Monday, November 28, 2011

UN: Syrian forces commit 'crimes against humanity' (AP)

GENEVA ? A U.N. probe has found that Syrian troops killed hundreds of children and committed other "crimes against humanity" since the government crackdown began in March.

A panel of independent experts says at least 256 children were killed by government forces as of early November, with some boys sexually tortured and a 2-year-old girl shot to death just to prevent her from growing up to be a demonstrator.

The panel's report to the U.N. Human Rights Council says government forces have used excessive force to "shot indiscriminately at unarmed protesters" while snipers targeted others in the upper body and head.

Their report, released Monday, said Syrian security forces along with militias were given "shoot to kill" orders to crush demonstrations.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_re_eu/eu_un_rights_syria

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Teen tweeter won't apologize to Kan. governor (Providence Journal)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/167050999?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

2011 Holiday Guides: Gifts for iPhone and iPad geeks

Geeks are really difficult to buy for. They know everything. They have everything. Every iPhone case, every iPad stand, one of each color for every model ever released. So unlike our other 2011 holiday gift guides that focus on awesome gifts to make your iPhone or iPad better,...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/QBrosqYFFX0/story01.htm

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Photoblog: Cattle banditry threatens peace in young country of South Sudan

Cattle raids are not new in South Sudan. But with a gun surplus left behind by two decades of civil war with Sudan, the raids are more violent, adding fuel to long-standing economic and ethnic rivalries?in the herding communities. South Sudan officially became Africa's 54th nation in July, but the young country continues to struggle with internal violence.

Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

A herdsman from the Dinka tribe is pictured at a cattle-camp near south Sudan's central town of Rumbek.

BBC News describes the importance of cattle to the South Sudanese culture:

In many South Sudanese communities the cow is incredibly important.

It is a source of personal wealth, and young men cannot get married without paying a dowry of cows.

So, in what are very poor communities, cattle raiding has become a way of life for some.

To make matters worse, automatic weapons are everywhere, following decades of civil war.

In the past, cattle raids caused relatively few casualties. Now the guns boom, and scores or even hundreds die in a day - creating a commensurate desire for revenge.?

Tony Karumba / AFP - Getty Images

A herdsman stands among his cattle at a cattle-camp near south Sudan's central town of Rumbek on Nov. 13. One of Africa's longest-running wars left this land in ruins and battling a bitter legacy that threatens prospects for peace -- a stockpile of weapons spurring cattle raids and banditry.

See more about Sudan's split?into two countries

Source: http://photoblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/25/9025528-cattle-banditry-threatens-peace-in-young-country-of-south-sudan

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Light Strike Assault Striker D.C.R-012


The holiday season is fast approaching, and again parents are asking themselves, "What should I get my kid?" The Light Strike Assault Striker D.C.R-012 ($39.99 list) is the at-home consumer version of laser tag. It comes with one gun and a plastic orb for target practice?and batteries are not included. Playing with this high-tech toy is fun, but parents be warned if you have no intention of joining in the fire-fight: This toy is noisy.

The Assault Striker D.C.R-012 has a bright sci-fi pattern on the exterior, and from the box image you may think you're getting a dynamically molded gun, but it's just a bunch of stickers on a flat surface, which may leave the gun prone to looking weathered quickly if the stickers start to peel. The gun has a lot of touch-sensitive buttons, the most important one parents and stealth shooters will want to take note of is the volume button. You can't completely mute the gun, but you can install ear buds into the headphone jack to silence the weapon.

Setting up the Assault Striker D.C.R-012 will require a Phillips head screwdriver and four AA batteries for the gun, and three AAA batteries for the Strike Target.

The Laser Strike isn't that heavy, and it's pretty accurate. It has a range of 30 feet, and when I took the orb out for target practice, the further away I went, the more challenging it was to hit the target, which I thought was well within reason. Booting up the gun, requires only to flip a switch and press the "fingerprint reader" touch button. You can have up to 4 players in an all-out deathmatch and up to 4 teams in a team deathmatch. The features on the gun remind me of a certain sci-fi first-person shooter game (Halo). There's a shield button, which halves any damage that you may take when activated, and the built-in health meter tracks how much damage you've taken (the gun also functions as the tag sensor). There's also a weapon selection button that allows you to switch between several "weapon" modes to help you with your strategy?unless you just like to run-and-gun.

Laser: It's the default weapon mode that doesn't offer a lot of firepower, but you'll be able to get your shots off quicker.

Stealth: This option allows you to shoot with the same power and frequency as the Laser Strike, but your shots will be muffled.

Pulse: This mode with use up your ammo faster and has a longer delay between blasts, but it packs a lot more damage per shot.

Rail: This weapon mode offers even more firepower, but also goes through ammo fast and there's a longer delay between shots.

Sonic: This mode is the biggest "weapon" in your arsenal, packing the largest amount of damage, but you'll go through ammo quickly and there's a long delay between blasts.

The Assault Striker D.C.R-012 also has room for expansion options, like the Enemy Scanner, Scope, Rapid Fire System, and Refractor Launch System that may give wealthier children an edge against their competition.

If there are a lot of kids in your neighborhood, this gift is definitely a good buy especially if it's a coordinated effort among the other parents. I had a lot of fun playing with it, running around the office (after work hours) and essentially skeet-shooting with the plastic orb.

More Toy Reviews:
??? The Hottest Tech Toys for Kids
??? Light Strike Assault Striker D.C.R-012
??? VTech Kidizoom Camera
??? LeapFrog Tag Reading System
??? Lite Sprites Prisma and Lite Wand
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/2gaFo7SRrBw/0,2817,2396716,00.asp

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Good Science Always Has Political Ramifications

Features | More Science

Why? Because a scientifically testable claim can be shown to be either most probably true or false, whether the claim is made by a king or a president, a Pope, a Congressperson, or a common citizen. [Book Excerpt]


Image: Rodale books

When speaking about science to scientists, there is one thing that can be said that will almost always raise their indignation, and that is that science is inherently political and that the practice of science is a political act. Science, they will respond, has nothing to do with politics. But is that true?

Let's consider the relationship between knowledge and power. "Knowledge and power go hand in hand," said Francis Bacon, "so that the way to increase in power is to increase in knowledge."

At its core, science is a reliable method for creating knowledge, and thus power. Because science pushes the boundaries of knowledge, it pushes us to constantly refine our ethics and morality, and that is always political. But beyond that, science constantly disrupts hierarchical power structures and vested interests in a long drive to give knowledge, and thus power, to the individual, and that process is also political.

The politics of science is nothing new. Galileo, for example, committed a political act in 1610 when he simply wrote about his observations through a telescope. Jupiter had moons and Venus had phases, he wrote, which proved that Copernicus had been right in 1543: Earth revolved around the sun, not the other way around, as contemporary opinion?and the Roman Catholic Church?held. These were simple observations, there for anyone who wanted to look through Galileo's telescope to see.

But the simple statement of an observable fact is a political act that either supports or challenges the current power structure. Every time a scientist makes a factual assertion?Earth goes around the sun, there is such a thing as evolution, humans are causing climate change?it either supports or challenges somebody's vested interests.

. . .

Why did the church go to such absurd lengths to deal with Galileo? For the same reasons we fight political battles over issues like climate change today: Because facts and observations are inherently powerful, and that power means they are political.

Failing to acknowledge this leaves both science and America vulnerable to attack by antiscience thinking?thinking that has come to dominate American politics and much of its news media coverage and educational curricula in the early twenty-first century. Thinking that has steered American politics off course and away from the vision held by the country's founders.

Wishing to sidestep the painful moral and ethical parsing that their discoveries sometimes compel, many scientists today see their role to be the creation of knowledge and believe they should leave the moral, ethical, and political implications to others to sort out. But the practice of science itself cannot possibly be apolitical, because it takes nothing on faith. The very essence of the scientific process is to question long-held assumptions about the nature of the universe, to dream up experiments that test those questions, and, based on the observations, to incrementally build knowledge that is independent of our beliefs and assumptions. A scientifically testable claim is utterly transparent and can be shown to be either most probably true or false, whether the claim is made by a king or a president, a pope, a congressperson, or a common citizen. Because of this, science is inherently antiauthoritarian, and a great equalizer of political power.

AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS

Because this is the case, it's reasonable to ask how science fits into political thought. Science writer Timothy Ferris reminds us that in politics there are not just two forces, the progressive left (encouraging change) and the conservative right (seeking constancy). In fact, there are four. Imagined on a vertical axis, there are also the authoritarian (totalitarian, closed, and controlling, at the bottom of the axis) and the antiauthoritarian (liberal, open, and freedom loving, at the top), which one can argue have actually played much more fundamental roles in human history. Politics, then, can be more accurately thought of as a box with four quadrants rather than as a linear continuum from left to right.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=8df82d052c56c7a1e3fa1c9bf54679b3

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Majority of ex-rebels seek to join national army (AP)

SHAKTIKHOR, Nepal ? For a decade, Maoist rebel fighters waged brutal warfare against Nepal's army. Five years after the end of the war, thousands of former insurgents are now joining that very army.

Government monitors have been interviewing 19,000 ex-fighters in camps to ascertain who wants to join the military and who prefers to take a rehabilitation package of up to 900,000 rupees ($11,500) in cash.

That's enough to buy a small farm or shop, or sustain a family for a few years in rural Nepal.

Still, two-thirds of the former members of the "People's Liberation Army" interviewed by government-assigned monitors in recent days said they favored taking a secure job and joining up with their former enemies in the national army.

"We have forgotten the bitterness we had against the army and now are ready to work together," said Santu Darai, the head of the 7th Division of the Maoist force. "But they should respect us and treat us as equals."

Darai said the integration should not be too problematic because both the former rebel force and the Nepal Army consider their main goal to be defending the country and its people.

Under the agreement reached earlier this month between Nepal's major political parties, the ex-fighters would be part of a new division under the command of the Nepal Army commander and used mainly for noncombat duties like construction and emergency response.

Integrating former insurgents into national armies is seen as an important tool for ensuring trained ex-combatants have stable jobs and a stake in keeping the peace of the nation. South Africa staved off further conflict when it integrated former anti-apartheid fighters into the military in the 1990s.

Nepal's former rebels would still have to go through the normal recruitment tests and health checks before they can join. The army says it is working to accommodate the new additions.

"We can't and won't hold any prejudice against them. We have to move forward and instead of having any negative attitude we have to be optimistic," said army spokesman, Brig. Gen. Ramindra Chhetri.

"The main thing is peace. The rest are minor things that we can overcome," he said.

Dil Bahadur Magar, 28, who fought for the Maoists, said he sees his future only in the army.

"Being part of the security force is what I know how to do and what I plan to do in the future," said Magar, who was interviewed at the Shaktikhor camp in the southern Nepal district of Chitwan.

Once enlisted, they would receive an annual salary of about $2,400, plus food, housing and other benefits.

A few who were not opting for the army said they would take a lump sum, return home and open up small business or work on ancestral farms.

Anita Chaudhury, who was with her 1-year-old child, said she planned to resume working on a village farm.

"I have already fought several wars and now they want us to go through recruitment tests. It is like a high school student having to go through kindergarten," Chaudhury said.

The Maoists fought government troops in a bloody, 10-year revolt to demand political reforms and end Nepal's centuries-old monarchy. More than 13,000 people were killed in the fighting.

The Maoists joined a peace process in 2006 under an agreement stipulating that the insurgents be integrated into the army, and that in the interim they would be confined in U.N. monitored camps, with their weapons locked up.

Maoists won the most seats ? though not an outright majority ? in 2008 elections. But political disputes stymied efforts to integrate the insurgents into the military. The Maoists wanted all 19,000 fighters to be inducted into the army, while military leaders and other political parties resisted.

Tensions have eased in the five years since the end of the fighting, and earlier this month, the sides finally reached agreement to induct 6,500 ex-fighters into the 93,000-strong army and to give cash and retraining to the others.

It was still not clear what would happen if more than 6,500 opt for the army and pass the recruitment tests.

Balananda Sharma, chief of the monitors conducting the interviews, said the process was expected to be completed next week.

Former insurgent Bikash Shahi, 28, said he was confident he would pass the tests for recruitment.

"My future is with the army. I plan to move forward in life with the army," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_as/as_nepal_former_rebels

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Is It Ever Worthwhile to Line Up for Black Friday? [Black Friday]

Is It Ever Worthwhile to Line Up for Black Friday?This year's Black Friday deals look pretty decent, with Best Buy offering a 42-inch LCD TV for $200 and Office Depot selling a 15.6-inch laptop for $400. But are these deals worth waiting in line at absurd hours in the November cold? Let's do some calculations.

I've lined up a few times for Black Friday in the past, waking up while it's still dark and putting on warm clothes?never warm enough, for some reason?to stand outside a store with a couple hundred other people in search for a deal. Problem is, I always make the mistake of thinking arriving for an 8:00 AM store opening at 5:00 or 6:00 AM will be good enough to get me a decent place in line; not first, but maybe 60th or so. I'm always wrong, and no matter how early I get there, it's always already packed with people who have been there since the night before.

Lesson 1: You can never arrive early enough to a big Black Friday sale.

But alright, let's suppose you're committed to this than me. What's the next step?

Where should you line up?

All the best deals (the door-busters) at every store will be sold out within the first twenty people, meaning that if you're lining up, it should be at the store with the thing you want the most. First, figure out what you you actually need, and by need, I mean things that you are going to buy even without a sale.

Let's say you wanted a new TV, a new printer, and a new router. Now look at the deals and figure out how much money you'd save on each item. This year, you're getting a TV from Best Buy at $300 off, a printer at OfficeMax for $170 off, and a new router also at OfficeMax for $30 off. It should be obvious that you should go to Best Buy, because even though Office Max has two of the items you want, you're saving more money in total by buying the TV. So even if you had to pay full price for the printer and router later on?you won't, because there are more sales elsewhere and Cyber Monday is coming up?you've still optimized your savings.

Of course, this is all moot if you're not going to actually line up early enough to get get the deal. See lesson one.

When is the optimum time to line up?

The question of "when you should line up" depends heavily on what store, how good their deals are this year and what kind of people live in the area. It's a little delicate to say, but if your target store is in a neighborhood with a lot of gated communities and high-priced homes, chances are those residents won't be lining up at 4AM to save a couple hundred bucks on a TV or a computer. The rest of us can take advantage.

But no matter what, your driving principle should be to minimize the time spent at the store?which includes all the time spent in the car, waiting in line, shopping, checking out, and on the way home. It's all the time between you pulling out of your garage and going back in. If you leave home at 3:00 AM, get to the store at 3:30, get inside at 9:00, check out at 9:30 and get back home at 11:00, that's a total of 8 hours, or one full work-day.

Adjusting your entry time will naturally affect your exit time. In our hypothetical example, if you line up the previous night at 10:00 PM, which should probably guarantee you a top-10 or 20 slot, your entry time will be 8:00, exit time will be 8:30, and you get home at 9:00. That's 12 hours. Similarly, if you leave your house at 7:00 AM, the line might be so long and checkout so slow that you're not getting back home until 2:00 PM, for a total of 7 hours.

Obviously you want to be as early in the line as possible, not just because it's faster, but because you want the best deals. So as much as it may hurt your body and your soul, to ensure you get that TV for $300 off, you're going to have to spend the whole night standing outside Best Buy.

How much is your time worth?

In our previous Best Buy TV example, you saved $300 on a TV but spent 12 hours doing so, which is the equivalent of working a job for 12 hours and getting paid $25 per hour. That's actually a post-tax number, so you'd need to make $36 per hour in order to make it out the door with $25 (at a 30% tax rate). Now, $36 an hour is a pretty decent pay rate (it comes out to about $72,000 a year), so if you make less than this at your current job, it's sort of like you're working a second job at a higher rate. Plus, you're not doing a whole lot at this gig other than standing outside in the cold?a pretty easy job description for any job, especially one in which you can and are encouraged to fall asleep.

Also, a lot of us work jobs where we get a set pay rate per month, so we can't just go up to our bosses and say, "Hey Bob, I'm gonna put in 12 extra hours today, so I'm gonna expect appropriate compensation at the end of the month." Hence, the $300 savings is an opportunity you wouldn't normally get at your normal job.

On the other hand, how much is your free time worth? Are you willing to postpone a night's sleep for $300? Some people (understandably) aren't. If you're just going to conk out when you get home after Black Friday, you're basically losing a good chunk of that day. Are your relatives in town? Would you rather be spending time with them? Or if it's not spending time with your relatives, would you rather be spending time with people you love? These are all things you should consider when you calculate how much your time is worth on Black Friday.

Furthermore, if at any point during the night you feel like saying, "I would pay them $300 if I could go home and go back to sleep," then you shouldn't line up. It's a similar idea to paying $75 every two weeks for someone to clean your house. If you hate cleaning and would rather be doing anything else, it's money well spent. If you hate lining up and doing nothing for eight hours, it might be worthwhile to pay to NOT do that, which is essentially what you're doing by not waiting getting in on this deal.

But if you have a good group of people with you and turn it into a fun night out, that's worth something as well.

How about Cyber Monday?

On the flip side of this weekend, Cyber Monday is a made-up holiday I can get behind. When you look at Black Friday, you're outside, in the cold (or rain), with a bunch of strangers standing in line being bored. On Cyber Monday, you're at work, sitting in your comfy office chair, in a temperature-controlled environment in front of a computer. And, because Cyber Monday has become more and more popular and the deals are getting better and better?to even Black Friday-ish levels?you don't necessarily have to wait in line to get the stuff you want.

So to recap, on Cyber Monday, you're:

  • Not super cold
  • Paid to be there
  • Saving just about as much money as Black Friday
  • Not bored because you have a computer in front of you that has access to THE INTERNET
  • Getting out of doing actual work because you're shopping

Unless you have a specific deal during Black Friday that you're unlikely to get on Cyber Monday, it seems pretty clear what you should do.


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/EK3XFmtHDN8/is-it-ever-worthwhile-to-line-up-for-black-friday

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

PFT: Romo, Cowboys know how to escape

Green Bay Packers v Detroit LionsGetty Images

In the past, when Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh has supplied his version of an on-field incident that resulted in a penalty or a fine, he seemed persuasive.

After Thursday?s Haynesworthy performance against the Packers, Suh?s effort to talk his way out of trouble comes off as pathetic.

?What I did was remove myself from the situation the best way that I felt in me being held down in the situation that I was in,? Suh said, via NFL.com.? ?My intentions were not to kick anybody, as I did not.? [I was] removing myself, as you see, I?m walking away from the situation.? And with that I apologize to my teammates, and my fans and my coaches for putting myself to be in position to be misinterpreted and taken out of the game.?

It gets better.? Or, for Suh, worse.

?I was on top of a guy being pulled down and trying to get up off the ground, which is why you see me pushing his helmet down,? Suh said.? ?As I?m getting up, I?m getting pushed so I?m getting myself unbalanced. . . .? With that a lot of people are going to interpret it as or create their own storylines, . . . but I know what I did, and the man upstairs knows what I did.?

What Suh did requires no interpretation.? He aggressively pushed the head of Evan Dietrich-Smith into the ground, and Suh stomped on Dietrich-Smith?s arm as Suh started to walk away.

?I understand in this world because of the type of player and type of person I am, all eyes are on me,? Suh said.? ?So why would I do something to jeopardize myself, jeopardize my team, first and foremost?? I don?t do bad things.? I have no intentions to hurt someone.? If I want to hurt him, I?m going to hit his quarterback as I did throughout that game.?

He needs to quit while he?s not ahead.

?If I see a guy stepping on somebody I feel like they?re going to lean into it and forcefully step on that person or stand over that person,? Suh said.? ?I?m going in the opposite direction to where he?s at.?

It?s an amazingly flimsy, and perhaps delusional, effort to explain what was obvious to anyone with eyes.? Apart from the ultimate penalty that will be imposed on Suh by the league office ? and plenty of people believe a suspension is coming ? Suh needs to be concerned about the impact of his behavior and his lame explanation of it on his marketability.? From Subway to Chrysler to any other company that has chosen to give Suh a lot of money to endorse its products, that money could be drying up, quickly.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/11/24/romo-cowboys-know-how-to-escape/related

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Climate Change Panel Predicts More Intense Weather Events (ContributorNetwork)

According to NPR, a recent meeting of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which included more than 200 scientists, concluded with a report stating it expects climate change to bring more intense weather events. The panel specifically noted more rainfall, heat waves and other natural disasters are in the forecast as a result of climate change.

The IPCC notes the frequency of heavy rainfall will likely increase this century in many different regions. Additionally, more powerful hurricanes and typhoons are likely to occur, but these events will see a gradual, small increase instead of a steep one. With the debut of this report, here are some facts about climate change:

* Since the industrial revolution, the burning of fuel and constant deforestation has led to the release of greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

* These greenhouse gases prevent heat from re-entering space and create a warming effect, also known as global warming or climate change, on the earth.

* The Washington State Department of Ecology notes while climate change can impact weather events, it also has the potential to impact agriculture, human health, water resources, and energy use.

* Despite the fact there is a warming trend, different regions will experience changes differently as well and there is the possibility that a few areas could see temperatures drop instead of increasing.

* In the late 1990s, numerous nations attempted to join together to establish the Kyoto Protocol, a treaty designed to ensure countries would commit to combating climate change.

* The U.S. failed to ratify the treaty over concerns that China and India would not have to follow the outlined changes or commit to reducing their own emissions.

* Nearly a decade later in Copenhagen, Denmark, world leaders met again to discuss and reach agreements on the growing concern of global warming.

* The 2009 summit focused on the dispute between the U.S. and China and if the nations couldn't agree it could have potentially killed any further international agreements at the summit.

* President Barack Obama also attended and spoke at the summit to help work out disagreements over China joining the pledge and although they fell short of expectations, agreements were finally reached.

Rachel Bogart provides an in-depth look at current environmental issues and local Chicago news stories. As a college student from the Chicago suburbs pursuing two science degrees, she applies her knowledge and passion to both topics to garner further public awareness.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111122/us_ac/10476715_climate_change_panel_predicts_more_intense_weather_events

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Harbaughs lead Ravens and 49ers into historic duel (AP)

BALTIMORE ? The Baltimore Ravens and San Francisco 49ers have thrived this season because they are physical, relentless and combative.

Just like their coaches.

The no-holds barred sibling rivalry between John and Jim Harbaugh moves to the national stage on Thanksgiving night, when they make NFL history by becoming the first brothers to compete on opposite sidelines as head coaches.

John Harbaugh is seeking to take the Ravens (7-3) to the playoffs for the fourth time in as many years at the helm. Jim Harbaugh has turned the 49ers (9-1) into Super Bowl contenders in his rookie year as an NFL coach by instilling his unyielding work ethic into a workmanlike offense and the league's stingiest defense (14.5 points per game).

The brothers received much of their football knowledge from their father, Jack, a longtime college coach. Their competitive spirit was honed during endless duels in almost every game imaginable ? including a few they invented just so they could butt heads for boasting purposes.

"We would play tennis-ball basketball on a coat hanger rim," big brother John recalled. "We were throwing balls between tree branches, I guess, throwing snowballs against trees. It was whatever we could think of."

Sometimes, things got a bit out of hand.

"We have never had a fight as adults, maybe since we were 25 or something," John said. "But we had some knock-down drag-outs when we were younger. I can remember my mom screaming, wailing and crying, `You're brothers! You are not supposed to act like this!' There are probably a lot of mothers out there that can relate to that."

John, 49, and Jim, 47, aren't the only pair of brothers who have dueled while growing up. They are, however, poised to become the only ones to take that competition into an NFL game as head coaches.

"It goes back to how hard both of them worked to get to where they're at today," said Joani Crean, their younger sister. "Nobody said, `Oh, you're Jack Harbaugh's son, why don't you come do this job?' They both started out in their professions at the bottom rung, so to speak. They both worked their way up."

Their players know how important this game is to each brother.

"They're both competitive. We're competitive as a team," 49ers running back Frank Gore said. "Baltimore has a great team ? they've been playing great ball for a while. Now we're doing our thing, so it should be a great game."

Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs said, "We really want to win it bad for (John). We've (heard) they were going to kind of get after each other like they did when they were little. It's going to be fun to be a part of a sibling rivalry."

The last time John and Jim Harbaugh competed against each other in a sporting event was during an American Legion baseball game when both were teenagers. John was part of the an elite team and Jim wasn't, so little brother created a team of his own. Jim can remember virtually all of his teammates and the final score: Jim lost 1-0.

John's recollection of the game is not quite as precise, or so it would seem.

"We won. That's what I remember about it," he said. "I think I had the game-winning home run, too, if I remember correctly. At least as far as everyone here knows, right?"

The stakes will be much higher on Thanksgiving night, although to the Harbaugh brothers, it's just another chapter in a competition that will almost certainly continue for the rest of their lives.

"I'm really looking forward to it, and I think Jim is, too," John said. "Yeah, it's going to be very competitive, it's going to be very emotional. We're going to have a lot of family in town. It's one of those things in life where you don't get these moments back, you don't get these chances to live back. And this is a chance to live. Not just for Jim and I, but for the family, even the players and fans. If nothing else, it's something to remember. It's an event. It's cool."

The Harbaughs' parents will be at the stadium early, but will watch the game at John's house to "allow the stage to be John and Jim's. I want to rephrase that. Let the stage be the 49ers and the Ravens. I stand corrected," Jack Harbaugh said.

Some have dubbed this the Harbaugh Bowl, but it's also a very important game for both teams. The 49ers have won eight straight and are chasing unbeaten Green Bay for the top seed in the NFC. San Francisco can clinch the NFC West with a win and a Seattle loss on Sunday against Washington.

The Ravens are locked in a first-place tie with the Pittsburgh Steelers, one game ahead of surprising Cincinnati.

Jim Harbaugh loves the idea of squaring off against John again, although he'd have preferred a more neutral scenario.

"It's the first time in history that two brothers have coached against each other," he said. "This will be the first time since they went to a 16-game schedule that a team has traveled three time zones to play a Thursday game."

Asked how he will feel staring across the field at his brother, John said, "I'll be filled with so much pride and joy. And then probably some anger and other things once we start playing. But really, it's special."

___

AP Sports Writer Janie McCauley in Santa Clara, Calif. contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn49ers_ravens

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Shell and Turkey sign oil, gas search deal (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? Royal Dutch Shell on Wednesday signed a deal with Turkish state-run petroleum company, TPAO, to search for oil and gas offshore in the Mediterranean and onshore in Turkey's southeast region.

The deal allows the companies to search for oil and natural gas and to produce and share any discoveries. Offshore search efforts will concentrate off the Mediterranean coast of Antalya.

"God willing, we will reach important signs and with these signs ... TPAO, will reach gas and oil discoveries," Energy Minister Taner Yildiz said.

Turkey has recently carried out a seismic search for fuel sources in the Mediterranean in response to a Greek Cypriot search, which Turkey opposes on the ground that it undermines the rights of Turkish Cypriots.

U.S. firm Noble Energy has said that exploratory drilling off the coast of Cyprus may yield between 3 to 9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.

Turkey and Greece also have long-running disputes over delineating the Mediterranean and Aegean seas for exploration.

Taner said however, the deal signed Wednesday was "technical work far from any political speculation."

"We hope that (the deal) will be beneficial to both our country and to Shell," Yildiz said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_turkey_shell

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Climate Change Panel Predicts More Intense Weather Events (ContributorNetwork)

According to NPR, a recent meeting of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which included more than 200 scientists, concluded with a report stating it expects climate change to bring more intense weather events. The panel specifically noted more rainfall, heat waves and other natural disasters are in the forecast as a result of climate change.

The IPCC notes the frequency of heavy rainfall will likely increase this century in many different regions. Additionally, more powerful hurricanes and typhoons are likely to occur, but these events will see a gradual, small increase instead of a steep one. With the debut of this report, here are some facts about climate change:

* Since the industrial revolution, the burning of fuel and constant deforestation has led to the release of greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

* These greenhouse gases prevent heat from re-entering space and create a warming effect, also known as global warming or climate change, on the earth.

* The Washington State Department of Ecology notes while climate change can impact weather events, it also has the potential to impact agriculture, human health, water resources, and energy use.

* Despite the fact there is a warming trend, different regions will experience changes differently as well and there is the possibility that a few areas could see temperatures drop instead of increasing.

* In the late 1990s, numerous nations attempted to join together to establish the Kyoto Protocol, a treaty designed to ensure countries would commit to combating climate change.

* The U.S. failed to ratify the treaty over concerns that China and India would not have to follow the outlined changes or commit to reducing their own emissions.

* Nearly a decade later in Copenhagen, Denmark, world leaders met again to discuss and reach agreements on the growing concern of global warming.

* The 2009 summit focused on the dispute between the U.S. and China and if the nations couldn't agree it could have potentially killed any further international agreements at the summit.

* President Barack Obama also attended and spoke at the summit to help work out disagreements over China joining the pledge and although they fell short of expectations, agreements were finally reached.

Rachel Bogart provides an in-depth look at current environmental issues and local Chicago news stories. As a college student from the Chicago suburbs pursuing two science degrees, she applies her knowledge and passion to both topics to garner further public awareness.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111122/us_ac/10476715_climate_change_panel_predicts_more_intense_weather_events

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Man suspected in Colorado mall fire to change plea (Providence Journal)

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Google sets execution dates for Wave, Knol, Friend Connect and more

In what Google is calling its "off-season spring cleaning series," the mega company is finally setting some end dates for many of its lukewarm services, most notably the once-hyped Wave, Knol and Friend Connect. Sitting on Death Row for some time now, Mountain View has slowly phased out the less-than-successful products, most recently announcing that it would kill seven APIs including Translate and Video Search. The sweep is part of Google's VP of Product Management Bradley Horowitz' overall plan to "[do] less of throwing things against the wall," focusing instead on "doing fewer things well." Besides the aforementioned services to receive the axe, Google will also be putting an end to Bookmarks List, Gears, Search Timeline and its Renewable Energy Cheaper than Coal initiative. The company says the overhaul is part of the effort "to build a simpler, more intuitive, truly beautiful Google user experience" -- in other words, "it's not me... it's you." Check the source for more details.

Google sets execution dates for Wave, Knol, Friend Connect and more originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 Nov 2011 08:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

NATO service member killed in southern Afghanistan (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? NATO says one of its service members has been killed in a bomb attack in southern Afghanistan.

The alliance says the bombing took place Sunday, but did not provide further details or the nationality of the dead. NATO typically waits for national authorities to provide this information.

The death raises the number of international troops killed so far this month to 20, and at least 510 so far this year.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Video: Money-saving holiday travel deals

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Working for the Weekend [Video]

Working for the Weekend Normally I'd say "Working for the Weekend" is not the attitude you want to have when starting out your work week, but let's be honest: It's almost Thanksgiving here in the States, and the promise of a turkey-fueled binge is tough to ignore. So, for just this once, let's pull through the work week ahead with a little motivation from Loverboy.

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Work Sounds is a twice-a-week post that highlights good music to enhance your 'getting stuff done'. On Mondays, we focus on a piece of music to help motivate you for the week ahead; on Wednesdays we feature distraction-free, headphones-on, head-down work tunes. Have a suggestion on a song or album we should feature for Work Sounds? Share it with us here.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ng_srKDlDyY/working-for-the-weekend

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SEC rules: LSU, Alabama, Arkansas top AP rankings

LSU head coach Les Miles celebrates with his team following their 52-3 win over Mississippi in an NCAA college football game in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

LSU head coach Les Miles celebrates with his team following their 52-3 win over Mississippi in an NCAA college football game in Oxford, Miss., on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

Alabama running back Trent Richardson (3) smiles at the end of a 45-21 win over Georgia Southern in an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Hallie Treece, 11, of Clinton, Ark., holds a sign looking forward to Friday's Arkansas - LSU football game during the second half of Arkansas' 44-17 victory over Mississippi State in an NCAA college football game in Little Rock, Ark., Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/David Quinn)

Arkansas running back Broderick Green celebrates his fourth quarter touchdown in Arkansas' 44-17 victory over Mississippi State in an NCAA college football game, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011, in Little Rock, Ark. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston)

(AP) ? The latest AP college football poll gives a new meaning to the term all-SEC.

The Southeastern Conference is the second league to have the top three spots in ranking all to itself.

No. 1 LSU held the top spot for the ninth straight week in Sunday's rankings, and after a weekend when three other top-five teams lost, Alabama moved up a spot to No. 2 and Arkansas jumped three places to No. 3.

The only other time in the 75-year history of The Associated Press rankings that the top three teams all came from the same conference was the final regular-season poll of 1971, when Nebraska, Oklahoma and Colorado from the Big Eight were 1-2-3.

And this time it's not just one conference, but one division (the SEC West) holding down the top spots.

No. 4 Stanford from the Pac-12 is the first non-SEC team in the rankings and Oklahoma State dropped from No. 2 to No. 5 after its first loss of the season. The Cowboys lost 37-31 in double overtime at Iowa State on Friday night.

That opened the door for Alabama to move up to No. 2.

"You're excited to see things like that of course because at Alabama we play for championships, that's what we do," defensive end Damion Square said after Alabama's easy victory against Georgia Southern on Saturday.

Little did Square realize the situation was about to get even better for Alabama and the SEC.

Oregon lost 38-35 at home to USC that night and Oklahoma fell at Baylor 45-38.

The last time three of the top five teams lost on the same weekend was Oct. 11, 2008, when No. 1 Oklahoma lost to No. 5 Texas; No. 3 Missouri lost to No. 17 Oklahoma State; and No. 4 LSU lost to No. 11 Florida.

Oregon slipped five spots to ninth with its second loss of the season. Oklahoma dropped from No. 5 to No. 12.

No. 6 was Virginia Tech, followed by Boise State, Houston, Oregon and Southern California at No. 10.

The Trojans, at one time a fixture in the top 10, have their best ranking since the middle of the 2009 season.

Houston has its best ranking since 1990, when David Klingler and the Cougars were as high as No. 3 in the rankings.

Record-breaking quarterback Case Keenum and the current Cougars are the only other unbeaten team in the nation outside of LSU.

Those SEC West powers might not have the top three spots locked up for long.

LSU hosts Arkansas the day after Thanksgiving. Another loss by the Razorbacks, whose only loss so far is to Alabama, would likely knock them back.

Though if Arkansas beats LSU, which beat Alabama, maybe the teams would stay the same but the order would change?

Alabama plays Auburn on Saturday.

In the event of a three-way tie for the SEC West title, the BCS standings are used as a tiebreaker to determine which team will play Georgia in the conference title game on Dec. 3 in Atlanta.

The second 10 in the Top 25 starts with No. 11 Michigan State, which has clinched a spot in the first Big Ten championship game.

Oklahoma is followed by No. 13 Georgia, No. 14 South Carolina and Wisconsin.

Kansas State is No. 16. Michigan is No. 17 heading into its rivalry game against unranked Ohio State.

Clemson already has a spot in the Atlantic Coast Conference championship game sewn up, but the Tigers dropped 11 spots in the latest rankings after a 37-13 loss at North Carolina State.

No. 19 is TCU, which has earned no less than a share of the Mountain West Conference title.

No. 20 Penn State will play Wisconsin for the right to play Michigan State in the Big Ten championship.

Baylor's big victory helped Robert Griffin III and the Bears moved up three spots to No. 21.

Nebraska and Notre Dame are tied at No. 22.

No. 24 Virginia beat Florida State 14-13 on Saturday night to move into the AP rankings for the first time since Dec. 2, 2007. The Cavaliers will play Virginia Tech next week for a spot in the ACC title game.

ACC rival Georgia Tech also moved back into the rankings at No. 25.

Florida State and Southern Miss dropped out after losses.

____

AP Sports Writer John Zenor in Tuscaloosa, Ala., contributed to this report.

____

Follow Ralph D. Russo at www.Twitter.com/ralphDrussoAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-20-FBC-T25-College-FB-Poll/id-ff67456c90e048e5a6e56db3997f7d03

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Occupy protests spread to US college campuses

As the Occupy Wall Street protests have grown to cities across the United States, they've also taken root at US universities, where students have staged rallies and walk-outs from classes.

Mo Tarafa stood before students at a small, outdoor concrete auditorium at Florida International University and called for volunteers to sit in the 10 chairs before her. Each chair, she said, represented 10 percent of the wealth in the United States and 10 percent of the population.

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The students, mostly in their 20s and wearing jeans and T-shirts on a balmy autumn afternoon in Miami, took their places. Then Tarafa asked nine of the students to squeeze together into five of the chairs. This, she said, was the distribution of wealth in 1996.

Next she asked nine students to fit into three of the chairs. This, she said, is the distribution of wealth today.?"How are you all feeling right now?" she said.

"Uncomfortable," said one of the students piled up on one another.

RECOMMENDED:?Top 5 targets of Occupy Wall Street

The exercise was part of a teach-in that took place recently at FIU and dozens of other campuses across the country in solidarity with Occupy Wall Street. As the protests have grown to cities across the United States, they've also taken root at US universities, where students have staged rallies and walk-outs from classes. On Thursday, students were among the thousands who took part in protests across the country.

They've even set up their own tent cities: At the University of California, Berkeley, where 40 people were arrested in a violent confrontation with police last week, officers removed 20 tents on Thursday. At Harvard University, dozens of students have set up tents in the middle of campus.

The students' concerns: The rising costs of tuition, seemingly insurmountable student debt and weak job prospects ? issues unique to them, but which student organizers see as directly connected to the larger issues being raised by the Occupy protests against economic inequality.

"I love my education. I think it was completely valuable; however, I feel I'm not using it on a daily basis," said Natalia Abrams, 31, a recent University of California at Los Angeles graduate who has been helping organize students through Occupy Colleges, a loose coalition of universities across the country. "We didn't go back to school to have $20,000 in debt to work at Starbucks."

Whether the protests mark a rejuvenation of student activism in the United States is yet to be seen, but already some important distinctions are being made from their involvement in politics and society over the last few decades. In the 1960s, students held sit-ins to protest racial segregation and marched against the Vietnam War. But since then, activism on campus has tended to focus on specific issues, like rape awareness, anti-sweatshop campaigns, and equality for gays and lesbians, notes Robert Self, a history professor at Brown University.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/D8yu0KuituA/Occupy-protests-spread-to-US-college-campuses

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Republicans seek Iowa social conservatives' nod (tbo)

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Gay soldier shares reaction to GOP debate boos (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? Army Capt. Stephen Hill says he wasn't trying to score political points when he asked the Republican presidential candidates if they would reinstate the ban on gays serving openly in the U.S. military.

He wasn't worried that his debate question, posed via a YouTube video recorded in Iraq, would generate boos or reveal his sexual orientation to millions of people, including his superiors and fellow troops.

All Hill was thinking about in September was his husband of four-and-a-half months, Joshua Snyder, in Columbus, Ohio.

Now that "don't ask, don't tell" has been lifted, he needed to know if the military would take the next step and recognize his marriage, or if a new president would try to force soldiers like him back into the closet.

"I was looking forward to the future and hoping everybody would realize we are soldiers first, always," said Hill, 41, an Army reservist who returned last week from his yearlong deployment. "I was hoping `don't ask, don't tell' would be a distant memory for everybody."

In an interview with The Associated Press, Hill reflected publicly for the first time on his reasons for submitting the pre-recorded question for the Sept. 22 debate, as well as his reaction to the heckles heard around the world; the answer that former Sen. Rick Santorum gave to thunderous applause; and the outrage expressed on his behalf by, among others, his commander in chief.

With Snyder on the telephone, Hill watched the debate live from Iraq at 4 a.m. And this is what he asked: "In 2010, when I was deployed to Iraq, I had to lie about who I was because I'm a gay soldier and I didn't want to lose my job. My question is, under one of your presidencies, do you intend to circumvent the progress that's been made for gay and lesbian soldiers in the military?"

Santorum replied that he would reinstitute the ban on open service by gay troops because "any type of sexual activity has absolutely no place in the military."

"What we are doing is playing social experimentation with our military right now. That's tragic," he continued. "Leave it alone. Keep it to yourself whether you are heterosexual or homosexual."

Hill says the fact that he just outed himself on national television had barely registered when he absorbed the boos and Santorum's answer followed by applause.

"When the actual booing occurred, my gut dropped out, because my first inclination was, did I just do something wrong?" he said. "The answer, obviously, wasn't very supportive of gay people, and there was a lot of fear of how the Army would take the question."

He did not have to wait long to find out. At breakfast later that morning, the segment was playing on the chow hall television. Hill immediately tracked down his commander, who told him she had no problem with what he'd done but that she would need to run it up the chain of command. She later relayed the response.

"She said, `What the military's most concerned with is that you are OK, because it's a lot of pressure on you and we want to make sure if there is anything we can do to help,'" he recalled.

President Barack Obama, about a week later, chided the Republican contenders for staying silent when several people booed an American soldier. Santorum said he had not heard the booing but condemned the audience members who did it.

What Hill remembers most was that a presidential candidate defined his marriage and military service in terms of sex. He holds that up against the times he hid Snyder's photograph because Army buddies were coming over to play video games, introduced his husband as his roommate or brother, and the legal vows they exchanged at the grave of Air Force Sgt. Leonard Matlovich, who was discharged in 1975 after becoming the first gay service member to challenge the U.S. military's ban on gay troops.

Snyder and Hill last month joined other same-sex military couples in suing the government for the same benefits as straight military couples, which the Pentagon denies them on grounds that federal law defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

"This is not about sex," Hill said. "A special privilege is not hiding pictures in my house or God forbid, taking mortar fire again and not knowing if Josh will be recognized. I'm fighting every day to protect everyone's rights as human beings, and it seems counterintuitive for me to be fighting for those rights and not have them."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111118/ap_on_re_us/us_gays_in_military

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UNC students lace up their kicks to honor murdered student body president

By:?News 14 Carolina Web Staff

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CHAPEL HILL -- Saturday, the fourth annual Eve Carson Memorial 5k got underway in Chapel Hill. The former UNC student body president was murdered in March of 2008. Officials at UNC say this year's run is the largest in school history.

Last year, more than 1,700 runners participated and more than $30,000 was raised. Proceeds from the race will go directly toward the Eve Carson Memorial Scholarship.

Source: http://triangle.news14.com/content/top_stories/649823/unc-students-lace-up-their-kicks-to-honor-murdered-student-body-president

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FDA Revokes Approval of Avastin for Breast Cancer (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Nov. 18 (HealthDay News) -- Saying the risks outweigh the benefits in patients with advanced breast cancer, U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Margaret Hamburg said on Friday that the agency has rescinded its approval of the cancer drug Avastin for that use.

Avastin (bevacizumab), however, will remain available for treating some types of colon, lung, kidney and brain cancer.

"Today, I am revoking the FDA's approval of the breast cancer indication for Avastin after concluding that the drug has not been shown to be safe and effective for that use," Hamburg said during a late morning press conference.

"Sometimes, despite the hopes of investigators, patients, industry, and even the FDA, the results of rigorous testing can be disappointing," she said. "This is the case with Avastin when used for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer."

The risks of Avastin include severe high blood pressure, bleeding, heart attack or heart failure and the development of perforations in different parts of the body such as the nose, stomach and intestines.

"These are considerable risks from taking Avastin, and can be justified only if there is good evidence that the use of the drug will benefit the patient," Hamburg said. "In breast cancer, it was clear that there was no proof of benefits that would justify the risks."

The FDA's decision was based on an expert panel's unanimous recommendation in June that the drug was not safe or effective when used for women with metastatic breast cancer. The drug had been approved for use along with the cancer drug Taxol (paclitaxel) for an aggressive type of breast cancer called HER2-negative breast cancer.

In 2008, Avastin was approved to treat metastatic breast cancer under the FDA's accelerated approval program, Hamburg said. Under this program, a drug can gain approval before final data on its safety and effectiveness is complete if its use appears promising in treating serious and life-threatening conditions, she explained.

Avastin's approval was based on results from one study that suggested it extended the lives of certain breast cancer patients.

After its approval for this use, Avastin's maker Genentech completed two clinical trials that found only a small effect on tumor growth without evidence that patients lived any longer or had a better quality of life compared with standard chemotherapy alone.

Some said Friday that they thought the FDA's decision was a sound one.

In a statement, the National Breast Cancer Coalition said it "applauds the FDA and Commissioner Margaret Hamburg for the decision to revoke the approval of Avastin in the first-line treatment of metastatic breast cancer. We understand the devastation of metastatic breast cancer and the fact that we do not know how to prevent or cure it. We remain committed to and focused on finding those answers."

However, Genentech took issue with the agency's decision.

"We are disappointed with the outcome," Dr. Hal Barron, Genentech's chief medical officer, said in a statement. "Despite today's action, we will start a new phase III study of Avastin in combination with paclitaxel in previously untreated metastatic breast cancer, and will evaluate a potential biomarker that may help identify which people might derive a more substantial benefit from Avastin."

Several experts also questioned the FDA's decision.

"I can only say it's not good," said Dr. Stefan Gluck, an oncologist at the University of Miami's Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. "They have been agonizing over it, and they still made the wrong decision."

Avastin gives a subset of patients a large advantage over chemotherapy alone, Gluck said. "In metastatic breast cancer, we give therapy to improve symptoms and improve quality of life and occasionally to improve quantity of life," he explained.

Avastin should only be used in late-stage breast cancer where the disease has spread to other organs such as the lungs, liver, bone or kidneys, Gluck said.

"I would not use Avastin in an older woman with small tumors in the lung without symptoms," Gluck said. "But in a young woman with huge lung masticates, then I need a quick response and a long-lasting response, and this is only available if you add chemotherapy and Avastin together," he said.

In these cases, "the cancer is worse than the side effects," Gluck said. "I need to weigh what is worse at the moment, the side effects, which may not happen, or the cancer. Eventually, the cancer kills the patient, but until the cancer kills the patient I want to give her the best quality of life."

Gluck noted that doctors can still use Avastin for breast cancer patients on an off-label basis. However, the FDA decision may mean that the drug will no longer be covered by insurance companies for use in treating breast cancer.

Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society, said in a statement: "The full impact of this decision is difficult to determine at this time. This decision will obviously lead insurance companies to review their payment policies regarding Avastin in breast cancer. Other experts have made their opinions known that in their experience Avastin has proven beneficial for breast cancer patients. Whether those opinions will provide sufficient reason for insurers and government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid to pay for this treatment remains unknown."

"At the least, we would hope that insurers will continue to cover treatment with Avastin in those women with metastatic breast cancer who are currently on the drug and who are showing a benefit from its use," he added. "Ultimately, as noted by the Commissioner, this was a difficult decision to make, but one that had to be made based on the science."

Elizabeth Thompson, president of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, said in a statement that "as a patient advocacy organization, we want to ensure that women who are successfully using Avastin today continue to have access to the drug, and that their treatment be covered by third-party payers."

"This decision underscores the need for aggressive research to develop treatments that will allow women to live full, high-quality lives even with advanced and metastatic breast cancers. At the same time, we encourage continued research into biomarkers that will help identify which patients will or will not benefit from certain treatments," she said.

More information

For more information on breast cancer, visit the American Cancer Society.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111119/hl_hsn/fdarevokesapprovalofavastinforbreastcancer

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