Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Home buying could soon beat renting

By John W. Schoen, Senior Producer

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Falling home prices have sent many would-be buyers to the sidelines. If all goes well, record low interest rates and rising rents may soon prompt some of them to take a second look at buying.

Unfortunately, that's a big "if," according to Paul Diggle, a housing economist at Capital Economics.

Much of the decision to buy a house still depends on your personal finances and preferences, your career or family life, or level of financial security.

But if you?re comparing just the cost of owning and renting, buying a house may soon be the better choice, according to Diggle.

Until recently, home ownership was no bargain compared to renting, according to his analysis. ?A 33 percent drop fall in home prices, a plunge in mortgage rates and 15 percent rise in rents since the housing crash has evened the scales. Today, the median monthly mortgage payment of about $700 has fallen to about the level of a median monthly rent check. If mortgage rates keep falling and rents keep rising, the equation will tip even further toward owning.

But that analysis doesn?t include the total cost of owning versus renting. A full accounting includes ?closing costs, maintenance, insurance and property taxes, tax savings from mortgage deductions, gains or losses from home equity, among other factors. Renters have to think things about broker fees and future rent hikes. You also have to make some assumptions about future trends in housing prices and rents.

When you take those factors into account ? which Diggle has done with a homegrown ?calculator? ? someone who plans on staying put for seven years would come out ahead by about $9,000 if they bought a median-priced home rather than being a tenant in a median-priced rental. Diggle?s calculation assumes that rents keep rising by about 3 percent a year and that house prices stay flat in 2012 and 2013 and then begin rising in 2014 at about 3 percent a year.

If house prices fall further, all bets are off, said Diggle. In that case, the renters come out ahead.

?At the moment, (that) downside scenario is more likely to materialize than the upside one,? he said.

Even if Diggle's calculator were to signal a ?strong buy? for home ownership, he doesn?t expect that would spark a buyers' stampede. Most first-time buyers or households who lost a? home to foreclosure don?t have the 20 percent down payment many lenders are insisting on. They may also have trouble getting a mortgage with a credit score of 700 or more ? a higher bar than the 650 score that was the norm for the past two decades.

?A large share of the population has dropped out of the pool of potential buyers,? he said. ?Given that the choice between owning and renting a home is a luxury than many Americans simply do not have, the fact that this does appear to be the time to buy will have only a minimal effect on actual sales. Accordingly, we expect only a modest housing recovery over the next few years.

When would you consider buying a house?

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Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/23/10217301-home-buying-could-soon-beat-renting

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These Incredible Collages Are Like Standing on Top of the World [Image Cache]

It's hard not to get a slight sense of vertigo from these stereographic projections by Dutch photographer Wouter van Buuren. Each one was taken from a very high point across the Netherlands, China, and New York City. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/uumn8JkxXWU/

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Iran's Gulf smugglers feel blowback from tensions

(AP) ? By dawn, the unmarked speedboats from Iran pull into port. By dusk, they are racing back across the Strait of Hormuz loaded with smuggled consumer goods ranging from Chinese-made shoes to cut flowers from Holland.

Even as sanctions squeeze Iran ever tighter, there's one clandestine route that remains open for business: A short sea corridor across the Persian Gulf connecting a rocky nub of Oman and the Iranian coast about 35 miles (60 kilometers) away.

Yet even this established smugglers' path is now feeling the bite from the pressures on Iran over its nuclear program.

Business is sharply down, the middlemen and boat crews say, as the slumping Iranian currency leaves fewer customers for the smuggled wares. At the same time, the risks of interception are higher as Iranian authorities step up patrols near the strategic oil tanker lanes at the mouth of the Gulf.

The strait, which is the only access in and out of the Gulf, has been the scene of Cold War-style brinksmanship between Iran and the West after Tehran last month threatened to block the passageway for about one-sixth of the world's oil in retaliation for new U.S. sanctions.

"We used to make two or three trips across every day. Now, it's maybe one," said an Iranian middleman, who gave only his first name Agheel to protect his identity from authorities in his homeland.

He watched crews load up a pickup truck with bolts of fabric from Pakistan and table-size boxes of cut flowers from the Netherlands, before the trucks headed off through the treeless mountains to Khasab port.

The operation smuggles in merchandise to avoid Iranian tariffs and to bring in American and European products that have disappeared from Iranian markets because of international sanctions. Experts note that the consumer items post no real challenge to efforts to block material with military or nuclear uses.

"Still, it shows you can't close off all channels into Iran no matter how hard you try," said Paul Rogers, who follows security affairs at Bradford University in Britain. "People will find a way."

On this side of the Gulf, the smugglers operate under a tacit tolerance from authorities, even though Oman and the United Arab Emirates are close U.S. allies and have pledged to enforce sanctions. The port lies in a sparsely populated peninsula enclave belonging to Oman but encircled on land by the UAE, a legacy of how the area was carved up in the final days of British rule here in the last century that resulted in Oman holding joint control with Iran over the strait.

The goods are legally imported into the UAE and truck drivers take them across the border, paying the customary 50 dirham ($13.50) entry fee, according to the smugglers interviewed by The Associated Press. In Khasab, the merchandise is taken to warehouses and then piled on the docks less than 100 yards (100 meters) from the port police headquarters.

Omani authorities did not respond to requests for comment on the traffic.

The Khasab speedboats are far from the only back channel into Iran. Drug traffickers easily cross the hinterland borders with Pakistan and Afghanistan, and black market networks stretch across the frontiers with Iraq and Turkey. Authorities in Iraq's Kurdish region have been under pressure for years to crack down on fuel trucks heading into Iran in violation of U.S. sanctions.

But Khasab stands out for its openness and for lying on the highly sensitive Strait.

A shipment arranged by the Iranian smuggler Agheel this week was done with practiced efficiency.

A pickup truck backed into a wood-floored warehouse with hundreds of cases of cigarettes bundled three together and wrapped tightly in gray plastic weave ? in total 3,000 cigarettes under south Asian brands such as Ruby Menthol. The truck was soon sagging under the weight of boxes piled five high.

Agheel did some quick calculations: Each three-case load cost him about $1,200 and he could sell them to merchants in Iran for the equivalent of about $1,350 under current exchange rates. The truck pulling out of the warehouse represented a potential return of about $4,500.

"If we don't get caught," he added.

The smugglers have their ways of avoiding Iranian authorities.

Spotters off the coast ? on the island of Qeshm and near the port of Bandar Abbas ? call in coast guard movements to Khasab. The speedboat drivers keep close attention to the water conditions on the Strait and try to approach the Iranian coast just after sunset. The trip can take as little as 90 minutes in calm seas and up to four hours in rough water in the stripped down stripped-down 16-foot (five-meter) fiberglass boats.

Agheel's truck passed through the Khasab customs station at midday and then down a strip of hardscrabble road.

At the port ? almost in the shadow of a Costa cruise ship making a day stop ? dozens of boats were being packed and secured for the trip. There were no names or markings on the speedboats. But the items loaded on carried familiar logos: LG 42-inch flatscreen TVs, Discovery Channel DVDs, Panasonic microwaves, Yamaha motorcycle parts. Also in the stacks were textiles, satellite dishes and Chinese-made clothes and shoes.

One boat driver, who gave his name only as Aziz, had a breakfast of eggs, beans and Mountain Dew as he waited for the day's shipment to be loaded for the return run to Qeshm, a long arrow-shaped island near the Iranian coast and a main waystation for the smugglers.

Months ago, he could make as many trips as possible because the merchants in Iran were demanding goods.

But now the struggling Iranian rial ? dragged down partly by U.S.-led sanctions that could target Iran's Central Bank ? has put many things out of reach for Iranians, he said.

"No one wants to buy because the (rial) rate is not stable," he said.

He also said the Iranian coastal patrols have been boosted amid the escalating tensions over the Strait.

On Wednesday, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said the American military is "fully prepared" to deal with any Iranian effort to close the waterway. Next month, Iran's powerful Revolutionary Guard plans naval exercises in the area.

If spotted by patrols, Aziz said the two-man boat crews try to heave the goods overboard. They then must pay back the smuggling network, which can amount to thousands of dollars.

But it's worth the risk, he said.

"The situation is getting worse now," he said. "All the prices are up and Qeshm has nothing else" except smuggling.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-22-ML-Smugglers-in-the-Strait/id-e2bd6b95b8ef45589402dbff56f3a2b1

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Which Romney will show up after defeat? (Washington Post)

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Cruise ship threatens marine paradise off Italy

(AP) ? Stone fortresses and watchtowers that centuries ago stood guard against marauding pirates loom above pristine waters threatened by a modern peril: fuel trapped within the capsized Costa Concordia luxury liner.

A half-million gallons (2,400 tons) of heavy fuel oil is in danger of leaking out and polluting some of the Mediterranean's most unspoiled sea, where dolphins chase playfully after sailboats and fishermen's catches are so prized that wholesalers come from across Italy to scoop up cod, lobster, scampi, swordfish and other delicacies.

"Even the Caribbean has nothing on us," said Francesco Arpino, a scuba instructor in the chic port of Porto Ercole, noting how the sleek granite sea bottom helps keep visibility crystal clear even 135 feet (40 meters) down.

Divers in these transparent waters marvel at an underwater world of sea horses and red coral, while on the surface sperm whales cut through the sea.

But worry is clouding this paradise, which includes a stretch of Tuscan coastline that has been the holiday haunt of soccer and screen stars, politicians and European royals.

Rough seas hindering divers' search for bodies in the Concordia's submerged section have also delayed the start of a pumping operation expected to last weeks to remove the fuel from the ship. Floating barriers aimed at containing any spillage now surround the vessel.

According to the Dutch salvage firm Smit, which has been contracted to remove the fuel, there are about a half million gallons (2,400 tons) of heavy fuel oil on board, as well as some 200 tons of diesel oil and smaller amounts of lubricants and other environmentally hazardous materials.

The ship lies dangerously close to a drop-off point on the sea bottom. Should strong waves nudge the vessel from its precarious perch, it could plunge some 90 feet (30 meters), further complicating the pumping operation and possibly rupturing fuel tanks. Italy's environment minister has warned that if the tanks break, the thick black fuel would block sunlight vital for marine life in the seabed.

A week after the Concordia struck a reef off the island of Giglio, flipping on its side, its crippled 114,000-ton hull rests on seabed rich with an underwater prairie of sea grass vital to the ecosystem. Environmentalists warn the sheer weight of the wreckage has likely already damaged a variety of marine life, including endangered sea sponges, and crustaceans and mollusks, even before a drop of fuel leaks.

"The longer it stays there, the longer it impedes light from reaching the vegetation," said Francesco Cinelli, an ecology professor at the University of Pisa in Tuscany.

The seabed is a flourishing home to Poseidon sea grass native to the Mediterranean, Cinelli told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

"Sea grass ... is to the sea what forests are to terra firma," Cinelli said. They produce oxygen and serve as a refuge for organisms to reproduce or hide from predators.

The Tuscan archipelago's seven islands are at the heart of Europe's largest marine park, extending over some 150,000 acres (60,000 hectares) of sea.

They include the islands of Elba, where Napoleon lived in exile, and Montecristo, a setting for Alexandre Dumas' novel "The Count of Monte Cristo," where rare Mediterranean monk seals have been spotted near the coast.

Montecristo has a two-year waiting list of people hoping to be among the 1,000 people annually escorted ashore by forest rangers to admire the uninhabited island. Navigation, bathing and fishing are strictly prohibited up to a half mile (one kilometer) from Montecristo's rocky, cove-dotted coast. A monastery established on the island in the 7th century was abandoned 900 years later after repeated pirate raids.

Come spring, Porto Ercole's slips will be full, with yachts dropping anchor just outside the port. A steep hill provides a panoramic view of a sprawling seaside villa, once a holiday retreat of Dutch royals, and of the crescent-shaped island of Giannutri, with its ancient Roman ruins.

Alberto Teodori, who said he has been hired as a skipper for the yachts of Rome's VIPs for 30 years, noted that the area thrives on tourism in the spring and summer and survives on fishing in the offseason.

If the Concordia's fuel should pollute the sea, "Giglio will be dead for 10, 15 years," Teodori fretted, as workers nearby shellacked the hull of an aging fishing boat.

The international ocean-advocacy group, Oceana, describes the national marine park as an "ecological diamond," favored by divers for its great variety of species.

"If the pollution gets into the water, we are ruined," said Raffaella Manno, who with her husband runs a portside counter selling fresh fish in Porto Santo Stefano, a nearby town where ferries and hydrofoils depart for Giglio.

She said fish from the archipelago's waters are prized throughout Italy for their quality and variety.

"The water is clean and the reefs are rich" for fish to feed, she said, as trucks carrying oil-removal equipment waited to board ferries to Giglio. "The priciest markets in Italy come here to buy, from Milan, Turin, even Naples."

Concordia's captain, initially jailed and then placed under house arrest in his hometown near Naples, is suspected of having deliberately deviated from the ship's route, to hug Giglio's reef-studded coastline in order to perform a kind of "salute" to amuse passengers and islanders.

The maneuver is apparently a common practice by cruise ships, environmentalists lament.

"These salutes are an established practice by the big cruise ships," said Francesco Emilio Borrelli, a Green party official from Naples. He said that the Greens have received reports of numerous such sightings by ships sailing by the Naples area islands of Capri, Ischia and Procida.

Even before the Concordia tragedy, environmentalists had railed against what they brand "sea monsters," ? massive cruise liners releasing huge amounts of greenhouse gases ? sailing perilously close to the coast to thrill the passengers aboard.

"These virtual cities put at risk the richness of biodiversity, which we must never forget is at the foundation of our very survival on Earth," said Marevivo, an Italian environmental group.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-01-20-EU-Italy-Paradise-in-Peril/id-bc724a269f61487cb228f76a221050ee

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Ratings king 'American Idol' ready for 11th season (AP)

LAS VEGAS ? "American Idol" is having a bit of a Goldilocks moment. When the nation's favorite TV addiction debuted 10 years ago, critics complained the judges were too mean to the hordes of would-be singers seeking celebrity.

But after pop icons Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler became judges last year, some fans complained the show had lost its bite. "American Idol," critics complained, had become too nice.

Now in its 11th season, the Fox show that spawned a dozen pop stars and copycat talent competitions is hoping to get it just right.

With the second post-Simon Cowell season under way, Lopez and Tyler said they are striking a balance between showing compassion and respect for their fellow artists, while also not mincing their words.

"Last year was kind of our first year and we were kind of finding our way and figuring out how we were going to do things," Lopez said during a press conference in between filming the show in Las Vegas on Wednesday, hours before the Season 11 premiere. "But I just think we are more to the point now. We understand how to do it."

Tyler joked that he was peppering his encouragement with "well-rounded, slanderous attacks."

Tyler and Lopez's still-evolving shtick will likely determine whether "Idol" can match its previous successes. In an era of social networking, where YouTube videos result in record contracts, does America still want pop stars invented by a TV show?

All signs say yes.

It's been a decade since Texas native Kelly Clarkson was plucked from obscurity and turned into the nation's first American Idol in 2002 and by all accounts the show has retained its dominance over the nation's TV viewers.

Lopez and Tyler's debut year saw the show maintain its spot as the nation's most-watched TV show, making it No. 1 for the eighth-straight season. Scotty McCreery, last season's winner, became the first "Idol" to start his post-show career with a No. 1 album since Ruben Studdard in 2003.

No major changes have been announced for the show's 11th season. The season is opening with taped audition episodes before it shifts to live shows in Los Angeles that include audience voting. The show's season premier Wednesday was to focus on Savannah, Ga., before continuing in Pittsburgh on Thursday.

Veteran music producer Jimmy Iovine, chairman of Interscope-Geffen-A&M, is returning as the in-house mentor for the contestants. Finalists will once again compete midway through the competition on the Las Vegas Strip, where 42 contestants practiced singing Wednesday morning.

Tyler said soul music has emerged has this season's genre of choice, with many of the contestants looking to channel chart-topper and British soul diva Adele.

The season could mark Ryan Seacrest's last year hosting the show. He has said he would like to stay on as the show's host past 2012, but his contract ends this year. There have been several reports that Seacrest could replace Matt Lauer, should he decide to leave the "Today" show on NBC.

Season 11 opens in a different era from when the show launched in 2002. Then, former judge Cowell helped turn the competition into a national phenomenon with his harsh feedback for the show's less-than-stellar contestants. It was the only singing competition of its kind at the time.

But last year Lopez, Tyler and lone original judge Randy Jackson seemed reluctant to point out contestants' shortcomings in the same blunt manner that helped make "Idol" must-see entertainment.

The TV landscape has also changed. "Idol" now faces challenges from NBC's competition "The Voice," and Fox's "The X Factor," which stars Cowell.

The show has helped launched the careers of pop stars Clarkson, Jennifer Hudson, Chris Daughtry and Carrie Underwood.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_en_tv/us_american_idol

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House backer withdraws Web anti-piracy bill (Reuters)

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) ? The Texas Congressman whose proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) prompted dozens of websites to go dark or run protest messages this week said Friday he is pulling the measure from consideration "until there is wider agreement on a solution."

"I have heard from the critics and I take seriously their concerns regarding proposed legislation to address the problem of online piracy," U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, a Republican from Texas and the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"It is clear that we need to revisit the approach on how best to address the problem of foreign thieves that steal and sell American inventions and products," Smith said.

(Reporting by Jim Forsyth; Editing by Daniel Trotta)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120120/wr_nm/us_congress_internet_smith

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Putin says he's ready for dialogue

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin speaks at his meeting with mass media editors in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Pool)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin speaks at his meeting with mass media editors in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Pool)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, third left, meets with mass media editors in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Pool)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, second right, speaks at his meeting with mass media editors in the Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Nikolsky, Pool)

(AP) ? Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Wednesday he is ready for dialogue with the country's newly energized opposition forces but doubts whether their leaders want to talk, according to Russian news reports.

Putin met with top editors of Russian news media and was asked if he is ready for dialogue in the wake of the massive protests that erupted over allegations of vote fraud in last month's parliamentary election.

Putin said some figures had been invited for talks "not long ago" but did not come.

"This question occurs to me ? what do they want? Do they want to show that there are no discussions or that they do not want to discuss," Putin was quoted as saying by the ITAR-Tass news agency.

"We're ready, and I am personally ready to meet with them, to talk. We invited them, but they did not come even one time," he said.

It was not clear from the reports specifically who had been invited or when the invitations were issued.

Putin, who was president in 2000-2008, now seeks to return to the Kremlin in an election on March 4. Although he is seen as almost certain to win, his image has taken a significant blow from the protests, including two rallies in Moscow that attracted tens of thousands of people in the largest public show of discontent in post-Soviet Russia.

Putin has belittled the protesters, dismissing them as Western stooges, and he has firmly rejected opposition demands that the parliamentary election be negated and a new one conducted.

In late December, he had appeared to effectively reject talks with the opposition, saying they had no common platform or leadership, so "who is there to talk to?"

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-18-EU-Russia-Putin/id-b443e9bc3cc74fa9ab14b3dae9fd78a8

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Antidepressant Use During Pregnancy Might Endanger Newborn (ContributorNetwork)

A study published in the British Medical Journal revealed infants born to mothers who took antidepressants during pregnancy are at risk for dangerous levels of high blood pressure in their lungs, Medical News Today reports. Here is a guide about antidepressant use in pregnancy and pulmonary hypertension in children.

Infant lung high blood pressure

It's normal for a fetus in utero to have pulmonary hypertension because the placenta is where oxygen exchange occurs, Medscape. After birth, infants whose lungs don't make the circulatory transition properly experience symptoms such as breathing problems and higher pulmonary blood pressure. If the infant's lungs work correctly, they develop Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension in the Newborn, which can lead to respiratory failure. Pulmonary hypertension normally affects 1.2 to 3 infants per 1,000 with a 15 percent mortality rate and is responsible for 10 percent of infant respiratory failure cases.

Link between maternal antidepressants and newborn health

The BMJ study looked at 1.6 million single-birth infants, of which 27,000 mothers took a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressant during pregnancy. SSRIs include Prozac, Paxil, Zoloft and Celexa. Researchers found that risk of infant pulmonary hypertension was only slightly increased if the mother used an SSRI before the eighth week of pregnancy. Infants born to mothers who took SSRIs after 20 weeks had double the risk, Medical News Today says.

Concerns for mother and baby about antidepressants

Quitting antidepressants after getting pregnant might be better for the baby but more dangerous for the mom, the Mayo Clinic reports. Traditionally, it was thought mothers were protected from depression during gestation by feel-good hormones associated with pregnancy. Now doctors aren't so sure. There are also sometimes extra depression triggers in pregnancy. Untreated depression can be dangerous for the baby, WebMD reports. Stopping antidepressant use for pregnancy might exacerbate emotional issues. Depressed mothers are also more vulnerable to post-partum depression.

Advice to mothers

WebMD says that in deciding whether to use antidepressants during pregnancy that the main factor is the severity of the mother's emotional health issues. There are also some antidepressants that might be safer for babies than others. The Mayo Clinic lists tricyclic antidepressants and bupropion (Wellbutrin) as safer pregnancy drugs. Drugs says Paxil has been linked to birth defects and not recommended during pregnancy.

Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben writes about parenting issues from 23 years raising four children and 25 years teaching K-8, special needs, adult education and home-school.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120117/hl_ac/10835213_antidepressant_use_during_pregnancy_might_endanger_newborn

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Golden Globes viewership off slightly from 2011 (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? All the hype surrounding British comedian Ricky Gervais's return to host Sunday night's Golden Globe awards and how he might tweak the sensibilities of the stars in attendance failed to boost the TV audience.

The star-studded Hollywood awards ceremony lured 16.8 million total viewers to the telecast, the NBC television network said on Monday. That was a slight dip from the 17 million who tuned in last year when Gervais ruffled feathers in the audience and drew poor reviews for caustic jokes about stars including Robert Downey, Jr. and Charlie Sheen.

Among the key viewer group of 18-to 49-years-old adults, the awards telecast drew a 5.0 rating, which again was slightly below last year's 5.2, according to NBC.

Gervais promised more of the same type of humor this year, and aimed his acid wit at Johnny Depp, Mel Gibson, Jodie Foster, Kim Kardashian and others. But his edge was decidedly less sharp this year, and for the most part, critics noticed.

"Despite all the tough talk leading to Sunday night's broadcast, it was a markedly respectful and restrained Ricky Gervais who showed up," TV critic Mary McNamara began her review in the Los Angeles Times

Writing for show business website TheWrap.com, Tim Molloy said "Gervais told solid jokes. But despite promises he wouldn't hold back, none were as harsh as the ones last year."

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Christopher Michaud)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120116/tv_nm/us_goldenglobes_ratings

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Philippine chief justice impeachment trial starts (AP)

MANILA, Philippines ? The Philippine Senate has begun an impeachment trial of the Supreme Court chief justice, who has been accused of corruption and blocking the prosecution of detained former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.

Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile promised Monday an impartial and fair trial for Chief Justice Renato Corona. Corona was impeached by the House of Representatives last month on allegations that include a bias for Arroyo, who has been detained on electoral fraud charges.

Corona is attending the trial. He earlier declared in a speech before Supreme Court employees that he would fight to prove his innocence and defend the court's independence.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_on_re_as/as_philippines_impeachment

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

?I Engaged In A Week-Long Drug-Fueled Orgy With Corporate Income Taxes? (Theagitator)

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Costa Concordia: Why navigation might 'fail' and other cruise ship questions

An Italian cruise ship, the Costa Concordia, collided with rocks off the coast of Tuscany and capsized this week, leaving many unanswered questions as to how and why the accident occurred. The Monitor spoke with admiralty and maritime lawyer David Y. Loh, who points out how an over-reliance on technology and staffing shortages have been problems in the industry. Mr. Loh is a former Lieutenant Commander in the US Navy and specializes in risk management.?

- Whitney Eulich,?Staff Writer

The captain of the Costa Concordia cruise boat that ran aground off Tuscany on Friday claims the rock he hit?wasn?t marked on navigational charts, reports Reuters. But maritime lawyer David Y. Loh says relying on one navigation system is never fail-proof.
?
?[A large rock] wouldn?t show up if the [electronic] navigation system was turned off,? Mr. Loh says. ?If it was turned on and operating properly it would work properly, but that also presumes someone is monitoring the system and its settings.?
?
Some navigation systems will have an alarm built in that will go off when it is close to hazards, Loh says. When a boat is leaving port and close to land the alarm may go off incessantly. ?If you?re close to land you might turn [the alarm] off to prevent that,? he says.

Steering a large vessel like the Costa Concordia cruise boat should never rely solely on electronic navigation systems, Loh says. ?I don?t know why they were so close and whether or not [the ship] was in a sea lane,? says Loh, but if they intended to take that route, procedure would have likely called for consulting with a local pilot familiar with the coastal terrain.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/7yVHOenB0kY/Costa-Concordia-Why-navigation-might-fail-and-other-cruise-ship-questions

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Regal but never solemn, Freeman honored at Globes (AP)

In accepting the Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award Sunday night, Morgan Freeman showed all the characteristics with which he's long graced the movies.

He was sharp, honed and sure. He was dignified, certainly, but also mischievous, as when he interrupted his speech to take notice of a famed musician in the front of the crowd at the 69th annual Golden Globes.

"Hi, Elton," Freeman said with a glint in his eye.

The 74-year-old Freeman has been on the lifetime achievement circuit lately. In the past year, he's received American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award and the People's Choice Awards' first-ever movie icon award. The Cecil B. DeMille award follows five Oscar nominations (and one win for his supporting performance in "Million Dollar Baby") and five Golden Globe nominations, including a win for his lead performance in "Driving Miss Daisy."

But Freeman, whose earring has long been a feature of his stately visage, has never been one for self-indulgent flattery, always wary of the calcifying effect of being labeled a legend. So he kept it brief and to the point Sunday, noting that the clip reel of his still quite busy career made him appreciate the people with whom he had worked and "how much fun I've been having."

"If you do what you love, you'll never have to work a day in your life," he said.

Freeman was, naturally, not speaking in the past tense. He is currently shooting the third season of his Science Channel series "Through the Wormhole" and later this year will reprise his role in the highly anticipated Batman blockbuster "The Dark Knight Rises."

Freeman ? who has played God in the films "Bruce Almighty" and "Evan Almighty" ? has sometimes chafed at being pigeonholed as "Mr. Gravitas," his catchall name for his more grandiose roles. His deep, melodious voice has made him a popular narrator, most famously in the 2005 documentary "March of the Penguins."

Few have matched Freeman's dignified screen presence, but one of them helped introduce the actor Sunday night: Sidney Poitier.

"In my humble opinion, sir, you are indeed a prince in the profession you have chosen," said Poitier, a previous DeMille honoree, who himself received a standing ovation. "We thank you, Mr. Freeman, for raising the level of excellence yet another notch."

Helen Mirren followed Poitier's serious tribute with a more relaxed introduction: "I'm going to lower the tone," she warned.

"He's made over 50 films and I've only been in one of them," said Mirren, who co-starred in the 2010 action film "Red" with Freeman. She then did a brief, waddling audition for "March of the Penguins" and pleaded, "I could have been a penguin."

Freeman warmly responded to Mirren, but it was clear Poitier's words were deeply meaningful.

"Being up here receiving this award, this tribute that you yourself received, makes it clear to me that though they call this the Cecil B. DeMille Award, in my house, it will also be called the Sidney Poitier Award."

Freeman made his big-screen debut as an extra in 1965's "The Pawnbroker," and his film work remained modest over the next two decades.

His big successes early on came in theater, which brought him a Tony Award nomination for 1978's "The Mighty Gents," and television, where he was a regular for six years on the children's show "The Electric Company."

A clip from "The Electric Company" that amused the audience and likely viewers as well was included in Freeman's tribute reel. There was a young Freeman as Count Dracula, singing "I Love to Take a Bath in a Casket," a YouTube video of which quickly went viral while the Globes carried on.

Freeman's big-screen career took off with 1987's crime drama "Street Smart," which earned him his first Oscar nomination. His lengthy career has included a number of beloved performances, including "Glory," "Unforgiven," "The Shawshank Redemption" and "Lean on Me." He co-starred in this year's family film "Dolphin Tale."

When Clint Eastwood ? who has directed Freeman in several of his best performances, including "Unforgiven," "Invictus" and "Million Dollar Baby" ? presented Freeman with his AFI honor, he called him "the greatest actor."

"He is the most effortless person to be around and to act," Eastwood said. "I don't know if it's proper to love another man, but this is as close as I'm going to get to it."

Poitier ended his tribute to Freeman with a nod to the future.

He said, "May your journey be long and your characters continue to multiply."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_en_tv/us_golden_globes_freeman

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Anthony: It's not easy being first lady (CNN)

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

White Galaxy Nexus shows itself, plans an arctic vacation

We knew a snowed-out version of Samsung's Galaxy Nexus was on pace for a February release, and while we've still got a few weeks left, it looks as if one or two have slipped through the cracks. The fine folks over at HDBlog.it managed to get a hold of the prized possession, and for anyone who has managed to pass their eyes over the white Galaxy S II, there's not a lot to be shocked by. The bezel along the front remains black, but hey -- beggars can't be picky, right? Tap that source link for a gallery's worth of eye candy.

White Galaxy Nexus shows itself, plans an arctic vacation originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Jan 2012 23:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday Night Open Thread (Balloon Juice)

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Head Agony

When Lewis Carroll sent Alice down the rabbit hole, she encountered a strange and twisted land with distortions of size and time. Some headache experts see something else ? the possible ghosts of the author?s migraines, which can leave victims temporarily blinded, nauseated, hallucinatory, numb, unable to concentrate or seeking shelter from painful stings of light and sound.

People with migraines travel between two worlds: one in which they are having a migraine and one in which they are not. ?I?m very brave generally,? Tweedledum tells Alice, ?only today I happen to have a headache.? But even after the headache is gone, migraine sufferers live with the dread of its return.

For more than a century, researchers have been trying to step through the looking glass to find clues to the mystery of migraines, with little success. Treatments that can prevent or end migraine attacks exist only because drugs for something else were found, often by accident, to quiet the migraine?s neurological storm.

?All of the major things we use were not designed for migraine at all,? says Peter Goadsby, a neurologist at the University of California, San Francisco. ?It?s not good enough that one of the commonest of medical problems has treatment developed by serendipity.?

A major barrier to relief, it turns out, has been that migraines, which affect 36 million people in the United States, have no known cause. But researchers now think that they are, at least, looking for the culprits in the right places.

?For almost 100 years, people believed it was a vascular disease,? says Rami Burstein, academic director of the Comprehensive Headache Center at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Blood vessels, it is now thought, are probably just aiding and abetting the crime. Instead, the perpetrators are nerves inside the brain itself, which misfire and set off a disastrous sequence of events. Making things more complicated, migraine sufferers may differ in their thresholds of susceptibility and sets of triggers. ?Migraine is for the most part a genetic disease,? Burstein says, ?a problem with genes that regulate excitability of neurons in the cortex.?

Study results announced last year point to three genes that may be linked to migraines. Along with other ?migraine genes,? the findings seem to paint a picture of brain cells that remain too jumpy when they are supposed to be settled down. With each new discovery, migraine sufferers are brought closer to the day when they might finally be able to escape the hell in their heads.

Stemming the tide

Migraine researchers spent a long time focusing on blood vessels, partly because the notion seemed to make sense: The pain of a migraine throbs in sync with a person?s heartbeat, and triptans ? the first class of drugs approved specifically for migraines ? constrict blood vessels in the brain. Research suggested that vessels in the head set off a domino of neurological reactions after abnormally contracting, then dilating. Ironically, some of the shift away from the blood vessel theory arose from the study of triptans themselves.

Sumatriptan, the first of the triptans, was introduced for clinical use in the early 1990s. ?It was a real milestone in the headache world,? Goadsby says. ?But as people looked at sumatriptan, it became clear that it did more than just constrict blood vessels.? The drug also affected nerves, raising the possibility of a different explanation for its effectiveness. More recent evidence has poked holes directly in the blood vessel theory: A study in 2008 in the journal Brain found that blood vessel size during much of the headache is normal (though a more recent study with better resolution is more supportive of at least some vascular role in a migraine attack).

Goadsby was drawn to study migraines largely because one part of the vascular theory never made sense to him. The pain often strikes only one side of the head, and it isn?t necessarily the same side from episode to episode. ?I never understood how something originating from the bloodstream would just affect one side of the head,? he said.

So Goadsby decided to use medical imaging as a window into the brains of people having a migraine attack. His curiosity had mostly to do with the brain stem, which controls many basic body functions, such as digestion and circulation ? some of the same systems known to go haywire during a migraine attack. It seemed logical to him that a migraine had to originate in some central area since, other than the headache itself, the symptoms don?t tend to be lopsided.

?The brain stem has, in a small area, the ability to affect a large part of the brain,? Goadsby says. In experiments he began publishing in 2005, he used PET scans to identify three locations in the brain stem (corresponding to three distinct structures) that show greater than normal activity during a migraine attack. These parts of the brain usually act as a damper on nerve signals, he says. But when the structures allow too much input to pass through, nerve signals pour into the rest of the brain without control, Goadsby hypothesizes. That?s why normal sensations such as light, sound and even the pulsing of blood through the head become painful. He also believes that the malfunctioning of these areas of the brain stem give rise to one of the most peculiar aspects of a migraine ? the aura.

An aura is a sensory disturbance that occurs in about one in four people with migraines. It commonly begins as a flickering of bright lights, like the flashes of an ambulance, in the corner of the visual field and gradually intensifies as it works its way across the line of sight. Some patients experience tingling, nausea and slurred speech during the aura, as well as blind spots once it subsides. An aura vanishes within an hour, and is replaced by a detonation of pain in the head.

Unbearable lightness

The origin of the aura has long been a topic of research fascination. An explanation now gaining consensus emerged in the 1940s from Brazilian biologist Aristides Le?o while he worked on his dissertation at Harvard Medical School. After performing experiments in rabbits, Le?o noted a marked change in electrical activity that started in one group of cells and rippled across the cortex, the outer layer of the brain. The hyper-excited nerves fire, and then appear to recalibrate, going temporarily silent. Le?o called the phenomenon ?cortical spreading depression.? Later researchers connected the phenomenon to a migraine aura, reasoning that the flickering light that patients see could occur as the cortical spreading depression crosses the visual center at the back of the brain.

The theory of cortical spreading depression was mostly confined to animal data, remaining at the margins of medical research for decades, until researchers could obtain brain scans of patients experiencing a migraine. One of the first of these images, published in 1994 in the New England Journal of Medicine, came about by chance. A young woman was in a scanner at UCLA for a study of cerebral blood flow when suddenly her migraine began. For about 15 minutes, researchers were able to document a wave of low blood flow (which they believe corresponded to nerve cells going temporarily inactive) spreading across the woman?s brain. A second study was led by Michael Moskowitz of Harvard Medical School. Moskowitz says that in the late 1990s he learned of an engineer who could induce his migraine auras with intense exercise. So Moskowitz and his team invited the man to campus, had him play basketball for 80 minutes and then whisked him off for an MRI.

In 2001 in the Proceedings of the Na-tional Academy of Sciences, Moskowitz?s team published the first MRIs of an aura from start to finish. In addition to the engineer, the researchers also took brain images of two campus employees who entered the scanner shortly after their auras had begun. As predicted, the images showed a wave of overactive (then underactive) neurons creeping across the cortex. ?It?s not unlike what would happen if a stone were dropped in quiet pond,? Moskowitz says. The data suggest that the blood flow changes in the brain ? the ones that led researchers in the wrong direction for decades ? are more likely caused by the aura, and not vice versa. Active neurons grow hungry for fuel.

There is little debate about whether cortical spreading depression is a component of a migraine, but one central question is where it comes from, as well as its exact relationship with the pain. Goadsby believes the aura and pain arise from the brain stem, but others, like Moskowitz, say the activity changes observed in the brain stem are a result of a migraine, not the cause.

?The evidence that this kind of an event is triggered in any precise region of the brain is overstated,? Moskowitz says. Instead of having origins in the brain stem, he suggests, the cortical spreading depression can arise in any part of the brain, an idea consistent with animal studies.

Moskowitz also does not agree that the changes that occur in the brain stem during a migraine open the floodgates on nerve signals, allowing normal sensations to become painful. Instead, he points to laboratory experiments supporting the idea that the cortical spreading depression itself is responsible for the pain. Most of the brain does not have the capacity to feel pain; only the nerve endings in the dura mater, the organ?s tough outer covering, and related tissue are pain-sensitive. A headache happens because of the stimulation of these nerves, which fire as the wave of excitability makes its way across the cortex, Moskowitz believes. ?Cortical spreading depression releases in a drastic way a group of chemicals that are normally sequestered in cells of the brain,? he says. When those chemicals ? such as potassium, hydrogen ions and the neurotransmitter glutamate ? get dumped, they may activate the pain fibers on the brain?s surface through a process that is still being worked out.

Skeptics of this idea point out that most people get migraines without an aura. Moskowitz?s belief is that cortical spreading depression occurs but does not affect the brain?s visual processing and thus remains undetected ? a kind of hidden aura.

In truth, much about migraines is still unknown, says Burstein of Beth Israel. ?Migraine is a complex disorder,? he says, involving abnormalities in both the cortex and the brain stem. Where the pain comes from is still unclear, and perhaps the mechanisms behind chronic migraines (which occur more than 15 days a month) are different from those for less frequent ones. Migraines that strike regularly could originate from the cortex but over time could damage the cells of the brain stem. ?This damage may reduce the ability of the brain stem to mitigate incoming signals,? he says.

And none of the research so far has clearly answered the biggest question: What?s the first thing that goes wrong? The list of potential migraine triggers reads like a catalog of daily life experiences: hunger, flashing lights, alcohol, strong smells, chocolate, cheese, too little sleep, too much sleep, stress, relaxation after stress, menstrual cycle changes, weather changes, and on and on. (And there may be no triggers at all; the changes in the brain that lead to an attack could cause someone to crave chocolate or feel stressed, or undergo other physiological shifts.)

?We don?t know why someone gets a migraine when they are exposed to a perfume in the elevator, when 10 other days they smelled the perfume and didn?t get it,? Burstein says. ?Once it starts, we know a lot about it. What we don?t know is why and how.?

Tinderbox of nerves

While scientists debate the why and how of the trigger, genetic studies are getting at a separate question ? who. Most researchers believe that genes contribute to a person?s susceptibility to the triggers. The headaches seem to run in families, and the risk is higher if you have an immediate family member with migraines.

Most migraine sufferers probably possess a constellation of genes, each one of which contributes a little to the susceptibility. But there is one kind of migraine, called familial hemiplegic migraine, that appears to have an even stronger genetic component.

An international team of researchers studying this kind of migraine described the first ?migraine gene? in the journal Cell in 1996. The discovery came after neurologist Michel Ferrari of Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands happened to see two patients on the same day with familial hemiplegic migraine. (They turned out to be both from the same region of the country and were obliquely related.)

Since then, researchers have discovered a handful of genes that may contribute. By understanding the role of these genes, scientists could gain clues to the mechanism behind a migraine. So far, all signs point to nerve activation.

?They confirm that migraine is a disease of hyperexcitability in the brain,? says Ferrari.

Nerve cells work by transmitting electrical impulses. Normally, the inside of a nerve cell is negatively charged (thanks to a lot of negatively charged chlorine ions) and the outside is positive (from positively charged sodium, calcium and potassium ions). When a nerve cell releases a signaling molecule called a neurotransmitter, channels on the cell next door open up and allow positive ions to rush in. The cell briefly depolarizes ? the inside loses its negative charge ? and then returns back to its normal state.

Genes that have been linked to migraine all have some role in the firing of nerve cells and this positive-negative ion swap. The gene mutation described in 1996 affected the calcium ion channel. Another DNA variation, described in 2010 in Nature Genetics, inhibits a cell?s ability to clear away the neurotransmitter glutamate after the nerve has fired, allowing it to accumulate. In June 2011, Ferrari and an international team of researchers described signs of three more rogue genes in Nature Genetics. These, too, are involved in the transmission of signals from cell to cell.

?The story seems to go in the same direction,? Ferrari says. In a migraine-susceptible brain ?it?s easier to trigger neuronal activity.?

The idea is also supported by a study published last January in the journal Neurology. Researchers exposed patients suffering a migraine attack to light ? a normal stimulus that becomes excruciating during the headache. PET scans of the patients revealed that the light caused the nerves in the occipital cortex of the brain to fire. But when the patients were not experiencing an attack, the light did not have an effect on that part of the brain. Like a drought-stricken forest, the nerves may be easy to ignite, and easy to fuel once they do.

?The fact of the matter is there is plenty of evidence now that the brain of a migraine sufferer is never normal,? says David Dodick, a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz., and president of the American Headache Society. It now appears that a migraine brain exists on edge, quick to set off a headache when the right combination of circumstances comes along. ?Networks are active when normally they shouldn?t be,? Dodick says. ?The threshold for generating an attack is always just below the surface.? The rabbit hole is always near.

But maybe not forever. Soon migraine sufferers may, like Alice, be able to wake up from the nightmare inside their heads ? something Alice?s creator could never do.


Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/337574/title/Head_Agony

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US woman, pet kangaroo moving over city spat

FILE - In this March 30, 2011 file photo, Christie Carr gets a lick from her pet kangaroo, Irwin, at her home in Broken Arrow, Okla. Carr says she and her therapy kangaroo, Irwin, are leaving Broken Arrow and moving to McAlester, Okla. Carr said she was told by animal control that by keeping the disabled kangaroo in her home that she was violating city ordinance and will receive fines and or the seizure of the animal. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrock, File)

FILE - In this March 30, 2011 file photo, Christie Carr gets a lick from her pet kangaroo, Irwin, at her home in Broken Arrow, Okla. Carr says she and her therapy kangaroo, Irwin, are leaving Broken Arrow and moving to McAlester, Okla. Carr said she was told by animal control that by keeping the disabled kangaroo in her home that she was violating city ordinance and will receive fines and or the seizure of the animal. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrock, File)

In this March 30, 2011 photo, Irwin sits in his bean bag chair with his owner, Christie Carr, at rear, at her home in Broken Arrow, Okla. Carr says she and her therapy kangaroo, Irwin, are leaving Broken Arrow and moving to McAlester, Okla. Carr said she was told by animal control that by keeping the disabled kangaroo in her home that she was violating city ordinance and will receive fines and or the seizure of the animal. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

(AP) ? A woman who keeps a partially paralyzed kangaroo as a therapy pet said Wednesday that she is moving to another city over a spat with local officials, even though they insist they haven't told her to go or threatened to seize the animal.

Christie Carr, who says she has been diagnosed with depression, plans to take Irwin the kangaroo from Broken Arrow to McAlester to stay with her parents because of the fuss. Carr said she hastily packed what she could in her car Wednesday afternoon because she could "no longer trust" city officials.

"I don't know if I'll ever go back to Broken Arrow," Carr said as she made the two-hour drive to McAlester. "I don't know if I can even drive through there and feel safe."

But Broken Arrow spokeswoman Stephanie Higgins said no threats were made to seize the animal and that Carr failed to turn in the proper paperwork that would have allowed her to keep Irwin.

"She was given a draft proposal of the application last year, and she is saying she has not received anything," Higgins said Wednesday. "We have documented that we sent her the application."

Higgins said that the city re-delivered the application by hand on Wednesday, and that Carr still has until later this month to complete the necessary paperwork.

But Carr remained unconvinced, and said she was waiting for the city to send an official version of the paperwork.

"They have dragged their feet on everything," Carr said.

Last year, Broken Arrow's city council voted to create an exotic animal ordinance exemption that allowed Carr to keep Irwin within city limits under certain conditions. The permit required exotic animal owners to have a $50,000 liability insurance policy for any injuries inflicted by the animal, certification that the animal has adequate housing for its health and meet all federal and state guidelines for licensing, among other provisions.

Carr had been devastated because she couldn't afford to buy the insurance policy for Irwin, but an anonymous donor paid for Irwin's insurance last year.

Carr, who was unable to work because of her health, first found comfort in the companionship of Irwin after meeting him while volunteering at a local animal sanctuary on the advice of her therapist.

Irwin fractured his neck and suffered brain damage when he ran into a fence, and Carr offered to take him home and nurse him back to health. Irwin cannot stand or walk on his own, although he can hop with assistance.

At first, Broken Arrow city officials feared that the red kangaroo could present a risk to public safety. Native to Australia, healthy male great red kangaroos can grow up to 7 feet (2.1 meters) tall, weigh more than 200 pounds (90 kilograms) and bound 25 feet (7.6 meters) in a single leap.

But veterinarians said Irwin would probably not grow larger than 50 pounds (22 kilograms) because of his injury and because he has been neutered. Carr's therapist had certified the animal as a therapy pet under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Caring for Irwin is almost a full-time job for Carr: she changes his diaper several times a day, feeds him salad, raw vegetables and popcorn and dresses him up each time he leaves the house. The clothes ? a little boy's shirt cut and sewed to accommodate his neck, sometimes a tie, and jeans or slacks with a hole cut for the tail ? are necessary for therapeutic reasons and to protect him against germs, she said.

Carr said she had contacted animal control workers in McAlester and she said employees told her that the city had no ordinance banning kangaroos and that she and her pet were welcome in the city.

"I have to protect him," Carr said. "I have to get him out of there because they are not taking him. I haven't taken this paralyzed kangaroo and taught him to hop again for Broken Arrow to come in and remove him."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-11-Pet%20Kangaroo-Oklahoma/id-783c5130c08943989654db5519f68387

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