Saturday, June 30, 2012

Explosion wounds 7 in Mexico border city

  • Westboro plans protest of two Midlands funerals

    Westboro plans protest of two Midlands funerals

    Thursday, June 28 2012 3:53 PM EDT2012-06-28 19:53:55 GMT

    Westboro Baptist Church, the church known for protesting at soldier's funerals, will be in the Midlands for the funerals of two fallen service members.According to the Topeka, Kansas-based church's website,More >>Westboro Baptist Church, the church known for protesting at soldier's funerals, will be in the Midlands for the funerals of two fallen service members.More >>
  • Forestry officials trying to prevent recycling plant fire from spreading

    Forestry officials trying to prevent recycling plant fire from spreading

    Friday, June 29 2012 4:55 PM EDT2012-06-29 20:55:17 GMT

    Fire officials from the Cayce Department of Public Safety are working a fire on Foreman Street in Cayce.According to the address given by DPS officials, that fire appears to be located at World Wide Recycling.DetailsMore >>The South Carolina Forestry Commission has joined efforts to prevent a recycling plant fire from spreading into a nearby wooded area.More >>
  • Flags at half-staff on State House

    Flags at half-staff on State House

    Thursday, June 28 2012 2:42 PM EDT2012-06-28 18:42:21 GMT

    The flags flying over the State House are at half-staff to honor the lives of the three South Carolina National Guardsmen who died in Afghanistan last week.First Lt. Ryan Davis Rawl, 30, of Lexington,More >>The flags flying over the State House are at half-staff to honor the lives of the three South Carolina National Guardsmen who died in Afghanistan last week.More >>
  • Officials: Soldier fatally shot by another soldier on Fort Bragg

    Officials: Soldier fatally shot by another soldier on Fort Bragg

    Friday, June 29 2012 9:08 AM EDT2012-06-29 13:08:55 GMT

    An investigation is underway after a shooting at a North Carolina Army Base. According to officials at Fort Bragg, in Fayetteville, a shooting took place on base on Thursday afternoon. Officials wouldMore >>An investigation is underway after a deadly shooting on a North Carolina Army Base, reportedly killing a senior officer.More >>
  • Curry out as co-host of NBC's 'Today' show

    Curry out as co-host of NBC's 'Today' show

    Ann Curry is expected to officially make her exit from NBC's "Today" show after one year as co-host.More >>Ann Curry is officially out as "Today" show co-host after one year.More >>
  • Suicide by poison suspected in Ariz. court death

    Suicide by poison suspected in Ariz. court death

    As the word "guilty" filled the silence of a Phoenix courtroom, defendant Michael Marin closed his eyes, put his head in his hands and appeared to put something in his mouth. He then took a swig from a sports bottle.More >>As the word "guilty" filled the silence of a Phoenix courtroom, defendant Michael Marin closed his eyes, put his head in his hands and appeared to put something in his mouth. He then took a swig from a sports bottle.More >>
  • Lawsuits in Amtrak mishap claim crossing defects

    Lawsuits in Amtrak mishap claim crossing defects

    Four lawsuits filed on behalf of victims of last year's Amtrak-truck collision in northern Nevada claim railroad crossing gates either came down late or not at all.More >>Four lawsuits filed on behalf of victims of last year's Amtrak-truck collision in northern Nevada claim railroad crossing gates either came down late or not at all.More >>
  • Remains of 2nd person found in Colo. fire wreckage

    Remains of 2nd person found in Colo. fire wreckage

    After waiting for two days, Rebekah and Byron Largent learned from lists distributed by authorities that their home was among the hundreds that burned to the ground.More >>Firefighters searching for bodies in smoldering piles of the nearly 350 homes burned to the ground by the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history found a second body Friday at a residence where another person was found...More >>
  • NC murder convict ordered freed on new evidence

    NC murder convict ordered freed on new evidence

    A North Carolina man who spent nearly 17 years in prison for a murder case in which law officers and prosecutors hid key details is going free.More >>A North Carolina man who spent nearly 17 years in prison for a murder case in which law officers and prosecutors hid key details is going free.More >>
  • Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes divorcing

    Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes divorcing

    Tom Cruise and Katie Homes are calling it quits after five years of marriage.More >>It always seemed more than a little weird, didn't it? The whirlwind romance of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes with its very public, very emphatic proclamations of love. It all occurred too quickly and too loudly to seem...More >>
  • 1 dead, estimated 346 homes burned in Colo. fire

    1 dead, estimated 346 homes burned in Colo. fire

    1 dead, 1 missing in Colorado Springs wildfire; estimated 346 homes destroyedMore >>1 dead, 1 missing in Colorado Springs wildfire; estimated 346 homes destroyedMore >>
  • Presidents approve college football playoff

    Presidents approve college football playoff

    University presidents approve college football playoff starting in 2014 seasonMore >>University presidents approve college football playoff starting in 2014 seasonMore >>
  • Widening sex scandal rocks Texas Air Force base

    Sex scandal rocks Texas Air Force base; allegations lead to charges against 4 instructors

    Sex scandal rocks Texas Air Force base; allegations lead to charges against 4 instructorsMore >>
  • As Debby hovers in Gulf, Florida getting more rain

    As Debby hovers in Gulf, Florida getting more rain

    Tropical Storm Debby hovers in the Gulf of Mexico; Florida braces for more rain, floodingMore >>Tropical Storm Debby hovers in the Gulf of Mexico; Florida braces for more rain, floodingMore >>
  • Elder fraud: One couple's losses and hard lessons

    Elder fraud: One couple's losses and hard lessons

    Elder fraud: A look inside one scammed couple's case, as losses and bitter lessons mountMore >>Elder fraud: A look inside one scammed couple's case, as losses and bitter lessons mountMore >>
By Associated Press

CIUDAD VICTORIA, Mexico (AP) - Authorities say an explosion in a pickup truck has wounded seven people outside city hall in the border city of Nuevo Laredo.

Officials said Thursday that a grenade went off around 11:15 a.m. in the truck parked outside the main municipal building of the city across from Laredo, Texas. The seven victims were hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries, a statement from local officials said. The facade of the city building was damaged, along with nearby cars.

Nuevo Laredo and the surrounding state of Tamaulipas have been the scene of brutal battles between the Zetas cartel and its former ally, the Gulf cartel, which is now allied with the Zetas' biggest rival, the Sinaloa cartel led by Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wistv.com/story/18917489/explosion-wounds-7-in-mexico-border-city

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Bonnie Fuller: Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes Prove Marrying for the Wrong Reasons Is a Recipe for Divorce

Marriage is NOT a fairy tale, Katie Holmes. Just because you have crushed on someone since you were a teenager doesn't mean you should marry them when they're a devoted Scientologist and you're not.

Katie Holmes - when you filed for divorce from Tom Cruise you just became another real-life example of what not to do when choosing a life mate.

Tom Cruise may have been -- and still is -- a handsome, rich superstar and a gorgeous guy who starred in your Top Gun bedroom poster, but you and all the women out there have to marry the real man and not a fictionalized man of your dreams.

As dull as it sounds, it is totally true that you must marry a man who shares your same life goals and values, and the two of you have to have common interests that you both enjoy.

That doesn't mean that you have to come from the same ethnic background, have the same skin color, or even be a member of the same religion. Lots of people have happy, successful and long-term marriages even if their backgrounds are diverse.

But, you have to be on the same page when it comes to the most important guiding principles of your life.

And Katie, in this case, the man you married was a very devoted member of an extremely demanding and possessive religion -- Scientology. And Scientology has some very strange beliefs. So much so that many people are convinced that it's a cult.

On the other hand, you Katie are a Catholic, raised by parents who are devoted Catholics.

There was no way when you finally realized that you couldn't become a fervent Scientologist devotee or have your daughter become indoctrinated into Scientology, that your marriage could last.

You should have paid attention to Nicole Kidman's marital experience with Tom. Not only did their union end up in a nasty divorce but it appears that Nicole basically lost the two children she adopted with Tom. Tom got custody and her two kids also became devoted Scientologists -- and she is now rarely seen with them.

You never should have rushed into marriage and motherhood; getting engaged after two months of dating and then pregnant shortly after that.

So Hollywoodlifers, learn from Katie Holmes' mistake. No matter how glamorous, sexy and powerful a man may seem, he's not Mr. Right unless you and he see eye-to-eye on how you want to live, where you want to live, whether you want to have children, how you want to raise them, whether you will be a two or one-career marriage and more.

Click here to read more at HollywoodLife.com.

?

Follow Bonnie Fuller on Twitter: www.twitter.com/bonniefuller

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bonnie-fuller/tom-cruise-katie-holmes_b_1639233.html

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User:NielsonLeyva591 - OpenG

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Source: http://wiki.openg.org/User%3ANielsonLeyva591

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Supporters, opponents protest outside court before healthcare ruling (Los Angeles Times)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/234777755?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Coca-Cola's A011 vending machine keeps drink cool without using (much) power

Coca-Cola's A011 vending machine keeps drink cool without using (much) power

So maybe that self-chilling soda didn't pan out, but Coca-Cola is working on another method for keeping its beverages cool without using power. In partnership with Fuji Electric Retail Systems, the company has developed the A011 vending machine, which is capable of keeping drinks frosty for up to 16 hours a day without using energy. The A011 works by shifting the cooling process from mid-day, when energy use is higher, to nighttime, when there is a higher power capacity. Even after the machine stops powering the chilling, the unit's temperature only rises slightly, thanks to vacuum insulation and an airtight design. Great in theory, right? Well Coca-Cola Japan will put the product to the test this summer with a two-month pilot program in two of Japan's toastiest areas, Tajimi City in Gifu Prefecture and Kumagaya City in Saitama Prefecture. If things go well, the company will tweak the A011 to extend the amount of time it can go without power. Room-temperature soda is the worst, so here's hoping it works.

Continue reading Coca-Cola's A011 vending machine keeps drink cool without using (much) power

Coca-Cola's A011 vending machine keeps drink cool without using (much) power originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jun 2012 22:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/06/28/coca-cola-a011-vending-machine/

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REVIEW: Stanard on Stearns, 'Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa'


From: Charles V. Reed <cvreed@mail.ecsu.edu<mailto:cvreed@mail.ecsu.edu>>
List Editor: "Charles V. Reed" <cvreed@MAIL.ECSU.EDU>
Editor's Subject: REVIEW: Stanard on Stearns, 'Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa'
Author's Subject: REVIEW: Stanard on Stearns, 'Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa'
Date Written: Mon, 25 Jun 2012 22:26:22 +0000
Date Posted: Tue, 25 Jun 2012 18:26:22 -0400

 Jason Stearns.  Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa.  New York  PublicAffairs, 2012. 417 pp.  $16.99 (paper), ISBN 978-1-61039-107-8.  Reviewed by Matthew G. Stanard (Berry College) Published on H-Empire (June, 2012) Commissioned by Charles V. Reed  "Where elephants fight the grass is trampled"  For many who grew up during the Cold War, the competition between capitalism and communism seemed to determine the unfolding of history. Then 1989 happened, and communism collapsed spectacularly. Francis Fukuyama famously proclaimed the end of history, that is, the end of ideological competition and the triumph of Western liberal democracy.[1] Of course history did not end, ideological battles continued, and the decade that followed witnessed a dizzying array of complex developments. Saddam Hussein's Iraq invaded Kuwait and was expelled. Mengistu Haile Mariam's regime collapsed in Ethiopia and Eritrea gained its independence, which led to an extraordinarily rare border change in postindependence Africa. Sierra Leone and Liberia plunged into civil conflicts without apparent end. Somalia failed and Yugoslavia disintegrated. Russia both fulfilled and dashed hopes in its transmogrification into a political and economic system that defies categorization. The Maastricht Treaty created another sui generis entity, the European Union. South Africa held its first democratic elections, setting the African National Congress on a path toward one-party dominance. Japanese economic growth was followed by a crash and the so-called lost decade. India and Pakistan both tested nuclear weapons. Multiple terrorist strikes in and outside the United States presaged the 2001 attacks.  Considering all this, it is unsurprising that anyone who lived through the 1990s had trouble keeping track of the multitude of developments also unfolding in Rwanda and Zaire (later rebaptized the Democratic Republic of the Congo). A century earlier, during the 1890s, news about atrocities in the Congo were hard to come by and it took dedicated efforts by individuals like E. D. Morel and Roger Casement to bring the violence affecting millions under Leopold II's abusive colonial regime to the attention of the wider world. By comparison, information was much easier to come by in the 1990s. Across the globe people knew a genocide had begun in Rwanda within days of its start. Diplomats at UN headquarters in New York City, such as U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, publicly debated the genocide, even if to their shame they refused to use the term itself for fear that doing so would commit them to actually do something about it. Scenes of immense refugee camps in central Africa hit the airwaves repeatedly, and journalists at the _New York Times_ and elsewhere regularly informed the world of the ongoing conflicts in the area: child soldiers, mass rapes, disease, humanitarian missions, exploitation of natural resources, foreign incursions, and attempts at peace. Such reporting has continued. But with all the information came little explanation. To redress this lack--to explain--is the task that Jason Stearns sets for himself in _Dancing in the Glory of Monsters_, his captivating if dreadful account of the wars in central Africa since the 1994 Rwandan genocide.  Stearns begins with the genocide, an event similar to the Holocaust in the sense that we now know quite a bit about its causes even if it ultimately defies comprehension. For decades, Rwanda had witnessed competition for both resources and control over the state with competing sides divided along ethnic lines. As Tutsi insurgents advanced on Kigali in 1994, people inside and outside the Hutu-dominated government fought back and also attacked civilians, both Tutsis and Hutu moderates. Rebel leader Paul Kagame's victory, which also ended the genocide, thrust hundreds of thousands of refugees out of the country, most over the border into Zaire. In the months afterward, Kagame and others came to see Rwanda's security as dependent on the defeat of Hutu and other refugees in camps across the country's western frontier. Some neighboring governments, such as the one in Uganda, became involved to eliminate their own enemy rebel groups that had set up bases within Zaire during the late period of Mobutu Sese Seko's rule. In Zaire itself, people struggled under Mobutu's deteriorating rule. This led to the 1996-97 Congo war in which Congolese rebels took up arms against Mobutu's dictatorship, supported and at times led by Rwandan, Ugandan, and other armed powers. They fought across the country to Kinshasa, ostensibly under the leadership of the aged Congolese rebel Laurent Kabila. The successful assault on Kinshasa was a campaign of distances rivaling those of Napoleon's 1812 march on Moscow, with different results of course.  Just months in power, Kabila was at war again. Although sparked by Rwandan military action, the ultimate causes of the second Congo conflict are much less clear. Perhaps it was that Kagame and his allies in Rwanda had become persuaded that Kabila was no longer trustworthy, or they simply had grown tired of him. Rwandan hubris, which built up after the successes of 1994 at home and 1997 in the Congo, also played a role. Divisions among the Congolese undoubtedly contributed to the renewed fighting, as did the stunning weaknesses of Kabila's government, which had been left no choice but to establish itself on the sometimes literally charred ruins of Mobutu's failed kleptocracy. On the ropes, Kabila's Democratic Republic of the Congo fought back with support from Angola, Zimbabwe, and others. Although the initial threat to Kabila's hold on power receded, the fighting did not. The expansive canvas Stearns paints of the second Congo conflict, where months of battles turned into years of fighting, is filled with portraits of all sorts of characters, from would-be revolutionary professor Ernest Wamba dia Wamba to the "millionaire-turned-rebel leader" Jean-Pierre Bemba, today on trial before the International Criminal Court (p. 217). The war degenerated into smaller, sometimes sporadic but vicious offensives and counterattacks between proxy forces in various corners of the capacious Congo. A murky picture grew even darker following Kabila's 2001 assassination, the causes of which remain unclear to this day.  The longer the war continued, the less sense it seemed to make. Stearns suggests a parallel with the Thirty Years' War: starting out as a local conflict, the war spiraled out of control as more and more outside powers got involved, each seeking to advance its own interests while the civilian population suffered all along. As Stearns heard from people several times during his multiple stays in the region, "Where elephants fight the grass is trampled." The picture improved significantly after Kabila's son Joseph Kabila succeeded him. Following peace talks, direct foreign intervention drew to a close in 2003, although fighting and atrocities continued, especially in the eastern part of the country where the wars had first begun.  These conflicts taken together have been called Africa's Great War, but Stearns is clear that his book's title is not an analogy to World War I (p. 273). Consider one devastating Ugandan offensive on Kisangani in June 2000 that dropped 6,000 shells on the city over six days. By comparison, the Battle of Verdun saw, on average, some 125,000 artillery shells land every day for ten months. Whereas the various armed forces involved in the two Congo wars could at times be counted in the thousands, the armies that faced off during World War I numbered in the millions. The effects of Spanish influenza aside, most casualties of Europe's Great War were soldiers. The overwhelming majority of people who died as a result of the Congo wars were civilians.  One comparison Stearns does make is between the killings of millions in central Africa and the deaths of millions in central Europe little more than half a century earlier. By contrasting events in Africa with those of twentieth-century Europe, Stearns suggests that the Congo wars are particularly hard to figure out because no single individual or group drove the killing; no Adolf Hitler, no Joseph Stalin, not even a "select group" who directed the carnage, as he suggests was the case for the Holocaust (pp. 5, 15). The contrast is not as great as Stearns would like us to believe. Countless thousands of people actively participated in the Holocaust and Stalin's Great Terror. Christopher Browning's _Ordinary Men_ (1992) and Jan Gross's _Neighbors_ (2001), among others, have shown how ordinary Europeans became killers who committed unspeakable acts against their fellow humans.  Many people today think of Africa as a backward place of ethnic hatred, violence, warfare, and military coups d'?tat. The Rwandan genocide and wars in the Congo only feed those stereotypes. But as I tell students in my modern African history class, Africa compares favorably with twentieth-century Europe when considering the Balkan Wars, World War I, the Russian Civil War, the Polish-Soviet War, Italy's conquest of Ethiopia, Stalin's Great Terror, the Spanish Civil War, World War II, France's colonial wars from 1946 to 1962, Hungary in 1956, Prague in 1968, European terrorism, and the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s. Perhaps historians ought to concern themselves less with why people become killers and more with what drives people not to kill. Although an admittedly bleak starting point, some have adopted a similar approach when considering the root causes of such conflicts as World War I: don't explain war, explain peace.[2]  One example of European cruelty not mentioned above is the turn-of-the-century violence caused by Leopoldian imperialism in central Africa. Some might be surprised at the very small role played either by the legacy of the Belgian Empire or Belgium itself in the Great War of Africa. There were hangovers of the colonial era to be sure, and Stearns does look back to the colonial past, although not in any systematic way. He points out more than once that the independent Congo that emerged in 1960 was left wholly unprepared for a successful existence as an independent state, which of course fed into Mobutu's rule and its failures. Another colonial legacy is how the postindependence copper giant G?camines was for so many years and in so many ways just like its predecessor, the Union Mini?re du Haut-Katanga (UMHK) of the Belgian Congo. Just as UMHK provided workers with jobs and healthcare and the colonial state with revenue, so "G?camines remained the country's [Zaire's] largest source of employment and income, providing over 37,000 jobs at its peak, running thirteen hospitals and clinics, and contributing to between 20 and 30 percent of state revenues" (p. 289). A parallel with the colonial epoch can also be seen in how the inspiration behind Leopold II's and the Belgian Congo's armed forces, the Force publique, foreshadowed Mobutu and Kabila's fears of domestic instability as opposed to external threats (p. 330). Although the Force publique saw limited fighting outside the Congo during World Wars I and II, it was in essence a domestic policing force. Neither Leopold II nor the Belgians were afraid of neighboring colonial powers. What they feared was rebellion, just as Mobutu and Kabila did after them.  While the relics of empire remained, what the book suggests is that the history of the colonial period mattered little to people caught up in a war. Unsurprisingly, people do not debate the past much when they are just trying to survive. Comparisons to contemporaneous developments in Belgium are telling on this point. The year that the second Congo war started, 1998, also witnessed the publication of one of the best-known books on the Congo, Adam Hochschild's _King Leopold's Ghost_. Hochschild's book created controversy in Belgium and contributed to an outpouring of research on Belgium's colonial past, what two scholars recently called "Congomania in Academia."[3] Among the most contentious of Hochschild's points was his reference to ten million deaths in the Congo during Leopold II's rule as well as an oblique likening of Congo atrocities under Leopold to the Holocaust. This all fed into an ongoing debate in the Western press and academia over the number and nature of deaths in the Congo under Leopold II. While accusations flew in newsprint and teeth gnashed at university conferences because of Belgium's horrific colonial past, literally millions of human lives were being lost in central Africa. Why care about millions killed a century ago when millions were dying today? In this light the 2004 re-erection of Leopold II's statue in Kinshasa, a seemingly bizarre and acrimonious move, appears less odd. Culture Minister Christophe Muzungu said the statue went up because the Congo needed to remember its history. Perhaps it was a way to symbolically claim lands that Leopold II had staked out as the borders of the Congo, since it was Leopold's reign, however dreadful, that had carved out the borders that had been violated by Congo's neighbors after 1998.[4]  The motivations behind the brief return of Leopold's statue in 2004 remain unclear to this day, and Stearns does not mention the episode. His enviably level-headed accounting of the wars does, however, raise other useful questions in need of further investigation. Some of these include who assassinated Kabila; what his son Joseph's role in government has been since 2001; and what the exact roles were of the Rwandan, Ugandan, Zimbabwean, Angolan, and other neighboring governments in the Congo, especially after 1998. Stearns is less strong when it comes to addressing several critical issues, such as the availability of medicines, the medical infrastructure (or lack thereof) in the Congo, the international trade in weapons, and the effects of the Cold War's end on that trade. There is some discussion of mineral production and urban life, especially in Kinshasa, Kisangani, and Kigali, but virtually nothing is made of agricultural production and competition for land, an important issue considering that most people in central Africa remain agriculturalists (in Rwanda as much as 90 percent of the population).  Another bigger picture issue about which Stearns says hardly anything is Western involvement or its absence. Of course it is unfair to criticize a book for not doing what its author did not set out to do, but it is nonetheless surprising to see so little about international passivity in the face of the Rwandan genocide and the killings in the Congo. It is not clear how international support bolstered or sapped Laurent Kabila's hold on power or how nongovernmental or other interventions furthered or hindered life-saving measures on the ground during the two wars. The author does accuse the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) of hypocrisy for deploying fifty thousand troops in the comparatively tiny area of Kosovo in 1999 while UN peacekeepers numbered at most twenty thousand in central Africa (p. 334). Yet by 1999, NATO already had been involved for years in the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia, and the organization had by then expanded to include Hungary, which borders Serbia and lies just a few hundred kilometers from Kosovo. Moreover the accession of southeastern European states to NATO already was being discussed by 1999. Was it hypocritical for NATO to be deeply engaged in an ongoing area of conflict within Europe while simultaneously debating a course of action in central Africa?  To question Stearns's accusation of hypocrisy and to highlight areas needing further study is not to pass a negative judgment on his book. The book's strengths far outweigh any weaknesses. The book is richly rewarding because it provides a broad overview that ties together many complex strands of the 1990s and early 2000s. Here we discover connections among the Rwanda genocide; refugee camps in the Congo; international aid; Mobutu's kleptocratic rule; individual leaders; everyday people; and the politics of nearby countries, including Angola, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zimbabwe. Even better, this wide-ranging history is splendidly well written and supremely accessible. In short, this is a page turner that ought to engage a broad audience.  Stearns is marvelously evenhanded in his general approach and in how he handles his sources, which brings up what is perhaps his book's greatest strength: the incorporation of numerous interviews that he conducted, on the ground, over the course of many years. Stearns is not a professional historian. He worked for various organizations in Africa before embarking on a PhD in political science at Yale. _Dancing in the Glory of Monsters_ plumbs the secondary literature, from Alison Des Forges on the Rwandan genocide to key works by G?rard Prunier, Isidore Ndaywel ? Nziem, Gauthier de Villers, Piero Gleijeses, and many others. He relies extensively on British papers and the _New York Times_ as well as newspapers in Uganda, Rwanda, and elsewhere. Other important sets of sources are government, UN, and nongovernmental organization reports. The real wonder of the book, however, are the interviews. He conducted dozens of interviews with players big and small in the Congo, Rwanda, and beyond. Many of the interviews are recent, some having taken place as late as 2010. His many dialogues allow him to put a human face on the broader conflict. In short, _Dancing in the Glory of Monsters_ is a fresh, impartial, well-researched, and highly engaging look at the conflict by someone who has spent considerable time in central Africa.  Although the book ranges across the secondary literature in such a way as to make it much more than merely a firsthand account of the wars, it bears noting that some sources could have been used more carefully. Stearns claims that the CIA wrote in the 1990s that Mobutu was suffering from AIDS (p. 153). As evidence, he cites Michela Wrong's _In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz_ (2001), which is a journalistic account containing no citations. To help explain the economics behind the Congo wars, Stearns draws on Ludo de Witte's _The Assassination of Lumumba_ for figures on the Soci?t? G?n?rale's land concessions in Katanga in 1906, which set the stage for copper mining to dominate the colony and the independent Congo later on (p. 288). Although important, de Witte's narrowly focused work on Lumumba's death is far from an ideal source on the history and the economics of copper in the Congo. Stearns's reliance on de Witte's book is more than a quibble because in this specific case, the figures he cites from _The Assassination of Lumumba_ are not backed up by any references of their own in de Witte's book.[5]  Despite Stearns's elegant history, by the end of the book the reader is left with an unclear account of what caused the wars, especially the second one, and who is to blame for them. What the reader is left with is deep heartache because it is clear that the Congo wars were horrifically destructive of human life. We still await a full accounting, both of how the wars' victims died and of how many. Population figures for the Congo are difficult to pin down, let alone war casualties. Recently revised casualty figures from the U.S. Civil War show that demographics for even the most studied of wars are tricky.[6] In the case of central Africa, for now the best we have are estimates. The second conflict alone, starting in 1998, left some 3.8 million dead, which when added to the dead from the 1996-97 war totals 5 million. Most died not in combat strictly speaking but because of hunger, disease, other illness, exposure, or smaller-scale attacks and killings. Such numbers are impossible to understand, although we can follow Timothy Snyder, who, when writing about an equally incomprehensibly vast number of dead, that of the 5.7 million victims of the Holocaust, proposed that "this number, like all of the others, must be seen not as 5.7 million, which is an abstraction few of us can grasp, but as 5.7 million _times one_."[7]  Stearns's book edges us closer toward understanding 5 million times one. But in the end comprehension eludes us. It is fitting to conclude with one of Stearns's interviewees, Pastor Philippe of Kisangani. As a father Philippe suffered what is perhaps a parent's most dreaded fate: having to live on after the death of one's own young child. Pastor Philippe lost three. When Stearns asked Philippe who was to blame for his children's deaths, the father's response summed up the causes and agonizing consequences of the Congo wars: "There are too many people to blame. Mobutu for ruining our country. Rwanda and Uganda for invading it. Ourselves for letting them do so. None of that will help bring my children back" (p. 248).  Notes  [1]. Francis Fukuyama, "The End of History?" _The National Interest_ (Summer 1989): 3-18.  [2]. Paul W. Schroeder, "International Politics, Peace, and War, 1815-1914," in _The Nineteenth Century: Europe 1789-1914_, ed. T. C. W. Blanning (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), 158-209.  [3]. Idesbald Goddeeris and Sindani E. Kiangu, "Congomania in Academia: Recent Historical Research on the Belgian Colonial Past," _BMGN Low Countries Historical Review_ 126, no. 4 (2011): 54-74.  [4]. "DR Congo's Leopold Statue Removed," _BBC News_, February 4, 2005, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4235237.stm (accessed May 10, 2012).  [5]. Ludo de Witte, _The Assassination of Lumumba_, trans. by Ann Wright and Ren?e Fenby (London: Verso, 2001), 31.  [6]. J. David Hacker, "A Census-Based Count of the Civil War Dead," _Civil War History_ 57, no. 4 (2011): 307-348.  [7]. Timothy Snyder, _Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin_ (New York: Basic Books, 2010), 407.  Citation: Matthew G. Stanard. Review of Stearns, Jason, _Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa_. H-Empire, H-Net Reviews. June, 2012. URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=36185  This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. 
 

Source: http://h-net.msu.edu/cgi-bin/logbrowse.pl?trx=vx&list=H-Empire&month=1206&week=d&msg=6lYth3r9iVhc9MUYKZWhzA

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Clinton: US pleased so far by new Egypt president

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton receives a gift from Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, Wednesday, June 27, 2012, at the Government Banquet Hall in Helsinki, Finland. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton receives a gift from Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, Wednesday, June 27, 2012, at the Government Banquet Hall in Helsinki, Finland. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and President of Finland Sauli Niinist? meet in Mantyniemi the President's official residence in Helsinki, Finland, Wednesday, June 27, 2012. Clinton visits Finland on 27 June at the invitation of Minister for Foreign Affairs Erkki Tuomioja. (AP Photo/Martti Kainulainen/LEHTIKUVA) FINLAND OUT

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton meets with Finnish Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen, Wednesday, June 27, 2012, at the Parliament House in Helsinki, Finland. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari, Pool)

(AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says the Obama administration is pleased so far with commitments made by Egypt's Islamist president-elect, Mohammed Morsi, but will reserve judgment on his government until it is up and running.

Speaking to reporters in Finland on Wednesday, Clinton said the U.S. was pleased that the new leader has pledged to respect Egypt's international obligations, which Washington believes covers its 1979 peace treaty with Israel. She also said the Egyptian military, which is supposed to turn over power to the president on Saturday, deserved praise for "facilitating" a free, fair and credible election.

However, she said the U.S. would judge Egypt's new leadership on its actions and called for it to respect principles of democracy and pluralism.

"We expect the transition to continue as has been promised by the (military) and we expect president-elect Morsi, as he forms a government, to demonstrate a commitment to inclusivity that is manifest by representatives of the women of Egypt, of the Coptic Christian community, of the secular non-religious community and, of course, young people," she said.

"We hope that full democracy is understood to be more than one election," she added. "One election does not a democracy make. That's just the beginning of the hard work and the hard work requires pluralism, respecting the rights of minorities, independent judiciary, independent media."

The secretary also said, "We know a lot of work lies ahead. They have to write a constitution, they have to look at how they are going to deal with the judicial decision about the parliament and seating a new parliament."

"We are going to work with the leaders in support of that transition," she said, adding that "we have heard some very positive statements so far, including about respecting international obligations which would, in our view, cover the peace treaty with Israel, but we'll have to wait and judge by what is actually done."

Clinton sidestepped a question on whether she would visit Egypt soon to convey the US message to Morsi in person.

US officials have said the administration is willing to send a senior official to Cairo once Morsi is inaugurated and the military cedes the absolute power that it wields currently.

.

Associated Press

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Hands-on with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean on the Google Galaxy Nexus

Sponsored links, if any, appear in green.

Here at Google I/O 2012, the search giant handed out Galaxy Nexus smartphones to attendees that were updated with a preview version of the new Android 4.1 Jelly Bean operating system. We got our hands on one and gave it a quick tour to check out the new features.

There a number of new features in Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, but the most prominent ones are the improved touch response and performance, offline voice to text transcription, new home screen and widget management, revamped notification bar, and Google Now intelligent search tool.

Performance-wise, Android 4.1 Jelly Bean on the Galaxy Nexus appears to be snappy and quick, but that is often the case when a phone is loaded with a clean operating system for the first time. In our experience, once the phone has been in use and loaded with apps and data, it tends to slow down significantly. We will have to see if that happens with Android 4.1, or if Google's under-the-hood improvements are really making a difference in the long run.

Google's new offline voice transcription works as promised and makes the existing feature more usable in more situations. The new home screen and widget management features are well done and add to the already improved experience offered in Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. Likewise, the new notification bar offers more information than before and the ability to swipe down with two fingers to display even more data if wanted. It is also possible to perform actions, such as reply or comment, on notifications that display in the new status bar.

Google Now is a big new feature that promises to make it easier to carry out day-to-day tasks. Google's goal with Now is to provide information to the user without them asking for it. It does this by combining data from past search history, current location, and upcoming calendar data to inform the user of such things as weather, flight times, transportation information, upcoming events, and more. We didn't get a whole lot of time to play with Google Now just yet, but we look forward to taking a deeper dive into it when we have a final, proper version of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean to test.

All in all, Android 4.1 Jelly Bean is most certainly an incremental improvement over Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, but the new features and performance enhancements promise to provide a better experience for many users, which is the most important thing of all. Unfortunately, it may be a long time before many Android owners get to benefit from Jelly Bean's improvements, as the vast majority of devices in use today aren't even running Android 4.0 yet. The Jelly Bean update is shipping on the new Google Nexus 7 tablet and will be available for the Galaxy Nexus and Nexus S smartphones in mid-July. Other than that, we really don't know when it will come to the multitude of Android devices in use today.

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Gluten Free Krums: Titus: A Poetic Summary {by yours truly}


Well, my women's small group has been at it for 6 weeks now. ?We've read the entire letter to Titus.{It's only 3 chapters.} We've listed key words, phrases, and themes. ?We've looked at each chapter by itself, and have re-written crucial passages in our own words. ?We've even memorized a section of verses that well sums up the book's purpose. ?Tonight is our final night together, and the assignment I gave our group was to write a paragraph summary of the entire book.


I had the wonderful opportunity of being at The Gospel Coalition Woman's Conference over the weekend in Orlando, Florida, which I can't wait to tell you about, ?and it was on the plane coming back to Massachusetts that I decided to start writing my paragraph. ?I pulled out my Bible and journal to start writing, but the idea of trying to summarize it in rhyme kept coming to mind. {rhyme/mind = poet/didn't know it} I finished most of it before we landed, and then was able to complete it yesterday while waiting in the local high school parking lot for Cooper to finish up his first day of basketball camp. {A plane and a mini-van = my creative writing spaces and only available moments for sitting still.} So, without further ado, here is my poetic summary of Paul's letter to Titus:

Graciously granted apostleship, I, Paul
But for life, and by choice, now a slave
To the God Who entrusted me with Gospel Truth
So that Gentiles could be saved.


Dear Titus, you are my beloved friend
Child in faith, bold servant, a brother
I left you behind there in Crete
To set the new churches in order.


So, appoint church leaders in every city
Men above reproach, godly elders, mature
Faithful husbands, selfless fathers, good stewards
Grounded in truth, and a faith that endures


They must teach and defend sound doctrine
It's of utmost importance, you see
On that island where Cretans and Jews
Misconstrue customs and create heresies.


And speaking of sound doctrine, Dear Titus
Here's one very important way
That the church should proclaim the Gospel
But not only by the words that they say.


The men should trust Christ in their leadership
For dignity, steadfastness, faith, and love
They should always exemplify good deeds
And live blamelessly by grace from above.


The women should also be reverent
Not given to gossip or addicted to wine
They should focus first on creating their homes
Being pure, submissive, and kind.


Teach all the Christians in Crete to obey
Its leaders, its rulers, its laws
They should never speak evil of others
But be gentle and choose peace with all.


Encourage in each a humble heart
That recalls its former condition:
Foolish, hateful, disobedient, deceived
Until His mercy accomplished salvation.


With proper roles, leadership, and good works
All Gospel-born and grace-transformed
Not only are Crete's churches and people profited
But the Gospel of Christ is beautifully adorned.

Along with our study of Titus, we've been reading this book, which covers in expanded detail the seven virtues that the older women are encouraged to teach the younger women in the second chapter of Titus. To be honest, it's not an easy book for some to readily embrace on their first exposure to the principles of biblical manhood and womanhood. ?It's quite counter-current-feminist-culture. ?However, I have been really blessed to hear about its fruit in the lives of a few of the women in our group whom I have been privileged to discuss it with over coffee. ?Just yesterday over iced coffees at Starbucks, a woman shared with me how she was beginning to try and bless her husband by prioritizing some of his desires for their home. ?It gave her joy to consider his temperament over her own, and serve him in a way that would specifically bless him and make for peaceful, relaxing evenings at home. ?Another sweet member of our group shared that she had learned so much about godly family dynamics from the book , not having ever really seen those modeled in her own home.


But as usual, I get the biggest blessing by interacting with wonderfully unique women from my church, being encouraged by God's amazing work in their lives, and by deepening my own understanding of my Lord and His Word through it all. I love my "job."


Speaking of...Stay tuned for how I got to hang out with John Piper, Tim Keller, D.A. Carson and 3800 godly women from all over the world!

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Google's I/O 2012 keynote is up in video form, in case you missed the skydivers the first time

Google's IO Keynote 2012 is up in video form, in case you missed the skydivers the first time

Yeah, two hours can be a lot of press conference to sit through, but if you took a bathroom break, got a drink or just blinked, you might have missed some of the action-packed spectacle that was today's I/O keynote. We got Jelly Bean, the Nexus 7, the Nexus Q and some extreme Project Glass action. Check out the full video after the break.

Continue reading Google's I/O 2012 keynote is up in video form, in case you missed the skydivers the first time

Google's I/O 2012 keynote is up in video form, in case you missed the skydivers the first time originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jun 2012 15:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Chatbot Eugene Wins Biggest Turing Test Ever

An anonymous reader writes "Eugene Goostman, a chatbot imbued with the personality of a 13-year-old boy, won the biggest Turing test ever staged on 23 June, the 100th anniversary of the birth of Alan Turing. Held at Bletchley Park near Milton Keynes, UK, where Turing cracked the Nazi Enigma code during World War 2, the test involved over 150 separate conversations, 30 judges, 25 hidden humans and five elite, chattering software programs. 'Thirteen years old is not too old to know everything and not too young to know nothing,' explains Eugene's creator, Vladimir Veselov."

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Text Of Van Rompuy Report On Vision For Future Of EMU -2 ...

BRUSSELS (MNI) ? Below is the second half of the verbatim text of a
report by EU Council President Herman Van Rompuy on a ?vision? for the
future of the Eurozone, including steps towards a banking and fiscal
union:

?Integrated supervision is essential to ensure the effective
application of prudential rules, risk control and crisis prevention
throughout the EU. The current architecture should evolve as soon as
possible towards a single European banking supervision system with a
European and a national level. The European level would have ultimate
responsibility. Such a system would ensure that the supervision of banks
in all EU Member States is equally effective in reducing the probability
of bank failures and preventing the need for intervention by joint
deposit guarantees or resolution funds. To this end, the European level
would be given supervisory authority and pre-emptive intervention powers
applicable to all banks. Its direct involvement would vary depending on
the size and nature of banks. The possibilities foreseen under Article
127(6) TFEU regarding the conferral upon the European Central Bank of
powers of supervision over banks in the euro area would be fully
explored.

Building on existing and forthcoming Commission proposals, work
should be taken forward on deposit insurance and resolution:

A European deposit insurance scheme could introduce a European
dimension to national deposit guarantee schemes for banks overseen by
the European supervision. It would strengthen the credibility of the
existing arrangements and serve as an important assurance that eligible
deposits of all credit institutions are sufficiently insured.

A European resolution scheme to be primarily funded by
contributions of banks could provide assistance in the application of
resolution measures to banks overseen by the European supervision with
the aim of orderly winding-down non-viable institutions and thereby
protect tax payer funds.

The deposit insurance scheme and the resolution fund could be set
up under the control of a common resolution authority. Such a framework
would greatly reduce the need to make actual use of the guarantee
scheme. Nevertheless, the credibility of any deposit guarantee scheme
requires access to a solid financial backstop. Therefore, as regards the
euro area, the European Stability Mechanism could act as the fiscal
backstop to the resolution and deposit guarantee authority.

2. Towards an integrated budgetary framework

The financial and debt crisis has underlined high levels of
interdependence particularly within the euro area. The smooth
functioning of the EMU requires not only the swift and vigorous
implementation of the measures already agreed under the reinforced
economic governance framework (notably the Stability and Growth Pact and
the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance), but also a
qualitative move towards a fiscal union.

In the context, within the euro area, of greater pooling of
decision making on budgets commensurate with the pooling of risks,
effective mechanisms to prevent and correct unsustainable fiscal
policies in each Member State are essential. Towards this end, upper
limits on the annual budget balance and on government debt levels of
individual Member States could be agreed in common. Under these rules,
the issuance of government debt beyond the level agreed in common would
have to be justified and receive prior approval. Subsequently, the euro
area level would be in a position to require changes to budgetary
envelopes if they are in violation of fiscal rules, keeping in mind the
need to ensure social fairness.

In a medium term perspective, the issuance of common debt could be
explored as an element of such a fiscal union and subject to progress on
fiscal integration. Steps towards the introduction of joint and several
sovereign liabilities could be considered as long as a robust framework
for budgetary discipline and competitiveness is in place to avoid moral
hazard and foster responsibility and compliance. The process towards the
issuance of common debt should be criteria-based and phased, whereby
progress in the pooling of decisions on budgets would be accompanied
with commensurate steps towards the pooling

of risks. Several options for partial common debt issuance have
been proposed, such as the pooling of some short-term funding
instruments on a limited and conditional basis, or the gradual roll-over
into a redemption fund. Different forms of fiscal solidarity could also
be envisaged.

A fully-fledged fiscal union would imply the development of a
stronger capacity at the European level, capable to manage economic
interdependences, and ultimately the development at the euro area level
of a fiscal body, such as a treasury office. In addition, the
appropriate role and functions of a central budget, including its
articulation with national budgets, will have to be defined.

3. Towards an integrated economic policy framework

In an economic union, national policies should be orientated
towards strong and sustainable economic growth and employment while
promoting social cohesion. Stronger economic integration is also needed
to foster coordination and convergence in different domains of policy
between euro area countries, address imbalances, and ensure the capacity
to adjust to shocks and compete in a globalised world economy. This is
essential for the smooth functioning of the EMU and is an essential
counterpart to the financial and fiscal frameworks.

It is important, building on the principles spelled out in the
European semester and the Euro Plus Pact, to make the framework for
policy coordination more enforceable to ensure that unsustainable
policies do not put stability in EMU at risk. Such a framework would be
particularly important to guide policies in areas such as labour
mobility or tax coordination.

Measures to strengthen the political and administrative capacity of
national institutions and foster national ownership of reforms could be
taken where necessary, as this is a vital condition for the efficient
implementation of growth enhancing reforms.

4. Strengthening democratic legitimacy and accountability

Decisions on national budgets are at the heart of Europe?s
parliamentary democracies. Moving towards more integrated fiscal and
economic decision-making between countries will therefore require strong
mechanisms for legitimate and accountable joint decision-making.
Building public support for European-wide decisions with a far-reaching
impact on the everyday lives of citizens is essential.

Close involvement of the European parliament and national
parliaments will be central, in the respect of the community method.
Protocol 1 TFEU on the role of national parliaments in the EU offers an
appropriate framework for inter-parliamentary cooperation.

III. NEXT STEPS?PROPOSAL FOR A WORKING METHOD

Further work is necessary to develop a specific and time-bound road
map for the achievement of the genuine Economic and Monetary Union.

A report could be submitted to the December European Council by the
President of the European Council in close collaboration with the
President of the Commission, the President of the Eurogroup and the
President of the European Central Bank. There will be regular and
informal consultations with the Member States and the EU institutions.
An interim report could be presented in October 2012.?

[TOPICS: M$X$$$,MGX$$$,M$$CR$,MT$$$$]

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Nissan chief wary despite quick disaster recovery

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Colonoscopy Prevents Colorectal Cancer Deaths | ISMH

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer and the fifth leading cause of cancer death in men worldwide.? The majority of colorectal cancers arise from adenomatous polyps, which can be detected with screening colonoscopy.? Previously, the investigators of the National Polyp Study (NPS), found that colorectal cancer can be prevented by colonoscopic removal of adenomatous polyps.? However, it has been unclear if the cancers prevented were those that had the potential to cause death.? Recently, Zauber and colleagues reported* the effect of colonoscopic polypectomy on mortality from colorectal cancer.? The researchers conducted a long-term prospective? study of the NPS cohort of patients to determine the mortality among patients with adenomas removed compared with the expected mortality from colorectal cancer in the general? population.?? The death rate of patients with adenomas was also compared with an internal control group of patients with nonadenomatous polyps.? Among 2,602 patients who had adenomas removed, 12 died from colorectal cancer over a median? period 15.8 years, compared with 25 expected deaths in the general population, suggesting a 53% reduction in mortality.? Mortality from colorectal cancer among patients with adenomatous polyps was similar to those with nonadenomatous during the first 10 years after polypectomy.? Thereafter, mortality increased for patients with adenomas, when strict surveillance was not organized by the study?s investigators.? The researchers concede several limitations of the study.? A small number of skilled endoscopists performed the colonoscopies, thus the observations may not be applicable to a community practice, for which the reported rates of colorectal cancer after polypectomy are higher than those reported in the NPS.? The results of the study may not be? representative of the general population, since the study was not a randomized, controlled trial.? In conclusion, the study?s findings further support the belief that colonoscopic removal of adenomatous polyps prevents colorectal cancer death.? The results also underscore the importance of longterm-term surveillance for patients after the initial removal of adenomatous polyps.? More randomized, population-based trials are necessary to determine the effectiveness of screening colonoscopy? on colorectal cancer mortality.

Reference: Zauber AG, et al. Colonoscopic Polypectomy and Long-Term Prevention of Colorectal-Cancer Deaths. N Engl J Med 2012;366:687-96.???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

Bretthauer M, Kalager M.? Colonoscopy as a triage screening test. N Engl J Med 2012;366:759-60.

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'Dessert with breakfast diet' helps avoid weight regain by reducing cravings

ScienceDaily (June 25, 2012) ? Dieters have less hunger and cravings throughout the day and are better able to keep off lost weight if they eat a carbohydrate-rich, protein-packed breakfast that includes dessert. These findings come from a new study that was presented June 25 at The Endocrine Society's 94th Annual Meeting in Houston.

"The goal of a weight loss diet should be not only weight reduction but also reduction of hunger and cravings, thus helping prevent weight regain," said Daniela Jakubowicz, MD, the study's principal investigator.

Jakubowicz, a senior physician at Tel Aviv University's Wolfson Medical Center in Holon, Israel, and her co-authors studied nearly 200 nondiabetic obese adults who were randomly assigned to eat one of two low-calorie diets. Both diets had the same number of daily calories -- about 1,600 for men and 1,400 for women -- but differed mainly in the composition of breakfast.

One group received a low-carbohydrate diet, featuring a 304-calorie breakfast with only 10 grams of carbohydrates, or "carbs." The other group ate a 600-calorie breakfast with 60 grams of carbs, which included a small sweet, such as chocolate, a doughnut, a cookie or cake. Both diets contained protein (such as tuna, egg whites, cheese and low-fat milk) at breakfast, but the "dessert with breakfast diet" had 45 grams of protein, 15 grams more than in the low-carb diet.

Halfway through the eight-month study, participants in both groups lost an average of 33 pounds (15.1 kilograms, or kg) per person, which Jakubowicz said shows that "both diets work the same." However, in the last four months of the study, the low-carb group regained an average of 22 pounds (11.6 kg) per person, while participants who ate the dessert with breakfast diet lost another 15 pounds (6.9 kg) each, the authors reported.

In addition, the study subjects who ate the dessert with breakfast diet reported feeling less hunger and fewer cravings compared with the other group. Subjects' food diaries showed that the dessert with breakfast group had better compliance in sticking to their calorie requirements. Women who ate the dessert with breakfast diet were allowed 500 calories for lunch and about 300 calories for dinner. Men in that group could eat a 600-calorie lunch and up to 464 calories at dinner.

As further evidence supporting the dessert with breakfast diet, the levels of ghrelin, the so-called "hunger hormone," dropped much more after breakfast than in the low-carb group: 45.2 percent versus 29.5 percent, respectively, according to the abstract.

Jakubowicz attributed the better results from the dessert with breakfast diet to meal timing and composition. She said the diet's high protein content reduced hunger; the combination of protein and carbs increased satiety, or feeling full; and the dessert decreased cravings for sweet, starchy and fatty foods. Such cravings often occur when a diet restricts sweets and can result in eating many fattening foods that are not allowed on the diet, she said.

This study was published in the March issue of the journal Steroids.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Endocrine Society, via Newswise.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Daniela Jakubowicz, Oren Froy, Julio Wainstein, Mona Boaz. Meal timing and composition influence ghrelin levels, appetite scores and weight loss maintenance in overweight and obese adults. Steroids, 2012; 77 (4): 323 DOI: 10.1016/j.steroids.2011.12.006

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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