Saturday, December 31, 2011

sluathletics: SOCCER: Cooper Repeats at All-Central Region Selection http://t.co/f1kp7n7E #NCAA #soccer

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SOCCER: Cooper Repeats at All-Central Region Selection dlvr.it/12Zc30 #NCAA #soccer sluathletics

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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
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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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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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Friday, December 30, 2011

Daily Kos Polling Wrap: Iowa GOP primary now a two-man race?

No need to check your watch: the Polling Wrap is a bit tardy tonight. It is an excused tardy, however: we have a note in the form of the new Iowa tracking poll by PPP.

The verdict: what was once a three-man race is now a two-man race.

NATIONAL (Gallup Tracking): Gingrich 25, Romney 24, Paul 11, Perry 8, Bachmann 6, Santorum 3, Huntsman 2

IOWA (PPP Tracking): Paul 24, Romney 20, Gingrich 13, Bachmann 11, Perry 10, Santorum 10, Huntsman 4, Roemer 2

You really have to love PPP. Not only do they give us our first Buddy Roemer sighting in quite some time, but they also bestow over 300 pages of crosstabs on us.

Feel free to dive through them all, though we will also have more extensive analysis of the PPP Iowa poll on Wednesday here at Daily Kos.

The story here is Gingrich's fall from grace, which continued this week. The biggest indicator of this is his cratering favorabilities, down to 37/54 this week. Mitt Romney is also in net-negative territory on his fav/unfav (44/47).

The most beloved Republican is, ironically, a guy who is languishing in fifth place. Rick Santorum has the best fav/unfav (56/29), but only 10% are willing to pick him as their candidate. The only way he becomes relevant is with a strong third-place finish in Iowa, which he can then parlay into bigger things if he becomes the consensus anti-Romney.

The final question is this: can Paul really win next week? The answer is: possibly. The challenge for Paul is that his coalition (younger voters, Indies, Democrats) is an untraditional one. Romney's coalition is a much more traditional one, and should be a better bet to show up on caucus night. But if Paul has inspired his flock enough for them to turn out, he becomes the betting favorite.

There should be a flood of polling to come this week (PPP is going back into the field before the weekend), so this Paul-Romney dynamic bears watching, as does whether or not Santorum can generate any forward momentum.

Source: http://rss.dailykos.com/~r/dailykos/index/~3/M9ibV9WAFDQ/-Daily-Kos-Polling-Wrap%3A-Iowa-GOP-primary-now-a-two-man-race

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German industry mogul Werner Otto dies at 102 (AP)

BERLIN ? Werner Otto, the founder of the mail-order company that bears his name and a prominent figure in West Germany's post-World War II economic resurgence, has died. He was 102.

The company, Otto Group, said Tuesday that he died in Berlin on Dec. 21 in the presence of his family.

Otto opened a shoe factory in Hamburg in 1945, but it didn't last long in the face of tough competition from southern Germany.

So in 1949, with four employees, he turned to selling shoes by mail order ? the start of what became Otto Group, which now employs 50,000 people and has annual revenues of euro11.4 billion ($14.9 billion).

Its first, hand-produced, catalog appeared in 1950, offering 28 styles of shoes. The business then grew rapidly during the 1950s, expanding its range and establishing itself with the help of shoppers from outside major cities who didn't have ready access to stores; in 1963, Otto introduced telephone orders and went online in 1995.

Otto handed over the company's operational management in 1965 and founded another enterprise, ECE, which builds and manages shopping malls in Europe.

He also set up Paramount Group, Inc., to invest in U.S. real estate.

Otto dedicated himself to a range of social causes, including his Werner Otto Foundation, founded in 1969, which supports medical research.

Among other projects, his company said he also donated a new museum building to Harvard University, the Werner Otto Hall, to showcase expressionist art from the German-speaking world.

Otto was born in the eastern German town of Seelow on Aug. 13, 1909, the son of a merchant.

He is survived by his third wife, Maren, and his five children. His oldest son, Michael, is now Otto Group's supervisory board chairman and his youngest son, Alexander, is the chief executive of ECE.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_germany_obit_otto

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

GeorgeJulian: @jaxrafferty I have gone off tweet deck since got iPad / find the twitter app much easier, and use same on iPhone. Enjoy.

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@jaxrafferty I have gone off tweet deck since got iPad / find the twitter app much easier, and use same on iPhone. Enjoy. GeorgeJulian

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Source: http://twitter.com/GeorgeJulian/statuses/151617801788993537

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womentalksports: Fashion Experts Break Down Best & Worst College Football Uniforms http://t.co/jNKI2jm0 #WTSports

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Fashion Experts Break Down Best & Worst College Football Uniforms bit.ly/s0BQ0D #WTSports womentalksports

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

LONDON. December 26. KAZINFORM There has been widespread condemnation in the international community of a series of Christmas Day bomb attacks in Nigeria that killed almost 40 people; Kazinform refers to BBC.

LONDON. December 26. KAZINFORM There has been widespread condemnation in the international community of a series of Christmas Day bomb attacks in Nigeria that killed almost 40 people; Kazinform refers to BBC.

The White House said the attacks were "senseless violence" and the UK foreign secretary called them "cowardly".

Militant Islamist group Boko Haram said it carried out the attacks.

A blast outside a church near the capital Abuja claimed 35 lives, while a policeman died in the city of Jos and four people were killed in Damaturu.

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan said the attacks were "an unwarranted affront on our collective safety and freedom", adding: "Nigerians must stand as one to condemn them."

'Solidarity'

The White House said initial investigation showed the attacks were "terrorist acts" and pledged to help Nigeria bring those responsible to justice.

Spokesman Jay Carney said: "We condemn this senseless violence and tragic loss of life on Christmas Day. We offer our sincere condolences to the Nigerian people and especially those who lost family and loved ones."

French President Nicolas Sarkozy expressed "solidarity in [Nigeria's] fight against terrorism", while German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said: "Even on Christmas Day, the world is not spared from cowardice and the fear of terrorism."

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague said: "These are cowardly attacks on families gathered in peace and prayer to celebrate a day which symbolises harmony and goodwill towards others. I offer my condolences to the bereaved and injured."

Israel said it would send medical aid to Nigeria and that it "condemned in the strongest terms these attacks carried out on Christmas Day".

The Vatican said attacking a church was "blind hatred" seeking to "arouse and feed even more hatred and confusion".

President Jonathan, who is a Christian, said: "I want to reassure all Nigerians that the government will not relent in its determination to bring to justice all the perpetrators"; Kazinform cites BBC.

To learn more go to www.bbc.co.uk

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5663449748

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

7 die in latest school bus accident in China

BEIJING The death toll in China's latest crash involving transportation for students has risen to seven, state media said Monday.

The official China Daily newspaper said an additional student had died in hospital, after four students and two adults were killed Saturday in southwestern China when the overloaded van taking them home crashed into a 195-foot (60-meter) deep valley.

Xinhua News Agency said the eight-seat van was carrying 12 students and the two adults. The others were all injured, two seriously.

The newspaper said the students were aged 14 or 15 and were in junior high school.

Xinhua said the crash happened on a mountainous road in Yunnan province. A local government official confirmed the accident but would not give any details. A local news portal in Yunnan showed a picture of the van, with all its sides and roof crushed in.

Badly maintained school transport has been the focus of public anger in recent weeks after a series of accidents in which children were killed on their way to and from school, leading China's safety regulator to demand immediate action to improve safety aboard frequently overloaded and badly maintained school buses.

Earlier this month, a school bus taking primary students home slipped off a country road into an irrigation ditch in the eastern province of Jiangsu, killing 15 children. Officials later acknowledged the bus was overloaded.

In the worst recent accident, 19 children and two adults were killed last month when a nine-seat private kindergarten van packed with 62 students crashed head-on with a truck in northwest Gansu province.

The crashes came amid a national debate over the poor condition of Chinese school buses and chronic underfunding of public schools, particularly in rural areas, which have lagged far behind cities over the past three decades of rapid economic development.

Road safety is also a serious problem in China, with many accidents caused by poorly maintained roads and bad driving habits.

Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2011/12/24/2875685/6-die-in-latest-school-bus-accident.html

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Honduras, Colombia and Guatemala Conclude Anti-drug Military Exercise

Colombian Air Force

22/12/2011

The Honduran, Colombian, and Guatemalan Air Forces participated in the joint anti-drug exercise Honcolgua I from December 16 to 21, 2011, with the aim of strengthening the monitoring air traffic over the Caribbean Sea. (Photo: Infodefensa.com)

The Honduran, Colombian, and Guatemalan Air Forces participated in the joint anti-drug exercise Honcolgua I from December 16 to 21, 2011, with the aim of strengthening the monitoring air traffic over the Caribbean Sea. (Photo: Infodefensa.com)

With the aim of closing the Caribbean Sea?s airspace to drug-trafficking flights, the Honduran, Colombian and Guatemalan Air Forces concluded the combined air interdiction exercise ?Honcolgua I.?

From December 16 to 21, combat aircraft from the three countries carried out maneuvers using the runways of Coronel H?ctor Carraccioli Moncada and Coronel Enrique Soto Cano Airbases (Honduras), as well as La Aurora Airbase in Guatemala. As part of the exercise, a Colombian aircraft simulated involvement in illegal activity, crossing the border and flying through the shared space.

Honcolgua I joins other military exercises that Colombia has conducted with Brazil (COLBRA), Peru (PERCOL), the Dominican Republic (CARIBE), and Honduras (HONCOL), which have strengthened airspace monitoring.

These and other exercises aim to improve crew training levels and update established procedures, taking into account the fact that the enemy is constantly modifying his criminal methods.

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Source: http://www.dialogo-americas.com/en_GB/articles/rmisa/features/regional_news/2011/12/22/feature-ex-2756

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Joe Lieberman: "I don't think Congress has ever been as bad as it is today." (The Christian Science Monitor)

Independent Senator Joseph Lieberman chairs the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. Elected to the Senate in 1988, he ran as an independent in 2006 after losing Connecticut's Democratic primary. He spoke at the Dec. 13 Monitor breakfast in Washington.

Why public approval of Congress is so low:

"Because I don't think Congress has ever been as bad as it is today. Here is a time of very serious, painful economic hardship ... and a debt that is threatening our future, national debt, and we really haven't done anything about it."

Whether members of Congress are using non-public information for personal financial gain:

"I don't have any evidence that there is insider trading by members of Congress.... A lot of people around the country ... think there is.... It is very important that Congress make clear with legislative action that members of Congress ... are covered by insider-trading laws."

President Obama's response to Iran's capture of an American spy drone:

"I wish that we had found a way to at least go in and destroy it.... It would have been very difficult to rescue it.... I say that with humility because I wasn't in the [White House] Situation Room...."

US policy toward Iran:

"I don't think we have done enough to support regime change. It needs to be done artfully because it is not one of those cases where we want to go in and start endorsing opposition" candidates.

Former Speaker Newt Gingrich saying the Palestinians are an "invented" people:

"To me, the important fact is, the Palestinians are a people today and any resolution of the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians has to be between two peoples, two nations."

Calls for the Transportation Security Administration to create passenger advocates at airports to deal with complaints about searches:

"It is worth thinking about, but I am not jumping to endorse it.... I am an admirer of TSA."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111225/ts_csm/437874

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StephLauren: Merry Christmas to those who aren't eating Chinese and watching movies!

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Merry Christmas to those who aren't eating Chinese and watching movies! StephLauren

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Video: Hot for the holidays: Films, food and more

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45775819#45775819

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Teaching about HIV/AIDS in the church

? When the Rev. Keron Sadler of the NAACP tried to persuade churches around the country to play a more active role in HIV/AIDS education, she drew some hostile reactions. One pastor said his congregants might think he was gay. Another said AIDS is a curse. Yet another walked out of the room rather than discuss the topic.

Those reactions highlight the challenges facing Baltimore as it enlists church outreach for its ambitious goal of curbing new HIV/AIDS cases by 25 percent in the next four years.

The disease remains a sensitive topic among some ministers, as Sadler found when a similar NAACP initiative took her to churches in 11 cities, including Baltimore. Discussing HIV/AIDS means delving into topics ? gay sex, promiscuity and drug use ? that churches may not want to be seen as embracing or condoning. Some churches ignore the subject, while others tackle it in a way that passes judgment on lifestyles, leaving some people reluctant to seek help.

Bishop Willard Saunders Jr. of the Created For So Much More Worship Center in the Cherry Hill neighborhood said that he promotes HIV/AIDS education, but does not sacrifice the beliefs of the church in doing so. The church tells members that gay sex, sex with multiple partners and drug use are all unsavory, risky behaviors that lead to bad consequences such as HIV/AIDS.

?If you choose to live an unhealthy lifestyle, it puts you at risk,? Saunders said. ?I believe homosexuality is wrong. I believe it?s wrong the same way adultery is wrong. The same way that lying is wrong.?

S. Todd Yeary, the pastor of Douglas Memorial Community Church in West Baltimore, takes a different approach. He knows that in educating about HIV/AIDS, churches may be confronted with issues that go against their beliefs. Churches, he said, need to learn to teach about prevention without passing judgment.

?Part of the challenge of dealing with the dilemma of HIV has been a reluctance to be honest with the fact that our job is not to police what goes on in people?s bedrooms,? Yeary said.

Many AIDS activists say the church has to be a part of the fight against the disease, reaching residents who may already have it or people with behaviors that put them at risk.

Churches are the heart of many neighborhoods in Baltimore, where HIV/AIDS affects more than 13,000 residents. And it is from the pulpit that many residents ? especially African-Americans, who make up 85 percent of Baltimore cases ? get their messages. To many people, the pastor?s word is sacred.

?The church is a foundation of bringing communities together,? said Baltimore City Health Commissioner Oxiris Barbot. ?We need them to help get out the message about AIDS.?

A 2002 survey found that 46 percent of Baltimore injection drug users had attended church in the past month. A recent survey of 300 clients with HIV who get treatment through the Jacques Initiative health program at the University of Maryland said faith is important in their lives, and 44 percent said faith became even more important after they were diagnosed with the disease.

Churches already do charitable work, such as food drives and homeless outreach, that would complement HIV-prevention efforts, health officials said. Some churches have HIV/AIDS programs that include testing, workshops and education, and city officials hope to have them reach out to peers who may be more hesitant.

The city recently announced plans to reach out to churches as part of an initiative for fighting the disease at its earliest stages, by limiting its transmission and pushing for more widespread testing. The goal of the plan, crafted by the Baltimore City Commission on HIV/AIDS, is to cut the annual number of new diagnoses from 505 to 379 by 2015.

Other recommendations called for expanding needle-exchange programs, promoting testing in primary-care doctors? offices, and targeting outreach to gay and sex clubs, schools, senior centers and prisons.

?We are trying to work with opinion leaders, which are often religious and community leaders, to recognize that stigmatizing attitudes have a profoundly negative effect on prevention,? said commission chairman William Blattner, who is associate director of the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. ?We are trying to get them to recognize we?re here to help people, not judge them, and get pastors to have a more enlightened approach.?

Blattner and others said they are not asking churches to sacrifice their religious beliefs.

?We don?t have an agenda other than providing important public health messaging,? Barbot said. ?We?re very cognizant of steering away from the moral issue. For us it?s a public health issue, not a moral issue.?

The city wants to target churches in areas with the highest HIV/AIDS concentrations and risk factors. Barbot said they can work with churches to approach the subject in broad, general terms. Some churches may not feel comfortable giving out free condoms. Others may give out literature, but not want to talk about HIV/AIDS from the pulpit.

?The reality is there are some churches that will be initially hesitant because they may have some preconceived notion to what we are looking to do,? Barbot said. ?We want people to know we will meet them where they are.?

In Baltimore, issues that may be controversial to some ministers are at the heart of the AIDS epidemic ? particularly homosexuality.

Heterosexual contact was the most common way people contracted the disease, according to a 2009 survey. About 38 percent of people contracted the disease this way.

But a disproportionate number of cases came from men having sex with men; about 36 percent of people contracted the disease this way. While the number of gay men in the city is not known, they make up about 2 percent of the national population.

HopeSprings, a Baltimore nonprofit that trains church leaders on HIV/AIDS education, said their comfort level varies on sensitive topics.

?We try to present them with all the different options,? said Erin Donovan, executive director of HopeSprings. ?We want them to do what fits their church.?

A committee for the Baltimore-based NAACP is creating a manual for churches on how to teach HIV/AIDS prevention methods. Research for the guide led Sadler on the 11-city tour to talk to churches.

Sadler said the HIV Faith & Social Justice manual would present AIDS prevention as a social justice issue that addresses health disparities along with the teachings. It will provide pastors with optional sermons, such as teaching that the Bible says people should not judge others.

?We have to reshape the conversation when it comes to HIV because it is so taboo and rejected,? Sadler said.

Some church programs have made strides in efforts to address HIV/AIDS. Project Shalem, under the Jacques Initiative, has tested close to 5,000 people at churches throughout the city. In the process, workers discovered 10 new HIV/AIDS cases and were able to get additional treatment for 96 others.

?For us, not energizing the church is a big mistake,? said Derek Spencer, executive director of the Jacques Initiative. ?There are people sitting in church affected by HIV/AIDS.?

John Smith, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Essex, said his church hasn?t done any AIDS outreach, but said it could be done without delving into people?s sexual histories.

?Whether or not it should be tied to the issue of sexuality, I don?t know,? Smith said. ?I don?t know if that would be one in the same. I think it would simply be enough to address the AIDS epidemic as a terrible disease that we have a responsibility to do something about.?

Source: http://www.kansas.com/2011/12/24/2151676/teaching-about-hivaids-in-the.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

LogMeIn goes free with in app purchases for additional functionality

LogMeIn, a remote access service, has recently shed their $30 initial purchase price tag, and moved to a free download model for iPhone and iPad, along with in-app purchases to expand what it can view. ?The free LogMeIn app will now gain you access to your desktop...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/EVFj55BHzBA/story01.htm

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Health Tip: Use Medications Safely (HealthDay)

(HealthDay News) -- If your child isn't feeling well and needs an over-the-counter medication recommended by your pediatrician, the American Academy of Family Physicians offers these safety guidelines:

  • Make sure the medicine treats only your child's symptoms, nothing more.
  • Make sure any caregivers know the correct timing, dosage and type of medication your child needs.
  • Always read the medication's label and follow directions carefully.
  • Keep medications stored in their original packaging, so you can easily refer to instructions.
  • Never give cough and cold medication to a child younger than age 4 or aspirin to anyone younger than age 18.
  • Don't combine medications unless your child's pediatrician says it's OK to do so.
  • Don't give any adult medication to a child.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111224/hl_hsn/healthtipusemedicationssafely

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Lawyer: Portugal denies US appeal for fugitive

Portugal's Supreme Court has refused a request from the U.S. to extradite American fugitive George Wright, his lawyer said Thursday.

Wright's lawyer Manuel Luis Ferreira said the court rejected an appeal by the U.S. against a lower court's decision that denied extradition a month ago.

"The Supreme Court has denied the appeal," Ferreira told The Associated Press. "They notified me today."

The U.S. can now appeal to Portugal's Constitutional Court if it chooses to.

Ferreira said he did not have details of the ruling. In Portugal, extradition cases are conducted in secret. Ferreira said Wright intends to remain in Portugal.

A Lisbon judge decided against Wright's extradition in November, two months after he was captured in Portugal following four decades on the run.

The U.S. Justice Department filed an appeal less than two weeks later.

Supreme Court officials weren't available to comment after office hours Thursday, and the U.S. Justice Department did not immediately reply to an email seeking comment.

The lower court judge had ruled that Wright, 68, had become a Portuguese citizen and that the statute of limitations on his 15- to 30-year sentence for a robbery-murder in New Jersey had expired, according to Ferreira.

Wright, now called Jorge Luis dos Santos after changing his identity, is married to a Portuguese woman and has two grown children. They have lived near Lisbon, the Portuguese capital, since 1993.

Wright was accused of gunning down Walter Patterson during a 1962 gas station robbery in the U.S.

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Patterson's daughter, Ann Patterson, 63, Thursday said about the Lisbon court ruling, "I'm surprised; I wouldn't know what else to say about it."

He and others then hijacked a plane in 1972 from the U.S. to Algeria along with other Black Liberation Army militants. He was captured in Portugal after his U.S. fingerprint matched one in Portugal's database of prints for all citizens.

Wright's fugitive odyssey began when he broke out of Bayside State Prison in Leesburg, N.J., on Aug. 19, 1970, and made his way to Detroit, where he joined the Black Liberation Army. Dressed as a priest, he hijacked a Delta flight to Miami with four others, using handguns they sneaked on the plane.

After releasing the plane's 86 passengers for $1 million, the hijackers forced the plane to fly to Boston, then to Algeria, where they sought asylum.

Algeria gave the money and plane back to the U.S., and Wright and his comrades went underground, settling in France. The others were captured and convicted of hijacking in Paris, but radical French sympathizers helped Wright escape to Portugal.

Wright met his future wife, Maria do Rosario Valente, in Lisbon in 1978. The couple moved in the early 1980s to Guinea-Bissau, a former Portuguese colony, where Wright lived openly using his real name and socialized with U.S. diplomats and embassy personnel who told The Associated Press they were unaware of his past.

Guinea-Bissau granted him political asylum in the 1980s, made him a citizen and gave him the new name Jose Luis Jorge dos Santos, complete with fake names for his parents.

Wright then got Portuguese citizenship through his 1991 marriage to a Portuguese woman. His identity from Guinea-Bissau was accepted by Portugal when it granted him citizenship, according to his lawyer.

He and his wife moved back to Portugal in 1993 to the tiny town of Almocageme, 28 miles (45 kilometers) from Lisbon. Wright then worked a series of jobs ? as a painter, a nightclub bouncer and a barbecue chicken restaurant manager ? as they raised two children.

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/45769460/ns/world_news-europe/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Google TV and Apple TV Could Change Cable TV for the Good (ContributorNetwork)

COMMENTARY | Streaming video is a big deal when it comes to mobile devices. Tablet computers are almost designed with the capability in mind, and many smartphones have the application as well. In fact the popularity of streaming video is putting the squeeze on traditional cable companies and the media companies that create the television shows, but does anyone have an advantage in the race for consumer dollars?

According to the Wall Street Journal, television revenue from advertising, cable subscriptions and the like tally around $150 billion per year, which means there is serious money up for grabs. However, there is little doubt that if Apple and Google have anything to say about television, the entertainment landscape will change in the coming years, especially due to the popularity of mobile devices.

Business Insider reports cable TV should take Google TV seriously. The article mentions the $100 million investment Google is making in original programming for YouTube. However, Netflix is also getting in on the exclusive programming game getting ready to revive "Arrested Development," according to the Los Angeles Times. Plus, The Week is reporting a lot of interesting features on the new Apple TV that could increase the streaming content competition.

Whether or not viewers will shift to the original programming offered by YouTube and Netflix is an interesting question; however, users need something to watch for free (OK, Netflix has a subscription fee) on all those new shiny devices. Television is changing, and there is room for new shows that could start to affect the traditional television viewing process, which is getting home and turning on the TV to see what is on. The change is that now viewers will know what is on, and be able to watch it on several different devices with no additional cost, and that should shake cable companies to the core.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111221/tc_ac/10717879_google_tv_and_apple_tv_could_change_cable_tv_for_the_good

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Self-affirmation may break down resistance to medical screening

ScienceDaily (Dec. 21, 2011) ? People resist medical screening, or don't call back for the results, because they don't want to know they're sick or at risk for a disease. But many illnesses, such as HIV/AIDS and cancer, have a far a better prognosis if they're caught early. How can health care providers break down that resistance?

Have people think about what they value most, finds a new study by University of Florida psychologists Jennifer L. Howell and James A. Shepperd. "If you can get people to refocus their attention from a threat to their overall sense of wellbeing, they are less likely to avoid threatening information," says Howell. Do that, and people are more likely to face a medical screening even if it means undertaking onerous treatment and even if the disease is uncontrollable. The findings will appear in Psychological Science, a journal published by the Association for Psychological Science.

The researchers undertook three studies, each with about 100 students of both sexes. In all three studies, they asked the participants to think of a trait they valued; they chose traits such as honesty, compassion, and friendliness. Participants then wrote either about how they demonstrated the trait (expressing self-affirmation) or a friend (not affirming themselves) demonstrated the trait.

Next participants watched a video about a (fictional) disorder called thioamine acetlyase (TAA) deficiency that ostensibly impairs the body's ability to process nutrients and can lead to severe medical complications. They then completed an online risk calculator for the disease and decided either to receive their risk feedback or not.

In the first study, fewer participants who wrote self-affirming essays avoided learning their risk than did participants who wrote non-affirming essays. In studies 2 and 3 researchers investigated the effects of affirmation on two conditions known to increase avoidance of risk feedback. In the second study, participants learned that testing at high risk for TAA deficiency would either require an easy or onerous follow-up examination process. Participants who were not affirmed avoided learning their risk more when they thought it might necessitate an onerous, as compared to an easy, follow up. However, affirmed participants showed little avoidance regardless of the difficulty of follow up. In the third study, participants learned either that TAA could be managed with a pill; or that there was no effective treatment. Again, the non-affirmed group avoided learning their risk almost twice as often when hearing they had no control over the illness. By contrast, affirmed participants were unlikely to avoid the news, regardless of the possibility of treatment.

The researchers acknowledge it's sometimes rational to choose not to know about an incurable disease you might (or might not) get. "But when it is important to prepare for negative events -- getting your affairs in order, finding the coping resources you'll need," Howell suggests, going through with that screening might wise.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Jennifer L. Howell and James A. Shepperd. Reducing Information Avoidance Through Affirmation. Psychological Science, (in press)

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/gHPHc0OIN6A/111221211326.htm

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Decision sharing tied to lower cost for kids' care (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? Parents who report having an increased involvement in making decisions about their children's medical treatment are more likely to see lower risks of their kids going to the emergency room or being hospitalized, according to a new study.

The researchers, who looked only at families with children who have long-term health conditions, also found that those who joined doctors in making medical decisions had lower costs for their kids' medical care.

"This suggests that if you involve people in decision-making, they may be making choices that lead to decreasing the financial burden on them," said the study's lead author, Dr. Alexander Fiks, a professor at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

Cost is especially important for these families, Fiks told Reuters Health, because there's a large out-of-pocket burden for kids who have asthma, autism or other chronic health problems.

His study, published in the journal Pediatrics, used responses from a large, annual health care spending survey, and they compared the results over two years.

The parents of more than 2,800 kids with special health care needs answered questions not only about costs, but the relationship they had with their child's doctor.

For instance, the survey asked how often doctors invited the parents to help in making decisions about treatment, and how often health care providers listened carefully to the parents.

Shared decision-making in medicine is considered a relatively new approach to determining a plan of treatment for patients, compared to the older, more paternalistic approach of the doctor calling the shots without input from the family or patient.

Fiks and his colleagues found that about half of the families experienced a high level of shared decision-making with doctors over the two years, while 17 percent continued to have a low level of participation.

About 16 percent of the families played an increasing role in making decisions over the span of the study, which was linked with a drop in trips to the hospital.

In the first year, seven out of every 100 kids in this group of families were admitted to the hospital, compared to three out of every 100 kids in the second year of the study.

Similarly, 26 out of every 100 kids went to the E.R. in the first year, compared to 15 in the second year.

Dr. Stephen Berman, a professor of pediatrics and public health at the University of Colorado and a medical editor of the Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making, said he wasn't surprised to see these kids avoiding the hospital.

"In my own practice I find that when parents become partners in these decisions...they understand the care plan much better and they're much more compliant with giving medications (to their kids) and recognizing danger signs," said Berman, who was not involved in this study.

"If families are following treatments more closely, it's possible that the kids may get better," Fiks said.

SPENDING DROPS

Health care spending for kids also dropped in the second year of the study if families had a growing part in making decisions.

The total spending on health care was more than $2,000 in the first year, and dropped to about $1,700 in the second year.

Fiks and his colleagues didn't prove that sharing decisions was the sole reason for the benefits they saw.

There are other possibilities that could explain why the researchers found a benefit for families who took a larger part in making choices in the second year.

For one, parents who are stronger advocates for their children -- and who are more likely to aggressively pursue treatments -- might seek out doctors willing to involve them in making decisions.

Another explanation is that as children get sicker, their parents might be less willing or able to make choices, and the decisions fall primarily on the doctor. On the flip side, as kids gets healthier, their parents might be more able to take on a greater role in their care.

Fiks said he'd like to see future studies work out whether shared decision-making alone can result in cost savings and health benefits for children with health problems.

"I personally believe that when we do those studies...we will find an impact from shared decision-making," Berman told Reuters Health.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/vIVZMR Pediatrics, online December 19, 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/hl_nm/us_decision_sharing_tied

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Colts finally win one, beating Titans 27-13 (AP)

INDIANAPOLIS ? The Indianapolis Colts are winless no longer.

Dan Orlovsky threw one touchdown pass and the key block on an 80-yard TD run, leading the Colts to their first win of the season, 27-13 over Tennessee on Sunday.

Indianapolis (1-13) avoided becoming the second team in NFL history to go 0-16.

The loss dealt a serious blow to the Titans' playoff hopes. Quarterback Matt Hasselbeck was picked off twice and Chris Johnson rushed for only 55 yards for Tennessee (7-7).

Orlovsky gave Indy a 10-6 lead with an 18-yard TD pass to Reggie Wayne in the third quarter, and Jacob Lacey made it 17-6 with a 32-yard interception return for a TD.

Jake Locker got the Titans within 20-13 with a 7-yard TD pass to Nate Washington with 3:43 to go.

But on the next play, with Donald Brown reversing field, Orlovsky threw a block that helped Brown get to the corner and he sprinted 80 yards to seal the win.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111218/ap_on_sp_fo_ga_su/fbn_titans_colts

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

The week's buzz: We aren't the median

Brandon Thibodeaux for msnbc.com

Megan and Sam Moss, pictured here with their baby daughter Mary Margaret, are living on the nation's median household income of around $50,000 a year.

By Allison Linn

?

For the last couple of weeks, Life Inc. has been exploring what it?s like to be in the exact midpoint of the nation?s economic spectrum.

The We are the median project prompted thousands of readers to share their stories and thoughts on what it?s like for to live on the nation?s household median income of around $50,000 a year. And it also prompted lots of you to tell us about what it?s like to be much worse off.

Many readers told us they can only hope to bring home $50,000 a year.

?$50,000 would be great to make a year. Single mom with 2 kids and I bring home less than $35,000. Took a cut in hours to keep my job,? one reader wrote in response to our profile of a mom and son who are struggling with a drop in income.

Another profile, of a young couple bringing home around $50,000 a year and juggling high student loan bills, also prompted some to tell us that people need to pay more attention to those who have it much worse.

?Why is this news? We make less than $27K, I have over $80K in student debt. My dream is a nightmare and we are family of 4,? one reader wrote.

Although some readers told us?they are doing just fine?on incomes below $50,000 a year, others said it?s very hard to make ends meet on a lower income. In a post this week about a family choosing to live a very simple life on about $20,000 a year, many readers questioned whether low-income living is really ?living well.??

But some found the story inspirational.

?It's gratifying to hear stories of real people. I applaud this young family and see their lot improving, over time. My husband and I struggled in our early life, with young children and little money. ? Our kids are not scarred because of this, they are all hard working, successful contributors to society. We have always had to be smart about our money and now that we have more, we are still frugal,? one commenter wrote.

Apparently that?s not a lesson many parents are passing on to their children. In a post about a young couple getting a good financial start in life, about 40 percent of our readers said they hadn't learned much from their parents about how to manage money.

?My parents didn't tell me anything about budgeting. It's a hard lesson I now know and am passing this on to my kids,? one reader wrote.

How much would you have to bring home to be free of money worries? More than half of our readers said they would have to make $250,000 or more per year in order to feel rich.

For some, the more money, the better.

?As much as possible. You're never secure in this country unless you are the 1%,? one reader wrote.

Still, some readers said they would settle for much less.

?I would be thrilled with that (to me) mythical $50,000 per year..........!? one reader wrote.

What's the minimum annual income your household could live on?

?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9471435-the-weeks-buzz-we-arent-the-median

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Senate delays decisions on Obama financial nominees (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175990849?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Linda Hogan & Charlie Hill: Off to Relationship Rehab!


Linda Hogan and her 23-year-old fiance boy toy are headed to rehab.

Relationship Rehab. The VH1 spinoff of Celebrity Rehab. Obviously ...

The Hulk's 52-year-old ex-wife apparently has some issues to work out with Charlie Hill, and they've agreed to appear on the upcoming reality show. Taping is underway.

Linda Hogan and Charlie Hill Pic

You two kids hang in there now.

Linda and Hulk Hogan finalized their divorce back in 2009, and Charlie Hill, who Linda had been dating since 2008, when he wasn't old enough to buy alcohol.

He proposed a year later. Hulk began dating a Brooke Hogan clone.

Joining them on the new show? DMX and Tashera Simmons, his estranged wife, with whom he is looking to repair their marriage. Should be CAN'T MISS television.

Sadly, the kaput Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries have not been asked to join the cast. Now that would be a ratings boost for the fledgling reality telecast.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/linda-hogan-and-charlie-hill-off-to-relationship-rehab/

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Reports: 20 trapped in Vietnam's blazing 'twin towers'

Luong Thai Linh / EPA

Smoke billows a blazing building in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Thursday.

By msnbc.com staff

About 20 people were?believed to be?trapped Thursday?after a blaze broke out at a skyscraper in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi, according to reports.

Tuoi Tre News reported that clouds of smoke billowed from?the under-construction?EVN Center for Telecommunications Information Management?after the fire?started?around 4:30 p.m. local time (4:30 a.m. ET). Citing a source, it said at least?two people had been rescued and taken to hospital from the "twin towers" complex.


Tuoi Tre?quoted an official as saying that some workers?on the site "rushed to upper floors" when the fire erupted.

According to BBC Vietnam,?about 20 people were believed to be trapped inside.

The BBC reported that one of the buildings is 33 stories,?while the other has 29 floors.

It added that either?a gas explosion or faulty wiring was believed to have sparked the blaze.

Read more content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9466888-reports-workers-trapped-in-vietnams-blazing-twin-towers

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Friday, December 16, 2011

iTunes Match now going live internationally

iTunes Match seems to be going live internationally right now — and for real this time, not like yesterday. International iTunes users are now once again getting the sign up page for the iTunes Match. Folks in Canada, Ireland, Mexico, Australia, France, New Zealand and various other regions...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/EYIBwhYoDtg/story01.htm

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Black Eyed Peas' apl.de.ap Launches 'Charity Dreams' Auction

Fans can bid on a package that includes a Ferrari and studio time with the MC.
By Gil Kaufman


Black Eyed Peas' apl.de.ap
Photo: Getty Images

With the Black Eyed Peas recently announcing their hiatus after a star-studded sendoff show in Miami, the band's members are not wasting time getting busy.

Leader will.i.am. has already dropped the eye-popping video for "T.H.E. (The Hardest Ever)," the electro-fueled first single from his new solo album, while member apl.de.ap is focusing on non-musical ventures.

Apl announced the launch of this week of the "Charity Dreams" auction benefiting education in his native Philippines. The rapper, who is an educational ambassador for the island nation, is upping the ante on celebrity auctions in a major way with the "We Can Be Anything" event.

The auction — which begins pre-registration this week at CharityDreams.com and lasts through 9 p.m. ET Monday — allows fans to start the bidding at just 99 cents for a huge prize package that may end up being the most affordable donation on the planet.

Not only will the winner get a private-jet flight out to Los Angeles to spend time in the studio to watch as Apl creates a custom track in their honor, but the BEP rapper will also cut a custom disc of the session and serve as the DJ at the winner's birthday party, where he will spin the song for the top prize-getter and 50 of his or her friends. The winning bidder will also get a 2012 collector's edition Ferrari, $250,000 in cash and a trip to Las Vegas with 10 friends to spend New Year's Eve with Fergie while staying in the "Real World" penthouse suite.

Once 1 million people pre-register and the bidding begins, all the money donated in bids will go toward building 10,000 classrooms in the Philippines and improving education in the nation. And even before the first brick is laid, bidders will be able to join together to help build "virtual classrooms."

According to a release announcing the effort, every bid will allow users to buy virtual books, pencils, chairs, desks, etc., and help build virtual classrooms in an effort to combine gaming, social networking and philanthropy. Each time a bidder finishes a virtual classroom, an actual classroom will be named for that bidder once construction is completed on the new schools.

In a unique twist, the initial fee to place a charity bid is 99 cents, with the bidding price beginning at $0. Organizers expect the final package to go for no more than a few hundred dollars thanks to a system in which each bid increases the top price by just a fraction of a penny. "That means that even as hundreds, thousands, or even millions of people bid, the final sale price will only go up to no more than a few hundred dollars," according to a press release announcing the auction. "We have leveled the playing field, and the price stays affordable, with the auction proceeds going to a good cause."

Each bid will also entitle users to an app, music download or play list curated by Apl and featuring an exclusive song or the chance to have Apl follow you on Twitter.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676079/black-eyed-peas-apl-de-ap-charity-dreams.jhtml

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Gingrich worse against Obama than Romney: Reuters/Ipsos poll (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Newt Gingrich holds a 10-point lead in the fight for the Republican presidential nomination, but he would fare worse against President Barack Obama than Republican Mitt Romney, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.

With the first nominating contest in Iowa less than three weeks away, Gingrich leads Romney among Republican voters nationwide by 28 percent to 18 percent, the poll found.

However, the poll raises questions about whether Gingrich -- a former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives who has shot to the top of Republican opinion polls in recent weeks -- would be able to defeat Obama.

The poll found that if the November 2012 presidential election were held today, Obama would defeat Gingrich, 51 percent to 38 percent. By contrast, Obama would defeat Romney by a narrower margin, 48 percent to 40 percent.

Analysts say the results reflect the risk that Republicans could face if they nominate Gingrich, whose strong performances in debates have won him support among conservatives seeking an alternative to Romney.

Gingrich has a long record of making provocative statements that could alienate independent voters, such as when he recently referred to Palestinians as an "invented" people.

Even so, some conservative Republicans see him as preferable to Romney, a former Massachusetts governor who has built a more extensive campaign and fundraising operation.

"This is the Republican dilemma," said Calvin Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University. " 'Do I want to enjoy myself by voting for Gingrich ... or do I want to look toward the general election and see a winnable contest?'"

Romney has been widely viewed as the candidate to beat among Republicans.

Obama's campaign was focused squarely on an eventual race against Romney until this week, when it began taking shots at Gingrich -- an acknowledgement of the former speaker's elevated standing in the Republican race.

The new poll found Texas Representative Ron Paul and Texas Governor Rick Perry tied for third place with 12 percent each, while Minnesota Representative Michele Bachmann has the support of 10 percent of Republicans.

Former Utah Governor John Huntsman is next with 5 percent, followed by former Pennsylvania senator Rick Santorum, with 4 percent. Another 4 percent picked other candidates or none at all.

The poll, taken from December 8 to December 12, shows Gingrich's remarkable comeback since a staff mutiny and criticism by fellow Republicans nearly torpedoed his campaign in June. A Reuters/Ipsos poll taken during that period showed him polling at 6 percent.

The poll also found that Obama could be making a comeback of sorts as the economy shows signs of improvement and Republican candidates bloody each other in a series of televised debates.

Obama's 8 point lead over Romney is a dramatic increase from the 1 point deficit he faced in a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken from October 31 to November 3.

Although Obama is doing better compared with Republicans, his approval rating, at 47 percent, is little changed since the beginning of the year.

Americans remain generally pessimistic, the poll found. Only 27 percent say the country is moving in the right direction, while 69 percent say it is on the wrong track, a slight improvement from the October poll.

The poll was based on telephone interviews of 1,102 adults, 443 of them registered Republicans. The margin of error for all adults is plus or minus 3 percentage points; for Republicans the margin of error is plus or minus 4.7 percentage points.

The complete poll results can be found at http://www.ipsos-na.com/news-polls/pressrelease.aspx?id=5437.

(Reporting by Andy Sullivan; Editing by David Lindsey)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111214/ts_nm/us_usa_campaign_poll

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