Wednesday, October 31, 2012

HBT: Dodgers, League ink 3-year, $22.5 million deal

The Dodgers acquired reliever Brandon League from the Mariners at the July 31 trade deadline and were pleased with the numbers (2.30 ERA and 1.13 WHIP in 27 1/3 innings) he posted down the stretch. So they?ve decided to keep him around for a while.

According to Dylan Hernandez of the Los Angeles Times, the impending free agent was re-signed on Tuesday evening to a new three-year contract. The financial details of which are not yet available.

Any three-year deal for a reliever deserves to be met with raised eyebrows, but League boasts a 3.14 ERA (and 122 ERA+) since the start of the 2010 campaign. And the Dodgers have enough financial backing now to spend somewhat recklessly.

The 29-year-old righty will presumably serve in a setup role in 2013 behind closer Kenley Jansen.

*******************

UPDATE, 8:50 PM: Jim Bowden of ESPN and SiriusXM reports?that the three-year deal is worth north of $7.1 million per season and Hernandez adds that the Dodgers are viewing League as?their?closer. Lordy.

UPDATE, 9:02 PM: Tim Dierkes of MLB Trade Rumors says the contract is actually worth $7.5 million per year and that it also includes a vesting option. What in the world is Ned Colletti doing?

UPDATE, 9:05 PM: Hernandez confirms: it?s a three-year, $22.5 million contract for League.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/30/dodgers-re-sign-brandon-league-to-three-year-contract/related

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Hubble sees violent star formation episodes in dwarf galaxies

ScienceDaily (Oct. 27, 2012) ? The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has imaged the faint irregular galaxy NGC 3738, a starburst galaxy. The galaxy is in the midst of a violent episode of star formation, during which it is converting reservoirs of hydrogen gas located in the galaxy's center into stars. Hubble spots this gas glowing red around NGC 3738, one of the most distinctive signs of ongoing star formation.

Lying in the constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear), NGC 3738 is located about 12 million light-years from the sun, and belongs to the Messier 81 group of galaxies. This galaxy -- first observed by astronomer William Herschel back in 1789 -- is a nearby example of a blue compact dwarf, the faintest type of starburst galaxy. Blue compact dwarfs are small compared to large spiral galaxies -- NGC 3738 is around 10,000 light-years across, just one tenth of the size of the Milky Way.

This type of galaxy is blue in appearance by virtue of containing large clusters of hot, massive stars, which ionize the surrounding interstellar gas with their intense ultraviolet radiation. They are relatively faint and appear to be irregular in shape. Unlike spirals or elliptical galaxies, irregular galaxies do not have any distinctive features, such as a nuclear bulge or spiral arms. Rather, they are extremely chaotic in appearance. These galaxies are thought to resemble some of the earliest that formed in the Universe and may provide clues as to how stars appeared shortly after the Big Bang.

This image was created by combining visual and infrared images taken with the Wide Field Channel of the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. The field of view of the Wide Field Channel is approximately 3.4 by 3.4 arcminutes wide.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/4Yo335_SX7Y/121027120925.htm

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Four Border Collies and Me: JUST plain FUN

I love teaming up with my dogs.? I enjoy competition, but not nearly as much as just working with them.? Competition is too CONTROLLED for me.? I'd much rather be loading, unloading, moving stock, etc. on a ranch.? One thing that is a pet peeve with me is that dogs (for the most part) aren't allowed to defend themselves when challenged in USBCHA.? I don't? mean "cheap shots,"....I mean in self defense.? If stock drops a head at my dog on a ranch, I expect that dog to take a nip to show them who is in charge.? I don't like a "pansy" dog...never have.
Or, I'd much rather be out in the desert enjoying the "vastness," the "quiet" and just plain enjoying watching my dogs work.? Even 'just hiking' would take precedence over trialing.? So, I guess?I will never be a trial contender.? I don't trial enough to even be a finals contender.? But, that's okay.? I love rooting on my friends that get there.? I enjoy helping out when I can.? And, most of all I ENJOY my dogs.? Isn't that what it is all about?
I'm lucky that I have a ranch just 15 min. away from me with sheep, sometimes cows, and goats.? My dogs love it.? I love it.? It gives them the exercise they need and me, too. :0)? Now, if?I had a horse, I think life would be rather "complete."
Just a few pics from today working at Task Farms.?

YOKO AKA Goat Girl

Yoko has everything under control.? Yo loves a good game.

Go Goat Girl!? You tell them :0)

?

Yoko is all about COWS.? Even on the other side of the fence :0)

Here she shows her half brother to stand quietly

?

Champ says, "Good Morning Mr. Angus.? How nice to meet you."

?

Mother and son take no prisoners

Source: http://walkupbcs.blogspot.com/2012/10/just-plain-fun.html

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Q&A: What will candidates do on college costs?

President Barack Obama has rallied college students at dozens of campuses, touted his record on student aid and needled Republican challenger Mitt Romney for advising students to "borrow money if you have to from your parents." Romney counters that despite the flood of federal financial aid unleashed during Obama's term, college costs and student debt have only grown.

The debate over rising college tuition is a microcosm of the broader debate over the economy: Obama argues he's taken bold steps that minimized the damage of a deep recession and will build for the future. Romney says the president's big-government interventions have backfired, and more private-sector solutions are needed.

Here are some questions ? and answers ? about the complicated landscape of college costs and the presidential campaign.

Q. What's happened to college costs under Obama?

A. They've gone up ? a lot, at least at four-year schools. Since the 2008-2009 academic year in which he took office, the average public four-year college has increased its tuition list price 26 percent (beyond overall inflation). That's an increase of about $1,800, to $8,655, according to figures released Wednesday by the College Board. However, costs have been going up since long before Obama took office, and his term coincided with unprecedented college funding cuts by the states, which are spending 26 percent less per student on higher education than five years ago.

Largely because of a massive increase in federal aid under Obama, the net price ? what the average student pays after accounting for grants and tax credits ? has gone up considerably less than the sticker price. The net price is $2,910 this year, or $570 more than the year he took office. At community colleges, aid covers on average all costs.

Q. Can either candidate do anything about the increasing prices colleges are charging?

A. Both say they'll try. Obama has proposed a $1 billion "Race to the Top"-style contest to reward states for reforms, and said he could cut off aid to colleges that don't take steps to improve productivity. He's called for working with the states to cut tuition inflation in half within 10 years. A Romney campaign paper says Washington will no longer write a "blank check to universities to reward their tuition increases" and to support schools pursuing new models to drive down costs.

But the debate mostly concerns the enormous mix of federal aid programs for students, which will disburse about $175 billion this year in the form of grants and loans.

Q. What's Obama's record on student aid?

A. Obama can rightly claim he's transformed the federal financial aid system. Partly that means more money ? Washington is on track to disburse almost $50 billion more this year than in 2008-2009. Spending on Pell Grants for low-income students has nearly doubled to about $35 billion, supporting about 10 million students, up from 6 million when he took office, and he successfully pushed Congress to postpone a scheduled doubling of the interest rate on subsidized Stafford loans.

But he's also made structural changes. Obama stopped subsidizing banks to make student loans, and now almost all student loans come directly from the government. Much of the estimated $60 billion in savings over 10 years is channeled back into other student aid programs. A new income-based repayment program caps loan repayments for 1.1 million recent borrowers at 15 percent of discretionary income and forgives their debts after 25 years. The program will soon become a 10 percent cap and forgiveness after 20 years.

Romney says the increased aid from Washington is driving up prices, arguing in a campaign position paper the president "returns over and over again to the old liberal playbook that has driven up tuition rates for decades."

Q. What did Romney do about college costs as governor of Massachusetts?

A. Romney has touted the John and Abigail Adams scholarship that started when he was governor, offering top Massachusetts public high school students free tuition at state universities. A recent Harvard study argues the program steered students to colleges where they were less likely to graduate, and may have confused recipients by promising "free tuition" but not covering mandatory fees, which are much higher than tuition at Massachusetts colleges. The report found the award is much less than similar state scholarships in places like Georgia and California.

Q. What would Romney do as president?

A. He's pledged to reverse Obama's "nationalization" of the federal student loan market and return private lenders to the process. He wants to consolidate what he calls "duplicative" student aid programs but hasn't specified which ones.

Romney education adviser Phil Handy, in a recent debate with an Obama counterpart, called the income-based repayment program a "creeping entitlement" but the campaign has not said publicly whether or how he would reform it. (A recent New America Foundation calls for reforms to the program so its benefits will be less weighted to higher earners).

Q. What about tax credits?

A. Obama wants to extend the American Opportunity Tax Credit, which provides about 10 million families a tax refund of up to $2,500 for tuition, fees and course materials. Romney's tax plan would allow that credit to expire and revert to the old HOPE tax credit, which is less generous to students and less expensive for the government. Unlike HOPE, the AOTC is partly refundable, meaning low-income students can benefit even if they don't owe taxes.

Some education finance experts have criticized the AOTC, arguing other programs channel benefits more effectively to the neediest students. Obama campaign policy director James Kvaal counters it's important to help middle-class families afford college as well as the low-income students who use Pell Grants.

Q. What is the problem with Pell Grant funding and what will the candidates do about it?

A. Pell is the main college aid program for low-income students. The awards are given on a sliding scale, and only about one-third of recipients receive the maximum (currently $5,550). Typically those who get the maximum are the very poorest students (more than 90 percent come from families earning under $30,000).

Congress has essentially laid out a schedule of Pell awards where the maximum rises to $6,030 in coming years, but hasn't provided full funding for that commitment. There's a shortfall averaging roughly $8 billion annually starting in 2014. Obama's latest budget proposal calls for filling the immediate shortfall, partly through redirected savings, and working with Congress on a long-term fix. But he doesn't propose tightening eligibility requirements.

Romney said during the second debate he wants to keep Pell "growing." But a Romney campaign paper calls for "refocusing" Pell on the neediest to preserve its financial viability. Handy, the Romney education adviser, said Pell Grants need to be "radically fixed."

In short, Romney's campaign has made it increasingly clear he's talking about keeping the maximum Pell on track for its scheduled increase, but limiting eligibility or lowering awards for the those who get less than the maximum ? currently about 6.5 million students who typically come from families earning $30,000-$50,000 annually. If Romney ever signed into law the House budget of his running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, more than 1 million students could be on track to lose their Pell Grant eligibility over the next decade, according to an analysis by The Education Trust, a non-partisan Washington, D.C.-based policy and advocacy group.

Q. How do the candidates differ on student loans?

A. When Obama took office, two federal loan systems existed side-by-side ? one offering direct loans from the government, the other subsidizing a kind of federal loan provided by private lenders. Obama ended the second system and moved entirely to direct lending.

Romney's campaign says the decision "moved a trillion-dollar obligation" to the federal balance sheet and is proving more expensive than expected, citing a Barclays research report that estimates costs of direct lending have been underestimated by $225 billion between now and 2020. Even accounting for the $60 billion in lender subsidies Obama has eliminated, Romney contends returning to a system that incorporates private lenders would offer taxpayers more efficiency and students better service.

Obama argues the $60 billion previously allocated to paying private lenders was wasted. Kvaal says it's actually Obama's direct-lending approach that makes better use of market forces ? instead of getting subsidy checks, the student loan companies now compete for government contracts to service the direct loans, replacing bureaucrats. Jason DeLisle, a former member of Senate Budget Committee's Republican staff who now directs the Federal Education Budget Project at the New America Foundation, agrees, calling the changes Obama made "something Bain Capital would come up with" rather than the government takeover Romney describes.

Q. Is Romney right that Obama's direct lending changes are costing the government and that taxpayers are "on the hook?"

A. The short answers are "not really" and "possibly" ? but those are complicated questions.

Romney's campaign points to figures that the Department of Education borrowed billions more from the Treasury than expected to meet student loan demand, and that those loans are performing worse than expected.

But experts such as Mark Kantrowitz, creator of the website finaid.org and a leading student aid expert, and others say looking at a given year's cash flow the way Romney's campaign does isn't how you tell whether any lender ? whether a bank or the government ? will eventually make or lose money on the loans it's making.

In fact, it's impossible to know whether taxpayers will make or lose money over time on the student loans Washington's now disbursing; that will depend on unpredictable variables like future interest rates, and how many borrowers default or choose the income-based repayment option.

Still, there are accounting methods to estimate the present value of the payments the government will collect on those loans over the coming years. The method the Congressional Budget Office is required by law to use values the $113 billion in direct loans Washington will disburse to students this year at $150 billion ? in other words, an asset worth $37 billion to taxpayers, not a liability. A different valuation method favored by some in Congress and many economists shows direct lending as less profitable, but still in the black and far more profitable than subsidized lending.

True, like any lender, the federal government could be "on the hook" for big losses if current projections are off and defaults jump. But that would also be true in the old system of government-guaranteed loans. Under current projections, direct lending will make money for taxpayers (though the point of the federal student loan program wasn't originally to make money; it was to help students attend college).

DeLisle, the former Republican staffer, is more blunt. He calls the Romney campaign's argument about costs in direct lending "a totally phony concept meant to bamboozle people into thinking we're borrowing from China to make these loans and it's going to take the federal government down."

Q. Any other differences?

A. The Obama administration has aggressively pushed to regulate for-profit colleges, which receive billions in taxpayer-funded student aid dollars but have higher default rates and lower completion rates than other types of schools. Romney says those regulations are misguided and will stamp out innovation and student choice.

____

Follow Justin Pope at http://www.twitter.com/JustinPopeAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/q-candidates-college-costs-140115892--election.html

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Stern to retire as NBA Commissioner in 2014

NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, left, listens as Commissioner David Stern speaks during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, left, listens as Commissioner David Stern speaks during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, left, smiles as Commissioner David Stern speaks during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NBA Commissioner David Stern speaks during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, left, laughs as Commissioner David Stern gestures toward him during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NBA Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver, left, poses for a photograph with Commissioner David Stern during a basketball news conference following Board of Governors meetings in New York, Thursday, Oct. 25, 2012. Stern announced he will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Silver. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

(AP) ? NBA Commissioner David Stern will retire on Feb. 1, 2014, 30 years after he took charge of the league. He will be replaced by Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver.

The announcement came at an NBA Board of Governors meeting Thursday.

Stern told owners during their two days of meetings of his plans, and the board unanimously decided Silver would be his successor.

"I decided that things are in great shape and there's an organization in place that will ultimately be led by Adam that is totally prepared to take it to the next level," Stern said.

Stern, who turned 70 last month, became commissioner on Feb. 1, 1984. He has been the NBA's longest-serving commissioner, establishing the league's brand around the world, presiding over team expansion and overseeing the establishment of the WNBA and the NBA Development League.

"You'll be remembered as the best of all-time," Silver told Stern, sitting to his left on a podium during a news conference.

Stern said he decided on his plans about six months ago, having guided the league through a lockout that ended nearly a year ago. He said the league is in great shape and he's confident in Silver, who has been the league's No. 2 since 2006.

"I don't know what else to say other than to recite what I told the owners yesterday in executive session," Stern said. "I told them that it's been a great run, it will continue for another 15 months, that the league is in, I think, terrific condition."

Stern is the one who got it there, taking over what was a second-rate league with little-to-no TV presence and making basketball one of the world's most popular sports.

He cited the success of the 1992 Dream Team, which helped spark the league's international explosion, but said everything "just keeps getting better than that."

"For the most part it's been a series of extraordinary experiences and enormous putting together of pieces of a puzzle and it goes on forever," Stern said. "And there will always be another piece of the puzzle and so the question is at what point do you decide that, let someone else do it? That's the point that I'm at now."

Stern was the league's outside counsel from 1966-78, then its general counsel before becoming executive vice president of business and legal affairs from 1980-84. He replaced Larry O'Brien to become the league's fourth commissioner.

The NBA has added seven franchises during his tenure.

Minnesota Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor, the outgoing chairman of the Board of Governors, said the average player salary had grown from $250,000 when Stern took over to $5 million.

The league has reported huge increases in ticket and merchandise sales, and TV ratings are at an all-time high.

"There are all kinds of other business metrics we could look at that would define David as one of the great business leaders of our time," Silver said.

Taylor and Spurs owner Peter Holt, who is replacing him as board chairman, said the owners will work to have a contract with Silver by April. Silver came to the NBA 20 years ago and served a variety of positions before becoming the deputy commissioner in 2006.

Stern said he wouldn't leave until he knew there was a successor ready, and he has repeatedly said Silver is ready for that role. Stern said he would always remain available to take a call and help the league.

"Life is a journey and it's been a spectacular journey," Stern said. "Each step along the way there are things that you have to do, things that you maybe wish you hadn't done. But I don't keep that list, and so I'm totally pleased and I'm particularly pleased with the transition of which we're now embarking."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-25-Stern-Retirement/id-f58eb8fc970844dab57ca482680f6ebb

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U.S. to study cancer risks near 6 nuclear plants

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced plans Tuesday to launch a pilot epidemiological study of cancer risks near six nuclear power plants, including San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in north San Diego County.

The commission is acting out of growing concern that using uranium to produce electricity may be dangerous even without accidents at nuclear plants. In addition, recent epidemiological studies in Germany and France suggest that the children living near nuclear reactors are twice as likely to develop leukemia.

The U.S. study will be conducted by the National Academy of Sciences, which will also help the commission determine whether to extend the study to all 65 U.S. nuclear power plants and certain nuclear fuel sites.

The pilot study will investigate cancer rates in each census tract within a 30-mile radius of the nuclear facilities, and assess cancers in children younger than 15 whose mothers lived near a nuclear facility during pregnancy. About 1 million people live within five miles of operating nuclear plants in the United States, and more than 45 million live within 30 miles, nuclear regulatory officials said.

The study will cost about $2 million and is to begin later this year, with the results available in 2014, commission spokesman Scott Burnell said. Before beginning, researchers will meet with communities near the plants to explain how the study will be conducted, Burnell said.

The academy chose sites that provide a broad representation of engineering designs and operating histories in states that have a variety of data retrieval systems in cancer registries.

The study area around the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, which has been out of commission since January because of equipment problems, encompasses 2.4 million people in more than 50 cities, including Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Tustin, Lake Elsinore, Temecula, Oceanside, Escondido, Solana Beach and Camp Pendleton.

The last time officials assessed cancer rates near nuclear power plants was in 1990. The National Cancer Institute studied cancer risks posed by the 104 licensed reactors the commission governed at that time. The study concluded that the health risks, if any, were too small to be measured.

The commission has been relying on the results of that study ever since to inform the public about cancer mortality rates near nuclear reactors.

"I'm very pleased about this pilot study," said Roger Johnson, a retired neuroscience professor and member of the nonprofit environmental group San Clemente Green, which has raised safety and health concerns about San Onofre.

"Most people are focused on accidents at nuclear power plants," Johnson said. "They don't realize that they store tons of radioactive material and emit low levels of radioactive waste into the atmosphere."

louis.sahagun@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/A-D5iputcU4/la-me-1024-san-onofre-cancer-20121024,0,7076665.story

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Gay GOP group offers 'qualified endorsement' for Romney

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A prominent gay Republican group offered Mitt Romney its "qualified endorsement" on Tuesday, calling it the right decision for the nation even as it slammed Romney's opposition to gay marriage.

Rather than offer the Republican presidential nominee its full support, Log Cabin Republicans said it will focus its efforts instead on Republican candidates for House and Senate who favor equality for gays and lesbians.

"If LGBT issues are a voter's highest or only priority, then Gov. Romney may not be that voter's choice," the group said in its endorsement, adding that its members value a diverse set of issues. "We believe Gov. Romney will make cutting spending and job creation his priorities, and, as his record as governor of Massachusetts suggests, will not waste his precious time in office with legislative attacks on LGBT Americans."

Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul said in an email that the candidate welcomes the endorsement and appreciates the group's support.

A lengthy explanation released by Log Cabin Republicans under the banner "We Are Americans First" was part endorsement, part rebuke to a Republican Party whose standard-bearers the group said "appear to be caught up in an outdated culture war." The group argued that Americans of all sexual orientations have suffered financially under President Barack Obama, and while Romney may not share all of their views, he could be worse.

"Mitt Romney is not Rick Santorum, and Paul Ryan is not Michele Bachmann. Otherwise, our decision would have been different," the group said.

Even so, Log Cabin Republicans, a vocal and long-time critic of Romney's opposition to gay marriage and civil unions, said it would continue fighting a federal amendment banning gay marriage, which Romney supports, and condemned "the aspects of the GOP platform which work to exclude our families."

Stonewall Democrats, a national gay group backing Obama, called the decision by Log Cabin Republicans shameful and insulting. "This is politics at its worst ? when a community sells out its own people for the gain of a few individuals," Jerame Davis, the group's executive director, said in a statement.

The last-minute endorsement by the Republican group reflected persistent tensions among gay conservatives about what role to play within a party still largely opposed to many of the broader gay community's priorities. Another gay Republican group, GOProud, in June said it would "enthusiastically endorse" Romney and pledged to "commit significant resources" to electing him.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gay-gop-group-hesitantly-backs-romney-163823972--election.html

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Fed likely to send wait-and-see signal at meeting

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Six weeks ago, the Federal Reserve unveiled its latest plan to invigorate the U.S. economy. This week, the Fed will likely send a simple message:

Give that plan time to work.

No major announcements are expected when the Fed's latest two-day policy meeting ends Wednesday. Instead, officials will likely affirm their plan to buy mortgage bonds as long as necessary to make home buying more affordable, keep short-term interest rates at record lows through mid-2015 and take other stimulative steps if hiring doesn't pick up.

Those policies are intended to support an economy that's shown flashes of strength but isn't growing fast enough to create many jobs or to increase Americans' income. The economy grew at a meager 1.3 percent annual rate in the April-June quarter.

Economists think it grew slightly faster in the July-September quarter. Yet many employers remain wary of hiring, in part because of tax increases and spending cuts set to kick in next year and in part because of a slowing global economy.

The $40 billion-a-month in bond purchases the Fed launched last month are designed to lower interest rates and cause stock and home prices to rise, creating a "wealth effect." When consumers feel wealthier, they're typically more willing to spend, thereby boosting the economy.

The Fed made clear it would likely hold rates low even after the economic recovery has strengthened. That was a signal that it will keep intervening until the economy grows fast enough to reduce unemployment sharply.

Now, the Fed likely wants to wait to assess the effects of its policies before deciding whether to take further action.

There's another reason to stand down for now: A debate is raging inside the Fed over whether its actions are doing much, if any, good. The Fed's moves last month were approved 11-1, with Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Richmond Federal Reserve Bank, dissenting. Since then, some other regional Fed presidents have expressed their discomfort.

The critics note that interest rates have already been at or near all-time lows. They worry that the Fed's injection of steadily more money into the financial system will eventually ignite inflation or create dangerous bubbles in the prices of stocks or other assets.

Since the 2008 financial crisis erupted, the Fed has bought more than $2 trillion in Treasurys and mortgage bonds to try to drive down long-term borrowing rates and accelerate the economy. Its portfolio of investments stands at $2.85 trillion ? more than three times its size before the crisis.

Since the Fed unveiled its latest plans last month, the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage has touched 3.36 percent ? the lowest since mortgage buyer Freddie Mac began keeping records in 1971. Cheap loans have helped lift home sales, prices and construction ? key pillars of the housing market's gradual but steady comeback.

Super-low rates have shrunk many bond yields close to zero and led some investors to shift money into stocks, whose prices have surged. Higher stock prices may help explain some of the recent gains in consumer confidence and retail spending.

One part of the Fed's drive to keep long-term borrowing rates down has been a program it began a year ago to sell short-term securities and use the proceeds to buy $45 billion in longer-term securities each month. This program is called "Operation Twist."

When Operation Twist is combined with the mortgage bond purchases the Fed launched in September, the central bank is buying $85 billion in long-term bonds each month.

Operation Twist is to expire at year's end, when the Fed will run out of short-term securities to sell.

Many analysts think the Fed may announce at its next policy meeting in mid-December that it will replace Twist with some other bond purchase program. Fed officials could decide to start buying enough new Treasurys to keep their total long-term-bond purchases at around $85 billion each month.

If the Fed decided instead to do nothing further, it might unsettle investors, said David Jones, chief economist at DMJ Advisors. A signal to financial markets that the Fed was reducing its bond purchases could send long-term rates up and stock prices down.

For now, investors seem pleased that the Fed is on a bond-buying spree.

The central bank is right to signal its commitment to support the economy until the job market strengthens, said Brian Bethune, an economics professor at Gordon College in Massachusetts.

Economic growth remains subpar despite the stronger housing market, a decline in the unemployment rate to 7.8 percent and retail sales in August and September that were the best back-to-back monthly gains in two years, according to Commerce Department data.

"We still have a weak economy, but it would have been flirting much closer to a recession if the Fed had not been as aggressive as it has been," Bethune said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fed-likely-send-wait-see-signal-meeting-070211185--finance.html

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Essential Arian Foster Jersey Internet Hosting Recommendations ...

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5 Don'ts In A Relationship Advice For Women - Ayushveda

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Rating: 5.0/5 (1 vote cast)

Relationship Advice For WomenWomen can have a dimensional variation to men?s opinion in a relationship. But in order that a relationship works optimally, both men and women have to give it a uniform shape despite all the differences. It is good if you can spontaneously get attuned to the changing needs of your partner and your partner gets in sync with yours. Women are believed to have a better capacity to adjust and (thereby) expected to be more flexible on this front.

Tips On Relationship For Women

There are worthy opportunities which can be utilized by women to give their relationship a promising meaning. Someone rightly said ? It is easier to pick the average apples from the bottom of the tree; but it is difficult to climb the top of the tree for the good ones. To get the good ones which serve more than the average ones, you should be prepared to climb the tree and equipped with the right skills.?Given here are some promising opportunities for women to gain from.

Don?t Expect 100% Happiness

Perfect match needs a broad definition when it comes to couples relationship. If you (as a woman) expect your man to be in 100% sync (with you), you are probably expecting too much. It is better to have practical expectations because, no matter whether you are from Mars or Venus, you both are humans. Keeping the expectation parameter a bit logical and practical can put you in a better position to deal with the realities of life. Try to be contended even if you do not agree to all your disagreements.

Don?t Ignore the Definition of Romance

Romance for you may be the love letters, cute cards and/or the fragrant flowers. But not essentially for him!

Don't Ignore the Definition of Romance

Your expression can differ from his and men generally do not seem tempted by the letters, cards or flowers. Being romantic for him can be related to the sex life both share. If you feel your ideas are too skewed and depart from each other?s, have a discussion to find a common definition which neither makes you nuts nor tries his patience.

Also Read

Relationship Advice For Women: How To Know If He?s The One
Relationship Advice For Women In Their 20s
Dating Advice For Women Above 30
Top 5 Relationship Advice For Men

Don?t Kill the Thrill

Men need to be challenged to get out the best within. This enthusiasm can drive your relationship to achieve new heights. Do not stay around him too much or get overwhelmed by him (or allow him to get overwhelmed by you). Have your own circle of friends and acquaintances and reveal your fulfilling life even while sharing his special place in your life. It can be better alone than have a poor company!

Don?t Forget the Right Permutation of Engagement and Separation

Both of you are individuals sharing some common and (some) uncommon goals in life. Privacy is an important element for both of you, even though you may love spending more time together.

5 Don'ts In A Relationship Advice For Women

Association and intimacy are vital in a relationship; but privacy has its role to play. Give your man the liberty to spend time with himself minus any of the very important family agenda. Even if it is for some time, your partner would like it.

Don?t Forget the Good Witch Within

Do not subdue the good witch within you! Let her direct you at some occasions, especially when you want to feel good about yourself. Maintain your dignity, and then a man shall respect you. When you will feel good about yourself, you will feel good about others. Love yourself!

5 Don'ts In A Relationship Advice For Women, 5.0 out of 5 based on 1 rating

Source: http://www.ayushveda.com/magazine/5-donts-in-a-relationship-advice-for-women/

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AP Exclusive: France sends drones for Mali crisis

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Wyoming Democrat wages lonely congressional fight (The Arizona Republic)

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Britain's first 4G service to start at 36 pounds a month

LONDON (Reuters) - Mobile operator EE said Britain's first 4G service will cost from 36 pounds a month under a pricing strategy designed to lure smartphone customers to its superfast network before rivals are able to launch competing products.

Chief Executive Olaf Swantee said the company's tariffs, which range from 36 pounds for 500MB of data to 56 pounds for 8GB, were about 10-20 percent more than for equivalent 3G plans. He said it was a small premium to pay for up to five times faster connections.

He declined to say how many customers the group, owned by France Telecom and Deutsche Telekom, expected to switch to 4G, which launches in 10 cities on October 30.

But he said EE had decided not to price 4G at the high premium seen in some other European countries.

"Our business model is more built around a fast adoption of 4G services ... because of our whole tariffing structure and tariffing strategy and because the UK in general has a big appetite to move to new technologies," he told reporters.

EE, which leads the British market with about 27 million customers, is able to roll out 4G before its rivals because the regulator has allowed it to re-use existing spectrum.

Telefonica's O2, Vodafone and Three will have to wait until next year to obtain the spectrum they need for their own 4G offers.

Swantee said the new service had already attracted a lot of interest from corporate customers, which currently provide just 14 percent of the group's revenues.

"We have a big opportunity on the back of a better, stronger, bigger 3G network, and being the first with 4G to get us into some new large accounts," he said.

Companies wanted fast mobile broadband so they could offer video conferencing and other business applications to workers, he said.

EE, previously know as Everything Everywhere, said it was spending tens of millions of pounds on publicity for the launch, including a television campaign fronted by film star Kevin Bacon, that will first air during the "X-Factor" on November 3.

All of the 24-month price plans available to consumers include unlimited calls and texts, the company said, although none includes a free smartphone, a stance taken partly to reduce fraud rates.

(Reporting by Paul Sandle; Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/britains-first-4g-start-36-pounds-month-230047481--finance.html

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NY man gets watch back 53 years after theft

ENDICOTT, N.Y. (AP) ? A man in upstate New York finally has his wristwatch back, 53 years after it was stolen.

Ed Grigor says he had long ago forgotten about the 23-jewel wristwatch stolen when he was in the Navy.

Then last month the Binghamton-area man got a call from a Las Vegas couple. They were able to track down Grigor because his name was engraved on the back of the watch.

The Press and Sun Bulletin of Binghamton (http://press.sn/XJqC6c ) reports that the mother of the woman who tracked down Grigor owned a guest house frequented by Navy servicemen stationed in Virginia Beach. When they ran low on money, she would hold collateral until they paid their bills, but some never came back.

When the woman's mother died, the watch was found among her possessions.

Grigor now calls his watch Time Traveler.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-man-gets-watch-back-53-years-theft-123819252.html

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Boy's 'miracle' cure makes 1st Native American saint

Jake Finkbonner was so close to death after flesh-eating bacteria infected him through a cut on his lip that his parents had last rites performed and were discussing donating the 5-year-old's tiny organs.

Jake's 2006 cure from the infection was deemed medically inexplicable by the Vatican, the "miracle" needed to propel a 17th century Native American, Kateri Tekakwitha, on to sainthood. Kateri will be canonized on Sunday along with six other people, the first Native American to receive the honor.

Jake is fully convinced, as is the church, that the prayers his family and community offered to Kateri, including the placement of a relic of the soon-to-be saint on Jake's leg, were responsible for his survival.

Jake, now 12 and an avid basketball player and cross-country runner, will be present at the canonization, along with hundreds of members of his own Lummi tribe from northwest Washington state and reservations across the U.S. and Canada who have converged on Rome to honor one of their own. It's a ceremony the Catholic Church hopes will encourage Native Americans to keep to their Christian faith amid continued resentment among some that Catholicism was imposed on them by colonial-era missionaries centuries ago.

"I believe everybody has a purpose on this earth," Jake's mother Elsa Finkbonner said this week soon after the family arrived in Rome for the ceremony. "I think this Sunday Jake will define his purpose, and that's to make Kateri a saint."

Jake, a poised, lanky kid who just got his braces off, seems perfectly at ease with his role in the whole thing, gracious and grateful to the doctors who performed 29 surgeries to save his life and reconstruct his face.

"It's a really special thing," Jake told The Associated Press, flanked by his parents on a hotel terrace sofa. "We've never been to Rome, and especially meeting the pope? It'll be an experience of a lifetime."

Pope inaugurates 'Year of Faith' amid concerns over rising secularism

Besides Kateri, Pope Benedict XVI will declare another American a saint Sunday, Mother Marianne Cope, a 19th century Franciscan nun from Utica, New York ? near where Kateri lived two centuries earlier ? who cared for lepers exiled to Hawaii's Kalaupapa Peninsula. Another new saint is Pedro Calungsod, a Filipino teenager who was killed in 1672 along with his Jesuit missionary priest by natives resisting their conversion efforts.

'Lily of the Mohawks'
The Catholic Church creates saints to hold up models for the faithful, convinced that their lives ? even lived hundreds of years ago ? are still relevant to today's Catholics. The complicated saint-making procedure requires that the Vatican certify a "miracle" was performed through the intercession of the candidate ? a medically inexplicable cure that can be directly linked to the prayers offered by the faithful. One miracle is needed for beatification, a second for canonization.

In Jake's case, Kateri was already an important figure for Catholics in the Lummi tribe, of which his father Donny is a member. A carved wooden statue sits in the church on the Lummi reservation near Bellingham, Washington, 25 miles south of the Canadian border, where Jake's grandparents worshipped and where Donny remembers being told of Kateri's story as a child.

Known as the "Lily of the Mohawks," Kateri was born in 1656 to a pagan Iroquois father and an Algonquin Christian mother in what is today upstate New York. Her parents and only brother died when she was 4 during a smallpox epidemic that left her badly scarred and with impaired eyesight. She went to live with her uncle, a Mohawk, and was baptized Catholic by Jesuit missionaries. But she was ostracized and persecuted by other natives for her faith, and she died in Canada when she was 24.

Pope tells Christians in Beirut: 'Be peacemakers'

The Rev. Tim Sauer was the Finkbonner's parish priest in Ferndale, Washington ? as well as the visiting pastor on the Lummi reservation ? when Jake cut his lip while playing basketball on Saturday, Feb. 11, 2006. The necrotizing fasciitis bacteria that entered Jake's body through the cut immediately began spreading, and by the time Sauer arrived at Seattle Children's Hospital where Jake was airlifted two days later, Donny and Elsa Finkbonner were preparing to bury their son.

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"At that point, we were desperate, and we were looking for anyone's help that would help our son," Donny said, recalling how doctors had said there wasn't much else for them to do but pray, and that they had come to terms with the possibility that their oldest of three children might not survive the week.

"We wanted Jake back with us desperately," he recalled. "But we were willing to give him up" to God.

Sauer, who performed the last rites ritual on Jake that Wednesday ? four days after he cut his lip ? said he immediately urged the Finkbonners and the congregation back on the reservation to pray to Kateri, thinking their shared Native American heritage and scarring diseases were relevant.

He said he did so first and foremost to save Jake, but also because he thought that Native Americans could use a "boost of faith" if one of their own were held up as a saint. Indigenous Catholics, he said, increasingly find themselves ostracized and criticized on their reservations for embracing and retaining the Christian faith spread by imperial colonizers.

"There's been a growing sense of a return to Native American spirituality on reservations, which are good things, but at the same time along with that has been some criticism that native people should let go of Christianity because that was brought by the 'white man' and should go back to their own native culture entirely," he said.

Pope holds Easter candle at Vatican vigil

He said Kateri represents a perfect model for indigenous Catholics today, someone who resisted the ostracization of fellow natives and kept the faith.

Prayer was all they had left
For the devoutly Catholic Finkbonners, prayer was all they had left after Jake's doctors tried unsuccessfully for two weeks to stop the bacteria's spread. Jake was in a drug-induced coma for most of that time and says he doesn't remember much, a few memories "here and there, not all of it."

"Every day it would seem the news would get worse," Donny recalled. "I remember the last day that we met with the whole group of doctors, Elsa didn't even want to hear. She just got behind me and was holding on."

But rather than bad news, the doctors said the infection had stopped. "It was like a volcano that was erupting, and they opened him up and it was gone. It had stopped. It was a pretty amazing day," Donny said.

Are nuns getting ready to spurn the Vatican?

It took the Finkbonners several years to realize that the turning point had come a day after a friend of the family ? a nun named after Kateri ? had visited them in the hospital, prayed with them and placed a relic of the soon-to-be saint on Jake's leg.

"It took years for us to look at the calendar and recall that this is the day she came, this is the day she put the relic on, this is the day the infection stopped," Elsa said. "As the years of the investigation have gone on, little bits and pieces of puzzle seem to fall into place, and that's where it all makes sense now as to why Jake's story turned out so big."

Jake, who bears the scars of his ordeal, seems all too happy to be the center of attention this weekend. But he seems keen to move on from his celebrity. He has basketball tryouts when he gets back home and his studies ? he wants to be a plastic surgeon when he grows up. "Kateri was placed on this earth, and she has interceded on many people's behalf, she has defined her purpose," Elsa said. "I think Jake has bigger, larger plans in store for him."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49485707/ns/world_news-europe/

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Lebanese mourn anti-Syrian official killed in car bombing

Thousands of Lebanese attended the funeral for Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan, an opponent of Syria, who died in a massive car bombing. Some have called him a martyr.

By Bassem Mroue,?Associated Press / October 21, 2012

Police and protesters clash after the funeral of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan in Beirut, Lebanon Oct. 21.

Hussein Malla/AP

Enlarge

Soldiers carried two flag-draped coffins through a central Beirut square packed with thousands of Lebanese mourners who turned out on Sunday for the funeral of a top intelligence official and his bodyguard. The men were killed in a massive car bombing that many blame on the regime in neighboring Syria.

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Soldiers set up road blocks and cordoned off Martyrs Square, where the coffins of Brig. Gen. Wissam al-Hassan and his bodyguard were brought for burial.

"We came for Lebanon's future to show that we will not be scared," said Arama Fakhouri, an interior designer from Beirut in the cheering crowd. Many people were shouting that al-Hassan was a martyr who was struck down while trying to protect Lebanon.

Al-Hassan, 47, was a powerful opponent of Syria in Lebanon. He headed an investigation over the summer that led to the arrest of former Information Minister Michel Samaha, a Lebanese politician who was one of Syria's most loyal allies in Lebanon. He was among eight people killed in the attack on Friday.

"He was killed while he was defending his country," said Samer al-Hirri, who traveled from northern Lebanon to attend the funeral.

Ahead of the burial, there was a memorial ceremony attended by government officials and al-Hassan's wife Anna, his two sons, Majd and Mazen, and his parents.

Even before Friday's bombing, the civil war in neighboring Syria had set off violence in Lebanon and deepened tensions between supporters and opponents of President Bashar Assad's regime. The attack heightened fears that Lebanon could easily plunge back into cycles of sectarian violence and reprisal that have haunted it for decades.

France's foreign minister said it was likely that Assad's government had a hand in the assassination. Laurent Fabius told Europe-1 radio that while it was not fully clear who was behind the attack, it was "probable" that Syria played a role.

"Everything suggests that it's an extension of the Syrian tragedy," he said.

Dozens of anti-Syrian protesters erected eight tents near the Cabinet headquarters in central Beirut, saying they will stay until Prime Minister Najib Mikati's government, which is dominated by the Shiite militant group Hezbollah and its allies, resigns. Hezbollah is Syria's most powerful ally in Lebanon, which for much of the past 30 years has lived under Syrian military and political domination.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/PEzvlG0sO60/Lebanese-mourn-anti-Syrian-official-killed-in-car-bombing

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Brisbane Fitness & Health Expo Recap ? Crave

Oh my! Can you say HUGE day? I told you yesterday it was going to be busy, and it definitely was- even though I didn?t manage to get through everything on that list! I have SO much from the Brisbane Fitness & Health Expo that I want to discuss and share with you, so what I?m going to do is give you a run down and then show you a bazillion different pictures. In particular, Michelle Bridges was incredibly inspirational and I?ll probably break down a few points from her speech in multiple posts- because it was really that good.

I literally have a million different things buzzing through my head that I want to share with you, but I think for your sanity I?ll stick with just a run down of the expo. Okay, so you know I was predicting my kid in a candy shop type excitement and I was right. As soon as we got there I was looking every which way and the three hours totally flied by!

Right near the entrance was my current new yummy- SlimPasta. The man was super sweet and showed me their new Fettucine product (along with their wok-ready, angel hair and spaghetti).

He was also kind enough to give me a freebie of my favourite type, the wok-ready (flat noodle)- which reminds me?I forgot to tell you about that on Saturday! I had it on Friday night for dinner and it was by far their best product I?ve tried. Gimme gimme!

?

I also saw some other familiar faces- like my FAV Chobani yogurt!

I seriously cannot get enough of the Chobani brand and everyone who worked there was incredibly helpful and nice. I managed to also snag some recipe cards, a chobani magnet and a whole box of plain chobanis (my fav) to take home! They won?t last long- what with all their deliciousness, uses and versatility! It was pretty cool to see just about every person there walking around eating a bowl of Chobani yogurt!

I?m not bias though, not all my friends are food-related. I also saw a fav gym wear shop- Lorna Jane.

?

I was salivating as I looked through the beautiful items, along with the 20% off sign! I actually asked if my gift card could be used and was a bit put off when a quite rude lady obviously thought I wasn?t worth her time and gave me a blunt no without even acknowledging or looking at me. So that was a bit disappointing since I love the brand so much and now I?ve got a slightly sour taste in my mouth about it.

With the stuff I knew, there was also the stuff I wanted- badly (oh to have unlimited $$$). There was a Vitamix stand and I was standing in awe at its? awesomeness. One day, you?ll be mine!

Speaking of awe- this lady left me dumbstruck. She is absolutely incredible and I fell in love with her as she talked.

Don?t worry I?ll try to capture her amazing-ness in future posts (yes I was that loser who took notes) and share it all with you! I also was lucky enough to get a photo with her (which I look terrible in haha) and her autograph. She was so lovely as she introduced herself to each person, got their names, autographed whatever and took photos. She also liked to chat it seemed, and this caused the line to slow down at times- oh well, so worth it ;)

?

Other demonstrations and presentations were going on too. Like arm wrestling, strong man competitions, bench press comp, fitness models and Mr Australia. He has HUGE calves. I?m totally blanking when it comes to his name and I actually can?t find it anywhere! :S

?

There were also plenty of other stalls that interested me like shoe stalls, magazine stalls (I got an Oxygen & Clean Eating mag!), clothes stalls, and those with vitamins and supplements.

?

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That last picture is from the MissFit Sportswear stall. They had rocking clothes- bold colours, cool styles, and were very reasonably priced for gym wear! I didn?t get anything but I?ll definitely check out their website soon!

Oh and look what I DID buy.

?

I can now get my foam roll on with my very own foam roller ;)

Well this is a ginormous post, and hopefully I?ve stimulated your eyes with all my (dodgy) photos. I am already excited about next year- I?ll be there for sure! Thanks for having me Brisbane Fitness & Health Expo!

DAILY HEALTHY THOUGHT: I love myself!

What was your favourite stall at the expo? Who is your ultimate fitness inspiration?

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Source: http://icraved.wordpress.com/2012/10/21/brisbane-fitness-health-expo-recap/

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

APNewsBreak: Questions for Medicare in outbreak

FILE - In this May 15, 2012 file photo, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks in Bethesda, Md. Medicare, overseen by Sebelius' department, is coming under scrutiny in the meningitis outbreak that has rekindled doubts about the safety of the nation?s drug supply. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

FILE - In this May 15, 2012 file photo, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks in Bethesda, Md. Medicare, overseen by Sebelius' department, is coming under scrutiny in the meningitis outbreak that has rekindled doubts about the safety of the nation?s drug supply. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

(AP) ? Medicare is coming under scrutiny in the meningitis outbreak that has rekindled doubts about the safety of the nation's drug supply.

The giant health insurance program for seniors long ago flagged compounded drugs produced for the mass market without oversight from the Food and Drug Administration as safety risks. In 2007, Medicare revoked coverage of compounded inhaler drugs for lung disease.

But Medicare doesn't seem to have consistently used its own legal power to deny payment, and critics say that has enabled the compounding business to flourish.

Now program officials are scrambling to find out how many Medicare beneficiaries are among the more than 250 people sickened in 16 states in a still-growing outbreak that has claimed 20 lives.

The illnesses have been linked to an injectable steroid used to treat back pain, made by the New England Compounding Center, a Massachusetts specialty pharmacy. The medication was contaminated with a fungus.

A senior lawmaker and consumer advocates are raising questions about Medicare's role, including an apparent lack of coordination between Medicare and the FDA, the two most powerful agencies within the federal Health and Human Services Department.

In response, a department spokesman says Congress needs to provide the FDA with stronger powers.

The meningitis outbreak has called attention to the role of compounding pharmacies in supplying medications routinely used by hospitals and doctors to treat patients. Regulated primarily by states, the pharmacies specialize in customizing doses for individual patients who have allergies to ingredients in an FDA-approved drug, or who might need a smaller dosage than what's available commercially. But some pharmacies have pushed into full-scale manufacturing.

Medicare has long been aware of the risks.

"By compounding drugs on a large scale, a company may be operating as a drug manufacturer within the meaning of (federal law), without complying with requirements of that law," Medicare's coverage manual, a reference for contractors that handle payments, says in a section dealing with compounded drugs.

That situation, adds the manual, fails Medicare's basic standard, that treatments must be "reasonable and necessary" in order to be covered. "This means, in the case of drugs, the FDA must approve them for marketing," says the manual.

It goes on to say that billing contractors should wait for instructions from Medicare before cutting off payment in specific cases where the FDA has determined that a company is producing compounded drugs in violation of the law.

"Medicare indicates in its own policy documents that it can cut off payments for compounded drugs produced under manufacturing-like conditions," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who over the years has pushed for stronger government oversight of the pharmaceutical industry.

"Medicare should explain whether it uses this step, and if not, why not. Every avenue for explaining how this health crisis occurred and preventing others like it needs exploration," he added.

Joyce Lovelace of Albany, Ky., says she doesn't understand how the outbreak could have happened. Eddie Lovelace, her husband of 55 years, died of a stroke after receiving injections of the steroid implicated in the outbreak as a treatment for pain from an auto accident.

"I'm 100 percent behind not paying ... whether it's Medicare, Blue Cross, or whatever," she said. "Somebody dropped the ball and as a result my husband is gone." Eddie Lovelace, 78, a long-serving judge, was still working at the time of his death and Medicare was not his primary insurance.

Medicare officials are looking into whether the program paid for drugs that have sickened patients.

"If the FDA determines a company is producing compounded drugs in violation of (federal law), Medicare will not reimburse for drugs produced in that facility," said HHS spokesman Tait Sye. "The FDA's regulatory authority over compounding pharmacies is more limited by statute than it is for typical drug manufacturers. We urge Congress to strengthen the FDA's authority."

FDA records show that in 2006 the agency issued a warning letter to the New England Compounding Center for producing anesthetic creams, but officials were unable to say if Medicare was alerted.

In a separate case, Medicare seems to have taken sweeping action on its own without much prodding from the FDA. In 2007, Medicare stopped coverage for compounded inhalation drugs used to treat lung disease.

"Compounded drugs are not considered interchangeable with FDA-approved products," said an information bulletin at the time from Noridian, a major Medicare payment contractor. "The absence of testing for safety and effectiveness has the potential of putting a patient at increased risk of injury, illness or death."

Michael Carome, deputy director of Public Citizen's health research group, says Medicare's policy on compounded drugs seems "internally contradictory."

"They do appear to have a policy for which the default setting is that Medicare does not cover drugs that have not been approved by the FDA," said Carome. "That essentially applies to many, if not all, drugs made by compounding pharmacies."

Medicare's defenders say the agency may be reluctant to act for a number of reasons. Cutting off compounding pharmacies could aggravate drug shortages. Also it could open Medicare to a political counterattack from industry, even charges of rationing.

But Carome, a kidney specialist who once served in an HHS regulatory office, says the alternative is that compounding will continue with little federal oversight and recurring outbreaks.

If Medicare had expanded its compounding crackdown beyond just lung disease medications, "that might have prevented the widespread use of these drugs," Carome said. "Without coverage, things don't get used."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2012-10-19-AP-US-Meningitis-Outbreak-Medicare/id-d7a4939c158e430ba609881e4ea1008b

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