December 2009

Wind Spinners

Kite flying is popular in many Asian countries, where it often takes the form of 'kite fighting', in which participants try to snag each other's kites or cut other kites down. Fighter kites are usually small, flat, flattened diamond-shaped kites made of paper and bamboo. Tails are not used on fighter kites so that agility and maneuverability are not compromised. In Afghanistan this is known as Gudiparan Bazi.

The Indian festival of Makar Sankranti is devoted to kite fighting in some states. This spring festival is celebrated every January 15, with millions of people flying kites all over northern India. The states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Gujarat, some part of West Bengal, Rajasthan , and the cities of Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Dhanbad and Hyderabad are particularly notable for their kite fighting festivals. Kite flying in Hyderabad starts a month before the official kite flying festival (Sankranthi).

Wind Spinners

Aufdenblatten wins super-G, Vonn third

VAL D'ISERE, France – Franzi Aufdenblatten posted her first World Cup victory in leading a 1-2 Swiss finish in a super-G, and Lindsey Vonn placed third to take sole possession of the lead in the overall standings.
The 28-year-old Aufdenblatten finished in 1 minute, 26.43 seconds Sunday on the Oreiller-Killy course, 0.23 seconds ahead of Nadia Styger. Aufdenblatten's previous best World Cup result was the third place she twice took in downhills.
Vonn finished 0.26 seconds back. She has 581 points in the overall World Cup standings to lead Maria Riesch by 50 points.
Marie Marchand-Arvier, the super-G silver medalist at the world championships earlier this year, crashed out and was evacuated off the slope on a sleigh.

Green Mountain Coffee

Green Mountain Coffee

The production and consumption of "Fair Trade Coffee" has grown in recent years as some local and national coffee chains have started to offer fair trade alternatives.

The type of grind is often named after the brewing method for which it is generally used. Turkish grind is the finest grind, while coffee percolator or French press are the coarsest grind. The most common grinds are between the extremes; a medium grind is used in most common home coffee brewing machines.[54]

Report: Kevin Jonas, ex-hairdresser marry in NY

NEW YORK – A report says the oldest sibling of pop group the Jonas Brothers and a former hairdresser have married at a French-style chateau in suburban New York.
People magazine reported a heavy snowstorm bore down on Saturday's wedding between 22-year-old Kevin Jonas and 23-year-old Danielle Delesea at Oheka Castle, a 109,000-square-foot estate in Cold Spring Harbor.
The couple told People that the wedding went on as planned. About 400 relatives and friends attended.
Celebrity event planner Michael Russo created a fairy-tale forest theme that included heated white tents with 14-foot trees and crystals made to look like icicles.
Jonas' brothers Joe and Nick served as his best men.
A message left Saturday night for a representative of Jonas was not immediately returned.

Obama health plan gets boost as Christmas deadline looms

WASHINGTON (AFP) –
Senators readied for a crucial pre-dawn Monday vote to pave the way for US health care reform, President Barack Obama's top domestic priority, after a key holdout senator said he would back the sweeping legislation.

Democratic Senator Ben Nelson's resistance had kept fellow Democrats from corralling the 60 votes needed to ensure Senate passage over resistance from Republicans eager to hand Obama a crippling political defeat.

"Change is never easy, but change is what is needed in America today. I will vote for health care reform," said the Nebraska lawmaker, who announced Saturday he had secured the tough new restrictions he sought on public money from paying for abortions.

"With today's developments," Obama told reporters at the White House, "it now appears the American people will have the vote they deserve on genuine reform offering security to those who have health insurance and affordable options for those who do not."

While acknowledging "there is still much work left to be done," the president hailed what he called "a major step forward for the American people."

"After a nearly century-long struggle we are on the cusp of making health care reform a reality," he said.

But groups from opposites sides of the abortion debate assaulted the compromise. The pro-choice National Organization of Women called it a "cruelly over-compromised legislation," while the conservative Family Research Council blasted the "phony abortion 'compromise.'"

The House of Representatives approved similar curbs on abortion when it passed its own version of the legislation, but abortion-rights Democrats have vowed to strip them when the two chambers craft a final bill for Obama to sign into law.

Nelson warned -- "less as a threat, and more of a promise" -- that he would oppose the final House-Senate compromise if it included "material changes" that stripped out his demands, likely dooming the legislation.

His backing allowed Democrats to breathe a sign of relief ahead of a make-or-break 1:00 am (0600 GMT) Monday vote to end debate on Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's newly unveiled compromise health bill.

A tentative Democratic timeline also calls for key procedural votes around 7:00 am (1200 GMT) Tuesday and 1:00 pm (1800 GMT) Wednesday, with final passage at 7:00 pm Thursday (0000 GMT Friday) -- Christmas Eve.

If the Senate approves the bill, it will still need to reconcile stark differences with a House plan to pass a final measure before Obama's State of the Union address to the US Congress in January or early February.

Reid's measure strips out a government-backed "public option" plan to compete with private insurers, but would extend coverage to 31 million of the 36 million Americans who currently lack it, Democrats say.

It would forbid insurers from denying coverage because of pre-existing medical conditions and provide subsidies to low-income Americans.

Obama's Republican foes have sharply criticized Reid for only making the bill public Saturday and then pushing ahead with an accelerated schedule in order to meet a self-imposed Christmas deadline.

And Republicans made good on pledges to delay the bill at all costs -- forcing the Senate clerk to read the measure aloud, a process that took up most of the day.

"We will do everything in our power to stop it," vowed Republican Senator John Cornyn.

As a severe snowstorm pounded the US capital, Democrats took steps to ensure that they could call upon all 58 of their senators and the two independents who often side with them to prevail in the coming votes.

And they trumpeted a finding from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office that the bill would cost 871 billion dollars over the next 10 years and cut the soaring US budget deficit by about 132 billion dollars -- bringing it in under Obama's top pricetag of 900 billion dollars.

The United States is the world's richest nation but the only industrialized democracy that does not provide health care coverage to all of its citizens.

Washington spends more than double what Britain, France and Germany do per person on health care, but lags behind other countries in life expectancy and infant mortality, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Democrats gain 60th vote on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
Senate Democrats reached a compromise on Saturday with the last holdout senator that secured the 60 votes they need to pass a broad healthcare overhaul sought by President Barack Obama.

A marathon negotiating session on Friday clinched an agreement with Democrat Ben Nelson ensuring federal funds would not be used to pay for abortions and providing extra Medicaid funds for his home state of Nebraska.

Nelson, a strong abortion rights opponent, had been the elusive 60th vote for the sweeping revamp, Obama's top legislative priority and the subject of intense political brawling for months.

"Today is a major step forward for the American people," Obama said at the White House. "After a nearly century-long struggle we are on the cusp of making healthcare reform a reality in the United States of America."

Nelson's backing should secure victory for Democrats in the first of a series of crucial procedural votes scheduled to begin at 1 a.m. (0600 GMT) on Monday and possibly conclude with final Senate passage on Christmas Eve.

"It seems that way," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid said when asked if Democrats had the 60 votes they need to muscle the bill through the Senate against unified Republican opposition.

If the Senate approves the bill, it must be melded with a version passed on November 7 by the House of Representatives and both chambers must approve it again before sending it to Obama for his signature.

Reid introduced a 383-page amendment on Saturday making changes aimed at securing the last votes, including the abortion compromise and the dropping of a government-run public insurance option to appease moderates like independent Joe Lieberman.

The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office gave the revised bill a rosy review, saying it would cost $871 billion over 10 years and cut the federal deficit by $132 billion in the same period -- meeting Obama's cost target and goal of deficit reduction.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who has vowed to use every tool possible to delay the bill, forced the public reading of Reid's amendment. That took more than seven hours on Saturday.

Afterward, Reid filed a series of procedural motions to bring debate to a close and set up a string of closing votes to begin early Monday. The moves came during a rare Saturday session as a huge snowstorm slammed the U.S. capital, shutting down traffic.

'MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT'

"If they were proud of the bill they wouldn't be doing it this way," McConnell told reporters. "They wouldn't be jamming it through in the middle of the night on the last weekend before Christmas."

Obama has asked the Senate to finish by year's end to prevent the issue from spilling into the campaign for November 2010 congressional elections. Opinion polls show the bill losing public support, with majorities now opposed to it.

The Senate bill would extend coverage to 30 million uninsured Americans, provide subsidies to help them pay for the coverage and halt industry practices like refusing insurance to people with pre-existing medical conditions.

Reid's amendment incorporates a variety of changes, from dropping the government-run public insurance option to adding non-profit health plans offered by private insurers and administered by a federal agency.

Other revisions take aim at insurance industry margins and taxes, including a cap on profits. Still, insurers would see a delay to the bulk of new taxes and now they would be phased-in over time.

Health insurance plans for large groups would have to spend at least 85 cents of every dollar on medical costs under the revisions, potentially crimping their profits. The amendment dropped the bill's tax on elective cosmetic surgery and added a 10 percent tax on indoor tanning, a potential cause of cancer.

Also included is an increase in the bill's Medicare payroll tax from 0.5 percent to 0.9 percent on income over $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples.

But much of Reid's focus had been on winning Nelson's support. He and other abortion rights opponents feared the federal subsidies could be spent on plans covering abortion.

Nelson said the agreement would allow states to prohibit abortion coverage in the new insurance exchanges created under the bill and mandate that every state exchange include an insurance plan that does not cover abortion.

It would require payments for abortion coverage be made separately with private funds.

"The plan that we've put together here, that we have agreement on, in fact walls off that money in an effective manner," Nelson told reporters. "I would not have voted for this bill without these provisions."

He said he could drop his support if the abortion deal was altered in negotiations with the House of Representatives.

Reid defended the additional federal funds for Nebraska that will permanently pay for the bill's expansion of the Medicaid health program for the poor -- all other states have to start picking up the tab in 2017.

"That's what legislation is all about," Reid said. "It's compromise."

Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer, a strong supporter of abortion rights, told reporters she believed the compromise would adequately separate public and private funds for abortion coverage under the bill.

Advocates on both sides condemned the abortion deal.

Planned Parenthood called it "a sad day when women's health is traded away for one vote."

Douglas Johnson, the legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee said, said the compromise "solves none of the fundamental abortion-related problems with the Senate bill."

The House version of the healthcare bill includes stricter anti-abortion language. The Senate rejected an amendment incorporating the language last week.

(Additional reporting by Susan Heavey, editing by Eric Beech and Jackie Frank)

Mom's Exposure to Microbes Lowers Allergies in Kids (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Dec. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Children born to mothers exposed to
microbes during pregnancy may be less likely to develop allergies, German
researchers say.

They found that pregnant mice exposed to inhaled barnyard microbes gave
birth to allergy-resistant offspring. The microbe exposure triggered a
mild inflammatory response in the mothers. This response was characterized
by increased expression of microbe-sensing Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and
the production of immune molecules called cytokines.

The study was published online Dec. 7 in the Journal of Experimental
Medicine.

The researchers said the mothers' TLRs are essential for transmitting
allergy protection to their offspring, but it's not known how the TLR
signals translate into allergy resistance in the mice pups.

In addition, further investigation is needed to determine whether this
mother-to-offspring protection applies to a wide range of allergens,
including those found in food, said the team at the Phillips-University of
Marburg.

Previous research has shown that children raised on farms -- which teem
with environmental microbes -- develop fewer allergies than those raised
in cities or in non-farming rural areas. One theory is that early-life
exposure to microbes conditions a young child's developing immune system
to tolerate microbes and allergens later in life.

But it may not be a child's exposure to microbes that protects against
allergies. Studies have found that children of farming mothers are also
less susceptible to allergies, regardless of the child's own exposure to
microbes. This new study reveals a biological mechanism that helps explain
this phenomenon.

More information

The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America has more about allergies.

Yankees, Tigers, D'backs complete big trade

INDIANAPOLIS – The World Series champion New York Yankees landed yet another All-Star, getting center fielder Curtis Granderson from Detroit in a three-team trade Wednesday that included Arizona.
A day after the teams reached a tentative agreement on the seven-player swap, they checked all the medical records and completed the first major trade of the winter meetings.
Arizona acquired All-Star pitcher Edwin Jackson from Detroit and right-hander Ian Kennedy from the Yankees.
The Tigers came to Indianapolis looking to shed payroll and did exactly that — they got lefty reliever Phil Coke and outfield prospect Austin Jackson from the Yankees, plus touted young pitchers Max Scherzer and Daniel Schlereth from Arizona.
"The Granderson piece is something we're really happy about," Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said.
The speedy Granderson takes over for Melky Cabrera and Brett Gardner in center for the Yankees. Cashman said the trade doesn't necessarily preclude them from re-signing free agents Johnny Damon and Hideki Matsui.
Granderson was a first-time All-Star last season when he had 30 home runs, 71 RBIs and 20 steals. The lefty's batting average has fallen from .302 in 2007 to .280 in 2008 to .249 last year.
Tigers manger Jim Leyland gushed about Granderson earlier in the day.
"I think, in my opinion, Curtis Granderson is one of the things that's all good about baseball in today's baseball world. He is one heck of a player. He has a great face. He's very bright. He's very articulate. He's everything that's good about baseball," Leyland said. "He's the total package."
Detroit missed the playoffs after a late collapse and hoped to cut costs after a big attendance drop at Comerica Park. Granderson is owed $25.75 million through 2012.
"It was a business decision," Tigers general manager Dave Dombrowski said.
Edwin Jackson, a 26-year-old righty who is eligible for salary arbitration, was 13-9 with a 3.62 ERA in 33 starts for the Tigers. He held opponents to a .247 batting average in 214 innings.
Kennedy, who turns 25 on Dec. 19, impressed when he came up from the minors at the end of the 2007 season, going 1-0 with a 1.89 ERA in three starts. He's been slowed by injuries the past two seasons.
Kennedy strained a muscle near his right ribcage and had bursitis in his right shoulder blade in 2008, when he was 0-4 with an 8.17 ERA. He pitched in only one big league game this year, when he was sidelined by surgery May 12 to remove an aneurysm from beneath his right biceps.
"We feel the addition of two starters will solidify our rotation," Arizona general manager Josh Byrnes said. "Edwin Jackson is a young All-Star who has continued to improve in recent years, and Ian Kennedy is a former first-rounder with a history of success and a tremendous feel for pitching."
Coke was 4-3 with a 4.50 ERA in 72 relief appearances. He gave up two runs in 1 1-3 innings in the World Series.
Austin Jackson, 22, was regarded as one of the Yankees' top prospects. He hit .300 last season at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre with 23 doubles, four homers, 65 RBIs and 24 steals.
Scherzer, the 11th overall pick in the 2006 amateur draft, is a 25-year-old righty who went 9-11 with a 4.12 ERA in 30 starts for Arizona last season, striking out 174 in 170 1-3 innings.

Schlereth, a 23-year-old lefty, was the 26th pick in the 2008 amateur draft. He made his major league debut this year and went 1-4 with a 5.89 ERA in 21 relief appearances with 22 strikeouts in 18 1-3 innings. He is the son of former NFL offensive lineman and current ESPN football analyst Mark Schlereth.

FTSE 100 ends lower

LONDON (AFP) –
London shares slid further on Wednesday on jitters surrounding debt crises in Greece and Dubai.

The FTSE 100 index of leading shares ended down 0.37 percent at 5,203.89 points.

Lloyds Banking Group (LBG) was the most traded stock, seeing 294 million units change hands, followed by Vodafone, which saw 153 million shares switch owners.

Property investment company Segro was top of the leaderboard, adding 11.8 pence -- or 3.67 percent -- to finish at 333.3, followed by miner Xstrata, which gained 20 pence -- or 1.93 percent -- to finish at 1,054.

The day's worst performer was insurer Old Mutual, slipping 6.2 pence -- or 5.63 percent -- to close at 104, followed by investment products provider Man Group, which lost 12.4 pence -- or 3.92 percent -- to close at 304.3.

Meanwhile, the pound slipped against the dollar and the euro.

At 17:22 GMT, sterling was trading at $1.6197, down from $1.6287 at Tuesday's close, while it stood at 1.1026 euros, down from 1.1078.

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