Saturday, December 31, 2011

uBook, otra notebook con dos pantallas tactiles

Me entero seg?n fuente que en ces 2012 se va a presentar un modelo de notebook o netbook el cual tiene dos paneles t?ctiles digamos que todo pantalla (o dos pantallas) sin ser flexible como el futuro que nos espera, esta idea no es exactamente nueva,? pero no tuvo mucho ?xito y no se ha convertido realmente en un factor de forma convencional.

Este tiene una denominaci?n especial y espera ponerse de moda en este 2012 como? uBook, La Notebook Universal de NajmTek? la cual est? lista para ser presentado en CES 2012 en poco m?s de una semana. La demo que mas abajo pueden ver en el video nos indica que la port?til puede ser configurado para trabajar con Windows o Linux.

Como vemos la pantalla t?ctil inferior est? dise?ado para adaptarse a la situaci?n actual. Donde podremos tener un teclado QWERTY o AZERT.

El resto de las caracter?sticas de la uBook es igual a de una notebook convencional.

Te gusto el post sobre uBook, otra notebook con dos pantallas tactiles?. Si eres nuevo puedes seguirnos en Twitter o Facebook, adem?s de suscribirte gratis a nuestro RSS feed.

Source: http://www.tecnologiait.com.ar/ubook-otra-notebook-con-dos-pantallas-tactiles/

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GOP voters focus on nation economy, not Iowa's

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks during a campaign stop at the Westside Conservative Club breakfast,Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011, in Urbandale, Iowa. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks during a campaign stop at the Westside Conservative Club breakfast,Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011, in Urbandale, Iowa. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks to reporters during a campaign stop at the Southbridge Mall in Mason City, Iowa, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop at the Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines, Iowa, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) ? The "Great Recession" barely touched Iowa City.

The University of Iowa and its hospital are in the middle of a construction boom. A manufacturer is touting plans to hire 175 people for a new iron foundry. Farmers working the land outside the city are flush with cash from record-setting crop prices.

Yet, after Rick Perry entered the Republican presidential race, he rolled into town on a bus emblazoned with "Get America Working Again" and offered prescriptions for fixing the economy. Newt Gingrich stopped by to bash what he calls job-killing environmental and labor regulations. Ron Paul said during a recent visit that an overreaching federal government is hurting "the productivity of all of us and means we will be poorer."

Throughout the campaign for Tuesday's Iowa caucuses, it hasn't seemed to matter much that the state economy is in far stronger shape than the rest of the country, with unemployment at 5.7 percent, agricultural real estate selling near all-time highs and some manufacturers reporting a shortage of skilled workers to fill all their openings.

Republican voters who in past election years focused on pocketbook issues specific to Iowa, such as corn subsidies or ethanol policy, say they're taking a wide-angle view of the economy this year. They blame President Barack Obama for its sputters and fear giving him a second term will slide it back toward the abyss.

"The economy is still suffering, even though the numbers don't say it. People are hurting and things have gone downhill since Barack Obama became president," said Pam Swick, a Council Bluffs retiree and Perry supporter.

"Yes, things are better here. But they're still not good," she said. "And don't credit President Obama for it. He's made it worse. Things here are going fine despite him, not because of him."

Iowa's economy fell into recession later than the nation's and didn't drop as far as some other states, said Iowa State University economist David Swenson. There wasn't much of a housing bubble, partly because the state is slow-growing but economically stable.

Yet a recent New York Times/CBS News poll found the economy was by far the most important issue to likely Republican caucus-goers. Leading the polls off and on in recent weeks have been the candidates most associated with the pro-business, small-government, economic freedom slices of the GOP: Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul. Those with stronger ties to the party's social conservative base ? Rick Santorum, Michele Bachmann and Perry ? make time for a healthy dose of economics during their stump speeches.

Jim Knapp, a 71-year-old home builder who lives in Iowa City and plans to support Bachmann, is one of many taking the wide view. Knapp said he is collecting Social Security and works on home remodeling projects while his wife works at the University of Iowa. They're doing fine financially.

But he said he's worried about the long-struggling economy in Detroit, where his son is a preacher. His son-in-law, meanwhile, is being laid off in a downsizing at a financial company in Minnesota.

"Iowa's economy has held up because of the agricultural base," Knapp said as he left a Bachmann event at a diner. "But we need to get the whole economy back on track. As long as the nation is suffering, everybody is, to some extent."

To be sure, not all of Iowa is as economically healthy as Iowa City. Swenson said that while Des Moines and the corridor between Iowa City and Cedar Rapids are doing well, cities such as Waterloo and Mason City that rely heavily on manufacturing are struggling with long-term unemployment and a slow recovery.

"We're just kind of stuck in neutral," Swenson said. "On average, we don't look so bad, but a large swath of the state also doesn't look so hot."

Still, Swenson said he wasn't surprised that Iowa's Republican voters are focused on the economy outside of the state. Many are businesspeople and farmers who equate a recovering national economy to renewed demand for their products.

That's the view of Norman Olson, a 77-year-old retired farmer from Northwood, near the border with Minnesota. "It still hurts that other people don't have work other places," he said. "We are not isolated from the rest of the country."

Then, there's Obama. A recent University of Iowa Hawkeye poll found that Iowa Democrats have a brighter view of the economy than those in the GOP, suggesting some of the gloomy Republican outlook could be tinged by anti-Obama partisanship.

That's the case for Carol Ann Christiansen, 55, president of the Johnson County Republican Women and the retired owner of a floral business. She said she wants a candidate who will be frugal in Washington and "create the jobs this country so desperately needs." She dismissed the economic success in the state college town of Iowa City as being largely funded by taxpayers.

"We need a president who is going to give business people some economic certainty," Christiansen said. "Every other day there seems to be some new regulation that makes it hard for them."

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott and Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report from Dubuque, Council Bluffs and Mason City.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-29-Iowa%20Caucuses-Economy/id-fd50c75fae324fe6b80f1f7bae40cb30

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Friday, December 30, 2011

State cuts to Medicaid affect patients, providers

(AP) ? Just as Medicaid prepares for a vast expansion under the federal health care overhaul, the 47-year-old entitlement program for the poor is under increasing pressure as deficit-burdened states chip away at benefits and cut payments to doctors.

Nearly every state has proposed or implemented a plan in its current budget to rein in costs, and many are considering additional cuts in the year ahead.

For the tens of millions of poor and disabled who rely on the program ? approaching nearly one in five Americans ? the cuts translate into longer waits for doctors, restrictions on prescription drugs, a halt to vision and dental care, staff cuts at nursing homes and dwindling access to home health care.

Ruth Wohlforth, 70, is among those feeling the effects.

Her $700 monthly income qualifies her for both Medicare and Medicaid, but she says her benefits have been reduced, she's being forced her to make co-pays for the first time on prescription drugs, and she now has to drive about 30 minutes from her home near the southern tip of New Jersey to see a doctor. Some of her friends have been assigned to doctors in Philadelphia.

She said she feels lawmakers are not aware of the real-world consequences of their spending cuts.

"I've seen so many people in tears, and they don't know what to do," Wohlforth said. "People that are older than I am, and are in worse shape, they get befuddled by the whole thing. They don't know where to go for help; they just feel they're not being listened to."

States are reshaping the Medicaid landscape even as the need has grown along with joblessness during the recession.

The $427 billion-a-year program, a combination of state and federal funding, also had been targeted for additional cuts at the federal level this year as members of Congress sparred over how to reduce the nation's debt. But funding seems safe for now after a special committee failed last month to reach an agreement on how to cut overall spending.

Already, many changes at the state level have been dramatic and are testing the legal bounds of what Medicaid must provide:

? Arizona, for a time, eliminated life-saving transplants for Medicaid patients, and hospital officials in the state blame at least one death on the halt in coverage. Gov. Jan Brewer restored transplants but is prohibiting thousands of low-income, childless adults from entering the program and has added fees on those who smoke and the obese.

? New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is pushing a plan under which only the poorest would qualify. A parent of two making more than $103 per week would no longer be eligible for coverage.

? The U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether California has the right to continue cutting payments to physicians and other Medicaid providers to help close the state's ongoing budget deficit.

Cuts to provider fees, as in California, have been the most frequently used tactic by states to save Medicaid costs. A recent survey by the National Association of State Budget Officers found that 33 states wanted to reduce provider rates and another 16 sought to freeze them.

California was granted permission by federal officials to make broad cuts to reimbursement rates to its Medicaid program, known as Medi-Cal, in October. The cuts include a 10 percent reduction to payments for outpatient services for doctors, clinics, optometrists, dental services, medical equipment and pharmacy. They are intended to save the state an estimated $623 million.

A coalition of trade associations representing doctors, pharmacists and chain drug stores has filed a lawsuit seeking to stop the cuts. Doctors who care for Medi-Cal patients say they already have been subjected to multiple pay cuts, and some say they no longer will be able to serve the state's neediest patients.

About 70 percent of Dr. Douglas Tolley's practice in Yuba County is covered by Medi-Cal. The 64-year-old obstetrician, who practices in a largely agricultural region about 40 minutes north of the state capital, said he is the old-school sort of doctor who "was brought up in a time when doctors took care of all comers."

Yet he has seen his income steadily drop over the last 18 years ? down one-third from what it was when he started.

"Everybody understands that doctors are basically small business people, and we have to meet our cost plus make a living." Tolley said. "Just meeting our cost doesn't mean staying in business."

Even more state cuts could be on the horizon. In Maine, Gov. Paul LePage recently proposed removing 65,000 residents from the program, citing a state Medicaid shortfall estimated to reach $221 million through mid-2013. The Republican governor says he will not consider tax increases to make up the difference.

State officials, who are required to balance their budgets, argue they have no choice but to cut into Medicaid after four straight years of budget deficits. With state and federal funds combined, Medicaid makes up 22 percent of total state spending, the largest single portion of most state budgets, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers.

Critics say the moves are shortsighted.

Joan Alker, co-executive director of the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University, said slashing Medicaid will not stop the sick from seeking care, sending them to emergency rooms and ultimately inflating private medical insurance premiums.

"At the end of the day, for the children, the individuals with disabilities, the seniors in nursing homes, their health care needs are not going to go away just because someone cuts the Medicaid program," Alker said.

Jerry Kemmer, a former Democratic state assemblyman in New York, said Medicaid has long been an issue lawmakers did not want to touch. Now, they simply have no choice.

"It's ballooned to the extent that it's just become a budget-buster," he said.

Six million people have joined the Medicaid rolls since the recession began in late 2007. Enrollment nationally topped 50 million for the first time in June 2010, a number that is projected to keep rising, especially as the nation's unemployment rate remains high.

Billions of dollars from the federal stimulus program helped avoid deep Medicaid cuts through the worst of the recession, but the last of that money dried up this year.

In Florida, Medicaid reimbursement rates were reduced this year by 12 percent for most hospitals, although rural and children's hospitals were cut just 3 percent, and rates for nursing homes were cut 6.5 percent.

But the start of the next legislative session in January already has some people worried about additional cuts.

Debra St. Fleur, 25, of Miami, is covered by Medicaid, along with her 1-year-old son. Many of her neighbors in the city's Little Haiti section are on Medicaid, too, and she worries what would happen if services continue to be eroded.

"It's really scary," she said. "If they can't get their medicine, what's going to happen? They're going to die."

The Obama administration is concerned enough about the widespread Medicaid provider cuts that it has introduced a rule that would make it harder for states to slash the rates. The move is designed to ensure that those eligible for Medicaid are not denied access due to a shortage of health care resources.

Medicaid reimbursement rates already trail those physicians receive for treating Medicare patients and those with private insurance. A study by the nonpartisan Center for Studying Health System Change found that on, average, Medicaid would reimburse a doctor $39 for 45 minutes for a new patient hospital visit, compared to $63 for Medicare.

Physician groups say that has left more and more doctors declining to see Medicaid clients. Some providers are trying to find other ways to make up for the cuts.

In Columbia, S.C., Julie Ann Avin, executive director of the private, nonprofit Mental Illness Recovery Center Inc., has decided not to fill staff vacancies and also cut back on some rehab services because of Medicaid's new authorization process. The center serves about 650 people annually, close to 60 percent of whom are on Medicaid.

"We accept folks regardless," Avin said. "Everything that we do is not based just on a reimbursement."

Molly Collins Offner, director of policy development for the American Hospital Association, said emergency rooms must accept Medicaid clients, as well as those without insurance.

"More and more, you are seeing ER's becoming primary care docs," she said.

She said deep cuts rippling through the Medicaid system will only exacerbate that.

___

Associated Press writers Samantha Henry in Newark, N.J., Meg Kinnard in Columbia, S.C., Shaya Tayefe Mohajer in Los Angeles and Matt Sedensky in Miami contributed to this report.

___

Follow Shannon McCaffrey at www.twitter.com(backslash)smccaffrey13

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-27-US-Broken-Budgets-Medicaid/id-c71d59230abc465591f7b5def51cf938

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

The Worst Cads of 2011

Our cads list is fairly comprehensive, but it?s not complete. Please do add any cads we?ve left out in the comments below. Perhaps this year?s list will be instructive, and next year?s cheating celebrities will be smart enough to keep their philandering offline. We?re sure that will happen. Right after that 2012 apocalypse.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=b4828cd626ed85d5bba457ed85f7a62b

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Rose Parade Float Decorating in Full Bloom at Fiesta Parade Floats

December 26, 2011 01:00 PM?Eastern Time?

Thousands Of Volunteers Begin The Magical Process Of Transforming Giant Foam And Steel Structures Into Magnificent Masterpieces At America?s Winningest Float Builder

--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fiesta Parade Floats:

DECEMBER 27 - JANUARY 1, 2012
OPEN FOR MEDIA, DAILY
4:30 AM ? 11:30 PM

WHAT?

  • America?s Most Dominant Float Builder and designer go for a 19th straight Sweepstakes Trophy (the parade?s top prize), with a line-up that includes: Macy?s, Republic of Indonesia?s Ministry of Tourism & Creative Economy, Paramount Pictures, Dick Van Patten's Natural Balance? Pet Foods, Discover Card, Dole Foods, City of Torrance, Kit-Kat Clocks, AIDS Healthcare Foundation, Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles and Kaiser Permanente.
  • Carnival?Like Atmosphere: Hundreds of excited kids, families and volunteers gather at Decorators? Village and begin the arduous process of affixing thousands of flowers and floral arrangements to this year?s Rose Parade floats - a task that requires over 10,000 cumulative hours for completion.

WHY BE THERE?

  • It?s Where the Winners Live: Simply put, Fiesta Parade Floats has a prize winning rate of over 65% for the last 22 years, the highest prize winning rate in the Rose Parade industry, and has built the last 18 Sweepstakes Trophy Winning Floats.
  • GREAT PHOTO OPPORTUNITIES: Decorators? Village is the best place to get an up-close look at the Rose Parade preparation, as it is always buzzing with excitement all day and night.
  • Inside Look: Bring your audience a behind the scenes look at the hard work ? and fun ? that goes into getting the floats ready for the 2012 Tournament of Roses Parade.
  • Secrets Of The Fab 3: Meet world-renowned float designer Raul Rodriguez, floral director Jim Hynd and float builder Tim Estes as they reveal their secrets for creating the ?magic? that has yielded 18 consecutive Sweepstakes Trophies.
  • Action: An opportunity for your favorite ?on the scene? reporter to get their hands dirty and learn the finer points of Rose Parade float decorating with a line-up that includes a little bit of everything from children?s dreams to high-flying Girl Scouts and surfing dogs to movie magic, timeless fun, environmental action, the Royal Court and more, Fiesta?s 2012 line-up of float entries features a little bit of everything.

Fiesta Parade Floats
16016 Avenida Padilla, Irwindale, California

Source: http://feeds.businesswire.com/click.phdo?i=149c0e0e4a80005c04fe6ce14d3c3d14

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

AP survey: Economy to pick up but still vulnerable

In this Dec. 13, 2011 photo, Jerry Clay of Chicago, shops at the Macy's on State Street store, in Chicago. The U.S. economy will grow faster in 2012 _ if it isn?t knocked off track by upheavals in Europe, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

In this Dec. 13, 2011 photo, Jerry Clay of Chicago, shops at the Macy's on State Street store, in Chicago. The U.S. economy will grow faster in 2012 _ if it isn?t knocked off track by upheavals in Europe, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

In this Dec. 14, 2011 photo, a line worker assembles an engine for a Ford Focus at the Ford Michigan Assembly plant in Wayne, Mich. The U.S. economy will grow faster in 2012 _ if it isn?t knocked off track by upheavals in Europe, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

In this Dec. 14,2011 photo, Nathan Nettler polishes a tank JV Northwest, in Canby, Ore. JV Northwest manufactures stainless steel vessels. The U.S. economy will grow faster in 2012 _ if it isn?t knocked off track by upheavals in Europe, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

(AP) ? The U.S. economy will grow faster in 2012 ? if it isn't knocked off track by upheavals in Europe, according to an Associated Press survey of leading economists.

Unemployment will barely fall from the current 8.6 percent rate, though, by the time President Barack Obama runs for re-election in November, the economists say.

The three dozen private, corporate and academic economists expect the economy to grow 2.4 percent next year. In 2011, it likely grew less than 2 percent.

The year is ending on an upswing. The economy has generated at least 100,000 new jobs for five months in a row ? the longest such streak since 2006.

The number of people applying for unemployment benefits has dropped to the lowest level since April 2008. The trend suggests that layoffs have all but stopped and hiring could pick up.

And the economy avoided a setback when Obama signed legislation Friday extending a Social Security payroll tax cut that was to expire at year's end. But Congress could agree only on a two-month extension.

The economists surveyed Dec. 14-20 expect the country to create 177,000 jobs a month through Election Day 2012. That would be up from an average 132,000 jobs a month so far in 2011.

Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital, says the U.S. economy remains vulnerable to an outside shock. A big threat is the risk that Europe's debt crisis will trigger a worldwide credit freeze like the one that hit Wall Street in late 2008.

A shock to the U.S. economy, he says, might not be as dangerous if it were growing at a healthier 4 percent to 5 percent annual pace. But when growth is stuck at 2 percent or 3 percent, a major global crisis could stall job creation and raise unemployment.

Beyond Europe, troubles in other areas could also upset the U.S. economy next year, the economists say. Congressional gridlock ahead of the 2012 elections and unforeseen global events, like this year's Arab Spring protests, could slow the U.S. economy. Three economists said rising nuclear tensions with Iran are a concern.

Even without an outside jolt, the economists expect barely enough job creation in 2012 to stay ahead of population growth and the return of discouraged workers into the labor force.

"I just don't know if it's going to be enough to bring the unemployment rate down," says Chad Moutray, chief economist for the National Association of Manufacturers.

The AP economists expect the unemployment rate to be stuck at a recession-level 8.4 percent when voters go to the polls in November. Unemployment was 8.6 percent in November.

A majority (56 percent) of the economists say the economy will get a lift from Federal Reserve policies. The Fed has said it plans to keep short-term interest rates near zero through at least mid-2013 if the economy remains weak. The central bank also has begun a campaign to try to push down mortgage rates and other long-term interest rates through next June.

Those surveyed also think the economy is strong enough to withstand higher oil prices. At near $100 a barrel, oil prices are up 10 percent from a year ago. But only two of the economists AP surveyed expect the higher prices to slow the economy "a lot."

The economists expect the European economy to shrink 0.5 percent in 2011 ? and fall into a recession. Europe is slowing as heavily indebted countries slash spending and banks exposed to government debt curtail lending.

Among the gravest fears is that a major country like Italy will default on its debt, wiping out some banks with large holdings of European government bonds. A worldwide credit crunch like the one that followed the 2008 failure of Lehman Bros could follow.

Twenty-one of the economists listed Europe as a threat to the U.S. economy next year.

"If it were a big enough downturn, given the size of Europe, it could bring the world economy down into recession," says Allen Sinai, president of Decision Economics.

But overall, the economists see only an 18 percent chance that Europe's debt troubles will cause a recession in the United States.

The economists are divided over which one step European policymakers should take now to bolster the 17-country eurozone.

More than one-fourth say the European Central Bank should aggressively try to lower the borrowing costs of the Italian and Spanish governments by buying their bonds.

Nearly one-fifth say European countries should jointly issue "Eurobonds" to help finance weaker countries.

And 17 percent say European governments should slash spending.

Still, the economists expect European policymakers to find a way to prevent the crisis from escalating into a global financial panic.

If Europe can stabilize its economies, the U.S. stock markets would rally sharply, economists say, and prospects for U.S. economic growth would brighten.

"Europe appears to be the only real impediment to keeping this recovery from happening," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economics.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-27-US-AP-Economy-Survey/id-a8317f4dc5cf44359e161b097ee7bdf5

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$100 Million of Assets from Open Range Communications to Be ...

Tuesday, December 27, 2011 posted by webupdates

Heritage Global Partners to conduct public auction of cell towers telecommunications equipment, IT equipment and furnishings from leading nationwide wireless broadband company

SAN DIEGO?(BUSINESS WIRE)?Heritage Global Partners and Counsel RB Capital Inc. will conduct a global webcast auction of surplus assets held by Open Range Communications, Inc, a previous provider of broadband wireless Internet and digital phone services across the United States. The auction will be held on Wednesday, January 11 and Thursday, January 12, from 10 am MST, through 5 pm MST via live global webcast at www.hgpauction.com and in person at the company?s headquarters in Greenwood Village, CO.

The auction will feature large quantities of state-of-the-art networking, test equipment, IT equipment and office furnishings as well as more than 350 cell towers located throughout the United States.

?This auction is an opportunity for local or regional wireless telecom providers to purchase technologies and equipment to expand their services and better serve their customers,? said David Weiss, VP of Heritage Global Partners. ?We are pleased to represent Open Range, and leverage our global webcast platform and vast experience in selling assets around the world.?

To Read More Click Here.

Source: http://www.hgpauction.com/index.php/100-million-of-assets-from-open-range-communications-to-be-auctioned-on-january-11-12/2076

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Ohio police say they understand human-animal bond

backgroundblue line Sunday 25th December, 2011

Ohio police say they understand human-animal bond ??



?????Sunday 25th December, 2011??Source: Associated Press ??
"He loves his job and the work he does with me, and I love my job and my work with Willie," said Shoopman, a member of the Division of Police mounted unit.

Breaking News
Sunday 25th December, 2011


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Source: http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/?rid=202138485&cat=d3350bca3cdaf0d1

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

More tiny, but harmful, frogs showing up in Hawaii

FILE - In this June 27, 2005 file photo, a coqui frog sits on a leaf in Wahiwa, Oahu. The frogs have been growing in population in the state in recent years and are now starting to show up in larger numbers on Oahu ? home to most of the state's population. The frogs already have a strong foothold on the less-populated Big Island, and people there complain of being kept awake at night with a thunderous roar of chirps as thousands of male coqui simultaneously summon partners ? a mating chorus some say can be as loud as a jet airplane. (AP Photo/Ronen Zilberman, File)

FILE - In this June 27, 2005 file photo, a coqui frog sits on a leaf in Wahiwa, Oahu. The frogs have been growing in population in the state in recent years and are now starting to show up in larger numbers on Oahu ? home to most of the state's population. The frogs already have a strong foothold on the less-populated Big Island, and people there complain of being kept awake at night with a thunderous roar of chirps as thousands of male coqui simultaneously summon partners ? a mating chorus some say can be as loud as a jet airplane. (AP Photo/Ronen Zilberman, File)

FILE - In this March 16, 2010 file photo, Keevin Minami, with the State Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Quarantine Station, holds a coqui frog in Honolulu. The frogs have been growing in population in the state in recent years and are now starting to show up in larger numbers on Oahu ? home to most of the state's population. The frogs already have a strong foothold on the less-populated Big Island, and people there complain of being kept awake at night with a thunderous roar of chirps as thousands of male coqui simultaneously summon partners ? a mating chorus some say can be as loud as a jet airplane. (AP Photo/ Honolulu Advertiser, Norman Shapiro, File)

(AP) ? The coqui is a tiny, coin-sized frog whose distinctive nightly mating calls are a beloved sound in Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands. But people in Hawaii don't share the same sentiment.

The frogs have been growing in population in the state in recent years and are now starting to show up in larger numbers on Oahu ? home to most of the state's population. The frogs already have a strong foothold on the less-populated Big Island, and people there complain of being kept awake at night with a thunderous roar of chirps as thousands of male coqui simultaneously summon partners ? a mating chorus some say can be as loud as a jet airplane.

The frogs are also preventing the state's plant nurseries from exporting to some markets, and depressing some Big Island property values. The frogs aren't stopping tourists from visiting, but there's a fear they could if they spread further.

There have been just as many reports of coqui on Oahu in 2011 as the seven prior years combined, said Derek Arakaki, who helps hunt coqui frogs for the state Department of Agriculture. Before, Arakaki and two others on the coqui-eradication team would head out to capture the frogs on Oahu once a month or maybe twice a month. This year, there have been times when they've had to go coqui hunting twice a week.

The frogs are a significant problem in their non-native Hawaii because the state has no natural predators to stop their advance. As a result, they have spread quickly through the lush forests and yards near Hilo since they were accidentally introduced to the Big Island in the 1990s. They have been making a steady advance into the more heavily populated Oahu in recent years, sneaking onto the island on plants and stowing away in cars, piles of lumber, cargo pallets and whatever else that's being sent to Honolulu.

"Compared to the amount that's on the Big Island, very few are actually getting through," said Carol Okada, an Agriculture Department plant quarantine manager who heads the state's efforts to control invasive species. "But the amount that's getting through is still enough to establish a population, so we are still very concerned."

Coqui, which get their name because of their "ko-kee" chirps, are showing up in diverse places. The International Marketplace outdoor bazaar in the heart of Waikiki, the state's tourist mecca. Near a banyan tree in front of a multiplex theater. Seven coqui were found in a home in the upscale Diamond Head neighborhood. The residents had brought back some plants from the Big Island not knowing they needed to be inspected for coqui before shipping them to Oahu.

Coqui eradication team members spot them by mimicking their mating call, which prompts the frogs to call back. They hone in on the sound and trap the frogs with a clear tube. Sometimes, they'll spray water to entice the frog to sing.

In a few cases, the coqui team has found so many frogs they've had to kill them with citric acid, the preferred chemical for eradicating the frogs.

That was the case in the rural windward Oahu town of Hauula, where coqui had spread out across several homes and a city park. Residents there heard nocturnal chirping, but didn't call the state's pest control hotline because they thought birds were making the sounds. By the time the authorities were notified, the frogs had been around and breeding for two years. It took the crew several months to get rid of the infestation.

The problem is only made worse by recession-induced budget cuts that forced the state to slash the number cargo inspectors to 50 from 95.

This caused the Agriculture Department to prioritize checking out-of-state cargo, because imports are more likely to carry harmful species like snakes ? an animal that hasn't become established in Hawaii.

Okada said the state will have to capture more pests that get through because there haven't been enough people to spot them at the ports.

"When you're not at the front end, you end up chasing it on the back end," Okada said.

The state has had this problem with snakes, which could wipe out Hawaii's native endangered bird species they ever became established here. A dozen ? from boa constrictors to ball pythons ? have been either captured or turned in to authorities since July.

"There's a reason why all the snakes are coming out this year. We're not out in force anymore," Okada said.

Gov. Neil Abercrombie enabled the state to hire 10 more people to bring the inspector count close to 60, but Okada said they're still far short of where they need to be to effectively intercept pests entering Hawaii or traveling inter-island.

Okada said one scary thing about this past year was that many coqui were found closer to the base of Oahu's heavily forested mountains. The coqui population could explode if they started breeding somewhere like the back part of Manoa valley, where it frequently rains.

Authorities are asking the public to call the state's pest control hotline if they think they hear a coqui.

____

http://hawaii.gov/hdoa/pi/pq/coqui

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-24-Noisy%20Frogs/id-adddde188ded467e92a771ce784d73df

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

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Friday, December 23, 2011

IMF MD wraps up West Africa trip

IMFLagarde1

REUTERS

International Monetary Fund's Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses a roundtable discussion in Lagos, December 20, 2011. Lagarde is on her first trip to Africa as the Managing Director of the IMF.

Chief of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) Christine Lagarde was to leave West Africa Thursday after visiting the continent's most populous country, Nigeria, and one of its poorest, neighbouring Niger.

During a visit to Niger Wednesday and Thursday, Lagarde told local journalists that the country's gross domestic product could grow dramatically in 2012, up to 14 percent, if natural resource wealth was invested wisely.

Despite vast natural resources, notably uranium, Niger is ranked second from bottom on the UN's 187-country strong Human Development Index, just above the Democratic Republic of Congo.

According to a 2011 report from the UN's Human Rights division, ?high levels of corruption prevent the general population from sharing in the country's wealth.?

?Uranium mining contracts in particular have been highlighted by observers as being allocated in a covert manner. A lack of transparency perpetuates the corruption,? the report adds.

But Lagarde, who is on her first trip to Africa since succeeding Dominique Strauss-Kahn in May, admitted that ?few countries have managed natural resource wealth well.?

Niger is also plagued by seasonal food shortages, usually peaking between June and September when crop availability is generally low. About 70 per cent of the country's population depend on farming and access to locally-harvested crops.

The UN's Children's Agency (UNICEF) launched an appeal this month for 65 million dollars, to prevent what it calls a potential ?tragedy? in 2012 in Niger. The agency said that more than one million children are at risk from serious malnutrition in Niger and the surrounding Sahel belt.

On Monday and Tuesday, Lagarde visited Nigeria, where she met with President Goodluck Jonathan and praised the country's economic progress.

But, she told Nigeria's This Day newspaper that African nations should expect economic shocks as a result of the eurozone crisis.

?Growing economic uncertainty in the world is raising concerns across the continent, where vulnerability to global shocks remains high,? she said. - Sapa-dpa

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/imf-md-wraps-up-west-africa-trip-1.1203383

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Holiday showdown over payroll tax tests Obama, GOP (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Stuck in a stalemate, President Barack Obama and his Republican rivals are slugging it out in Washington rather than reaching for a holiday season accord to prevent payroll taxes from going up on 160 million workers.

The tax increases, as well as cuts to Medicare doctors' fees and a lapse in jobless benefits, are due Jan. 1. They are looming even though the combatants agree that they shouldn't happen. Instead, the warring factions have painted themselves into a corner.

House Republicans are demanding that the Senate join negotiations to produce an agreement within days; Senate Democrats insist no talks will take place before the House approves a stopgap measure to buy more time.

A House vote Tuesday scuttled a bipartisan Senate deal for a two-month extension of all three policies: the payroll tax cuts, jobless benefits and Medicare fees.

After the House killed the Senate measure on a 229-193 vote, Obama signaled he'll use his presidential megaphone to try to force Republicans controlling the House into submission.

"Now let's be clear," Obama said at the White House. "The bipartisan compromise that was reached on Saturday is the only viable way to prevent a tax hike on Jan. 1. The only one."

The Obama campaign promptly took to Twitter and Facebook to fight it out. With their candidate's poll numbers rising, Democratic operatives seemed almost giddy at the prospect of a prolonged battle.

"The response was overwhelming," said a White House official requiring anonymity to discuss Obama's political efforts.

Republican lawmakers relished the battle as well, though some of them are too inexperienced to know that presidents ? regardless of party ? usually win such high-profile fights, like President Bill Clinton did over a 1995-96 government shutdown or President George W. Bush did in skirmishes on anti-terror policies.

House Republicans instead rallied around a plan passed last week that would have extended the payroll tax cut for one year. But that version also contained spending cuts opposed by Democrats and tighter rules for jobless benefits.

If legislation isn't passed by New Year's Day, payroll taxes will go up by almost $20 a week for a worker making a $50,000 salary. Almost 2 million people could lose unemployment benefits as well, and doctors would bear big cuts in Medicare payments.

Whatever the stakes, there was little indication that Republicans would get their wish for negotiations with the Senate any time soon. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., issued a statement saying he would be happy to resume talks on a yearlong measure ? "but not before" the House ratifies the two-month bill and sends it to Obama for his signature.

Given Obama's remarks and Reid's refusal to negotiate, it was unclear what leverage Republicans had in the year-end standoff. It appeared likely the partisan disagreement could easily persist past Christmas and into the final week of the year.

A little-noticed element of the brawl was that the House-Senate parliamentary situation, which can be a critical factor, is all messed up. The Senate adjourned Saturday until Jan. 23 except for so-called pro forma sessions in which legislative business ? like responding to the House moves ? is basically impossible unless all 100 senators agree. That's never a sure thing.

The standoff was sowing confusion among business executives, who were running out of time to adapt to any new payroll tax regimen. Even the Senate's proposed two-month extension was creating headaches because it contained a two-tiered system geared to ensuring that higher-income earners paid a higher rate on some of their wages, according to a trade group.

"There's not time enough to do that in an orderly fashion," said Pete A. Isberg, president of the National Payroll Reporting Consortium trade group. "We're two weeks away from 2012." He wrote a letter to congressional leaders this week warning that the Senate bill "could create substantial problems, confusion and costs."

Meanwhile, Medicare announced Tuesday that, as it has in the past when doctors' reimbursements have been cut through congressional inaction, it would withhold physicians' payments for two weeks in January to avoid passing on a 27 percent cut in Medicare fees. The hope is that the problem gets fixed by then.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_payroll_tax

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Friday, December 16, 2011

First low-mass star detected in globular cluster

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Even the most powerful high-tech telescopes are barely able to record remote low-mass and thus faint stars. Together with researchers from Poland and Chile, an astrophysicist from the University of Zurich has now detected a low-mass star in globular cluster M22 for the first time through microlensing. The result indicates that the overall mass of globular clusters might well be explained without enigmatic dark matter.

Until now, it was merely assumed that low-mass and therefore extremely faint stars must exist. However, in view of the vast distances and weak luminosity of low-mass stars, even the most modern telescopes fail. Together with a Polish-Chilean team of researchers, Swiss astrophysicist Philippe Jetzer from the University of Zurich has now detected the first low-mass star in the globular cluster M22 indirectly. As their recent article published in Astrophysical Journal Letters reveals, it involves a dwarf star that has less than a fifth of the mass of our sun and is 3.2 kiloparsecs from it (one kiloparsec corresponding to 3,210 light years).

The evidence, which enables the mass to be determined highly accurately, is based upon so-called gravitational microlensing and requires the highest technical standards available. The measurements were carried out on the ESO VLT 8-meter telescope with adaptive optics at the Paranal Observatory in Chile.

Major breakthrough in 2000

In August 2000 Polish astronomers discovered that the brightness of a star located at about two arcminutes from the center of the globular cluster M22 increased for twenty days. They suspected that the phenomenon was due to so-called gravitational microlensing, which is based on the fact that light spreads along a curved path near large masses as opposed to in a straight line. The brightness of the star increases briefly through the gravitation of an object crossing in front of it, which acts as a lens. The star ? the source, in other words ? appears brighter for a short time before fading again after passing by the lens. In order to confirm this supposition, the astronomers turned to gravitational microlensing specialist Philippe Jetzer from the University of Zurich. The control measurement carried out on July 17, 2011 at the Paranal Observatory confirmed the hypothesis. "The detailed analysis revealed that the source was outside M22," explains Jetzer. "A low-mass star acted as a lens within the globular cluster itself."

Low-mass stars instead of dark matter?

The first evidence of a low-mass star in a globular cluster is extremely important for astrophysics as it sheds new light on the structure of globular clusters. Until now, the overall mass of globular clusters could not be explained other than with dark matter, the existence of which, however, is also unproven. "The overall mass or at least a significant proportion of globular clusters can now be explained through the presence of previously undetected low-mass, faint stars," says Jetzer.

###

University of Zurich: http://www.uzh.ch

Thanks to University of Zurich for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116059/First_low_mass_star_detected_in_globular_cluster_

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

World's smallest frog is tinier than a penny

Smaller than a penny, two newly discovered frog species are considered the smallest ever found. The pipsqueaks live in Papua New Guinea and run about 0.4 inches (8-to-9 millimeters) in length.

The two species, Paedophryne dekot and Paedophryne verrucosa, are not only the smallest frogs ever discovered, they are also the smallest of a group of animals called tetrapods (four-legged animals with backbones). The duo rounds out the Paedophryne genus, which already contained two other, slightly larger, frog species first described in 2002.

The name P. dekot derives from the word for "very small" in the local language, Daga, noted study researcher Fred Kraus; P. verrucosa was named from the Latin for "full of warts," due to its distinctively lumpy skin.

P. dekotinhabits the lower ranges, below about 4,000 feet (1,200 meters) of the western slope of Mount Dayman, in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea, and P. verrucosalives on the southeastern slope of ?Mount Suckling, near a region that joins Mt. Dayman.

"Miniaturization occurs in many frog genera around the world," Kraus, of the Bishop Museum in Hawaii, said in a statement. "New Guinea seems particularly well represented, with species in seven genera exhibiting the phenomenon. Although most frog genera have only a few diminutive representatives mixed among larger relatives, Paedophryne is unique in that all species are minute."

The frogs are so small they seem to have hit the lower limit of body size for frogs and toads, so it's unlikely that researchers will find anything much smaller. The frogs are brown or red-brown in color, with camouflaging flecks of brown and blackish triangles on their sides.P. verrucosa has lots of wartlike protrusions on its skin, along with some yellow splotches.

Because of their tiny size, their fingers and toes are too small to allow much climbing, so they have found a niche on the forest floor, where their tiny body size allows them to hide among leaf litter and moss. The author suggests they might eat tiny arthropods, such as mites.

They are so small that females of both species can have only two eggs, limiting their ability to reproduce. Most frogs have lots of eggs per litter, so this small number is very rare. They also lose moisture very quickly, restricting them to very wet tropical forests.

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      Physicists are closer than ever to hunting down the elusive Higgs boson particle, the missing piece of the governing theory of the universe's tiniest building blocks.

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The four known Paedophryne species inhabit small ranges in the mountains of southeastern Papua New Guinea and its offshore islands. Until their DNA is analyzed, researchers can't be sure who their closest froggy relatives are.

Kraus recorded the call the male P. verrucosauses to attract females, which he notes sounds like "a quick drag of a finger over a comb." It makes its calls at dusk until the sky turns dark, and also before dawn.

The study of these tiny frogs was published Monday in the journal ZooKeys

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45661141/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Federal Study: BP Oil Spill Impact on Bluefin Tuna is Minimal (ContributorNetwork)

According to the Associated Press, a federal analysis by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of bluefin tuna, an already overfished species, in the Gulf of Mexico indicates the BP oil spill in April 2010 would not impact populations as greatly as some scientists had feared.

Computer models and projections show the spill would lead to at most a 4 percent decrease in future bluefin tuna spawning, but likely much less. This species is especially important to the fishing industry in the Gulf and following the 172 million-gallon spill, about one-fifth of the fishes' spawning habitat had been contaminated with oil. Here are some facts about the ecological impacts of the BP oil spill and plans for restoration:

* The National Wildlife Federation reported that the BP oil spill could potentially impact numerous species in many ways, including sea turtles, birds such as brown pelicans, marine mammals, and especially the egg and larvae stages of animal life cycles.

* This past spring, scientists and researchers began looking into the increased number of bottlenose dolphins covered in oil and newborn and stillborn dolphin calves that were washing ashore in the Gulf, reported Reuters.

* Scientists were able to determine that the oil found on some of the dolphins' bodies came from the BP oil spill and speculated that oil inhaled or ingested by pregnant dolphins could induce miscarriages or stillborn calves.

* AOL News noted that a scientific report released in February concluded that oil on the sea floor was not degrading as fast as indicated by an official report made by BP and that oil had suffocated crabs, starfish and other sea-dwelling animals.

* The report also concluded that much of this oil was directly from the BP oil spill since oil is chemically fingerprinted.

* Shortly after the oil spill, blue crab larvae were being found with specks of oil in them, indicating the possibility of the spill impacting the ecological food web if other animals are consuming oil-tainted organisms, reported NOLA.

* Additionally, about 40 percent of blue crab habitat in the Gulf was struck by oil contamination to some degree.

* The Chicago Sun-Times noted BP was nearing the end of oil cleanup in November after 90 percent of the Gulf coast was cleaned and was switching its focus toward restoration of impacted areas.

* BP's is legally responsible for restoration of oil-contaminated areas and the company's restoration plans include planting new plantlife, replacing sand on beaches, and establishing new marshes.

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/20111204/pl_ac/10598099_federal_study_bp_oil_spill_impact_on_bluefin_tuna_is_minimal

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

More Evidence Links Specific Genes to ADHD (HealthDay)

SUNDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Variations in genes involved in brain signaling pathways appear to be linked to attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to a new study.

The findings suggest that drugs that act on these pathways may offer a new treatment option for ADHD patients with the gene variants, the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia researchers said.

In the study, researchers conducted whole-genome analyses of 1,000 children with ADHD and 4,100 children without ADHD. They then evaluated the findings in light of other research involving nearly 12,000 subjects -- 2,500 with ADHD and 9,200 without.

The genomic analysis revealed at least 10 percent of the children with ADHD had so-called "copy number variations" -- deletions or duplications of DNA sequences -- in four genes that are all part of the glutamate receptor gene family. The strongest result was in gene GMR5.

Glutamate is a neurotransmitter, a protein that transmits signals between neurons in the brain, the study authors explained in a hospital news release.

"Members of the GMR gene family, along with genes they interact with, affect nerve transmission, the formation of neurons, and interconnections in the brain, so the fact that children with ADHD are more likely to have alterations in these genes reinforces previous evidence that the GMR pathway is important in ADHD," study leader Dr. Hakon Hakonarson, director of the Center for Applied Genomics at Children's Hospital, said in the news release.

"Our findings get to the cause of the ADHD symptoms in a subset of children with the disease," he added.

One expert said the finding could prove to be significant.

"This study is important not only in that it has identified gene variants that are associated with ADHD in approximately 10 percent of cases, but it identifies novel treatment strategies related to the neurotransmitter glutamate that researchers can now try to develop for individuals with the newly identified gene variants," said Dr. Andrew Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Steven & Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center of New York in New Hyde Park, N.Y.

"This study provides further evidence not only that ADHD has a genetic basis in a distinct subset of children with ADHD but that the neurotransmitter glutamate seems to play a big role in some cases," he added. "Hopefully, these findings will allow researchers to identify safe and effective treatment strategies for the subset of children with ADHD who have variations in their glutamate-related genes."

The study was published online Dec. 4 in the journal Nature Genetics.

ADHD affects as many as 7 percent of school-age children and a smaller percentage of adults. Symptoms include short attention span, impulsive behavior and excessive activity. The causes are not known, but ADHD tends to run in families and is believed to be influenced by many interacting genes.

Adesman also noted that the technique used in this study, comparative whole-genome analysis, "may in the future identify other treatment opportunities for sub-groups of children with ADHD and other conditions."

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about ADHD.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/biotech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111205/hl_hsn/moreevidencelinksspecificgenestoadhd

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Professional Left Weekly Podcast: Ancient Rome and Your Conservative Relatives, also Zappa

enlargeproleft graphic blue and white.jpgCredit: The Professional Left

Time for your weekly podcast with the Professional Left, otherwise known as our own Driftglass and Blue Gal.

You can listen to the archives at The Professional Left and make a donation there if you'd like to help keep these going. You can also follow them on Facebook at The Professional Left Podcast with Driftglass and Blue Gal. Have a great weekend everyone and enjoy the podcast.

Source: http://crooksandliars.com/heather/professional-left-weekly-podcast-ancient-r

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Suh's 2-game suspension upheld by NFL

FILE - In this Nov. 20, 2011 file photo, Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh (90) sits on the bench during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Detroit. Suh is suspended for two games by the NFL for stomping on the arm of Green Bay's Evan Dietrich-Smith during a Thanksgiving game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 20, 2011 file photo, Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh (90) sits on the bench during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Detroit. Suh is suspended for two games by the NFL for stomping on the arm of Green Bay's Evan Dietrich-Smith during a Thanksgiving game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

(AP) ? The suspension stands, and that means Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh will sit out the next two games for stomping an opponent during a loss to the Green Bay Packers.

Suh's appeal of the suspension handed out earlier this week was denied Friday by Art Shell, jointly appointed by the NFL and the players' association to hear such cases. Suh will miss Sunday's game at New Orleans and a Dec. 11 home game against Minnesota. He can return for practice on Dec. 12.

The 2010 Defensive Rookie of the Year was penalized and ejected from the Thanksgiving Day loss to the Packers for stomping on the arm of guard Evan Dietrich-Smith. On Tuesday, the league suspended Suh and the player appealed.

Shell, however, saw no merits to the appeal during a conference call with Suh on Thursday.

Lions president Tom Lewand issued a statement saying the club respects the disciplinary process and added "obviously, today's ruling does not impact our preparations for this week's game. We remain exclusively focused on the New Orleans Saints."

Usually, a hearing is held within 10 days of an appeal, but the league expedited Suh's high-profile case so a decision could be made before Sunday's game.

Suh is barred from practice and the team's facility while suspended.

Early last month, Suh requested and was granted a meeting with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to discuss his play after he drew several penalties and fines. Suh said he had a better understanding of the rules after that meeting.

On Sunday, with it becoming apparent he would be disciplined again, Suh called Goodell to apologize.

In the game against the Packers, Suh lifted up his right knee and forcibly stepped on Dietrich-Smith's right arm during the third quarter of the Lions' 27-15 loss. Before the stomp, Suh shoved Dietrich-Smith's helmet toward the turf while separating himself from the Packers player on the ground.

He was penalized and ejected.

Asked about the incident after the game, Suh sounded defiant, insisting he didn't intentionally step on Dietrich-Smith. A day later, following criticism from the Lions, Suh apologized to his teammates, organization and fans ? not to Dietrich-Smith.

His actions prompted more criticism around the league, with some calling Suh the NFL's dirtiest player.

Suh can afford any fines ? he is making $40 million guaranteed with a chance to get paid as much as $68 million in a five-year contract he signed after Detroit drafted him No. 2 overall in 2010.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-02-FBN-Suh-Appeal/id-567f290db0de4801bcbf6223afed1ce0

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