011, plenty of readers have asked for more information about the procedure that would apply if the two teams finish 0-16.

Several times in recent years, draft order has been determined by a coin flip.? So could the ability to draft Andrew Luck be determined by a rudimentary game of chance?

In this case, that most likely won?t happen, since the Colts and Dolphins are in the same conference.

First, the strength of schedule would compared.? That means the total wins and losses of the Colts? opponents would be compared to the total wins and losses of the Dolphins? opponents.? If the numbers are the same, the process would move on to the next step.

Second, the division or conference tie-breakers apply, if applicable.? In other words, the various steps that would be used to determine a wild-card berth would be employed to determine the ?better? (and thus the ?worse?) team.? This would ultimately bring into play the following specific and detailed factors that surely would produce a winner (i.e. loser):? best combined ranking among conference teams in points scored and points allowed; best combined ranking among all teams in points scored and points allowed; best net points in conference games; best net points in all games; best net touchdowns in all games.

If each of those steps results in a tie, the final step would be a coin flip.? But, surely, the two teams won?t tie on each of those specific factors.

Coin flips for draft picks happen when the two tied teams are in different conferences.? In those cases, the factors are strength of schedule and coin flip.

So in a Colts-vs.-Dolphins showdown for Luck, someone will ?win? the pick based on losing as to one of the various factors listed above.

9.? ?Skins could make a run for Luck.

Though they have three wins, the Redskins? performance over the past several weeks suggests they won?t have many more.? And that could cause the Redskins to plunge toward the Andrew Luck splash zone.

Even if the Redskins lose the rest of their games, they most likely won?t ?earn? the top pick.? Still, the closer they are to the top of the order, the less it will take to finish the climb via trade.

And if Luck decides he doesn?t want to play for the team that finishes in the first spot, and if he determines that he?d like to play for the Redskins, who knows?? Mike Shanahan could get the best quarterback since the one with whom Shanahan won a pair of Super Bowls in Denver.

10.? League needs to expand reviewable plays.

As the NFL gradually expands its use of instant replay, the league needs to be willing to consider whether further changes are needed.? The most recent tweak to the system seems to cry out for a more radical overhaul.

Late in the Patriots-Steelers game, with New England trailing by six, quarterback Tom Brady was hit, forcing a fumble.? During the scramble for the ball, safety Troy Polamalu dove for it, deftly slapping the thing hard across the goal line.? The ball ultimately rolled out of the back of the end zone for a safety.? In real time and at full speed, it was hard to see that Polamalu whacked the ball toward the two-pointer.? The replays revealed that Polamalu had indeed pushed the ball into the end zone.

But when referee Mike Carey reviewed the play, since it involved a score, Carey had no power to overturn the non-call on the field as it related to Polamalu?s punching of the ball, because that specific action is not on the pre-set list of reviewable plays.

Though the play would have been subject to a booth-initiated review even if it had happened before the 2011 season, given that it happened in the final two minutes of the game, the league?s expanded commitment to getting it right compels the league to ditch the list of specifically reviewable actions and to make everything reviewable, with specific exceptions carved out.

If the overriding goal is indeed to get it right, the league should exempt from review only those judgment calls made based on a three-dimensional observation of the action that can?t and shouldn?t be second-guessed by a two-dimensional representation of it.? Other than pass interference and the question of whether a receiver was in the vicinity of a pass being assessed for intentional grounding, there are few (and possibly no) pure judgment calls.? Thus, once the referee goes under the hood to review a play, he should be able to change the outcome based on anything he sees that should have been seen in real time.

The concern about prolonging the game shouldn?t matter.? If, on scoring plays and all plays occurring with fewer than two minutes in each half, the referee watches the entire play for anything that could be overturned, the delay already has been injected into the process.? The only remaining question is whether the referee will be permitted to fix any error that he sees.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/31/eagles-right-back-in-nfc-east-mix/related/

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Israel, militants continue attacks for second day

Medics treat a wounded Palestinian militant at Al Najar hospital following an Israeli air strike in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants in Gaza on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. (AP Photo/Eyad Baba)

Medics treat a wounded Palestinian militant at Al Najar hospital following an Israeli air strike in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants in Gaza on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. (AP Photo/Eyad Baba)

An Israeli inspects damage to a school caused by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip in Ashdod, southern Israel, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. (AP Photo / Tsafrir Abayov)

An Israeli woman is evacuated after she was injured in rocket attack in Ashdod, southern Israel, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. (AP Photo / Tsafrir Abayov)

A woman uses her phone to take a photograph at a site where a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip hit Ashdod, southern Israel, Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. Palestinian sources said that seven militants were killed while the Israelis reported several civilians injured. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

An Ultra orthodox man uses a phone to take photographs at a site were a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip hit Ashdod, southern Israel,Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. Israeli aircraft struck at Palestinian militants on Saturday who responded with a volley of rockets which rained on southern Israeli towns, Israeli and Palestinian officials said. Palestinian sources said that seven militants were killed while the Israelis reported several civilians injured. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

(AP) ? Israel and Gaza-based Palestinian militants launched retaliatory attacks on each other on Sunday and Egypt said that it had launched a failed bid to reach a ceasefire, following a day of deadly, escalated violence.

Nine militants and an Israeli civilian were killed on Saturday in a round of violence set off by a rocket attack earlier in the week. The exchange of fire continued overnight, with Palestinians firing 10 rockets fired into Israel in the early hours of the morning, and Israeli aircraft targeting six militant sites in Gaza, the military said.

Targets included three rocket-launching sites and a tunnel used by gunmen, an Israeli military statement said. Explosions were observed in several sites, it said, suggesting weapons sites were hit.

No casualties were reported by either side, but both sides braced for further attacks.

As a precautionary measure, Israeli officials closed schools in southern communities within 25 miles (40 kilometers) of Gaza, as well as Ben-Gurion University in Beersheba and several colleges, which were to have begun their academic year on Sunday, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said. Police brought in reinforcements from other areas of the country.

More than 1 million Israelis live within the range of rockets possessed by Gaza militants.

In Gaza, militants who had been emboldened to remove their masks and emerge from their hideouts following a high-profile prisoner swap with Israel earlier in the month disappeared from the streets again. And Hamas scaled back its police deployment, apparently afraid that police positions would be targeted by Israeli aircraft.

Egyptian officials meanwhile said that they had tried to arrange a cease-fire that would have gone into effect at 3. a.m. (0100 GMT), but did not win agreement from factions responsible for the attacks.

Egypt has long been involved in mediating between Israel and Gaza militants, who do not speak directly to each other.

Militants from Gaza's ruling Hamas movement are not believed to be involved in the attacks, which were claimed by smaller factions. But Israel holds Hamas ultimately responsible for all violence against it emanating from the territory.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned that Israel would step up its retaliatory attacks if necessary, but in the meantime, defense officials said, Israel is holding back in an effort to keep the violence from escalating further.

The defense officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss military operations.

___

Amy Teibel in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-30-ML-Israel-Palestinians/id-cdf598c5cff3420095c5594f470d590e

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9 astounding Halloween costumes (Yahoo! News)

It takes a little geek plus a little cute to make a memorable costume

When you consider pumpkin carving and Halloween light shows, it becomes clear that Halloween is the most creative celebration of the year. The costumes, though, are what really knock Halloween creativity out of the park. Everyone gets to decide what they want to be for Halloween, and you can go as far with your costume as you'd like.

Consumers get bombarded with ads pushing professional and retail costumes every year. The true Halloween aficionado knows, however, that it's the homemade stuff that makes a costume special. In the spirit of the holiday, check out these nine amazing homemade costumes that will inspire your trick or treat weekend.

These vintage video game costumes are a home run

Pac-Man
This Pac-Man costume is more than just a static creation. Slip inside this big, yellow binge eater and move the mouth open and closed. Check out this amazing video to get a better idea of this dynamic costume in action. Pac-Man is a feat of both engineering and creativity. (Image credit:?Matthew Varas)

A costume only a nerd could love

TI-83+ calculator
This creative costumer reached deep into his memories of school, science, and mathematics to design a TI-83 calculator costume. The TI-83 is a time-honored gadget that helps students plot graphs, handle advanced formulae, and achieve ever-higher scholastic feats.

People who saw the costume for the first time often mistook it for a smartphone. The creator says folks would push the buttons and ask what kind of reception the costume could get. In reality, though, the only connection a TI-83 has with a smartphone is that you could use it to calculate your early termination fees.

Krang the Conqueror
Krang is a villain from the early Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon. The unique thing about Krang's design is that he's a brain-like creature with hands. He rode around inside a human-sized robot suit. Halloween costumer?Melissa Dunphy has recreated the effect with hilarious success. Watch while her husband shuffles around in the?robot costume,?Krang shouting threats the whole time from inside the belly. Krang's arms even move to heighten the effect.

The most adorable Ewok ever

Ewok
There's almost nothing as adorable as a small child encased within an Ewok costume. Not only is the outfit too cute to stand, the warm layers and thick fur go a long way toward keeping warm in the chilly October weather. And who doesn't want to see a child dressed up as such an endearing character? Add accessories like a leather bag and a walking stick, and that Ewok costume steps up to legendary status.

This costume is even better because the trick-or-treater clearly knows how to work it like an Ewok. That stride looks like he's ready to walk onto the set of Return of the Jedi. Find a way to get some lightsaber-wielding kittens in there, and this will be the last costume you ever need. (Image credit:?razorsheldon)

An enlightened youngster

Baby Lama
This baby's parents were aiming for a costume that takes advantage of a child's bald head. Using clothes from the doll section at a local craft store, baby Grace is transformed into the Dalai Lama.

Grace's content, calm expression serves to enhance the ensemble. The child-sized glasses are especially adorable. Last year, Grace dressed up as Uncle Fester from The Addams Family. It makes sense to get all the bald characters out of the way early in life, because that smooth head won't last much longer. (Image credit:?tbudd)

A despicable crew

Disney collection
Normally, you have to be very young to wear a costume in Disney. Adults aren't allowed to play dress-up in those magical kingdoms, a right reserved for the people who get paid to portray the characters inside the parks.

For special occasions like Halloween, though, Mickey loosens those rules. Check out this carful of costumed park-goers enjoying a ride as Honorary Costume Party Guests. With so many of the minions from Despicable Me all piled in one vehicle, you know despicable evil is going down somewhere. (Image credit:?Elizabeth Harper)

Who didn't want to be a fireman as a kid?

Firefighter in his own truck
Firefighters are awesome. Almost every little boy out there has a righteous and thorough interest in fire trucks, firefighters, and the heroic task of saving lives. The people who do that job deserve the adulation, and thousands of kids deliver it in the form of fun costumes every Halloween.

This fire truck costume is a fantastic way of accomplishing the task. The trick-or-treater gets the both of both worlds ??he gets to be both the fire engine and the firefighter. (Image credit:?Brett Holt)

Fully functional camera
This costume (top) is amazing in more than one way. Not only is it a creative costume, helping Tyler dress up as a favorite camera, but the costume is actually capable of taking photographs. It has its own shutter release button and built-in screen. Tyler even rigged the costume so that it can control his strobe lights. (Image credit:?Tyler Card)

Creepy? Yes. Awesome? Yes.

Frankenstein's monster
The final costume in our montage is a classic: Frankenstein's monster. The creature was spotted roaming the streets of Minneapolis, where we can hope no mobs armed themselves with torches and pitchforks to chase him around. There's something to be said for the classics, and you don't get any more classic than this monster masher. (Image credit:?Elkman)

Unleash your inner creative ghoul
No matter what costume you choose for Halloween, make sure you let your inner creativity out and do something spectacular. Whether you're building a high-tech costume like Tyler Card's working camera or a fun, peaceful outfit like Grace's Dalai Lama, you're only limited by your imagination. Go out and trick or treat in style!

This article was written by Michael Gray and originally appeared on Tecca

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111028/tc_yblog_technews/9-astounding-halloween-costumes

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Reggie: Martin made racial, anti-Semitic remarks

FILE - In this July 24, 1977, b&w file photo, New York Yankees manager Billy Martin, right, and Yankees slugger Reggie Jacksonlook on during warmups before a baseball game with the Kansas City Royals in New York, July 24, 1977. The late Martin managed the New York Yankees in the late 1970s, a fiery time that included a pair of World Series championships. Jackson spoke about Martin in an interview with the MLB Network that is to be shown Monday night, Oct. 31, 2011. (AP Photo, File)

FILE - In this July 24, 1977, b&w file photo, New York Yankees manager Billy Martin, right, and Yankees slugger Reggie Jacksonlook on during warmups before a baseball game with the Kansas City Royals in New York, July 24, 1977. The late Martin managed the New York Yankees in the late 1970s, a fiery time that included a pair of World Series championships. Jackson spoke about Martin in an interview with the MLB Network that is to be shown Monday night, Oct. 31, 2011. (AP Photo, File)

Reggie Jackson heard Billy Martin use racial and anti-Semitic remarks then, and felt it was time to talk about them now.

"You need to set the record straight," the Hall of Fame slugger told The Associated Press on Friday. "They're the truth."

The late Martin managed the New York Yankees in the late 1970s, a fiery time that included a pair of World Series championships. Jackson spoke about Martin in an interview with the MLB Network that will be shown Monday night.

"I did not accept the way he managed me. I did not accept the way he managed Ken Holtzman. I thought there was anti-Semitism there," Jackson said in the MLB Network interview.

"I couldn't accept the racial epithets in reference to players like Elliott Maddox or Billy Sample," he said. "There are players that played for him that would tell you that."

Jackson told the AP that "sometimes it's uncomfortable, but it's real and you can't ignore it."

"There's a certain time that when somebody asks you a question, you answer them," the 65-year-old Jackson said. "I don't think I said anything with venom. If you can express yourself without anger and make it as palatable as you can, that's what you do."

Jackson was asked how often Martin used such language.

"Sometimes," he said. "It wasn't all the time."

Jackson hit three home runs in the clinching Game 6 of the 1977 World Series, earning the nickname "Mr. October." He starred again in the Series the next year as the Yankees won another title.

The relationship between Jackson and Martin was tumultuous, played out against a backdrop of what became known as "The Bronx Zoo."

"He was a guy I never got to know really well. Obviously, we didn't see eye to eye," Jackson said.

Martin died in a car crash on Christmas Day in 1989.

Jackson hit 563 home runs in a career from 1967 through 1987, and was the MVP of the World Series in 1973 and 1977. He says he was aware some players were using performance-enhancing drugs at the time.

"When (Jose) Canseco came in, he talked about steroid use fairly openly and when I was playing with Mark McGwire, he was not suspect, didn't have the size and he was not a steroid user," Jackson told the MLB Network. "McGwire, (Barry) Bonds, (Roger) Clemens ? these guys were great players without PEDs. Would Canseco have his 460 or 470 home runs without? Probably not. McGwire hits 480 or 500. Bonds hits 600. Clemens wins 320."

"The sad part of that, too, is when you see the great players like Prince Fielder and great players like (Albert) Pujols, it makes you unfairly question," Jackson said.

He said he ran across someone Friday who was aware Jackson had referenced current players in his remarks.

"He said to me, 'Why did you have to mention those guys?'" Jackson said. "I told him that's what those guys who used steroids did to the game. They raised suspicions all over baseball."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-10-28-BBA-Reggie-Martin's-Epithets/id-c0a41565222d4f238b5b09714f9d96a1

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Whirlpool to cut 5,000 jobs to reduce costs

A Whirlpool logo is seen on a Whirlpool refrigerator on the Singers showroom floor Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011 in Philadelphia. Whirlpool Corp. says it will cut 5,000 jobs in an effort as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials. The jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

A Whirlpool logo is seen on a Whirlpool refrigerator on the Singers showroom floor Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011 in Philadelphia. Whirlpool Corp. says it will cut 5,000 jobs in an effort as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials. The jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

A Whirlpool logo is seen on a Whirlpool appliance on the Singers showroom floor Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011 in Philadelphia. Appliance maker Whirlpool Corp. says it will cut 5,000 jobs in an effort as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials. The jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

A Whirlpool logo is seen on a Whirlpool appliance on the Singers showroom floor Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011 in Philadelphia. Appliance maker Whirlpool Corp. says it will cut 5,000 jobs in an effort as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials. The jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Appliance maker Whirlpool Corp. plans to cut 5,000 jobs, about 10 percent of its workforce in North America and Europe, as it faces soft demand and higher costs for materials.

The world's biggest appliance maker also on Friday cut its 2011 earnings outlook drastically and reported third-quarter results that missed expectations, hurt by higher costs and a slowdown in emerging markets. Shares fell 12 percent in premarket trading.

The company, whose brands include Maytag and KitchenAid, has been squeezed by soft demand since the recession and rising costs for materials such as steel and copper. Due to its size, Whirlpool's performance provides a window on the economy because it indicates whether consumers are comfortable spending on big-ticket items.

Whirlpool has raised prices to combat higher costs, but demand for items like refrigerators and washing machines remains tight. Whirlpool is also facing discount pressure from competitors.

To offset slowing North American sales, Whirlpool has turned to emerging markets. But the company said Friday that sales have slowed there, too.

Steep costs and the dour global economy are affecting the entire appliance industry. Swedish appliance maker Electrolux said Wednesday that its third-quarter net income fell 39 percent and cut its forecast for demand in North American and Europe for the year

Whirlpool jobs to be cut are mostly in North America and Europe. They include 1,200 salaried positions and the closing of the company's Fort Smith, Ark., plant.

The Fort Smith plant shutdown will affect 884 hourly workers and 90 salaried employees. An additional 800 workers were on layoff from the factory and on a recall list.

Whirlpool will also relocate dishwasher production from Neunkirchen, Germany, to Poland in January 2012.

The company expects the moves will save $400 million by the end of 2013.

Benton Harbor, Mich.-based Whirlpool's third-quarter net income more than doubled to $177 million, or $2.27 per share, from $79 million, or $1.02 per share. Adjusted earnings of $2.35 per share fell short of analyst expectations for $2.73 per share.

Revenue rose 2 percent to $4.63 billion, short of expectations for $4.74 billion.

"Our results were negatively impacted by recessionary demand levels in developed countries, a slowdown in emerging markets and high levels of inflation in material costs," CEO Jeff Fettig said.

Unit shipments fell in all regions except Asia, where they rose 4 percent.

In North America, revenue fell 2 percent to $2.4 billion, and in Latin America, revenue rose 8 percent to $1.2 billion.

The company now expects 2011 net income will be $4.75 to $5.25 per share. Its prior guidance was net income would be at the low end of a range between $7.25 and $8.25 per share.

Whirlpool's stock fell $7.10, or 11.7 percent, to $53.37 in premarket trading. The stock has already sunk 32 percent this year.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-28-Earns-Whirlpool/id-9465a818d78143248ce4b3754479acf2

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Oakland mayor sorry for clash that injured ex-Marine (Reuters)

OAKLAND, Calif (Reuters) ? Oakland mayor Jean Quan apologized for a clash between police and protesters during a march against economic inequality that left an ex-Marine wounded, and said she would meet with demonstrators.

Quan, who has come under withering criticism for her handling of the protests, said in a written statement that she had met with ex-Marine Scott Olsen and his parents and was concerned about his recovery.

Olsen, 24, was struck in the head during protests in Oakland on Tuesday night and has become a rallying cry for the so-called "Occupy Wall Street" protests nationwide.

A spokesman for Highland General Hospital in Oakland said Olsen remained in fair condition on Friday, having been upgraded from critical one day earlier, and was visiting with his parents.

"I am deeply saddened about the outcome on Tuesday," Quan said in the statement. "It was not what anyone hoped for, ultimately it was my responsibility, and I apologize for what happened."

"When there's violence there are no winners," she said. "It polarizes us and opens old wounds rather than brings us together, which is the aim of Occupy Wall Street and uniting the 99 percent."

The Occupy Wall Street protests, which began in New York City last month, take issue with a financial system they say most benefits corporations and the wealthy. They are critical of U.S. government bailouts of big banks, high unemployment and economic inequality.

The 99 percent refers to their rallying cry that the richest one percent of Americans control too much of the wealth.

Quan said she and acting Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan would meet with representatives of the city's protesters but asked the group not to camp overnight in Frank Ogawa Plaza near city hall.

Police dismantled the encampment in the plaza early on Tuesday morning and protesters were marching to re-take it that evening when Olsen was injured.

Protest organizers say the ex-Marine was hit by a tear gas canister fired by police. City and police officials have not said how they believe Olsen was hurt but Jordan has opened an investigation into the incident.

Occupy Oakland organizers have called for a general strike over what they called the "brutal and vicious" treatment of protesters there, including Olsen.

At the downtown plaza where he was hurt, several hundred supporters turned out Thursday night for a candlelight vigil in which fellow activists from a group called Iraq War Veterans for Peace addressed the crowd.

One drew loud cheers when he said the police chief or mayor should resign.

(Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/us_nm/us_usa_wallstreet_protests_oakland

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Keen On ? The Greatest Entrepreneurs Are Born To Deal With Failure (TCTV)

Ooyala Backlot Web-5Few people know failure better than venture capitalists. Even the most successful fail much more than they succeed and the best are those, like?Vinod Khosla, who acknowledge that their successes are much rarer than their failures. Another venture capitalist well acquainted with failure is?Peter Gardner, Managing Director of?Wavepoint Ventures, a Menlo Park shop that primarily invests in software, medical technology and clean tech start-ups. I caught up with Peter earlier this week at the engaging?FailCon?conference where he spoke on the Failure of Business Models?panel. ?We?ve had our fair share of failures,? Gardner confessed to me, stressing that one of the greatest assets of Silicon Valley was its tolerance of failure. Sharing Ron Conway?s view on?failure, Gardner explained that rather than being born to succeed, great entrepreneurs are born to be able to deal with failure.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/j6bulu6efk4/

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Expert says Jackson likely addicted to pain med (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? An addiction expert testifying for the doctor charged in Michael Jackson's death told jurors Thursday he believes medical records showed the singer developed an addiction to a powerful pain medicine in the months before his death.

Dr. Robert Waldman told jurors that Jackson was receiving "above-average doses" of the painkiller Demerol in the months before his death.

"I believe there is evidence that he was dependent on Demerol, possibly," Waldman said. The witness said he also thinks Jackson had an addiction to opioids by May 2009, the month before his death.

Waldman said a symptom of Demerol withdrawal is insomnia. Jackson complained that he couldn't sleep as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts.

Attorneys for Dr. Conrad Murray have suggested Jackson was undergoing withdrawal from Demerol before his death. None of the drug was found in the singer's system when he died.

Defense attorneys contend Jackson gave himself a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol, which they say he was taking as a sleep aid.

Authorities found propofol throughout Jackson's body during an autopsy, and they contend Murray gave the singer a fatal dose of the drug while using it to help him sleep.

Jackson received the Demerol shots from his longtime dermatologist, Dr. Arnold Klein, who has not been accused of wrongdoing and will not be called as a witness during the trial.

Waldman said he had not treated a case of Demerol addiction in recent memory.

Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's June 2009 death.

The Houston-based cardiologist's attorneys plan to call a propofol expert later Thursday.

Murray's attorneys have yet to show evidence of how their self-administration theory would have been possible. Several prosecution experts have said the self-administration defense was improbable, and a key expert said he ruled it out completely, arguing the more likely scenario was that Murray gave Jackson a much higher dose than he has acknowledged.

The scientific testimony of Waldman and Dr. Paul White comes a day after jurors heard from five of Murray's one-time patients, who described the cardiologist as a caring physician who performed procedures for free and spent hours getting to know them. When Ruby Mosley described Murray's work at a clinic he founded in a poor neighborhood in Houston in memory of his father, tears welled up in the eyes of the normally stoic doctor-turned-defendant.

White and Waldman do not necessarily have to convince jurors that Jackson gave himself the fatal dose, but merely provide them with enough reasonable doubt about the prosecution's case against Murray.

Prosecutors have portrayed Murray, 58, as a reckless physician who repeatedly broke the rules by giving Jackson propofol as a sleep aid. But jurors heard a different description of the doctor Wednesday.

Several of the character witnesses called described Murray as the best doctor they had ever seen and highlighted his skills at repairing their hearts with stents and other procedures.

"I'm alive today because of that man," said Andrew Guest of Las Vegas, who looked at Murray. "That man sitting there is the best doctor I've ever seen."

Another former patient, Gerry Causey, stopped to shake Murray's hand in the courtroom and said the physician was his best friend.

A prosecutor noted none of them were treated for sleep issues, although Causey and others said they didn't believe the allegations against Murray.

Defense attorneys have told Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor they expect their case to conclude Thursday. Pastor has said if that happens, closing arguments would occur next week.

___

AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch contributed to this report.

___

McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_en_mu/us_michael_jackson_doctor

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Minnesota ad guru calls Cain ad 'dopey' (Star Tribune)

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Virginia ex-teacher sentenced to 30 years for child porn (Reuters)

ALEXANDRIA, Va (Reuters) ? A former Virginia elementary school teacher was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison on Friday for creating two pornographic videos with underage girls.

Justin Coleman, 36, made the videos showing him sexually abusing two underage girls as part of a secret life that included clandestinely filming students and electronically transferring the faces of former students onto child pornography, federal law enforcement officials said.

He was sentenced to 30 years on each of two counts of producing child pornography. The sentences will run concurrently.

"Mr. Coleman, you are a bad seed. You are a danger and a predator," U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee said in sentencing him.

Coleman, a former fourth-grade dual language teacher at Alexandria's John Adams Elementary school, was arrested in April. He pleaded guilty in August.

His voice trembling slightly, Coleman told Lee he was dedicated to repairing the damage he had caused and had been living in a "veritable sea of shame and guilt" for a year.

"I am here because I betrayed the trust of many," said Coleman, dressed in dark green jail overalls. He listened to sentencing arguments with head bowed.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jerry Smagala said Coleman had engaged in child pornography while he taught at a U.S. military school in Japan. He also had filmed underage girls at a school during a trip to Italy, Smagala said.

Coleman's argument that he had been under stress from a breakup with his girlfriend and the death of a sister did not excuse him, Smagala said.

Federal officials have said Coleman possessed more than 2,500 images of child pornography that he had altered to depict former, minor female students to appear to be engaging in sexually explicit conduct.

Coleman's collection included at least 74 videos he had recorded at classrooms that showed him masturbating behind an unaware student and attempting to obtain erotic videos of female students.

Coleman was among 900 people in the United States identified by Italian authorities as part of an overseas child pornography investigation.

Under federal guidelines, he could be eligible for release after 85 percent of his sentence is completed.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/us_nm/us_virginia_pornography

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Friday, October 28, 2011

The All Ikea, Cubes-Everywhere Workspace [Featured Workspace]

The All Ikea, Cubes-Everywhere WorkspaceMany home offices lack enough storage space, but that's not a problem with today's featured workspace; in fact, the Ikea Expedit shelving units are one of the highlights, adding cubes everywhere for visual interest as well as storage.

The large Ikea Galant desk offers lots of room too to spread out. Keeping all the furniture white in a room with a gray and red color scheme also adds to the space's tranquil feel. (I'm not sure what the Playstation 3 and Wii stenciling on the wall is all about, though; the equipment list on Flickr includes an Xbox 360 Slim, so there's little doubt Flickr user chargerfun is a gamer).

If you have a workspace of your own to show off, throw the pictures on your Flickr account and add it to the Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell Pool. Include some details about your setup and why it works for you, and you just might see it featured on the front page of Lifehacker.

Desk Setup | July 2011 | All IKEA | Flickr


You can follow or contact Melanie Pinola, the author of this post, on Twitter or Google+.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/6Mafm9TAigI/the-all-ikea-cubes+everywhere-workspace

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Official convicted in West Virginia mine disaster (AP)

BECKLEY, W.Va. ? The probe of the worst U.S. coal-mining disaster in decades has produced its first conviction ? a former mine security chief found guilty of lying to investigators. After the jury returned its verdict, prosecutors said nothing is off the table when it comes to the possibility of charges for others.

It took jurors about six hours to find Hughie Elbert Stover guilty Wednesday on the lying charge and a second count of seeking to destroy thousands of security-related documents following the explosion that killed 29 men in 2010. So far, he's the only person who's been charged, but state and federal investigations continue.

U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin said prosecutors haven't ruled out the possibility of charges for others.

"There were serious matters that existed in this mine that didn't just happen overnight or without the involvement of individuals," he said.

The jury had begun deliberating Wednesday morning after hearing two days of testimony, in which prosecutors painted Stover as an obstructionist and defense attorneys claimed he was a scapegoat.

He remains free pending a Feb. 29 sentencing hearing. Stover faces an estimated two years in prison on the record-disposal count alone. Goodwin said prosecutors will seek as stiff penalty as possible to deter such conduct.

Stover's attorney, William Wilmoth, said it was too early to discuss any future motions or appeals.

"While we're disappointed at this result, we're very appreciative of their services," he said of the eight women and four men on the jury.

The defense had portrayed the former law enforcement officer, a veteran of both the Navy and Marines, as a by-the-book employee who became a victim of the government's zeal to blame someone for the deadly explosion.

"You wanted justice, and this is who they brought you," Wilmoth said during his closing argument.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Blaire Malkin had earlier reminded jurors of testimony from others at the Raleigh County underground mine. These witnesses alleged that Stover instructed mine guards to send out alerts by radio whenever inspectors entered the property. Such a practice is illegal. One of the criminal charges alleges Stover denied in a November 2010 interview with investigators that there were any advance warnings at the mine.

The other count alleges that Stover sought to destroy the documents the following January, by ordering a subordinate to bag and then throw them into an on-site trash compactor. Assistant U.S. Attorney Larry Ellis suggested to jurors Wednesday that those records would prove that Stover had lied about inspection tip-offs. The attempted disposal also violated repeated warning from the mine's then-owner, Massey Energy, to keep all records while the disaster remained under investigation. Massey officials told investigators of the trashed documents, which were recovered.

Wilmoth attributed Stover's November statements to confusion over evolving policies at the mine, run by Massey subsidiary Performance Coal Co. As for the document disposal, Stover had called that the "stupidest, worst mistake" of his life when he testified Tuesday in his defense.

Questioning criminal intent, Wilmoth said Stover could have burned, shredded or otherwise destroyed the records himself, instead of delegating the task of throwing them out to a subordinate during daylight hours and in front of a security camera. Prosecutors said the documents were dumped around 6 a.m., and after being placed in trash bags. Hauling them out in their cardboard storage boxes would have drawn notice, as would Stover performing the deed himself, prosecutors argued.

In urging jurors to acquit, Wilmoth argued that Stover's actions amounted to innocent mistakes, citing how several witnesses had described him as by-the-book and honest. Rather than targeting mine executives or engineers who may be at fault for the deadly blast, prosecutors have seized on Stover in a game of "government gotcha," Wilmoth told the jury.

"We're no closer to finding the real villain or villains behind this explosion," said Wilmoth, a former U.S. attorney. "Instead, this is what they brought you."

Three investigative reports issued so far on the disaster have each concluded that poorly maintained machines cutting into sandstone created a spark that ignited both a small amount of naturally occurring methane gas and a massive accumulation of explosive coal dust. Malfunctioning water sprayers allowed what could have been a small flare-up to become an epic blast that traveled seven miles of underground corridors, doubling back on itself and killing men instantly.

One of those reports was issued Tuesday by the United Mine Workers union, which criticized government regulators while slamming Massey. Labeling the disaster as "industrial homicide," the findings urge criminal charges against a number of then-executives at Massey. Alpha Natural Resources of Abingdon, Va., acquired the Richmond-based Massey in June through a $7.1 billion takeover deal.

___

Follow Lawrence Messina at http://twitter.com/lmessina

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_us/us_mine_explosion_trial

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White House hopes Obama's latest slogan catches on (Los Angeles Times)

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American-Israeli swapped for 25 prisoners

A U.S.-Israeli citizen arrested in Egypt as a suspected spy flew to freedom in Israel and into his mother's arms on Thursday after more than four months in jail, after a prisoner swap deal that has eased friction between the two countries.

Egypt traded the U.S.-born Ilan Grapel, 27, for 25 Egyptians, most of them smugglers, held in Israeli jails.

A smiling Grapel looked fit after his one-hour flight from Cairo landed at Ben-Gurion International Airport outside Tel Aviv. On the tarmac, his tearful mother, Irene, who had traveled to Israel from her home in Queens, N.Y., clasped him in her arms.

TV footage did not capture his comments, but the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, was heard telling him, "I'm very happy to see you here."

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Grapel was scheduled to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem.

The Egyptian prisoners passed through a land crossing from Israel as Grapel prepared to take off for Israel. TV broadcasts showed some of the Egyptian men kneeling to kiss the asphalt after crossing through a blue metal gate at the border crossing.

Story: Hamas frees Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in prisoner swap

Israel denied the espionage allegations against Grapel, as did his family and friends, and his release helped to ease fears that relations would sour after Egypt's longtime president, Hosni Mubarak, was ousted in February. He was not charged.

Hours before the release, his father told The Associated Press that his son had been held in isolation in an unknown location and that when they last spoke two weeks ago, he seemed to be in "OK" condition and "getting fed."

"I am happy that this thing will be done and over with and that he will be able to resume his normal life away from Egypt," Daniel Grapel said in a telephone interview from his home in Queens, N.Y.

He said his son and wife would remain in Israel for at least two days to meet with Israeli and American officials before returning to the U.S.

U.S. main player
Initially, the U.S. Embassy in Cairo had taken the lead in Grapel's case because he had entered Egypt with his U.S. passport. A former Israeli ambassador to Egypt, Eli Shaked, told Israel Radio that the U.S. was a main player in clinching the swap deal.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the U.S. "worked hard to bring (Grapel) home." She added, "The Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty is a vital element of regional peace and stability, and we strongly support both countries' sustained commitment to its provisions."

Grapel was volunteering at a legal aid group in Cairo that resettles refugees when he was arrested and accused of spying for Israel during the grass roots revolt that overthrew Mubarak.

He made no secret of his Israeli background, entered Egypt under his real name and his Facebook page had photos of him in an Israeli military uniform. Such openness about his identity suggested he was not a spy, and even in Egypt, where hostility toward Israel runs high, the arrest was widely ridiculed.

Grapel moved to Israel, where his grandparents live, as a young man. He did his compulsory military service in Israel during its 2006 war with Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas and was wounded in the fighting. He later returned to the U.S. to study, and after his legal internship in Cairo, had planned to return to Emory University in Atlanta for his final year of law school.

Some Israelis have criticized their government for making a deal to free a citizen arrested in a friendly nation on what they think were trumped-up allegations.

Israel Hasson, an Israeli lawmaker dispatched to Israel to escort Grapel from Egypt, said the Israeli government was willing to free prisoners to defuse the situation. "This event could have developed into a crisis and we don't think either country needs that," Hasson told Israel Radio.

Story: Saudi cleric offers cash for Israel soldier kidnap

Since Mubarak was toppled, Egypt's military rulers have often warned against what they call "foreign" attempts to destabilize the country. And like other Arab states, Egypt has a long history of blaming internal problems on Israel.

Israel and Egypt signed their peace treaty ? the first between an Arab state and the Jewish one ? in 1979. Relations have been cool since, but Mubarak carefully upheld the pact.

While the military leaders who now rule Egypt have vowed to follow suit, they have unnerved Israel with overtures to Israel's enemy, the Hamas militant group that rules Gaza, a tiny patch of Palestinian territory that borders both countries.

Those improved ties appear to have helped Egypt finally broker a long-elusive prisoner swap between Israel and Hamas last week, in which Israel traded hundreds of Palestinian prisoners for Israeli soldier Gilad Schalit, who had been held by Hamas in Gaza for more than five years.

AP correspondent Tia Goldenberg contributed to this report from Jerusalem.

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45060714/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Obesity limits effectiveness of flu vaccines, study finds

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2011) ? People carrying extra pounds may need extra protection from influenza.

New research from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that obesity may make annual flu shots less effective.

The findings, published online Oct. 25, 2011, in in the International Journal of Obesity, provide evidence explaining a phenomenon that was noticed for the first time during the 2009 H1N1 flu outbreak: that obesity is associated with an impaired immune response to the influenza vaccination in humans.

"These results suggest that overweight and obese people would be more likely than healthy weight people to experience flu illness following exposure to the flu virus," said Melinda Beck, Ph.D., professor and associate chair of nutrition at the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health and senior author of the study.

"Previous studies have indicated the possibility that obesity might impair the human body's ability to fight flu viruses. These new findings seem to give us a reason why obese people were more susceptible to influenza illness during the H1N1 pandemic compared to healthy weight people."

The study reports for the first time that influenza vaccine antibody levels decline significantly in obese people compared to healthy weight individuals. What's more, responses of CD8+ T cells (a type of white blood cell that plays a key role in the body's immune system) are defective in heavier people.

Researchers studied people at a UNC clinic who had been vaccinated in late 2009 with inactivated trivalent influenza vaccine, the common flu vaccine for that fall and winter season. Although obese, overweight and healthy weight individuals all developed antibodies to flu viruses within the first month after vaccination, the antibody levels in the blood declined more rapidly in obese and overweight individuals over time.

About 50 percent of obese participants had a four-fold decrease in antibody levels at 12 months compared to one month post vaccination. However, less than 25 percent of healthy weight participants had a four-fold decrease in antibody levels.

Also, when study participants' blood samples were tested in the lab and exposed to a flu virus 12 months after vaccination, about 75 percent of healthy weight people's CD8+ T cells still expressed interferon-?, an infection-fighting protein. However, only about 25 percent of obese patients' cells responded by producing the protein.

When vaccination fails to prevent flu infection, people must rely in part on their CD8+ T cells to limit the spread and severity of infection, said Patricia Sheridan, Ph.D., research assistant professor of nutrition and an author on the paper.

"If antibody titers are not maintained over time in the obese individuals and memory CD+ T cell function is impaired, they may be greater risk of becoming ill from influenza," Sheridan said.

Heather Paich, a doctoral student in Beck's lab, added: "The findings also suggest overweight and obese people are more likely to become sicker and have more complications. That's because influenza-specific CD8+ T cells do not protect against infection, but instead act to limit the disease's progression and severity of disease."

In 2005, Beck and her colleagues reported that obesity in mice impaired the animals' ability to fight influenza infections and increased the percent dying from influenza, compared to lean mice with the same infections. In 2010, her team showed that obesity seemed to limit the mice's ability to develop immunity to influenza, suggesting vaccines may not be as effective in obese and overweight as in healthy weight humans. Also, the fatality rate was higher in obese mice -- none of the lean mice died, but 25 percent of the obese mice died.

"This latest study shows that obese people may have a similar impaired response to influenza vaccines as our mouse models did to influenza virus," Beck said. "We need to continue to study the effect of obesity on the ability to fight virus infections. Influenza is a serious public health threat, killing up to half a million people a year worldwide. As rates of obesity continue to rise, the number of deaths from the flu could rise too. We need to better understand this problem and to look for solutions."

Along with Beck, Sheridan and Paich, other UNC nutrition department study authors were Erik A. Karlsson, now a postdoctoral research associate, at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, and Aileen B. Sammon and Lara Holland, who were undergraduates at the time. Other authors were Michael G. Hudgens, Ph.D., research associate professor of biostatistics in the public health school; and Jean Handy, Ph.D., associate professor of microbiology and immunology, Samuel Weir, M.D., clinical associate professor of family medicine, and Terry L. Noah, M.D., professor of pediatrics, all from the UNC School of Medicine.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of North Carolina School of Medicine.

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Journal Reference:

  1. P A Sheridan, H A Paich, J Handy, E A Karlsson, M G Hudgens, A B Sammon, L A Holland, S Weir, T L Noah, M A Beck. Obesity is associated with impaired immune response to influenza vaccination in humans. International Journal of Obesity, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/ijo.2011.208

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/aKkq5B75Ors/111025091642.htm

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Monday - #SciAmBlogs SA-ists at their best!


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Bora ZivkovicBora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz. Bora ZivkovicBora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

Monday ? #SciAmBlogs SA-ists at their best!

Bora ZivkovicAbout the Author: Bora Zivkovic is the Blog Editor at Scientific American, chronobiologist, biology teacher, organizer of ScienceOnline conferences and editor of Open Laboratory anthologies of best science writing on the Web. Follow on Twitter @boraz.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

All hail the chief ? in Prague

Czechs attribute their independence and the end of Communism to former American presidents, and have honored them with statues in Prague to show their gratitude.

? A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

Skip to next paragraph

After 80 years, a world war, and several tectonic political shifts, a 10-foot-high bronze statue of US President Woodrow Wilson again stands in Prague outside the train station.

Czechs first erected the statue in 1928 to commemorate Wilson for backing their bid for independence, spelled out in his famous ?Fourteen Points? speech. The statue stood for all of 13 years, when in 1941 the Nazi occupier forces decided to melt it down for cannons. Using photos and the statue?s surviving head, a new statue was built and unveiled in October, part of a week-long celebration of Wilson.

The Wilson statue dedication follows the July 4 unveiling of a statue of Ronald Reagan near the US Embassy in Prague, to honor Reagan?s efforts to end communism.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/00SGr83pT4M/All-hail-the-chief-in-Prague

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