Sunday, August 4, 2013

Portion-Size Label Influences Ingestion Intake

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The mayor of New York famously tried to ban super-sized sodas. But instead of legislating a drink?s volume, maybe we should change its name. Because a new study shows that the words we use to describe portion size affect how much we actually consume. The findings are in the journal Health Economics. [David R. Just And Brian Wansink, One Man's Tall Is Another Man's Small: How The Framing Of Portion Size Influences Food Choice] As portion sizes at many restaurants grow larger, so do our waistlines. Of course, no one says we have to finish that three-quarter pound burger or chug an entire Big Gulp. But what determines when we lay down the fork and push away from the table? To find out, researchers led by Brian Wansink of the Cornell Food and Brand Lab served up some spaghetti. Some volunteers received a portion labeled ?regular,? others got a dish described as ?double size.? Although both plates contained the same amount of pasta, people ate more when they thought their serving size was normal. Participants who thought they?d gotten the piggy-sized portion left 10 times more food on their plates. So if a big beverage were called, say, Double the Size of your Stomach, maybe we?d think twice about draining every last drop. ?Karen Hopkin [The above text is a transcript of this podcast]
? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/portion-size-label-influences-ingestion-intake-134008074.html

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India eases investment rules to attract global retailing giants

New Delhi: India eased requirements for foreign retailers to invest in local supermarkets to lure global chains such as Wal-Mart Stores and Tesco to open stores in Asia's third-biggest economy.

Rules covering sourcing, infrastructure investment and store location have been amended, Commerce Minister Anand Sharma told reporters in New Delhi on Thursday night. The cabinet also approved proposals to amend foreign direct investment rules for a range of businesses including commodity exchanges, he said.

The government is loosening rules to attract overseas investors to stem a ballooning current-account deficit and a weakening rupee. While the nation changed laws in September to allow foreign retailers to own majority stakes in stores selling multiple brands, no companies have sought such licenses yet.

"The government is showing really positive intentions," Kumar Rajagopalan, chief executive officer of lobby group Retailers Association of India, said in an interview on Bloomberg TV India. "The state governments now have to go forward and invite the companies to come and invest."

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, and other foreign chains already have some wholesale operations in the country. Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart is studying India's revisions and remains "optimistic" about the opportunity, Arti Singh, a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart's Indian unit, said in an e- mailed statement. A Tesco spokesman said the company welcomed the proposed changes in the policy and is in the process of reviewing the conditions.

Heavy debt
Debt-heavy domestic retailers like Future Retail could be one of the "key beneficiaries" of these policies, as it would make it easier for them to seek overseas partners to trim their borrowings, said Dhvani Modi, an analyst at brokerage ICICI Direct. Future, which runs the Big Bazaar grocery chain, climbed as much as 14.7 per cent to Rs84.5, headed for the biggest gain since April 17. Apparel retailer Shoppers Stop advanced as much as four per cent before dropping 1.35 per cent to Rs355.15 as of 3.08pm.

Farmers' groups
Minister Sharma said foreign investment up to 49 per cent will be now allowed under the automatic route in sectors including petroleum and natural gas, commodity and power exchanges as well as in stock exchanges. In defense, the government will consider proposals of more than 26 per cent FDI on a "case to case" basis.

The government also amended a rule intended to help small industries supply to the big chains. Retailers were earlier required to source 30 per cent of their manufactured products from small- and mid-sized local firms, which were defined as companies with less than $1 million invested in factories and machinery.

The new rules allow sourcing from companies with investments of up to $2 million, broadening the supply base for retailers. Products from agricultural cooperatives and farmers groups would also be considered under this requirement, according to an e-mailed statement from the government. Allowing farmers groups in this category "is a huge deal as it includes all dairy products and fresh produce," Modi said. "This will make it very easy for retailers to meet the requirement."

Source: http://www.timesofoman.com/News/Article-20597.aspx

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3 teens charged in death of Minnesota woman, 79 (Providence Journal)

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North India Hill-Stations Travel

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London: Twitter apologises but campaigner says wants more action

The British arm of Twitter apologised on Saturday to a group of high-profile women who have been threatened with death and rape on the micro-blogging site, and announced measures to make it easier for users to report abusive tweets.

Twitter had come under increasing pressure to react after a feminist campaigner, several women members of parliament and female journalists were targeted by users who hurled misogynistic abuse at them and in some cases made violent threats.

"I personally apologise to the women who have experienced abuse on Twitter and for what they have gone through," Tony Wang, general manager of Twitter UK, said on his own Twitter feed.

"The abuse they've received is simply not acceptable. It's not acceptable in the real world, and it's not acceptable on Twitter," he said.

Twitter UK said it was adding staff to help handle abuse reports. It also said an in-tweet "report abuse" button currently available on the Twitter app for iPhones would be added to the Twitter website and to platforms used on other mobile devices.

The problem of abuse by so-called internet "trolls" has been front-page news in Britain since activist Caroline Criado-Perez was hit by a barrage of vitriolic tweets after successfully campaigning for a woman's face to appear on bank notes.

In recognition of her role, Criado-Perez appeared alongside Bank of England Governor Mark Carney on July 24, when he announced 19th century novelist Jane Austen would become the face of the new 10-pound note.

Police arrested two men over rape threats against Criado-Perez. One of them was also suspected of making rape threats against opposition Labour legislator Stella Creasy, who backed the bank note campaign and also appeared with Carney on July 24.

In separate incidents days later, several high-profile female journalists received tweets from someone threatening to bomb their homes and "destroy everything" there.

... contd.

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Source: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/london-twitter-apologises-but-campaigner-says-wants-more-action/1150768/

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Rio organizers may need $700 million in govt money

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) ? Olympic organizers say they may have to use $700 million in government money to meet the operating budget for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

Leo Gryner, chief operating officer of the organizing committee, said Friday that as conditions now stand "we need this $700 million."

Gryner told The Associated Press earlier this week the operating budget could be as much as $4 billion. The original budget estimate of $2.8 billion was submitted before Rio won the games in 2009.

The operating budget is used to run the games and is separate from the capital budget, a mix of private and public money used to build needed infrastructure.

Gryner says any shortfall was caused by inflation and Brazil's slowing economy.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rio-organizers-may-700-million-govt-money-212222165.html

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Facebook Finally Closes Above IPO Price

Facebook Finally Closes Above IPO Price

If you bought Facebook stock during the company's IPO (and held on to it), you just finally broke even. eek!

It took more than 14 months, but Facebook has finally bounced back from a disastrous public offering. Friday, the social network's shares closed above its offering price of $38 for only the second time in history. Facebook finished an especially fortuitous week of trading at $38.05. The last time the company's shares closed higher than $38 was on May 18, its very first day of trading.

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Posted by Steve 2:58 PM (DST)??

Source: http://www.hardocp.com/news/2013/08/02/facebook_finally_closes_above_ipo_price/

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We want your UFC 163 picks

Lost in the hubbub of a stacked Bellator card, Ronda Rousey telling off a fan, and a clash of two former UFC champions in Bellator is UFC 163, headed by UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo's bout with Chan Sung Jung. But it's not too late to check out the main card and make your picks for the fights.

Jose Aldo vs. Chan Sung Jung - for featherweight title
Phil Davis vs. Lyoto Machida
Cezar Ferreira vs. Thiago "Marreta" Santos
Thales Leites vs. Tom Watson
John Lineker vs. Jose Maria

Go to Cagewriter's Facebook page, pick a fight, and then tell us who you think will win and why. Will "The Korean Zombie" knock off Aldo? Will Phil Davis or Lyoto Machia emerge with title hopes? Tell us your thoughts on Facebook, and your picks may show up here on Cagewriter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/want-ufc-163-picks-143851332.html

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Wedding Guest

Wedding Guest Outfit

I just love finding new brands online that no one else has even heard of, the internet is such an amazing thing!

This summer everyone has a wedding they need to attend and there?s always that slight fear that you?re going to turn up wearing the same dress as someone else, what a disaster?

Luckily I?ve struck gold with Box Clothing, this amazing online fashion retailer sells loads of designer brands, with many independent boutiques as well, so there?s a very slim chance of anyone wearing the same dress as me.

I?ve decided to go with a gorgeous, Blue Lace Dress, ?41, from Darling. I just love this brand, it?s a new designer range which is ultra-feminine and vintage-inspired. I?m really impressed, it?s a timeless piece that can be worn again and again. I couldn?t help but buy the Flowers Blush Hard Pink Clutch, ?26, from Darling to match, it?s so unique.

I want the dress to stay the statement piece so I?ve found a beautiful taupe curl feather headband from Debenhams which will match the bag perfectly. I?ve decided to pair the dress with my comfortable nude, peep-toe heels from New Look.

Wedding Guest Outfit

There?s a wide range of clothing and accessories for both men and women ? all fairly reasonably priced for designer labels ? and they often have sales too! The bride better watch out, I might be using the aisle as my own personal catwalk!

Source: http://en.paperblog.com/wedding-guest-607884/

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Zimbabwe votes in third Mugabe-Tsvangirai showdown

By Cris Chinaka

HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabweans voted in large numbers on Wednesday in a fiercely contested election pitting veteran President Robert Mugabe against Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, who has vowed to push Africa's oldest leader into retirement after 33 years in power.

With no reliable opinion polls and amid allegations of vote-rigging, it is hard to say whether Tsvangirai will succeed in his third attempt to oust 89-year-old Mugabe, who has run the southern African nation since independence from Britain in 1980.

Both sides are forecasting landslide wins. In a country with a history of election violence the big question is whether the loser will accept the result of a poll dogged by logistical problems and reports of intimidation and irregularities.

Mugabe, who rejects past and present charges from critics of vote-fixing and intimidation by his ZANU-PF party supporters, has said he will concede if defeated.

"I'm sure people will vote freely and fairly," he told reporters after casting his ballot in a school in Harare's Highfields township.

"There's no pressure being exerted on anyone."

Polls opened on time at 0500 GMT (1:00 a.m. EDT), with long queues of people braving unseasonably cold weather to stand in line from well before dawn.

At one polling station in the eastern province of Manicaland, a key swing region, the queue of voters, many wrapped up in blankets, stretched for a kilometer (half a mile).

"I got up at 4:00 but still couldn't get the first position in the line," said sawmill worker Clifford Chasakara. "My fingers are numb but I'm sure I can mark the ballot all the same. I'm determined to vote and have my vote counted."

"WAY TO CHANGE"

The Election Commission said nationwide turnout was high, but with no breakdown between urban and rural areas it is impossible to say whether this will benefit Mugabe or his 61-year-old challenger.

In Harare, the epicenter of support for Tsvangirai and his Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party, the mood was upbeat.

"We are here to vote and I'm convinced Harare will lead the way to change," John Phiri, a house cleaner in his 30s, said in a polling station in the upmarket Mount Pleasant suburb.

Casting his vote at a Harare high school, Tsvangirai said he expected to win "quite resoundingly".

Around 6.4 million people, or half the population, are registered to vote. Results are expected well within a five-day deadline intended to prevent a repeat of problems seen in the last election in 2008, when big delays led to serious violence.

The threat of unrest remains at the back of people's minds but the atmosphere has been markedly lighter than five years ago, with both party leaders preaching peace and tolerance.

The pair met at State House late on Tuesday in the presence of African Union (AU) monitoring chief Olusegun Obasanjo, an AU official said. Details of the meeting - an unusual encounter on the eve of an election - were not immediately not known.

Asked at a news conference on Tuesday whether he and ZANU-PF would accept defeat, Mugabe was unequivocal: "You either win or lose. If you lose, you must surrender."

"SO FAR SO GOOD"

His comments were in marked contrast to the acrimony of what he described as an "energy-sapping" campaign, and may help to ease fears about a repeat of the turmoil that broke out in 2008 after he lost the first round of voting.

Around 200 Tsvangirai supporters were killed then before South Africa brokered a power-sharing deal that stopped the bloodshed and stabilized the economy, establishing a unity government criticized as fractious and dysfunctional.

Western observers have been barred from the elections, leaving the task of independent oversight to 500 regional and 7,000 domestic monitors.

Obasanjo, a former Nigerian president, said there were no grounds at the moment to suggest the elections could not be declared credible.

"So far so good," he told reporters after visiting a polling station in Harare.

The monitors' verdict is crucial to the future of Zimbabwe's economy, which is still struggling with the aftermath of a decade-long slump and hyperinflation that ended in 2009 when the worthless Zimbabwe dollar was scrapped.

The United States, which has sanctions in place against Mugabe, has questioned the credibility of the poll, pointing to a lack of transparency in its organization and pro-Mugabe bias in the state media and partisan security forces.

However, if the vote receives broad approval, there is a chance Western sanctions may be eased, allowing Harare to normalize relations with the IMF and World Bank and access the huge investment needed to rebuild its dilapidated economy.

It would also spark a rush to exploit Zimbabwe's rich reserves of minerals such as chrome, coal, platinum and gold.

Tsvangirai urged African monitors not to give the vote the thumbs-up simply because they do not witness bloodshed.

"Mugabe is the world's oldest leader and one of its longest-ruling dictators. He is fixing this election in a more sophisticated fashion than previous ZANU-PF campaigns of beatings, killings and intimidation," he wrote in an editorial in the Washington Post.

(Additional reporting by Nelson Banya in Mutare, MacDonald Dzirutwe and Stella Mapenzauswa in Harare; Writing by Ed Cropley; Editing by Pascal Fletcher, Paul Taylor and Peter Graff)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zimbabweans-face-third-mugabe-tsvangirai-showdown-000332235.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Detroit slashes pay for some police, firefighter unions

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT (Reuters) - About 1,200 Detroit police lieutenants and sergeants and about 400 Detroit firefighters will see a 10 percent pay cut in their paychecks on September 16, a spokesman for Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr said on Thursday.

The city informed the Detroit Police Lieutenants and Sergeants Association (LSA) and the Detroit Firefighters Association of the pay cut along with a reduction in benefits on Wednesday.

The Detroit Police Lieutenants and Sergeants Association's contract was slated to be terminated on July 6, but the city extended the contract for 30 days.

Orr's spokesman, Bill Nowling, said the contract was extended to give new Detroit Police Chief James Craig, who started July 1, "an opportunity to get his feet on the ground."

The firefighter union's contract expired June 30, but the 400 affected firefighters - lieutenants, sergeants and captains - have parity with the Lieutenants and Sergeants Association, so their contract was also subject to the delay.

Nowling said the city notified the unions in June that the cuts would occur once the contracts expired. He said the city will take 30 days to process the changes into its payroll system.

The pay cuts will mean police lieutenants will be paid about $7,000 less and sergeants will earn about $6,000 less, said Mark Young, president of the LSA.

"We understand that the city is in financial distress," Young said. "The past leadership of the city government drove us here, but we were hoping that the hardship wouldn't be so great on the men and women that I represent that haven't had a raise in four and a half years."

Aside from the pay cut, the new contract also makes changes to sick leave accrual, overtime payments and paid time off.

Detroit Mayor Dave Bing implemented the same cuts last August for patrol officers and most firefighters. Non-uniformed city employees also took a 10 percent pay cut at that time.

The cuts will save the city $4.5 million annually, Nowling said. The unions hope to meet with the city to discuss the changes, Young said, but Nowling noted the changes are already adopted in the city's fiscal year 2014 budget.

(Reporting by Joseph Lichterman; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)

(This story was refiled to correct pay amount in the seventh paragraph to $6,000 instead of %6,000)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/detroit-slashes-pay-police-firefighter-unions-013102910.html

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Glaxo case shines light on China's medical bribery

BEIJING (AP) ? Huang Dongliang says his uncle was being ignored by his low-paid cancer specialist at a Chinese government hospital. So the family gave the doctor a "hongbao," the traditional red envelope used for gifts, with 3,000 yuan ($480).

"We could feel an obvious difference" after that, said Huang, who lives in the southeastern city of Quanzhou. "The doctor started to do more checkups, to give suggestions and advice and offered a detailed chemotherapy plan."

Such informal payments pervade China's dysfunctional health system. Low salaries and skimpy budgets drive doctors, nurses and administrators to make ends meet by accepting money from patients, drug suppliers and others. Accusations last month that GlaxoSmithKline employees bribed Chinese doctors to prescribe its drugs brought international attention to the flow of illicit money. But to China's public, the practice has long been common knowledge.

Many blame a system in which the country's hospitals nearly all are state-run but get too little money from Beijing. Most of China's 2.3 million doctors are hospital employees and are barred from adding to their income by taking on second jobs.

"Physicians are way underpaid and they need to find a way to survive," said Gordon Liu, a health care economist at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management.

The ruling Communist Party has promised higher health spending as part of efforts to spread more of China's prosperity to its poor majority. But with a population of 1.3 billion, the cost of a full-scale overhaul will be daunting for Beijing. The government faces other financial demands while economic growth is slowing.

Under the current system, the state-set price to see an oncologist or other specialist is as little as 8 yuan ($1.25) ? less than the cost of a hamburger and too little to cover a hospital's expenses.

An experienced physician might earn 6,000 yuan ($980) a month. That top level is about average for an urban Chinese worker at a time when a 100-square-meter (1,000-square-foot) apartment in Beijing can cost more than 6 million yuan ($1 million).

To fill the gap, hospitals add surcharges to drug prices and assign employees sales quotas. Doctors and other employees accept money to move patients up waiting lists for surgery or to let them see the physician they prefer. Doctors, administrators and others take kickbacks from pharmaceutical companies to use more expensive drugs or use them more often. Bribes can also distort treatment by encouraging overuse of expensive drugs or procedures.

"There are many farmers and people without medical insurance, and it's they who suffer greatly," said Liu Junhai, head of the Commercial Law Research Institute of the ruling party's Renmin University.

Huang said that after his uncle was diagnosed with lung cancer last October, he went to the bigger nearby city of Xiamen, which had a reputation for "better medical ability and attitude."

"The doctor barely said anything useful after 12 or 13 days in the hospital," he said. "Then my cousin sent 3,000 yuan to get the doctor to pay more attention to my uncle."

Complaints about medical corruption have fueled public frustration at doctors, nurses and hospitals. Distraught families that pay extra are dismayed if a patient sickens or dies. That has erupted in a spate of stabbings and other violence against hospital employees.

Last year, 39 staff members of a hospital in the southern city of Gaozhou and five salespeople for drug companies were implicated in a kickback scheme that inflated medicine costs for patients, according to the newspaper Shanghai Evening Post.

The hospital director was fired and 382 employees returned 5.8 million yuan ($950,000) in improper payments, the report said.

"For the hospital's 35 drug suppliers, no matter which is selected, in order to give the hospital an incentive to sell more drugs, they will all find ways to make contact with doctors," the hospital director, Ye Guanrui, was quoted as saying. "In a hospital with 1,000 staff members, one-third will take kickbacks."

A half-dozen physicians and hospital employees approached by The Associated Press declined to talk about medical bribery, even on condition of anonymity, due to its sensitivity.

In the GlaxoSmithKline PLC case, police say employees of the British company paid doctors, hospital administrators and officials of the government and medical groups to encourage use of its medications.

Four employees have been detained. Police say they are suspected of laundering money through travel agencies to conceal the payments and evade Glaxo's internal anti-bribery controls.

Glaxo has tried to distance itself from the scandal, saying the employees acted without its knowledge and violated its policy.

Also last month, a rival drug manufacturer, AstraZeneca PLC, said police visited its office in what the company believed was an investigation of one of its sales representatives.

Last year, New York City-based Pfizer Inc. agreed to pay the U.S. government $60 million to settle charges its salespeople made improper payments to health care workers in China and other countries.

Estimates of how much outside money doctors and others receive range from 30 percent to up to 10 times their salaries, according to Peking University's Liu. He said he and colleagues have tried to gather data but hospital employees refuse to cooperate.

Despite the scrutiny directed at foreign drug suppliers, their Chinese rivals probably are more active at spreading around such payments, said Liu.

"In general, people would say domestic companies actually practice this informal payment approach almost as a common marketing strategy," he said. "For multinationals, this is not a common marketing tool."

The financial strain of health care on families is so great that it is distorting China's economy.

Until recently, few had health insurance and families saved a big share of their income to pay for medical emergencies. That left less for consumer spending, hampering the Communist Party's efforts to nurture self-sustaining economic growth based on domestic consumption instead of exports and investment.

The latest scandal could increase pressure on Chinese leaders to speed up promised health reforms.

The ruling party is promising more health care spending as part of an expansion of social welfare aimed at spreading China's new prosperity to its poor majority. The government says state-provided health insurance has been expanded to cover 95 percent of people in China, up from less than 50 percent in 2006.

Following the accusations against GlaxoSmithKline employees, the chairman of a government health panel acknowledged the link between low spending and graft.

Beijing has imposed price caps on several hundred drugs deemed essential. But that gave hospitals that add a surcharge to medicine prices an incentive to use more of them. The Cabinet's planning agency launched an investigation in July of production costs at 60 Chinese and foreign suppliers in a possible prelude to issuing new price standards.

The government has promised to ban surcharges by hospitals to reduce incentives to overuse drugs.

Beijing also has promised to pay doctors more, but Peking University's Liu said bringing them into line with comparable professions could require doubling or tripling salaries.

Instead, some reformers are urging Beijing to adopt a U.S.- or European-style system in which doctors can work second jobs and open private clinics.

___

AP researchers Fu Ting in Shanghai and Zhao Liang contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/glaxo-case-shines-light-chinas-medical-bribery-094818478.html

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Hey, Microsoft Office is out for Android now, too.

Hey, Microsoft Office is out for Android now, too. Now you can work even more. It's not optimized for tablets, though, so stick to the Office web apps if some deranged kidnapper is forcing you to work on a tablet. [Google Play]

Read more...

    


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