Saturday, December 31, 2011

NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53

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    Sam Ostarello #32 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Liza Clemons #23 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Chelsea Jones #40 battles Jackie Voigt #45 for a rebound (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Brianna Mastey #41 gets fouled on the fly by Sam Ostarello #32 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Katie Loberg #25 has her shot challenged by Chelsea Jones #40 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Katie Loberg #25 led Minnesota with 13 rebounds (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Chelsea Jones #40 forces Katie Loberg #25 off balance and off the ball (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Chantel Poston #43 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Leah Cotton #11 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Leah Cotton #11 drives on Courtney Moses #15 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Leah Cotton #11 scored 11 points for Minnesota (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Dee Dee Williams #20 and Kiara Buford #30 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Brianna Mastey #41 finds herself jammed up between Sam Ostarello #32 and Dee Dee Williams #20 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Rachel Banham #1 and Brittany Rayburn #5 tangle under the basket (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Dee Dee Williams #20 finished the night with five points (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Antionette Howard #2 drives the baseline against Rachel Banham #1 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Antionette Howard #2 takes in the monologue delivered by Coach Sharon Versyp during a time out late in the game (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

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    Drey Mingo #24 (NCAA Women's Basketball: Purdue 57 v. Minnesota 53, Mackey Arena, West Lafayette IN, December 30, 2011)

  • Source: http://www.sportspagemagazine.com/content/bb/wc-bb/gal-wc-bb/ncaa-womens-basketball-purdue-57-v-minnesota-53.shtml?50545

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    Microbial communities on skin affect humans' attractiveness to mosquitoes

    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    The microbes on your skin determine how attractive you are to mosquitoes, which may have important implications for malaria transmission and prevention, according to a study published Dec. 28 in the online journal PLoS ONE.

    Without bacteria, human sweat is odorless to the human nose, so the microbial communities on the skin play a key role in producing each individual's specific body odor. The researchers, led by Niels Verhulst of Wageningen University in the Netherlands, conducted their experiments with the Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto mosquito, which plays an important role in malaria transmission. They found that individuals with a higher abundance but lower diversity of bacteria on their skin were more attractive to this particular mosquito. They speculate individuals with more diverse skin microbiota may host a selective group of bacteria that emits compounds to interfere with the normal attraction of mosquitoes to their human hosts, making these individuals less attractive, and therefore lower risk to contracting malaria. This finding may lead to the development of personalized methods for malaria prevention.

    ###

    Verhulst NO, Qiu YT, Beijleveld H, Maliepaard C, Knights D, et al. (2011) Composition of Human Skin Microbiota Affects Attractiveness to Malaria Mosquitoes. PLoS ONE 6(12): e28991. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0028991

    Public Library of Science: http://www.plos.org

    Thanks to Public Library of Science for this article.

    This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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    Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116342/Microbial_communities_on_skin_affect_humans__attractiveness_to_mosquitoes

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    Breast cancer survivors benefit from practicing Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction

    Breast cancer survivors benefit from practicing Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Dec-2011
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Jesslyn Tenhouse
    jtenhouse@mail.missouri.edu
    573-882-6211
    University of Missouri-Columbia

    Survivors' psychological and physiological health improved after training

    COLUMBIA, Mo. Women recently diagnosed with breast cancer have higher survival rates than those diagnosed in previous decades, according to the American Cancer Society. However, survivors continue to face health challenges after their treatments end. Previous research reports as many as 50 percent of breast cancer survivors are depressed. Now, University of Missouri researchers in the Sinclair School of Nursing say a meditation technique can help breast cancer survivors improve their emotional and physical well-being.

    Yaowarat Matchim, a former nursing doctoral student; Jane Armer, professor of nursing; and Bob Stewart, professor emeritus of education and adjunct faculty in nursing, found that breast cancer survivors' health improved after they learned Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), a type of mindfulness training that incorporates meditation, yoga and physical awareness.

    "MBSR is another tool to enhance the lives of breast cancer survivors," Armer said. "Patients often are given a variety of options to reduce stress, but they should choose what works for them according to their lifestyles and belief systems."

    The MBSR program consists of group sessions throughout a period of eight to ten weeks. During the sessions, participants practice meditation skills, discuss how bodies respond to stress and learn coping techniques. The researchers found that survivors who learned MBSR lowered their blood pressure, heart rate and respiratory rate. In addition, participants' mood improved, and their level of mindfulness increased after taking the class. Armer says, for best results, participants should continue MBSR after the class ends to maintain the positive effects.

    "Mindfulness-based meditation, ideally, should be practiced every day or at least on a routine schedule," Armer said. "MBSR teaches patients new ways of thinking that will give them short- and long-term benefits."

    Armer says the non-pharmaceutical approach works best as a complement to other treatment options such as chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.

    "Post diagnosis, breast cancer patients often feel like they have no control over their lives," Armer said. "Knowing that they can control somethingsuch as meditationand that it will improve their health, gives them hope that life will be normal again."

    The study, "Effects of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) on Health Among Breast Cancer Survivors," was published in the Western Journal of Nursing Research.

    ###


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


    Breast cancer survivors benefit from practicing Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Dec-2011
    [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

    Contact: Jesslyn Tenhouse
    jtenhouse@mail.missouri.edu
    573-882-6211
    University of Missouri-Columbia

    Survivors' psychological and physiological health improved after training

    COLUMBIA, Mo. Women recently diagnosed with breast cancer have higher survival rates than those diagnosed in previous decades, according to the American Cancer Society. However, survivors continue to face health challenges after their treatments end. Previous research reports as many as 50 percent of breast cancer survivors are depressed. Now, University of Missouri researchers in the Sinclair School of Nursing say a meditation technique can help breast cancer survivors improve their emotional and physical well-being.

    Yaowarat Matchim, a former nursing doctoral student; Jane Armer, professor of nursing; and Bob Stewart, professor emeritus of education and adjunct faculty in nursing, found that breast cancer survivors' health improved after they learned Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), a type of mindfulness training that incorporates meditation, yoga and physical awareness.

    "MBSR is another tool to enhance the lives of breast cancer survivors," Armer said. "Patients often are given a variety of options to reduce stress, but they should choose what works for them according to their lifestyles and belief systems."

    The MBSR program consists of group sessions throughout a period of eight to ten weeks. During the sessions, participants practice meditation skills, discuss how bodies respond to stress and learn coping techniques. The researchers found that survivors who learned MBSR lowered their blood pressure, heart rate and respiratory rate. In addition, participants' mood improved, and their level of mindfulness increased after taking the class. Armer says, for best results, participants should continue MBSR after the class ends to maintain the positive effects.

    "Mindfulness-based meditation, ideally, should be practiced every day or at least on a routine schedule," Armer said. "MBSR teaches patients new ways of thinking that will give them short- and long-term benefits."

    Armer says the non-pharmaceutical approach works best as a complement to other treatment options such as chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.

    "Post diagnosis, breast cancer patients often feel like they have no control over their lives," Armer said. "Knowing that they can control somethingsuch as meditationand that it will improve their health, gives them hope that life will be normal again."

    The study, "Effects of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) on Health Among Breast Cancer Survivors," was published in the Western Journal of Nursing Research.

    ###


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


    Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/uom-bcs122911.php

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    Church Nativity scene with gay figures vandalized

    December 30, 2011

    CLAREMONT, Calif. (AP) ? Vandalism of a church's Nativity display that includes depictions of gay and lesbian couples was being investigated as a hate crime, police said.

    The damage at Claremont United Methodist Church occurred late Saturday or Sunday morning.

    The display's three panels feature silhouettes of three hand-holding couples _ two men, two women and a heterosexual pair. The vandal knocked over the depictions of the gay and lesbian couples but left the straight couple alone.

    "It's a hate crime based on it being church property as well as the wooden box knocked over that depicted two males holding hands," Claremont police Sgt. Jason Walters told the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.

    The display created by artist church member John Zachary includes the phrase "Christ is born" and a Star of Bethlehem but no traditional manger figures. For the past six years, Zachary has designed and built a scene on the church's front lawn. The scene has had controversial themes before, but this was the first about gay couples, the Daily Bulletin said.

    Zachary said the artwork suffered at least $3,000 worth of damage. The exhibit had three panels that weighed 600 pounds each.

    The Rev. Dan Lewis said he was saddened by the incident.

    "We have members of our church who are gay and lesbian who it sends a very personal message to," said Lewis, who learned of the vandalism on Christmas Day. "I tried to say in worship on Sunday morning that we will not let it trouble us."

    Ed Kania, 60, an openly gay member of the church, called the act of vandalism disappointing, especially because Claremont is a generally seen as a progressive college town.

    "It's a reminder that although there are pockets of acceptance, not everybody is accepting," he told the Los Angeles Times. "We're all kind of disappointed, but we're using it as a rallying point."

    (Copyright 2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

    Source: http://feeds.mpr.org/~r/MPR_LawJustice/~3/alQs7VLFpjs/

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    Friday, December 30, 2011

    How beavers helped build America

    Beavers, once abundant and widespread in the Northern Hemisphere, helped to forge the ground underneath many Americans? feet

    The team behind a new study used ground-penetrating radar to detect buried beaver dams.

    The study, published in the January 2012 issue of Geology, reveals how beaver activity up to thousands of years ago affected sedimentation and left its lasting mark within North America's ground.

    NEWS: Largest Beaver Dam Seen From Space

    ?Ecologists have estimated that, prior to the arrival of Europeans in North America, anywhere from 60 to 400 million beavers inhabited the continent, with a geographic range estimated at 15 million square kilometers,? co-author Ellen Wohl told Discovery News.

    ?Beavers were present from the arctic tundra to the deserts of northern Mexico, so they would have been in every U.S. state but Hawaii,? added Wohl, a professor in the Warner College of Natural Resources at Colorado State University.


    VIDEO: Watch a beaver chop down a tree.

    For the study, Wohl and colleagues Natalie Kramer and Dennis Harry used both ground-penetrating radar and near-surface seismic refraction to detect beaver-induced sedimentation.

    Both methods put energy, radar and seismic waves, into the ground. The researchers then recorded the times required for the energy?s return, using spatial differences in these travel times to infer the presence of contrasts in the subsurface. These, in turn, can reveal buried beaver dams that may have no surface expression.

    The scientists focused their work at a site appropriately called Beaver Meadows in Colorado?s Rocky Mountain National Park. As of 1976, no beavers were present in the area, but earlier surveys documented the presence of numerous beaver lodges. The beaver dam sedimentation detected by the scientists dated from 180 to 4,300 years ago, with even older remains possible.

    The study determined that beavers contributed 30 to 50 percent of post-glacial sediments in the target area.

    1. More science news from MSNBC Tech & Science

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        Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: 2011 had plenty of scientific weirdness, ranging from doomsday predictions to game-playing chimps. It's up to you to decide which weird tales take the prize.

      2. Samoans drop Friday from the calendar
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    ?I think it very likely that our results are not unique to the Beaver Meadows study site, but also apply to other regions with relatively low rates of sediment yield to valley bottoms,? Wohl said.

    She explained that beaver dams interrupt the flow of a stream, creating a backwater effect of reduced velocity. Sediment deposits in the backwater zone of the beaver pond, with this material remaining ?in storage? until river erosion may mobilize it and carry it downstream.

    The process is beneficial to humans, she continued, because ?wet meadows associated with beaver dams have higher habitat and species diversity for plants, insects and other invertebrates, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals -- pretty much all forms of life.?

    Beaver ponds additionally help to remove carbon and nitrogen from water. When carbon combines with chlorine -- used in many water treatment facilities -- it can result in cancer-causing chemicals, she said, so beavers can help to keep drinking water safe.

    Jill Baron, co-director of the John Wesley Powell Center for Earth System Analysis and Synthesis at the U.S. Geological Survey, believes that studies like this latest one, which show the widespread and long-standing effects of beaver activity, are important.

    NEWS: Ancient Beavers Didn?t Have a Taste for Wood

    ?Not only do beavers make wetlands, but they also alter the appearance and function of rivers for a very long time,? Baron said.

    ?What beavers do is create environments for storing carbon and processing nitrogen,? Baron said. The latter, in particular, provides a ?very important ecosystem service, because reactive nitrogen flowing down rivers is what causes eutrophication, hypoxia and dead zones in many of the world?s estuaries (such as at Chesapeake Bay and the Gulf of Mexico),? she said.

    Due to intense beaver hunting, habitat destruction, pollution and other problems, the beaver population has plummeted by the millions in recent decades. Since beavers can impact human activities, their presence in areas remains controversial. Conservation groups such as Worth a Dam in Martinez, California, however, work hard to maintain beaver dams through responsible stewardship and to educate the public about the many benefits associated with beavers.

    ? 2011 Discovery Channel

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45806279/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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    Gray whales usually swim off the Southern California coast later in the year, bu...

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    Trans-Canada Fitness resolutions resolved

    The second offering of Trans-Canada Fitness?s Ultimate Loser competition helped dozens of participants get healthy and shed weight ? all for a good cause. Cooper?s Foods matched donations of $1 per pound lost to the contest, and also donated $1 per pound lost to the Revelstoke Food Bank. JR Powell came in first with the biggest percentage of body weight lost over the 13-week program, totalling 45 pounds. ?[Trans-Canada Fitness?s Neil Jones] goes above and beyond to help you,? Powell told the Times Review. ?It?s a new lease on life; a world of difference for everybody,? he said of the group. Jones said he?ll be offering the three-month program once again in February, but that?s it for the year. Pictured here from left: Trans-Canada Fitness?s Neil Jones, co-organizer Tanya Secord, Joe Mele of Cooper?s Foods Revelstoke, JR Powell (1st with 45 pound loss), Teresa Flick (2nd with 24 pounds lost) and Joanne Short (3rd with 19 pounds lost).

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    D.C. Del. Holmes Norton joins call for Union Station audit

    Two members of Congress have called for what they describe as the first-ever federal audit of Union Station's Redevelopment Corporation, the Washington Examiner reported. The moves comes as Union Station undergoes 10 months of repairs following the Aug. 23 earthquake.

    District Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton and Rep. Nick Rahall, D.-W.Va., are asking the Department of Transportation's Inspector General to investigate Union Station's management and finances as the station prepares to undergo major changes in addition to repairing earthquake damage, according to the Examiner - including expanded Metrorail access and renovations in Columbus Circle.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bizj_washington/~3/8jwJK51aXh0/dc-rep-holmes-norton-joins-call-for.html

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    Thursday, December 29, 2011

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    Jaan Pehechaan Ho (Balloon Juice)

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    ProBallNW: Hate seeing Twitter reaction on live TV broadcasts. That's what... ya know... Twitter is for.

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    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    In GOP race, Iowa and New Hampshire aren't what they used to be (The Christian Science Monitor)

    Washington ? The 2012 caucuses and primaries are finally upon us, and now it can be said: Iowa and New Hampshire may be a thing of the past.

    What's fading is not their place in the celestial order as hosts of the first nominating contests, but rather their outsize role in personally sizing up Republican nominees.

    An obscure Democratic governor named Jimmy Carter set the paradigm in 1975, when he essentially took up residence in Iowa and shook countless hands on his way to becoming the top named vote-getter in the 1976 caucuses. The Georgia governor's upset victory set him on a path to the presidency.

    When Iowa Republicans caucus on Jan. 3, chances are the voters will know more about the candidates from nationally televised debates and interviews than from personal interaction. Ditto the New Hampshire primary on Jan. 10.

    "If the protester is Time's person of the year, then the debate is the primaries' theme of the year," says Republican strategist Ford O'Connell.

    RECOMMENDED: Mitt Romney gaffes: 8 times the button-down candidate should have buttoned up

    Contrary to popular belief, there have not been more Republican debates than there were four years ago. In 2007, GOP contenders took part in 15 debates; this year, they had 13. But the 2011 debates have been more memorable, in part because the field has been so fluid. Over time, Iowa has had a succession of six front-runners. And when a new one rises up ? say, Texas Gov. Rick Perry ? he or she becomes the focus of attention in debates, both by the other candidates and the moderators.

    That means more questions and attacks, which increase the possibility of a stumble. Governor Perry's stunning brain freeze in the Nov. 9 debate, where he could not remember the third government agency he would close, sealed his fate as yesterday's news.

    Herman Cain benefited from the debates, as they gave him a platform to show off his charisma and "9-9-9"-infused sound bites. When allegations of sexual impropriety emerged, viewers tuned in to the debates to see what he would say.

    Ron Paul's quirky authenticity shines through in debates, helping the libertarian-leaning Texas congressman build a devoted following that is unparalleled in this cycle.

    Debates have also been central to a candidate's revival. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich appeared mortally wounded in June when most of his staff resigned over his unorthodox campaign strategy. He was ridiculed for taking a Mediterranean cruise, rather than the Holiday Inn circuit around Iowa. And he appeared woefully out of touch in tough economic times when he defended his $500,000 line of credit at Tiffany's.

    But by the last two months of 2011, Mr. Gingrich had climbed back into contention via the debate stage, where he displayed verbal skill and familiarity with policy. Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, has also been a consistently strong debater, reinforcing his position in the top tier. He did make that $10,000 bet with Perry, which was blasted as a gaffe because it made the wealthy former businessman look out of touch. But he, like Gingrich, has shown himself to be fluent on the issues and a credible potential debater against President Obama.

    In short, the 2011 primary season has been all about fired-up conservatives looking for an alternative to the moderate Mr. Romney. And so there's been an evolving narrative as, one by one, the alternatives have risen and fallen.

    "This has been a season to find the un-Romney, and so our memory will be of more debates because there was more novelty in the focus of the debates," says Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. "It's not the same debate being rerun over and over."

    No wonder, she says, debate viewership has been way up over four years ago (7.6 million viewers on Dec. 10 alone ? a boffo rating, especially for a Saturday night). The lingering economic downturn has made voters particularly anxious about who will be the next president, and interest is high.

    In addition, Ms. Jamieson says, there have been lots of televised candidate interviews, which offer additional insights into each contender's views and personality. She welcomes the access that candidates have provided the national audience, rather than sequestering themselves in the living rooms of Iowa and New Hampshire.

    In the Granite State, GOP partisans rue the threat to their state's special role.  "On-the-ground retail campaigning, it just doesn't pay," says Fergus Cullen, former chairman of the New Hampshire Republican Party. "That's a disappointing realization. The idea of Jimmy Carter building support one by one is not nearly as effective as having a good debate moment that goes viral on YouTube."

    Indeed, the multiplier effect of social media is more important than ever. Instead of the traditional media deciding what the key debate moments are and pushing an analysis that may or may not resonate with voters, debates are in effect being crowd-sourced in real time. Twitter and other platforms light up with trending topics that come straight from the candidates' and moderators' mouths.

    Clearly, the top candidates have figured all this out, as they have given less time to the early states than they did four years ago. Gingrich spent little time in Iowa and New Hampshire until recently but could well be a top-three finisher in both states (though his inability to qualify for the Virginia primary ballot on March 6 has raised serious questions about his overall viability). Romney has spent far less time in Iowa ?? just 12 days this cycle, as of Dec. 25 ? than he did four years ago but may end up winning the caucuses.  Representative Paul has posted middling numbers for visits to both Iowa (39 days as of Dec. 25) and New Hampshire (35 days), yet he has an excellent chance of winning Iowa and placing in the top three in New Hampshire. In contrast, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum has spent more time in Iowa than any other candidate ? 97 days, including visits to all 99 counties ? but is mired in single digits. (All the visit tallies come from the website P2012.org.) Mr. Santorum's Dec. 20 endorsement by Iowa evangelical activist Bob Vander Plaats could give him a little mojo in a state where religious conservatives are a force in the GOP, but endorsements are hardly game changers.

    The GOP?s new rule awarding delegates proportionally based on the vote, rather than winner-take-all, in most contests before April also makes the early contests less important than in the past.

    Still, Iowa and New Hampshire remain important. They will winnow the field, allowing those still standing to consolidate support. The winners will also matter, but perhaps not in a way that pleases the party.

    If Paul wins Iowa, that will feed the narrative that the Hawkeye State is becoming increasingly irrelevant in selecting the Republican nominee. Four years ago, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee won the caucuses with 34 percent but did not have the national appeal or fundraising skill to win the nomination.

    Paul would face an even more biting analysis. Because of the large, unsettled field, he can squeak through to victory in Iowa with a plurality in the 20s ?hardly a strong send-off. But a win is a win, and Iowa Republicans are already expressing concern that a Paul victory will hurt Iowa's image.

    Paul's isolationist foreign policy alone is enough to scare off much of the Republican mainstream, and thus he doesn't have much room to grow his numbers nationally. But he could opt to run as a third-party candidate in November, which could harm the eventual Republican nominee ? so the Republican powers-that-be will have to tread carefully.

    New Hampshire should be strong for Romney, and he is still expected to win there. The question is by how much. If he wins by single digits, that could raise a red flag over his ability to grow support in states that are less friendly to his moderate Northeastern sensibility.

    Regardless, Romney is one of the few Republican candidates with the organization and money to survive a long nomination battle, if it comes to that.

    RECOMMENDED:

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    Get daily or weekly updates from CSMonitor.com delivered to your inbox. Sign up today.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111226/ts_csm/441626

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    India aiming for big first innings lead

    AAP

    India plan to bat Australia out of the game on day three of the first Test at the MCG, confident that the pitch will help them.

    Offspinner Ravichandran Ashwin said the visitors had the better of the batting conditions on Tuesday, as the sun came out, and the pitch began to flatten.

    With India poised at 3-214 in their first innings, just 119 in arrears, Ashwin expected Wednesday's conditions to be ever more conducive to batting.

    Advertisement: Story continues below

    He said there was little sign of the wicket beginning to crumble or any deviation.

    "If the sun's going to belt down like this and the wicket eases more and more, I think we'll have to look at batting out as much time as possible and trying to get as much ahead in the game as possible," Ashwin said after Tuesday's play.

    "That's very important.

    "As far as this game could go, I think it's all about the first innings lead or first innings situation that both teams find themselves in.

    "I hope it just flattens out and becomes a really good day for us tomorrow."

    Ashwin said India would have settled for the position in which they ended day two at the start of their innings, despite the blow of losing Sachin Tendulkar in the day's final over.

    Source: http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-sport/india-aiming-for-big-first-innings-lead-20111227-1pbie.html

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    Prominent Egyptian blogger freed from detention

    Egyptian prominent blogger Alaa Abdel Fattah, left, hugs his recently born son, Khaled, his mother Laila Soueif, and his sister Ahdaf Soueif, left, after after he was released in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. An Egyptian court ordered the release of Alaa after detained nearly two months ago by the ruling military for his alleged role in deadly sectarian clashes in October. (AP Photo/ Amr Hafez)

    Egyptian prominent blogger Alaa Abdel Fattah, left, hugs his recently born son, Khaled, his mother Laila Soueif, and his sister Ahdaf Soueif, left, after after he was released in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. An Egyptian court ordered the release of Alaa after detained nearly two months ago by the ruling military for his alleged role in deadly sectarian clashes in October. (AP Photo/ Amr Hafez)

    Egyptian prominent blogger Alaa Abdel Fattah, left, hugs his recently born son, Khaled, after after he was released in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. An Egyptian court ordered the release of Alaa after detained nearly two months ago by the ruling military for his alleged role in deadly sectarian clashes in October. At right Alaa unidentified sister . (AP Photo/ Amr Hafez)

    (AP) ? A prominent Egyptian blogger accused of attacking soldiers during deadly clashes was released Sunday after nearly two months in detention, during which he became a symbol of the pro-democracy activists' struggle to end military rule in Egypt.

    Alaa Abdel-Fattah's first stop after he was freed was Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the uprising that toppled longtime leader Hosni Mubarak in February. The square continues to be the focus of the campaign against the military, which took power after Mubarak's ouster.

    Abdel-Fattah was accused of inciting violence and other offenses during clashes that killed 27 people Oct. 9, but he was never formally charged. He was arrested Oct. 30.

    The arrest raised tensions between the activists who engineered Mubarak's ouster and the generals led by Hussein Tantawi, the deposed leader's defense minister for some 20 years.

    Relations have since steadily worsened, hitting a new low this month when soldiers brutally beat and stomped on protesters, including women, in Cairo clashes that left at least 18 people dead and dozens wounded. Clashes between protesters and security forces have killed more than 100 people since Mubarak's ouster.

    "We need to end military rule," Abdel-Fattah said, moments after his release outside Cairo's police headquarters. "We cannot just celebrate my innocence. We know from the beginning I am not the one who killed peopleWe have not gone after the real criminals who killed people," he said in remarks carried on Al-Jazeera TV.

    A small crowd of supporters behind him chanted, "The people want the fall of the Field Marshal," referring to Tantawi.

    On Sunday evening, hundreds of people demonstrated against the military while waiting at Cairo International Airport to greet a protester, dentist Ahmed Harara, who was arriving from Paris. He flew there for medical treatment to try to save his vision. The treatment failed, according to activists.

    Harara, 31, lost an eye in the bloodiest day of clashes with security forces Jan. 28. Then he was shot in his other eye in mid-November by security forces during clashes near Tahrir Square that killed over 40 people. He also went to Tahrir Square with his supporters after arriving to Cairo Sunday evening.

    Members of an advisory council set up by the military say the generals were now prepared to look into proposals to bring forward the date of their transfer of power to a civilian administration. According to the military's timetable, the generals would step down after presidential elections are held before the end of June, 2012.

    Outside police headquarters Sunday, Abdel-Fattah cradled his newborn son Khaled, named after Khaled Said, whose death at the hands of police officers helped inspire the uprising that toppled Mubarak. Abdel-Fattah's wife gave birth to the baby while her husband was in detention.

    His detention brought international condemnation, and activists said it was evidence that the generals were following the same authoritarian policies as the deposed leader.

    Activist members of his family noted that at least 12,000 Egyptians have been tried before military courts since late January.

    The decision to release Abdel-Fattah but ban him from travel also applies to 27 others accused of taking part in violent clashes with security forces Oct. 9.

    That violence began when groups of stone-throwers attacked a crowd of Coptic Christians protesting an attack on a church in southern Egypt. Video showed the military moving in with force, and some of the protesters were run over by army vehicles.

    Abdel-Fattah and his supporters dismissed the accusations that he incited violence, saying the military was trying to silence a prominent critic and to deflect blame.

    The investigation of Abdel-Fattah's case was transferred to a civilian judge, who ordered his release Sunday. No reasons were given,

    Abdel-Fattah, a leader of the 18-day uprising that ousted Mubarak in February, was Egypt's first blogger activist, launching a blog years ago organizing opposition to Mubarak. He was detained for six weeks in 2006 under Mubarak.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-25-ML-Egypt/id-19d0c078702248cd9bc92426e3a38033

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    FSU football players from Central Florida happy to spend Christmas in Orlando

    With a practice scheduled for this morning in preparation for Thursday's Champs Sports Bowl, Florida State's football players and coaches didn't have the luxury of spending Christmas at home with family and friends.

    Well, most of them didn't.

    A handful of Florida State players from Central Florida admitted they were ecstatic when they learned they would be spending the holidays in Orlando.

    Junior linebacker Vince Williams, who grew up in nearby Davenport, said the only better destination would have been a BCS bowl. But once that was out of the question, Williams said he started rooting openly for the Champs ? even when the more prestigious Chick-fil-A Bowl was still in play.

    If Virginia Tech had defeated Clemson in the ACC Championship game, there was a chance FSU could have been sent to Atlanta for the second consecutive year.

    "I was like, 'Man, I hope Clemson kills Virginia Tech. I do not want to be in Atlanta,'?" Williams said, laughing. "It's cold up there."

    Of course, the Chick-fil-A Bowl is played indoors at the Georgia Dome, but Williams had bad memories of practicing in the elements.

    "I'm like, 'I want to go home and see my family and play in this warm weather,'?" Williams said. "When we were in Atlanta last year, it was snowing at practice. I'm a Florida boy. I don't even like snow. I was like, 'I don't want to do that no more.' It's like Miami or bust, now."

    Williams got his wish, of course. Clemson beat Virginia Tech, and the Seminoles got shipped to Orlando, where the temperatures will be in the 70s this week.

    Florida State's players reported to the Orlando Hilton for a team meeting Saturday, and they will practice today, Monday and Tuesday to simulate their normal Tuesday-through-Thursday game preparation.

    Because Orlando is centrally located for most of Florida State's players, FSU coach Jimbo Fisher allowed them to make their own travel arrangements.

    "We've got so many guys (from Florida), it's easier," Fisher said. "If we were (in a bowl game) farther off, I like going as a team."

    That suited many of the Seminoles, such as Tampa's Christian Green, just fine.

    "That's definitely good ? spend time with some of my family and stuff like that," said Green, a redshirt freshman receiver. "And some of my family will be able to come to the game. That's always good, to be close to home."

    Source: http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20111225/FSU03/112250330/1103/RSS18

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    #LesserKnownReindeer: Twitter Meme Names Santa's Other Helpers

    #LesserKnownReindeer: Twitter Meme Names Santa's Other Helpers '; var coords = [-5, -78]; if( HPConfig.current_vertical_name == 'homepage' ) { coords = [-5, -70]; } else if( HPConfig.current_vertical_name == 'mapquest' ) { coords = [-5, -68]; } FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });
    Lesserknownreindeer

    Maybe this guy will be pulling Santa's sleigh.

    T'was the night before Christmas and all over the internet, Twitter users were stirring. This time it's users tweeting new names for some of Santa's unsung reindeer with the trending hashtag #LesserKnownReindeer.

    Yes, everyone loves Rudolph and that shiny nose of his. And it's easy to remember Dasher and Dancer, Comet, Cupid, Donner and Blitzen, but what happens if Dasher pulls a hamstring? Or Blitzen has a bad hangover? Maybe one of these reindeer will step in?

    See our roundup of #LesserKnownReindeer tweets.

    MORE SLIDESHOWS NEXT?> ??|?? <?PREV

    '; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

    T'was the night before Christmas and all over the internet, Twitter users were stirring. This time it's users tweeting new names for some of Santa's unsung reindeer with the trending hashtag #LesserKn...

    T'was the night before Christmas and all over the internet, Twitter users were stirring. This time it's users tweeting new names for some of Santa's unsung reindeer with the trending hashtag #LesserKn...

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2011/12/24/lesserknownreindeer-twitter_n_1169031.html

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