Wednesday, 7 December 2011

FIFA: Joao Havelange resigns from IOC

FILE - In this Aug. 7, 1997 file photo, FIFA president Joao Havelange speaks at a press conference in Rio De Janeiro. The Associated Press has learned that longtime Brazilian member Joao Havelange has resigned by letter Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, from the IOC, just days before facing suspension in a corruption case stemming from his days as president of FIFA. (AP Photo/Renzo Gostoli, File )

FILE - In this Aug. 7, 1997 file photo, FIFA president Joao Havelange speaks at a press conference in Rio De Janeiro. The Associated Press has learned that longtime Brazilian member Joao Havelange has resigned by letter Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, from the IOC, just days before facing suspension in a corruption case stemming from his days as president of FIFA. (AP Photo/Renzo Gostoli, File )

FILE - In this Oct. 2, 2009 file photo, Joao Havelange, the former FIFA President, is embraced by Rio 2016 bid president Carlos Arthur Nuzman, right, during the Rio 2016 bid presentation at the 121st International Olympic Committee session at the Bella Center in Copenhagen. The Associated Press has learned that longtime Brazilian member Joao Havelange has resigned by letter Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, from the IOC, just days before facing suspension in a corruption case stemming from his days as president of FIFA. (AP Photo/Claus Bjoern Larsen, Polfoto, file) DENMARK OUT

(AP) ? FIFA says former president Joao Havelange has resigned as a member of the International Olympic Committee.

The Associated Press reported Sunday that he had resigned days before he faced possible suspension. The 95-year-old Brazilian official was the Olympic body's longest-standing member. The IOC was preparing to rule on claims he took kickback payments while he was the FIFA president from 1974-98.

FIFA says in a statement to the AP it has "taken note" of Havelange's resignation, and "the fact that the IOC has closed the case accordingly."

FIFA says it "cannot speculate on any decisions made by Mr. Havelange" regarding his status as honorary president. The FIFA congress appointed him to the position in 1998.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-05-OLY-Havelange-IOC/id-ecd4c083eee3477680586b72377cb5ae

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Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Dalai Lama's Latest Book Spawns Free Audiobook Edition Read By Martin Sheen (VIDEO)

The actor Martin Sheen (real name: Ram?n Antonio Gerard Est?vez) has played a President of the U.S., King Arthur and the father of a super hero. Yet he still felt inadequate when facing his latest role: being the voice of a real-life enlightened spiritual being.

He was selected to read the audio edition of the latest book by Dalai Lama, "Beyond Religion". According to Sheen, "my first inclination was, 'nobody can be that voice.'"

Yet eventually, he accepted the challenge from audible.com of reading the audio version of the book, which is available to download for free for the next two weeks via Audible's website.

The book is perhaps a surprising call for humanity to move beyond religion in order to improve our lives. "What we need today," the Lama writes, "is an approach to ethics which makes no recourse to religion and can be equally acceptable to those with faith and those without: a secular ethics."

You can read an excerpt from the book here, and watch the short video above to learn just how Sheen reacted to being asked to perform the reading, what word he found the Lama kept using in his writing, and how the book is about much more than questions of religion and ethics.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/06/dalai-lama-latest-book-martin-sheen_n_1130550.html

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Monday, 5 December 2011

Team sees biggest black holes yet

A US team has found the two biggest "supermassive" black holes known to science, Nature journal reports.

Sitting at the centres of two nearby galaxies, the two objects have masses close to 10 billion times greater than our Sun.

Such large black holes had been suspected to exist, but, until now, the biggest known was some 6.3 billion times the mass of the Sun.

The study is based on data from ground and space-based telescopes.

Most massive galaxies, including our own Milky Way, are thought to harbour supermassive black holes at their centres.

But these newly discovered black holes are much bigger than would be predicted by extrapolating from observations from their host galaxies.

This suggests that the factors influencing the growth of the largest galaxies and their black holes differ from those influencing smaller galaxies.

The findings come from observations of two nearby galaxies: NGC 3842 and NGC 4889.

Nicholas J McConnell from the University of California, Berkeley, and colleagues report that NGC 3842 has a mass of 9.7 billion solar masses and that a black hole of comparable or greater mass is present in NGC 4889.

Indications that such big black holes must have existed came from observations of the powerful galactic light sources known as quasars.

Measurements of quasars from the early Universe showed that some must be powered by black holes with masses of about 10 billion solar masses.

"These objects probably represent the missing dormant relics of the giant black holes that powered the brightest quasars in the early Universe," Michele Cappellari, from the University of Oxford, wrote in an accompanying viewpoint article in Nature.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-16034045

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Can the GOP be tough on the rich? How about no food stamps?

The White House on Thursday rejected as insubstantial a GOP proposal to curtail unemployment insurance and food stamps for the rich as an offset for extending the payroll tax cut.

Who says Republicans can?t be hard on millionaires and billionaires?

Skip to next paragraph

On Wednesday, Sen. Dean Heller (R) Nevada proposed means testing of the ultra-rich for eligibility for unemployment insurance and food stamps as well as raising their Medicare premiums.

The income garnered by keeping people like Warren Buffet from using the SNAP program (food stamps) would be part of an effort to pay for a one-year extension of the 2 percent payroll tax cut, which will cost over $120 billion.

In fact the US Department of Agriculture already does require means testing in order to receive food stamps.

On Thursday, White House press spokesman Jay Carney called the Republican proposal ?gorilla dust.?

Washington observer Peter Davis, a former congressional staffer who writes a blog, Davis Capital Investment Ideas, says the legislation is a very ?cosmetic? offset to a $122 billion payroll tax cut.

In an interview, Stewart Bybee, a spokesman for Senator Heller says the purpose of the anti-millionaire legislation is to ?preserve taxpayer funds for those who need it the most.? He adds, ?Millionaires and billionaires I think can sustain their lifestyle without taking unemployment compensation.?

According to IRS data in 2009, some 2,353 households that reported $1 million in income collected a total of $20.7 million in unemployment compensation. Some 716 households that reported making $2 million collected $6.67 million in income, while 18 households reporting $10 million in income collected $222,000 in unemployment.

But, actually keeping people like Bill Gates or Jaime Dimon, the chairman of J.P. Morgan Chase, from collecting unemployment benefits might be difficult.

The companies they work for pay into the unemployment insurance fund. Thus, unemployment insurance is an insured benefit.

?Unemployment insurance is completely based on the concept that taxes were paid on your wages and when you lose your job, you are being insured against the loss of your income,? explains George Wentworth, who works for the National Employment Law Project (NELP), which lobbies for the jobless. ?You have the right to unemployment insurance you earned through your work history.?

As Mr. Wentworth notes, ?If you happen to be an employee and earn $1 million, taxes are getting paid on those wages.? But, he adds, ?probably that category of employee has a lesser chance of being unemployed.?

Even if Congress can change the rules, state unemployment offices only keep a record of wages earned, not assets, or the sale of say a few million shares of stock. If Microsoft reported billionaire Mr. Gates received $20,000 in wages, he might be eligible for unemployment unless the government examined his income tax returns to look for capital gains and other non-wage sources of income.

In fact, some government means testing already takes place, including for SNAP. According to the Department of Agriculture web site, only people with incomes below 130 percent of the poverty level can collect food stamps. They also can?t have more than $2,000 in ?countable resources,? such as a bank account, unless they are disabled, or be over 60 years old, in which case it is $3,250.

In an email, Stewart Bybee, a spokesman for Sen. Heller says the purpose of the proposed legislation with regards to the SNAP program is to protect the taxpayers from abuse.

Of course, a lot of the top 1 percent don?t actually get paid an actual wage in the tradition sense. They might be sole proprietors or partners in a business, neither of which meet the Department of Labor?s definition of an employee.

In fact, Wentworth who worked for a state unemployment agency for thirty-five years, says millionaires and billionaires collecting unemployment ?is not a burning problem within the unemployment system.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/mndRR2NbnX0/Can-the-GOP-be-tough-on-the-rich-How-about-no-food-stamps

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Sunday, 4 December 2011

This Week's Top Web Comedy Video: Jesus Toast [Video]

You know how sometimes when you squint at a piece of toast really hard, at just the right angle, a fully realized flesh and blood Jesus is suddenly sitting on your coffee table? No? Uh... yeah, totally, me neither. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/zaWOtlVXyzg/this-weeks-top-web-comedy-video-jesus-toast

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Saturday, 3 December 2011

Accuser's lawyers: Sandusky account 'unconvincing' (AP)

NEW YORK ? Former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky maintains he never sexually abused children and portrays himself in a New York Times interview as a father-like figure to the kids in his life.

The Times reported Saturday that Sandusky also insisted he never spoke with Joe Paterno about any allegations of misconduct.

"They've taken everything that I ever did for any young person and twisted it to say that my motives were sexual or whatever," Sandusky said. "I had kid after kid after kid who might say I was a father figure. And they just twisted that all."

Sandusky has been charged with 40 counts of molesting eight boys over 15 years and is free on bail while awaiting a preliminary hearing Dec. 13. A grand jury investigating Sandusky said in a report that some of the assaults occurred in the Penn State football showers, including a 2002 allegation in which a graduate assistant testified he saw Sandusky sodomizing a young boy.

University trustees fired Paterno ? major college football's winningest coach ? on Nov. 9, four days after charges were filed against Sandusky, amid mounting criticism that school leaders should have done more when allegations came to their attention.

During a lengthy interview with The Times at his lawyer's home, Sandusky painted a picture of chaotic but friendly scenes involving children he described as extended family at his State College, Pa., home. There were sleepovers, wrestling matches, and children playing with dogs at the house after football games.

The descriptions sharply contrast with the shocking allegations involving children outlined in the grand jury report, including oral and anal sex. One accusation, from 2000, describes a janitor walking into the assistant coaches' shower room and seeing Sandusky holding a boy "up against the wall and licking on him."

Three attorneys representing one of the alleged victims released a statement Saturday, with attorney Andrew Shubin calling Sandusky's comments "an entirely unconvincing denial and a series of bizarre explanations."

Sandusky told the newspaper he and Paterno never spoke about the alleged 2002 incident or a 1998 child molestation complaint investigated by Penn State campus police.

"I never talked to him about either one," Sandusky said. "That's all I can say. I mean, I don't know." He worked for Paterno for nearly 30 years.

Messages left Saturday by The Associated Press seeking comment from representatives for Paterno were not immediately returned.

Paterno testified before the grand jury that the graduate assistant told him in 2002 about the assault he had witnessed, and that he relayed the report to his superior, athletic director Tim Curley.

The graduate assistant, Mike McQueary, later met with Curley and Gary Schultz, a university vice president who oversaw campus police. But authorities said the allegation was not passed on to police or prosecutors.

Curley and Schultz are charged with failing to report the 2002 allegation and lying to the grand jury. Curley is on administrative leave, while Schultz has stepped down. Lawyers for both men have said their clients are innocent.

Prosecutors have said Paterno is not a target of the investigation.

Paterno's son, Scott Paterno, told the AP last month the first and only incident reported about Sandusky to Paterno was in 2002. Paterno has said in a statement that specific actions alleged to have occurred in the grand jury report were not relayed to him

Still, the state's top cop has criticized the way school leaders handled allegations and said Paterno and other officials had a moral responsibility to do more.

The 84-year-old Paterno initially announced his retirement effective at the end of the season, saying that the scandal was "one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more." The trustees fired him anyway, about 12 hours later.

Sandusky said that prosecutors have misconstrued his work with children. He described a family and work life that "could often be chaotic, even odd, one that lacked some classic boundaries between adults and children," the Times reported.

"It was, you know, almost an extended family," Mr. Sandusky said of his household's relationship with children from the charity he founded, The Second Mile. He characterized his experiences with children was close with as "precious times," and said the physical aspect of the relationships "just happened that way."

But Saturday's statement from one accuser's attorneys called such comments a "delusional rationalization."

"Pedophiles often horribly mischaracterize the abuse they perpetrate as something that their victims sought or benefited from," said Justine Andronici, who represents the same accuser as Shubin.

A third attorney, David Marshall, added that Sandusky's interview "goes a long way toward corroborating the victims' accounts" because Sandusky acknowledges "he `wrestled' and showered alone with boys, gave them gifts and money, and travelled with them."

Allegations involving two victims occurred in Sandusky's home, according to the grand jury report.

"Victim One testified that Sandusky had a practice of coming into the basement room after he told Victim One that it was time to go to bed," the grand jury report said. "Victim One testified that Sandusky would `crack his back,'" which was described in the report as Sandusky getting on to the bed and "rolling under the boy."

Sandusky is accused of mining the ranks of Second Mile to find underprivileged boys to abuse, which he says is false. He said that the charity never restricted his access to children until he became the subject of a criminal investigation in 2008.

He acknowledged that he regularly gave money to the disadvantaged boys at his charity, opened bank accounts for them and gave them gifts that had been donated to the charity.

"I tried to reward them sometimes with a little money in hand, just so that they could see something," he said. "But more often than not, I tried to set up, maybe get them to save the money, and I put it directly into a savings account established for them."

The paper said he grew most animated when talking about his relationships with children and most disconsolate when he spoke of Paterno and Penn State, and the upheaval caused by his indictment.

"I don't think it was fair," he is quoted as saying.

During the interview, Sandusky said his relationships and activities with Second Mile children caused some strain with Paterno. He told the paper he worried that having some children with him at hotels before games or on the sideline during games could have been regarded as a distraction by Paterno.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111203/ap_on_sp_ot/us_penn_state_abuse_sandusky

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UK Researchers Awarded CDC Grant to Study Cancer Survival in ...

LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 2, 2011) ? University of Kentucky researchers recently received a $225,000 grant to study the differences in cancer survival in Appalachia.

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The grant gives the team $225,000 for the first year, with potential funding for two additional years that could total $675,000. It is funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through the UK-based Rural Cancer Prevention Center.

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Published studies have shown a high incidence of cancer incidence and mortality and insufficient cancer care in Appalachia. However, differences in relative survival and avoidable death within sub-regions of Appalachia, and between Appalachian and non-Appalachian areas, have not yet been studied.?

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The project will collect cancer incidence data from the?13 cancer registries in Appalachian states to identify differences in relative survival and avoidable death within sub-regions of Appalachia, and between Appalachian and non-Appalachian areas for lung, colorectal, female breast, prostate, ovarian and cervical cancer.

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Bin Huang, director of Population-Based Cancer Research at the Kentucky Cancer Registry, will serve as a principle investigator for the project. The findings from the project will provide valuable information needed to develop and target effective evidence-based cancer control interventions for the Appalachian population, says Huang.

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"Population-based survival is arguably the best single measure of the overall effectiveness of health service," Huang said. "Results of the study will have direct impact in cancer prevention research here at Markey as the Appalachian population is the focus of our research. With combined knowledge of cancer incidence, mortality, survival and health behavior, more effective or novel intervention strategies could be developed and conducted for this special population.?

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Thomas Tucker, director of the Kentucky Cancer Registry, will serve as a co-principal investigator for the project, and Robin Vanderpool, deputy director of the Rural Cancer Prevention Center, will join as a co-principal investigator for the third year of the study and lead the efforts to disseminate study findings.

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?Findings from this project have implications for multiple stakeholders, including state comprehensive cancer control coalitions; healthcare providers, including primary care and oncology specialists; hospitals and cancer centers; public and private insurers; cancer advocacy organizations; and policymakers," Vanderpool said. "It is important we disseminate our findings to state and local-level constituents, researchers, and organizations across Appalachia in order to improve cancer prevention, screening, treatment and survivorship services in this region of the country.?

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"Bringing all of the?13 states with Appalachian counties together for a study of this magnitude is a significant undertaking," Tucker said. "Cancer survival has never been studied across the entire Appalachian area. Yet, the results of this important research will help to identify the areas in greatest need for cancer prevention and control interventions."

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MEDIA CONTACT: Allison Perry, (859) 323-2399 or allison.perry@uky.edu

Source: http://uknow.uky.edu/content/uk-researchers-awarded-cdc-grant-study-cancer-survival-appalachia

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