Saturday, May 18, 2013

Top officials call to overhaul euro institutions

European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn addresses the media at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, Friday May 3, 2013. The European Union is predicting that the recession in the Eurozone will continue in 2013 and that unemployment will stand at record levels. In Friday's spring economic forecast, the EU said that gross domestic product in the 17 nations that use the euro currency will shrink by 0.4 percent this year, slightly better that the estimated -0.6 percent for last year. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

European Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs Olli Rehn addresses the media at the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, Friday May 3, 2013. The European Union is predicting that the recession in the Eurozone will continue in 2013 and that unemployment will stand at record levels. In Friday's spring economic forecast, the EU said that gross domestic product in the 17 nations that use the euro currency will shrink by 0.4 percent this year, slightly better that the estimated -0.6 percent for last year. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

FILE - In this April 23, 2010 file picture German Deputy Finance Minister Joerg Asmussen, right, and Axel Weber, then governor of the central bank of Germany, the Deutsche Bundesbank, brief reporters on their work at at the IMF-World Bank meetings in Washington. Engineering a financial bailout for Cyprus in March 2013 was such a chaotic process that top European officials say it is time to rethink how the region manages its crisis _ and who should be involved. Officials say the International Monetary Fund, which has contributed financial expertise and billions in emergency loans, may no longer be needed as a key decision-making partner. And they say that the eurozone would be able to make decisions and take action more quickly if it wasn't bound by the need for unanimous agreement among its 17 member countries. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite,File)

(AP) ? Engineering a financial bailout for Cyprus in March was such a chaotic process that top European officials say it is time to rethink how the region manages its crisis ? and who should be involved.

Officials say the International Monetary Fund, which has contributed financial expertise and billions in emergency loans, may no longer be needed as a key decision-making partner. And they say that the eurozone would be able to make decisions and take action more quickly if it wasn't bound by the need for unanimous agreement among its 17 member countries.

These concerns have been raised before by analysts and government officials outside of Europe, but now two of the region's leading financial decision-makers have said publicly that something needs to be done. Olli Rehn, the top economic official at the European Commission ? the European Union's executive arm ? and Joerg Asmussen, who sits on the European Central Bank's six-member executive board, said at a hearing last week that the easing of the financial crisis presents an opportunity to fix what is broken.

"If the IMF can take decisions with an 85 percent majority and not with unanimity, why on earth the eurozone cannot do so?" Rehn asked, referring to the IMF's executive board. "That would make our decision-making more effective."

And Asmussen questioned whether help from the IMF ? part of the "troika" of decision makers that also includes the ECB and the European Commission ? is even needed anymore. In effect, he said it is time for Europe to handle its problems without outside help.

Commerzbank analyst Christoph Weil says European leaders are slowly waking up to what has been evident to financial markets for a long time. "The current decision structure is dysfunctional," Weil said. "It was born in the urgency of the crisis ... It needs to be overhauled."

The 17-country eurozone has been severely tested by a three-year crisis over too much government debt which has seen five of its members bailed out ? Greece, Portugal, Ireland, Spain and Cyprus.

The "troika" arrangement to monitor the bailout process has been in place for eurozone bailouts since Greece's debt problems began to unfold in 2010. The setup gives a prominent role to the Washington-based IMF ? although it contributes much less money to bailouts than the eurozone nations.

Some eurozone member countries insisted on having the IMF on board for its experience in handling such crises around the world. Germany ? Europe's biggest economy ? also saw the fund's presence as a crucial check against political horse-trading that could have resulted in watered-down bailout conditions.

However, the troika's inspection teams have been heavily criticized for their insistence on harsh austerity measures that have plunged countries like Greece or Portugal in a yet deeper recession and that they're not answerable to voters.

"The Europeans wanted the IMF aboard for its expertise, even though many at the IMF thought that Europe is economically strong enough to solve its problems on its own," said analyst Weil.

"Now the Europeans feel stronger, and they realize that it would have been easier sometimes without the IMF, who insisted on radical up-front measures in Greece or Cyprus before granting aid," he added.

This view was given a boost last week by the ECB's Asmussen during a hearing at the European Parliament's economic committee in Brussels.

"I would not change the troika system in the midst of the crisis because we have no alternative available right now but in the longer-term future ... we should return to a fully EU-based system," he said.

The IMF recognizes that it's up to the EU's executive arm, the Commission, and the ECB as to whether it has a role to play in future bailouts, fund spokesman Gerry Rice said.

"I understand from reports that Mr. Asmussen underscored that he would not advise to change the troika system right now," he said.

In place of the IMF, Asmussen suggested the eurozone could use the body set up to manage its permanent 500 billion euros rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism. However, the makeup of the ESM means that it is currently technically outside of the EU's system of institutions.

"The setup is a bit of a stranger decided in a crisis mood," Asmussen said. "We had nothing else available and it had to be done quickly," he added.

The end of the troika arrangement would come once the ESM will be fully turned into an institution of the 27-nation European Union, he added. The ESM could then play its role as Europe's IMF.

As well as looking at the IMF's role in international rescues, the Eurogroup - the meeting of the eurozone's 17 finance ministers, IMF and ECB - has also come under the microscope.

The Eurogroup was initially planned mostly as a forum to exchange views on economic and financial policies ? but the crisis has turned it into a major decision-making body. At the moment, it has to reach a unanimous agreement on its decisions ? a daunting call when 17 ministers try to forge a deal.

The cumbersome decision-making process reached its climax when the bloc fought bitterly over a 10 billion euro bailout for Cyprus.

In March after marathon negotiations, the Eurogroup and Cyprus patched together a bailout agreement that shocked markets and Cypriots. Cyprus's banks had their assets frozen and a one-time levy on all bank deposits was imposed to help pay for the rescue ? a measure that violated EU deposit insurance rules guaranteeing all savers with fewer than 100,000 euros in their bank accounts. It was scrapped about 48 hours later.

Meanwhile, the ECB, seemingly fed up with the politicking, set a deadline for a deal after which it would cut off emergency funding for Cyrpus's banks? a move that would have plunged the country into chaos and out of the eurozone.

So, about a week later, the finance ministers descended again on Brussels. The second agreement saw Cyprus' insured depositors protected, but enforced a harsh restructuring of the country's outsized banking sector and heavy losses for those holding deposits worth more than 100,000 euros.

Another example of the Eurogroup's cumbersome decision-making was seen this week at a meeting to thrash out crucial details of the bloc's banking union ? a complex project that's seen as vital to help stabilize the EU's financial sector and turn the tide on its crisis ? but failed to make much headway. At the moment they can neither agree how far-reaching the banking union ought to be, nor how fast they want to move in setting it up.

Analysts maintain a reform of the Eurogroup is long overdue, but it's fraught with difficulty: A simple majority vote could mean small countries ganging up and overruling the few big ones while a system based on economic strength would mean Germany and France alone would hold almost 50 percent of the voting rights.

But the EU already has the answer. The ESM boasts a voting system that combines both, the number of countries and their economic weight. That makes it difficult to overrule countries but it is still possible to reach a decision if there are only few and small holdouts.

Europe's currency ? used by more than 330 million people ? is still a relative teenager, it was launched in 1999, "but it has grown up rapidly amid the crisis," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said.

But while it has evolved into the world's second-most important currency trailing only the dollar, its institutional doldrums seem far from over despite the optimism bolstered by the recent stabilization.

"We're still in the process of curing the teething troubles of the euro. Now that the acute pressure is easing, it gets more difficult again to push through sweeping reforms," said analyst Weil.

___

Marjorie Olster in Washington D.C. contributed to this report.

___

Follow Juergen Baetz on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/jbaetz

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-18-Europe-Financial%20Crisis-Logjams/id-f247a3ef055b457d8e9c49fa9f0b11b2

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Claudia Jordan's Dire Financial Situation Uncovered With ...

Claudia Jordan might count Donald Trump as her #1 fan, but maybe she needs to talk to him about financial advice because RadarOnline.com has exclusively uncovered her personal bankruptcy filing.

The Deal or No Deal model was a contender on this season?s Celebrity Apprentice All-Star, and after battling with Omarosa, but not bringing her back to the boardroom, she was promptly fired by Trump after losing her challenge as the project manager.

In court documents obtained exclusively by RadarOnline.com the reality star filed for Chapter 13 in January 2012 claiming she owed debts between $500,000 and $1 million.

COURT DOCUMENTS: Claudia Jordan Files For Bankruptcy

Claudia?s assets are listed as only between $100,000 and $500,000.

According to the documents the case was dismissed in February of the same year.

PHOTOS:? All-Star Celebrity Apprentice Cast Parties In Las Vegas

Order dismissing the case of the Debtor(s) named above was entered on 02/09/2012, and notice was provided to parties in interest. Since it appears that no further matters are required and that this case remain open, or that the jurisdiction of this Court continue, it is ordered that the Trustee is discharged from his/her duties in this case, his/her bond is exonerated, and the case is closed,? the documents obtained by RadarOnline.com state.

Source: http://radaronline.com/exclusives/2013/05/claudia-jordan-celebrity-apprentice-bankruptcy/

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Weight Loss News Headlines - Yahoo! News

NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - An older brother of the 19-year-old arrested in connection with a Mother's Day shooting in New Orleans was arrested Thursday in connection with the shooting, police said. Akein Scott, 19, and Shawn Scott, 24, have both been charged with 20 counts of attempted second-degree murder, New Orleans police??

Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/weightloss

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Red Carpet Roundup: Star Trek Into Darkness Edition

Red Carpet Roundup: Star Trek Into Darkness Edition

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Date: May 16, 2013

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927494/news/1927494/

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

Experience A Google Maps Free Fall With Instrument's Maps Dive At Google I/O

Screen Shot 2013-05-16 at 5.56.08 PMOne of the most interesting product demos on display at Google I/O this year was a virtual sky-diving simulation built using eight separate computers running Chrome, along with a Kinect-like motion sensor made by ASUS called the Xtion Pro. The Maps Dive experiment was created by Portland-based independent digital agency Instrument.

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James Deen on Farrah Abraham Pregnancy Scare: Total PR Stunt, Really Not Cool!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/james-deen-on-farrah-abraham-pregnancy-scare-total-pr-stunt-real/

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No One Wants to Download Your App When They Go to Your Website

There's a tedious balance between using apps on your smartphone or just using the browser. Sometimes like in the case of Google Maps or The Weather Channel, apps are better. Other times when you're just dropping quickly into an online dictionary or a silly link, you just want to use the browser. The problem with that though is those stupid websites stupidly bombard you with stupid notifications to download their stupid app!

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Realmac To Enter The Mobile Photo Fray With Analog For iPhone, Explains Why We Need Yet Another App

analog_camera_smallRealmac Software is showing off its latest app today, ahead of a launch to come later in the month. The app is called Analog, and is an iPhone version of its desktop quick and easy photo manipulation software. I’ve been beta testing the software, and the experience it provides is in keeping with Realmac’s other recent mobile releases, like the super simple to-do app Clear it created in concert with Impending. So why does the world need yet another mobile photo app with filters? I asked Realmac Software head honcho Dan Counsell to find out. “It seems like most of the current popular photo apps are competing on features, they keep cramming more and more into them to try and outdo each other,” he explained. “In doing this they have become overly complex and confusing for new users. Camera apps should be fun to use with a minimal interface that just stays out of the way allowing the user to focus on what really matters, their photos.” That’s what Analog manages to achieve. It inherits this approach to simplified photo editing from the desktop version, but adds touch-specific interfaces and controls that are much better suited to the iPhone’s screen. These use a bold, flat design that emphasize clean lines, large hit hit points and a grid-like pattern that provides all your sharing and editing options in as few screens as is possible. Another aspect of Analog’s simplicity is that it doesn’t try to replace the social networks you already use with a new one. That’s by design, according to Counsell. “Online services come and go but by having an app that’s service agnostic we can easily adapt to change.,” he said. “Not to mention the fact that it’s easier for users to have one app that posts to multiple services rather than having to hop in and out of a bunch of different apps.” Analog started out as an idea that was actually pretty far removed from mobile photography. Counsell said the original Mac app was inspired by his own love of photography, which inspired a need for software that wasn’t quite as daunting or involved as something like Photoshop. “I love my DSLR and take the majority of my photos with it, so developing Analog for the Mac first was an easy decision,” he said. “After the Analog for Mac launch we had a lot of requests from

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Battlefield 4's Frostbite 3.0 game engine goes mobile in 'Frostbite Go'

It appears that while EA's making claims that its Frostbite 3.0 game engine (which powers next-gen's Battlefield 4) can't run on Nintendo's Wii U, the game publisher is also working on bringing "true Frostbite experiences to all major mobile platforms." The Frostbite website details the initiative as "Frostbite Go," and calls it "one of our most exciting current projects."

Without directly saying "Frostbite 3.0," the blurb details Frostbite Go as aimed at "empowering EA game developers" -- in so many words, it sounds like Frostbite Go isn't meant for indies as much as it's meant for EA studios used to working with Frostbite. Battlefield 4 will be the first game from EA to launch using the latest iteration of Frostbite, which isn't a huge surprise considering that BF4's developed by the same folks who develop the engine (EA DICE). It's expected to arrive this fall on both current and next-gen platforms.

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Via: Game Informer, NeoGAF

Source: EA

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/14/frostbite-go/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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ABC officially relaunches its Player app as Watch ABC with live TV streaming

ABC officially relaunches its Player app as Watch ABC with live TV streaming

Just as it revealed in an interview this weekend after months of rumors, the Disney / ABC Television Group has launched Watch ABC as an "open access preview" for New York and Philadelphia residents. Available on the web and as an iOS or Kindle Fire app in place of the old ABC Player, it still offers video on-demand playback of the network's shows, but is the first to add live network TV streaming in those two areas. It will require customers to log in with their cable / satellite TV account details (Comcast, Cablevision, Cox, Charter, Midcontinent and AT&T U-verse are all signed up already) for access starting July 1st, but for now there's no such restriction. ABC is promising a launch in all ABC-owned station markets by the start of the fall broadcast season, though most areas will need to wait for agreements with their local affiliates.

Currently scheduled for launch after July 1st are Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Houston, Raleigh-Durham and Fresno, while Hearst Television has already signed on to launch streaming in its 13 markets as well. The app itself should resemble the WatchESPN and Watch Disney services we've seen roll out previously, and AirPlay streaming is disabled. The press release mentions Kindle Fire support, though we didn't see it in the Appstore yet, and it's coming to Samsung Galaxy devices "soon." There aren't any other Android devices mentioned, but hopefully more platforms will follow quickly. Hit the source links below for the app or to watch on the web, and there's a press release after the break with more details.

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Source: iTunes, WatchABC.go.com

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/14/watch-abc-launches-live-tv-streaming-philadelphia-nyc/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Can a Number Be Illegal?

You might not think too much about numbers as you sit and use your computer, but the underpinnings of software and images are based on them?and that means, in theory, a string of numerical characters can in fact be illegal.

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Iran defends post as chair of U.N. disarmament conference

By Louis Charbonneau

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Iran on Tuesday defended its election as the rotating chair of the world's sole multilateral disarmament forum after the United States announced that its ambassador to the U.N. Conference on Disarmament would boycott any meeting led by Tehran.

The U.N. Conference on Disarmament has been deadlocked for about 15 years. While the chairmanship of the Geneva-based body is largely ceremonial, it is a high-profile position.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran is a founding member of the United Nations," said Alireza Miryousefi, spokesman for Iran's U.N. mission.

"Its election to the presidency of the Conference on Disarmament, as the most important disarmament negotiating body of the U.N., is its right in accordance with the established practice and rules of procedure of this organ," he said.

Erin Pelton, spokeswoman for the U.S. mission to the United Nations, said on Monday that the selection of Iran was "unfortunate and highly inappropriate." She said countries under U.N. sanctions for arms proliferation or human rights abuses should be barred from such formal or ceremonial U.N. posts.

Iran is under sanctions by the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and other international bodies for refusing to halt a nuclear enrichment program that Tehran says is peaceful but Western nations and their allies suspect is aimed at giving it the capability to produce atomic weapons.

The United States and Europe have also accused Iran of violating a U.N. embargo on Iranian arms exports in order to supply weapons to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. They say Tehran is support Assad's efforts to defeat rebels seeking to overthrow him in the country's two-year civil war.

Pelton said the U.S. ambassador to the Conference on Disarmament, Laura Kennedy, would boycott any meeting chaired by Iran. Washington broke off diplomatic ties with Iran in 1980 after Iranian students took U.S. diplomats hostage in the aftermath of the Islamic revolution.

Rick Roth, spokesman for the Canadian Foreign Ministry, also condemned Iran's election to the disarmament conference.

"This makes a mockery of disarmament issues, and the world's sincere desire to make progress," he said. "In Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere, the regime is working directly against global disarmament goals and subverting the fundamental principles of this committee."

Miryousefi denied that Iran was in violation of any of its treaty obligations.

"Iran is a State Party to and in full compliance with all major treaties prohibiting the weapons of mass destruction negotiated within this body," he said.

Those treaties include the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Biological Weapons Convention, he said.

"During its presidency, the Islamic Republic of Iran would focus on promoting the goals and objectives of the Conference on Disarmament through according the highest priority to nuclear disarmament and the total elimination of nuclear arsenals of the nuclear-weapon States in an irreversible, transparent and internationally verifiable manner," Miryousefi said.

Iran will chair the conference for four weeks beginning on May 27. The 65-nation Conference on Disarmament, created in 1978, negotiated biological and chemical weapons conventions but has been unable to carry out substantive work since 1998 because members could not agree on priorities.

A key task proposed for the panel has been to negotiate a halt to production of nuclear bomb-making fissile material. That step has been blocked by Pakistan, which says it would put it at a permanent disadvantage to rival India.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has repeatedly urged the disarmament conference to overcome its deadlock.

Hillel Neuer, the head of UN Watch, a Geneva-based advocacy group that monitors the work of the United Nations, said in a statement on Monday that the selection of Iran as the conference chair "is like putting Jack the Ripper in charge of a women's shelter."

(Additional reporting by David Ljunggren in Ottawa; editing by Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-defends-post-chair-u-n-disarmament-conference-153557584.html

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Obama to welcome UK PM Cameron to White House

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is welcoming British Prime Minister David Cameron to the White House for talks on subjects ranging from Syria's civil war to preparations for a coming summit of the world's leading industrial nations in Northern Ireland.

Iran, the Mideast peace process, counterterrorism and trade are other likely topics for Monday's meeting.

The U.S. and Russia agreed last week to arrange an international conference to bring representatives of the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad and the opposition to the negotiating table. There is no date yet, but such talks would focus on setting up a transitional government.

Cameron said after a meeting last week with Russian President Vladimir Putin that they both agreed that "we must help drive this process."

The British leader also said Britain, the U.S., Russia and other countries should take part in setting up a transitional government.

Separately last week, the Obama administration announced it will provide $100 million in new aid to Syria, strictly for humanitarian relief for Syrian refugees and not linked to any possible decision on arming the rebels who seek to topple Assad from power.

Total U.S. humanitarian assistance in the war, now in its third year, will surpass $500 million.

The Obama administration has said it is considering providing weapons to vetted units in the armed opposition, among other military options, following the recent revelation of a U.S. intelligence assessment that suggested chemical weapons use by the Assad regime.

Obama has said use of such weapons would cross a "red line."

The president and Cameron also will review priorities for the Group of Eight summit. Cameron will preside over the June 17-18 gathering in Lough Erne, Northern Ireland. The White House said Friday that Obama would stop in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, before joining the summit.

The visit will be Obama's first to Northern Ireland.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-13-US-Obama-Britain/id-55f1e171debf4523bd3f46a7cde2d09f

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French Senate to vote on significant labor reform

May 13 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $5,849,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $3,388,064 3. Kevin Streelman $2,572,989 4. Billy Horschel $2,567,891 5. Matt Kuchar $2,493,387 6. Phil Mickelson $2,220,280 7. Adam Scott (Australia) $2,207,683 8. D.A. Points $2,019,702 9. Steve Stricker $1,977,140 10. Graeme McDowell $1,910,654 11. Jason Day $1,802,797 12. Webb Simpson $1,759,015 13. Dustin Johnson $1,748,907 14. Hunter Mahan $1,682,939 15. Charles Howell III $1,561,988 16. Russell Henley $1,546,638 17. Martin Laird $1,531,950 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-senate-vote-significant-labor-reform-111747736.html

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

AP IMPACT: Cars made in Brazil are deadly

SAO PAULO (AP) ? The cars roll endlessly off the local assembly lines of the industry's biggest automakers, more than 10,000 a day, into the eager hands of Brazil's new middle class. The shiny new Fords, Fiats, and Chevrolets tell the tale of an economy in full bloom that now boasts the fourth largest auto market in the world.

What happens once those vehicles hit the streets, however, is shaping up as a national tragedy, experts say, with thousands of Brazilians dying every year in auto accidents that in many cases shouldn't have proven fatal.

The culprits are the cars themselves, produced with weaker welds, scant safety features and inferior materials compared to similar models manufactured for U.S. and European consumers, say experts and engineers inside the industry. Four of Brazil's five bestselling cars failed their independent crash tests.

Unsafe cars, coupled with the South American nation's often dangerous driving conditions, have resulted in a Brazilian death rate from passenger car accidents that is nearly four times that of the United States, according to an Associated Press analysis of Brazilian Health Ministry data on deaths compared to the size of each country's car fleet. In fact, the two countries are moving in opposite directions on survival rates ? the U.S. recorded 40 percent fewer fatalities from car wrecks in 2010 compared with a decade before. In Brazil, the number killed rose 72 percent, according to the latest available data.

Dr. Dirceu Alves, of Abramet, a Brazilian association of doctors that specializes in treating traffic accident victims, said poorly built cars take an unnecessary toll.

"The gravity of the injuries arriving at the hospitals is just ugly," he said, "injuries that should not be occurring."

Automakers in Brazil point out that their cars meet the nation's safety laws. Some said they build even tougher cars for the country because of its poorly maintained roadways and rejected any notion that cost-cutting in production leads to fatalities.

But the country's few safety activists perceive a deadly double standard, with automakers earning more money from selling cars that offer drivers fewer safeguards ? a worrisome gap for new middle-class households, whose surging spending power has outpaced consumer protections taken for granted in more developed countries. The problem extends beyond Brazil, with economic forecasts showing the majority of global growth in auto sales taking place in emerging-market nations as the world's auto fleet doubles to 1.5 billion by 2020.

"Entry-level cars in Brazil are incredibly dangerous, it can't be denied. The death rate from accidents is far too high," said Maria Ines Dolci, coordinator of the Rio de Janeiro-based consumer defense group Proteste. "The manufacturers do this because the cars are a little cheaper to make and the demands of the Brazilian consumers are less; their knowledge of safety issues is lower than in Europe or the U.S."

Manufacturers earn a 10 percent profit on Brazilian-made cars, compared with 3 percent in the U.S. and a global average of 5 percent, according to IHS Automotive, an industry consulting firm.

Only next year will laws require frontal air bags and antilock braking systems on all cars, safety features that have been standard in industrial countries for years. The country will also have new impact regulations on paper, at least; Brazilian regulators don't have their own crash-test facility to verify automakers' claims about vehicle performance, nor are there independent labs in the country.

Experts say those requirements alone are not sufficient to meet basic safety standards. Some models sold in Brazil, like the Chinese-made JAC J3, scored only one star in a recent crash test despite having air bags and antilock brakes.

An independent pilot effort known as the Latin New Car Assessment Program has run initial tests of Brazil's most popular car models, and the results are bleak.

The cheapest models of four of the five top-selling cars, made by General Motors, Volkswagen and Fiat, received a one-star rating, out of five stars, while other top sellers also scored poorly. Such a rating means cars provide little protection in serious head-on wrecks, compared to four- or five-star rated cars, which are virtually the minimum that consumers in the U.S. and Europe buy.

"The difference is you're talking about somebody dead in the vehicle or dying very quickly, or somebody being able to get out of the vehicle themselves," said David Ward, director general of the London-based FIA Foundation for auto safety, which supports the Euro and Latin NCAP programs. "It's definitely a difference between life and death."

The squat Ford Ka hatchback sold in Europe scored four stars when it was tested by Euro NCAP in 2008; its Latin American version scored one star.

Ford acknowledged that particular Ka is built on an outdated platform, and said it cannot be compared with the European version of the same name ? it's that different. The company said it aims to have all its cars produced in Brazil built on updated, global platforms by 2015.

The Mexico-produced Nissan March compact sold in Latin America received a two-star rating from Latin NCAP, while the version sold for about the same price in Europe, called the Micra, scored four stars. The crash tests found the Latin American model had a weak, unstable body structure that offered occupants little protection in even non-serious wrecks.

In an emailed statement, Nissan said the March sold in Brazil is "practically the same model" offered in Europe. "The difference in the results achieved in Europe and Latin America is due to variations in the NCAP tests applied in different parts of the world."

Not so, said Alejandro Furas, technical director for the Global NCAP crash test programs.

"We perform the frontal crash test exactly in the same way as the Euro NCAP," he said. "The March and Micra were tested in the same lab, with the same type of crash test dummies, under the same conditions with the same people running the laboratory."

The Euro NCAP tests are more complete. They include side-impact and other tests, while the Latin American version only records front-impacts. Each type of impact test is individually scored on a 16-point scale.

The March sold in Brazil obtained a 7.62 rating in its frontal-impact test. The Micra fared much better, 12.7 points.

Italian automaker Fiat said in an emailed statement that "in general, Brazilian projects receive more reinforcements" within the cars' bodies to fortify them against the nation's "harsher roads and terrain."

However, NCAP tests found that Fiat's best-selling car in Brazil, called the Novo Uno, had an unstable body structure and scored it just one star.

Crash-test footage shows the front of the car folding up like an accordion, giving it a 2.0 point rating, the second lowest of the 28 cars NCAP has examined. Consumers purchased nearly 256,000 Novo Uno's last year ? the second-most popular car in the country.

Renault's safety standards also vary. The French company builds its Sandero in Brazil, selling 98,400 cars last year. That car scored one star on the Latin NCAP test, but the model sold in Europe, made by Renault's Romanian subsidiary Dacia, scored three stars.

Renault said the safety record of the Sandero and its other cars were on par with autos of the same class in Brazil.

One of those is the VW Gol, Brazil's best-selling car for the last decade.

Volkswagen said it strives to maintain a global standard for body strength, putting the same number of welds on the same models regardless of where they're produced, and using high-strength steel in Brazilian cars. It added that since 1998 it's given Brazilian consumers the option of buying a car with air bags ? its Gol Trend model with two frontal air bags scored three stars, while the same model without air bags scored one star.

The company didn't respond to requests for figures on how many consumers requested air bags.

"Structural integrity during a crash is a global standard for Volkswagen," the company said in an emailed statement. "The passenger compartment for the Gol remained stable and thus guarantees survival space for occupants."

Latin NCAP has tested three VW models. The Gol and the Polo had stable bodies. The Bora sedan, however, was rated as unstable, though other factors helped it score three stars.

And then there are the cars the companies do not market outside Latin America, such as the Celta by GM. Celta is Brazil's No. 5 car in terms of sales, with 137,615 sold last year. It received one star after its door unhinged and the passenger cabin roof bent into an inverted V shape during its crash test.

General Motors had no comment other than to say that its cars in Brazil are legal.

An engineer for a major U.S. automaker, speaking only on condition of anonymity for fear of losing his job, said he has watched for years as his company failed to implement more advanced safety features in Brazil, simply because the law did not require them.

""The automakers are pleased to make more profitable cars for countries where the demands, whatever they may be, are less rigorous," he said. "It happens everywhere ? India, China and Russia, for example."

___

About 40 million Brazilians moved into the middle class during the past decade with more income than ever to buy their first car. The growth potential is enormous: One out of every seven Brazilians owns a car, while the U.S. vehicle fleet covers nearly every American.

But as auto sales boom in Brazil, so have the number of accidents and deaths.

An analysis of Health Ministry data shows that 9,059 car occupants died in vehicle crashes in Brazil in 2010, according to the most recent statistics available. That same year, 12,435 people in the U.S. were killed in car crashes, though the U.S. passenger car fleet is five times larger than Brazil's. The result: Brazilian automobile crash victims died at four times the rate as those in the U.S.

The dangers come down to basics, engineers said: the lack of body reinforcements, lower-quality steel in car bodies, weaker or fewer weld spots to hold the vehicles together and car platforms designed decades before modern safety advances.

"The electricity used in building a car is about 20 percent of the cost of the structure," said Marcilio Alves, an engineering professor at Brazil's premier University of Sao Paulo and one of the few independent researchers in the nation looking at car safety.

"If you save on electricity, you save on cost. One way to save electricity is either reducing the number of spot welds or using less energy for each spot weld made. This affects structural performance in the event of a crash."

In a car with no air bags and an unstable body structure, a driver's biggest danger is the steering wheel.

A weak body structure and fragile steering column make it easier for the wheel to slam into the driver's chest and abdomen in frontal crashes, the deadliest and most common, causing serious damage to vital organs.

Ward talks of steering wheels that break off and "float" during wrecks in poorly made cars ? moving around the cabin in the driver's area. That means that even if an air bag is deployed, the steering wheel may go around or under it and directly hit the driver.

Many Brazilian car bodies also don't contain crumple zones, areas that absorb energy during wrecks. The omission endangers occupants' lower limbs, as foot wells rip off and expose feet and legs to car parts slamming into them from the front.

"If a car's body cannot absorb the energy of a crash, it will logically result in more damage, more injuries to passengers," said Alves, the doctor who specializes in traffic accident victims.

One auto engineer described the situation by sketching two car body designs with identical perimeters, but one depicted internal gaps ? missing body reinforcements.

He worked three decades for Volkswagen and spent the last 10 years as an independent engineering consultant for big automakers. He asked that his name not be published for fear of losing contracts and benefits.

"The secret of a car's body being able to withstand the crash test are the weld spots," he said.

"Let's say this is a German car," he pointed to the gapless sketch. "It's really sophisticated. Nothing is missing."

Then he pointed at the car made in Brazil, full of incomplete ink strokes.

"The Brazilian version looks the same from the outside, but it's missing pieces," he said. "In one version they include the reinforcement, in the other they don't. What's of interest is the final shape. What's inside, nobody can see."

___

In 2008, Carlos Alberto Lopes, then a 23-year-old waiter, was riding in a one-star car traveling about 50 mph on a rainy highway in the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais when the road curved smoothly left. The car hydroplaned, skidded into an embankment and rolled several times down a long incline. Of the four occupants, Lopes was the only one with serious injuries, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down.

Lopes says the three-point seatbelt he was wearing didn't lock his body in place, allowing him to repeatedly hit the collapsing roof as the car rolled. He suffered a crushed vertebra.

"If the seatbelt had locked when the car rolled I wouldn't have hit my back. None of this would have happened," Lopes said.

A study by a chain of Brazilian rehabilitation centers where Lopes is being treated found that in 2011, 40 percent of the patients it worked with in Sao Paulo with serious spinal injuries were hurt in traffic accidents.

Lopes never considered a lawsuit. In fact, in more than a dozen interviews with accident victims left paralyzed after crashes, not one considered taking legal action against vehicle manufacturers.

That's in part a reflection of the lack of police investigations into car accidents, the majority of which, like Lopes', only result in simple "occurrence bulletins" that include minimal information.

But it's also indicative of the deference Brazil's new middle class consumers show to automakers and most other industries.

"We're 20 years behind the U.S. and Europe in terms of consumer awareness," said Dolci, coordinator of the Proteste consumer defense group. "The new, emerging middle class entering the market has little information on car safety. They think little of automobile security. It's this very class of consumer the automakers are targeting and to whom they're selling a mountain of cars."

Accidents like Lopes' involve more than a poorly built car.

Drivers fail to obey traffic laws, which many of the region's governments notoriously don't enforce. Cars must navigate crumbling roads and poorly designed highway systems that all but make gridlock and accidents unavoidable. And many drivers simply value perks such as alloy wheels and sound systems over unseen crumple zones.

In 1965, there were 47,089 motor vehicle fatalities in the U.S. That same year, consumer activist Ralph Nader's famous indictment of the auto industry was published, Unsafe at Any Speed. The book ignited a national discussion on auto safety and ultimately led to reforms that dramatically refashioned the industry's standards, helping lead to a 32 percent drop in deaths by 2011.

Nader said halting the growing number of auto deaths in Brazil would take "a public uproar, product liability lawsuits, selective boycotts by motorists or by mandatory Brazilian law equalizing safety standards with the safest engineering required in other countries."

"These responses in the past have worked in other countries confronted by auto industry double standards for protecting lives on the highway. Such actions are long overdue but now Brazilians know the truth in more detail," he said.

The Brazilian government says its new laws mandating frontal air bags and anti-lock brakes will dramatically improve safety, as will new impact standards. But because there are no independent crash-test centers in Brazil, companies will not face the same scrutiny as elsewhere. They will run the impact tests themselves and present the results to the government for approval. Because there is no "conformity of production" clause in the Brazilian legislation, cars won't be spot-checked to ensure they meet safety laws.

Alexandre Cordeiro, the top government minister overseeing auto safety laws, acknowledged that the government doesn't have its own crash-test center ? but said Brazil will monitor crash tests conducted outside the country.

"Regarding front- and rear-end crash tests, our cars are as secure as European or American cars," Cordeiro said.

However, when asked about the stark differences in performance that the NCAP tests document between Brazilian and European cars, Cordeiro acknowledged improvements need to be made, saying "we need to evolve and we're working on it."

Over the years Ward said he has watched the same battles play out over auto safety ? the only thing that changes is the location.

"The sad thing is, this has been the experience in the 1960s in the U.S., in the 1990s in Europe and now in Latin America," Ward said. "The industry does the least it can get away with until they're forced to do something different. It's maddening."

http://www.latinncap.com/en/

http://www.euroncap.com/home.aspx

___

Follow Bradley Brooks at http://twitter.com/bradleybrooks

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-impact-cars-made-brazil-deadly-180411170.html

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What a Facebook Re-Design Would Be Like in Real Life

By now we're mostly used to Facebook moving the furniture around every once in a while. We complain for a while, then just deal with it. But in a way, it's still maddening. Your stuff was HERE and now it's HERE. (Right, right, glass houses.) But at least Facebook can't barge in and rearrange your real life. That would be terrible. [YouTube]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-a-facebook-re-design-would-be-like-in-real-life-502564802

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

U.S. approves Novartis drug Ilaris to treat childhood arthritis

By Susan Guyett INDIANAPOLIS (Reuters) - The daughter of Ariel Castro, the chief suspect in the Cleveland abduction of three women freed on Monday, is serving time in an Indiana prison for attempted murder after she slashed her baby's throat four times with a knife, court documents show. Emily Castro, 25, was sentenced to 25 years and is at the Rockville, Indiana, Correctional Facility. She was found guilty in Allen County Superior Court of attempting to murder her 11-month-old daughter, according to a decision by the Court of Appeals of Indiana on November 5, 2008. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-approves-novartis-drug-ilaris-treat-childhood-arthritis-054737426.html

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AP PHOTOS: Pakistanis defy dangers, go to polls

* Williams dismisses Errani, Sharapova beats Ivanovic * Number one ranking on the line in Sunday's final (Adds Sharapova result, quotes, byline) By Iain Rogers MADRID, May 11 (Reuters) - Serena Williams' tactic of staying in her hotel room and being "boring" appears to be paying off after the world number one swept past Sara Errani on Saturday to set up a Madrid Open final against rival Maria Sharapova. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-pakistanis-defy-dangers-polls-134552866.html

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Grandson of Malcolm X killed in Mexico City

MEXICO CITY (AP) ? Malcolm Shabazz, grandson of political activist Malcolm X, died in Mexico City after a violent dispute in a bar, Mexican authorities said Friday. He was 28.

City prosecutors are investigating the attack that sent Shabazz to a nearby hospital where he died Thursday of blunt-force trauma injuries. United States officials confirmed that Shabazz was killed in Mexico City.

Much like his grandfather, Shabazz spent his youth in and out of trouble. At 12, he set a fire in his grandmother's apartment, a blaze that resulted in the death of Malcolm X's widow. After four years in juvenile detention, Shabazz was later sent back to prison on attempted robbery and assault charges.

In recent years, the first male heir of Malcolm X seemed to seek redemption, saying he was writing a memoir and traveling around the world speaking out against youth violence. Before his trip to Mexico, he reached out to a group of Mexican construction workers in the U.S. and then visited in Mexico with a leader who had been deported.

Malcolm X, who inspired books and the 1992 Hollywood movie named after him, was shot to death as he delivered a speech in a Harlem ballroom in 1965. Shabazz's mother was only 4 at the time.

The Shabazz family said in a statement they were saddened to hear of the death of Malcolm X's grandson.

"To all who knew him, he offered kindness, encouragement and hope for a better tomorrow," said the statement. "We will miss him."

Labor activist Miguel Suarez, who was traveling with Shabazz, told The Associated Press that his friend was beaten up at a bar near Plaza Garibaldi, a downtown square that is home to Mexico City's mariachis.

Plaza Garibaldi is popular with tourists, but the pair were at a bar across the street from the plaza in an area of rough dive bars tourists are warned against going to.

Suarez said he and Shabazz were lured to the bar on Wednesday night by a young woman who made conversation with the American in English. The Palace bar is on one of Mexico City's busiest avenues.

"We were dancing with the girls and drinking," said Suarez. Then the owner of the bar wanted them to pay a $1,200 bar tab, alleging that they should pay for music, drinks and the girls' companionship.

"We pretty much got hassled," he said. "A short dude came with a gun."

Suarez said he was taken by the man to a separate room. Shabazz stayed in the hall. Suarez said he heard a violent commotion in the hall and escaped from the room and the bar altogether as he saw half-naked girls running away, picking up their skirts from the dance floor.

Minutes later, Suarez came back in a cab to look for Shabazz and found him on the ground outside the bar severely injured.

"He was in shock. His face was messed up," said Suarez. "He was alive."

"I grabbed him, and I called the cops," said Suarez, who was recently deported from the United States.

He said he took Shabazz to a hospital but his friend died hours later of blunt-force injuries.

Suarez said Shabazz had traveled to Mexico to support him and his movement advocating for more rights for construction workers. He crossed the border from San Diego to Tijuana with Suarez's mother and then the pair took a bus all the way to Mexico City.

"We were planning to go to Teotihuacan, to see the Aztec pyramids," he said.

U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell did not offer details on whether they are working with Mexican investigators.

"We've been in contact with family members and have been providing appropriate... assistance," Ventrell said. "At their request, we have no further comment at this time."

Ruth Clark, Shabazz's godmother, said that her heart was heavy, but that she believes he is now "among angels."

"Malcolm is part of a welcoming kingdom, sharing his bright smile, intelligence, and wisdom."

Shabazz was born on Oct. 8, 1984 to Qubilah Shabazz, one of six daughters of Malcolm X and his wife Betty Shabazz.

In June 1997, Malcolm Shabazz set the fire at his grandmother Betty Shabazz's home. She died from severe burns, and he served four years in juvenile detention.

He later expressed regret for his actions, telling The New York Times in 2003 that he would sit on his jail cot and ask for a sign of forgiveness from his dead grandmother.

"I just wanted her to know I was sorry and I wanted to know she accepted my apology, that I didn't mean it," he said. "But I would get no response, and I really wanted that response."

Despite the encouragement and support by his family's numerous supporters in New York, he struggled. He joined the Bloods street gang and after moving to the small city of Middletown, near New York's Catskills region, he had additional legal scrapes.

Shabazz also served time on a 2002 attempted robbery conviction, and was released in 2005. In 2006, he pleaded guilty to criminal mischief for smashing the window of a Yonkers doughnut shop.

More recently, Shabazz had taken on public speaking engagements and traveled, describing himself as a human rights activist. On his Facebook profile, he said he was attending John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York.

Yet his entanglements with law enforcement continued.

In one of the last posts on his blog, in March, Shabazz had complained that FBI agents had recently questioned him about his international travels. He also accused officers with the Middletown police department of harassing him since the fall, and said an arrest in the city over the winter prevented him from traveling to Iran in February to participate in a film festival.

Shabazz also wrote about traveling to Damascus, Syria to study and to Libya as part of a delegation of Americans who met with Muammar Gaddafi, prior to his ouster and death.

Police officials in Middletown didn't return phone messages Friday. An FBI spokesman in New York had no immediate comment.

He proudly embraced the legacy of his grandfather, one of the most influential Black people in history who had a more radical, angry approach than Martin Luther King Jr.'s nonviolent movement in the 1950s and into the 1960s.

On his Twitter page, Shabazz posted a picture of himself mimicking the famous photograph of his grandfather, peering out at a window with a rifle in one hand.

"Grandson, name-sake and first male heir of the greatest revolutionary leader of the 20th century," he wrote.

____

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper contributed to this report from Washington; and David Caruso from New York City.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/grandson-malcolm-x-killed-mexico-city-000543654.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

UA College of Nursing to Honor 64 Graduates at Convocation

From its beginnings in 1957 in a conference room of the University of Arizona Liberal Arts Building, with 42 students in its first class, today the UA College of Nursing has its own building, 588 students and ranks among the top 10 percent of graduate nursing programs in the United States.

On May 9, the college will honor 64 graduates at its spring convocation in Centennial Hall; 54 graduates will receive baccalaureate degrees, and the college will award 10 doctoral degrees: five Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing Science) and five DNP (Doctor of Nursing Practice). Awards also will be presented.

"Nursing is a versatile profession that allows one to have multiple varied careers over a lifetime without ever leaving nursing," says College of Nursing Dean Joan L. Shaver. "We are committed to preparing our students to embrace a myriad of opportunities and to ensuring that people have the highest quality health care possible from outstanding nurse leaders."

The UA College of Nursing is recognized for excellence in nursing and health-care education, research and practice, as well as for leading-edge online access to learning (courses that are completely Web-based or blended with intensive face-to-face learning). College leaders are advancing global nursing development through collaborations with universities particularly in Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Asia.

Accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education, the UA College of Nursing offers a variety of nursing degrees, from entry level to advanced, including Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), Master of Science in Nursing (one for university degree holders who want to enter nursing and another for RNs that is online). The Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), Ph.D. in nursing and dual DNP/Ph.D. degrees, as well as post-MS certificates are online except for short onsite clinical skills intensives.

In the College of Nursing, classrooms provide real-time video conferencing capabilities that reach across Arizona and beyond and allow integration with the Arizona Telemedicine Program statewide network. Resources include the Steele Innovative Learning Center, where students perfect their clinical skills in a simulated environment or engage in research within laboratories for behavioral or biological studies.

The college provides top-notch mentoring of health-care leaders with an emphasis on diversity. The faculty includes professionals with expertise in clinical practice, research and teaching.

Twenty-eight active and emeriti faculty are fellows of the American Academy of Nursing, a national peer-elected group of nursing profession "thought leaders" representing the most accomplished leaders in nursing education, practice, administration and research.

Nine faculty have been elected as fellows to the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners, the largest and only full-service national professional membership organization for NPs of all specialties, advocating for the active role of NPs as providers of high-quality, cost-effective, comprehensive, patient-centered health care. Endowed professorships include the William M. Feinberg Endowed Chair for Stroke Research, Gladys E. Sorensen Endowed Professor (diabetes) and Anne Furrow Endowed Professor (pediatric cancer).

The college is aligned with a chapter of Sigma Theta Tau International, the nursing honor society with more than 130,000 members worldwide. The Beta Mu chapter has earned key chapter awards nine times.

The college vision is to be the premier learning community for transforming health care, while valuing excellence, balance, social responsibility and creativity. Faculty envision, engage and innovate in education, research and practice to help people of all ages optimize health in the context of major life transitions, illnesses, injuries, symptoms and disabilities.

They seek discoveries particularly in older adult health; health promotion/restoration, especially in chronic conditions; integrative therapeutics science, symptom science, including cognition and depression; health informatics/systems; and health equity, especially in inner urban and rural/border health.

Inspiring 2013 UA College of Nursing graduates include Helena Haynes, Ariel Good and Zea Navazio:

Helena Haynes, DNP

"What I find most empowering about the field of nursing is the opportunity to continuously grow and develop my knowledge and skills in health-care practice, policy and research and apply it to my community,? says Helena Haynes, 28, previously a registered nurse in the neurological intensive care unit at Banner Good Samaritan Hospital in Phoenix, Ariz. "For example, in my neuro checks, I involve the patient's family in order to help explain the stroke process, the risks of recurrent stroke and the 'how and why' of the way we treat our stroke patients."

Haynes will receive a DNP degree from the UA College of Nursing. She also holds a Bachelor of Science in Nursing that she obtained in a one-year accelerated program from Regis University, a Jesuit university in Denver, Colo., in 2008, and a bachelor's degree in integrative physiology from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 2005.

"The UA College of Nursing has amazing mentors and faculty to help support the students throughout the DNP program," she says. "I met my faculty mentor, Dr. Leslie Ritter, prior to applying to the DNP program. She has been an integral part of my success in this program and a role model in terms of pursuing research interest, goal setting and work-life balance. The faculty are quick to respond to questions and have always made themselves available over the phone to discuss any questions I have had. As part of an online degree program, to have verbal one-on-one with faculty is important and I appreciate their willingness to help me succeed."

In the DNP program, her focus was on the stroke patient population. She led a transition-of-care model to support follow-up in the clinic of patients who had a transient ischemic attack (TIA) or stroke, to help ensure that proper measures are taken to prevent a secondary stroke event. "This is extremely important in our aging population, as stroke is one of the leading causes of adult disability," she notes.

In her doctoral practice inquiry project, "A Doctor of Nursing Practice-Led Transitions of Care (TOC) Model for Stroke and Transient Ischemic Attack," Haynes described the impact. "There are gaps in the care of patients who've had a stroke or TIA that occur due to transitions between health settings and/or practitioners, that may contribute to a second stroke or TIA," she says. "The purpose of the study was to identify the key elements of a model that could be used to design an effective TOC program for the stroke/TIA population."

In addition, she worked with her unit at Banner Good Samaritan Hospital to explore the concept of compassion fatigue and job burnout in the critical care nursing population caring for the stroke patient.

"These projects allowed me to explore both patient-centered and nurse-centered outcomes to further develop my research abilities and understanding of how I can further help and advocate for stroke patients and caregivers," she says.

As an undergraduate, Haynes initially pursued physical therapy (PT) and volunteered in a PT clinic. When that rotation ended, she recalls, "The volunteer coordinator placed me in the emergency room, and I fell in love with what nurses do. They truly were the backbone of the facility. As I was nearly finished with my degree, I used it as a foundation to transfer to nursing."

Haynes had several challenges while pursuing her DNP. "After I had my son Liam, I went back to work and was trying to manage school work, working as a nurse, being a mom and my practice inquiry studies," she says. "My son came down with RSV [respiratory syncytial (sin-SISH-uhl) virus] and was hospitalized for a week during the most challenging semester. I said goodbye to bedside nursing to focus on being home with him and devoting more time to my studies. I greatly missed caring for patients in that capacity but am grateful to have cared for so many great patients, families and fellow nurses."

Liam, now 2, was born just before the end of the first year of the DNP program, and Haynes remembers "taking a test the morning I went into labor, and nursing him during a final Skype? presentation a few days later so that he wouldn?t disturb the class. He has been a trooper and a wonderful distraction from the long hours of studying."

Haynes' family will join her at convocation. She is the second oldest of five children and the only girl in the family. Both parents have master's degrees. "My dad taught each of us a strong work ethic and my mom taught us a love of education and learning. My grandmother was a physician, and helped inspire me to pursue a health-care profession," she says.

She met her husband John during her undergraduate days at CU Boulder, while he went to an all-engineering school a half-hour away. They were married shortly after finishing their undergraduate degrees. "I have been in school since we first met, and could not have imagined a better best friend and support to make it through this experience," she says. "He has picked up the slack when I have needed him most."

Now that she will receive her DNP, she plans to stay in family practice, working in a preventative role providing help and education for patients in a rural family practice office, Deseret Family Medicine, in Gold Canyon, Ariz.

"The patients I will be working with most are the elderly population, who are the largest user of health-care costs at this point," she says. "If we can provide them the tools and strategies to manage their care outside of the acute setting, then they can age comfortably in their homes."

Ariel Good, BSN

"As a bilingual Hispanic-American student, I look forward to meeting and helping the diverse group of people I will undoubtedly encounter in my nursing career," says Ariel Good, 22, who will receive a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the UA College of Nursing.

Good plans to pursue a career in women's health nursing, working in labor and delivery, or in pediatric nursing, particularly in the neonatal intensive care unit. Her passion for working with children grew out of a summer spent volunteering at Phoenix Children's Hospital, she says. She also is interested in possibly becoming a nurse midwife.

"My passion is to work with moms, their babies and the neonatal population in general. But I will be happy to start anywhere ? there is a learning experience in everything we do."

Good has wanted to be a nurse for as long as she can remember, she says, desiring "to help people and spend time at the bedside with patients and also have a career where I get to embrace my love for science.

"My grandfather, a pediatrician, inspired me throughout my childhood as well, most likely without even noticing he was doing it. He had a passion for his patients that I hope to carry with me throughout my entire career." Good, whose mother is Cuban, comes from a long line of college graduates and will be the first nurse in her family.

A native of Mesa, Ariz., Good graduated from Red Mountain High School. At the UA, she was a member of the UA Honors College and wrote her thesis about drug withdrawal in newborns. She was a member of the UA pre-nursing club, Professional Achievements in Nursing, for two years; then became active in Student Nurses at the University of Arizona, or SNUA, the student branch of the American Nurses Association, serving as president of the organization for the past year. (SNUA provides support through fundraising, volunteering and scholarships as well as opportunities for UA College of Nursing students to further their education and participate in experiences that develop leadership and mentoring skills.)

Of her experience at the UA College of Nursing, Good says she most enjoyed "getting to know the people, serving in a leadership role and getting to act as a liaison between faculty and staff and my peers. Spending so much time with the same cohort gave us an opportunity to really develop everlasting friendships, and I am grateful for that."

Good's family will join her at the convocation, where she also will receive the UA College of Nursing Office of Student Affairs Award, given in recognition of exceptional service to the student affairs office in its work with students, alumni and friends of the college (award recipients' names are engraved on a permanent plaque displayed in the Office of Student Affairs), and the AZNA (Arizona Nurses Association) Chapter 2 Award, presented to a graduating nursing student nominated by the student?s faculty according to three criteria: scholastic and clinical excellence; active participation in one or more student, professional or community organizations; and demonstrated leadership abilities among peers and/or within professional or health-related organizations.

Zea Navazio, BSN

"Following graduation, I would like to begin my career working in a New Graduate Nurse Residency Program in an emergency department," says Zea Navazio, who will receive a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the UA College of Nursing.

"The emergency department is an area of health care where you come in contact with a broad range of patients ? different ages, cultures and suffering from a broad range of conditions.? (New Graduate Nurse Residency Programs prepare new nursing graduates as they transition to professional nurse.) Navazio also plans to further her education and pursue a doctorate of nursing practice degree.

"Ultimately, I hope to travel to developing countries and use my nursing skills to provide needed medical attention to underserved and underprivileged populations," she says. "I plan to incorporate my passion for health care and deep sense of social responsibility to improve the quality of life for many individuals, families and diverse populations to aid in building a healthier world community."

In 2011, she volunteered in a small medical center in Valle de Angles, a rural community in Honduras, as a member of the UA chapter of Global Medical Brigades, a student-led global health and sustainable development organization.

"It was a big challenge and proved to be a greater privilege, providing health care to the local population," she says. "This was a life-changing experience and solidified my desire to work with health care on an international scale.

"To me, nursing is the heart and soul of health care. Throughout my clinical training and volunteer work, I have developed meaning and purpose in my life, first through my teachers and mentors, and eventually experiencing for myself through discipline and training how to truly care for others."

She became interested in pursuing a career in nursing after volunteering at a local hospital during high school. She will be the first member of her family to work in the health-care field.

Navazio's family lived in five states before she was twelve due to her father's career as an organic agriculturalist. "This gave me the opportunity to acclimate to new places and different people often," she notes. It "also allowed me to experience a great deal of diversity, living in the rural communities of Montana, Big 10 college towns in the Midwest, the rocky coastal region of the Pacific Northwest and finally the busy suburbs of Detroit."

As a teenager, she lived with her mother in a single-parent household. "My mother understood the value of education and returned to school to improve our lives," she says. When her father was living in the Pacific Northwest and undergoing radiation for colon cancer, she moved in with her aunt and uncle so that she could continue attending and graduate from Walled Lake Northern High School in Commerce, Mich. "It was there that I learned the significance of paying it forward," she says.

Navazio's parents, sister, aunt and uncle will attend the convocation. "My family has been my biggest support system throughout my undergraduate education," she says.

What she enjoyed most about the UA College of Nursing, she says, was "the faculty and students I had the pleasure of working with. The UA College of Nursing is a small, tightknit community. Throughout my education I not only received constant guidance from faculty members and professors but I felt supported by fellow students."

As a UA undergraduate, in addition to serving with Global Medical Brigades, Navazio was a member and served as public relations chair of the UA pre-nursing club, Professional Achievements in Nursing and was elected fundraising chair for Student Nurses at the University of Arizona.

At convocation, Navazio also will receive a UA Foundation Award, presented to outstanding seniors on the basis of scholarship, leadership and citizenship.

Source: http://uanews.org/story/ua-college-of-nursing-to-honor-64-graduates-at-convocation

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