Friday, November 30, 2012

Autism severity may stem from fear

Friday, November 30, 2012

Most people know when to be afraid and when it's ok to calm down.

But new research on autism shows that children with the diagnosis struggle to let go of old, outdated fears. Even more significantly, the Brigham Young University study found that this rigid fearfulness is linked to the severity of classic symptoms of autism, such as repeated movements and resistance to change.

For parents and others who work with children diagnosed with autism, the new research highlights the need to help children make emotional transitions ? particularly when dealing with their fears.

"People with autism likely don't experience or understand their world in the same way we do," said Mikle South, a psychology professor at BYU and lead author of the study. "Since they can't change the rules in their brain, and often don't know what to expect from their environment, we need to help them plan ahead for what to expect."

In their study, South and two of his undergraduate neuroscience students ? Tiffani Newton and Paul Chamberlain ? recruited 30 children diagnosed with autism and 29 without to participate in an experiment. After seeing a visual cue like a yellow card, the participants would feel a harmless but surprising puff of air under their chins.

Part-way through the experiment, the conditions changed so that a different color preceded the puff of air. The researchers measured participants' skin response to see if their nervous system noticed the switch and knew what was coming.

"Typical kids learn quickly to anticipate based on the new color instead of the old one," South said. "It takes a lot longer for children with autism to learn to make the change."

The amount of time it took to extinguish the original fear correlated with the severity of hallmark symptoms of autism.

"We see a strong connection between anxiety and the repetitive behaviors," South said. "We're linking symptoms used to diagnose autism with emotion difficulties not usually considered as a classic symptom of autism."

The persistence of needless fears is detrimental to physical health. The elevated hormone levels that aid us in an actual fight or flight scenario will cause damage to the brain and the body if sustained over time.

And the families who participate in social skills groups organized by South and his students can relate to the new findings.

"In talking to parents, we hear that living with classic symptoms of autism is one thing, but dealing with their children's worries all the time is the greater challenge," South said. "It may not be an entirely separate direction to study their anxiety because it now appears to be related."

###

Brigham Young University: http://www.byu.edu

Thanks to Brigham Young University for this article.

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

This press release has been viewed 42 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125616/Autism_severity_may_stem_from_fear

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Which Obama E-mail Subject Line Raised Him the Most Money in 2012?

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A young model was either insane, or a calculating, quick-thinking murderer who feigned mental illness when he killed and castrated his lover, a prominent Portuguese journalist, in their New York hotel room last year, a jury heard on Wednesday. No one disputes that Renato Seabra, 22, killed Carlos Castro, 65, in January 2011. Seabra pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to a charge of second degree murder, and his trial reached closing arguments at Manhattan criminal court. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-e-mail-subject-line-raised-him-most-150302929.html

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Shoppers' habits not changed by garment plant fire

FILE - In this Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, file photo, two Black Friday shoppers walk past a large Christmas Tree at Union Square in San Francisco. A horrific fire that killed 112 people, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, at a Bangladesh garment factory owned by Tazreen Fashions Ltd has put the spotlight back on those factory workers and their sometimes treacherous work environment. The factory made clothing for several retailers around the globe including Wal-Mart, Sears and The Walt Disney Co. The companies said they didn't know the vendors were using the factory and according to a report by the Associated Press, holiday shoppers have also buffered themselves from the tragedy. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

FILE - In this Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, file photo, two Black Friday shoppers walk past a large Christmas Tree at Union Square in San Francisco. A horrific fire that killed 112 people, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, at a Bangladesh garment factory owned by Tazreen Fashions Ltd has put the spotlight back on those factory workers and their sometimes treacherous work environment. The factory made clothing for several retailers around the globe including Wal-Mart, Sears and The Walt Disney Co. The companies said they didn't know the vendors were using the factory and according to a report by the Associated Press, holiday shoppers have also buffered themselves from the tragedy. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Bangladeshi protesters hold placards as some of them lie down on the ground posing as dead bodies as they condemn the death of workers in a weekend fire at a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2012. Saturday's fire at Tazreen Fashions Ltd., a factory in a Dhaka suburb, killed 112 people. Activists in the South Asian country hope the tragedy will invigorate their lengthy, but so far fruitless efforts to upgrade safety standards and force stronger government oversight of the powerful industry. (AP Photo/Pavel Rahman)

Bangladeshi garment workers shout slogans as they participate in a protest to mourn the death of the victims of a fire in a garment factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Friday, Nov. 30, 2012. Hundreds of garment workers protested Friday outside the Bangladeshi factory where 112 people were killed by the fire, demanding compensation for their lost salaries. The placard behind reads: "Stop looting from the garment sector." (AP Photo/Pavel Rahman)

FILE -In this Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012, file photo, boxes of garments lay near equipment charred in the fire that killed 112 workers Saturday at the Tazreen Fashions Ltd. factory,on the outskirts of Dhaha, Bangladesh. The horrific fire that killed 112 people, Saturday, Nov. 24, 2012, has put the spotlight back on those factory workers and their sometimes treacherous work environment. The factory made clothing for several retailers around the globe including Wal-Mart, Sears and The Walt Disney Co. The companies said they didn't know the vendors were using the factory and according to a report by the Associated Press, holiday shoppers have also buffered themselves from the tragedy. (AP Photo/Ashraful Alam Tito, File)

(AP) ? Before purchasing a shirt, shoppers will run their hands over the fabric, look at the price tag and wonder how it will hold up in the washing machine. Some might even ask if it makes them look fat.

The one detail, however, that is rarely considered: What are the conditions like for the workers making the shirt?

A horrific fire that raced through a Bangladesh garment factory Saturday, killing 112 people, has put the spotlight ? at least temporarily ? back on those workers and their sometimes treacherous work environment.

The factory, owned by Tazreen Fashions Ltd., made clothing for several retailers around the globe including Wal-Mart, Sears and The Walt Disney Co. All three companies have distanced themselves from responsibility for the incident, saying they didn't know that their subcontractors were using the factory.

Holiday shoppers have also maintained their distance from the tragedy.

"Truthfully, I hadn't even thought about it," said Megan Miller of Philadelphia as she walked out of the Disney Store in Times Square. "I had Christmas on my mind and getting my kids something from New York."

Shoppers from Cincinnati to Paris to Singapore all said the same thing: They were aware of the fatal factory fire, but they weren't thinking about it while browsing stores in the days since. Brand name, fit and ? above all ? prices were on their minds.

"Either our pockets get lighter or we have to live with more blood on our hands," said Amy Hong, a college student who was at a store in Singapore. "I try not to think about it."

Experts who survey shoppers say the out of sight, out of mind attitude is nothing new.

"When you talk to them about their biggest concerns, where something is made, or the abuses in some country, almost never show up," said C. Britt Beemer, chairman of America's Research Group, which interviews 10,000 to 15,000 consumers a week, mostly on behalf of retailers. "The numbers are so small, I quit asking the question."

Convenience is much more important to shoppers.

Take Tammy Johnson who was at a Walmart in Bloomington, Minn. this week. She lives nearby and appreciates that the store has a large grocery section in addition to clothing and other goods.

"It's easier and it's cheaper," she said of her decision to shop there. "I hate that, but it is true."

Even those who want to make socially responsible purchases a priority have little information available to work with.

There's no widespread system in place to say where all the materials in a shirt come from let alone whether it was made in a sweatshop or not.

A label saying "Made in USA of imported fabrics" doesn't provide as much information to shoppers as they might think. Maybe tailors assembled it under good working conditions, but what about the people who wove the fabrics? Another label saying that a shirt is made from 100 percent organic cotton fails to say anything about the conditions of the factory in which it was made.

"What do they know at the point of sale about where it comes from, other than the tag?" said Paco Underhill, founder of Envirosell, which studies consumer behavior. "Our hearts are generally are in the right places. It's the question of making sure we have the knowledge and pocketbook to follow."

And it's not just clothing. It is hard to tell where televisions or laptop components are made.

Companies selling products say they even struggle to tell. Work is often given to subcontractors who themselves use subcontractors. While many major companies stipulate ethics and standards that their subcontractors must follow, policing them is a costly, time-consuming process that sounds easier than it is.

In the case of the Bangladesh factory, Wal-Mart said it had received a safety audit showing the factory was "high-risk" and had decided months before the blaze to stop doing business with Tazreen. But it said a supplier had continued to use Tazreen without authorization.

In recent years, consumers have become much more aware about the food they eat, and where it comes from.

Supermarkets are full of eggs laid by free-range chickens, organically-grown apples and beef from grass-fed, hormone-free cows. Some upscale restaurants now name the farm that provided them with pork chops. And customers pay a premium for these foods.

The difference: They perceive a direct benefit, since the food is going into their bodies.

Ethical choices when buying clothing ? or the latest version of Apple's iPhone ? are much more blurred.

Jean MacLeod, who was shopping at a Walmart on the south side of Indianapolis, is willing to pay more for goods if they are made in an ethically responsible manner and does it all the time when she buys food.

Walmart wants the best prices for its customers, she said, but the company also has power as a buyer to make sure factories have decent working conditions.

"They should be able to say, 'Look it, we don't want to buy from you unless you do things a little more our way,'" MacLeod said. "If they don't want to buy from them, then that means that factory will go out of business."

Arguments have been made that producing items with cheap labor isn't necessarily a bad thing.

Factories in the Third World can provide jobs with wages well above a region's average. They can help lift families out of severe poverty. The catch is that there are fewer safeguards to protect workers from being exploited from unscrupulous employers.

At the Bangladesh factory, locked exits prevented many workers from escaping after fire broke out.

It draws eerie parallels to New York's Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911, where 146 people died within 18 minutes of a fire starting in a factory with locked exits.

That fire was the catalyst for widespread changes in labor laws in U.S. But in the 100 years since, the desire for cheap clothing hasn't abated and costly labor has just shifted to factories overseas.

"To put it maybe too frankly, profit and efficiency and competition always trump safety and health," said James A. Gross, a labor relations professor at Cornell University.

Not every company sees things that way.

Los Angeles-based American Apparel promotes itself as a line of "sweatshop free" clothing. Its founder and CEO, Dov Charney, said that companies can control working conditions ? they just need to bring production closer to home. American Apparel knits, dyes, cuts and sews all of its products in-house.

"When the company knows the face of its worker, that's important," Charney said. "You can control working conditions and quality."

Yes, American Apparel spends more on labor, but it isn't as much as you would expect. Charney estimates that an imported T-shirt selling for $6 at Walmart would cost about $6.30 if produced domestically thanks to the company's massive scale.

"The consumer can care. They can buy from companies that are committed to fair trade and try to seek out those companies," he said.

Take Nike.

In the mid-1990s, the sneaker giant came under pressure to change its ways after numerous reports of child labor, low wages and poor working conditions. Eventually wages climbed, minimum age requirements were put in place and Nike increased monitoring at its factories.

But such change only comes after persistent public pressure.

"Clothes makers will always do what they want, but the buyer should educate himself," said Paris shopper Pierre Lefebvre.

Not all buyers have that luxury. Family budgets are tight.

"Especially with this economy, we like our money to go as far as it can," said Lesley Schuldt, who left a Cincinnati Macy's this week with five shopping bags worth of jewelry, cookware and gifts. "I have no idea where half the stuff I bought was made, but I imagine it was not in the U.S."

___

Associated Press reporters Amanda Lee Myers in Cincinnati, Josh Freed in Bloomington, Minn., Tom Murphy in Indianapolis, Meghan Barr in New York, Heather Tan in Singapore and Thomas Adamson in Paris contributed to this report.

___

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-30-Bangladesh-Factory-Fire-Shoppers/id-f19f5dbb930b4ecb939307728375a708

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Apple scores another patent victory over Samsung in the Netherlands

Apple scores another patent victory over Samsung in the Netherlands

It's always the same. The two companies continue to play tit-for-tat with their patents around the world. Apple's so-called rubber-banding patent has been particularly contentious. It played a central role in a German injunction against Motorola and was invalidated by the USPTO. Now the bounce-back scrolling effect has given Cupertino an other feather in its cap in the Netherlands. However, the Dutch court has chosen to be much more measured in its doling out of punishment. There will be no injunction, instead the manufacturer will be given eight weeks to update the offending handsets -- anything running Gingerbread or Froyo. Newer versions of Android, namely Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean, use a subtle blue glow to indicate the end of the line. For every day longer than eight weeks it takes to either issue updates or remove the aging devices from the market Samsung will be fined $100,000, but Lee Kun-hee has probably lost more cash than that in his couch cushions. Next week we're sure this same patent will be thrown out the window by French officials or Apple will be found to violate some Motorola patent... and around we go.

Continue reading Apple scores another patent victory over Samsung in the Netherlands

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Google Research: Most Of The Time, The Smartphone You Search For Is The Smartphone You Buy

Screen Shot 2012-11-29 at 2.54.21 PMGoogle has just posted research findings on how certain factors affect the launch of a smartphone, with data coming directly from search. According to author Matt Seitz, the senior analytical lead at the Google Agency Blog, searches predict smartphone sales "with over 90 percent correlation throughout the launch cycle." With this data, the search giant has uncovered the most important factors that determine whether or not a smartphone will launch into the arms of millions of adoring fans, or to an audience that either doesn't know the phone exists or simply doesn't care.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/dY9s-ZIXuuA/

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

'Fountain of youth' technique rejuvenates aging stem cells

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A new method of growing cardiac tissue is teaching old stem cells new tricks. The discovery, which transforms aged stem cells into cells that function like much younger ones, may one day enable scientists to grow cardiac patches for damaged or diseased hearts from a patient's own stem cells?no matter what age the patient?while avoiding the threat of rejection.

Stem cell therapies involving donated bone marrow stem cells run the risk of patient rejection in a portion of the population, argues Milica Radisic, Canada Research Chair in Functional Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering at the Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering (IBBME) and Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry at the University of Toronto.

One method of avoiding the risk of rejection has been to use cells derived from a patient's own body. But until now, clinical trials of this kind of therapy using elderly patients' own cells have not been a viable option, since aged cells tend not to function as well as cells from young patients.

"If you want to treat these people with their own cells, how do you do this?"

It's a problem that Radisic and her co-researcher, Dr. Ren-Ke Li, think they might have an answer for: by creating the conditions for a 'fountain of youth' reaction within a tissue culture.

Li holds the Canada Research Chair in Cardiac Regeneration and is a Professor in the Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, cross-appointed to IBBME. He is also a Senior Scientist at the Toronto General Research Institute.

Radisic and Li first create a "micro-environment" that allows heart tissue to grow, with stem cells donated from elderly patients at the Toronto General Hospital.

The cell cultures are then infused with a combination of growth factors?common factors that cause blood vessel growth and cell proliferation?positioned in such a way within the porous scaffolding that the cells are able to be stimulated by these factors.

Dr. Li and his team then tracked the molecular changes in the tissue patch cells. "We saw certain aging factors turned off," states Li, citing the levels of two molecules in particular, p16 and RGN, which effectively turned back the clock in the cells, returning them to robust and healthy states.

"It's very exciting research," says Radisic, who was named one of the top innovators under 35 by MIT in 2008 and winner of the 2012 Young Engineers Canada award.

Li and Radisic hope to continue their goal to create the most effective environment in which cells from older patients can be given new life. "We can create much better tissues which can then be used to repair defects such as aneurysms," Li says, as well as repairing damage caused by heart attacks.

The study was recently released in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, the top journal in the field of cardiovascular medicine.

###

University of Toronto: http://www.utoronto.ca

Thanks to University of Toronto for this article.

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

This press release has been viewed 23 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125549/_Fountain_of_youth__technique_rejuvenates_aging_stem_cells

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Open Hand, Open Heart: Ministry to Young Mothers

It occurs to me that 21st century realities for young mothers ? particularly for young mothers willing to have larger families ? are quite different than they were thirty years ago, or fifty. In ?the old days? ? back when my mother had me, for instance, and my Mother-in-Law had my husband ? families were larger to start with, and extended family members lived nearby. My grandmother lived with us; my husband?s grandmother lived a few blocks away; one aunt lived right up the street and another around the corner. A new mother had some resources to help her out, another pair of hands to catch a running kid; someone to sit with for a tea-break and an hour?s adult conversation.

Families are smaller, these days. Those young women who are nurturing ?big? families rarely have family members who live within hollering distance; siblings are few and often living in another state and aunts and grandmas are off ?having it all.?

Calah Alexander has written one of those brutally honest pieces about the trials, frustrations and fears that go hand-in-hand with mothering small children but she has added to it the twist that obedient Catholicism brings to the drama.

There is freedom in obedience but it can sometimes seem very hard to find When life is a blur of small, unruly people who are in constant states of screaming need and one?s post-partum chemistry is all afoul; a sincere attempt at religious obedience can feel like oncoming death or madness, especially if one is not getting some sound spiritual direction, and a little help. People who have no idea what it?s like to not even be alone while in the bathroom ? to have no spare minute in which to collect oneself or re-tether oneself to heaven ? cannot possibly imagine the strain.

Reading Calah?s piece, I couldn?t help but wonder why parishes do not have a ?young mother?s ministry?. We have Consolation/Funeral Ministry, Divorced Men?s Ministry, Teen-group Ministry, Bereavement Ministry; why not a Ministry of Succor meant to help young mothers who have passed that ?new baby? moment when everyone wants to help and are now in the thick of the everyday demands of motherhood ? just her and the brood and hours of unrelieved, lonely coping.

I?m envisioning a ministry whereby older moms ? perhaps women confronting an empty nest, or those facing retirement with some time on their hands ? can simply visit with a young mom for an hour or so, a couple times a week ? at home or in a park ? and be present to her in a reassuring, and most importantly, confidential way.

I am not talking about babysitting, about some woman coming in while the young mother flees for the hour ? and I?m not talking about someone who helps with the housework ? I?m thinking about something more in line with a woman able to come in and take one kid into her lap, and maybe rock it to sleep, while the young mother deals with another kid but also has a chance to talk, spill, vent, cry; a woman who might be a prayer companion in those moments; a woman who can identify ? who understands that the young mother is neither nuts nor incompetent, just overwhelmed; a woman who can reassure her that things get better ? that the job of motherhood never becomes ?easy? but it gets more manageable.

So, basically, I?m thinking a mother?s companion ministry; a ?mothering presence? to a young mother ? someone who might pour them both a cup of tea, hold a hand and say ?yes, these small people are little packages of lunacy, joy and sorrow entrusted to you. Aren?t they beautiful? And doesn?t time speed by so quickly?? A voice to bring a little perspective into a life that currently seems telescopically narrowed.

It would involve some training, I think. Some training in ?listening? skills, in facilitating and it what it means to simply ?be there? for someone else, for no other reason than the love of God. To be Christ for a young mother; to be Mary, and simply hear her, love her, pray with her.

Most importantly, it would require a rock-solid commitment to confidentiality; such a ministry would be useless to any young mother if she felt there was no safety in her venting, or if she had to worry about gossip.

My husband and I used to facilitate a youth group ? we took on kids in the 9th grade and they met weekly in our home until graduation from high school, just to talk, to be able to have a free, safe place in which to talk about anything they wanted, address sensitive issues or toss off challenging questions about church and the life of faith. We went through training for it, and yes, we signed a confidentiality agreement and the kids did, too. Barring something criminal or unsafe, what was said at a meeting stayed at the meeting. We did it for eight years, because it was a thing very much worth doing. People need to know they are seen and heard. Young moms need it, especially.

Seems to me, a ministry of succor to young moms might be worth doing, too. And it?s kind of part-and-parcel of ?Becoming Apocalypse? for each other.

I?d love to know if such programs are already alive in some Catholic parishes?

Image courtesy of Shutterstock.com

Source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/theanchoress/2012/11/28/open-hand-open-heart-ministry-to-young-mothers/

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Lava flows to the ocean in Hawaii, creating rare natural show

HONOLULU (Reuters) - A volcano on Hawaii's largest island is spilling lava into the ocean, creating a rare and spectacular fusion of steam and waves that officials said on Tuesday could attract thrill-seeking visitors if it continues.

Lava from a vent in Kilauea Volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii began flowing into the ocean 7 miles away on Saturday. The volcano has been erupting continuously from its Pu'u O'o vent since 1983.

The flow was the first from the volcano to reach the ocean since December, said Janet Babb, spokeswoman for the U.S. Geological Survey's Hawaiian Volcano Observatory.

Even as Hawaii tourism officials awaited an increase in visitors drawn by the explosive natural show, officials warned of potentially deadly risks and urged visitors to stay a safe distance away and respect barriers placed around the lava flow.

"Ocean entries can be quite beautiful but also quite dangerous," Babb said.

When the lava reaches the ocean, it cools, darkens and hardens into a lava delta amid an outpouring of steam. The lava delta is newly created land that is unstable and can collapse without warning.

When it collapses, even visitors standing 100 yards (meters) away can be hurt because large chunks of lava and hot water are hurled their direction by the collapse, Babb said.

"The molten lava meeting the ocean creates steam which may look innocuous, but can be quite hazardous," she said. "It's acidic and contains tiny particles of volcanic glass. And waves crashing with the lava can send out scalding water."

It was not clear how long the lava would continue flowing into the ocean.

George Applegate, director of the Big Island Visitors Bureau, said he expected an increase in tourists due to the latest occurrence of the phenomenon. "We always do," Applegate said. "A lot of people want to see a live lava flow."

Tourism officials declined to estimate how many more visitors they might see on the Big Island because of the lava flow. Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, which encompasses Kilauea, welcomed more than 1.3 million visitors last year, according to park spokeswoman Jessica Ferracane.

Security workers were keeping people beyond the barriers during approved viewing hours, said Barry Periatt, plans and operations officer for Hawaii County's Civil Defense Agency.

No communities around the volcano are threatened by the lava flow, Periatt said. The nearest town is Kalapana Gardens, which is more than half a mile away. It suffered major damage from a 1986 volcano flow.

(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis, Cynthia Johnston and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lava-flows-ocean-hawaii-creating-rare-natural-show-020319523.html

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Interracial marriage may affect views on money

3 hrs.

NEW YORK - Walk into any American conversation, and there are two volatile issues that could make it explode at any moment: race and money.

Combine the two, and spontaneous combustion is guaranteed.

Which is why no one ever talks about it. But given the rapidly rising number of interracial marriages in this country, perhaps it is time to discuss how coming from different cultural and ethnic backgrounds can sometimes lead to disparate attitudes toward money and security.

After all, one in 10 American marriages is now interracial, an all-time high. That is up 28 percent since 2000, according to Census figures, and translates to 5.4 million couples nationwide. That number looks primed to spike even higher, given that 18 percent of unmarried, opposite-sex couples identify as interracial.

So how do our unique backgrounds shape our understanding of money? On the subject, there is perhaps no better person to talk to than Carmen Wong Ulrich. The personal finance expert was famously satirized on the television comedy series "30 Rock" as Carmen Chao, a TV personality of indeterminate ethnicity who skipped effortlessly between multiple languages.

In real life, Ulrich is the author of books including "Generation Debt" and "The Real Cost of Living." She had her own personal finance show on CNBC, and was raised by a Latina mom and a Chinese stepfather. She also married a white guy from Michigan;?they have since split.

While many old stereotypes are wrongheaded, cultural backgrounds do tend to shape our attitudes toward money and security -- and it would serve most marriages well to understand where our partners are coming from, Ulrich said.

"People have very strong cultural and ethnic beliefs that we all carry with us, and a lot of those can have to do with money," she said. "For instance, I was raised as a Latina, where family is everything, and there's no thinking twice about it. I once gave my sister an apartment full of furniture, but my ex was appalled. He couldn't believe that I wanted to give away all that stuff for nothing."

Communities of color talk about money a lot, added Ulrich. "Within the majority culture, you have the option not to talk about it until it becomes an issue. Now, with so many interracial marriages, it's become an issue."

Every individual is different, of course. Suggesting that all members of a particular group have similar attitudes toward money is patently silly. But look broadly at the retirement saving numbers, as some major studies have, and trends begin to emerge. Understanding those trends can help us chart a course forward -- especially within a marriage, where compromises already need to be struck every single day.

For instance, the ING Retirement Research Institute recently looked at the average retirement savings of different minority groups. What it discovered: Cultural attitudes sometimes feed in to those numbers. For instance, while the savings of Hispanics were relatively low (an average of $54,000 in retirement plans), that was partially explained by underlying cultural attributes.

"Hispanics feel less prepared for retirement than other groups," said Fabian Gonzalez, vice president of multicultural sales for ING U.S. "To some extent that reflects the priorities of the Hispanic community, such as living with an extended family and taking care of elderly relatives, or sacrificing one's own wealth in order to give greater opportunities to one's children."

The Great Recession may have also exacerbated our different experiences of money, since it seems to have affected some pockets of American society more than others. A study by Ariel Investments and Aon Hewitt, "401(k) Plans In Living Color," surveyed the retirement savings of 2.4 million employees at 60 large organizations. It found that 8.8 percent of African-Americans had to take hardship withdrawals from their 401(k)s as the recession hit full-force in 2010, compared with 1.7 percent of whites and 1.2 percent of Asians.

Experts say that one's background is only one part of a much larger picture. Even if spouses enter into a marriage carrying their own cultural attitudes toward money, they are often trumped by other factors that are even more deeply entrenched.

"I've come across many marriages with spouses from different cultural backgrounds, and I've noticed that isn't the biggest factor in differing attitudes towards money," said Ann Minnium, an adviser with Concierge Financial Planning in Scotch Plains, N.J. "More often it's upbringing. People who come from a family that had to watch every penny are often that way themselves."

To understand how cultural background can shape one's money views, I need look no farther than my own marriage. My wife is of Haitian heritage, I am a white Canadian, and we are making it work in the multiethnic stew that is Brooklyn, N.Y.

Early in our relationship, ?we had divvied up the bill paying;?she would take care of some, I would tend to others, and I never thought twice about it. But in a premarital counseling session, I discovered this was a major source of stress for her. Since she had grown up in rural Haiti, one of the poorest nations on Earth, she had absorbed the notion that wealth and long-term security were never guaranteed. It could all go away at any moment.

The juggling of bills brought up those fears that we might not have enough, every single month. Understanding where she was coming from, I simply took over the monthly bill-paying and paperwork,?and she tries to put those deeply?harbored financial fears out of her mind.

"It shouldn't be about Me versus You," Ulrich said. "It's about how much respect you have for each other's culture, and about where you can find common ground. Respect the culture enough to talk it through."

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/marriage-money-bridging-interracial-divide-1C7280228

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Video: Grab a gun, take a family photo

Grapefruit may turn more drugs deadly

??If you kick-start your day with a glass of grapefruit juice, be careful. Canadian scientists say the number of common prescription drugs that can interact badly with the tart citrus is climbing, with the potential for dangerous, even deadly, results.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49971333#49971333

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

A Conversation With Roy Y. Calne: Organ Transplant Pioneer Talks About Risks and Rewards

Sir Roy Calne is a pioneer of organ transplants ? the surgeon who in the 1950s found ways to stop the human immune system from rejecting implanted hearts, livers and kidneys. In 1968 he performed Europe?s first liver transplant, and in 1987 the world?s first transplant of a liver, heart and lung.

This fall, along with Dr. Thomas E. Starzl of the University of Pittsburgh, he received a 2012 Lasker Award for ?the development of liver transplantation, which has restored normal life to thousands of patients with end-stage liver disease.?

We spoke for two hours immediately before the awards ceremony. An edited and condensed version of the interview follows.

When you were studying medicine in early-1950s Britain, what was the prevailing attitude toward organ transplantation?

It didn?t exist! While a medical student, I recall being presented with a young patient with kidney failure. I was told to make him as comfortable as possible because he would die in two weeks.

This troubled me. Some of our patients were very young, very deserving. Aside from their kidney disease, there was nothing else wrong with them. I wondered then if it might be possible to do organ transplants, because kidneys are fairly simple in terms of their plumbing. I thought in gardening terms. Might it not be possible to do an organ graft, replacing a malfunctioning organ with a healthy one? I was told, ?No, that?s impossible.?

Well, I?ve always tended to dislike being told that something can?t be done. I?ve always had a somewhat rebellious nature. Just ask my wife.

When did you first think it might be a real possibility?

Around 1957. I was teaching anatomy at Oxford. I attended a lecture there by the great biologist Sir Peter Medawar, who showed slides of successful skin grafts between white mice and black mice. Though he insisted that there was ?no clinical application whatsoever,? I wondered, ?Why couldn?t we do something like that with kidneys??

Afterwards, I began to devote myself to the two main obstacles to transplantation. One was surgical and the other immunological. In America, at that time, Tom Starzl, then at Colorado, and Francis Moore at Harvard were separately working on the surgical techniques. But I was in Britain, and there was no one there who could teach me. And so I worked out the surgical problem for myself. I taught myself how to transplant kidneys in dogs.

Once I?d done that, the big problem was to find some way to prevent the immune system from rejecting the transplanted organs. I sought some way to make the immune system temporarily malleable, as it is in the fetus. If you performed the transplant during a period of plasticity, the hope was that you could avoid rejection. In those days, the only described method for doing that was X-ray irradiation, shutting down the immune system by destroying it.

Well, that didn?t work. It just made the dogs desperately ill and it didn?t stop rejection. That led me to wonder if there wasn?t some other method of immunosuppression we could consider ? a drug perhaps?

How long did it take you to find something effective?

The first sign that we might have something came in 1959, when we tried the anti-leukemia drug 6-mercaptopurine with dogs who?d had kidney grafts. Some lived quite a long time. And this was a big step. It changed something that had been total failure to a partial success. Even Peter Medawar thought we were on to something.

But cyclosporine was the real watershed. We tested it in my laboratory at the University of Cambridge during the mid-1970s. By 1977, it had moved the success rate from 50 percent to 80 percent. That really changed attitudes. Before cyclosporine, you had only 10 centers around the world doing organ transplants. Afterwards, it was 1,000. And now we had a whole new problem: not enough donor organs to meet demand.

Is there any solution to the shortage of donor organs?

I think an ?opt out? program would work better than what you currently have in the United States. They are doing this in Spain, and it has worked very well. It offers the option for people to say ?no? to have their organs used after death. If they don?t take it, this is regarded as permission. This changes the atmosphere and the perception.

Are you intrigued by the ethical questions your discoveries have brought?

Well, one of the reasons we have them is that the results are so good. If we hadn?t had successes, we wouldn?t have ethical concerns.

Still, it?s one thing to transplant organs from deceased donors and another to pressure people to donate while alive. My profession has been very cavalier about taking organs from live donors ? especially livers. Sometimes adults are willing to donate half their livers because of tremendous pressure from their families. With half a liver, there?s a definite mortality rate, probably around 1 percent, maybe 2 percent, for the donor.

I?ve seen tremendous disruption in families where a wife said, ?My husband wants to give half his liver to his brother, but he?s the breadwinner in our family and I don?t want him to do it.?

What about the growth of ?transplant tourism,? where patients from wealthy countries travel to poorer ones to find organs?

That?s terrible ? verges on the criminal, really. We?ve heard stories where a well-respected surgeon is asked to go to a third world country, and he gets there and the recipient has cirrhosis and the donor is his ?cousin.? In fact, the donor is probably some poor peasant who is apparently being paid for it. One hears of disasters where the surgeon has to work in countries with poor facilities and both the donor and the recipient have died. The surgeon returns home to this horrible news.

These kinds of events can occur in countries where power is abused. We can just imagine what would have happened in Nazi Germany if organ transplantation had existed in the 1930s.

You did a lot of your early experiments on dogs and pigs. What do animal rights activists think of your work?

They once sent me a bomb. I was suspicious and phoned up the army ? who blew it up. This was right around the time cyclosporine was first being used. A BBC director did a program on a child who?d been saved with it. And after that, I had no more trouble with animal rights. Not because they loved me. But that they thought it wouldn?t do them any good if they killed someone treating children.

The Lasker prize, which you and Tom Starzl just won, is often called the Pre-Nobel. Were the Lasker judges saying to Stockholm, ?Hey, isn?t it time you honored this world-changing discovery??

Well, I don?t know how they work in Stockholm. If you look at the amount of good that resulted from organ transplantation it fits very much into what Alfred Nobel wanted the prize to be used for.

I get a lot of satisfaction a different way. I have a patient and it?s been 38 years since his transplant. He?s just come back from a 150-mile trek bicycling through the mountains. That?s my reward.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/27/science/organ-transplant-pioneer-talks-about-risks-and-rewards.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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The Social Commerce Attribution Problem: IBM Says Twitter Referred 0% Of Black Friday Traffic

Social Attriubution Problem FinalTwitter and Facebook usually aren't the last click before an ecommerce buy, but that doesn't mean they didn't inspire or influence the purchase. Yet IBM's Black Friday report says Twitter delivered 0% of referral traffic and Facebook sent just 0.68%. To lure advertisers and ecommerce integrations, they have to show its not Google driving every sale.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/YoVIN5-XMPw/

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Becoming Comfortable with Your Public Speaking - Washington, DC ...

Speaking in front of a small group or a large audience can instill fear in most people. In fact one of the things most Americans fear most is public speaking.

While speaking publicly can be a daunting proposition for most people, there are a few basic principles and steps anyone can use to get over the fear and speak effectively.

Here are a few keys to becoming an effective public speaker:

1). Have a Clear and Simple Message--Decide the main point you want to express to your audience.

2). Organize Your Thoughts--Develop a simple three-step organizational plan for your talk.

3) Practice, Practice, Practice--Do not leave your public speaking to chance. Rehearse what you want to say, and how you are going to say it.

4) Talk to People, Not a Group--It is much easier to talk to one person at a time in a group, than it is to talk to an audience.

5) Prepare Some More--You can never have too much preparation.

There is more to speaking effectively, but a good presentation starts with these five basic steps.

Stay tuned for more tips.

Prof. H.

Source: http://www.wyzant.com/Tutors/DC/Washington/7750535/Blog/8253/becoming_comfortable_with_your_public_speaking.aspx

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State Department wonders why Egyptians can?t get along (Powerlineblog)

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Saudi regulator suspends Mobily from selling SIM cards

(Reuters) - Etihad Etisalat Co (Mobily), Saudi Arabia's second-biggest telecoms operator, has asked to meet the industry regulator after it was suspended from selling pre-paid SIM cards, a company spokesman said, describing the ban as "astonishing".

Mobily's sales of pre-paid, or pay-as-you-go SIM cards will remain halted until the company "fully meets the pre-paid service provisioning requirements," the firm said in a statement.

"We're not sure when we can resume selling pre-paid SIM cards," said a company spokesman. We've requested a meeting with the CITC governor today to find out what's going on," he added, in reference to the regulator.

In an earlier order the Communication and Information Technology Commission said that from September 28 all pre-paid SIM users must enter a personal identification number when recharging their accounts and this number must be the same as the one registered with their mobile operator when the SIM card was bought.

This applies not only to Mobily but also to rival operators Saudi Telecom Co (STC) and Zain Saudi.

"This isn't just about Mobily - other operators also haven't complied and so we're astonished we've been singled out," said Mobily's spokesman. "We've done a huge campaign to inform customers about the ID requirement."

The company has yet to comply with the order because not all customers have updated their details, he said.

Mobily said the financial impact of the CITC's decision would be "insignificant", claiming data, corporate and "post-paid" contract revenues would be its main growth drivers.

"This could have a significant impact on Mobily's Q4 earnings - it depends on how quickly the company resolves this," said Asim Bukhtiar, Riyad Capital's head of research.

"Newcomers and visitors buy new SIM cards and if Mobily can't target this market it will affect the business."

The new SIM registration requirements are a security measure.

"From a CITC perspective it gives them better information on who is using pre-paid cards - there were a lot of SIM cards floating around that were not registered to anyone," added Bukhtiar.

Pre-paid mobile subscriptions are typically more popular among middle and lower income groups, with telecom operators pushing customers to shift to monthly contracts that include a data allowance.

Shares in Mobily, which reported an estimate-beating 23 percent rise in third-quarter profits in October, were down 2.1 percent at 1202 GMT on the Saudi bourse.

No one at STC or Zain Saudi was immediately available for comment.

(Reporting by Matt Smith; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/saudi-telco-regulator-suspends-mobily-prepaid-sim-sales-095125814--finance.html

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Ohio firm makes contest out of energy savings ? Business ...

In their quest to leave a smaller environmental ?footprint,? employees of Greif, a Delaware, Ohio-based industrial packaging products company, are trying to outdo each other when it comes to energy-efficient work habits.

For four months, 60 of the organi?zation?s employees participated on two teams that competed to identify energy wasters and control energy use at work. To do so, they used ?modlets??moni??tors that reveal how much energy devices plugged into an electrical outlet are using and can automatically shut them off at pre-programmed times.

That helped employees learn about ?phantom power,? the electricity that an appliance or computer uses even when it?s turned off, and about how much energy they waste by failing to unplug or shut down electronics when they?re not in use.

The two teams competed to save more energy and learn more about energy than the other, earning badges and points for participating in learning activities. For example, one activity encouraged participants to identify active and standby power states of the devices monitored by their modlets.

Result: Even after the competition has ended, employees are still talking about energy savings, using less energy and convincing their colleagues to do the same.

Contact: Deb Strohmaier of Greif, (740) 549-6074.

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Source: http://www.businessmanagementdaily.com/33168/ohio-firm-makes-contest-out-of-energy-savings

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Pass road test video help, car & motorcycle road secrets, DMV ...

You are here: Home / College University / Pass road test video help, car & motorcycle road secrets, DMV testing exam, g2 m2 exit license guide



Pass road test video help, car & motorcycle road secrets, DMV testing exam, g2 m2 exit license guidePass my road test video! How to pass your driving test. Passing your driver or motorcycle G2 road test study guide.

Hey New Driver! Getting ready to take your road test to get your license? Nervous? Oh yeah, we understand that feeling. Your hands are clammy, your heart is pounding and you?re crossing your fingers that you don?t pass out from fright when the tester climbs into your car and tells you to start your engine. Guess what? You have every right to be nervous because almost 50% of new drivers fail their first road test. Yep, I said HALF of the new drivers fail. What if I told you that I could help you pass your road test on the very first try, better than learning from a handbook or a driver?s ed class? Would you be interested? Of course you would! You?re no dummy and you WANT to pass that test the VERY FIRST TIME!

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Saturday, November 24, 2012

Crowdfunding Startup Razoo Makes Philanthropy Easy | Social ...

donations-welccomeHalf of American adults plan on giving to charity this holiday season, according to a recently published survey by Razoo, an online crowdfunding platform for causes. The survey, conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of Razoo, also found that 47% of the unemployed plan to give to charity during the holidays.

"Despite these tough economic times, it's encouraging to see half of America has plans in the works to give back to their favorite nonprofit - and Thanksgiving and the holiday season are the perfect time to do so," said Razoo's CEO Lesley Mansford.

Razoo, based in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., makes it easy for people to raise money online for around 1 million different nonprofit organizations. Razoo has helped raise $125 million to date, over half of which was raised in the last 10 months.

One such campaign is Sarah's Steps for Success, a giving campaign to raise money to help educate medical and school professionals on the effects of amplified pain on children and their families. The campaign was organized by teenager Sarah Wilen, who suffers from amplified pain syndrome. Sarah created a short video on Sept. 30, uploaded it to Razoo, and has already raised almost $11,000.

As consumers access the web more and more through the mobile web, Razoo has embraced mobile giving as a way to raise even more money for charity.

"We believe that both fundraisers and donors should be able to access Razoo anywhere, anytime," Mansford told Justmeans in an email. Over 15% of Razoo's traffic comes from users on mobile devices.

"Our focus has been the development of the best mobile optimized web experience that makes it easy to discover and donate to causes without having to download an app," she continued. "For fundraisers we have an iphone app that allows them to manage their fundraising activity and the ability to use QR codes for events and marketing materials."

Razoo also offers "Giving Cards," which the company hopes will be especially popular this holiday season. Giving Cards let costumers select a donation amount, and the recipient of the card can choose the nonprofit that the money will go to.

"There is nothing better than to be able to give the gift of giving.? Giving Cards allow you to empower the recipient to pick the charity that is most important to them," added Mansford. "Plus they make the perfect gift for anyone, especially for someone who wants a one-stop charitable choice for everyone on their gift list."

Razoo is also a partner of Giving Tuesday, a national day to give back to counter the unbridled consumerism characteristic of Black Friday. "Sometimes the real meaning of the holidays gets lost amongst all the holiday shopping craziness of Black Friday and Cyber Monday," wrote Christian Brink, Razoo's Communications Coordinator, in a recent blog post.

"Enter #GivingTuesday, the antithesis to Black Friday and Cyber Monday," wrote Brink. "#GivingTuesday is a movement that aims to put charitable giving back on the calendar for November." Giving Tuesday will be held this year on Nov. 27.

Founded in 2006, Razoo has received seed funding from the Dubai-based investment firm Legatum. Razoo uses a business model whereby it takes a small percentage (less than 3%) of every donation raised through its platform.

Image credit: Howard Lake, Flickr

Source: http://www.justmeans.com/Crowdfunding-Startup-Razoo-Makes-Philanthropy-Easy/56866.html

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Violent dolphin deaths: $5,000 reward to find their attackers (+video)

Violent dolphin deaths are on the rise in the Gulf of Mexico. The violent attacks on dolphins include bullet wounds and hacked off fins. Five dolphin deaths are from gunshot wounds.

By Tamara Lush,?Associated Press / November 20, 2012

Over the past several months, dolphins have washed ashore along the northern Gulf Coast with bullet wounds, missing jaws and hacked off fins, and federal officials said they are looking into the mysterious deaths.

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The most recent case was of a dolphin found dead off the coast of Mississippi, its lower jaw missing.

Officials from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday they're asking everyone from beachgoers to fishermen to wildlife agents to be on the lookout for injured or dead dolphins ? and any unusual interaction between the mammals and people.

RECOMMENDED: The 20 weirdest fish in the sea

"It's very sad to think that anyone could do that to any animal," said Erin Fougeres, a marine mammal scientist for NOAA's southeast office in St. Petersburg, Florida. "There have been some obviously intentional cases."

Fougeres said five dolphins have been found shot. In Louisiana, two were shot in 2011 and one in 2012. And in Mississippi, three were found shot this year, the most recent one last week, which was first reported by the Sun-Herald newspaper.

Besides the shootings, a dolphin in Alabama was found with a screwdriver stuck in its head over the summer. Another in Alabama had its tail cut off, and that animal survived. Still others were missing fins or had cuts to their bodies.

"I think it is outrageous," said Moby Solangi, the executive director of Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Gulfport, Mississippi. "These animals are very docile, very friendly and they're very curious. They come close to the boats, so if you're out there, you'll see them riding the bows. And their curiosity and friendship brings them so close that they become targets and that's the unfortunate thing."

Dolphins are among the species protected by the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act. Violators can be fined up to $10,000 per violation and sent to prison for a year.

The California-based Animal Legal Defense Fund said it is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whomever harmed the dolphins.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/8Fa2-tBxpNI/Violent-dolphin-deaths-5-000-reward-to-find-their-attackers-video

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Afghanistan: Wardak Province Suicide Bombing Injures At Least 40, Officials Say

KABUL, Afghanistan ? A suicide attacker detonated a car laden with explosives Friday in eastern Afghanistan, killing two civilians and wounding about 60 others, officials said.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the bombing, saying in a statement that the attack was in response to the recent execution of four Taliban detainees at the Afghan government's main detention center in Kabul.

The men were convicted and sentenced to death in Afghan courts for a variety of crimes, including murder, rape, kidnapping, robbery and cruelty against children. The Taliban condemned the hangings, saying the detainees were prisoners of war who were unjustly jailed.

Shahidullah Shahid, a spokesman for Wardak province, said the blast went off shortly before 7:30 a.m. on a street where international and Afghan security forces have a coordination office. He said at least two people were killed and 60 others were wounded in the explosion.

The Taliban said two suicide bombers were involved in the attack in Maidan Shahr, the capital of Wardak province. The insurgent group claimed the two attackers killed tens of Afghan and international troops, although the Taliban often exaggerate the number of casualties caused in their attacks.

Afghan and international forces have been working to root out insurgents in Wardak province to keep them from moving north into the Afghan capital. The international forces are scheduled to turn over security responsibility to local troops by the end of 2014.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/23/afghanistan-wardak-province-suicide-bombing_n_2176568.html

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Friday, November 23, 2012

Rihanna Gets Her Turkey Stuffed By Chris Brown On Thanksgiving!

Rihanna Gets Her Turkey Stuffed By Chris Brown On Thanksgiving!

Rihanna, who just completed her 777 mini tour, flew to Germany to spend Thanksgiving with her ex-boyfriend Chris Brown. The singer recently stated they are not together, but onlookers that saw them at the Berlin club disagree. Are Chris Brown and Rihanna together or not? She recently told Ellen DeGeneres she is single and told ...

Rihanna Gets Her Turkey Stuffed By Chris Brown On Thanksgiving! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2012/11/rihanna-gets-her-turkey-stuffed-by-chris-brown-on-thanksgiving/

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Facing fiscal cliff, some Republicans move away from no-tax pledge (CNN)

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Halle Berry's fiance fistfights with her ex

David Livingston / Getty Images file

Actors Olivier Martinez, left, and Halle Berry attend a function in Beverly Hills, Calif., in April 2011. Police say Martinez was involved in a fight Thursday with Berry's ex-boyfriend Gabriel Aubry.

By Janet Kwak and Melissa Pamer, NBCLosAngeles.com

LOS ANGELES -- Halle Berry's ex-boyfriend and her current fianc? got into a fistfight at her Hollywood Hills home on Thanksgiving morning, authorities confirmed.

The confrontation between ex-boyfriend Gabriel Aubry and fianc? Olivier Martinez took place at her home in the 1100 block of Doheny Drive on Thursday morning, police said.

A Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman confirmed firefighters were called to the scene just after 10 a.m.


The two men fought with each other, then Aubry was hospitalized at Cedars Sinai Medial Center and later jailed, according to Sgt. Mike Odle of the Los Angeles Police Department's Hollywood Station.

Aubry was booked on a misdemeanor battery charge and was being held on $20,000 bail, Odle said. There was no booking information for him as of 5 p.m. PST on the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's inmate information page.

Aubrey was the one who attacked Martinez, Odle said.

"He was the aggressor in an altercation with victim," Odle said.

The extent of Martinez's injuries was not clear. And police would not comment on the cause of the fight.

Berry and Aubry are in a custody battle over their 4-year-old daughter Nahla. Police said Nahla did not witness the fight.

Odle said an emergency order is in place to protect Berry, Martinez and Nahla, according to police.

LAPD Cmdr. Andy Smith said it's standard in a case such as this one for a judge to issued an emergency protective order in which the aggressor is ordered to stay 100 yards from the victim. Smith said he could not comment on the specifics of this case, however.

?

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2012/11/22/15372309-halle-berrys-fiance-fistfights-with-her-ex-who-is-arrested?lite

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