Saturday, December 31, 2011

2011 Reflections: the end of a landmark year for Latin America

Seven Monitor correspondents reflect on the world's hot spots. In this installment, Sara Miller Llana says Latin America has economically boomed this year as the US and Europe struggle.

As 2011 comes to a close, Latin America's future looks bright, with poverty at its lowest level in 20 years ? 31.4 percent ? and economies growing, thanks to earlier market-oriented reforms, the high prices of commodities, and new trading partners, especially China.

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In the ultimate role reversal, as Europe and the United States struggle, Latin America has shined.

Even Cuba made major economic progress, albeit out of necessity, granting more licenses for entrepreneurs and allowing for the sale of real estate and cars. But shadows of the past have clouded the region as well, especially in elections.

In Central America, two cold-war-era figures won presidencies, with retired Army Gen. Otto Perez Molina winning Guatemala's runoff, and Sandinista Daniel Ortega winning another term in Nicaragua (unconstitutionally, many argue). Mr. Perez Molina is accused of human rights abuses during the civil war; Mr. Ortega was a US foe as president in the 1980s after Nicaragua's revolution.

And then there is growing discontent with dynastic influences.

In Peru, Keiko Fujimori, daughter of disgraced former dictator Alberto Fujimori, made it to the runoff in June (she lost to Ollanta Humala).

In Argentina, Cristina Fern?ndez de Kirchner easily won reelection in October, boosted by a solid economy. But by the time she steps down, her family will have ruled for 12 years. That's too long for those who seek more dynamic democracy, replete with a robust opposition.

That is the case in Venezuela, too, where opponents are trying to edge out President Hugo Ch?vez, who announced this year that he was ill. He has been in office since 1999 and will face probably his fiercest test in 2012, as the opposition seeks to capitalize on high crime rates and inflation.

In Mexico, the 2012 presidential campaign is heating up. The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which presided over 71 years of authoritarian rule before being defeated in 2000, has emerged as the front-runner ? in part because of public weariness over President Felipe Calder?n's strategy against organized crime, which has caused homicides to soar past 40,000 in five years.

There are other hints of the past. Honduras is still reeling from its 2009 coup. The head of Colombia's FARC rebel group was killed in November, but the group still terrorizes. And former dictator Manuel Noriega is back in Panama, where he went straight to prison, having spent 20 years in French and US prisons.

But most of these events are overshadowed by the positive economic news. The year 2011 may be seen as the starting point of a new era for Latin America.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/cRoeC68nGvc/2011-Reflections-the-end-of-a-landmark-year-for-Latin-America

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Nelson says Dems shouldn't concede his Senate seat (AP)

OMAHA, Neb. ? Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson said Wednesday he doesn't think his decision not to run for a third term next year will automatically give the seat to Republicans, who already hold the other four spots in Nebraska's congressional delegation.

Nelson told The Associated Press that the timing of his announcement this week shouldn't be a problem for Democrats in 2012.

"There has always been plenty of time for the campaign. If it's not too late for Republicans to get in, why is it too late for Democrats to get in?" Nelson said.

Other Democrats have acknowledged they face an uphill battle to keep Nelson's seat away from the GOP, which must pick up four Senate seats in next year's election to regain control of the chamber.

The Republican primary field already is crowded with Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning, state Treasurer Don Stenberg, state Sen. Deb Fischer, and investment adviser Pat Flynn, and no Democrats are lined up to take Nelson's place in the conservative state.

Nelson said he's confident he still could have won re-election because his poll numbers have improved despite being hammered by conservatives for supporting the federal health care overhaul. He also said national GOP leaders seemed concerned because they recently tried to recruit Republican Gov. Dave Heineman as a candidate.

"I think that says a lot about what people thought about my chances of winning from the other side," Nelson said. "I think they were worried about that."

Nelson declined to speculate about Democrats who might seek his seat, or say whether he would use any of the campaign cash he'd amassed in support of other candidates.

The former governor and two-term senator had more than $3 million in campaign money on hand last month, about twice his nearest competitor. Federal election rules allow him to give at least some of that money to other candidates and political action groups or donate it to charity. But any funds donated specifically for the 2012 general election campaign will have to be returned.

Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said most retiring politicians hang onto their campaign money and donate it to candidates later, especially if they intend to become lobbyists.

"Money in Washington helps buy you influence, and now Ben Nelson has $3 million to spread around," said Sloan, who leads the nonpartisan watchdog group.

Nelson survived his nearly two decades representing his heavily conservative state by carving a path down the political center, and said Wednesday he thinks there still is room for moderate politicians in Washington. But he said the current political climate makes bipartisanship more difficult.

"There's no doubt about it because we've seen a great deal of polarization in the country," he said. "And the polarization in Washington is immense," Nelson said, "but on the right issues you can still work with people."

Nelson, 70, said he consulted family, friends and current and former Senate colleagues before deciding that he wanted to be free to go hunting, spend more time with his family, travel and pursue other opportunities while he's still in good health.

"For 20 years, I've been doing things on behalf of the people of Nebraska and putting things off," he said. "There comes a time when you have to make that decision, do you continue to put things off and do what you've been doing?"

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_el_se/us_senate_nelson

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thurrott: Christmas 2011 a Big Win for Android and iOS http://t.co/QlwVdnZ2

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Video: Stocks Still Ridiculously Cheap?

Despite the drop in the Dow on Wednesday, and the S&P back in the red for the year, are stocks still absurdly inexpensive? Michael Farr, Farr, Miller & Washington, weighs in on whether 2012 will be a boom or bust for stocks.

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Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45810508/

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Meat-eating panda caught on camera

A camera at a Chinese nature reserve has spied a wild panda eating meat.

Pandas spend most of their days eating bamboo.

Staff at the Wanglong Nature Reserve in southwest Sichuan province set up the camera after noticing dead animals with chew marks.

In the footage taken on Nov. 9 by an infrared camera, the giant panda is seen eating a dead gnu. It was not known if the panda had killed the animals.

The Pingwu County forestry bureau says the panda appears to be healthy and strong.

Conservation group WWF says only about 1 percent of a panda's diet is meat or plants that aren't bamboo.

China is set to launch its once-a-decade panda census, state media reported, as it tries to determine how many of the endangered animals live in the wild amid efforts to boost numbers.

Associated Press and AFP/Getty contributed to this story.

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45825843/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Top-ranked Syracuse beats Seton Hall 75-49

Syracuse's Fab Melo, right, blocks the shot by Seton Hall's Fuquan Edwin as Syracuse's C.J. Fair, left, defends during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Syracuse, N.Y., Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

Syracuse's Fab Melo, right, blocks the shot by Seton Hall's Fuquan Edwin as Syracuse's C.J. Fair, left, defends during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Syracuse, N.Y., Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

Syracuse's Dion Waiters scores over Seton Hall's Patrik Auda, right, and Herb Pope during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Syracuse, N.Y., Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

Syracuse's Fab Melo, right, blocks a shot by Seton Hall's Herb Pope during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Syracuse, N.Y., Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

(AP) ? A year ago as a raw freshman with little stamina, Fab Melo watched most of Seton Hall's stunning triumph over then-No. 9 Syracuse from the bench.

On Wednesday night, that was a distant memory.

Melo had a career-high 12 points and school-record 10 blocks and top-ranked Syracuse stifled Seton Hall at every turn in a 75-49 victory in the Big East opener for both teams.

"I wasn't surprised," said the 7-foot Brazilian, who is 30 pounds lighter than when he arrived on campus and in the best shape of his life. "I've put a lot of work in. I'm still working hard to get better and I'm sure you'll see better things from me. You're going to be more surprised."

Melo, who had his first career double-double, pulled in seven rebounds. A year ago against the Pirates, he had two points, two rebounds and no blocks in 4 minutes of a 90-68 loss.

Syracuse (14-0, 1-0) gained control in this one with a staunch defensive performance in the opening half, limiting Seton Hall to 5-of-27 shooting (18.5 percent) in building a 34-15 lead.

The Orange finished with 17 steals and 15 blocks, forced 23 turnovers, and limited the Pirates to only one steal ? by Fuquan Edwin, the national leader entering the game with 3.3 per game.

"I thought our defense was as good as it's been all year," Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. "It was an incredible defensive effort."

Dion Waiters had 15 points and Brandon Triche added 11 for Syracuse, which won easily despite a subpar performance from leading scorer Kris Joseph, who missed all six of his shots and did not score.

"That's a great team right there, man," said Joseph, who had four steals and four assists. "If I can go scoreless and we still win by these many points, it's a great sign."

The victory was the 870th of Boeheim's career, putting him within six of fourth-place Adolph Rupp of Kentucky and nine of third-place North Carolina's Dean Smith on the Division I list.

Jordan Theodore had 14 points but only two assists for Seton Hall (11-2, 0-1), which had an eight-game winning streak snapped. Herb Pope, fourth in the nation in scoring at 20.3 points per game, had just four points and nine rebounds, and Edwin finished with three points ? all on free throws ? on 0-of-11 shooting.

Last January, Jeremy Hazell led a long-range Seton Hall barrage with 28 points as the Pirates hit seven 3s in building a 13-point halftime lead.

The tables were turned this time.

With Hazell gone, Pope is the focus of the Pirates' attack. He has eight double-doubles, tops in the nation, and had only failed to reach double figures in scoring once, in the Pirates' win at Longwood on Friday night when he finished with eight in 29 minutes.

The Syracuse defense clamped down on the big guy, who was 2 of 9 from the field and committed six turnovers.

"I contributed too many turnovers," Pope said. "I didn't execute the game plan as far as getting the big kid (Melo) off his feet, going into him. I helped him have a stellar game."

Etan Thomas held Syracuse's block record with nine. He did it three times, the last in 2000.

Syracuse leads the nation with 11.2 steals per game and a turnover margin of 8.6, and the Orange's penchant for creating mistakes was on full display in the first half. Seton Hall committed 15 turnovers and Pope led the way with five, scoring just two points on a driving dunk and missing the other five shots he attempted.

"We haven't had a home game in a while," Seton Hall coach Kevin Willard said with a pained smile. "Maybe we thought we were wearing white jerseys. We kept throwing it to them."

Melo, who played 25 minutes, closed the first half with a stunning block of Pope under the basket at the buzzer. It was his eighth block of the half and he did it to Pope again early in the second after scoring two straight baskets. Melo converted a miss by Triche and scored off a nice feed underneath from Joseph to boost the lead to 42-20 with 16:19 left.

"The staff deserves an unbelievable amount of credit and I think Fab deserves an unbelievable amount of credit for transforming his body," Willard said. "That kid is a pleasure to watch."

A 3-pointer by Scoop Jardine boosted the lead to 50-26 at 13:35.

The Pirates missed their first six shots and Syracuse gained a 6-1 lead when Triche followed his own miss and fed Melo for a dunk.

Consecutive baskets by Waiters, the second a steal and dunk, boosted the lead to 12-3 as the Orange began to steadily pull away. When Theodore hit a 3 from the left wing at 8:05, he had 10 of Seton Hall's 12 points.

Syracuse finished just five blocks shy of the school record set Jan. 11, 1992, against Miami, and Willard was more than happy to get out of the Carrier Dome.

"It's tough. You can't really prepare for this type of game, especially when they're at home," Willard said. "You can't sit there and say, 'What could we have done if we had made passes?' We could have made a lot of passes. We're still going to get our butt kicked tonight."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-28-BKC-T25-Seton-Hall-Syracuse/id-5a36f25ac5f84a23b0953cbd677e86b9

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Romney, sensing opening, makes big push in Iowa (AP)

CLINTON, Iowa ? Mitt Romney has stepped into the center of a perfect storm in Iowa ? and he's going all in.

Sensing an opening to win next Tuesday's caucuses, an ever-more confident Romney is campaigning hard in a region of the state where he performed well in his failed 2008 race, with a bus tour and new crush of advertising intended to bolster his closing argument: that he's the most electable candidate against President Barack Obama.

It's thanks to a combination of luck and planning that Romney now finds himself in strong contention for an Iowa caucus victory that would give him a boost heading into the next contest, in New Hampshire, where the former Massachusetts governor's standing is strong.

Not that he's publicly entertaining the notion of back-to-back victories.

"I can't possibly allow myself to think in such optimistic terms. I just have to put my head down and battle as best I can," Romney said Wednesday. "But I can tell you: If the people here in Clinton are any example, or any indication, of what's going to happen in the process, I feel pretty good."

In a sign of his growing confidence, Romney hasn't announced where he'll be on caucus night and has left open the possibility that he may stay in Iowa if victory is at hand. Advisers are redoubling efforts to try to capitalize on the slide in support for Newt Gingrich and skepticism of Ron Paul by making a concerted effort to increase turnout in areas where Romney did well four years ago. His campaign also added at least $100,000 in additional advertising for the final days ? and bought broadcast advertising for the first time in the Quad Cities market in eastern Iowa.

And, while Romney is largely shying away from criticizing his rivals, he jabbed at Paul, who has emerged as his chief rival in Iowa, on Wednesday ? another indication of Romney's efforts to triumph here.

"One of the people running for president thinks it's OK for Iran to have a nuclear weapon," Romney said in Muscatine in response to a question from the audience. "I don't."

This is a far more aggressive strategy than the one Romney has employed all year after pouring $10 million into the state in 2008 only to lose it in a defeat that crippled his entire campaign. He couldn't allay concerns about his Mormon faith or his reversals on some social issues in a state where evangelical Republicans and other social conservatives dominate.

Romney approached Iowa more cautiously for this race, so much so that until recently aides worked out of an attic in Des Moines on a shoestring budget. He also had spent less than $200,000 on the state before the campaign started buying TV ads in December.

But even as advisers worked to play down expectations, they quietly stayed in contact with backers from his first campaign ? and Romney stood at the ready to try to take advantage of an opportunity in the race, should one present itself.

It looks like it has.

Social conservatives that united behind former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee in 2008 remain splintered among a handful of candidates that include Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum. Gingrich, the former House speaker, was Romney's latest threat but he's taken a significant beating from an onslaught of advertisements by a super PAC run by Romney's allies. Paul, a libertarian-leaning Republican, is a serious contender in Iowa but he has foreign policy views so outside the Republican mainstream that most Republicans believe he has little chance to win the GOP nomination.

On Wednesday, a new CNN/TIME poll in Iowa showed Romney leading with 25 percent support. Paul had 22 percent and Santorum drew 16 percent while Gingrich had fallen to 14 percent.

So Romney is trying to seize the moment. And it may be working.

Overflow crowds have been greeting Romney at every stop of his three-day, seven-city tour on a bus plastered with his campaign logo and "Conservative, Businessman, Leader" slogan on the side.

So many people showed up at a deli in Clinton that Romney's staff also sent the candidate to visit the restaurant across the street. Before sunrise, the line to see Romney at Elly's Coffee and Tea in Muscatine stretched out the door and down the block.

On Tuesday night, the campaign said that only 150 people had RSVPed to attend Romney's speech in Davenport. But more than 500 people showed up, shutting at least 200 people out of the Blackhawk Hotel ballroom. Many area voters were notified only that morning of Romney's visit.

People seem to like what they hear.

"He's probably the best chance to beat Obama," said Carol Hetzler, a medical secretary who backed Sen. John McCain's in 2008. She had also considered voting for Gingrich.

And Tim McCleary, who was waiting in line at Elly's before 7 a.m. to see Romney, said: "The only reason I'm supporting Romney is because he can win the election."

As Romney visits small towns in eastern Iowa, he's also doing countless interviews with the local media. He spent most of Wednesday morning talking to radio stations and small Iowa newspapers.

He's also relying on friends to help him make the sale.

Romney was dispatching surrogates from nearby states, including South Dakota Sen. John Thune, former Sens. Norm Coleman of Minnesota and Jim Talent of Missouri, to campaign in Iowa. Former Kansas Sen. Bob Dole was dialing influential activists Tuesday, including former state GOP chairman Steve Grubbs, who is a well-connected campaign operative in Davenport in the heart of Romney's eastern Iowa base.

"He made the argument that the candidate who has shown the ability to win by the effectiveness of the campaign he's run is Mitt Romney," said Grubbs, who worked on Dole's 1996 campaign. "At the end of the day, he was selling electability."

It's the case Romney will try to make in North Liberty, Waterloo and Ames on Thursday and in Des Moines on Friday.

Mindful not to ignore New Hampshire altogether, Romney planned events there Friday and Saturday. Four of his five sons will campaign in the state Thursday before heading to Iowa this weekend. His wife, Ann, will remain in Iowa all weekend, campaigning in the western part of the state. Romney returns to Iowa later Saturday.

__

Beaumont reported from Des Moines, Iowa.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney

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One held as Indian's killing sparks outrage on Facebook

One held as Indian's killing sparks outrage on Facebook
Albuquerque Express
Tuesday 27th December, 2011??
(IANS)

A 17-year-old British youth has been arrested over the fatal shooting of Indian student Anuj Bidve in Manchester, triggering condemnation on social networking website Facebook.

Bidve, 23, was part of a group of nine men and women -- all Indian students -- visiting the city for a short break for Christmas. He was a postgraduate student in micro-electronics at Lancaster University.

The arrested youth was being questioned, said BBC.

Hailing from Pune in India's Maharashtra state, Bidve was shot in the head while walking from his hotel in Salford area towards the Manchester city centre around 1.30 a.m. He died at a hospital a short while later.

Two men walked up to Bidve and his friends outside an eatery. After a short exchange of words, one man pulled out a pistol and shot the Indian student in the side of the head at point-blank range. The two fled, leaving Bidve dying in the street in a pool of blood.

Manchester police chief superintendent Kevin Mulligan said it was an 'awful, unprovoked attack on a young student'.

Witnesses said the attack was not a robbery or racially motivated.

The gunman was a white man in his mid 20s, of slim build and wearing a grey top. The other man had a heavier build and wore a black jacket.

Bidve's friends were being looked after in a 'safe place' by police.

Shocked neighbours told the Manchester Evening News they no longer felt safe in their own homes.

Donna Wilson, a 30-year-old mother of two young children, said: 'We were in bed when it happened and I woke up and saw the forensics people outside. It's right there, practically on my own doorstep. You don't feel safe in your own home.'

'I was up at six o'clock and saw all the police out of the window. I felt sick when I heard what happened. It's disgusting,' Kerry Thompson, who has lived there for 11 years, was quoted as saying.

A university spokeswoman said counselling and support was being organised for the friends who were described as 'deeply upset', reported Sky News.

Bidve's father Subhash turned to Facebook to seek assistance: 'Pl help in getting Anuj's dead body back to India.'

The social networking website has been flooded with comments condemning the killing.

Rakesh Sonawane, a resident of Pune, who now stays in Manchester, described on Facebook what he saw at the spot.

'In the early hours of the morning - I arrived at a scene i will never forget. Anuj Bidve had been shot in the head - for no reason what so ever. I feel like i myself did not do enough to help Anuj this morning - i feel that neither did the police and ambulance crews.'

He added: 'I personally feel disgusted that someone from our town could do such a thing to a visitor of our city.'

Sunit Parab from Glasgow said it was 'really a sad incident to have happened'.

Yas Miin, another Facebook user, termed the killers 'sick scumbags' and sought their hanging.

Manchester residents Becca Cloughley Lewtas said she was 'ashamed that someone from my city would do such a vile act'.

'I truly hope they catch the vermin who did this to you,' she wrote further.

Shripad Sathe, however, opposed taking the body back to India.

'Whilst I did not know this gentleman before, might I also, with due respect to everyone, also suggest last respects might be paid in the UK, rather than carry him (all with paperwork etc which is mentally traumatic) to India? Sincere apologies if this hurts anyone,' Sathe wrote on the website.

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5667628301

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A year of promise

A Christian Science perspective.

With what we?ve seen of weather disasters, economic problems, and difficulties in our cities, there are likely many of us who would say, ?Good riddance!? to 2011. But let?s not forget some of the good news, such as the encouraging stirrings and revolutions for democracy that we?re seeing in some countries. There are also studies indicating that violence is generally decreasing in tangible ways. And in the debates and protests around the globe, I have been struck by the tremendous heart evident in people.

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In light of such things, along with what hopes we still have within us, maybe we can begin to see in this past year something of the promise of good that?s already here. Sure, hope isn?t enough to help someone recover after a disaster. But let?s consider where things can go when we see our lives from the standpoint that our divine Creator is profoundly good and has a wonderful order of His universe for us to discover in whatever country and village we find ourselves.

This year has had its challenges for me, including financial challenges. But it then recently occurred to me that I was overly swayed by the bad news going on ? and not swayed enough by the promise of what I was able to discover of God?s good to help us all. This realization was a powerful turning point for me, from which I went forward and found ways to make a difference in my year and, I would like to think, in the lives of those around me.

It?s in this spirit that I?ve thought of the past year as ?really having been full of promise. A God-based view of things makes all the difference. It?s this spiritual lens that enables us to stay above the fray, harvest the good of the present, and so best prepare for tomorrow. Christ Jesus said: ?Say not ye, There are yet four months, and then cometh harvest? behold, I say unto you, Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields; for they are white already to harvest? (John 4:35).

Are we waiting for good to come along from somewhere else? Are we focused on ways we haven?t seen the good we want? Or rather, are we trying to see more of the good that God has already provided ? goodness that is ready for us to spread in our world?

Truly, the good that?s in store for us is not something that?s yet to be created. It?s ready for us to see. Life was not created for us to step and stumble through alone. Neither was it created for us to petition God for a random blessing. We are witnesses of God?s infinite good.

Sure, maybe it feels more like we?re witnesses in training, since the way doesn?t always seem clear. But a God-centered view leads us to more good. We need only to follow it. The founder of the Monitor, Mary Baker Eddy, wrote: ?The conscientious are successful. They follow faithfully; through evil or through good report, they work on to the achievement of good; by patience, they inherit the promise? (?Miscellaneous Writings 1883-1896,? p. 340).

We?re learning about what works in life, and maybe plenty about what doesn?t work, and there?s enough going on to suggest that we?ll continue to gain in our role as witnesses to God?s infinite glory. So let?s keep on looking to the light.

To receive Christian Science perspectives daily or weekly in your inbox,?sign up today.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/JCu9hYu2KTw/A-year-of-promise

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Life Insurance and Health - Finding Good Insurance Rates and ...

Life insurance and health often go hand in hand when it comes to determining what level of coverage and what life insurance prices you will be offered for your protection. As a rule of thumb, the better your health, the more coverage you will be able to get at a reasonable monthly premium. This is why people often recommend you shop for your policy when you are still young before your physical stamina has had a chance to decline. Fortunately, if you are a late shopper there are still plenty of ways to get a good deal on your life insurance and health coverage.

Paying Bills with Your Policy

Your life insurance and health coverage will cover most if not all of the medical expenses you encounter throughout your life. Before you sign up for either policy, however, it is important to know which expenses will be covered by each agency so you are not double-buying coverage or leaving yourself without protection you will need. Typically, everyday expenses such as prescriptions, annual visits to the doctor or treatment for illnesses will be covered by your health insurance, but there are some cases where your life insurance and health companies will work together to get these bills covered.

If you have an illness that is often fatal or a severe disability that will require you to stop working, your life insurance will often step in and pay you a portion of your benefits to help cover the costs. This may include paying for long stays in the hospital that prevent you from working, hiring live-in medical staff to care for you in your home, or helping you move into a rehab facility if you no longer have the ability to live on your own. Typically, to get this much coverage you will need to purchase extra provisions that specify that these types of incidents will be covered. If you are concerned that you will need this type of protection later, be sure to talk to your agent about what riders you will need to purchase to get what you need.

Getting a Better Price

If you have had trouble finding a life insurance and health organization that is willing to take you on as a client or you are concerned that the prices you have been offered for coverage are higher than you were hoping to spend, there are ways to get the price of your plan lowered. Typically, anything you do to improve your quality of life will be seen as a good sign by your insurance company. The more you do to maintain your health, the more likely it is that you will be a customer for a long period of time, making you an attractive investment.

Many life insurance and health benefits that are offered through your employer offer the opportunity to sign up for "preventative maintenance" routines in exchange for a lower monthly premium. This can include anything from seeing a personal trainer or diet specialist to meeting with a counselor to help you manage stress. Most companies have a list of these options readily available so if you are willing to put the work into improving your personal health, ask your life insurance agency what options they offer.

If your life insurance and health company does not work with health agencies to give you discounts, there is nothing to stop you from getting in shape on your own. If you start your own diet and exercise routine or give up unhealthy habits such as smoking or eating fast food, the results at your annual physical will improve. You can turn these results in to your life insurance company and it is quite likely that you will be offered a better price on your coverage to reflect your change in stamina.

As a general rule of thumb, the longer you hold your life insurance policy without needing to use it, the less likely it is that you will be subjected to increased rates. Many companies offer higher rates to older customers because your health declines as you age. However, if your decline is minimal and does not affect your ability to do as you please, then you can expect that your life insurance and health coverage will remain largely untouched as you get older.

Doing what you can to improve life insurance and health coverage costs is important for financial success, but it is more important to maintain your overall physique for your own benefit. The more you work at staying in shape, the less you will have to deal with painful medical issues or the difficulty of realizing you can no longer do the things you used to. Being able to live each day to the fullest is its own reward.

Benefits of Term Life Insurance

  • Long-term financial safety
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  • Significant death benefit

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Source: http://www.termlifeinsurance.com/life-insurance-and-health.html

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Smarter Than You Think? (Unqualified Offerings)

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Cruise's 'Mission' accomplishes box-office win

Hollywood has picked up a little Christmas bonus.

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Studios generally underestimated the size of their movie audiences over the weekend, and they're now revising the holiday revenues upward.

Leading the way is Tom Cruise's "Mission: Impossible ? Ghost Protocol," which pulled in $29.5 million for the weekend. That Monday figure is $3 million more than distributor Paramount estimated a day earlier.

For the four-day period Friday to Monday, Paramount estimates "Ghost Protocol" will have taken in $46.2 million to raise its domestic total to $78.6 million. That's on top of $140 million the film has taken in overseas, giving it a worldwide haul of $218.6 million.

Studios Monday also reported stronger results than they did a day earlier for Robert Downey Jr.'s "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows," which was No. 2 at $20.3 million for the three-day weekend and $31.8 million for the four-day period; Steven Spielberg's "The Adventures of Tintin" at No. 5 with $9.7 million over three days and $16.1 million for four days; and Matt Damon's "We Bought a Zoo" at No. 6 with $9.5 million over three days and $15.6 million for four days.

In a tight race for the No. 4 spot were David Fincher's "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" and the family sequel "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked."

Weekend box office

  1. Results for Dec. 23-26

    1. "Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol," Paramount, $46,210,000, 3,448 locations, $13,402 average, $78,645,000, two weeks.
    2. "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows," Warner Bros., $31,810,000, 3,448 locations, $9,226 average, $90,564,000, two weeks.
    3. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked," Fox, $20,000,000, 3,734 locations, $5,356 average, $56,940,187, two weeks.
    4. "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo," Sony, $19,400,000, 2,914 locations, $6,658 average, $27,716,000, one week.
    5. "The Adventures of Tintin," Paramount, $16,100,000, 3,087 locations, $5,215 average, $24,107,000, one week.

"Dragon Tattoo" did $12.8 million over three days and $19.4 million for four days. "Chipwrecked" took in $12.7 million over three days and $20 million for four days.

A few films debuted on Christmas Day, among them Spielberg's World War I epic "War Horse," which took in $7.5 million Sunday. Through Monday, its estimated two-day total is $15 million.

Also debuting was Emile Hirsch's action thriller "The Darkest Hour," which earned $3 million Sunday and had a two-day total of $5.5 million through Monday.

Opening solidly in just six theaters was Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock's Sept. 11 drama "Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close," which took in $71,000 Sunday and $136,000 through Monday. The film expands to nationwide release in January.

Despite the upward revision on some movies' revenues, the Christmas weekend continued a box-office slide that has persisted since Thanksgiving. Overall revenues from Friday to Monday totaled $184 million, down 10 percent from Christmas weekend last year, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.

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

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45791428/ns/today-entertainment/

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purple1029: @iretiTHEelf @katieTHEelf Church Mouuuuuuuuse!! LOL Merry Christmas to all of you!! See u sooooooon!! #stoked

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Can The Muppets Save Google Plus?


The Muppets are everywhere, it seems. But who would have thought that you could have found them, in all places, on Google Plus?

No, you can't really add Animal or Kermit the Frog to your Circles, but you can at least pretend what the experience would be like thanks to a new advertisement that Google's running. In it, The Muppets are using Google Plus for ? what else ? an impromptu band session, rocking out to a cover of the Queen/David Bowie collaboration, "Under Pressure," via the power of a Google Plus hangout.

This isn't the first time that Google has turned to The Muppets to support one of its products, as the company most recently celebrated the 75th birthday of famed Muppet creator Jim Henson by using The Muppets to form an interactive "Google" logo. While it wasn't quite the same as, say, clicking on Fozzie Bear and watching a pie hit him in the face, the doodle nevertheless came with a number of fun Easter Eggs for those exploring the animation of the made-up logo characters.

But will The Muppets be enough to encourage use of Google Plus? It's been difficult to get any kind of a direct figure on Google Plus use, but the site has allegedly seen a bit of an uptick in growth lately. According to November stats from Hitwise, Google Plus experienced its third-largest week of traffic for the week ending November 12. And this represents a 25 percent increase in site traffic since October.

That said, the Los Angeles Times reports that overall traffic to Google Plus has allegedly fallen in nearly half of the first 21 weeks since its June launch. Once Google Plus opened up to the public in September of this year, Hitwise reports that the site peaked out at around 15 million visitors (in just one week) before losing more than half this traffic over subsequent weeks. The most recent stats put Google Plus at around 6.8 million weekly visitors (as of mid-November), with roughly three-fourths of the traffic being supplied by return visitors to the site.

Of course, these are just recorded visits, not actual growth (or use) of Google Plus accounts. Take Google's own statistics for their worth, however, and Google Plus has sailed in as the second most-searched-for term in 2011. Which means people must be using the service, as search suggests intent, correct? But even the drop-off on Google searches for "Google Plus" is evident: A huge spike around July when the service was in its invitation-only phase, and only a mild spike in September when it opened up to the public.

So which is it? Is Google Plus in or out for 2012? It's a bit too early to call it either way, but it appears as if Google Plus is closer to approaching stability than it is to achieving breakout growth. Unless, of course, Google's latest Muppets commercial creates a Google Plus surge from, "lovers, dreamers, and you."

?

For more from David, subscribe to him on Facebook: David Murphy.

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

Source: http://feeds.ziffdavis.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/breakingnews/~3/Mc6RqQr3F_s/0,2817,2398048,00.asp

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Dentist Gives 12-Year-Old Cancer Survivor New Smile for Holidays

December 25, 2011 Updated Dec 25, 2011 at 10:37 AM PST

(NBC NY) Giana Gergoire miraculously survived the brain cancer she was diagnosed with in 2010, but the disease took a toll on her dental health.

The 12-year-old suffered from tooth decay, cavities, gaps and discoloring. But her family didn't have enough money to pay for her dental treatment. And
Gergoire, having missed a year of school due to her illness, desperately wanted a new smile to accompany her renewed lease on life.

Then Dr. Lee Gause, a dentist with Smile Design in Manhattan, showed up at her door and offered to do all her dental work for free.

He had asked his followers on Facebook to identify someone in need of a healthy smile for the holidays. And he found Gergoire.

"I am really grateful and thankful for that and I really appreciate it," she said.

hortly thereafter, Gergoire found herself sitting in the dental chair for the first time. After more than an hour, Gause held up a mirror so Gergoire could see the finished product.

"At first I was scared but then I was happy because I finally got my teeth whitened and cavities fixed," she said.

Gause said it would take some time before the work he intends to do on Gergoire is completely finished, but she's off to a great start.

For more on this story, click here!

Source: http://www.ksee24.com/news/local/Dentist-Gives-12-Year-Old-Cancer-Survivor-New-Smile-for-Holidays-136206373.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Chorus Gives Voice to Those With Alzheimer's (HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Dec. 22 (HealthDay News) -- Late December wouldn't be the same without the uplifting sound of holiday choirs, but there's a unique chorus in New York City, called "The Unforgettables," that's bringing new harmony to singers and audiences alike.

That's because the chorus' 22 members include 11 men and women diagnosed with early to middle-stage dementia, including dementia linked to Alzheimer's disease, paired up with 11 of their caregivers -- a spouse, child or friend.

Each practice and recital is an act of togetherness and renewed strength in the face of illness, one of the chorus' founders said.

"The pleasure this process has given participants was clear from the start," said researcher Mary S. Mittelman, who spearheaded the choir's inauguration back in June, along with colleagues from the NYU Langone Medical Center's Center of Excellence on Brain Aging. "The chorus has proven to be a wonderful place to be, where no one feels stigmatized."

Organizers say this is the first choir of its kind in the United States. Patients and caretakers were initially recruited through outreach that involved a number of local organizations, including the New York City chapter of the Alzheimer's Association and Langone. The chorus currently includes people diagnosed with either Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia called Lewy body disease.

Chorus members meet once a week to practice and are joined by musicians who serve as conductor-directors. They're taught standard techniques to enhance breathing, vocalization and performance, just like any other choir, Mittelman said.

To date, two public performances have been staged: The first, in September, featured 18 songs ranging from classical to folk to pop; the second, which took place just last week, was filled with holiday favorites.

"There's a certain camaraderie," noted Howard Smith, a choral member who cares for his wife, Lois, diagnosed with Alzheimer's about two years ago. "Lois is there with people with the same problems. And it's comforting for her and the other patients, and even for the caregivers. Because it means we're not alone."

That sense of inclusiveness is key, Mittelman agreed. Too often, she said, the typical caregiver is "afraid to go to a normal event with a person with dementia. And so he ends up being discounted, or discounts himself, as people exclude him from social events and he has less and less activities to participate in and becomes more and more isolated."

That means that a group such as The Unforgettables becomes "very important," said Smith, a painter and CUNY professor who commutes from the Hudson River Valley to join rehearsals with his wife each week. "Here you get a group like this together and it's not threatening."

Could the choir experience have therapeutic value, too? Mittelman says that's not been proven, but she hopes music may be an "unexplored opportunity" for improving cognitive function.

"Who's to say that singing in this chorus isn't having a really positive effective on mental function?" she asked, pointing to prior research that's indicated that exposure to music may elicit profound motor responses in every region of a patient's brain, stimulating the release of neurotransmitters and endorphins while triggering musical and emotional memory.

Delving further, Mittelman said she's now incorporated The Unforgettables into, "a research project with structured assessments before, in the middle and after the concert, as well as focus groups, to assess the benefits of participating."

One outside expert believes it may be worth studying. This kind of choral project, "may very well have a profound impact on the quality of life of both patient and family," said Dr. Robert Friedland, chair of neurology at the University of Louisville School of Medicine, in Kentucky.

"I actually believe it has a wonderful potential to be an Alzheimer's therapy," he said. "First, it involves physical activity, which is good for the brain and the heart. You have to get up and go. You can't participate in the activity if you stay home. And then singing involves emotional and social relationships, which are stimulating. And it provides purpose, so it's a meaningful activity and a very vigorous one. And it also would be a valuable approach to dealing with depression, which often accompanies dementia."

"That's not to say," Friedland cautioned, "that it's proven that singing in itself is effective as a therapy. But there's every reason to believe that it may very well be."

For his part, Smith says he doesn't need a study to know that the chorus is improving the quality of life for members, allowing them to regain their dignity.

"For example, there's a guy in the group, Chester, who is rather advanced in terms of his situation," Smith said. "Now this is a man who worked for IBM. He was very, very bright and educated. But when he was asked to [join the chorus], even clapping was very difficult for him. And yet now he is performing a solo in the concert from 'Fiddler on the Roof.'"

"I think there is a realization that the participants with dementia still have some behavioral skills working," he explained. "One watches loved ones or friends unable to accomplish tasks, having difficulty processing or retaining thoughts, or just experiencing confusion. And all of a sudden [in the chorus] they are functioning in a group setting and succeeding in singing words and melody."

More information

There's more on how music impacts dementia care at the Alzheimer's Association.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/seniors/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111222/hl_hsn/chorusgivesvoicetothosewithalzheimers

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Chavez appoints new military intelligence chief (AP)

CARACAS, Venezuela ? Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has replaced his military intelligence chief.

Chavez says he is appointing Gen. Wilfredo Figueroa Chacin as the new chief of the country's military intelligence agency.

The new appointee replaces Gen. Hugo Carvajal, one of the president's most trusted security chiefs.

Carvajal was one of three close Chavez allies who in 2008 were accused by the U.S. Treasury Department of helping Colombian rebels by supplying arms and aiding drug-trafficking operations.

Chavez has denied those accusations.

The president announced the change during a speech Saturday. He did not say why he made it or what plans he has for Carvajal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_venezuela_chavez

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Mitt Bids on Vintage Car, Declines $10K Asking Price (ABC News)

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Eusebio likely to spend Christmas in hospital

Associated Press Sports

updated 8:56 a.m. ET Dec. 22, 2011

LISBON, Portugal (AP) -Former Portugal and Benfica star Eusebio is likely to stay in a hospital over Christmas after being diagnosed with double pneumonia, doctors said Thursday.

Jose Roquette, a clinical director at Lisbon's Hospital da Luz, said Eusebio was in stable condition despite being admitted Wednesday with an infection in both lungs.

"He's eating well," Roquette told reporters. "He had a good night."

Doctors treating Eusebio said they are optimistic about his chances of a full recovery, though the illness requires close monitoring and he will undergo treatment for several more days.

Eusebio da Silva Ferreira, who turns 70 next month, became a national icon after his standout performances in the 1960s for Benfica and the Portuguese national team.

He was named one of the 10 best football players of all time by FIFA in 1998.

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


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Terry to be charged

England captain will face a criminal charge over allegations that he racially abused an opponent in the Premier League.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45753292/ns/sports-soccer/

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Snow, wind, rain cause holiday travel worries (Reuters)

DENVER (Reuters) ? Snowfall in the Rockies, strong winds in the West and soaking rain in the South caused problems for holiday travelers on the first official day of winter, forecasters said on Thursday.

A snowstorm swept across Colorado overnight, dumping up to 10 inches of snow in the Denver metropolitan area and up to two feet of snow in the foothills west of the city, according to the National Weather Service.

The storm snarled rush-hour traffic in the Denver area, and roads from Wyoming to the New Mexico border remain snow-packed and icy, said Mindy Crane, spokeswoman for the Colorado Department of Transportation.

"It's affected the whole urban corridor," Crane said.

More than 100 regional commuter flights from rural airports had been canceled at Denver International Airport, but all runways were open, said airport spokeswoman Laura Coale.

The early winter snowfall is a boon to Colorado's ski resorts for the upcoming busy holiday season. The fresh snow and warmer temperatures forecast for the weekend will make for optimum skiing conditions, said Mistalynn Lee, spokeswoman for the Winter Park ski resort west of Denver.

"Christmas came early," she said.

The dangers of heavy snowfall to travelers in some parts of the country were highlighted by the rescue of a college student stranded in her car for nine days on a barren northern Arizona road was rescued after living on candy bars and melted snow.

Arizona State University student Lauren Weinberg, 23, was found Wednesday by two U.S. Forest Service employees patrolling on snowmobiles, Coconino County Sheriff's Office patrol Lieutenant Jim Coffey said.

The discovery came the same day a Texas family was rescued from their sports utility vehicle, trapped for at least 36 hours under heavy snow in New Mexico, police said.

Heavy snowfalls were again developing over New Mexico, with 12 to 18 inches of snow expected on Thursday afternoon and evening in the mountains, said National Weather Service meteorologist Mark Wiley.

Some three to five inches of snow are expected in the western part of the state, he said.

Wiley said travel could be hampered, though the winds were not likely to be as strong as the 35-40 mph winds that blew snow around earlier this week, shutting down highways in New Mexico and nearby states.

Wind gusts also affected Southern California on Thursday, where forecasters warned travelers they should use extra caution as gusts up to 60 mph would make driving difficult over the holiday weekend. The Weather Service advised motorists to watch for broken tree limbs and downed power lines.

By Friday afternoon and Saturday morning, Wiley said, the snow storm is expected to move into north Texas, where two to four inches of snow could fall.

Heavy rain and thunderstorms in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee also could disrupt flights, said AccuWeather.com senior meteorologist Paul Walker.

Persistent rain was falling in Memphis early on Thursday and moving across the state.

"There will be a lot of rainfall today, with the areas south and east of us getting one to three inches," said Trevor Boucher, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Nashville.

Most of the more violent weather -- thunder and lightning storms -- will stay south of Tennessee, he said.

The showers will move into the Northeast, bringing heavy rains and thick fog overnight to New York, Washington and Philadelphia, Walker said.

"There's going to be some snow up into northern New England, north of Boston," Walker said.

(Additional reporting by Mary Slosson, Tim Ghianni, Corrie MacLaggan; Writing by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/us_nm/us_weather

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Indiana Secretary of State was not eligible for office: judge (Reuters)

INDIANAPOLIS (Reuters) ? Indiana's Republican Secretary of State Charlie White was not eligible to run for the office he now holds and his opponent should be named the winner of the November 2010 election, an Indiana judge ruled.

The Republican secretary of state, who faces seven felony charges including vote fraud, defeated Democrat Vop Osili by more than 340,000 votes in the election. Opponents contended White was not properly registered as a candidate.

White was registered at his ex-wife's address when he voted in the May 2010 primary and was not registered at his address until after the deadline for filing a declaration of candidacy or certificate of nomination, Judge Louis Rosenberg found in a ruling dated December 21.

Rosenberg, a Marion County Circuit Court judge, reversed a 3-0 Indiana Recount Commission decision finding White eligible and returned the matter to the commission with instructions to certify Osili as secretary of state.

Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller, representing the Recount Commission, will seek a stay of Rosenberg's ruling and is reviewing a possible appeal, spokesman Bryan Corbin said.

"Charlie White is the secretary of state and will continue to do the work of secretary of state as he has done since taking office, commission spokesman A.J. Feeney Ruiz said.

Democrats had said White did not change his address so he could retain a town council position. White has denied the allegations of voter fraud.

Indiana Democratic Chairman Dan Parker said the ruling validated months of efforts.

"As a result of his vote fraud, Charlie White was never eligible to be a candidate for this office, and he's done nothing but embarrass Hoosiers since wrongfully assuming the position," Parker said.

(Editing by David Bailey and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111223/us_nm/us_crime_indiana_election

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Steve Jobs to be awarded Grammy

Steve Jobs will be honored with a Grammy for helping to transform the way music is distributed and consumed.

The late CEO and co-founder of Apple will be posthumously awarded one of the organization's Special Merit Awards, the Recording Academy announced today.

Jobs "helped to create products and technology that transformed the way we consume music, TV, movies, and books," the Recording Academy said in a statement. "A creative visionary, Jobs' innovations such as the iPod and its counterpart, the online iTunes store, revolutionized the industry and how music was distributed and purchased."

Jobs, who died October 5 of pancreatic cancer, will be honored February 11 in the Trustees Award category. The other Trustee Award honorees are musician, bandleader, composer, and arranger Dave Bartholomew and recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder, who worked with jazz musicians such as John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Thelonious Monk.

Apple was awarded a technical Grammy in 2002 for its contributions to the music industry and recording field.

Source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-57346817-37/steve-jobs-to-be-awarded-grammy/?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=News-Apple

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Dr. Ying Ge, University of Wisconsin, "Comprehensive Analysis of Protein Modifications by Top-down Mass Spectrometry-Based Proteomics"

Dr. Ying Ge, University of Wisconsin, "Comprehensive Analysis of Protein Modifications by Top-down Mass Spectrometry-Based Proteomics"

Time 11:00 am ? Analytical Chemistry Seminar of Special Interest Sponsor Analytical Chemistry

165 NL

Source: http://illinois.edu/calendar/detail/81/11709206

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