Monday, November 28, 2011

Bodies identified in Mexico mass slaying (AP)

GUADALAJARA, Mexico ? A baker, a truck driver, a soft-drink vendor and a dental technician were among the 26 men found bound, gagged, slain and left in the center of Guadalajara, a state prosecutor said Friday.

Written in motor oil on the victims' bodies were the names of the Zetas and Millenium drug cartels. Law enforcement officials and analysts saw that as a possible indication the two allied gangs were announcing their intent to seize a city historically controlled by the powerful Sinaloa cartel.

The Zetas and Sinaloa have emerged from years of Mexican drug wars as the largest cartels in the nation, and potential competitors for control of smuggling and other businesses worth billions of dollars a year. Both frequently form alliances of convenience with smaller local gangs.

Analysts cautioned, however, that the killers in Guadalajara may also have been engaging in an isolated act of retaliation for the slaughter of dozens of men dumped on a roadway in September 600 miles away in the eastern, Gulf coast city of Veracruz. Authorities blamed that killing on the New Generation, a gang believed to be working with the Sinaloa cartel. A video posted by men claiming to be the Veracruz killers said the victims were Zetas.

The next few weeks will be crucial in determining whether Guadalajara, Mexico's second largest city, begins dissolving into the chaotic killing, kidnapping and streetfighting that has devastated cities and towns along the U.S. border, said Samuel Logan, director of Southern Pulse, a risk analysis firm specializing in Latin American organized crime.

"The Mexican government has to react quickly and strongly," Logan said. "This could be the beginning of Guadalajara moving into a more insecure environment ... We need a little more time to watch things play out."

The identities of 14 of the men slain in Guadalajara were released Friday by Jalisco state prosecutor Tomas Coronado, who said that only two had criminal records, without providing details.

Among the victims were Alejandro Robles Vidal, 22, who had been working as a dental technician in the nearby city of Zapopan for three years and disappeared Monday evening.

He was identified by his father, Coronado said.

Also among the dead was Jose Antonia Parga Guareno, 23, a cargo-truck driver who disappeared Tuesday and was identified by his father, Coronado said.

The prosecutor cautioned the press and public not to draw conclusions about the victims' potential involvement in drug cartel activity, saying that would be one of the subjects of the investigation.

He said the victims died of strangulation or blows to the head.

Earlier, he told MVS Radio that even though a message signed by the Zetas was left in one of the cars, investigators had not confirmed that the cartel was responsible.

Guadalajara sits on the main highway running through western Mexico from the methamphetamine-producing state of Michoacan north toward the Pacific Coast state of Sinaloa where the cartel of the same name is based.

In Michoacan on Friday, the entire 32-member police department of the town of Caracuaro resigned following a series of threats from drug gangs and the near-kidnapping of almost half the force earlier in the day.

Fourteen of the town's officers were surrounded by gunmen, presumably from a drug cartel, and had to be rescued by soldiers. After their rescue, they fled the town, and the rest of the officers resigned.

Caracuaro town councilman Mario Tentory said officers had reported getting threats for some time. He said the Mexican army had temporarily taken over security duties in the town, which is in an area where cartels have long operated.

According to press reports, drug traffickers were angered because the police had participated in a firefight with gunmen in a neighboring town.

It was the fourth town in Michoacan where the entire police force has resigned in recent years.

"Now nobody wants to work for the local police, because everybody knows there is a law of 'cooperate or get shot'," Tentory said.

In recent months, security officials and analysts have worried that the region around Guadalajara could become a target for the Zetas, which has rapidly expanded since breaking with its old allies in the Gulf cartel in 2010.

The Zetas have been expanding west from their base on the Gulf coast, and Sinaloa has apparently been sending proxy forces eastward into the territory of the Zetas or their allies.

Killings in Guadalajara slowed to a trickle during the Oct. 15-30 Pan American Games, which brought a big influx of police and soldiers. Law enforcement officials and analysts said they were nonetheless concerned a Zetas onslaught could be imminent.

On Wednesday, 17 bodies were found burned in two pickup trucks in a strikingly similar attack in Sinaloa, the home state of the Sinaloa cartel. Twelve of the bodies were in the back of one truck, some of them handcuffed and wearing bulletproof vests.

Coronado said he was in contact with authorities in Sinaloa to determine if the deaths in Sinaloa and Guadalajara were related, because they were at least superficially similar.

___

Associated Press writers E. Eduardo Castillo and Michael Weissenstein in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Black Friday violence: Competitive shopping's troubling new edge

Some Black Friday shoppers have been cutting in line, grabbing carts, coming to blows, and wielding pepper spray.?What the Black Friday hunt for the perfect Christmas present says about the shopper within.

Aisle-bumping, line-cutting, and parking lot rudeness is to be expected on Black Friday, the annual post-Thanksgiving shopping extravaganza. This year's event, however, saw more mayhem than usual as throngs of competitive shoppers tussled and growled over waffle irons and Xboxes, with altercations turning violent in at least seven states.

Skip to next paragraph

As in years past, stories of "competitive shopping" gone bad abounded, but with a new edge.

In Los Angeles, a woman pepper-sprayed at least 20 fellow shoppers to save some money on an Xbox console, paying up and getting out before cops arrived. In Ohio and Michigan, women "came out swinging" over discounted bath towels. The results were at times serious, with several shootings reported and one confrontation ending with a grandfather lying bloodied and unconscious.

RECOMMENDED:?Top 6 weird Black Friday discounts

With economic growth still moribund and unemployment uncomfortably close to double digits, the growth in Black Friday mayhem hints at both desperation and hope on the part of corporations and consumers looking to bust out of the pseudo-recession and salvage Christmas. Stores pushing start times up to midnight for the first time helped to dial up the emotions and the stress, which inevitably find occasional outlets in shoving and screaming.

"People are putting in all this effort getting up early, cutting out coupons ... then they get there and they find out the goods are gone because they are out of stock or because there were not very many to begin," Sharron Lennon tells TheStreet.com website. "They are?going to be angry, and some of them might be the ones who engage in the consumer misbehavior."?

Cue YouTube. One short clip depicts a huddle of shoppers climbing over each other, tossing around boxes of a $2 waffle iron, with, as Reuters reports, "one woman seemingly unaware that her pants were sliding down her backside."

For some, such scenes prompt existential musings about the state of humanity.

"There is a point in our culture beyond which camp and kitsch no longer make the least ironic sense, where consumerism loses its last mooring to civilization, where even seemingly legitimate protest devolves into farce.?That point is Black Friday," writes Andrew Leonard in Salon.

But the focus on snippets of consumer deviance doesn't quite give the event a fair shake.

Only eight percent of people in an ebates.com poll said they cut in line, for example, and given that 158 million people said they were heading out on Black Friday ? compared to 138 million people last year ? the sheer crush of humanity has only grown as retailers like Wal-Mart and Kohl's extended the start hour to 12:01 Friday morning, quite a stretch from when 6 a.m. starting times were seen as outrageous.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/xnVFaoV44IM/Black-Friday-violence-Competitive-shopping-s-troubling-new-edge

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German police, demonstrators clash at nuke protest

Police used water cannons to disperse about 300 protesters hurling rocks and fireworks during an attempt to disrupt a shipment of nuclear waste in northern Germany on Saturday, officials said.

Some 50 activists also tried to sabotage the rail tracks that will be used by a train this weekend to transport the nuclear waste to the storage facility near the northern town of Gorleben, police spokesman Stefan Kuehm-Stoltz said.

Several thousand protesters gathered in the town of Dannenberg to hold a peaceful protest rally, police said. Organizers put the figure at 23,000.

Northeast of Dannenberg at least 700 people later broke through police ranks and staged a sit-in on rail tracks in an area of dense forest. Several hundred officers were deployed to carry the protesters away, which was expected to take several hours, police spokesman Martin Ackert said.

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The train carrying the shipment of 11 containers of nuclear waste reprocessed at France's La Hague facility entered western Germany on Friday after delays in France, where activists damaged railway tracks in an attempt to halt the cargo.

The shipment is expected to reach its destination sometime over the weekend. Some 20,000 German police officers are on hand.

Nuclear energy has been unpopular in Germany since fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine drifted over the country. The annual shipment from France has been a traditional focal point for protesters.

This is the first shipment, however, since Chancellor Angela Merkel decided to speed up shutting down all of Germany's nuclear plants, with the last one scheduled to go offline by 2022, following safety questions raised after the disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan.

Activists in Germany say the waste containers, and the temporary storage facility near Gorleben, are not safe.

Germany has not yet decided where such waste, which remains radioactive for thousands of years, should be stored permanently.

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/45443901/ns/us_news-environment/

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

European shares fall on Merkel comments (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? European shares fell for the sixth consecutive session in low volume on Thursday after German Chancellor Angela Merkel restated her position against changing the role of the European Central Bank to ease the euro zone debt crisis.

The market trimmed gains after the comments by Merkel about the ECB as well as remarks that she remained opposed to the use of jointly issued euro bonds to combat the region's debt crisis.

"The comments about the ECB were a clear message to the market not to expect anything in the short-term," Veronika Pechlaner, a fund manager on the Ashburton European equity fund, said.

"The market is looking toward the ECB as it only has the firepower necessary to help the situation. The question is how much systemic risk do you get before something is done."

Banks (.SX7P), which have been in focus due to their exposure to the region's sovereign debt, pared earlier gains.

But after a sell-off of 10 percent over the past five days many banking stocks were in "oversold" territory after the (.SX7P) Relative Strength Index (RSI) came close to 30 on Wednesday and technical factors kept the (.SX7P) up 1 percent.

The RSI is a technical momentum indicator comparing the magnitude of recent rises with recent falls to determine "oversold" or "overbought" conditions. A reading of 30 or below is considered "oversold," while 70 and above is "overbought."

The main mover in the banking sector was Belgian lender Dexia (DEXI.BR), up 27.9 percent, after a French Finance Ministry source said an agreement to guarantee the troubled bank's financing would be reached within days.

Dexia's RSI fell into oversold territory at the beginning of October and is down 65.9 percent since October 4 after it emerged it would need state aid from France and Belgium.

On Wednesday Dexia's RSI was at 22.8, but had risen to 34.8 on Thursday.

Portuguese banks featured heavily on the downside in the banking sector after Fitch downgraded Portugal's credit rating to junk status because of its large fiscal imbalances, high debt and concerns about its austerity programme.

A Reuters poll showed that economists have slashed growth forecasts for the periphery countries from next year and 2013 and expect it will be years before the debt ridden countries recover from the crisis.

Portugal's PSI 20 (.PSI20) was down 0.9 percent underperforming the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 (.FTEU3) index of top shares which closed down 0.3 percent at 899.50 points in choppy trade, having been up as much as 913.13 and down as low as 894.37.

Volume on the FTSEurofirst 300 index was low at 76.8 percent of its 90-day daily average due to a public holiday in the United States.

FUND MANAGERS CAUTIOUS

Fund managers were wary about investing in banks because they were "oversold."

"Banks are not investable in the euro zone at the moment. Clearly there are people trading the banks shares, but there is no clarity on the quality of the balance sheets," David Coombs, fund manager at Rathbone Brothers, which has $24.2 billion under management, said.

(Reporting by Joanne Frearson, Editing by Helen Massy-Beresford)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111124/bs_nm/us_markets_europe_stocks

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Bills RB Fred Jackson placed on IR, out for season

Buffalo Bills quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (14) hands the ball off to running back C. J. Spiller during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Bills running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. Which could mean more work for Spiller. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

Buffalo Bills quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick (14) hands the ball off to running back C. J. Spiller during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Bills running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. Which could mean more work for Spiller. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

Buffalo Bills' C. J. Spiller looks on during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Bills running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. Which could mean more work for Spiller. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

Buffalo Bills running back C. J. Spiller runs a drill during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Bills running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. Which could mean more work for Spiller. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

Buffalo Bills running back C. J. Spiller looks on during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Bills running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. Which could mean more work for Spiller. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

Buffalo Bills running back C. J. Spiller tosses a ball during NFL football practice in Orchard Park, N.Y., Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Running back Fred Jackson won't play Sunday in New York against the Jets because of a leg injury. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

(AP) ? Fred Jackson will miss the rest of the year with a broken bone in his lower right leg, an injury that could derail Buffalo's once-promising season.

The team placed Jackson on injured reserve Wednesday, hours after Bills coach Chan Gailey said the running back wouldn't play Sunday in a pivotal game against the New York Jets.

"That's disappointing news for our team and certainly for Fred," Gailey said in a statement released by the team. "He was having a great year. The process for Fred to return to the field would most likely take him through the end of the season, so we have made the difficult decision to place him on injured reserve."

Jackson's best season was cut short after he was hurt in Sunday's blowout loss to the Miami Dolphins. Now, the Bills (5-5) will face the challenge of trying to erase an 11-year playoff drought without their most explosive offensive threat.

"If you've got a professional football team that's in the hunt and I've got to go give them some kind of talk to keep them motivated, we're in trouble," Gailey said. "My feeling is that if you've got a team that is that fragile, you're in trouble. I believe we have guys that understand about fighting through tough times and fighting through adversity."

Jackson's absence is a significant blow to a Bills team that has dropped three straight by a combined score of 106-26.

"It's tough not having Fred out there on the field," quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick said. "We know where his heart is, and where his mind's going to be ... with us."

Duplicating Jackson's production will be nearly impossible. Entering the Dolphins game he led the NFL in rushing, and his 1,376 yards from scrimmage through 10 games ranks behind only Chicago's Matt Forte (1,391).

"He's Mr. Everything," Bills receiver David Nelson said.

With Jackson out, the spotlight will be on his backup, second-year running back C.J. Spiller.

Spiller has not been the dynamic threat the Bills envisioned when they selected him with the ninth overall pick in the 2010 draft. He's carried the ball just 21 times for 115 yards, and made 15 catches for a mere 82 yards this season.

"You're excited, but at the same time you're sad because one of our great players on this team is out," Spiller said. "I've got to step up."

Despite the insertion of Spiller, Gailey said he's not anticipating a big change in offensive philosophy.

"You've got 10 other guys that have been doing things, you can't change everything they've been doing, and you don't want to," Gailey said. "You want to let C.J. go in and do what he does best and give him an opportunity to make plays. He gets his chance now. He's probably looking forward to it and so are we."

But even with Jackson, the Bills have struggled during a three-game skid that has all but erased the memories of an electrifying 4-1 start. The offense averaged nearly 33 points in the first five games, but hasn't been close to that type of production since, scoring just 73 points over the last five.

The blame can be evenly passed around, from an offensive line that has failed to overcome some key injuries to Fitzpatrick's suddenly erratic throws. The slip-up has caught top receiver Stevie Johnson off guard.

"Yeah, it has because when you could move the ball so easy and when you feel like everything's sharp, and the past few weeks it's like, 'How can we get a first down?'" said Johnson, who has been held to seven receptions over the past three games after compiling 39 catches in the first seven contests. "I can't say it hasn't shocked me, because it has."

Fitzpatrick also acknowledged the slide has come as a surprise.

"It's something that we're looking to stop," he said. "We're trying to figure out some answers, and looking to see some results this week. We're going to have to have some guys break some tackles, and we have to have some of those superhuman plays in order to get some big plays."

But the task will be daunting without Jackson, who ranks third in the league in rushing with 934 yards.

"Knowing Fred, he's the kind of guy that you can always count on," Fitzpatrick said. "But C.J.'s going to get some looks and we'll see what we have on Sunday."

NOTES: To help offset the loss of Jackson, Buffalo signed running back Tashard Choice. He was released by Washington on Tuesday after starting the season with Dallas. ... Johnson (shoulder), Nelson (illness), receiver Naaman Roosevelt (shoulder) and starting safety George Wilson (neck) didn't practice Wednesday. ... Fitzpatrick has had little success in his career against the Jets. He's completed just 47.5 percent of his passes, and thrown four touchdowns and four interceptions in going 1-4 against them since 2008. ... After Andy Levitre struggled replacing the injured Eric Wood at center against the Dolphins, Kraig Urbik will be moved to center this week. Levitre will be back at his normal left guard position. ... The Bills and Jets have split the season series seven times since 2000. New York's win in the first meeting this year launched Buffalo's current three-game losing streak.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-23-Bills-Jackson%20Out/id-a9fea3152e7e471f8276d88c6cf9b860

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 5:30PM

It's Monday, and almost as regular an occurrence as the day itself, we're here to help by letting you listen into the recording booth when the Engadget HD podcast goes to mp3 at 5:30PM. Please be a part of it by reviewing the list of topics after the break, then participating in the live chat as you listen in.

Continue reading Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 5:30PM

Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 5:30PM originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 16:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/11/21/join-the-engadget-hd-podcast-live-on-ustream-at-5-30pm/

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Obama urges Congress to save payroll tax cut (Reuters)

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama said on Tuesday U.S. lawmakers would have a chance to vote again next week to extend a payroll tax cut which, he said, would hurt the economy and employment if it were not extended into 2012.

"In the spirit of Thanksgiving, we are going to give them another chance," Obama said, referring to lawmakers in Congress and Thursday's U.S. Thanksgiving holiday.

"Next week they are going to get to take a simple vote. If they vote no again the typical family's taxes will go up $1,000 next year."

Obama made his pitch in New Hampshire, where his potential Republican presidential rivals in the 2012 presidential election are campaigning ahead of a party primary contest in early January.

A senior Democratic aide said plans were being made to debate the measure in the Senate in early December and possibly as soon as next week.

While the details were still being worked on, Democrats could attempt to pay for extending the tax cut by raising taxes on the wealthy. Republicans have blocked that idea in the past and likely would do so again.

In that event, the payroll tax cut extension could come up again in an end-of-year, catch-all bill to fund many government programs through next September, the end of the current fiscal year.

(Reporting by Alister Bull; Writing by Jeff Mason; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/ts_nm/us_usa_debt_obama_payroll

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Crosby scores in 1st period of season debut (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? Pittsburgh Penguins star Sidney Crosby had a goal and an assist in the first period of his season debut on Monday night against the New York Islanders.

Crosby weaved past three New York defenders then beat Anders Nilsson with a backhand to give the Penguins an early 1-0 lead less than 6 minutes into the game.

It was Crosby's first goal since scoring a pair against Atlanta on Dec. 28, 2010. Crosby hadn't played since Jan. 5 after being diagnosed with concussion-like symptoms.

He was cleared to play Sunday and needed just three shifts to score, raising his arms in triumph while letting out a scream drowned out by the crowd at an electric Consol Energy Center.

He added an assist on Brooks Orpik's goal later in the period that put the Penguins up 2-0.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111122/ap_on_sp_ho_ne/hkn_penguins_crosby_scores

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Monday, November 21, 2011

UFC 139 video: Has Bowles lost some of his sting? Benavidez breaks down 135-pound contender fight

Watch UFC 139 right here on Yahoo! Sports

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/UFC-139-video-Has-Bowles-lost-some-of-his-sting?urn=mma-wp9644

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Exclusive: U.S. to sanction Iran petrochemical industry (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The United States plans to sanction Iran's petrochemical industry, sources familiar with the matter said on Friday, seeking to raise pressure on Tehran after fresh allegations it may be pursuing nuclear weapons.

The sources said Washington wanted to send a strong signal after the U.N. nuclear watchdog issued a November 8 report saying Iran appeared to have worked on designing an atomic bomb and may still be secretly carrying out related research.

The sources, who spoke on condition that they not be named, said the sanctions could be unveiled as early as Monday.

They said the United States was looking to find a way to bar foreign companies from aiding Iran's petrochemical industry with the threat of depriving them access to the U.S. market.

While European nations have historically resented such "extra-territorial" U.S. sanctions seeking to punish their companies, in this case the sources said the European nations were themselves likely to follow suit, though not immediately.

U.S. firms are barred from most trade with Iran. The U.S. push is therefore aimed at foreign firms by in effect making them choose between working with Iran's petrochemical industry or doing business in the vast U.S. market.

It was not clear what authorities the Obama administration planned to invoke to impose the sanctions or precisely how, and how much, they would hurt Iran's petrochemical sector.

Discussion of the idea comes amid a renewed flurry of Israeli media speculation about the possibility of an Israeli military strike to try to destroy Iran's nuclear facilities.

The United States suspects Iran may be using its civil nuclear program as a cover to develop nuclear weapons. Iran has insisted its program is purely peaceful.

Anxieties about Iran's nuclear program increased after the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) released intelligence last week suggesting Iran has undertaken research and experiments geared to developing a nuclear weapons capability.

ACTION ON FINANCIAL SECTOR?

Iran, which denies it wants nuclear weapons, condemned the findings of the Vienna-based IAEA as "unbalanced" and "politically motivated."

The report increased tensions in the Middle East and led to redoubled calls in Western capitals for stiffer sanctions against Tehran.

The sources familiar with the matter said there had also been discussion of sanctions on the Iranian financial sector.

While U.S. officials last week said the idea of cutting off the Iranian central bank entirely was off the table for now, one source said there had been consideration of more limited measures.

"There was displeasure at the top with the view that it's all or nothing ... (and that if it's all) we take out our own economic recovery," he said. "The instruction was given to look for other possible avenues."

The sources said the United States was reluctant to try to cut off the Iranian central bank entirely for fear this could drive oil prices dramatically higher, potentially impairing the U.S. recovery.

The United States and its European allies, notably Britain, France and Germany, are seeking ways to raise the pressure on Iran without going to the U.N. Security Council, where fresh sanctions are all but sure to be opposed by Russia and China.

The U.N. Security Council has passed four resolutions imposing sanctions on Iran but both Russia and China have made clear their reluctance to go further for now.

There has been growing pressure from the U.S. Congress and prominent Republicans, including presidential candidate and Texas Governor Rick Perry and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, to sanction the Iranian central bank.

Perry advocated the idea in a televised debate on Saturday while Rice did so in an interview with Reuters on Wednesday.

"There is time for diplomacy but it better be pretty coercive diplomacy at this point," Rice told Reuters.

"There are many things we could do even without probably the Security Council: sanction the Iranian central bank, deny them access to the financial system through that," she said.

(Editing by Todd Eastham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111119/pl_nm/us_iran_usa_sanctions

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

The AOC Aire Pro: a 23-inch IPS monitor for $199

If your battalion of bargain-hunting web bots is doing its job properly, then you should already have been alerted to AOC's new sub-$200 IPS monitor. Oh, hold on, we're the bots? Right then, here are the key specs: you get Full HD at 60Hz spread over 23 inches, a meaninglessly high 50 million:1 dynamic contrast ratio, 5ms response time, twin HDMI sockets and built-in speakers, all housed in brushed aluminum shell that's less than 0.4 inches thick. The Aire Pro is available from today and there's further info in the PR after the break. Will that be all?

Continue reading The AOC Aire Pro: a 23-inch IPS monitor for $199

The AOC Aire Pro: a 23-inch IPS monitor for $199 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Nov 2011 01:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Long Beach State stuns No. 9 Pittsburgh 86-76 (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? Long Beach State coach Dan Monson helped turn Gonzaga into a national power more than a decade ago by challenging anyone, anywhere at any time.

He's kept the same philosophy with the 49ers, although without the same spectacular results.

Until now.

Casper Ware scored a career-high 28 points and Long Beach State raced by No. 9 Pittsburgh 86-76 on Wednesday night, the program's first win over a top-10 team in nearly 20 years.

"It's a big win but we expected to win this," Ware said. "Everybody in the locker room knew we were going to win this game."

Maybe because Monson told his players they would when practice started last month.

Long Beach State (2-0) has put together the toughest nonconference schedule in the country in each of the last two seasons, and this one is no different.

Wednesday night's game was the start of a brutal stretch that includes trips to defending Mountain West champion San Diego State, No. 8 Louisville, No. 12 Kansas, No. 1 North Carolina along with a showdown in Hawaii against No. 13 Xavier three days before Christmas.

It's how to make a name for yourself as a mid-major. Only Monson has grown tired of the act and he let his team know it.

"I told `em the first meeting of the year that playing this schedule is unacceptable," he said. "It's time for this team to stop playing the toughest schedule and start competing against the toughest schedule."

So far, so very good.

Long Beach State became just the second non-Big East team to win at the Petersen Events Center and the first nonconference opponent to knock off the Panthers at home in November and December since the gym opened in 2002.

"We got beat every which way," Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said.

Repeatedly.

James Ennis added 19 points and Larry Anderson had 12 points and seven assists for the 49ers (2-0), who relentlessly attacked the Panthers.

"All teams, they try to do a lot to stop us from running, but we were just too fast today," Ware said. "We were clicking on offense and it was too fast (for them) to stop us."

Ashton Gibbs led Pitt (2-1) with 20 points and Nasir Robinson added 19, but the Panthers simply couldn't keep up with the 49ers.

"They wanted it more than us," Robinson said. "They worked harder. They ran harder. They got to loose balls. They executed better than us. They outsmarted us."

Mostly, they outplayed the Panthers.

Long Beach State took a nine-point halftime lead and never let up.

Pitt drew within six points on a few occasions but each time the 49ers answered to become the first non-Big East team to beat the Panthers at home since Bucknell in 2005.

The victory was Long Beach State's first over a top-10 team since beating then-No. 1 Kansas on Jan. 25, 1993, when most of the current 49ers were in diapers.

This was no fluke, however.

Long Beach State never trailed after taking the lead less than 8 minutes in, attacking Pitt from the opening tip. If Ware wasn't knocking down 3-pointers, he, Ennis and Anderson were splitting Pitt's zone and finding open teammates.

The 49ers shot 59 percent from the floor, collected 24 assists on 32 baskets and turned it over just 10 times, beating the Panthers both outside and inside.

Long Beach State went out and played like it, outscoring Pitt 25-5 on the break and 48-31 in the paint, even slightly out-rebounding the bigger, stronger defending Big East regular season champions.

Dixon has preached patience while his team searches for a new identity behind Gibbs, the Big East preseason player of the year.

The Panthers looked lethargic at times in a win over Rider on Sunday. Dixon stressed the need to get more tenacious on defense, a hallmark of the program since he replaced Ben Howland in 2003.

There's still plenty to work on. Long Beach State wasn't intimidated by the long cross-country trip, the late tipoff or one of the country's toughest places to play.

Pitt has been practically unbeatable at "the Pete" against nonconference foes. Most of the wins have been laughers. When asked to answer the bell for the first time this season, the Panthers responded too late.

Pitt's best chance to get back in it came on back-to-back 3-pointers by Travon Woodall and Gibbs that pulled the Panthers to 62-56. The 49ers responded with a pull-up from Edis Dervisevic and a steal and dunk by Ennis, who flexed after flushing it to push the lead back to 10.

The Panthers crept within six twice more but couldn't get key stops.

"We knew they were very good and we wanted to play someone very good," Dixon said. "They're an experienced team. I had anticipated us being a much better team this time and, obviously, we're not where I'd like us to be."

The 49ers, by contrast, are right on schedule.

Confidence grew with each basket and by the time the horn sounded all Pitt could do is trudge off the floor as the shouts of about two dozen Long Beach State supporters echoed throughout the quiet arena.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_long_beach_st

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

GAO reports on delays in US quake aid for Haiti (AP)

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? U.S.-funded projects seeking to help Haiti rebuild after last year's earthquake have suffered numerous delays, a report by the U.S. Congress' chief auditor said Thursday.

The report from the Government Accountability Office focused on energy, ports and shelter projects for which the U.S. Agency for International Development and the State Department set aside $412 million.

It said holdups stemmed from a number of difficulties, ranging from problems in staffing the mission after the January 2010 earthquake to an inability to award shelter contracts because of unclear land titles in Haiti.

The report noted that 10 of the 17 U.S. government employees in Haiti left just after the quake, and there was no mechanism to quickly replace them or expand staff numbers. Remaining staff members were forced to take on duties outside their areas of expertise while it took months to fill the vacancies, the GAO said.

It said potential applicants declined to apply, citing a damaged school where U.S. Embassy personnel send their children, uncertainty about quality of life issues and a lack of financial incentives. And once personnel were hired, they didn't arrive in Haiti until a year after the quake because their families and households had to be moved. Some employees also needed six months of language training.

The mission plans to have all its Foreign Service officers assigned to Haiti by February 2012, the report said.

Looking at reconstruction efforts, the report said there were delays in awarding infrastructure construction contracts because there was only one U.S. officer in Haiti authorized to award contracts of more than $3 million.

It said there were also other snags in contracting.

The U.S. mission was six weeks behind schedule in awarding a $15 million contract to build a power source for an industrial park outside the coastal city of Cap-Haitien. The delays stemmed from giving contractors time to respond to USAID's requirements, among other factors.

There was an effort to break ground on a "demonstration" settlement of 200 houses on the first anniversary of the earthquake but the mission couldn't obtain proper land titles to build, the GAO said.

Haiti's land registry hasn't been updated for decades, and many of the records that did exist were lost in the earthquake.

USAID responded to the GAO report by saying it agreed that staffing difficulties delayed projects, but said it had mobilized temporary staff to Haiti after the quake.

In a written statement, USAID Chief Operating Officer Sean Carroll said the agency has also provided an accelerated one-on-one language training program for its staff and is working to boost Foreign Service staff.

Congress has allocated more than $1.14 billion in reconstruction money for Haiti. The bulk of that money goes toward USAID and the State Department.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111118/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cb_haiti_gao_report

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Why do events seem more important when consumers think about weight?

Why do events seem more important when consumers think about weight? [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Mary-Ann Twist
JCR@bus.wisc.edu
608-255-5582
University of Chicago Press Journals

Toting a heavy item around may cause you to judge an issue to be more important, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. But, interestingly, so does thinking about the concept of weight.

"Prior research has shown that the physical experience of carrying weight can influence people's judgment in unrelated domains such as the importance of an event," write authors Meng Zhang (Chinese University of Hong Kong) and Xiuping Li (National University of Singapore). "In this research we investigate how such an influence happens and when it will happen."

In their research the authors measured consumer responses to actually carrying weight as well as their reactions to being primed to think about the concept of weight. The authors found that the metaphorical associations people form are just as important as the physical weight they carry.

In one study, the authors asked some participants to hold shopping bags full of water bottles. Others read a paragraph that described a heavy-duty crane, which included weight-related terms ("heavy," "tons," and "loaded"). They asked participants to give an opinion on an unrelated topic: whether it was important to list nutritional information on products. The participants who were primed to think about weight responded much like the people who actually carried weight. They thought the issue was more important than participants who weren't weighed downmetaphorically or literally.

In another experiment, participants who carried heavy loads were instructed to think about light objects, like balloons and feathers. When they did so, the effect of the physical weight experience on their judgment was eliminated.

"The physical experience can directly cause the mental state or abstract judgment," the authors write. "The results of our five experiments, however, show that weight experience relies on people's subjective inference to exert its effect."

###

Meng Zhang and Xiuping Li. "From Physical Weight to Psychological Significance: The Contribution of Semantic Activations." Journal of Consumer Research: April 2012 (published online July 18, 2011).


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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.


Why do events seem more important when consumers think about weight? [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 15-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Mary-Ann Twist
JCR@bus.wisc.edu
608-255-5582
University of Chicago Press Journals

Toting a heavy item around may cause you to judge an issue to be more important, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. But, interestingly, so does thinking about the concept of weight.

"Prior research has shown that the physical experience of carrying weight can influence people's judgment in unrelated domains such as the importance of an event," write authors Meng Zhang (Chinese University of Hong Kong) and Xiuping Li (National University of Singapore). "In this research we investigate how such an influence happens and when it will happen."

In their research the authors measured consumer responses to actually carrying weight as well as their reactions to being primed to think about the concept of weight. The authors found that the metaphorical associations people form are just as important as the physical weight they carry.

In one study, the authors asked some participants to hold shopping bags full of water bottles. Others read a paragraph that described a heavy-duty crane, which included weight-related terms ("heavy," "tons," and "loaded"). They asked participants to give an opinion on an unrelated topic: whether it was important to list nutritional information on products. The participants who were primed to think about weight responded much like the people who actually carried weight. They thought the issue was more important than participants who weren't weighed downmetaphorically or literally.

In another experiment, participants who carried heavy loads were instructed to think about light objects, like balloons and feathers. When they did so, the effect of the physical weight experience on their judgment was eliminated.

"The physical experience can directly cause the mental state or abstract judgment," the authors write. "The results of our five experiments, however, show that weight experience relies on people's subjective inference to exert its effect."

###

Meng Zhang and Xiuping Li. "From Physical Weight to Psychological Significance: The Contribution of Semantic Activations." Journal of Consumer Research: April 2012 (published online July 18, 2011).


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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/2011-11/uocp-wde_1111511.php

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Mali citizen pleads guilty in NYC to terror charge (AP)

NEW YORK ? An African man has pleaded guilty in New York City to a terrorism charge, admitting that he engaged in the drug dealing trade with men who claimed they worked for terrorists who committed kidnappings.

Oumar Issa (OO'-mahr EE'-sah) pleaded guilty Tuesday to conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization.

The citizen of Mali told a magistrate judge that he agreed in 2009 to transport drugs through the Sahara desert. He said the men he worked with claimed they worked for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, and that they had done kidnappings. Issa said he had never heard of FARC.

A sentencing date wasn't set. Issa has agreed to be deported after he serves a sentence likely to be between five and 15 years in prison.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_re_us/us_africa_farc_drugs

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Video: Insider Trading in Washington

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45294042#45294042

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Philippines seeks summit on sea row; China cool (AP)

MANILA, Philippines ? Beijing on Tuesday rejected the Philippines' calls for talks at regional meetings this week with China and five other countries embroiled in one of Asia's most volatile territorial disputes.

Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said the Philippines also wants the United Nations to arbitrate the overlapping claims to a string of potentially oil-rich islands in the South China Sea that straddle one of the world's busiest sea lanes. China wants individual negotiations to settle the disputes, which many fear could be Asia's next flash point for conflict.

In Beijing, Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said at a news briefing that China hoped the issue would not be discussed at the two-day East Asian Summit of 18 Asian-Pacific nations in Bali, Indonesia.

"The South China Sea issue has nothing to do with the East Asian Summit because the East Asian Summit is a forum for discussing economic cooperation and development," Liu said.

Liu said China's position on the South China Sea issue "is clear and consistent: China believes that the dispute should be resolved through peaceful consultation through parties directly concerned."

The United States, which is also taking part in the regional meetings in Bali, has angered China by saying that it too has a stake in the security and unhampered international commerce in the South China Sea.

"The intervention of outside forces is not helpful for the settlement of the issue," Liu said. "On the contrary, it will only complicate the issue and sabotage peace, stability and development in the region."

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is expected to discuss the territorial row with del Rosario and Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin. She arrived in Manila on Tuesday, holding an umbrella at the airport to ward off the rain, for an overnight visit that is to include a meeting with Philippine President Benigno Aquino III.

Clinton will join a ceremony Wednesday aboard the USS Fitzgerald marking the 60th anniversary of the U.S.-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty. The event will be highlighted by the signing of a declaration affirming America's commitments under the pact, the U.S. Embassy said.

The East Asian Summit follows the regional meeting of leaders of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations. ASEAN includes the Philippines and Vietnam, which have accused Chinese vessels in recent months of trying to sabotage their oil explorations in the disputed waters.

In Manila, del Rosario asked ASEAN to host a summit that would discuss a Manila proposal to segregate disputed South China Sea regions so coastal nations can freely make use of non-disputed areas without fear of skirmishes. China has opposed the plan.

China's claim to virtually the entire South China Sea, submitted to the United Nations in 2009, is "the core of the problem," del Rosario said. He said the claim should be scrutinized based on the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which set out rules on how countries can use the world's oceans and its resources.

Beijing has been asserting its territorial claims more aggressively as its military and economic muscle have grown. Three island groups are being disputed, including the Spratlys ? a chain of up to 190 islands, reefs, coral outcrops and banks believed to be sitting atop large deposits of oil and natural gas.

___

Associated Press writer Louise Watt in Beijing contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_re_as/as_asia_south_china_sea

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Monday, November 14, 2011

NYT: New policy brings deportation confusion

A new Obama administration policy to avoid deportations of illegal immigrants who are not criminals has been applied very unevenly across the country and has led to vast confusion both in immigrant communities and among agents charged with carrying it out.

Since June, when the policy was unveiled, frustrated lawyers and advocates have seen a steady march of deportations of immigrants with no criminal record and with extensive roots in the United States, who seemed to fit the administration?s profile of those who should be allowed to remain.

But at the same time, in other cases, immigrants on the brink of expulsion saw their deportations halted at the last minute, sometimes after public protests. In some instances, immigration prosecutors acted, with no prodding from advocates, to abandon deportations of immigrants with strong ties to this country whose only violation was their illegal status.

For President Obama, the political stakes in the new policy are high. White House officials have concluded that there is no chance before next year?s presidential election to pass the immigration overhaul that Mr. Obama supports, which would include paths to legal status for illegal immigrants. But immigration authorities have sustained a fast pace of deportations, removing nearly 400,000 foreigners in each of the last three years. With Latino communities taking the brunt of those deportations, Latino voters are increasingly disappointed with Mr. Obama. White House officials hope the new policy will ease some of the pressure on Latinos, by steering enforcement toward gang members and convicts and away from students, soldiers and families of American citizens.

Factors to weigh
In a June 17 memorandum, John Morton, the director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, laid out more than two dozen factors that its agents and lawyers should weigh when deciding whether to exercise prosecutorial discretion to dismiss a deportation. The memo called for ?particular care and consideration? for veterans and active-duty troops, elderly immigrants and minors, and those brought here illegally as children. In August, the homeland security secretary, Janet Napolitano, announced additional measures to put Mr. Morton?s guidelines into effect, including a review of all deportation cases ? about 300,000 ?currently in the immigration courts, with the aim of closing cases that do not meet the administration?s priorities.

In a report released Wednesday, the American Immigration Lawyers Association and the American Immigration Council collected 252 cases from lawyers across the country who had asked Mr. Morton?s agency, known as ICE, to exercise prosecutorial discretion to spare immigrants from deportation. ?The overwhelming conclusion is that most ICE offices have not changed their practices since the issuance of these new directives,? the report found.

?This is a classic example of leadership saying one thing and the rank and file doing another,? said Gregory Chen, director of advocacy for the lawyers association. The report found that training for immigration officers on the new guidelines had been lacking. Officials at the Homeland Security Department acknowledge the policy?s slow start. Mr. Morton?s June guidelines were followed by a three-month lull, when resistance grew among agents in the field. In late September, Ms. Napolitano and Mr. Morton went on the offensive to press the policy, and since then Mr. Morton has been on the road inaugurating training programs.

?Like any major change in enforcement policy, this is a work in progress,? Mr. Morton said by telephone from Miami, where he was joining in a training session. ?I have been handling much of the initial explanation myself, because I feel so strongly about it.?

Officials say they need time to transform federal agencies accustomed to cut-and-dried immigration enforcement, with any illegal immigrant a target for deportation. Ms. Napolitano says immigration agents must become more like other police officers, using ?sound prosecutorial practice? to follow priorities. Those priorities are to deport convicted criminals, serial violators of immigration law and recent border crossers, officials said.

A wedding disrupted
The priorities did not apply for Neida Lavayen, 46, an American citizen in Elizabeth, N.J. After a three-year courtship, she had planned on Sept. 23 to marry Rub?n Quinteros, an illegal immigrant from Uruguay. Mr. Quinteros, 43, had come legally to the United States, then stayed past his time limit. But once he and Ms. Lavayen married, he would be eligible for a permanent resident?s green card as the spouse of a citizen.

Eight days before the wedding, Mr. Quinteros was arrested by immigration agents. His lawyer, Heather Benno, argued that he should benefit from prosecutorial discretion, since he was days away from resolving his immigration status. He had no criminal record, had paid taxes and had provided vital support for his fianc?e, who suffered domestic abuse in her first marriage.

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Ms. Benno?s motions were denied. Ms. Lavayen found a pastor to marry the couple in the detention center, but immigration agents declined to release Mr. Quinteros for a few hours so he could go with Ms. Lavayen to get the marriage license, since registrars would not issue one without him. They were not able to marry, and Mr. Quinteros was deported Oct. 27.

?I never thought I would fall in love again and have dreams again and live such a beautiful romance,? Ms. Lavayen said in a telephone conversation, pausing often to cry. ?How did my country take away my happiness??

Success for a student
By contrast, a student from Germany received good news that he had not asked for. Manuel Bartsch, now 24, was brought to the United States when he was 10 years old, then remained without documents. He stuck to his studies and is now nearing graduation from a private university in Ohio. After a legal fight in 2006, the immigration agency suspended Mr. Bartsch?s deportation, said his lawyer, David Leopold. On Nov. 3, the agency surprised Mr. Bartsch by terminating his deportation case entirely.

Like others whose deportations are canceled under the new policy, Mr. Bartsch will remain in limbo without any positive immigration status, Mr. Leopold said. But he will be able to apply for a work permit, an identity document that can open many doors.

?Hats off to ICE in the field for following the directives,? Mr. Leopold said.

Outspoken resistance to the policy has come from Chris Crane, the president of the American Federation of Government Employees? union local that represents ICE deportation agents. In testimony last month before the immigration subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, Mr. Crane said that Mr. Morton?s guidelines were too complex and ?cannot be effectively applied in the field.?

Rather than adding flexibility, Mr. Crane said, the guidelines ?take away officers? discretion and establish a system that mandates that the nation?s most fundamental immigration laws are not enforced.?

Still, uncertainty about the policy among agents appeared more widespread than outright rejection did. That was the experience of Shamir Ali, a 24-year-old student born in Bangladesh, who was detained Oct. 19 when the police raided a Miami car rental agency where he worked, looking for someone else. Mr. Ali seemed to fit within the discretion guidelines: he had no criminal record and had been brought by his parents to the United States when he was 7. But immigration agents denied his first requests to be spared from deportation.

Then student groups staged protests on Mr. Ali?s behalf in eight cities. On Oct. 28, agents freed Mr. Ali on an order of supervision, also allowing him to apply for a work permit. For Mr. Ali, like Mr. Bartsch, that permit would be life-changing, since it would allow him to obtain a driver?s license and to enroll at resident rates in a state college.

Mr. Ali said he felt deeply grateful to the immigration agency. But he wondered: ?If I didn?t have all that support, what would have happened to me??

This article, "Deportations Under New U.S. Policy Are Inconsistent," first appeared in The New York Times.

Copyright ? 2011 The New York Times

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45274732/ns/politics-the_new_york_times/

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Mirrors can alleviate arthritis

Swapped-hand Illusion produces drop in pain ratings, preliminary study shows

Web edition : 8:50 am

WASHINGTON ? Tricking people with severe arthritis into thinking their sore hand is healthy dampens their pain, a new study suggests.

If confirmed, the preliminary results may offer a powerful and inexpensive way to fight persistent arthritis pain.?

?The results are really exciting,? said pain expert Candy McCabe of the University of Bath in England, who wasn?t involved in the study. ?The whole thing is visual trickery, but the science behind it is strong.?

The new technique, described November 12 at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, is a type of mirror therapy, in which the illusion of a pain-free hand makes people feel better. So far, visual feedback from mirrors has been shown to reduce some kinds of chronic pain, notably the pain felt in ??phantom limbs? of amputees. But it was unclear whether mirror therapy could reduce pain produced by arthritic, inflamed joints.

In the new work, Laura Case, V.S. Ramachandran and colleagues at the University of California, San Diego recruited eight volunteers who had osteo- or rheumatoid arthritis. The volunteers saw a reflection of Case?s healthy hand in the same place where their sore hand should have been. To strengthen the sensation of the hand-swap, the researchers simultaneously touched Case?s hand and the volunteer's hand, creating a unified sensation of seeing and feeling the touch. The volunteer then mimicked a series of slow hand movements made by the researcher.

After experiencing the illusion, volunteers reported a reduction in pain by an average of about 1.5 points on a 10-point scale, with 10 being the worst pain possible. Some people?s pain ratings dropped as much as three points, Case said.

?What it tells us is the power of vision,? McCabe said. ?In this case, vision is somehow overriding what we think of as the strongest sense ? pain.?

Usually, mirror therapy is done with a person?s own healthy hand. But since both of the participants? hands were swollen and appeared painful, the team used healthy hands from the experimenter. Simply seeing a gnarled, sore hand might have a profound effect on feeling pain, Case said.?

Because the current experiment tested pain only immediately before and after the illusion, the researchers don?t know whether the method could produce lasting relief. The results are preliminary, Case emphasized, and the team plans to conduct more studies to figure out the most effective form of treatment.

If the results are confirmed, the method may offer a cheap and effective way of alleviating chronic arthritis pain, without the side effects of drugs. ?This is something that is easily accessible,? McCabe said. ?No matter where in the world you are, there are mirrors.?


Found in: Body & Brain

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336064/title/Mirrors_can_alleviate_arthritis

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