Saturday, December 31, 2011

How states fared on unemployment aid, at a glance (AP)

The number of people seeking unemployment aid rose last week for the first time in a month. But the rise comes after weekly claims fell to their lowest level in three and a half years in the previous week, and the overall downward trend suggests hiring could accelerate soon.

Here are states with the biggest increases and decreases in unemployment benefit applications, and some of the reasons for the changes. The state data is for the week ended Dec. 17, one week behind the national figures:

States with the biggest decreases:

Pennsylvania: Down 3,667, due to fewer layoffs in the construction, plastic and educational services industries

Michigan: Down 3,523, due to fewer layoffs in construction

Illinois: Down 3,092, due to fewer layoffs in services, trade and construction

Georgia: Down 2,133, due to fewer layoffs in manufacturing, services, trade and construction

Texas: Down 1,747, no reason given

Florida: Down 1,688, due to fewer layoffs in agriculture, manufacturing, construction and retail

States with the biggest increases:

California: Up 4,754, due to layoffs in services

New York: Up 1,163, due to layoffs in construction, educational services, and the real estate, rental and leasing industry

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_bi_ge/us_unemployment_benefits_glance

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

ArtsBeat Blog: Large Hepworth Sculpture Stolen From Park in London

December 21, 2011, 12:30 pm By CAROL VOGEL

Thieves entered Dulwich Park in south London on Monday night and stole a large bronze sculpture by one of Britain?s much-loved artists. The sculpture, ?Two Forms (Divided Circle),?? by Barbara Hepworth, had been a familiar sight since it was installed in the park more than 40 years ago.

A spokesman for the neighborhood council said it was insured for nearly $800,000. According to The Associated Press, the incident happened within hours after Scotland Yard officially dedicated a unit to investigate the theft of steel cables and metal car parts, which have become an increasing target for thieves as the price of copper, lead and bronze continues to rise.

Hepworth died in 1975 in a fire at her studio in Cornwall. and art experts consider ?Two Forms (Divided Circle)?? among her most important late works. Standing more than 6 feet tall, it was the only major sculpture in the park and is one of only six casts. Local officials are offering a reward of about $1,600 for its recovery.

Source: http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/21/large-hepworth-sculpture-stolen-from-london-park/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Pakistan president discharged from hospital

FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008 file photo, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari waves as he arrives at 10 Downing Street in London for a meeting with British Prime MInister Gordon Brown. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's associate said Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011 that the leader suffered a 'mini-stroke.'(AP Photo/Sang Tan,File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008 file photo, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari waves as he arrives at 10 Downing Street in London for a meeting with British Prime MInister Gordon Brown. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's associate said Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011 that the leader suffered a 'mini-stroke.'(AP Photo/Sang Tan,File)

FILE - In this Aug. 15, 2010 file photo, Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari listens to a reporter at a press conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's associate said Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011 that the leader suffered a 'mini-stroke.'(AP Photo/Anjum Naveed, File)

(AP) ? Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari was discharged from a hospital in Dubai late Wednesday, and will stay in his house in the Gulf state before returning home, his spokesman said.

Farhatullah Babar couldn't say when Zardari would fly to Pakistan, but expressed "no doubt" that he would do so. He said he was not sure whether doctors had given the 56-year-old leader permission to travel yet.

Zardari's illness and his sudden trip abroad have triggered rumors and media reports that Zardari could be set to resign, or even be ousted in a military coup. Officials have denied this, saying he will remain president of the nuclear-armed, violent and politically unstable nation.

So long as the president remains out of Pakistan, the media, his opponents and political observers are likely to continue to wonder whether he is being forced from power.

A close associate of Zardari has said the president suffered a "mini-stroke", but there has been no official diagnosis.

Earlier, the presidency faxed a statement bearing the letterhead of the American Hospital in Dubai, giving details of Zardari's health. Signed by a doctor at the hospital, it said on admission the president was complaining of numbness in the left arm, twitching and had suffered a "loss of consciousness that lasted for a few seconds."

The statement did not give a diagnosis, but said Zardari was to continue taking his regular heart medication.

It said doctors performed procedures including an MRI scan of his brain and a lumbar puncture taking fluid from his spine, and that results "were within normal range."

A "mini-stroke" is medically known as a transient ischemic attack, or TIA. It occurs when the blood supply to part of the brain is briefly interrupted, causing symptoms similar to a stroke but not as long-lasting, because with a TIA, the blood supply is restored.

Zardari was admitted to the hospital on Dec. 6.

His absence coincided with domestic political attacks against him over a memo delivered to U.S. officials, asking for Washington's help in reining in Pakistan's powerful military.

Zardari had been scheduled to present a statement to the Supreme Court this week explaining his role, if any, in the affair.

The president's illness also came a week after NATO airstrikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on the Afghan border, causing a spike in tensions with the United States.

Zardari had been expected to address a joint session of parliament about the raid, which has triggered a wave of anger in the country at his government's alliance with Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-14-AS-Pakistan/id-d44de5e6c4f642e28b04358c1f51751d

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Nervous System May Hold Key to Weight Loss (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Dec. 5 (HealthDay News) -- People with higher levels of nerve activity may have an easier time losing weight, a small study suggests.

Researchers looked at 42 overweight or obese people who took part in a 12-week weight-loss program that cut their daily calorie intake by 30 percent. The participants' resting sympathetic nerve activity was measured at the start of the study.

The sympathetic nervous system, which spreads throughout the body, regulates many functions, including control of resting metabolic rate and the use of calories from food consumption.

The researchers found that successful weight losers had significantly higher resting sympathetic nerve activity than those who had trouble shedding pounds. They also found that successful weight losers showed large increases in nerve activity after they ate a carbohydrate test meal. This did not occur in those who were weight-loss resistant.

The study will appear in the February 2012 issue of the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

"We have demonstrated for the first time that resting muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) is a significant independent predictor of weight-loss outcome in a cohort of overweight or obese subjects," lead author Nora Straznicky, of the Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia, said in a journal news release.

"Our findings provide two opportunities. First, we may be able to identify those persons who would benefit most from lifestyle weight-loss interventions such as dieting. Secondly, the findings may also help in developing weight-loss treatments through stimulating this specific nervous activity."

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases explains how to select a safe and successful weight-loss program.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weightloss/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111205/hl_hsn/nervoussystemmayholdkeytoweightloss

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Occupy Wall Street, Act II: Go local

With many encampments razed or in jeopardy, Occupy Wall Street needs a second act. For now, many activists are settling on issues of concern to local residents. Will that weaken the movement, or strengthen it?

As their encampments are razed, or as their tent cities dwindle with the onset of cold weather, the "Occupy Wall Street" movement ? now almost three months old ? needs a second act. And organizers of this grass-roots movement, which asserts that "the 99 percent" of Americans who are not Wall Street bankers, hotel chain heiresses, or real estate titans are getting a raw deal these days, appear to have lit upon an answer, for now: Go local.

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So it is that the Occupiers in Knoxville, Tenn., plan to start occupying foreclosed homes, to dramatize banks' actions. In Detroit, protesters are collecting provisions for the city's neediest. And in Los Angeles, Occupy activists are readying for a Dec. 12 action to close the Port of Los Angeles for a day ? part of a larger call for port closings from Tacoma, Wash., to San Diego to protest perceived union-busting tactics against organized longshore workers.

The question is whether Occupy forces are scattering their fire in so many directions that the movement will inevitably fragment and dissolve, or whether they will grow in strength and accomplishments by proving former House Speaker "Tip" O'Neill's famous pronouncement that, in the end, "all politics is local."

Until lately, the movement has been largely about occupying ground in the name of the 99 percent ? and trying to hold that ground in the face of city and police intervention. Since Sept. 17, when the first Occupiers settled in on Wall Street in New York, thousands of protesters have been arrested in cities across the United States (usually for refusing to obey police orders or for resisting arrest). The Occupy movement has been a way for people to rise up and vent their frustrations, but critics fault it for being unwilling or unable to devise a national action plan around something concrete, such as backing the Democrats' push to raise taxes on millionaires or proposing a constitutional amendment to limit special-interest money in political campaigns.

But that is as it should be, say those involved with the movement as well as its close observers.

"The question of engaging with local issues brings inherent challenges to the Occupy movement, but it is also the only way it can really move forward," says George Ciccariello-Maher, a political theorist and assistant professor at Drexel University in Philadelphia, a city where police cleared an Occupy encampment on Nov. 30. The alternative is to remain on the level of macroeconomic analysis and national issues ? and to jump into national electoral politics or lobbying. At this point in the movement's development, he says, those approaches would be difficult to sustain.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/LGk0L7hx8-A/Occupy-Wall-Street-Act-II-Go-local

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

FDA revisits safety of newer birth control drugs (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Birth control drugs that were heavily promoted as having fewer side effects and the ability to clear up acne and other hormonal bothers are under new scrutiny from safety regulators.

Research suggesting that newer birth control formulations are more likely to cause blood clots than older drugs has prompted the Food and Drug Administration to consider new safety measures in meetings later this week. The increased risk is slight but significant because blood clots can cause heart attacks, strokes and blockages in lungs or blood vessels, which can be fatal.

Regulators could order new warning labels on several contraceptives that gained popularity in the last decade, including Bayer's pill Yaz, which was the best-selling birth control pill in the U.S. for 2008 and 2009.

Yaz, Yasmin and similar drugs use a version of a female hormone which appears to reduce side effects found in older drugs, including bloating and mood swings.

Bayer AG spent more than $270 million on TV and magazine advertisements for Yaz between 2007 and 2010, according TNS Media Intelligence. Such big-budget campaigns are rare for birth control products. One advertisement featured young women singing the Twisted Sister anthem, "We're Not Gonna Take It," while popping balloons labeled "moodiness," "bloating" and "acne."

Sales of Yaz have fallen since regulators forced Bayer to correct advertisements that overstated Yaz's benefits and as safety questions drew scrutiny in both the U.S. and Europe.

FDA also is reviewing research on clot risks associated with Johnson & Johnson's weekly Ortho Evra patch, which is marketed as an "option for busy women who are looking to simplify life." The drug uses a different version of the female hormone progestin than the pills under scrutiny.

Millions of women have used the products since they launched a decade ago, but recent studies comparing the medical histories of women taking the newer drugs to older ones suggest a slightly higher risk of blood clots in the legs and lungs. Last year, the U.S. market for female contraceptive drugs totaled $3.4 billion, according to IMS Health.

Sorting out the blood clot risk of birth control drugs is especially difficult because all hormone-based drugs increase the risk of clotting. Further complicating the issue is that clots can be caused by factors such as smoking, obesity or family history.

Yaz, Yasmin and other pills containing a synthetic hormone called drospirenone are the focus of a discussion Thursday. The next day's meeting focuses on the Ortho Evra patch, which uses the hormone norelgestromin.

Bayer says its studies have shown no difference in blood clot risk between its drugs and the older birth control drugs. But several large, independent studies suggest the risk with Yaz and similar medications is slightly higher. The latest analysis by the FDA estimates the risk of a blood clot with drospirenone-containing pills is 1.5-fold higher than other hormone-based contraceptives. That translates into an estimated 10 in 10,000 women on the newer drugs experiencing a blood clot, compared with 6 in 10,000 women on older contraceptives, according to the FDA.

"It's a very small percentage of patients that develop these, but it's such a serious side effect that I think doctors have to use a lot of caution," said Dr. Jennifer Wu, of Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

Even if Yaz and other newer drugs get additional warning labels, some doctors say they don't expect to stop prescribing them. Doctors say the risk of blood clots with any birth control pill is still far lower than that associated with pregnancy and birth, when hormone levels and reduced blood flow increase clotting risk.

"At the end of the day I tell my patients the absolute risk is still very, very low compared to pregnancy and post-partum risk," said Dr. Rebecca Starck, of Cleveland Clinic's Fairview Hospital. "There are still many benefits to combination birth control pills."

The Ortho Evra patch already carries warning labels about an increased risk of blood clots compared with pills. Some, but not all, studies suggest patch users have twice the risk of clots. The FDA will try to further define that risk using the latest data.

Most birth control drugs use a combination of two female hormones, estrogen and progestin, to stop ovulation and help block sperm. But for decades many women have reported bloating and mood swings as side effects.

Introduced in 2001, Yasmin was the first birth control pill to use a new form of progestin called drospirenone, which appeared to have fewer side effects. The reformulated version of the drug, Yaz, was approved in 2006 with new claims on the label that it decreased acne and a severe type of mood disorder.

Yaz quickly grew into the best-selling birth control pill in the U.S. Sales plummeted more than 50 percent in 2010, after the company was forced to run corrective TV and magazine advertisements. Among other problems, the FDA said the company's commercials suggested Yaz could treat premenstrual syndrome when it has only been shown to decrease incidence of premenstrual dysphoric disorder, a severe mood disorder associated with major depression. Less than 8 percent of U.S. women experience the disorder, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Yaz currently ranks fourth in sales among contraceptive pills in the U.S. Last year doctors wrote roughly 13 million prescriptions for Yaz and two generic versions of the drug, according to IMS Health. Doctors prescribed the Ortho Evra patch nearly 1.6 million times.

Newer drugs like Yaz are no more effective than older pills, generally allowing one unplanned pregnancy per year for every 100 women.

"Many women will do fine on the older generation drugs, but some women will not," said Dr. Petra Casey, of the Mayo Clinic. "I think the newer drugs help many women in terms of mood and the water retention."

About 4,000 lawsuits against Bayer argue that any additional risk with the newer drugs should have been detected and emphasized to the public.

On Thursday, Cindy Rippee will tell the FDA panel about her 20-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, who died Christmas Eve 2008 when a blood clot traveled to her lung. Rippee says her daughter had been taking Yasmin for about two months.

"I really feel that if my daughter had been told about the increased risk she would have made a different decision," said Rippee, of Escondido, Calif.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_he_me/us_birth_control_safety

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Column: Woods' quiet win could produce a big echo (AP)

No one knows what this one means, least of all Tiger Woods.

A win at the Chevron World Challenge doesn't provide much in the way of bragging rights. It's not an official PGA Tour event, the field is limited to 18 players and it wraps up in the middle of an NFL Sunday, when most golf fans are paying closer attention to first downs than fairways hit. But after more than two years and 26 tournaments without a win of any kind, Woods isn't about to hand this one back.

"It feels great," he said afterward. "It's kind of hard for me to elaborate beyond that."

Here's why: Woods won't play tournament golf again until the end of January, when any momentum from the birdie-birdie finish he dropped on Zach Johnson to seal the deal will be little more than a fading memory. Ditto for the sometimes-sparkling golf Woods has played for nearly a month now, including nine of 11 rounds in the 60s and a handful of shots that no other golfer in the world could have pulled off.

But if there's a takeaway from any of that, it's this: For the first time in a long time, there was a feeling of inevitability about Woods' final putt on the 18th green at Sherwood Country Club. It was only 6 feet, but it was also straight downhill, the way our expectations for Woods have been trending for some time now. Yet the second after the ball disappeared into the cup, an NBC camera cut to Johnson flashing his caddie a grin that suggested, "I can't do anything about that" before walking across the green to shake hands.

"In this game, I'm never surprised with the way the guys are able to execute and hit shots," said Johnson, a former Masters champion. "I think he would be the epitome of that example. ... I mean, he's the most experienced and the best player I've ever played with. In every situation, he knows how to execute and win."

Or did ? until that fateful crash-filled, post-Thanksgiving ride down the driveway of his Florida mansion two years ago cost Woods his marriage, his reputation, a handful of big-bucks sponsors and his uncanny ability to produce magical shots time and again in the most pressure-packed situations. That 6-footer on Sunday won't be cherished, let alone remembered, the way any of the dozens that locked up major championships will be, and a few of his fellow golfers went so far as to make that same point on Twitter. Not that Woods needed humbling, not after 18 months as the butt of countless late-night TV jokes and two-plus years without a win.

"They all feel good, you know. They're not easy," he said. "People don't realize how hard it is to win golf tournaments. I've gone on streaks where I've won golf tournaments in a row, but still, each one, I don't think I've taken it for granted.

"And I know," Woods added, "because of how hard it is."

In case he needed reminding, No. 2 Rory McIlroy won the Hong Kong Open and No. 3 Lee Westwood won the Nedbank Challenge in South Africa the same day. But the funny thing is that the Chevron, which Woods hosts to benefit his foundation, actually had more players ranked in the top 25 than either: 11 total, compared to just three in Hong King and six in South Africa. And a few of those golfers saw enough to suggest that after so many false starts, Woods may actually be ? as he never tires of saying ? putting it all together.

"I figured someday he'd let all this stuff get past and rededicate himself," said Steve Stricker. "When somebody goes in the tank, you need to have that work ethic to get yourself off the bottom. We all know he works extremely hard when he wants to. He's finally getting his mind clear and wants to work at it a lot."

Though no one discussed it and few people were in a position to actually know, there was plenty to suggest that the distractions of his divorce and a string of injuries left Woods little time to work on his game. He left swing coach Hank Haney for Sean Foley, cut caddie Steve Williams and hired Joe LaCava, but the biggest change over the winless streak was how little Woods actually played.

Beginning with the Fry's Open last month, then on through some exhibitions, the Australian Open, Presidents Cup and now the Chevron, Woods has hit more golf balls than at any time in the past year. In the wind at Royal Melbourne, he hit a half-dozen shots that made you gasp ? among them a 3-wood that was head-high and traveled 280 yards before coming to a stop 12 feet from the pin ? and if not for a bogey-bogey-bogey start to the third round, Woods might have won that tournament, too.

The old Tiger might have said exactly that, but the one who's out there now wouldn't dare. The closest thing to an old "I told you so" that Woods mustered was a tweet asking, "who's up for some ll cool j?" that linked to a video of the rapper's 1991 hit "Mama Said Knock You Out." The song's well-known first line warns, "Don't call it a comeback. I've been here for years."

Just not in the winner's circle for the last two. All of a sudden, though, the guys Woods will be facing again come the start of next season won't be surprised to find him there again.

"I don't know if he'll ever get to where he was before, because he was so dominant. Sure, he'll have good stretches again and play some tremendous stretches again," Stricker said. "I don't know if we'll ever see that again from anybody.

"I'm sure he thinks he can get back there," he added a moment later. "I wouldn't doubt if he did."

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org. Follow him at http://Twitter.com/JimLitke.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_sp_go_ne/glf_jim_litke120511

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