Saturday, August 31, 2013

Wall Street Week Ahead: Jobs data could spur Fed action on stimulus


NEW YORK | Sat Aug 31, 2013 1:17am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street is bracing for a wave of economic reports next week, including the August jobs report, which might prove decisive in determining whether the economy is strong enough for the Federal Reserve to dial back its bond purchases in mid-September.

Anxiety about the Fed possibly reducing its $85 billion monthly stimulus, also known as QE3, has hurt the stock market, which recorded its steepest monthly fall since May 2012.

But the stock market's greater anxiety, which has developed in recent weeks, is that the Fed will press ahead with a reduction in support, even as the economy remains fragile. The recent data has failed to provide evidence of the convincing growth the Fed says it wants to see. Until then, stocks will benefit from the cheap money resulting from the Fed's bond purchases.

"Next week's data should make or break the September expectations," said Mike O'Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in Greenwich, Connecticut.

A strong jobs report will likely reinforce the view the Fed will opt to decrease its bond purchases at its September 17-18 meeting, while a weak one would do the opposite, analysts said.

"From a real economy perspective, QE3 has done very little. From a financial markets perspective, it has had a major influence. If it is really not helping the real economy beyond pushing financial assets higher, there is no point in continuing the risk of increasing the balance sheet," said O'Rourke.

For the month, the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 3.1 percent in August; the Dow Jones industrial average lost 4.4 percent and the Nasdaq slipped 1 percent. .N

Speculation on the timing of Fed action has triggered a bond market sell-off that sent mortgage rates to two-year highs. The surge in home borrowing costs this summer has shown signs of slowing the housing recovery. Analysts also are watching if the higher rates have discouraged employers from adding workers.

Economists polled by Reuters forecast domestic employers likely hired 180,000 workers in August, more than 162,000 in July, while the jobless rate likely held steady at 7.4 percent, which is a four-year low.

Deutsche Bank economists said that if the payrolls figure exceeds 190,000 and the unemployment rate falls to 7.3 percent, they expect the Fed will start cutting bond purchases. "August employment would have to meaningfully disappoint for the Fed to back away from the timetable presented by Chairman Bernanke in the June post-meeting press conference," they wrote.

Prior to the payrolls data on Friday, traders will face a heavy schedule of economic releases after the three-day holiday weekend. They include the latest readings on vehicle sales and national factory and service activities. <ECI/US>

U.S. financial markets will close on Monday for the Labor Day holiday.

Investors are watching the tense situation between the West and Syria. Signs of a U.S.-led military strike against Syria after chemical weapons were used to kill civilians could hurt the appetite for stocks globally.

Traders pared expectations on such a move after the British parliament voted against a military strike. But France said it supported punishing the Syrian government for the attack on civilians. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday the chemical weapons attack in Damascus last week killed more than 1,400 people.

Despite the sharp moves in equities due to the Syrian unrest, "we still expect the market to stop short of a 10 percent decline," said Mike Dueker, head economist for North America at Russell Investments in Seattle.

Light volume in late summer likely exaggerated August's stock decline, analysts said. The uncertainty has also boosted measures of volatility. The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX rose above 17 on Friday, a two-month high.

Bonds, in comparison, posted small losses. They were poised to lose 0.54 percent in August, according to Barclays' Aggregate bond index that tracks U.S. investment-grade debt returns.

SHAKY SEPTEMBER

While Syria and economic data will be next week's main concerns, other developments, such as President Barack Obama's nominee to succeed Ben Bernanke as Fed chief and another possible showdown between Obama and congressional Republicans over the federal debt might keep investors on edge, analysts said.

"There is no doubt that September is teed up for a tsunami of data coming at us and headlines coming at us," said David Lyon, investment specialist at JP Morgan Private Bank in San Francisco, California, which manages $910 billion in assets.

"So the market will look at September and really start to find its footing based on some of the economic data that comes out as well as clarity around some of these policy decisions at the central bank level or the geopolitical level," he said

History might complicate that view.

September has traditionally been the worst month for stocks, with an average 0.6 percent decline in the S&P 500 index over the past 62 years, although it rose 2.4 percent last September.

This September marks a milestone - the five-year anniversary of the global credit meltdown during which Wall Street witnessed the downfall of Lehman Brothers, the sale of Merrill Lynch, the near-demise of insurance giant AIG.

In that turbulent September 2008, the market tumbled 9.1 percent.

(Additional reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak and Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/31/us-usa-stocks-weekahead-idUSBRE97T0X220130831?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews

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Join fellow jugglers at BPA this Sunday - Bainbridge Island Review

Join with fellow jugglers for a night of throwing things around at Bainbridge Performing Arts on Sunday, Sept. 1.  - Photo courtesy of Bainbridge Performing ArtsJoin with fellow jugglers for a night of throwing things around at Bainbridge Performing Arts on Sunday, Sept. 1.

??image credit: Photo courtesy of Bainbridge Performing Arts

Bainbridge Performing Arts presents free First Sunday juggling from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 1 at BPA.

Experienced jugglers, beginning jugglers and closet jugglers are encouraged to drop in or become regulars in this invigorating new gathering that is free for all ages and all levels. Jugglers are invited to bring their own juggling implements or borrow them at the session.

For more information, call Tom Challinor at 206-842-8569 or email tchallinor@bainbridgeperformingarts.org.

Source: http://www.bainbridgereview.com/entertainment/221816171.html

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Why Wall Street doesn't blink at extra $30 billion for Verizon Wireless

By Sinead Carew

NEW YORK (Reuters) - It's not often that Wall Street shrugs off what amounts to a 30 percent price hike for an asset inside of four months.

But that is what happened to Verizon Communications Inc when news broke that it is in talks to buy out Vodafone Group Plc's 45 percent stake in their U.S. wireless venture for up to $130 billion, up from the $100 billion price range that it was considering back in April.

Verizon shares closed 2.7 percent higher on Thursday as investors took in stride the prospect of the company taking on tens of billions of dollars in debt to fund such a deal.

For years, Verizon has made no secret of its ambitions to own all of Verizon Wireless - the top U.S. mobile service provider - because it has the best customer growth rate and profitability of any telecom company in the country. But concern around overpaying for an asset that it already controls has always gotten in the way.

Analysts saw three big motivating factors to support a deal now: rising interest rates, rapidly intensifying competition and a 12 percent drop in Verizon's shares since April.

If these trends continue, and analysts expect they will, a deal gets that much more expensive for Verizon to pull off.

"With interest rates rising, Verizon and Vodafone are cognizant of the fact that they have a narrow window to get this deal done," said New Street analyst Jonathan Chaplin.

Vodafone has confirmed it is in talks with Verizon but declined to give details. Verizon declined to comment.

The U.S. Federal Reserve has said it expects to begin scaling back its monthly purchases of government and mortgage-backed debt with an aim to eventually ending the practice next year. The expectation that this policy shift may come as soon as September has already lifted long-term interest rates.

In such a rate environment, a deal for Verizon Wireless will only get more expensive the longer Verizon waits. Already, Verizon can expect to pay several hundred million dollars more in annual interest rate payments today than it would have expected to pay in April.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note has risen about 1 percentage point to 2.76 percent.

STEEP PRICE LOOKS WORTH IT

Even with the higher interest rate costs, Macquarie analyst Kevin Smithen estimated that buying the rest of Verizon Wireless could still increase Verizon's 2014 earnings per share by 14.7 percent. But if Verizon had done a $130 billion deal earlier this year, when its share price was higher and interest rates were lower, that increase would have been more like 21.8 percent, according to Smithen.

"If price was the only sticking point, we're not sure why Verizon didn't pull the trigger earlier," said Smithen.

Verizon, which currently leads the U.S. pack in wireless customer growth and profitability, needs new ways to grow as the U.S. market slows because most people already own smartphones, and competition is intensifying rapidly.

Thanks in part to aggressive marketing, No. 4 U.S. mobile operator T-Mobile US started reporting net subscriber growth in the second quarter after years of losses to rivals such as Verizon Wireless. Sprint Corp is also expected to become a tougher rival as it beefs up its network and now has the backing of majority owner SoftBank Corp.

"Verizon would like to have total control of this asset, particularly as we're getting into a more competitive environment," said S&P analyst James Moorman. "When you look at the value of this asset it makes sense to get it in house."

Still, such a deal is not without risk as it would saddle Verizon with a heavy debt burden that could tie up its cash flow. Craig Moffett of Moffett Research was more hesitant about the merits of such a huge deal at a time when growth is slowing in the U.S. wireless market.

Because the United States has been one of the best wireless growth markets in the world and Verizon has been a leader, it is unlikely to face much more improvement to its business, he said.

"There is little prospect for things getting materially better for Verizon Wireless, and a meaningful chance that things get worse," Moffett said.

The downside to swallowing such a high price tag is it might make it tough for Verizon to bid in upcoming spectrum auctions, leaving the coast clear for rivals like AT&T Inc , noted New Street's Chaplin.

But he said investors would likely still prefer to see Verizon buying "the best asset globally in telecom."

"It's worth $130 billion," he said.

Analysts also point out that full ownership of Verizon Wireless would automatically boost Verizon cash flow without it having to make any strategic changes.

With Verizon Wireless' free cash flow of $28.6 billion last year, RBC Capital Markets analyst Doug Colandrea said Verizon has the ability to pay back debt "very rapidly."

(Additional reporting by Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Edward Tobin and Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-wall-street-doesnt-blink-extra-30-billion-001029996--sector.html

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Cardboard Children: TRAINS. | Rock, Paper, Shotgun

By Robert Florence on August 31st, 2013 at 12:00 am.


Hello youse.

TRAINS! TRAINS! TRAINS! You there, young man! Do you like TRAINS?! You there, young lady! Do you like TRAINS?! TRAINS TRAINS TRAINS!
TRAINS!
?Just picked up a new game.?
?Cool. What?s it called??
?TRAINS.?
?Goodbye.?
You, Rock Paper Shotgun reader! Do you like TRAINS?! Read on, regardless. TRAINS.

TRAINS


TRAINS. It takes a big old set of balls to call your board game TRAINS. There are a lot of train games out there. There?s Ticket To Ride, which is a family game about trains. There?s Steam, which is about trains. There?s the 18XX games, which are about trains. There?s games like Martian Rails, which is set on Mars and is about trains. I could go on. I could, honestly. But this game is called TRAINS. Just TRAINS, and that takes a big old set of balls. It?s like saying ?Yeah, sure there are other train games, but when someone thinks TRAINS they are going to think TRAINS. They are going to think US. TRAINS.?

As your man from Dragon?s Den might say ?It?s a confident pitch from the young board game, but will it stand up to the Dragons? analysis??

Do you like Dominion? Dominion is a card game that changed the landscape of tabletop gaming a fair bit. It introduced that whole ?deckbuilding as you play? thing, and for better or worse it spawned a league of imitators. I like the game. I don?t think it?s spectacular. I certainly haven?t played it a lot, because while I find it ?enjoyable? I hardly find it a gripping experience. There?s almost too little going on, and there?s no real sense of theme, so the mechanics are way out there front and centre. And like I said, I enjoy those mechanics, but in the same way I used to enjoy playing a game of Patience with a normal deck of cards. It?s a relaxing, mechanical, chill-out thing ? and that?s GREAT ? but it?s not often what I?m wanting from a board gaming session. (I should state here that I don?t own even one Dominion expansion, so I?m basing all this on the base game alone.)

Why am I talking about Dominion? Well, you will soon see a lot of people calling TRAINS ?Dominion with a board.? And while I think that?s a bit of a lazy thing to say, it?s very hard to argue with as a shortcut to understanding what this game is. The deckbuilding element of the game is a lot like Dominion. Play cards to pay the cost to buy other cards. Put new purchases into your discard pile. Shuffle up, hope for your new cards. The fun comes from the additional actions that cards introduce to your game, and your attempts to get some kind of synergy rolling. And unlike Dominion, there is no limit on playing actions in your turn.

But here?s where TRAINS differs from Dominion. In a turn, as well as playing and buying cards, you can play cards that let you build stations and lay tracks. All that building stuff happens on a board. The board is laid out in hexes, and shows some Japanese cities. Players will lay tracks across the board, scoring points at the end of the game for tracks laid in cities with stations and tracks reaching to remote locations. The cost of laying tracks is paid for with cards too, so there?s a lot of deciding whether to spend money on refining your deck or on laying track. (Of course, you can only lay track when you play the card that allows you to do it, so you need to ensure your deck is spitting out enough of these cards.)

Here?s my favourite part of the game, though. It feels like everything you do creates waste. When you build a station in a city (and remember, you have to develop cities in this way to have your track be worth anything) you need to take a Waste card. When you lay rails, you need to take a Waste card. When you lay rail into a hex that already contains another player?s rail, that?s ANOTHER Waste card. And Waste cards do nothing. No actions, no value ? nothing. In Dominion, for example, a major element of the game is trying to get rid of the weak early starting cards, to thin your deck. In TRAINS, it?s all about Waste. Your starting cards will always be useful, but your deck will start to clog up with Waste. Thankfully, you can skip a turn to take a ?Rest? action, allowing you to ditch any Waste cards in your 5-card hand. But there are other, better ways. You can buy Landfill cards that allow you to trash waste, and you can even buy Freight Train cards that will carry off your Waste and get you PAID for that shit. Yep, you can even make your Waste work for you.

With Waste alone, the theme of TRAINS really comes through. In Dominion, you never feel like you?re building a kingdom, but in TRAINS you do feel like you?re building a little rail network and paying the economic and environmental cost for your constant expansion. Just having that board there, and being able to see your little network grow, elevates TRAINS above the other deckbuilders of this type.

There?s a lot to like here. I like how the scoring works. I like how your rails only generate points if they?re in cities with stations. I like how that forces you to build towards other players? rail networks, to take points in cities full of stations you had no hand in building. I like how you can buy cards that lower the cost of you building into your opponents? networks. I love how clean and simple the deckbuilding element is, allowing you to think equally about board and deck and hand. I love how fast it plays. I love the variety in the game, with the random selection of card piles at the start of every game. I pretty much just love it. By placing those rail cubes on that board, you have a completely different experience to any other deckbuilder I?ve played.

The theming of the game is great, I think. The art is lovely, and I?m delighted that the game is still set in Japan, the land of its origin. Cards that let you tunnel, pull freight, run tourist trains, build bridges ? all of that stuff just seems to click more naturally than other games of this type. It?s such a solid marriage of design and theme.

What else is there to say? It plays 2-4 players and absolutely will take an hour to play at most. If you?re a fan of Dominion, this is a definite buy for you. It?s some mechanics you recognise and love with some fun ?building? in the mix too. If you don?t like Dominion, this is still worth trying. I think it improves on the Dominion model, so you might like this game despite Dominion not clicking with you. If you?ve never played Dominion, I?d honestly recommend TRAINS over it. Many will disagree, I?m sure, because people LOVE Dominion. But I just think that when you compare base game with base game, TRAINS comes out on top with its elegant theming and the extra layer of light strategy that the board provides.

So. Do you like trains? Do you? It doesn?t matter, because I think you?re going to love TRAINS.

BROTHER GETHSEMANE WRITES?
?Fear not, Gethsemaniacs. The Midnight Table will return at regular intervals, with a darker look at board gaming, and the profane experiences you can expect from games good? and BAD.?

JAMES PUREFOY WRITES?
?Sorry, I?m not contributing anything to this column.?

Source: http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/2013/08/31/cardboard-children-trains/

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Washington DC dreams

The kindly, charismatically portrayed President (played spookily well by Daniel Day-Lewis) achieves his goal shortly before being shot while watching a play at the Ford Theatre in Washington on April 14, 1865. He dies the following day.

Another charismatic leader influenced by Lincoln, famed for his speeches, and whose life was also taken by a bullet, 45 years ago in Memphis on April 4, 1968, was Martin Luther King Jr (King may soon have his own biopic as Bourne Ultimatum director Paul Greengrass is rumoured to be shooting a docu?drama- style film, with Forest Whitaker playing the lead). My family and I arrive in the cleaned-up US capital the day before this anniversary, although it is his birthday, Martin Luther King Day, that is celebrated as a National Holiday each year on the third Monday of January.

We stay in the W Hotel, a block from the White House, a slickly-renovated 317-room Beaux Arts building decked out with a cult-Bliss Spa, playfully dramatic lobby with red leather chairs on a chequered floor and a silver canister providing hot syrupy apple cider taking the chill out of the unseasonably cold April weather. Spring is the capital?s famed cherry blossom season but blooms are slow.

Conveniently next door is the Willard Intercontinental where, on August 28 1963, King put the finishing touches to his seminal ?I have a dream? speech before delivering it to an audience of a quarter of a million people from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial at the famous March on Washington For Jobs and Freedom.

The famous photograph of the civil rights leader, hand raised in a salute to the crowds below, hangs in our living room and is largely what prompted our trip to Washington. As a mixed-race family, it resonates. Fortified by bowls of creamy porridge in the Willard?s abundant breakfast caf?, we pass crystal chandeliers, marble mosaic floors and Corinthian columns to study the hotel?s history gallery before heading to the Lincoln Memorial, with its 38 Grecian columns. The exact spot where King stood is marked on the stone.

Not far from here, in this leafy park dominated by memorials and monuments, stands the Stone of Hope. A 30-foot granite statue of King faces across the cherry blossom-fringed Tidal Basin to the domed Jefferson Memorial. The first black man ? and non-president ? to be honoured in this way, surprisingly it was only erected in 2011. I?m not sure I could say I liked it aesthetically, with its strange peachy-white hue, but it has the respect of being the highest memorial in the area.

Across the road, the contemporary glass-cubed gift shop is noticeably less full of tack than most (bad-taste presidential tie from the nearby White House gift shop, anyone?). My daughter selects a children?s book of King?s life story.

The slim volume is quickly read and while seeing her eyes well up as she reads of black children having cigarettes stubbed out on them is a sad sight, I?m aware that for us, being a mixed-race family in modern Britain is no big deal ? in Fifties America it would have been very different.

Barely 15 minutes by cab, but a world away from the marble monuments of the pristine National Mall, lies the U-Street district known as the ?Black Broadway? during the years of segregation for its theatres and jazz clubs where Duke Ellington, Miles Davis and Ella Fitzgerald performed before dining at Ben?s Chili Bowl ? as did King.

During the race riots that plagued Washington in 1968 following the assassination of King, this family-run diner, opened by Trinidadian immigrant Ben Ali and his wife 10 years earlier in a former theatre, was one of the few establishments that not only stayed open but was a refuge to both blacks and whites. Fast food became soul food for the army of regulars.

Bill Cosby is unofficial ambassador, having met his wife here, and even conducted a press conference here to celebrate his eponymous number one show. Famously, for years a sign hung behind the counter stating ?List of who eats free at Ben?s: Bill Cosby. No one else.? In 2008, the sign was amended to add Obama (although the then-President elect did pay) after he tucked into a well-documented chilli dog with cheese fries (you can watch the whooping-filled video on YouTube).

Both Obama and Cosby are honoured in a colourfully cartoonish mural on the brick wall of Ben Ali Way running along the exterior wall ? as we exit, there?s a growing line of people queuing up for their fix. I?m no fast-food freak but it?s a warm, atmospheric place kept going by Ben?s sons.

These days, the regenerated area buzzes with life ? we pass galleries, stores and revitalised late Victorian row houses ? and it?s still said to be the best spot in the city to hear jazz.?

Home to the historically black Howard University, where Ben Ali studied dentistry, the U-Street corridor retains its strong black heritage. A self-guided Heritage Trail of the area includes the African American Civil War Memorial opposite the African American Civil War Museum.

It?s time for some fun for our daughter Maya. Enter the International Spy Museum near China Town (highly recommended for children, with its noisy interactive exhibits, and an entire floor dedicated to James Bond). While Maya and her dad try to break a spy code, I spot a small photograph of Harriet Tubman.

She is not really known in the UK, but 2013 is the centenary of this remarkable woman who escaped brutal slavery in the South to become a leading abolitionist, helping other slaves escape along the network of safe houses known as the Underground Railroad. During the American Civil War, Tubman? worked as a spy liberating more than 700 slaves in South Carolina.

Getting from sight to sight is fairly easy in compact central Washington. Its Big Bus open-top double-decker tours (therefore better in warmer months) have colour-coded loops (tours), with the Red Loop taking in landmarks such as the Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr Memorials as well as the White House (disappointingly small in real life), the Ford Theater and the Spy Museum.

The W Hotel is just around the corner from Pennsylvania Avenue, which heads diagonally until the white-domed Capitol Hill, where you can hop on the bus passing the FBI headquarters, the National Archives where Alex Haley researched Roots and the National Council of Negro Women, part of the African American Heritage Trail.

It is also home to the innovative Newseum, where you could easily spend a weekend ? there?s a reason a ticket gives you two consecutive days? entry ? which shows a chunk of the Berlin Wall, a fragment of the World Trade Center and Pulitzer Prize photographs documenting defining, often deeply tragic moments in history (there are also fun bits such as filming your own news reports straight to camera).

One such is a photo of James Meredith, the first black man to attend the University of Mississippi in 1966, lying shot on the ground during his solitary ?March Against Fear? from Memphis to Jackson. King and key civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael took up his cause, with Meredith rejoining once he recovered.

Half a century on, there have undeniably been changes since King?s era ? could he then have foreseen a mixed-race President in the White House? Yet his 1963 vision of an

America where his children ?will not be judged by the colour of their skin but by the content of their character? still seems far away in an age when President Obama is openly called the N-word on Twitter.

DETAILS: USA

Virgin Holidays has three nights at the W Washington DC and return flights with Virgin Atlantic from Heathrow, from ?995pp room only, virginholidays.co.uk

Ben?s Chili Bowl, benschilibowl.com

Spy Museum, adults $19.95; children $15.95, spymuseum.org

Newseum, adults $21.95; children $12.95. Civil rights at 50, a major three-year exhibition, runs until 2015, newseum.org

capitalregionusa.org; washington.org

Source: http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/travel/washington-dc-dreams-8787123.html

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$389.97 - Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.0 Tablet - 10.1" - White - Z2560 - 1GB - 16GB SSD - BT - Android 4.2 (GT-P5210ZWYXAC)

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/A-powerWeeklySpecial/~3/bqC5uhIHhEk/product-28947-WeeklySpecial

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Laptop with patient information missing from Texas Medical Center

UT Health reported a laptop containing patient information as missing on Aug. 2.

A laptop containing information of about nearly 600 patients has gone missing from UT Physicians, the medical group practice of The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Medical School.

It was discovered Aug. 2 that the unencrypted laptop was missing from a locked closet at the UT Physicians orthopedic clinic. UT Health sent out a statement on Aug. 28 saying it had informed patients about the incident. The institution spent the 26 days in between identifying whose information was on the laptop, it said. The federal government allows for 60 days before reporting such an incident.

UT Health said it does not have reason to believe the information has been accessed or used by unauthorized individuals.

Information on the laptop, which has a password, includes names, birth dates and medical record numbers. No addresses, social security numbers, insurance or financial information was on the laptop.

While UT Health policy for the last two years has been to encrypt all laptop computers, this laptop slipped through the cracks because it was in inventory as a medical device. Amar Yousif, chief information security officer at UT Health, said practices have already been changed to ensure this type of thing doesn't happen again.

"It was a component of a medical device, so we missed it" Yousif said. "But I'd like to think it's a good thing we discovered the error in our process."

Yousif said the institution has already revised its purchasing behaviors based on the incident. Information technology personnel will have to review a device before it's purchased and installed to ensure that if a computer is attached, it is up to the institution's security standards.

Bayan Raji covers health care for the Houston Business Journal. For her breaking stories and industry insights, follow her on Twitter.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_36/~3/AQwOLnvz87k/laptop-with-patient-information.html

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Most active Nasdaq-traded stocks

NEW YORK (AP) -- A look at Nasdaq 10 most-active stocks at the close of trading:

Applied Materials Inc. rose 1.2 percent to $15.14 with 12,047,600 shares traded.

Cisco Systems Inc. was unchanged at $23.45 with 25,730,900 shares traded.

Dell Inc. fell .2 percent to $13.75 with 29,130,400 shares traded.

Facebook Inc. rose 1.8 percent to $41.28 with 57,047,300 shares traded.

Groupon Inc. rose 3.4 percent to $10.38 with 16,806,200 shares traded.

Intel Corp. fell 1.0 percent to $22.06 with 27,486,700 shares traded.

Micron Technology Inc. rose 2.5 percent to $13.57 with 23,300,200 shares traded.

Microsoft Corp. rose 1.6 percent to $33.55 with 44,214,200 shares traded.

Sirius XM Radio Inc. rose 1.5 percent to $3.63 with 25,633,200 shares traded.

Yahoo Inc. rose .7 percent to $27.30 with 13,529,400 shares traded.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/most-active-nasdaq-traded-stocks-174218975.html

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The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights: United States Brent Oil Fund, United States Oil Fund, PowerShares DB Oil Fund, iPath S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index ETN and Simcere Pharmaceutical Group

?
For Immediate Release
Chicago, IL ? August 30, 2013 ? Zacks.com announces the list of stocks featured in the Analyst Blog. Every day the Zacks Equity Research analysts discuss the latest news and events impacting stocks and the financial markets. Stocks recently featured in the blog include the United States Brent Oil Fund (BNO-Free Report), United States Oil Fund (USO-Free Report), PowerShares DB Oil Fund (DBO-Free Report), iPath S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index ETN (OIL-Free Report) and Simcere Pharmaceutical Group (SCR-Free Report).

Today, Zacks is promoting its ''Buy'' stock recommendations.

Get #1Stock of the Day pick for free.

Here are highlights from Thursday?s Analyst Blog:

Oil ETFs Jump on Syria Turmoil

Crude oil prices rebounded to the triple-digit mark at the start of the second half of the year after being stuck in a relatively tight range for much of the first half.
?
The commodity gained luster from encouraging economic data from the U.S., China and Euro zone as well as supply disruptions in the North Sea, Egypt and Libya (read: Oil ETFs Surge on Strong Data). Additionally, the commodity benefitted from the minutes of the latest Fed meeting, which suggested that QE3 tapering may not start soon.
?
Moreover, the ongoing tension in Syria has pushed the oil prices even higher this week. Brent oil hit a six month high and is currently hovering around $117 per barrel while crude oil reached its two-year high to about $112 per barrel.
?
Syria Threatens Oil Supply
?
The threat of military action in Syria could not only disrupt oil supplies in the rest of the Middle East including Nigeria, Libya and Sudan but raise alarms in the other oil exporting neighboring countries such as Iran and Iraq. Middle East accounts for about one-third of the world?s total
oil?s production.
?
As such, any supply disruptions in the region may lead to further rise in the oil prices. Moreover, rising global demand on the back of improving economies continues to act as a catalyst to the oil price surge (read: Bet on an Oil Surge with these 3 ETFs).
?
Market Impact
?
Growing concern over Syria outweighed the negative inventory data report from Energy Information Administration (EIA) for last week. According to the report, the U.S. crude stockpiles rose 3 million barrels to 362 million barrels last week (ending August 23) against the market expectation of a decline of 0.3 million barrels.?
?
The impressive jump in crude and Brent prices also had a big impact on oil ETFs this week, helping these to gains as well.?Below, we have highlighted a few popular oil ETFs that could be interesting plays in the coming days, given the intensifying worries over Syria (see: all the energy ETFs here).
?
United States Brent Oil Fund (BNO-Free Report)
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This fund provides direct exposure to the spot price of Brent crude oil on a daily basis through future contracts. It has amassed $39.7 million in its asset base and trades in small volume of roughly 35,000 shares a day.
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The ETF charges 96 bps in annual fees and expenses. BNO added about 4.5% this week and 15.2% since the start of the second half.
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United States Oil Fund (USO-Free Report)
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This is the most popular and liquid ETF in the oil space with AUM of over $1.5 billion and average daily volume of over 5.7 million shares. The fund seeks to match the performance of the spot price of light sweet crude oil West Texas Intermediate (WTI). The ETF has 0.74% in expense ratio.
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The ETF gained nearly 3% in the last three trading days and is up over 14% at the start of the second half (read: 3 Metal ETFs to Buy on the Commodity Upswing).
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PowerShares DB Oil Fund (DBO-Free Report)
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This product also provides exposure to crude oil through WTI futures contracts and follows the DBIQ Optimum Yield Crude Oil Index Excess Return. The fund sees solid average daily volume of more than 233,000 shares and AUM of $350 million. It charges an expense ratio of 79 bps.
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DBO gained 1.4% so far this week and is up 8.7% in the first two months of the second half of the year.
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iPath S&P GSCI Crude Oil Index ETN (OIL-Free Report)
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This is an ETN option for oil investors and delivers returns through an unleveraged investment in the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil futures contract. The product follows the S&P GSCI Crude Oil Total Return Index, a subset of the S&P GSCI Commodity Index (read: 2 Commodity ETFs Offering Investors Sweet Returns).
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The note has amassed $415 million in AUM so far and does volume of roughly 555,000 shares a day. It charges 75 bps in fees per year from investors. The ETN is up 3.4% this week and 16% since the start of the second half.
Bottom Line
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Oil climbed nearly 27% from this year?s lows reached in mid April thanks to solid global data reports and dovish Fed comments. The more recent surge was propelled by political unrest in Egypt and the threat of U.S. intervention in Syria's civil war, suggesting that the trend could continue in the near future (see more in the Zacks ETF Center).
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If it does, investors could consider any of the aforementioned oil ETFs for exposure. These could be solid ways to play the trend, and may be better performers compared to some of the sluggish oil companies for a continued run in crude oil prices in the near term.

Simcere to Go Private

Simcere Pharmaceutical Group (SCR-Free Report) recently announced that its Board has agreed to a buyout proposal from a conglomerate led by founder Mr. Jinsheng Ren, New Good Management Limited, Assure Ahead Investments Limited and its subsidiaries.

We remind investors that the proposal was initially made in Mar 2013. In response, Simcere?s Board formed a special committee of independent directors to consider the proposal.

Ren founded Simcere in Mar 1995. The conglomerate currently has an approximate 77.6% stake in Simcere.

As per the buyout offer, shareholders of Simcere will receive $4.83 per share or $9.66 per American depositary share (ADS), up from the original offer of $4.78 per share or $9.56 per ADS. We note that each ADS represents two ordinary shares of Simcere.?

The offer price represents a 21.4% premium over the closing price of $7.96 per ADS on Mar 8, 2013.? The transaction is expected to close by 2013 end.

We note that Simcere?s decision to go private comes in the wake of tough business conditions that it has been facing in the last few months.?

Simcere?s second-quarter results were disappointing. Simcere is expected to face challenging market conditions in the remainder of 2013 as well due to pricing pressure from the government.?

Hence, the increased offer price should come as a relief to the shareholders.
Simcere Pharma currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold).

Today, Zacks is promoting its ''Buy'' stock recommendations. Get #1Stock of the Day pick for free.
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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zacks-analyst-blog-highlights-united-110830142.html

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Galaxy i500 s2 Clone to new i500





Hello all,
I am the proud new owner of my recently late brother's i500. I happen to already own a couple and have one to spare. My brothers screen is badly shattered, so much so that no picture at all is displayed. The phone is still functioning though.

So, essentially what I would like to do is connect his phone to my comp, make a backup of his phone and clone it to an identical working phone.

Please tell me that this is possible as we are trying to figure out where he was last.

If anyone can repair his phone please message me here.

Thank You,
John

Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2425695&goto=newpost

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Panda Cloud Cleaner


If you put off installing antivirus software until after your system is pwned by malware, you may find yourself in a bind. Some malicious programs target antivirus installers, preventing you from installing protection or running a scan. Others, called ransomware, take over the whole computer and demand money before they'll release it. The free Panda Cloud Cleaner is specifically designed to address those situations, clearing out problem malware and allowing you to install ongoing protection. In testing, though, its aggressive cleanup techniques did some collateral damage.

When you visit the product's webpage (www.pandasecurityusa.com/tools/) you get some clear choices. If you're able to boot your system to Windows, it suggests the regular Panda Cloud Cleaner or, for experts, a portable no-install edition. If you can't boot Windows, or if ransomware has taken over, it offers two bootable solutions, Panda Rescue USB or Panda Rescue ISO. One or the other of these should get your system back in working order.

Quick, Simple Install and Scan
The product installs very quickly and launches right away. With one click you can accept the license agreement and begin a scan. The scan itself is quite a bit quicker than most full-scale antivirus products. In my testing it averaged about ten minutes, sometimes more, sometimes less.

On completing the scan, Cloud Cleaner summarizes its findings in three categories. The most importants is "Malware & PUPs Found," where PUP stands for Potentially Unwanted Program. It also notes how many "Unknown Files & Suspicious Policies" it found. Malware often disables Task Manager, REGEDIT, and other tools?these changes are suspicious policies. Finally, the scan also offers "System Cleaning," checking for useless items, or traces that could reveal your browsing and computer use history.

You could just click "Clean" at this point, but it's wise to dig into the details, especially if any of them report something like "Clean 8 of 10 elements." In some cases I found that it detected PUPs but didn't check them for cleanup, and in every case it found more system cleaning items than it would clean by default.

In almost every case, Cloud Cleaner wanted to reboot to complete the disinfection process. With or without reboot, at the end of the process it asks whether you're satisfied with its work. You can click thumbs-up for yes. If you choose no, you can further specify that it took too long, it failed to remove malware, or "other."

Trusted Boot
Cloud Cleaner's trusted boot mode is designed to handle malware that resists removal by normal means. You enable it by clicking "Advanced options" on the main window, which warns that you'll need three reboots to complete the process.

SecurityWatch

The first step is for Cloud Cleaner to install special drivers and reboot the system. According to my Panda contact, this effectively virtualizes all of the PC's resources. After reboot it runs a full scan and reports a slightly different trio of findings: Malware Found, Unknown Files and Anomalies, and System Cleaning.

After cleanup, it reboots to finish the process. Finally, one more reboot is needed to remove the special drivers and apply the virtualized cleanup to the physical system. It's a little more complicated than the basic scan, but still within the ability of any user. Even so, Panda doesn't recommend using this mode unless it's actually needed.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/bYgDAbz4uHw/0,2817,2423715,00.asp

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What college football taught me about investing

(MoneyWatch) As college football season approaches kick-off, I am reminded of a valuable lesson it has taught me about investing over the past few decades. Though it may appear that I'm really reaching here, I'm actually being dead serious.

My college days

I graduated from the University of Colorado back in 1979. At that time, my beloved CU Buffaloes were often ranked in the top 20. I loved and lived for game days, not to mention the celebratory partying that would take place afterwards. There was no doubt in my mind that the Buffs would always be a college football force to be reckoned with, and I felt my logic was sound -- the Big Eight Conference (as it was called then) was the dominant football conference and Boulder, Colo., was a more beautiful and fun place than any of the other schools.

After working a bit, I went back to school, getting my MBA at Northwestern University. But if I was hoping to recapture those glorious game days of yore, I was in for a rude awakening. Far from a Big Eight powerhouse, the NU Wildcats set an NCAA Division I record for most losses in a row. To say it was painful at times to watch them play would be a major understatement, though our opponents did tend to take it easier on us after racking up a 50 point lead by halftime. I still remember our chant -- "That's all right, that's okay, you're going to work for us some day." I was just as sure NU would remain in the cellar as my simple and compelling logic noted a private school in the Big Ten couldn't compete with all public schools many times its size.

College football today

For any of you who follow college football, you know just how incredibly wrong I was. The ranking of my beloved? CU Buffs has sunk like a stone. In fact, they are no longer in the same football conference and, like last year, are picked to be dead last in the Pac Ten Conference. Yet I was even more wrong about my NU Wildcats, which finished last year as the 17th ranked team in the nation by the Associated Press and has a similar pre-season ranking for the upcoming season. The Big Eight conference (now called the Big 12) nearly went extinct and, I'm sorry to say, the SEC completely dominates college football.

Parallels to investing

As I was graduating Northwestern in 1982, General Motors and Eastman Kodak were the fifth and sixth most valuable companies in the U.S. Today these shares are worthless, falling further from grace than my CU Buffs. AT&T was the second most valuable company. While it still exists, it was actually purchased by Southwestern Bell, one of its spinoffs.

Today, two of the three most valuable U.S. companies are Apple and Google. Apple was barely public, and Google wasn't even a glint in the eyes of Page and Brin and wouldn't be for 16 years after I graduated NU. These two companies rose faster than my NU Wildcats.

Lessons learned

What was wrong with my college football logic? Pretty much everything. I assumed the status quo would always continue. Well it didn't continue for either college football or investing.

But my errors taught me some pretty valuable lessons that I apply to investing.

1. We don't know how many of the ten most valuable companies today will even be around in a couple of decades. We can't even be sure the New York Stock Exchange will be around.

2. We can be pretty sure that some of the ten most valuable companies 20 years from now will be ones we've never heard of today. They may even be in industries that don't exist today.

3. When it comes to investing, the media tends to predict the status quo, just as I did decades ago in college football.

To put it bluntly, I was nearly as wrong on predicting college football as author and money manager Harry Dent has been in investing. I may have lost bragging rights, but those who followed Dent or other financial gurus lost a lot of money.

So while I don't know which teams or conference will dominate college football in 20 years, I'm certain the sport will exist. And though the names of the winners and losers may change, I'm just as certain capitalism will as well, which is why I own every publicly held company via broad low cost index funds. And I own them for the long-run.

Well, I'm going to think of my CU Buffaloes as the ultimate value stock. And value tends to beat growth in the long run. The market is pricing in an 0-12 season so all we need is a single victory. Grab the popcorn and let the games begin.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/AllanRoth/~3/1kdkc7PoTqg/

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Friday, August 30, 2013

Conjoined boys separated at Dallas hospital

This undated photo provided by Medical City Children's Hospital in Dallas shows conjoined boys Emmett, left and Owen Ezell. Hospital officials say the conjoined boys born last month in Dallas have been safely separated and are doing well. (AP Photo/Medical City Children's Hospital)

This undated photo provided by Medical City Children's Hospital in Dallas shows conjoined boys Emmett, left and Owen Ezell. Hospital officials say the conjoined boys born last month in Dallas have been safely separated and are doing well. (AP Photo/Medical City Children's Hospital)

DALLAS (AP) ? The mother of twins successfully separated after being born joined at the chest says she's looking forward to holding the babies she once thought had no chance of survival.

"I'm just so happy that they're here and they're alive and thriving. It's the best feeling in the world," Jenni Ezell said Thursday during a news conference at Medical City Children's Hospital in Dallas, where she was joined by husband Dave and a doctor.

Owen and Emmett Ezell were separated Saturday at the hospital after being born joined from just below the breast bone to just below the belly button on July 15. The babies shared a liver and intestines and had an about 3 inch by 5 inch area on their lower stomach that wasn't covered by skin or muscles.

"The whole pregnancy was very frightening. I didn't know what would happen. I didn't know if they would make it. It's hard as a mom to know that," Ezell said tearfully.

Dr. Clair Schwenueman, a neonatologist, said that once the boys were born, tests were done to determine exactly how many connections they had. During the nine-hour surgery, a team of surgeons separated the liver and intestines, with the most difficult part being the separation of a shared blood vessel in the liver.

"At this point they're as stable as we could hope for post-operatively," Schwenueman said.

Conjoined twins are rare, occurring in about one in 50,000 to one in 200,000 deliveries, the doctor said.

The Ezells, both 31, discovered the twins they were expecting were conjoined on March 1, when she was 17 weeks pregnant. The couple, who now live in Dallas but lived in Oklahoma at the time, said their doctor there gave them little hope the babies would survive.

"We didn't think they had a chance, that they weren't going to make it at all," she said. "So we decided to abort and it was the hardest decision that a mother has to make."

The Dallas clinic where they went for the abortion had concerns that her scar from previous cesarean sections might tear and sent her to Medical City for a consultation about the scar tissue. During that visit, a doctor unexpectedly told the parents that there was hope for their unborn boys, Jenni Ezell said.

"I could not contain my joy," said Ezell, who added that since they weren't even looking for a second opinion, she felt that through the whole process God was leading them to "exactly where we needed to be."

The boys weighed a combined 11 pounds, 15 ounces at birth. Hospital officials say the twins had grown to more than 16 pounds when the surgery was done.

Schwenueman said he doesn't know yet when they might be able to leave the hospital. The boys are still connected to breathing machines and must heal from the surgery, he said.

Also, he said, they'll face at least one or two more surgeries in the future for the openings below their chests, which are currently covered with a mesh as doctors try to promote skin growth.

In the meantime, Ezell is already planning their first birthday party and getting excited about the boys' brothers ? a 7 year old and 16 month old ? seeing them now that they're separated.

___

Online:

Medical City Children's Hospital, http://www.mcchildrenshospital.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-08-29-US-Dallas-Conjoined-Boys/id-0597744423e64d1bb5b41b78f29dff84

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Apple's iPhone trade-in program hits its retail stores today (updated)

Well folks, it seems the rumblings we heard earlier this week were indeed true. CNBC has confirmed that Apple's iPhone trade-in program -- officially labled the iPhone Reuse and Recycling Program -- is starting up in the outfit's retail stores today. According to 9to5Mac, trade-ins will be offered for iPhone 3G up to the iPhone 5 with customers receiving a gift card for the determined value of their devices. Phones will then be handed over to BrightStar for recycling. It's worth noting that these number fluctuate, so there's no way of accurately calculating what a local shop will offer up. Of course, timing is everything, and folks looking to recoup some funds ahead of the anticipated iPhone 5S announcement now have an option.

Update: We reached out to Apple on the matter and here's the response:

"iPhones hold great value. So, Apple Retail Stores are launching a new program to assist customers who wish to bring in their previous-generation iPhone for reuse or recycling. In addition to helping support the environment, customers will be able to receive a credit for their returned phone that they can use toward the purchase of a new iPhone."

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Comments

Source: CNBC (Twitter), 9to5Mac

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/q3vG0aNk1FI/

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NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory untangles motion inside the sun

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Using an instrument on NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, called the Helioseismic and Magnetic Imager, or HMI, scientists have overturned previous notions of how the sun's writhing insides move from equator to pole and back again, a key part of understanding how the dynamo works. Modeling this system also lies at the heart of improving predictions of the intensity of the next solar cycle.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/UB5tZ-kRleQ/130828211146.htm

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Boomer Beware When Caring for Dying Parent : Eastern Group ...

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Home / Bell Gardens Sun, City Terrace Comet, Commerce Comet, Eastside Sun, Editorial & Opinion, ELA Brooklyn Belvedere Comet, Mexican American Sun, Montebello Comet, Monterey Park Comet, Northeast Sun, Vernon Sun, Wyvernwood Chronicle / Boomer Beware When Caring for Dying Parent

By Gwen Fitzgerald

A legal ruling emerging last week from a storefront courtroom in rural Pottsville, Pennsylvania, could impact tens of millions of baby boomers nationwide caring for their aging and dying parents. This relatively obscure court?s decision could chill good end-of-life medical care and diminish legal options nationwide.

On Aug. 1, a Schuylkill County magistrate ordered a Philadelphia nurse, 57-year-old Barbara Mancini, to stand trial in the death of her terminally ill 93-year-old father, Joe Yourshaw. Prosecutors from Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane?s office charged Barbara with assisted suicide for allegedly handing her father his prescribed morphine, which he consumed. Barbara was there to relieve her mother, Marge, of caregiving duties for Joe, who was in home hospice care as his death approached.? Enduring a long list of serious medical conditions, Joe had made medical decisions to ensure he did not experience a prolonged, painful death. He completed his advance directive and designated his daughter Barbara as his medical surrogate so she could carry out his wishes if he were unable to do so. He had stopped taking all medication and stated he wanted no medical interventions. What he wanted was to die at home in peace. What he and his family got was anything but peaceful.

All parties in this outrageous criminal proceeding seem to agree that Joe consumed a large dose of the morphine prescribed by a hospice physician to relieve his chronic, severe pain. Later that day, a hospice nurse came by the house to check on Joe. When the nurse learned he had taken extra morphine, she called her supervisors, who called 911.

What happened next should disturb every American. Despite Joe?s advance directive and Barbara?s instruction, in her role as his attorney-in-fact for healthcare, to refrain from intrusive medical interventions, EMTs took Joe to the hospital. Then a police captain took Barbara to the courthouse and charged her with assisted suicide, a felony that carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

When hospital staff revived Joe he immediately expressed his anger at hospice for removing him from his home. When he learned Barbara was in legal trouble, he was even more furious. He died four days later in the hospital. Imagine ? a dying man?s last thought is of his loving daughter?s arrest for the supportive and respectful way she cared for him!

I attended the preliminary hearing in Pottsville on August 1. I observed three hours of detailed testimony from prosecution witnesses. And I honestly can?t understand why Attorney General Kane is allowing this unjust prosecution to move forward.

This case has great resonance on a personal level. Fifteen years ago this month, I was that loving daughter, supporting my mother as my father, a decorated Vietnam vet, was dying. I learned so much that week. But the most searing lesson was that end-of-life decisions are the most important and personal decisions families face. They have immediate implications for the sick and dying. And they have long-term implications for those who live on.? With loving family in attendance there is no need, nor space, for government at the bedside of a dying person.

Joe Yourshaw was very old and terminally ill. He had end-stage diabetes, heart and kidney failure, and arthritis. He died just short of his 94th birthday. Maybe his agony was so great, he longed to die. Where is the public interest in constructing a criminal case from this scenario? How will society benefit from imprisoning Barbara Mancini?

This case could be the bellwether for my generation. Millions of families across America are facing end-of-life decisions every day, as we baby boomers care for our parents, The Greatest Generation World War II veterans like Joe Yourshaw. The story resonates as we, ourselves, age. Do the 75 million+ boomers need to fear the long arm of government literally reaching into our living rooms to seize authority for our medical decision?

Attorney General Kane recently refused to defend the state?s ban on marriage equality because she said it was ?wholly unconstitutional.? She should make a similar principled stand in this case and drop the criminal prosecution of Barbara Mancini. This step is appropriate because the U.S. Supreme Court has embraced the principle that dying patients should be free to receive as much medication as they need to relieve their suffering, even if it advances the time of death. Two cases decided by the Court in 1997, Washington v. Glucksberg and Vacco v. Quill, rest on this principle.

This family is traumatized by this very public reminder of what happened to Joe against his wishes six months ago. That trauma is compounded by what?s happening to his daughter, Barbara, today.

?

Gwen Fitzgerald is the director of communications and marketing for Compassion & Choices.? The column was originally published in USA Today on Aug. 20.?

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Posted by admin ? Filed Under Bell Gardens Sun, City Terrace Comet, Commerce Comet, Eastside Sun, Editorial & Opinion, ELA Brooklyn Belvedere Comet, Mexican American Sun, Montebello Comet, Monterey Park Comet, Northeast Sun, Vernon Sun, Wyvernwood Chronicle?

August 29, 2013? Copyright ? 2012 Eastern Group Publications, Inc.

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Endangered black rhino born at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo

By Mary Wisniewski

CHICAGO (Reuters) - An Eastern black rhinoceros, a critically endangered species, was born at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo this week, the first in 24 years, officials said on Thursday.

The male calf, weighing 60 pounds at birth, was born on Monday to first-time mother, Kapuki, age 8, according to the zoo. The father is 27-year-old Maku.

Black rhinos were nearly driven to extinction in the 1990s. They are a major poaching target, mainly due to the misconception that their horns have medicinal value.

There are 5,055 Eastern black rhinos in the wild, and 68 Eastern black rhinos in 25 accredited zoos across North America. Lincoln Park has three adults of the species.

"The calf divides his time between nursing, following mom around, and napping, and that is exactly what a baby rhino should be doing," Mark Kamhout, mammals curator, said in a statement.

Rhinos are tricky to breed - the gestational period is 15-16 months and parents have "incredibly small windows for conception," Kamhout said.

"Together with the zoo's endocrinologists, we worked to pinpoint the exact window for Kapuki and Maku to get together for breeding," Kahhout said.

The mother and calf will be off display for a couple of weeks while they bond, the zoo said.

The Atlanta zoo saw the birth of its first-ever eastern black rhino earlier this month.

(Reporting by Mary Wisniewski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/endangered-black-rhino-born-chicagos-lincoln-park-zoo-175500561.html

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College degrees overseas out of reach for many Indians

4 hours ago

For the thousands of Indian students pursuing college degrees abroad, the thrill of starting a new chapter in their lives is being doused by the crash in the rupee, which has dramatically pushed up academic fees and the cost of living.

Shyam Mehta, a 26-year-old national from Mumbai who recently began a Master of Business Administration (MBA) program at Insead in France, said this could not have come at a worse time.

(Read more: For Indians living abroad, rupee's plunge is great news)

"The one year you do your MBA is when the rupee is at an all-time low, it feels horrible," said Mehta, who has taken out a euro-denominated loan to fund part of his 60,000 euro MBA fee.

Plans to return home to find work after he graduates next year have also been put on hold, as it would be much more expensive to pay back the loan on a rupee-denominated income. The rupee has fallen 28.4 percent against the euro over the past three months.

"Initially, I thought I would return home and work after completing the program. But since I have to pay back a loan in euros, the plans have to be reassessed. It's an extremely weak option at this point," he said.

Mehta says he now has less disposable income, and will likely need to cut back on discretionary spending during his time abroad. "There're still a lot of rupees that I need to convert into euros for day-to-day spending, on housing rent, car rentals. I need to re-budget and reallocate."

Falguni Jhaveri, who is currently in New York to enroll her daughter at a college in the city, said she and her husband budgeted for tuition fees when the rupee was at 55 against the U.S. dollar - 25 percent stronger than Thursday's trading level of 68.8.

"That's huge considering it costs us $75,000-$80,000 a year to send our daughter to college, including living and travel expenses. It's a lot of money, it's unplanned for. We'll have to reevaluate how we are going to take care of the fees," Jhaveri, who lives in Mumbai, told CNBC.

"The problem is also uncertainty and where it's going to be next. You can't plan," she added.

(Read more: Indian rupee extends slide to fresh record low)

According to Arvind Kumar Singhal, chief executive of consultancy Technopak Advisors, the number of Indian students traveling abroad to study will likely suffer a notable decline, if the rupee doesn't recover. About 200,000 Indians set off for overseas degrees every year, according to Technopak.

"For students who are already overseas, there's nothing they can do about it. This impact will happen in the next academic year, even if the rupee stabilizes, we will see a significant amount of impact with more people deciding not to send their kids overseas," he said.

Mumbai resident Miloni Shah, who has spent the past four years saving to pay for business school in the U.S., in which she plans to enroll next year, fears the money she has set aside now may no longer suffice.

"I have been saving up for business school, but if this continues, and the rupee goes to 75, 80, my savings are going to be wiped out and I may need to take out a student loan," 27-year-old Shah, who works at a private equity firm in the Indian financial capital, said. "It's really frustrating."

The share of American 25-year-olds with student debt hit 43 percent in 2012, up from 25 percent in 2003, according to a recent study by the New York Federal Reserve. The average student loan balance among the group grew to $20,326 from $10,649 over the same time.

?By CNBC's Ansuya Harjani; Follow her on Twitter@Ansuya_H

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/308c3a79/sc/33/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Ccollege0Edegrees0Eoverseas0Eout0Ereach0Emany0Eindians0E8C110A30A885/story01.htm

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