Monday, September 3, 2012

Muslim cleric arrested for framing girl in Pakistan blasphemy case

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani authorities have arrested a Muslim cleric on allegations of framing a Christian girl who was arrested under the country's controversial anti-blasphemy law, a police official said on Sunday.

Religious and secular groups worldwide have protested over the detention in August of Rimsha Masih, accused by Muslim neighbors of burning Islamic religious texts.

Police official Munir Hussain Jafri said a cleric was arrested after witnesses from Masih's village on the edge of the capital Islamabad complained about his alleged actions.

"Witnesses complained that he had torn pages from a Koran and placed them in her bag which had burned papers," Jafri told Reuters.

A bail hearing will be held on Monday for Masih, whose case has re-focused a spotlight on Pakistan's anti-blasphemy law.

Under the law, anyone who speaks ill of Islam and the Prophet Mohammad commits a crime and faces the death penalty.

Activists and human rights groups say vague terminology has led to its misuse, and that the law dangerously discriminates against the Muslim country's tiny minority groups.

Critics of Pakistan's leaders say they are too worried about an extremist backlash to speak out against the law in a nation where religious conservatism is increasingly prevalent.

Convictions are common, although the death sentence has never been carried out. Most convictions are thrown out on appeal, but mobs have killed many people accused of blasphemy.

There have been conflicting reports about Masih's age and her mental state. Some media have said she is 11 and suffers from Down's Syndrome.

A hospital said in a report she was about 4 but had the mental capacities of someone younger, and was uneducated.

Masih's arrest triggered an exodus of several hundred Christians from her poor village after mosques reported over their loudspeakers what the girl was alleged to have done.

Christians, who make up four percent of Pakistan's population of 180 million, have been especially concerned about the blasphemy law, saying it offers them no protection.

Convictions hinge on witness testimony and are often linked to vendettas, they complain.

In 2009, 40 houses and a church were set ablaze by a mob of 1,000 Muslims in the town of Gojra, in Punjab province. At least seven Christians were burned to death. The attacks were triggered by reports of the desecration of the Koran.

Two Christian brothers accused of writing a blasphemous letter against the Prophet Mohammad were gunned down outside a court in the eastern city of Faisalabad in July of 2010.

(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Daniel Magnowski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/muslim-cleric-arrested-framing-girl-pakistan-blasphemy-case-062829763.html

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Sunday, September 2, 2012

PFT: Rex thinks he has his best Jets team yet

Philadelphia Eagles v Cleveland BrownsGetty Images

The dust has settled (sort of) on the reduction from 90 to 53 players.? And now that the Browns? roster is determined (sort of), more than a fourth of the players are rookies.

In all, 15 of 53 players are entering their first season in the NFL.

While looking for the best 53, G.M. Tom Heckert apparently wasn?t paying attention to the abundance of players without an abundance of experience.? ?I?m going to be totally honest with you, [team spokesman Neal Gulkis] just told me that,? Heckert told the media on Saturday.? ?I didn?t really know it was 15 so it?s obviously not something that we planned.?

The current 15 rookies are, in alphabetical order:? defensive back Johnson Bademosi, receiver Travis Benjamin, linebacker Tank Carder, linebacker L.J. Fort, defensive back Tashaun Gipson, receiver Josh Gordon, defensive tackle John Hughes, linebackers James-Michael Johnson, defensive lineman Ishaa?ily Kitchen, offensive lineman Ryan Miller, running back Trent Richardson, offensive lineman Mitchell Schwartz, defensive back Trevin Wade, quarterback Brandon Weeden, and defensive lineman Billy Winn.

Nine are draft picks; the other six (I are good with the number things) were undrafted.

The Browns also didn?t care about fitting anyone?s formula for how many players a team should have at each position.

?I don?t know if Pat [Shurmur] told you guys, but you can see there are some unorthodox ? maybe too many guys at one position,? Heckert said.? ?We talked about it in our meeting the other day and we wanted to keep the best 53 or what we consider the best 53 no matter what position, if we have to go light at one position or heavy at another one, we were willing to do it so I think it worked out that way at least right now and we?ll see how it goes.?

Given the way the Browns have performed the past few years, it should be no surprise that 15 first-year players could claim jobs.? In order to keep the guys who picked those players around for another year beyond 2012, however, those rookies need to step up.? Quickly.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/09/01/rex-ryan-thinks-he-may-have-his-best-jets-team-yet/related

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Baby born with brain cancer surviving with chemotherapy

By LISA BLACK | Chicago Tribune ? Published September 01, 2012 Modified September 01, 2012

CHICAGO - Peering intently at the tiny white smudge in their baby's brain scan, Sue and Ben Erickson could see that the image did not reveal the miracle they had prayed for.

The cancer still lurked, though it had shrunken significantly after five rounds of chemotherapy. The news was as good as they could expect, realistically, and the doctor was upbeat.

"It looks good. It looks good. I'm happy," said Dr. Rishi Lulla, a pediatric oncologist, as he reviewed the images at Lurie Children's Hospital in Chicago. "It's substantially, substantially better."

The results from last week's MRI marked a pivotal time for Matthew Erickson, who, at 8 months old, has charmed every nurse with his single-toothed grin. He was born Dec. 11 with an especially aggressive form of brain cancer, a high-grade glioma that developed while he was still in his mother's womb, even though it's most often diagnosed in adults.

The cancer, whose causes are unknown, had engulfed most of the right hemisphere of Matthew's brain. Only about five children nationally are born each year with such a rare, usually fatal, condition, his doctors said when the Tribune first chronicled the family's story in February.

At the time, doctors gave the Huntley couple a difficult choice: bring Matthew home with a hospice team, love him and keep him comfortable until the inevitable. Or, they could treat the cancer aggressively with chemotherapy, a toxic cocktail with no certain outcome.

While used successfully with some other babies, chemotherapy could cause additional long-term damage or even hasten Matthew's demise, the doctors warned.

Matthew seemed determined to make the decision for the couple. He was a born fighter, his parents said, and he rarely cried, making the treacherous journey a bit less emotionally taxing on his parents.

Even when he throws up, he smiles, his mom said.

"You look at him, you look at his eyes, he has life," Sue Erickson said.

The couple arrived at the hospital at 6 a.m. Aug. 16, the day of Matthew's MRI, admitting they did not sleep the night before. For six months, the family had set their sights on this day, to find out how well their baby responded to the aggressive treatment.

"Too nervous. Too excited," said Ben Erickson who, like his wife and mother-in-law, wore a T-shirt that read "Grey Matters" with the family name on the back.

Since their decision to fight the cancer, the couple has also fought to maintain normalcy.

Matthew has spent at least two to three weeks each month in the hospital, dealing not only with the chemotherapy's side effects, but complications from diabetes insipidus, a kidney condition marked by excessive urination that can lead to dehydration. He also suffers brain seizures, which are likely caused by the tumor and surgeries, Lulla said.

Meanwhile, time marched on. The couple's son, Nolan, 5, just started kindergarten. Their daughter, Sophia, recently celebrated her second birthday with a "princess party."

Matthew's saga splashes over into daily routines. Sophia one day picked up a calculator, held it to her ear like a cellphone, and said, "Dr. Lulla? Dr. Lulla?"

Sue's parents, Louise ("Nunny" to her grandchildren) and Bob Turner, help juggle child care and doctor appointments.

School also started last week for Ben, a teacher at South Elgin High School.

Hundreds of students surprised him last spring with a donation for Matthew, whose every visit to the hospital generates a lengthy bill. The most recent invoice was 69 pages long.

"Thank God for insurance," said Ben, who was not sure where the total stands.

After the MRI, Matthew awakened from sedation smiling, as usual.

Over prior months, he has undergone four brain surgeries, and received 30 to 40 transfusions for blood and platelets. At one point, he was left with only one long strand of hair clinging to his head. Within days of his last treatment, a soft layer of "peach fuzz" had begun to reclaim his head.

Developmentally, Matthew has made progress each month.

He babbles like other babies his age. He sits up, but finds it hard to stay there, or to hold a bottle, possibly because of the weight of a catheter in his left arm, Sue said. The peripherally inserted central catheter, or Picc, is a semipermanent port used to deliver fluid and medications or withdraw blood.

As the family traipsed through the hospital, headed from recovery to a clinic where they would learn more answers, they stopped along the way to greet familiar faces.

"Where's your little baby?" said one nurse, noticing that Matthew's size has doubled, to 16 1/2 pounds, over recent months.

"Little dude, you're beating this thing," said another patient's mother, Deidre DeVance, cooing over Matthew in his miniature track suit. "You don't even know what you're beating, but you're beating it."

Sue, Ben and Louise huddled around a computer with Lulla, a physician in the hospital's Division of Hematology, Oncology and Stem Cell Transplant.

He pointed to the screen showing four images of Matthew's brain from MRIs taken in December, February, May and July.

The change was obvious, even to a layman.

Instead of gray brain matter, the scan taken eight months ago revealed a gaping dark cavern in the brain's right hemisphere, where excess fluid had collected in the oversized ventricles, or cavities that allow the flow of cerebral spinal fluid. The tumor was hunkered down in the middle, a small bright white spot.

By May, the tumor was "very subtle," Lulla said, pointing to a smidgen of white against gray. Brain surgeries to remove portions of the tumor and fluid had been successful, as well.

"What if we had decided to do nothing? What do you think would have happened?" Ben Erickson asked, as the couple sat quietly, absorbing the information.

"I don't know the answer. I think he would have died, not from the tumor but the (pressure of fluid-filled) ventricles," Lulla said. "Our goal is to stop the tumor from growing and get Matthew to grow around the tumor."

Sue Erickson asked the next big question: "Is there ever going to be a point where there is no cancer?"

Probably not, Lulla said. Even a few abnormal cells left behind may lead to the cancer's return, he explained.

While Thursday's scan showed even more improvement, the scary white smudge lingered and prompted debate among doctors during their weekly "tumor board" meeting.

During these sessions, oncologists, surgeons, nurses, radiologists, pathologists and social workers discuss new cases and patients whose treatments have reached critical points.

On Aug. 21, Lulla and Dr. Tord Alden, a neurosurgeon, laid out Matthew's case to the group of about 20 people. As they viewed brain images projected on a large screen, specialists questioned whether they were looking at scar tissue or tumor, and how fast, if at all, the cancerous cells would spread.

At 9 p.m. that night, Lulla called the couple and discussed options.

Some doctors felt that the chemotherapy should continue. Lulla and Alden recommended giving Matthew a two-month break, during which time they could also treat his brain seizures with steroids.

"Ben and I, we almost knew the ball would be put into our court and we would have to make that decision," Sue Erickson said the following morning.

The couple decided to follow the advice of the doctors who know Matthew best, Lulla and Alden. The steroid treatment should be far easier for his body to tolerate than the chemo, said Lulla, the recent recipient of a nearly $100,000 research grant from the St. Baldrick's Foundation, a charity that raises money to combat childhood cancers.

"Nothing is guaranteed," Sue said, recalling that there were those who doubted the couple's decision to proceed with chemotherapy in February. "There was a risk then. There is a risk now."

Chemotherapy administered to children younger than 3 with a high-grade glioma offers a 40 to 50 percent chance of survival for three years, Matthew's doctors have said. Yet they are treating other children who have beaten similar odds - who have shown doctors that nothing is certain.

Early on, the couple adopted a family motto: "Defined by God, not by cancer."

"Matthew has blown any statistic, any number out of the water," Sue said. "To keep on with chemo I know could help him, but I also know if we don't address the seizures, that could affect him a lot more. I am looking at Matthew as a survivor, and as a kid in 12, 14 years."

Since his MRI, Matthew has been readmitted to the hospital twice after having trouble keeping food down. On Monday his condition had improved and he was prepared to start the steroid treatment, Sue said. He will remain in the hospital under observation this week, she said.

If the tumor shows no change in two months, the doctors could continue the wait-and-see approach, Lulla said. Matthew will soon start occupational, physical and speech therapy sessions at home.

Meanwhile, his parents take great joy in the milestones that most take for granted.

After reviewing their baby's brain images, Ben looked closer at the scan and asked: "Can you see his teeth?"

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/08/31/2233566/baby-born-with-brain-cancer-surviving.html

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Muscle Building Tips That Will Increase Your Gains

How best can you build muscle in a short amount of time? Early on, it can be hard to answer that question. Building muscle is a long and complicated process, and some people just can?t stick it out long enough to see results. Read these tips to build muscle and you may find some new techniques you can use.

Keep a journal of your training. Keeping track of progress is vital to keeping motivation up and seeing how well your muscle building routines are working. Using a fitness log is one of the best ways to do this. Make sure you record each exercise as you complete it. This serves two purposes. It will let you accurately track your progress, and can serve as motivation when you see how far you?ve come.

You need to get enough protein if you want to build muscle. Protein supplements and protein shakes are excellent ways to boost your body?s supply of this vital nutrient. These shakes work very well immediately after you workout and right before you hit the sack. If you are trying to shed some pounds as you build your muscles, only consume one shake or supplement each day. If your goal is to also increase your mass, consuming as many as three per day will be beneficial.

Eat lots of protein when you are trying to gain muscle. Proteins play a vital role in the formation of muscle mass; if you do not eat enough, you may actually sacrifice muscles. Aim to eat about 1 g of protein for every pound that you weigh.

Make sure you honestly examine yourself to decide what things you can do and what things you cannot do. This will provide a good foundation to begin creating goals and building on them. You should take your current weight and body type into consideration when planning your work outs.

Do not pin all your hopes on supplements. Supplements are a good way to help out your muscle goals. However, supplements are never meant to take the place of adequate nutrition. They should be used to add to, or supplement, your regular healthy diet. Try to keep your supplements to a minimum.

You workouts should last around 60 minutes, each. Your body starts producing excess cortisol, the stress hormone, after 60 minutes of a workout session. Cortisol is a hormone which can block testosterone, wasting the effort you exert in your muscle building program. Making sure that workouts are less than an hour helps you to get the best results.

Mix up the grip that you use. Use a mixed or staggered grip for doing deadlifts and rack pulls, to achieve more strength. Using a staggered grip will help twist the bar in one direction as your underhand grip moves the bar in the opposite direction. This will prevent the bar from moving all around in your hands.

Make room in your regimen for plyometric exercises. These particular exercises let your body develop the fast-twitching muscle fibers that encourage growth of muscle mass. Plyometric exercises are a different kind of exercise that rely more on acceleration than strength. As an example, if you were performing plyometric push-ups, you would allow your hands to spring off the ground lifting yourself up as high as possible.

Some exercises should not be performed with heavy weights. Exercising your neck, doing split squats, and doing dips can all compromise your joints and put you in jeopardy of getting seriously injured. Heavy loads are more appropriate for big exercise such as presses, squats, rows and deads.

Building stronger and bigger muscles requires the proper information and techniques. Use the advice in the preceding article to ensure that your bodybuilding plan is as successful as it can be. With the proper advice, you can reach any muscle building goal you may have

Source: http://www.online-health-resources.com/muscle-building/muscle-building-tips-that-will-increase-your-gains-3/

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Saturday, September 1, 2012

IAC picks up DateHookup.com


Essential News from The Associated Press

? ?Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-08-31-US-IAC-Acquisition/id-ffaf1948419042c7b01643f48625198e

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Ticked Off

Close up of an adult female and nymph tick.

An adult female and nymph tick on a fingertip. Ticks cause an acute inflammatory disease characterized by skin changes, joint inflammation, and flu-like symptoms called Lyme disease.

Photo By Getty Images.

Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced the discovery of a new tick-borne virus this week, one of several newly identified pathogens that ticks are passing to humans. Why are so many new tick-borne diseases being reported?

Improvements in medical technology, mostly. The newly discovered tick-borne diseases have probably been infecting humans for years, but they?re not easy to spot. Many victims never realize a tick has bitten them, and the symptoms, such as fevers, aches, and fatigue, are not distinctive and mirror those of common summer viral infections. The patient?s immune system usually fights off the illness unassisted, so doctors don?t bother running the battery of tests required to identify a new pathogen. Only in the rare cases when a patient struggles with the infection are physicians likely to make a genuine discovery. (The disease identified this week, a member of the phlebovirus family, hospitalized two men in Missouri.) They order blood smears or antibody tests to identify the presence of a pathogen, and genetic analyses?which were either inefficient or completely unavailable to doctors just a few years ago?alert researchers to the presence of the previously unidentified bug. Researchers have also become more aggressive recently, with some searching within ticks themselves for evidence of new pathogens.

Lyme disease is a classic example of how long a disease can exist in a population without being identified. Genetic research has suggested that the pathogen responsible for Lyme disease has afflicted humans for more than 5,000 years. Examinations of a mouse specimen collected from Central Park in the late 1800s suggest that the disease has been present in the United States for more than a century, and case reports indicate that Europeans were carrying the disease at about the same time. In the early 1970s, fishermen in Long Island complained of a form of arthritis they called ?Montauk knee,? but it wasn?t until later in the decade that doctors figured out that it was caused by an infectious agent. In 1982, researchers finally identified the spirochete that carried the illness. And Lyme disease, with its telltale bull?s-eye rash, is usually easier to identify than many other tick-borne illnesses.

Environmental change has also played a role in the recent discoveries. Americans spent centuries converting the Northeastern woodlands into farms, hunting or driving out much of the local fauna. In the late 19th and 20th centuries, however, agriculture moved west, and many farms turned back into fragmented forests in close contact with human settlement. Animals that survive best in so-called ?edge habitats,? like deer and mice, came to dominate the region. Dense populations of those animals made fertile breeding ground for ticks and the pathogens that love them.

Increased tick density plays two roles in the discovery of tick-borne diseases. First, and probably more significantly, it leads to more human infections and gives doctors more opportunities to identify existing pathogens. It?s also possible, although largely unproven, that tick-borne pathogens are evolving more quickly than in the past. Ticks are expanding their ranges, bringing different species of the pests into contact with one another, sometimes as they ride on the same deer, dog, or rodent. This may result in microbes jumping between tick species. As pathogens are exposed to new environments, they may evolve into subtly different organisms, some of which might be more dangerous to human hosts.

It should be noted that humans are dead-ends for tick-borne pathogens?either they kill us or we kill them long before they have the chance to jump to the next host. So ticks don?t really evolve inside the human body. Rather, it?s the increased density of animal hosts like deer and mice that create new opportunities for the evolution of tick-borne pathogens. If those changes happen to afflict humans, we are little more than collateral damage.

Got a question about today?s news? Ask the Explainer.

Explainer thanks Brian Allan of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Carl Brenner of the National Research Fund for Tick-Borne Diseases, and Peter Krause of the Yale School of Public Health.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=48870b223f900aefddddc2944b6938ea

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Michigan, Alabama aiming to make big statements

The Michigan Wolverines have reclaimed their confidence, something Alabama did shortly after Nick Saban landed in Tuscaloosa and started winning national titles.

The eighth-ranked Wolverines have already earned some preseason acclaim going into Saturday night's opening showdown with the similarly pedigreed and second-ranked Crimson Tide at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Beating a team that has won two of the last three national championships from a league that has captured six in a row would be an especially huge statement for Denard Robinson & Co.

"They're just trying to show the world that they can play," Alabama safety Robert Lester said. "The SEC is such a dominant conference, and I guess just to get any credibility points, you have to go and beat a credible SEC team. They're just trying to prove themselves."

Saban and the Tide have some things to prove, too, even as nearly two-touchdown favorites.

The nation's best defense a year ago gets quite a test for seven new starters facing the dangerous Robinson, the kind of double-edged weapon Alabama hasn't seen since Cam Newton two years ago.

This game could do much to support Saban's contention that there's no sense of entitlement with this team, unlike the talent-laden 2010 group that dropped three games after a championship season.

"If this team is not successful it is not because of the character and attitude of the team," said Saban, who is 18-6 against ranked opponents and 10-4 against Top 10 teams over the last four seasons. "It will be because of the lack of experience the team has in certain positions, and they may make too many mistakes to win. It will not get compared that way, I am sure, because this team has done everything the right way."

So one storied program wants to prove it's back, the other that it isn't going anywhere.

Alabama has been ranked for 65 weeks and counting, the nation's longest active streak. Michigan was unranked going into coach Brady Hoke's first season before going on to win 11 games and beat Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl.

This is the first time Alabama and Michigan have met in the regular season.

The Wolverines would love to make a statement for the Big Ten, besieged by Penn State's sex abuse scandal and encumbered by Ohio State's bowl ban. Both teams will get some quick answers about where they stand.

"I went back and thought about last year at this time," Hoke said. "I didn't know if we were going to win two games let alone 11, because you don't know until you get in the real deal as far as playing games.

"Honestly, we'll find out. We'll find out about ourselves."

About 32 hours before kickoff, Hoke announced he was suspending starting running back Fitzgerald Toussaint and reserve defensive end Frank Clark for the game. Toussaint pleaded guilty Tuesday to drunken driving. Clark is accused of taking a laptop from a dorm room.

The Wolverines will likely use running backs Thomas Rawls, Vincent Smith, Justice Hayes perhaps along with newcomers Dennis Norfleet and Drake Johnson against the Crimson Tide.

Without Toussaint, there's an even bigger burden on Robinson to try to outrun or outwit Saban's defenders, who are seldom caught out of position.

Saban said Robinson has improved as a pocket passer. He has warned his pass rushers of what can happen if they leave their feet while approaching him.

"Well, this guy will ball fake you like Michael Jordan and take off running and you'll say, 'Well, how did that happen?'" Saban said.

The swift Robinson can make teams pay for mistakes, as evidenced by his 30 carries of 20-plus yards.

"He's fast. You see that on ESPN watching the Top 10 (plays) week in and week out," Alabama defensive end Damion Square said. "He's a guy that players know of. He has an exceptional arm. He makes throws that need to be made for his team and he extends plays and makes big plays a lot. That's what you want to come and stop ? big plays."

Alabama counters with the more traditional passer AJ McCarron, offensive MVP of the BCS championship game.

Tailback Eddie Lacy also makes his starting debut in place of Heisman Trophy finalist Trent Richardson. He has plenty of help, though, from big-play threats Dee Hart and T.J. Yeldon along with a veteran offensive line.

Michigan linebacker Kenny Demens doesn't think there's any room for error against Alabama.

"Zero. They're a great team. They're disciplined," Demens said. "Any mistake can cost us the game."

The Wolverines don't seem bothered by the fact that Alabama is so heavily favored.

"The game is played on the field," cornerback J.T. Floyd said.

Asked if he likes Michigan's chances, he invoked the three-word catchphrase that has caught on since Hoke's arrival.

"This is Michigan," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/michigan-alabama-aiming-big-statements-183111607--spt.html

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