Monday, April 15, 2013

Josh Hamilton Late Insurance HR Helps Angels Win - Halos Heaven

The Angels won consecutive games for the first time this season and took their first series in the process, beating the Houston Astros 4-1 at Angel Stadium. Mike Trout hit his first home run of the season and Josh Hamilton had a late two-run homer to widen a 2-1 lead. Hamilton finished the day with three RBIs.

Ernesto Frieri came into the top of the eighth inning with two on and tow out and got a strikeout, then stayed in the game to record the Save. C.J. Wilson had more 3-2 counts than a cat has lives and seemed to nibble around the plate with each batter, but in the end the Astros were only able to score a run off of him.

Hamilton gave the generic live on-field interview after the game to Jamie Maggio of FSN-West - a boring recap of the generic platitudes about feeling good that you have heard a million times until he asked her "Is two games considered a winning streak?" The bottleblonde telecaster was left giggling in lieu of being speechless in the heat of actually having to think.

The Angels are now 4-8 and head to Minnesota for three games.

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Source: http://www.halosheaven.com/2013/4/14/4224658/josh-hamilton-late-insurance-hr-helps-angels-win

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Ten-year follow-up of physical activity among adolescents

Apr. 15, 2013 ? A study from the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, shows that the drop in boys' physical activity during the teenage years levels off in early adulthood.

In 2000, about 1000 children aged 6-14 from southeast Sweden participated in an international study on physical activity, body constitution and physical self-perception.

The new study is a follow-up study on a sample of the 12-year-olds in the original study. The researchers followed and reassessed the group at age 15, 17 and 22. As in the first study, they measured physical activity using a pedometer.

The results indicate a reduction in total daily physical activity from the early teenage years to early adulthood. The boys show a dramatic drop between the ages of 12 and 15. Girls are on average more active than boys at both 17 and 22.

The activity pattern -- the question of whether the most active children are also the most active as adults -- is maintained only to a low extent. However, those who were deemed insufficiently active at age 12 seemed to maintain their activity pattern to a larger extent as adults.

'This is a problem. But low-activity children can be identified with simple methods like using a pedometer. They could then be targeted in school and through intervention programmes,' says Anders Raustorp, Senior Lecturer at the Department of Food and Nutrition, and Sport Science, University of Gothenburg, and one of the researchers behind the new study.

While many previous studies have looked at what happens to adolescents' exercise habits, this study also explores their overall levels of daily physical activity. Studies including objective measures of physical activity over the course of a whole decade in this age span are extremely rare.

Raustorp has previously published global steps-per-day recommendations for both children (2004 and 2011) and adults (2008). He has also introduced the pedometer in Swedish research and as a useful method in physiotherapy, and has become an authority within pedometer research.

His and his colleagues' step-per-day recommendations for children and adolescents published in International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity are in frequent use.

Objective measurements based on validated pedometers and accelerometers offer new opportunities to measure and communicate physical activity as number of steps per day. This simple measure continues to gain respect and popularity among both researchers and practitioners as an acceptable way to assess total daily physical activity.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Gothenburg, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Raustorp A, Ekroth Y. Tracking of Pedometer Determined Physical Activity: A 10 Years Follow-Up Study from Adolescence to Adulthood in Sweden. J Phys Act Health, 2013, Jan 3 [link]

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/living_well/~3/uHpXz4J791Q/130415095924.htm

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Putin congratulates Maduro in oil-ally Venezuela

Apr 15 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $4,139,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $3,137,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,442,389 4. Adam Scott (Australia) $2,100,469 5. Steve Stricker $1,935,340 6. Phil Mickelson $1,764,680 7. Dustin Johnson $1,748,907 8. Jason Day $1,659,565 9. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 10. Keegan Bradley $1,430,347 11. Charles Howell III $1,393,806 12. John Merrick $1,375,757 13. Russell Henley $1,331,434 14. Michael Thompson $1,310,709 15. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 16. Bill Haas $1,271,553 17. Billy Horschel $1,254,224 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-congratulates-maduro-oil-ally-venezuela-183442886.html

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Why Is North Korea Acting Out?

About the same time that Secretary of State John Kerry was landing in Seoul in an effort to defuse tensions on the Korean Peninsula, two members of Congress?one Democrat and one Republican, who?declined to be identified so that they could speak more freely?were raising warnings about North Korea?s recent bellicose actions and addressing key concerns with a small group of reporters. Among them:

Does North Korea have the ability to put a nuke on a ballistic missile??The members echoed an intelligence estimate showing that North Korea has made strides in ballistic-missile technology and miniaturization of nuclear weapons that could allow it to threaten its neighbors soon, if not now. The assessment came from the Defense Intelligence Agency and was revealed on Thursday. The members seemed to indicate this was a view shared throughout the Obama administration. ?There is a growing body of analytical product that says if they?re not there, they?re getting there," said the GOP member, adding that getting the weapon light enough and coming up with a reliable system of detonation is the hardest part for North Korea?or any aspiring power?to achieve as it seeks the capacity to fire medium and long-range missiles equipped with nuclear weapons.

What is Kim Jong Un up to? The Democratic member?echoed the familiar point that Kim Jong Un is untested, but he offered hints of a complex family situation that may help explain why Pyongyang has been so provocative. Kim Jong Un is ?a young leader who is immature and is probably being controlled by relatives and he is attempting to not only show that he?s a leader throughout the world but to show his people that he?s a leader," the Democratic member said. "You have to look at the people advising him, an uncle and an aunt,? the Democratic member said, without elaborating on the aforementioned kin. The Republican added, ?If I were China, I?d be talking to that group of hard-liners. [China] could have tremendous influence with them? ?

What about South Korea? Both members said they believed South Korea probably couldn't resist responding militarily to any attack from the North. ?This time they?re not going to stand by like they did last time and do nothing,? the Republican member said, referring to the North?s sinking of a South Korean naval vessel and its attack on a remote South Korean island. This makes the situation even more dangerous and explains, in part, why Kerry is eager to "ramp down" tensions.

Can China help? Both members emphasized that it was in China?s interest to reduce tensions on the Korean Peninsula, lest it face a refugee problem or a war that would result in the end of the North Korean regime and a unified Korea under the South?s control and backed by the United States. But they said that China has yet to step up and take an active role in defusing tensions?at least as far as they could see. One of the most helpful things that China could do would be to halt the black market on the Chinese-North Korean border, they said, because of its effect on the Pyongyang elite, which lives lavishly while the larger populace faces abject poverty and even starvation. The Republican member noted that Kim Jong Un?s father had ?an on-again, off-again relationship with China, but the big concern here is that the son doesn't know when he?s gone too far.?

Is Obama doing a good job? The Republican member said the administration had done a ?great job? in its military and diplomatic response to North Korea?s bellicose statements and action. Those moves include flying B-2 stealth bombers to the Peninsula and moving antiballistic missile technology to the Pacific.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-north-korea-acting-143641524--politics.html

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Hispanics, Well ... Turn Out to Be Democrats (talking-points-memo)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/298784651?client_source=feed&format=rss

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US, China pledge efforts for nuclear-free NKorea

BEIJING (AP) ? The United States and China committed Saturday to a process aimed at ridding North Korea of its nuclear weapons, with the Obama administration gaining at least the rhetorical support of the only government that can exert significant influence over the reclusive North.

The question now is whether Beijing will make good on its pledge to uphold "peace and stability" and work with Washington on achieving the goal of a nuclear-free Korean peninsula.

With North Korea seemingly readying a potential missile test, U.S. Secretary of State John and China's foreign policy chief, Yang Jiechi, stressed that their countries were committed to a peaceful resolution of the nuclear standoff.

Under young leader Kim Jong Un, North Korea has issued a series of brazen threats since testing an atomic device in February, including talk of launching nuclear strikes against the United States.

"We are able ? the United States and China ? to underscore our joint commitment to the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula in a peaceful manner," Kerry told reporters before having dinner with Yang.

"We agreed that this is of critical importance for the stability of the region and indeed for the world and indeed for all of our nonproliferation efforts. This is the goal of the United States, of China" and of other countries that hope to resume nuclear talks one day with North Korea.

"From this moment forward we are committed to taking actions in order to make good on that goal," Kerry added. "And we are determined to make that goal a reality. China and the United States must together take steps in order to achieve the goal of a denuclearized Korean peninsula. And today we agreed that further discussions to bear down very quickly with great specificity on exactly how we will accomplish this goal."

Yang said his government's position was clear.

"China is firmly committed to upholding peace and stability and advancing the denuclearization process on the Korean peninsula," he said through an interpreter.

"We maintain that the issue should be handled and resolved peacefully through dialogue," Yang said, adding that China would work with the United States and any other nation to resume talks with North Korea.

The U.S. is counting on China to force its unruly neighbor to stand down. It's a strategy that has produced uneven results over decades of American diplomacy, during which the North has developed and tested nuclear weapons and repeatedly imperiled peace on the Korean peninsula.

But with only the counter-threat of overwhelming force to offer the North Koreans, the U.S. has little other option.

Neither Kerry nor Yang specifically addressed the immediate crisis: a North Korean test of a missile with a range of up to 2,500 miles that the U.S. believes could happen any day.

Instead they focused on the long-term problem, which is a nuclear program that may soon, if not already, include the capability to deliver a warhead on a missile.

The question of North Korea's capacity has been subject to great debate in Washington this past week after a U.S. intelligence assessment suggested North Korea had the capacity to put a nuclear warhead on a missile, even if any such weapon would have low reliability.

China has the greatest leverage over North Korea, a country that like few in the world actually cherishes its isolation.

The Chinese dramatically have boosted trade ties with their neighbors and maintain close military relations some six decades after they fought side by side in the Korean War. They provide North Korea with most of its fuel and much of its food aid.

China has a history of quickly reversing course after talking tougher with North Korea. In late 2010, as American officials were praising Beijing for constructive efforts after the North shelled a South Korean island, a Chinese firm agreed to invest $2 billion in a North Korean industrial zone.

Beijing, which values stability in its region above all else, clearly has different priorities than Washington.

China's greatest fear is the implosion of North Korea's impoverished state and the resulting chaos that could cause, including possibly millions of refugees fleeing across the border into China.

For that reason, China has in many ways looked past North Korea's bellicose rhetoric and activity, prioritizing the security of Kim's government, like his father's and grandfather's, over nuclear proliferation concerns.

China also remains deeply wary of any American military buildup in its backyard. Chinese officials are suspicious that the containment effort toward North Korea may be part of the long-term U.S. strategy to expand its influence in the region and even ring in fast-growing China with countries closer to Washington.

U.S. officials say they've gone to great lengths to explain to China that the American objective in North Korea, at least in the short term, is not to change governments.

The U.S. abhors the North's human rights record, its regular provocations and military links with other international pariahs such as Iran. But the U.S. has stressed over years of conversations with Beijing that pushing for North Korean denuclearization could reinforce stability.

In Seoul on Friday, Kerry said President Barack Obama had canceled a number of military exercises planned with South Korea. The message that the U.S. wasn't seeking a military confrontation was directed as much to the North as to Beijing.

The Obama administration believes it may now have greater scope for diplomatic progress.

It has pointed to new President Xi Jinping's recent criticism of the North as illustrative of a subtle shift in China's outlook. Beijing also has backed U.N. penalties in response to North Korea's tests of a nuclear device and intercontinental ballistic missile technology over the last four months.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-china-pledge-efforts-nuclear-free-nkorea-134527072--politics.html

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

The Dryer Messenger Sends You a Text Message When Your Clothes Are Dry

The Dryer Messenger Sends You a Text Message When Your Clothes Are DryIf your dryer is tucked away in a corner of your house where you don't hear the notification when it's done, it's pretty easy to forget about your clothes. DIYer Thomas Taylor was bothered enough by this that he created a system that alerts him via text message when the dryer's done.

The basic idea here is to create a system that alerts you by text message when the dryer is finished drying, without voiding the dryer's warranty. To accomplish this, Thomas used all sort of tools, including an Arduino, a Wi-Fi module, XBee sockets, and plenty more. It's by no means an easy task, but the end result is a dryer that texts you when it's finished. That means no more excuses for forgetting about the laundry. Head over to Make for the full guide to make this for yourself.

The Dryer Messenger | Make

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/BLYEO6Ofk7U/the-dryer-messenger-alerts-you-by-text-message-when-your-clothes-are-dry

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Migraine triggers tricky to pinpoint

Apr. 8, 2013 ? Women often point to stress, hormones, alcohol, or even the weather as possible triggers for their migraines. But a new study from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center found that it is nearly impossible for patients to determine the true cause of their migraine episodes without undergoing formal experiments.

The majority of migraine sufferers try to figure out for themselves what causes their headaches based on real world conditions, said lead author Timothy T. Houle, Ph.D, associate professor of anesthesia and neurology at Wake Forest Baptist.

"But our research shows this is a flawed approach for several reasons," he said. "Correctly identifying triggers allows patients to avoid or manage them in an attempt to prevent future headaches. However, daily fluctuations of variables -- such as weather, diet, hormone levels, sleep, physical activity and stress -- appear to be enough to prevent the perfect conditions necessary for determining triggers."

For example, said Houle, the simple act of drinking a glass of wine one day and not on the next could be complicated by inconsistencies in other factors. Similarly, a patient may drink wine for several days, but adding cheese to the mix one day could further skew results. In fact, a valid self-evaluation requires such perfect conditions that only occur about once every two years, he said.

"Many patients live in fear of the unpredictability of headache pain. As a result, they often restrict their daily lives to prepare for the eventuality of the next attack that may leave them bedridden and temporarily disabled," Houle said. "They may even engage in medication-use strategies that inadvertently worsen their headaches. The goal of this research is to better understand what conditions must be true for an individual headache sufferer to conclude that something causes their headaches."

Houle and co-author Dana P. Turner, M.S.P.H., also of the Wake Forest Baptist anesthesiology department, have published two related papers on the subject in the journal Headache, which were published online ahead of print this month.

For the study, nine women who had regular menstrual cycles and were diagnosed with migraine either with or without aura provided data for three months by completing a daily diary and tracking stress with the Daily Stress Inventory, a self-administered questionnaire to measure the number and impact of common stressors experienced in everyday life. Morning urine was also collected daily for hormone level testing. Houle and Turner also reviewed three years worth of weather data from a local weather station. Because of the difficulty in recreating identical conditions each time a patient evaluates a potential trigger, determining triggers proves difficult even for physicians, said Turner. "People who try to figure out their own triggers probably don't have enough information to truly know what causes their headaches," she said. "They need more formal experiments and should work with their doctors to devise a formal experiment for testing triggers."

The research was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and of the National Institutes of Health (1R01NS06525701).

Co-authors include: Todd A. Smitherman, Ph.D., University of Mississippi, Donald B. Penzien, Ph.D., Head Pain Center, University of Mississippi Medical Center, and Vincent T. Martin, M.D., University of Cincinnati College of Medicine.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Dana P. Turner, Todd A. Smitherman, Vincent T. Martin, Donald B. Penzien, Timothy T. Houle. Causality and Headache Triggers. Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 2013; 53 (4): 628 DOI: 10.1111/head.12076

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/most_popular/~3/Lf9vXYhdVd8/130408084745.htm

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