Wednesday, October 31, 2012

'DWTS' shocker! High scorer gets ballroom boot

Adam Taylor / ABC

Sabrina Bryan and Louis Van Amstel's rumba on Monday earned them a perfect 30 from the judges, but fans weren't as impressed.

By Ree Hines, TODAY contributor

The all-stars kicked up their heels with country-themed routines this week on "Dancing With the Stars," but for one hopeful it was time to giddyap out of the ballroom on Tuesday night. And it wasn't the celebrity at the bottom of the leaderboard (Kelly Monaco)?after Monday's performances who had to go. It wasn't even the second lowest scorer (Emmitt Smith).

No, instead there was a big shock in the ballroom as one of the judges' favorites, still riding high from a perfect score, got the boot. And it wasn't just the typical elimination shocker that's bound to happen at this point in the season. It was a case of history repeating itself.

Sabrina Bryan, the only all-star voted into the competition by "Dancing" fans, failed to get enough votes to stay in the game past week six -- which just so happened to be the week she suffered an elimination shocker back in season five despite being the judges' "Dancing" queen pick then too.

"You know, everyone -- every single person -- can understand what it feels like to get a second chance at something," Sabrina said as she faced her repeat fate. "This was my second chance. And last night was one of the most beautiful nights I've ever had. ... I'm grateful for this experience. 'Dancing With the Stars' has honestly just been just an absolute dream."

But as the Disney Channel star knows all too well, some dreams must come to an end -- again.

"I think I can speak for all of the people who love you and love watching you, that both last time you were here and this time, week six sucks!" quipped host Tom Bergeron.

But Sabrina's early exit from the competition wasn't the only surprise of the night. Pro hoofer Derek Hough revealed that he performed his Monday night tractor-lovin' dance (alongside all-star Shawn Johnson) with injured vertebrae in his neck. The ailment will sideline him next week, leaving Shawn to dance with Mark Ballas, her winning pro partner from season eight.

Also coming up next week, the remaining all-stars have to face an all-new challenge: fusion dances. That means each couple will have to perform two styles of dance in one song as part of one routine. The competitors picked the fusion blends for each other Tuesday night. Here they are:

  • Apolo Anton Ohno will be performing a combo of the cha-cha-cha and the paso doble.
  • Emmitt Smith will take on a blend of the rumba and the samba.
  • Giles Marini will be performing part Argentine tango and part samba.
  • Kelly Monaco will dance a cha-cha-cha meets foxtrot.
  • Kirstie Alley will take on the challenging mesh of quickstep and samba.
  • Shawn Johnson will dance the tango-paso mix.

So, who's likely to leave the ballroom after those tricky routines? No one! Thanks to the double whammy of Superstorm Sandy this week and Election Day next week, the show's producers saw fit to make it a non-elimination round. But the free pass isn't exactly a perk for the all-stars. While they're all guaranteed to make it through to week 8, they'll have to face back-to-back double eliminations from there until the finals.

What did you think of Sabrina's ouster? Was it really her time to go? Share your thoughts on our Facebook page!

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Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2012/10/30/14812006-sabrina-bryan-voted-off-again-in-week-6-of-dancing-with-the-stars?lite

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Interview with South Florida's Shocolaate.com

spotlight interviews, photo: google images

Shocolaate (Show-ko-latt) is an online gourmet chocolate company based in Tequesta, Florida owned and operated by?mother and daughter team, Diana Pace and Cristina Vives; both of whom are truly passionate about the design, the creativity and the art of chocolate?making. Shocolaate specializes in handmade truffles and?chocolate treats.?Shocolaate, Diana and Cristina embody their product with a very feminine victorian-esque motif, not to say that men wouldn?t purchase?Shocolaate as corporate gifts, because they do but?Shocolaate definitely has a feminine approach and appeal, that makes eating chocolate oh so pretty. This week is a double header interview, with the Spotlight questions answered by both Diana and Cristina. ?This week we go behind the scenes of Shocolaate.com and find out the inner workings of an online gourmet chocolate company. I present this week?s Spotlight Interview with?Diana Pace and Cristina Vives.

Shocolaate, Diana and Cristina

South Florida Food and Wine: For those that don?t know about Shocolaate, tell us a bit about your business.

Diana: We are a small artisan truffle company and growing every day. Decandence in a single bite is what we strive for.

Cristina: Shocolaate is a place where people come to indulge, to ignite their senses, and to enjoy the ultimate truffle experience. At Shocolaate we tempt all of your senses starting with visual. After all as humans we eat with our eyes! Not only does it look good, but it tastes just as good if not better. I believe that the perfect balance to a great product is when it attracts all of your senses.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: What is a typical day like for you as co-owners of Shocolaate?

Diana: I am the creative designer behind the business, I make everything look pretty and we work together on creating new flavors. Social Media and making new contacts also. Truly my job is the visual part of Shocolaate I always thinking of ways to create a beautiful visual of our truffles. Cristy is the truffle magician. ?I am the creative designer. ?We work together and live together and it is a true honor to be working with my beautiful daughter.

Cristina: My mom and I play very different roles. Every morning we have a coffee meeting and talk about what our day is going to be like. We write down weekly goals and talk about what?s already been accomplished for the week. Then it?s down to business. Since we are a two-person team then we both have a lot of duties. We work out of a co-op bake shoppe. This is not our retail space, it?s simply where we do all of our production. If I?m not there rolling out truffles then I?m in a meeting selling our product. If I?m not doing that then I?m preparing for an event or chocolate pairing. In the midst of this chocolate storm I?m always on my social media pages tweeting, uploading photos on our Shocolaate Instagram, Facebooking our latest event and getting the word out any way possible. My mom plays a different role, she is behind the scenes. She?s our in-house accountant, our creative designer, and my biggest fan! She makes everything look beautiful while I make it taste beautiful. When we have a photoshoot for new truffles my mom is the one who makes the tablescapes and designs what the general photo is going to look like. We are a team an we work well together.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: What is the one thing you love the most about your job?

Diana: Working with my darling daughter and seeing little kids faces oogle when they see the chocolate

Cristina: For me it?s when I?m at a show or a chocolate pairing and I see with my own eyes people eating the truffles and for them to be satisfied and keep coming back asking for more. It is what keeps me going and helps me stay motivated. I love when people love what I give them!

?

South Florida Food and Wine: Who is the one person you most would like to share a box of chocolates with? And why?

Diana: At this moment it would be my dad who has recently passed away

Cristina: One of my biggest influencers in the chocolate world is Katrina Markoff. She owns a very successful chain of chocolate boutiques called Vosges. Since I started I?ve always looked up to her and would love to get her input!

?

South Florida Food and Wine: Out of your entire collection which chocolate is your favorite and why?

Diana: Star of India it is spicy and wonderful Cristy is the genius behind that one

Cristina: I love dark chocolate personally and I grew up eating orange slices and grew to love those. So I combined two of my favorite flavors Dark Chocolate and Orange and for a twist I added some guava jam. The result is like 4th of July in your mouth! It?s Dark Chocolate, Orange Zest, a freshly candied orange peel topped with Guava Jam. LOVE LOVE LOVE. I call it the Orange Guava.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: Who?s chocolate was the last you ate, other than your own?

Diana: Ghiadelli Hot Chocolate . Caramel with Salt

Cristina: My aunt just came back from a two week long cruise and on her ventures she always brings me back chocolate from other lands. So the last chocolate I tried was a dark chocolate bar from a company in Seattle called Frans?s Chocolates. It was a brick of dark chocolate filled with almonds and crunchy caramel. Actually very good, I love the crunch in the center.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: What is the most challenging thing about being an entrepreneur?

Diana: It is our own creation and that always presents a challenge! Our truffles are different! Just staying true to what we believe in .

Cristina: It?s HARD work. I encourage everyone to follow their dreams but they should know that dreams are not all sunshine and rainbows. It takes long hours, persistence, openness, and most importantly courage. The thing about Shocolaate is that it is a luxury. Since people don?t necessarily ?need? it then I have to convince them why they absolutely do. That part is easy, with one taste they always come back for more. Since we also sell wholesale to large companies/hotels that?s when it becomes a tad difficult. It?s a little intimidating walking into a boardroom or an office full of chefs in their uniforms. One thing is that I never get discouraged if someone tells me no. Having a tough shell is part of the job. My mom is my biggest cheerleader and as long as I have her by my side then no task will be too difficult.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: It?s your day off, what do you do for fun?

Diana: Social Media!! Ha!! We are always working.?I do love trying creative places to dine at and I love travel! We are always working we live together and are always coming up with creative ideas.

Cristina: Like most entrepreneurs, there is hardly ever a day off. But if we do then we go to Disney to blow off some steam. We are annual passholders and if you ever can?t find me at the bake shop or at home then that?s probably where I am.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: The gourmet specialty products business is not an easy business, what motivates you to be bigger, better, stronger?

Diana: I see how the clients love our truffles. It is a great experience to see others love your creation My daughter inspires me every day; she motivates me

Cristina: I believe that the products I make are comparable to the top brands that everyone knows about. What motivates me is when I hear people tell me over and over that I will be up there one day. My mom and I make a great team and are very marketable, we will continue to work our hardest and make sure that one day Shocolaate will be a brand known all over.

?

South Florida Food and Wine: What is the one piece of advice you would offer entrepreneurs starting out today?

Diana: Work diligently every day in what you believe in, It is your dream and it is up to you to make it a reality

Cristina: A good friend once told me to begin with the end in mind. I would offer that piece of advice to anyone. When you start out know what your goals are. Make sure that your product is something that you yourself would buy in the store or pay top dollar for. Find a good/trustworthy team, be a good leader, always stay connected, participate in as many networking events as possible, and most importantly always have FUN with whatever you are doing and know that in the midst of a storm remember to stop, breathe, and remember that it will pass.

Visit?Shocolaate.com

Love the South Florida food scene? Check out our newly published book (Globe Pequot Press, $14.95),?Food Lovers? Guide to Miami & Fort Lauderdale

2012 Spotlight Interviews

Girl Power, Interviews with Female Chefs, Vintners and Entrepreneurs

2011 Spotlight Interviews

2010 Spotlight Interviews

?

Did you enjoy this article? If so, we?d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below. Sign up for our weekly email updates via the Contact Us page for more *hospitality* goodness. There?s lots more where this came from!

Source: http://www.southfloridafoodandwine.com/2012/10/interview-with-south-floridas-shocolaate-com.html?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=interview-with-south-floridas-shocolaate-com

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Baseball-Pitch counts don't add up to more injuries, says study

NEW YORK, Oct 26 (Reuters Health) - It is impossible to watch a Major League Baseball (MLB) game nowadays - such as those in the World Series now underway - without hearing about how many pitches a player has thrown.

But a new study suggests that when it comes to preventing injuries, the obsession of many teams with those kinds of numbers may be misplaced.

"I don't necessarily think that pitch counts or innings pitched are the best way to measure the demands of pitching," Thomas Karakolis, the lead author on the study, told Reuters Health.

Karakolis, a PhD candidate at the University of Waterloo in Canada, and two colleagues looked at data from every MLB pitcher from 2002 to 2007, focusing on a given year's pitch count, innings pitched and whether the player ended up injured the following year.

In that second year, more than a quarter of major league pitchers spent time on the disabled list. That rate jumped to nearly two in five pitchers for those who tended to throw six or seven innings.

But that difference - which would seem to support the idea of using pitch counts and innings pitched to pull pitchers - was more than likely due to chance, Karakolis said.

The injuries were significant enough that disabled list players were out for an average of 78 days - more than a third of the annual baseball season.

"If we can't predict injuries based off of these metrics, how are we going to use them to prevent injuries?" asked Karakolis.

Perhaps the most famous case is Stephen Strasburg of the Washington Nationals, whose managers made it clear at the beginning of this year's season, following surgery in 2010 and less than a month of play in 2011, that he would be allowed to pitch only 160 innings.

They shut him down after 159 and a third innings, meaning he was unavailable to play in the Nationals' first-ever playoff appearance in nearly 80 years.

Strasburg did not debut in the majors until 2010, so his data are not included in the research, which is published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.

"The Karakolis study indicates that Strasburg faced very little danger from continuing to pitch," said J.C. Bradbury, of Kennesaw State University in Georgia.

The Nationals declined to comment.

Bradbury, who was not involved in the new study, published research earlier this year showing that pitch counts did seem to have a real effect on performance, but so small as not to be practically relevant.

TODAY'S PITCHERS VS. YESTERDAY'S

Because of the pitch count obsession, such numbers have been falling for more than two decades, Bradbury told Reuters Health by email.

"In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the maximum number of pitches you'd see a pitcher throw would be in the 160s. Now that maximum is normally in the 130s," Bradbury said.

Although excessive pitching can obviously lead to injury, he added: "The relevant question is, can we say that cutoffs at 90, 100, 110, etc. are safer than each other? I don't think there is any evidence (for that)."

Another factor in the mix is pitches and workouts on off days - often 30-40 pitches a few days after each start, plus strength training - which are not reflected in game-day pitch counts, said Karakolis.

One of Karakolis's co-authors, Ryan Crotin, pointed out that some of the strain on pitchers is emotional and psychological, and would not show up in typical measures.

For their stress hormone-producing adrenal glands, said Crotin, who works with the Baltimore Orioles, it's "almost like they've run a marathon".

Karakolis said that pitch counts and innings pitched were "definitely part of the future but on their own they're not going to be effective".

He suggested that teams might look into a "piggy back" system such as that used in the minor leagues, in which pitchers do not throw more than 75 pitches before being taken out of the game, and rotate between starting and relieving.

But he is clear that the data are "not conclusive yet, and I don't have any idea how that would affect performance". His study only looked at injuries.

Bradbury agreed that baseball needs better metrics.

"There have been many studies on youth pitchers that find pitches thrown are correlated with injury," he said.

"However, very little work had been done on adults or professionals, and there are many reasons to expect the impact will differ between children and adults." (Editing by Frederik Joelving and Mark Lamport-Stokes)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/baseball-pitch-counts-dont-add-more-injuries-says-211127160--mlb.html

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Earnings pain sees FTSE fall back

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AP-GfK poll: Romney erases Obama lead among women

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks as he campaigns in Reno, Nev., on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Cathleen Allison)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks as he campaigns in Reno, Nev., on Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Cathleen Allison)

President Barack Obama speaks at a campaign rally, Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, in Las Vegas. The president is on a two-day tour of key battleground states that included stops in Iowa and Colorado on Wednesday and was scheduled to head to Florida, Virginia and Ohio on Thursday. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

Chart shows the results of a AP-GfK voters poll

(AP) ? What gender gap?

Less than two weeks out from Election Day, Republican Mitt Romney has erased President Barack Obama's 16-point advantage among women, a new Associated Press-GfK poll shows. And the president, in turn, has largely eliminated Romney's edge among men.

Those churning gender dynamics leave the presidential race still a virtual dead heat, with Romney favored by 47 percent of likely voters and Obama by 45 percent, a result within the poll's margin of sampling error, the survey shows.

After a commanding first debate performance and a generally good month, Romney has gained ground with Americans on a number of important fronts, including their confidence in how he would handle the economy and their impressions of his ability to understand their problems.

At the same time, expectations that Obama will be re-elected have slipped: Half of voters now expect the president to win a second term, down from 55 percent a month earlier.

For all of the good news for Republicans, however, what matters most in the election endgame is Romney's standing in the handful of states whose electoral votes still are up for grabs. And polls in a number of those battleground states still appear to favor Obama.

As the election nears, Romney has been playing down social issues and trying to project a more moderate stance on matters such as abortion in an effort to court female voters. The AP-GfK poll, taken Friday through Tuesday, shows Romney pulling even with Obama among women at 47-47 after lagging by 16 points a month earlier.

But now his campaign is grappling with the fallout from a comment by a Romney-endorsed Senate candidate in Indiana, who said that when a woman becomes pregnant during a rape "that's something God intended."

Romney quickly distanced himself from the remark by Republican Richard Mourdock. But Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the incident was "a reminder that a Republican Congress working with a Republican President Mitt Romney would feel that women should not be able to make choices about their own health care."

A renewed focus on social issues would be an unwelcome development for Romney: Among female likely voters, 55 percent say Obama would make the right decisions on women's issues, compared with 41 percent who think Romney would.

Romney's pitch to women has been focused squarely on the economy, making the case that what women want most is to ensure their families and their country are on a solid financial footing. The poll shows that message appears to be taking root.

A month ago, women favored Obama over Romney on the economy 56 percent to 40 percent. Now, the split has shifted to 49 percent for Romney and 45 percent for Obama.

Similarly, Obama's lead among women as the candidate who better understands the people's problems has narrowed considerably, from a 58-36 Obama advantage last month to a 50-43 Obama edge now.

Monica Jensen, a 55-year-old independent from Mobile, Ala., says she voted for Obama in 2008 but will shift her vote to Romney this time, largely because of the economy.

"I'm ready for a change," she said. "I want to see the economy go in a different direction."

Ginny Lewis, a Democrat and 72-year-old retired district attorney from Princeton, Ky., says she'll vote for Romney because "I'm tired of the Republicans blaming all the debt on Democrats, so let them take over and see what they do."

Not that she's optimistic about how that will turn out, though. "I think things will get worse before they get better," she said.

Lindsey Hornbaker, a 25-year-old graduate student and nanny, hasn't been swayed by Romney's charm offensive.

Hornbaker, interviewed Wednesday in Davenport, Iowa, where she was attending an Obama rally, said Romney can tweak his tone but not what she sees as a record focused far more on top income earners and out of touch with most working families.

"I heard him go out of his way to sound so moderate during the debate," she said. "And I thought: 'Who is this? Where did this come from?' He may sound like he's focused on the middle class. But where's the record?"

Obama, meanwhile, has been working to shore up his support among men, who tend to be more Republican than women. In the 2008 election, men broke 49 percent for Obama to 48 percent for John McCain, even though Obama got 53 percent of the vote overall. The president's job approval ratings among men have tended to fall below his ratings among women throughout his first term.

A month ago, Romney's advantage among men was 13 percentage points. Now, it's down to 5 points, with most of the shift toward Obama coming among unmarried men.

Obama's election chances hinge on turning out voters like Jon Gerton, a disabled construction worker from Jonesboro, Ark. Gerton's a staunch Obama supporter ? but he didn't vote in 2008.

"It takes longer than four years to get things to the point where things are going better," Gerton said. "Four years, it's not very long."

There has been a gender gap in every presidential election since 1980. In 2008, women were 7 percentage points more likely than men to vote for Obama.

Overall, people are significantly more optimistic about the economy and unemployment in the coming year than they have been at any point in AP-GfK polling going back to March 2011, when the poll first started asking those questions. And likely voters are even more optimistic than other adults.

Nearly six in 10 likely voters think the economy will improve in the next year, up from 46 percent last month. And 42 percent think the number of unemployed Americans will drop in the next year, up from 32 percent in September.

Count Chrysta Walker, of Cedar Lake, Ind., among the voters who are sticking with Obama because they think he's got the right solutions for the fragile economy.

"He's got the middle class at heart," says the 58-year-old Walker. On the economy, she says, Obama "did as well as could be expected because he didn't get a lot of cooperation."

David Bierwirth, who owns an autograph sales business in Las Vegas, turned out at a Romney rally in Henderson this week to show his support for the GOP nominee. To Bierwirth, his vote for Romney is all about the economy.

"I want people back to work," he says, "because then they will buy my products."

The Associated Press-GfK poll was conducted Oct. 19-23 by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,186 adults nationwide, including 839 likely voters. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points; for likely voters it is 4.2 points.

__

Online:

http://www.ap-gfkpoll.com

___

AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and Stacy A. Anderson in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Davenport, Iowa, and Ken Ritter in Henderson, Nev., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nancy Benac on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/nbenac

Follow Jennifer Agiesta on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/JennAgiesta

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-10-25-US-AP-Poll-Presidential-Campaign/id-247df08197d54c0e937df6d4cf35bb7d

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

HBT: Sandoval's 3-HR game as good as it gets

Before Pablo Sandoval got to Justin Verlander twice and Al Alburquerque once for his first ever three-game game in the World Series opener, eight players in major league history had hit three homers in a postseason game:

Babe Ruth (NYY) ? Game 4, 1926 WS ? 3-for-3, 4 RBI, 2 BB
Babe Ruth (NYY) ? Game 4, 1928 WS ? 3-for-5, 3 RBI
Bob Robertson (Pit) ? Game 2, 1971 NLCS ? 4-for-5, 5 RBI, 2B
Reggie Jackson (NYY) ? Game 6, 1977 WS ? 3-for-3, 5 RBI, BB
George Brett (KC) ? Game 3, 1978 ALCS ? 3-for-5, 3 RBI
Adam Kennedy (ANA) ? Game 5, 2002 ALCS ? 4-for-4, 5 RBI
Adrian Beltre (Tex) ? Game 4, 2011 ALDS ? 3-for-4, 3 RBI
Albert Pujols (StL) ? Game 3, 2011 WS ? 5-for-6, 6 RBI

Kennedy may yet rank as the most unlikely of the three-homer games, considering that he?s not a power hitter at all. He?s homered once in his 24 other career postseason games.

However, once factoring in the quality of the competition, Sandoval?s seems just as unlikely. And it?s the most impressive of this whole bunch.

- Including the postseason, Verlander had given up 21 homers in 262 2/3 innings this season or one every 12 2/3 innings. Sandoval hit two in four innings off him tonight.

- Albuquerque has never allowed a homer in 56 2/3 innings in the regular season. He did surrender one to Robinson Cano in the ALDS a year ago.

- No one homers in AT&T Park. The Giants hit 31 and allowed 53 there this year. Sandoval was the first person to hit three homers there since Kevin Elster did it in the park?s?inaugural?game 12 years ago. Only four players hit two homers in a game there this year, and the lone Giant to do it was Sandoval.

Besides Sandoval, Brett probably had the toughest assignment in getting to three homers; he was facing Hall of Famer Catfish Hunter when he did in 1978. However, it was in a losing cause in the ALCS, so that costs him some points. Jackson?s three-homer game was more?crucial, coming in a Game 6 that clinched the 1977 series for the Yankees. Pujols was the one player to hit three homers and still add two more hits.

But Sandoval?s game seems to me to the most impressive of the bunch. To get to those two pitchers in that ballpark in a World Series Game is maybe the highlight of the 2012 season to date.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/25/pablo-sandovals-three-homer-game-is-most-impressive-in-postseason-history/related/

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Merkel opens Roma Holocaust memorial in Berlin

Sean Gallup / Getty Images

Messina Weiss, 12 and great grand-daughter of Holocaust survivor Gertrud Rocher, carries a flower past the memorial to the Sinti and Roma in Berlin, Germany, on Wednesday.

By NBC News staff and wire services

Germany remembered the Holocaust's forgotten victims on Wednesday by opening a memorial in the heart of Berlin to the 500,000 ethnic Sinti and Roma murdered by the Nazis.

As the mournful strains of a solo violin sounded through the trees, political leaders and frail survivors approached a dark pool close to the German parliament building.

Its still water is intended to evoke tears for the dead but also, in reflecting the beholder, inspire new generations to protect minorities from hate.

"This memorial commemorates a group of victims who, for far too long, received far too little public recognition -- the many hundreds of thousands of Sinti and Roma who were persecuted by the Nazis as so-called gypsies," said German Chancellor Angela Merkel.?"The destiny of every single person murdered in this genocide is one of unspeakable suffering. Every single destiny, fills us, fills me, with sadness and shame."

The memorial was designed by the Israeli artist Dani Karavan, the BBC reported, and a chronology of the Nazis' extermination campaign appears next to the memorial. A fresh flower will be placed on the triangular surface at the center of the reflecting pool every day, the BBC said.

Discrimination against Sinti and Roma increased at alarming levels once Adolf Hitler took power in 1933. They were sent to forced labor camps and, from 1934, subjected to forced sterilization as a result of the Nazis' "racial purity" laws.

Thomas Peter / Reuters

People lay flowers during the dedication of the memorial to the Sinti and Roma in Berlin, Germany, on Wednesday.

By the start of World War II, the Nazis' genocidal intent became clear as Sinti and Roma were deported to death camps, where they wore uniforms bearing a "Z" for "Zigeuner" (the German word for "gypsy").


The first time a German leader recognized Nazi persecution of the Roma on racist grounds was in 1982, more than 30 years after West Germany acknowledged the murder of 6 million Jews and began to pay compensation to Israel.

Discrimination today
German politicians and Roma leaders at the opening ceremony described the memorial as a reminder of the urgent need to protect minorities today.

Many of Europe's 12 million Roma face discrimination and social exclusion, often living in dire poverty.

"Half a million Sinti and Roma, men, women and children, were murdered during the Holocaust. Society has learned nothing, next to nothing from this, otherwise they would treat us differently," said Dutch Sinto survivor Zoni Weisz.

His voice faltered as he described how, as a seven-year-old, he watched his father, mother, sisters and brother being deported in a train to Auschwitz concentration camp.

Merkel stressed it was a German and European duty to protect Roma rights. After her speech, a heckler highlighted that Germany refuses to grant asylum to Roma from countries such as Serbia and Macedonia, where they face discrimination.

Romani Rose, leader of the Central Council of Sinti and Roma in Germany, also attended the ceremony.

"Opening the memorial sends an important message to society that anti-Roma sentiment is as unacceptable as anti-Semitism," he told AFP.

Reuters contributed to this report.

More world stories from NBC News:

Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/24/14672261-germanys-merkel-opens-roma-holocaust-memorial-in-berlin?lite

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?In the Studio,? Sosh?s Rishi Mandal Wants To Attack Offline Monotony

Screen shot 2012-10-16 at 9.40.14 AM"In the Studio" hosts an entrepreneur who, after studying astrophysics, went on to handle various product management roles at a small startup eventually acquired by Google and who know, most recently, helped launch a venture-backed mobile application startup based in San Francisco. Rishi Mandal, co-founder and CEO of Sosh, has brought a team together to bring real web scale technologies to a mobile form factor and, in all the noise of apps today, has managed to get this product on peoples' radars. Members of Sosh in San Francisco are already using the service to find out about new things to do in the city and, as Mandal hopes, to get personalized recommendations about new things to do that breaks the monotony of people patronizing the same places. But beyond the pretty web site and slick iPhone app, there is real web technologies powering Sosh, crawling the web, blogs, and forums to structure disparate data around locations and events and create a timely product in the process. This ability, in turn, makes it easier for a service like Sosh to scale to other cities, so much so that the company recently announced it has raised Series A financing.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/N_CZNfa6LS8/

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

New England Patriots preparing for trip to London

FOXBOROUGH ? Before he plays at Wembley Stadium on Sunday, Patriots running back Shane Vereen wants to make a stop at Buckingham Palace.

?I just want to see the soldiers outside of the Palace that can?t smile,? a smiling Vereen said Tuesday. ?I just want to take a picture.?

And then he?ll play for usually dour coach Bill Belichick in New England?s second trip in four years to London, where they?ll face the St. Louis Rams.

?The time change, the travel ? that?s certainly different than most normal games,? Belichick said, ?but it?s not anything we haven?t dealt with before. We?ve traveled to the West Coast. We?re just going the other direction. Hopefully, we?ll be able to deal with it.?

The Patriots went to London in 2009, beating the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 35-7, but most players on that New England team won?t be with this one when it travels across the Atlantic Ocean on a red-eye Thursday night.

For Vereen, in his second NFL season, it will be his first trip to Europe.

?I?m excited to go, see what it?s all about and be able to play somewhere else, but at the same time we do have to go get a ?W,?? Vereen said, adding, ?I think it?s fun? more so than an inconvenient long trip in the middle of the season.

?I think it will be a good thing for us. I think it will be a good thing for St. Louis as well,? he said. ?Middle of the season, you kind of start getting into the lull, the everyday routine. So to break the routine a little bit and get to go out of the country, I think will be something fun.?

Injured safety Steve Gregory, who missed the last two games with a hip injury, visited London with the San Diego Chargers in 2008 and is looking forward to another trip.

?It was a great experience,? he said. ?Obviously I had never been there before, so to see London, the overall experience, was just amazing.?

As far as his off-field plans, Gregory joked he would see Queen Elizabeth, ?if she?ll let me.?

Running back Stevan Ridley, asked about visiting the queen, said, ?Hey man, if she calls, yeah.?

Placekicker Stephen Gostkowski, who made the 2009 trip, said, ?It was a lot of fun and we got a win and hopefully it will be the same experience. It?s a long trip, but it?s not too much farther than when we went to Seattle (Oct. 14). So, it will be a good experience if we play well and can come home with a win.?

As far as what he might like to do this time, Gostkowski said, ?I doubt we?ll really have time to really enjoy ... go sightseeing, maybe take a tour bus, I don?t know. They haven?t told us the schedule yet. It will be fun if we win and we?ll have a good time.?

The Wembley Stadium field hasn?t gotten great reviews.

?Every field is different. You get used to it,? Belichick said. ?It?s a grass field. It?s not the fastest field, but we?ve played on plenty comparable to that. It?s a little different environment out there. They do the soccer cheers and the rugby cheers and all that.

?It?s a little less football-oriented.?

NOTES: Gostkowski, who kicked the tying and winning field goals Sunday in a 29-26 overtime win over the New York Jets, said, ?I got a chance to help the team and I came through. It was fun. It was a good feeling to come out with a win, a division win against a team that we like to beat? ... The Patriots have gained more than 350 yards in each of their last 16 games, tying an NFL record set by the Rams (1999-2000). ?I?m a lot more concerned about wins than yards. I don?t really care about the stats,? Belichick said. ?I just care about scoring more points than the other team.?

Source: http://www.masslive.com/patriots/index.ssf/2012/10/new_england_patriots_preparing.html

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It's already Election Day in Iowa -- and it has been for weeks

It's Election Day in Iowa, and it has been for weeks.

Recent polling in the state shows Republican Mitt Romney quickly closing the gap in the presidential race, but that may be less and less important with every day that passes. Political watchers say President Obama has been successful this year at getting his supporters to take advantage of Iowa's early voting system and that likely has given him a head start at a time when he still leads in the polls.

Pollster Ann Selzer, who runs the respected Des Moines Register survey, said there are signs that Iowans who have already cast a ballot are leaning heavily toward Obama.

"Two-to-one, people who say they have already voted are Barack Obama supporters," Selzer told TPM. "The majority of people who plan to vote early are Barack Obama supporters. The majority of people who plan to vote on election day, Romney supporters. I think that's what's gets tricky ? you have to have a huge margin on election day to offset the Democrats."

Early voting in Iowa began on Sept. 27, and already nearly 520,000 people requested early ballots, according to elections officials. Of those, some 347,000 had filled out and returned them as of Oct. 22.

In 2008, a little more than 1.5 million people voted in Iowa and the state's six electoral votes went to Obama by a solid 9.5 points. Few expect that sort of margin this time around, and polling throughout the summer suggested the state might be one of Romney's best pick-up opportunities.

"I think that [Romney's] early showing has a lot to do with there being a Republican caucus and nothing happening on the Democratic side," Selzer said. "You had a lot of Republican messages in this state, a lot of 'Fire Barack Obama' messages. ... So that had a lasting impact."

As the summer faded, Obama started to tick up in the state in September and October, even though current polling has been mixed.

"The reason Obama became stronger is two things ? first of all there are economic signals that things are getting better, and that became a little hard to ignore ... and I think Obama has in place a stronger ground game, and that is starting to pick up," Selzer said. "So all of the people that he had in place from four years ago, a lot of that infrastructure is still there. Romney sat out Iowa, really, and has chosen to have less presence in terms of a ground game ... and in Iowa, with so much early voting, that ground game is really critical."

And that could make all the difference in the state. Polls of late have been more cloudy -- President Obama held a solid 8-point lead in a NBC News/Marist College poll released Thursday, but Romney was up 49 percent to Obama's 48 percent in a survey from Democratic-leaning Public Policy Polling the day after. But among early voters ? a solid 34 percent of the NBC/Marist sample and 31 percent those polled by PPP ? two-thirds had already cast their ballots for the president, with a third going for Romney.

Overall, the PollTracker Average of Iowa shows Obama with a small lead.

"When likely voters intend to cast their ballot tells us a lot about what is happening in Iowa," Lee M. Miringoff, director of The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion, said in a statement, citing the Obama advantage among early voters. "In contrast, Romney leads by double digits with those who will vote on Election Day."

That means a key for the Obama campaign will be to overwhelm the Republican ticket before Nov. 6 so that Election Day becomes somewhat a foregone conclusion.

Selzer pointed the youth vote. During the last month, President Obama, Vice President Biden and First Lady Michelle Obama have all campaigned on college campuses with an early voting station set up nearby. That allows the campaign to point supporters directly to the place where they can drop off their ballots before the buzz of the rally wears off.

Selzer said that kind of push could send early voter turnout to huge levels this year. Thirty-two percent of Iowa voters cast their ballots early in 2008 and 35 percent did in 2010. The question this year is whether it will approach 50 percent.

"If it's half, that will be jaw-dropping," Selzer said. "But it feels within the realm of possibility."

Ed. note: The post has been updated to reflect that the NBC/Marist and PPP polls showed two-thirds of early voters, not likely voters, had already cast their ballots for Obama.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obamas-ground-game-makes-iowa-tough-turf-romney-102426723--politics.html

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Daily multivitamins reduce men's cancer risk

This is a discussion on Daily multivitamins reduce men's cancer risk within the Men's Health anti misandry forums, part of the General category; Daily multivitamins reduce men's cancer risk Wednesday, 17 October 2012 Daily multivitamins reduce men's cancer risk | Machines Like Us ...

Source: http://antimisandry.com/mens-health/daily-multivitamins-reduce-mens-cancer-risk-49164.html

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Ultimate adventure travel bucket list

2 hrs.

Getting to the chinstrap penguin colony along the Antarctic Peninsula isn't for the fainthearted. To reach the finger of land that juts out from the frozen continent?s western coast, you have to first face the stormy Drake Passage.

But the risks are worth it. Gliding through the waters of Orne Harbor, you may encounter humpback and minke whales, leopard and fur seals, and cormorants and other seabirds. Greeting you onshore is the sight of hundreds of squawking penguins tending their young. Still unimpressed? Then hike up the 935-foot Spigot Peak for awe-inspiring panoramic views of the world?s last great wilderness.

Slideshow: Check out which places are on the ultimate adventure travel bucket list

Challenging experiences like?Quark Expeditions? guided trip from Argentina to Antarctica remind us that the toughest journeys are often the most memorable. And in an age where time is treated as a commodity, arriving at a destination through toil and sweat is becoming a lost art.

Adventure plays a key role in?T+L?s bucket list?of 101 experiences every traveler should know?gleaned from our network of correspondents and tastemakers. But not every escapade requires traveling to the ends of the earth or pushing your body?s limits. David Chang, the chef behind the Momofuku restaurant empire, favors fly-fishing in Jackson Hole, Wyo.

Other all-American adventures include driving down the dramatic Pacific Coast Highway, with a stop at the Redwood Grill for a pulled-pork sandwich, and paying a visit to the millennia-old sequoias in?Yosemite?s Mariposa Grove (documentary filmmaker Ken Burns?s pick).

For thrill-seekers, there are the serious adrenaline rushes: whitewater rafting through the Class Four rapids of the Salmon River?s Middle Fork in central?Idaho?or heli-skiing in?British Columbia?s Bugaboo Mountains. And you don?t always need to leave the big city behind. You can channel your inner race-car driver at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, zooming from zero to 60 mph in 3-1/2 seconds in a Ferrari F430 GT.

If you?re seeking a gentler pace, consider a stay at?Campi Ya Kanzi, a community-owned lodge in eastern?Kenya?where Masai trackers lead guests through the savanna and cloud forest.

Read on for more life-changing adventures and our tips on how to tackle them.

More from Travel + Leisure:

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/travel/itineraries/ultimate-adventure-travel-bucket-list-1C6568546

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Armstrong doping saga spoils memories

Thirteen years ago, on an idyllic summer?s afternoon, I stood by the side of a road in the cheesemaking region of Cantal and watched Lance Armstrong speed by, tucked into the peloton, on his way to his first victory in the Tour de France.

It was 1999. A year earlier the Tour had been in tatters, devastated by a doping scandal that had seen police and judges raiding riders? hotel rooms in the middle of the night, seizing drugs. Armstrong?s successful arrival on the scene after overcoming cancer ?is symbolic of the way the Tour de France is emerging from its own battle against disappearance,? said the tour director at the time.

His victory would be ?highly symbolic of the combat he fought against death, and that we are fighting against doping,? promised Jean-Marie Leblanc.

[Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.]

It turns out that Mr. Armstrong beat the Tour de France organizers just as he had beaten death. Today the International Cycling Union (UCI), accepting evidence gathered by the US Anti-Doping Agency that Armstrong was a serial drug-taker, stripped the US ?champion? of all his titles.

Even back in 1999, people suspected something was wrong. ?Armstrong is very strong, too strong, incredibly strong,? commented one French TV journalist the evening that the US rider won a punishing stage in the Alps.

But that could be dismissed as sour grapes, as an American charged into a sport long dominated by the French and swept all before him, ?winning? a record seven Tours.

And we all wanted to believe in Armstrong, from the UCI ? for whom he was a magnificent money-spinning mascot for his sport ? down to the lowliest spectator standing by the side of the road who admired his comeback courage.

Well, not all of us. My (French) wife never believed Armstrong was clean. She never believed that any of the top riders were clean. In argument after argument over the years I called her cynical, pointing out that my hero had never failed a drug test. Now I know that she was just clear-eyed.

Everybody who followed Lance during his ?glory days? will have his or her own way of feeling disappointed now that the truth, it seems, is out. (Armstrong has not acknowledged any guilt but says he will not challenge the USADA report.)

For me, the news has tainted some of my happiest memories of reporting in France. I used to love covering the Tour, driving halfway up an Alp one July afternoon, parking my car near a steep hairpin bend, picnicking sociably with whomever I found parked next to me (and there were always crowds of families waiting for the Tour to come by), sleeping in the car, and then the next day enjoying the hoopla of the publicity caravan before the riders themselves came by, just an arm?s length away, thighs straining, sweat pouring from their chins, teeth gritted.

It was an annual treat for me, the most fun I have ever had at work. And watching these men at the outer edges of endurance even inspired me to take up cycling myself: I had a go at one of the Tour?s mountain stages in 2005 and I spend my weekends now cycling up and down mountains. (You can imagine what my wife thinks about that?.)

Lance Armstrong, whose feats excited a lot of interest in American newspaper readers, was my passport to this kind of fun, and now that we know he was cheating, it feels almost as though I was piggyback cheating by having that fun.

Even at the time though, I realize, I could not entirely ignore my wife?s doubts. That evening in July 1999, as I dictated my article over the phone to my editor, I ended it with something the spokesman for Credit Lyonnais bank, the Tour?s leading sponsor, had told me.

?We cannot be certain that a scandal won?t drop on our heads,? he said. ?I have just one hope: that the rumors about Lance Armstrong are not true.?

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fans-lance-armstrong-doping-saga-spoils-memories-174746249.html

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Thread: Walnut doors with stained glass inserts - Family Woodworking

Week ending October 21st: (post two of two)

The overall quality of the walnut is quite good, but there are a few knot holes. I deal with these using a mixture of walnut planer shaving, walnut sawdust, and epoxy (QuickCure 5) in steps as shown in the photos below:

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The mixture dries very hard and can be readily sanded. Once a finishing coat is applied (later), the former hole blends in reasonably well.

The walnut is screwed as well as glued, then the screw holes are plugged with walnut dowels. These are ?manufactured? from cut offs:

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Here, boards are being installed around the door frame:

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I just noticed when looking at this photo now that I chipped then paint off a couple of tiles when taking off the old molding. Oh well, I still have most of a box of tiles left over from when I applied them about 25 years ago. I expect that I will need to purchase new grout though.

Source: http://familywoodworking.org/forums/showthread.php?28729-Walnut-doors-with-stained-glass-inserts

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Monday, October 22, 2012

How to kill time without staring at your phone

16 hrs.

Once upon a time, standing around and waiting involved exactly that: Standing around, waiting, and not doing much else. Today, any free moment is spent facedown in a phone. Stop reading this on your own phone. Right now. Look around. At this moment, you should be the only person, anywhere in sight, not looking at a phone.

But staring at that phone isn't the only way to wait. You can do other stuff. In fact, there are exactly six things you can do instead.

Make eye contact
People used to do this all the time. You could recognize a neighbor or share a moment with an attractive stranger. It can still happen???but you have to be careful. You don't want to be caught staring right at the moment that person looks up from his (or especially her) phone. Wait until the fleeting few seconds when this person looks away from the phone for some reason, then casually lock eyes. Smile! It will seem a lot less weird that way. When you get back online, this kind of encounter is a great thing to put on Craigslist as a Missed Connection.

Talk about the weather
This is a classic. If you're new at it, try some established introductory phrases.

  • "This is some rain!"
  • "Hot enough for ya?"
  • "They say it's gonna turn cold tomorrow!"

For this to work, you'll need a little luck, because you have to find someone else who is also not looking at a phone. Otherwise, there's a data-filled weather app just a tap away. Not to mention that look:?Why are you talking to me, can't you see I'm looking at my phone?

Observe your surroundings
If you look up from your phone for long enough, you can notice amazing things happening all around you. A pigeon pecking at a pizza crust. A man pushing a shopping cart piled higher than his head. A grown woman weeping hysterically. That's real life! And it is stunning. Once you get back on your phone, all of these observations will make excellent tweets.

Find unusual patterns
This one is a bit of a brain teaser. Look over at that odd brick wall, or the hexagonal tile on the floor, or that way the ice cubes collect at the bottom of your glass. Gaze into these shapes. Watch them form new shapes. See the shapes begin to arrange themselves, rotating, and falling into position. So chaotic, yet so organized. You know what? This calls for a quick game of "Tetris."

See what other people are looking at on their phones
This is an endlessly fascinating sociological exercise, and it can also give you fresh ideas about what you could be doing on your own phone. A scouting report from a recent bus ride:

  • Shiny gold case. Hot pink case. iPhone 5, no case.
  • Cracked white iPhone 4 with an incoming call from "Daddy."
  • Bedazzled lady playing "Bedazzled."
  • Woman urgently speaking Spanish into a white Nokia with gold trim.
  • Girl on an HTC, reading Gawker, followed by "A Farmer's Market, Deep in China."

You could also just read a book
But then you're not even thinking about looking at your phone. You're looking at your Kindle.

This is what I do, anyway???how do you kill time phone-free?

More from Gizmodo:

Opening photo: Four guys who really know how to look at phones. From left:?Jesus Diaz,?Matt Buchanan,?Sam Biddle, and?Matt Hardigree. Shot by?John Mahoney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/how-kill-time-without-staring-your-phone-1C6583331

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Lohan won't face charges in alleged NYC car scrape

NEW YORK (AP) ? Lindsay Lohan won't face criminal charges after being accused of clipping a man with her car outside a nightclub, one of a string of troubles the actress has encountered behind the wheel and elsewhere in recent months.

The "Mean Girls" and "Freaky Friday" star had been due to make her first court appearance in the case Tuesday, but the Manhattan district attorney's office said Monday there is now no court date scheduled at any point.

Prosecutors wouldn't elaborate on their decision not to move forward on the allegations about the Sept. 21 episode, which was captured on surveillance video. Lohan's spokesman had called the claims false.

"As we said from the beginning, this is a big nothing," the spokesman, Steve Honig, said Monday.

Lohan, 26, was arrested on a charge of leaving an accident scene after restaurant worker Jose Rodriguez said her Porsche hit him and hurt his knee as she turned from a Manhattan street into an alley by the Dream Hotel. Police said no alcohol was involved. Rodriguez, 34, was walking by after leaving his job at another hotel nearby.

Lohan was released with an appearance ticket. Rodriguez called emergency services and was taken to a hospital.

Police released grainy surveillance footage that shows Lohan's car turning as Rodriguez passed in front of it. Blurring to conceal witnesses' faces partially obscures the scene, and it's not clear exactly what happens as he is in front of the car. The video does show him staying on his feet and walking after the car as it continues into the alley.

The encounter came with Lohan on informal probation for taking a necklace last year without permission from a jewelry store in Venice, Calif.; she spent 35 days on house arrest in that case. The Los Angeles city attorney's office said Monday the Manhattan car episode wouldn't affect Lohan's probation.

The actress' latest project, "Liz & Dick," is set to premiere on Lifetime on Nov. 25. She plays Elizabeth Taylor in the biopic, which chronicles the roller coaster romance of Taylor and Richard Burton.

Lohan ? whose earlier problems with cocaine, alcohol and driving landed her in a Los Angeles-area jail for about two weeks in 2010 ? has had some other brushes with the law recently. In May, she was cleared of allegations that she hit a Hollywood nightclub manager with her car. The next month, she and her assistant were in a California crash that sent both to a hospital; neither was seriously hurt.

About a week after the episode near the Dream Hotel, Lohan told authorities a man grabbed her in a New York hotel room in an argument over cellphone photos. The man was initially arrested, but the arrest was voided hours later when the charge could not be substantiated, law enforcement officials said.

Earlier this month, police were called to Lohan's childhood home in the New York suburbs after getting a report that she and her mother were fighting. Investigators found nothing criminal happened, Nassau County police said.

___

Follow Jennifer Peltz at http://twitter.com/jennpeltz

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lohan-wont-face-charges-alleged-nyc-car-scrape-174414503.html

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Risks of esophagus cancer studied: Statins may protect against esophageal cancer

Risks of esophagus cancer studied: Statins may protect against esophageal cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jacqueline Gaulin
jgaulin@gi.org
301-263-9000
American College of Gastroenterology

Las Vegas, NV, (October 22, 2012) Statin use is associated with protection from esophagus cancer according to a new meta-analysis of existing clinical studies exploring the cancer prevention effects of statins presented by a Mayo Clinic researcher, Dr. Siddharth Singh, at the American College of Gastroenterology 77th Annual Scientific Meeting in Las Vegas, NV.

Dr. Singh and his Mayo colleagues conducted a systematic review of eleven studies reporting 8,613 cases of esophageal cancer from studies including almost 1 million patients. Incidence of esophageal cancer is increasing in the United States, especially esophageal adenocarcinoma in patients with Barrett's esophagus.

"The meta-analysis of these studies showed a significant 30 percent reduction in esophageal cancer incidence with statins use," said Dr. Singh.

When looking more closely at the seven highest-quality observational studies among the eleven, researchers continued to find a significant chemo-protective effect with statin use. An analysis of a subset of patients with Barrett's esophagus, a pre-malignant condition associated with chronic acid reflux, revealed that, in this higher risk population, statin use was associated with a significant 41 percent decrease in the risk of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus.

Bone-Building Drugs for Osteoporosis Do Not Add to Risk of Esophagus Cancer

In a separate study, researchers at the Mayo Clinic Jacksonville found no association between oral use of bisphosphonates, a class of bone-building drugs widely used for prevention and treatment of osteoporosis, and the risk of esophageal cancer. This meta-analysis of 42 studies included 3,570 esophageal cancer patients in the analysis by Dr. Saowanee Ngamruengphong and collegauges.

###

About the American College of Gastroenterology

Founded in 1932, the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) is an organization with an international membership of more than 12,000 individuals from 80 countries. The College is committed to serving the clinically oriented digestive disease specialist through its emphasis on scholarly practice, teaching and research. The mission of the College is to serve the evolving needs of physicians in the delivery of high quality, scientifically sound, humanistic, ethical, and cost-effective health care to gastroenterology patients. www.gi.org View releases on other research breaking at the ACG meeting at http://gi.org/media/press-releases-for-acg-annual-scientific-meeting/

Follow ACG on Twitter Tweet, Follow #ACG2012


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Risks of esophagus cancer studied: Statins may protect against esophageal cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jacqueline Gaulin
jgaulin@gi.org
301-263-9000
American College of Gastroenterology

Las Vegas, NV, (October 22, 2012) Statin use is associated with protection from esophagus cancer according to a new meta-analysis of existing clinical studies exploring the cancer prevention effects of statins presented by a Mayo Clinic researcher, Dr. Siddharth Singh, at the American College of Gastroenterology 77th Annual Scientific Meeting in Las Vegas, NV.

Dr. Singh and his Mayo colleagues conducted a systematic review of eleven studies reporting 8,613 cases of esophageal cancer from studies including almost 1 million patients. Incidence of esophageal cancer is increasing in the United States, especially esophageal adenocarcinoma in patients with Barrett's esophagus.

"The meta-analysis of these studies showed a significant 30 percent reduction in esophageal cancer incidence with statins use," said Dr. Singh.

When looking more closely at the seven highest-quality observational studies among the eleven, researchers continued to find a significant chemo-protective effect with statin use. An analysis of a subset of patients with Barrett's esophagus, a pre-malignant condition associated with chronic acid reflux, revealed that, in this higher risk population, statin use was associated with a significant 41 percent decrease in the risk of adenocarcinoma of the esophagus.

Bone-Building Drugs for Osteoporosis Do Not Add to Risk of Esophagus Cancer

In a separate study, researchers at the Mayo Clinic Jacksonville found no association between oral use of bisphosphonates, a class of bone-building drugs widely used for prevention and treatment of osteoporosis, and the risk of esophageal cancer. This meta-analysis of 42 studies included 3,570 esophageal cancer patients in the analysis by Dr. Saowanee Ngamruengphong and collegauges.

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About the American College of Gastroenterology

Founded in 1932, the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) is an organization with an international membership of more than 12,000 individuals from 80 countries. The College is committed to serving the clinically oriented digestive disease specialist through its emphasis on scholarly practice, teaching and research. The mission of the College is to serve the evolving needs of physicians in the delivery of high quality, scientifically sound, humanistic, ethical, and cost-effective health care to gastroenterology patients. www.gi.org View releases on other research breaking at the ACG meeting at http://gi.org/media/press-releases-for-acg-annual-scientific-meeting/

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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/acog-roe101912.php

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Two Months 'Til Doomsday? Mayan Apocalypse Set for Dec. 21

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