Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Crisis of Confidence Endangers the Health Care Law


The recent government shutdown may have distracted some Americans from the bungled rollout of Obamacare, but a new Pew survey shows many people are well aware of just how bad things are for the law’s new insurance websites. Forty-six percent of Americans polled on Oct. 9 to 13, while the shutdown was in full swing, said the Affordable Care Act’s online insurance exchanges were working “not too well” or “not working at all.”






Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2013/10/23/crisis_of_confidence_endangers_the_health_care_law_318355.html
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Trapped in Shade, Norwegian Mountain Town Gets Light From Giant Mirrors


TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma






FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 2011, AT 3:07 PM
Obama Gets Firsthand Look at a Tornado Damage






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.



Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/video/video/2013/10/rjukan_norway_mirrors_mountain_town_trapped_in_shade_gets_reflected_light.html
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Research stalls on dangers of military burn pits (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)

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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Titanfall reaches Xbox One, Xbox 360 and PC on March 11th


RESPAWN ENTERTAINMENT AND EA PREPARE FOR TITANFALL ON MARCH 11, 2014


Titanfall: Collector's Edition Available for Pre-Order Now in Extremely Limited Quantities


VAN NUYS, Calif. – Oct. 22, 2013 – Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: EA) announced today that Titanfall™, the debut game from acclaimed independent videogame developer Respawn Entertainment, will be landing on store shelves beginning March 11, 2014 exclusively for Xbox One, the all-in-one games and entertainment system from Microsoft, Xbox 360 games and entertainment system and PC. Already the winner of more than 80 coveted awards from critics around the world, Titanfall is winning over fans with its thrilling, dynamic first-person action gameplay featuring elite assault Pilots and agile, heavily-armored, 24-foot Titans. Crafted by one of the co-creators of Call of Duty and other key designers behind the Call of Duty franchise, Titanfall delivers a brand-new online experience that combines fluid, fast-paced multiplayer action with heroic, set-piece moments found in traditional campaign modes.


"Since we revealed the game in June we've been absolutely blown away by the reaction to Titanfall," said Vince Zampella, a Co-Creator of Call of Duty and Co-Founder of Respawn Entertainment. "The feedback we're getting from fans around the world is fueling our team as we head towards March and motivating us to deliver an experience that lives up to the hype."


In addition to the standard edition of the game, the Titanfall: Collector's Edition (SRP $249.99) will include an exclusive collectible 18" hand-crafted Atlas Titan statue with diorama and battery-powered LED lighting, a full-size art book featuring more than 190 pages of rare concept art, and an exclusive full-size schematic poster of the Atlas Titan. The Titanfall: Collector's Edition is available for pre-order now at select retailers.


Set in the near future on a distant frontier torn apart by war, Titanfall drops players in the middle of a conflict between the Interstellar Manufacturing Corporation (IMC) and the Militia. The action is rapid and varied – featuring parkour-style wall running, massive double jumps and the ability to hijack Titans. The freedom to shift back and forth between Pilot and Titan allows players to change tactics on the fly, attacking or escaping depending on the situation and extending the action vertically to new heights.


Titanfall and the Titanfall: Collector's Edition will be available for Xbox One, Xbox 360 and PC on March 11, 2014 in North America, and beginning March 13, 2014 in Europe.


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/22/titanfall-reaches-xbox-one-on-march-11th/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Ramin Karimloo, Will Swenson cast in 'Les Miz'




FILE - In this Oct. 2, 2012 photo, Sierra Boggess, left, and Ramin Karimloo arrive at the Royal Albert Hall for the Classical BRIT Awards, in London, UK. The upcoming Broadway cast of "Les Miserables" is anything but miserable, veteran theater actors Karimloo, Will Swenson, Nikki M. James and Caissie Levy are all on board. (Photo by John Marshall JME/Invision/AP, file)





NEW YORK (AP) — The upcoming Broadway cast of "Les Miserables" is anything but miserable — veteran theater actors Ramin Karimloo, Will Swenson, Nikki M. James and Caissie Levy are all on board.

Producers announced Tuesday that "The Phantom of the Opera" veteran Karimloo was cast as Jean Valjean, "Hair" star Swenson as Javert, "Ghost" star Levy as Fantine and "The Book of Mormon" star James as Eponine.

The re-imagined story will begin previews March 1 at the Imperial Theatre. Additional casting, including the roles of Marius and Cosette, will be announced later.

The show marks the third time the show has made it to Broadway.

The Oscar-nominated big screen adaptation directed by Tom Hooper starred Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe and Anne Hathaway.

___

Online: http://www.LesMis.com

___

Follow Mark Kennedy on Twitter at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ramin-karimloo-swenson-cast-les-miz-190124781.html
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Melissa Rycroft Expecting Second Child

"Clearly excited to share our big news!!! A new little Strickland will debut this fall!" Rycroft wrote.Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/xiNwfHlEdz8/
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BBC Worldwide Not Eyed for Sale, Executives Say



Getty Images


BBC director general Tony Hall



LONDON – BBC Trust chairman Chris Patten and Tony Hall, the director general of the U.K. public broadcaster, on Tuesday faced the latest grilling of BBC top executives by the British parliament.



After a year of scandals, the new BBC boss and the head of its governing body answered questions about executive salaries, severance payments and bullying. And they denied plans to sell off BBC Worldwide, the broadcaster's commercial arm.


STORY: BBC Director General Tony Hall Aims to Create a More 'Bespoke' Broadcaster


Patten also said he hopes to publish a report "before Christmas" on the work he and Hall are carrying out to clarify the respective roles of the BBC Trust and the BBC executive team and how they interact.


Patten acknowledged to the committee of the U.K. parliament's House of Commons that it "has been a bad year" for the BBC, but said that the broadcaster could recover.


Patten was also questioned about the BBC Trust's supervision over the past year, during which he appointed Hall after former director general George Entwistle was forced to resign as the BBC's director general after only 54 days, thanks largely to the escalating Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal.


Patten described Entwistle as a "decent broadcaster" who was "overwhelmed by events" as the fallout from the scandal engulfed the BBC.


Meanwhile, Hall addressed questions about the ongoing overhaul of the BBC's bullying and harassment policy, noting the team he has been assembling to reform the broadcaster since he took his position in April.


Hall said the BBC is opening its first bullying and harassment support line and is implementing recommendations made by human rights lawyer Dinah Rose and the BBC's human resources department. Complaints will be investigated by people from different departments, Hall said, while exit interviews are being conducted to see what departing staff has to say about bullying.


STORY: 5 Things to Know About the Jimmy Savile Abuse Scandal and the BBC


Hall described the BBC as having been through a "really grueling year," but kept returning to his mantra of "moving forward" and making sure that there was a "proper culture" to improve things going forward.


"I want us to learn, I want us to change and I want us to move on," Hall said, reflecting that some of the British parliamentarians had "differences of opinion" on recent executive appointments. Patten noted that Hall has been "appointing a very good team."


There were also questions about the differences in accounts from top executives concerning what went down at Newsnight, the BBC flagship news program that had left the allegations of sexual abuse unaired.


Then-BBC News director Helen Boaden, now director of BBC Radio, and former director general Mark Thompson, who left the public broadcaster to become CEO of the New York Times Co., have offered different accounts of the timing and decision-making process that led to the news story about Savile's abuse being dropped.


Hall told parliament Tuesday that he genuinely believed it was possible to have two different recollections of the events from two different executives, and he was okay with that.


When pressed about the fact that Nick Pollard, the Sky News executive who wrote a report on Newsnight's decision to drop the Savile investigation, said it was a "mistake" that evidence from Boaden was excluded, Hall said Pollard had also made it clear that Boaden's evidence would not have affected his findings.


Meanwhile, Patten said the BBC's executive team was responsible for what one member of parliament described as the public broadcaster's "culture of excessive severance payments," referencing the public outcry over some of the broadcaster's pay-offs. Patten did note that sometimes it was justified paying someone "over contract" to get rid of them quickly though.


Patten also said in recent years the BBC found itself "competing for talent not just with ITV and other big broadcasters, but with independent production companies." He said: "People got 'stars in their eyes' in relation to pay."


The pay of senior management has gone down ,and Hall reiterated that he aims to cut salaries among senior managers by 2015 to bring the BBC in line with ambitions to reduce overheads and management costs at the organization.


"I do want a simpler, slimmer BBC," Hall said, with a reduction in managers who are not "enablers" within the organization.


On the failure of an expensive digital media initiative, a plan to digitize the entire organization's archive, which was shelved after costs hit $160 million, Patten said "it should not have happened at the BBC" and declared it a "pretty lamentable" situation. The BBC Trust chairman said the full story of the costly failure would be published in a report later this year. Hall said he was looking forward to reading the report, but that he had felt it was right "to completely write it down" as a failed venture.


Patten also said that Tuesday there were no plans to "fatten up" BBC Worldwide, the broadcaster's commercial arm, for a sale.


Patten noted that if BBC Worldwide was sold off, it would remove one of its main reasons for being a commercial success as it would lose the wealth of BBC programming it gets to distribute around the world.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/SjXsqZG_Zg8/story01.htm
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New iPads likely to star in Apple's latest show

(AP) — Apple is expected to round out its line-up of gadgets for the holiday shopping season with the Tuesday unveiling of its latest iPads.

The San Francisco showcase is likely to feature remodeled versions of Apple's standard-sized iPad with a 10-inch display screen and the iPad Mini with a nearly 8-inch screen. Hewing to its usually tight-lipped ways, Apple Inc. hasn't shared details about what's on the agenda. The Cupertino, Calif. company merely sent out invitations that said, "We still have a lot to cover."

Apple's secrecy notwithstanding, glimpses of the revamped iPads have been showing up in videos posted on the Internet, including on websites that provided early — and accurate — peeks at the new iPhones Apple rolled out last month.

It will be a shock if Apple isn't taking the wraps off new iPads on Tuesday because it has been nearly a year since the previous generation came out. This would be the fifth generation of Apple's tablet computer. The original iPad debuted in early 2010 and accelerated the consumer shift away from traditional laptop and desktop computers. Tablets, including rival devices inspired by the iPad, are now outselling laptops.

If the unauthorized previews of the new iPads are correct, this year's standard-sized model is getting a more noticeable makeover than last year. It's expected to be even thinner and lighter than its predecessor and designed more like the iPad Mini with slimmer sides and tighter curves on the back. To conform with the new look, Apple is also expected to introduce new versions of its smart covers — the polyurethane shields that attach to iPads to protect the screen. The covers also can be detached and folded into a stand for the device.

Apple will probably add its high-definition "Retina Display" to the iPad Mini to stay competitive with recent upgrades to the smaller tablets sold by Google Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.

Both sizes of iPad almost certainly will come with iOS 7, Apple's latest mobile operating system, already installed. The new operating software has been available to download on most of the previous generations of the iPad since last month. Some iPad owners have complained that iOS 7 doesn't look as good or run as well on older tablets.

The new iPads may also come equipped with a biometric sensor that enables a user's fingerprints to serve as a password instead of typing a numeric code to unlock the device. The fingerprint technology is part of the iPhone 5S, Apple's latest high-end smartphone.

If Apple is consistent with its past practices, the prices on the new iPads won't change. Prices on the standard-sized iPad usually start at $499 and the cheapest iPad Mini goes for $329. That has left Apple's tablets more expensive than rival models, but the company has maintained the iPad is worth it.

The higher prices nevertheless have eroded the iPad's market share. The research firm Gartner Inc. estimates that tablet's running Google's Android operating system will end this year with a 50 percent share of the worldwide market versus 49 percent for the iPad. Just two years ago, the iPad commanded a 65 percent market share compared to 30 percent for Android tablets, according to Gartner.

The introduction of a new iPad could also herald the end of the line for the iPad 2, a tablet that Apple released more than two years ago. The iPad 2 currently serves as Apple's discount tablet with a $399 price tag.

It's also likely Apple will use Tuesday's event to announce the release dates for the polished version of its Mavericks operating system for Mac computers and a new Mac computer. Both the operating system and a desktop computer called the Pro were previewed at an Apple conference in June. New MacBook laptops are also possible Tuesday.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-10-22-Apple-New%20iPads/id-0a85bf729c6a4218ae167f5ed5eb217a
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Neglected Elderly Australian Endures Brutal End


SYDNEY (AP) — By the time the ambulance showed up to the house, the old woman's screams were, as the paramedics would later tell it, already at a 10 out of 10.


On a bed in the foyer lay 88-year-old Cynthia Thoresen, her eyes screwed up in agony, her fists clenched, with an untended broken leg. Feces caked her body, from her arms down to her feet, filling the crevices between her toes and under her fingernails.


The fact that Cynthia even lived in the house was a surprise to most of the neighbors. None had ever seen her. None had any idea she'd spent her final days in hellish pain after a fall. None knew that her daughter and caretaker, Marguerite Thoresen, had waited weeks before calling for help, or that the help would come far too late.


In the end, Cynthia Thoresen joined a large and growing cohort of elderly people across the world who live — and increasingly die — in silence. They are unseen and unheard, left to fend for themselves against a problem society has barely begun to notice, let alone fix: elder abuse.


This type of abuse, which in many cases includes neglect, is still so hidden that it is hard to quantify. But the broad picture gleaned from hundreds of interviews and dozens of studies reviewed by The Associated Press is clear: Tens of millions of elders have become victims, trapped between governments and families, neither of which has figured out how to protect or provide for them.


___


EDITOR'S NOTE — As the world ages faster than ever, who will care for the old? This story is part of an occasional series about elder neglect and abuse worldwide.


___


Most of the elderly live with relatives or at home, and researchers estimate at least 4 to 10 percent of them are abused, likely much more. Even by the lowest count of 4 percent, that means about 30 million people.


The demographics alone show clearly that the problem is growing. By the year 2050, there will be more old people on earth than children for the first time in history, because of rising life spans and falling birth rates.


Australia, where Cynthia Thoresen lived, is a developed, wealthy nation considered progressive in its treatment of seniors. But even in high-income countries, the rate of abuse is 4 to 6 percent, according to the World Health Organization. And even here, the system failed Cynthia, over and over again, in life and in death.


"Nothing in the past has disturbed me like this job disturbed me," paramedic Christopher Curtis told police. "I've not seen anyone, regardless of their age, that could withstand the level of pain inflicted by a fractured femur for five seconds, let alone three weeks."


And yet Cynthia Thoresen lay helpless for up to three months, screaming into the silent void of a world that had forgotten her.


___


For some, aging in today's world can be a slow slide into invisibility.


In study after study, elders say they exist in the shadows, at home or in institutions. Their words are dismissed. Even their bodies shrink. Sometimes they become invisible to themselves, as the cruelty of dementia robs them of the memories of who they once were.


This invisibility is reflected in the laws and practices of society.


Information on elder abuse lags decades behind research on child abuse. Only a handful of countries legally require the reporting of suspected elder abuse, compared to dozens for child abuse.


In the U.S., which researchers consider relatively advanced, the government passed the Elder Justice Act in 2010, compared to 1974 for its counterpart on child abuse. No more than two cents of every dollar spent by the federal government on family violence goes to elder abuse. And studies of domestic violence tend not to include victims older than 49.


Researchers can't even agree on who is an elder, let alone what elder abuse is. Depending on the country and culture, the definition ranges from physical and financial abuse to emotional cruelty and even disrespect.


"Here in Canada, millions of dollars have been spent on definitions and they go around in a circle and it drives me crazy," says Elizabeth Podnieks, founder of World Elder Abuse Awareness Day. "It's extremely hard to both identify and to address."


Other data from the World Health Organization, the United Nations, aged care advocates and academics fills in the edges of a hazy but distressing snapshot.


Only one in five older people worldwide has a pension. Elders figure prominently among the more than 100 million who fall into poverty each year because of health-care expenditures. And the suicide rate among men over 75 is the highest in the world.


"I think what's underneath it is ageism, and the belief that, well, old people have had their life and so if they die, they die," says Gloria Gutman, president of the International Network for the Prevention of Elder Abuse. "But what an awful way to die."


Cynthia Thoresen's story can be pieced together through government records, faded newspaper clippings and decades-old memories, along with legal testimony and police documents released to the AP under a freedom of information request. Marguerite Thoresen did not answer repeated requests, by phone, email and letter, for comment.


Cynthia's world began to shrink with a fall that left her injured, dependent and, ultimately, isolated. It is a common problem: About a third of people over 65 fall every year, according to the WHO.


She was born on Jan. 10, 1920, as Cynthia Anne Carey, one of four children of a British couple who whisked the family from Shanghai to the UK and back.


Cynthia eventually married a Norwegian named Arild Thoresen, and moved to Victoria in southern Australia. She stayed home to raise their children, Inger, Thorolf and Marguerite.


After Arild and Inger both died, Cynthia relocated to Perth in the west, where Marguerite and her husband John had settled with their daughter, Anita. One day she tripped while walking the dog, resulting in a partial hip replacement.


After that, Cynthia struggled to keep her house clean; ants were everywhere and the dishes piled up. Marguerite decided Cynthia should move in with her.


In 2001, Marguerite applied for a government carer's benefit for Cynthia's upkeep. The benefit came to around $500 every two weeks, Marguerite said. She told the coroner this money was her only income before her mother's death, apart from money for one article she wrote for a website.


Once the payments started, the government welfare agency, Centrelink, never asked for further medical updates on Cynthia, Marguerite said.


Cynthia also vanished from the health care system. Medicare records show that until 2003, she regularly saw doctors and took prescription medications; Marguerite said the doctors' visits were covered by government health care. But after 2003, Cynthia never saw another doctor, never filled another prescription.


She simply slipped through the cracks, showing how the protection of social networks can evaporate with age. A doctor or teacher may notice the bruises on a child. But almost nobody sees the bruises on a secluded older person — and those who do may chalk them up to aging.


Marguerite's explanation, years later, for why she stopped taking her mother to the doctor: "Well, she didn't say she was ill...She seemed happy."


__


In 2007, Marguerite moved with her husband, daughter, grandsons and mother to a heavily-wooded suburb of the Queensland capital, Brisbane.


There, Cynthia's world shrank to a pinpoint.


In the 18 months Cynthia lived in the one-story house, no visitors were invited inside. The family was almost never seen. Marguerite's main interaction with her neighbors involved a campaign she led to stop the local council from cutting down trees on her street.


Even in life, Cynthia was a ghost. She didn't talk on the phone or write letters. Her only other close relative, her son Thorolf, lived nearly 1,700 kilometers (1,000 miles) away.


Dementia left her confused at times. Occasionally, she spoke.


Mostly, she was silent.


__


The events that led to Cynthia's death started one morning, probably in late November 2008, with a pool of liquid on the rug next to Cynthia's bed. Maybe it was urine, or maybe a spilled drink. Marguerite's husband, John, spread newspapers over the wet patch and went to work.


When the family found Cynthia, she was on the floor, possibly having slipped. She moaned as she was hoisted back up.


Marguerite figured she'd sprained her knee and ordered her to stay in bed. No one called an ambulance. Cynthia had also fallen in Perth, Marguerite said, and paramedics had recommended bed rest.


Marguerite left a towel underneath her mother to soak up her excrement.


She said she changed the towel often. She said she fed her mother soft foods — eggs, chicken, fruitcake. She said Cynthia only refused to eat in the third week, which Marguerite figured was due to a stomach bug.


Marguerite finally called the ambulance on Dec. 17, 2008, thinking the problem might be stomach cancer instead.


She said the screaming only began when she and her husband moved Cynthia to a bed near the front door, stressing her broken leg.


She said until this point, her mother seemed fine.


___


Marguerite opened the door and paramedics Curtis and Rebecca Whiteley were hit with the overwhelming stench of stale urine and feces.


They began to question Marguerite:


Has your mother suffered a trauma?


No.


Has she fallen?


A few weeks ago. Do you think her leg is broken?


Screaming, screaming, screaming.


Curtis tried to walk down the hallway, but Marguerite shut the doors to every room.


Cynthia's screams grew louder. Marguerite demanded the paramedics alleviate her pain.


My mother got to 88 years without going into a nursing home, she told them. We've done a good job.


___


There is no gentle way to describe the state Cynthia was in when she arrived at the hospital.


Her chafed skin was covered in bedsores and feces. Her toenails were overgrown and curling, her right foot riddled with infections, and she had no teeth or dentures. She was dehydrated and malnourished, and couldn't speak.


Most troubling, her swollen right leg was 10 centimeters (4 inches) shorter than her left, the result of a fracture healing improperly.


Marguerite didn't ride to the hospital with her mother. Staffers called her repeatedly.


"I think we should discuss your mum," a social worker told Marguerite over the phone. "We are really concerned about her. She's not at all well."


Marguerite didn't show up to the hospital for three days.


So doctors called the state Adult Guardian to gain consent to operate. But the fracture was too severe and the delay in treatment too long; the break appeared between 3 and 12 weeks old.


On Dec. 30, the doctors recommended palliative care. Marguerite said no, then yes, then asked for her mother's transfer to another hospital. The doctors said Cynthia was too fragile.


Marguerite threatened to call the police if staffers touched her mother again. Hospital officials scheduled an urgent family meeting. Marguerite did not attend.


Cynthia died at 6:15 p.m. on Jan. 3, 2009. She was one week shy of her 89th birthday.


The coroner would not hold the inquest hearing into her death until four years later.


___


In Australia, as in many other places, experts say the legal system is not set up to adequately prevent or punish elder abuse. The few regions with mandatory reporting laws — including most U.S. states, some Canadian provinces and Israel — catch only a tiny fraction of cases.


Since Australia introduced limited mandatory reporting in 2007, alleged nursing home assaults jumped from 925 to 1,971 in 2011-12. But the law applies only to government-subsidized homes for cases involving sexual abuse or "unreasonable use of force." That phrase gives nursing homes wide discretion in what — or whether — to report.


Even when cases are reported, victims seldom see justice.


Dianne Pendergast spent five years as Queensland's Adult Guardian investigating hundreds of allegations of abuse. Only one case was prosecuted.


"People won't prosecute — whether it's police, whether it's family members — because it involves family business," she says. "Because it's private. Because there's a level of abuse that's tolerated in the community that none of us wishes was there. We all turn a blind eye."


Stereotypes further cast elders as lousy witnesses and abuse as tough to prove, says Paul Greenwood, head of San Diego's Elder Abuse Prosecution Unit, one of the most aggressive in the world.


The lead police investigator for Cynthia's case recommended amending the law to include a specific crime of elder abuse. However, Eileen Webb, an elder law expert at the University of Western Australia, said the problem is not a lack of relevant charges, but an unwillingness to get involved.


"The laws are there," Webb says. "It's a matter of will."


Cynthia was as invisible to society in death as she was in life.


On May 13, 2013, Queensland Coroner Christine Clements held the inquest, a court-like proceeding convened after unusual deaths in Australia.


The investigator, Det. Sgt. Glen Skugor, took the stand first. The case had bothered him, he said. It had bothered everyone — the paramedics, the doctors, his fellow officers.


The autopsy concluded Cynthia died from a blood clot in her lung, sparked by the leg fracture. In an expert opinion, Dr. Stephen Morrison, head of thoracic medicine at Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital, said her condition suggested a "severe degree of neglect...to the point of cruelty in a distressed, demented and totally dependent patient."


Officers who photographed Cynthia's body noticed bruising on her arms and midsection. The police contemplated several charges: manslaughter, failure to provide the necessities of life, negligent acts causing harm, torture. But the doctors couldn't say beyond a reasonable doubt that Marguerite's care had directly caused Cynthia's death, and similar cases had failed to nab convictions.


And so police closed the case. No charges were filed. In the eyes of the law, Cynthia became a nonentity.


Abuse of the elderly comes most often from a spouse or child, and the key to Cynthia's story lies with her daughter, Marguerite — a complex puzzle.


She holds journalism and business degrees, and an eBay store attached to her phone number sells ebooks on topics such as bee keeping, shoe making and welding.


The few people who know her describe her as introverted and odd, but also compassionate. She took in scores of unwanted rabbits and ran an information service dedicated to their care.


Astrid Herlihy, who met Marguerite through a Perth animal rights group, remembers her as a vegetarian, sensitive and distant. Marguerite was also depressed and paranoid, according to her own testimony, possibly in part because of a stalking incident involving a bullying neighbor.


"She really had just about given up on the world," says Herlihy, who was never invited into Marguerite's home. "I think she was pretty disillusioned."


In a poem on her rabbit care website called "Everything is wrong," Marguerite writes:


"And as we deny that our world is dying, Mother Nature sits abandoned, quietly crying."


Another poem decries the fate of a puppy.


"Miserable howling pierces the night as the pet shop puppy cries a lament that nobody hears," she writes.


"...The solitary victim left to cry alone."


___


Marguerite didn't want to talk about her mother's death, fearing she might incriminate herself. But the coroner ordered her to testify.


For two hours, Clements and the lawyer, Emily Cooper, grilled her.


Through it all, Marguerite seemed detached. She spoke slowly, in a breathy voice. And she showed only the slightest agitation when pressed about the feces covering her mother's body, which she had once suggested might be chocolate ice cream.


The excrement? There wasn't that much. Cynthia's screams? They weren't that loud. The stench of urine? The result of her grandson running around without a diaper.


She hadn't put her mother in a nursing home because, she said, Cynthia disliked them.


"She had a philosophy of people staying with the family when they were old," Marguerite said. "And she also hated strangers."


She hadn't accompanied her mother in the ambulance because she didn't think it was allowed. She hadn't visited for three days because her husband was too busy to join her.


"You didn't think the urgency of seeing your mother in hospital sort of overrode you having someone to go with?" Cooper asked.


"I didn't think she was that ill," Marguerite replied.


"So you didn't believe what the hospital was telling you?"


"No."


Marguerite said she hadn't minded caring for Cynthia. But Cooper read from a statement by the hospital social worker, who quoted Marguerite as saying: "It was really difficult to care for my mother."


What had Marguerite meant by that?


"I have no idea. I was probably under a lot of stress."


Marguerite finally conceded that perhaps she should have called an ambulance a week earlier. But no sooner.


Her answers did little to satisfy the increasingly frustrated coroner. Why hadn't Marguerite taken her mother to see a doctor for years, despite seeing doctors herself?


"Well, she wasn't sick."


Cooper asked point-blank: Had Marguerite provided Cynthia appropriate care?


"I believe that up to that last fall, she had very good care," Marguerite replied. "I did my best."


And after the fall?


"I probably could have judged the situation better."


___


The coroner issued her 15-page findings report just over a week later. In it, the word "pain" appears 30 times.


Clements found Marguerite "failed her mother entirely" by not taking her to a doctor for years, and her explanation was "unsatisfactory and implausible." She called Cynthia's bedbound final weeks "unforgiveable," and concluded she would probably have been better off in a nursing home.


"It is an appalling thought to consider the pain endured by Cynthia Thoresen during this period when she was totally at the mercy of her daughter's inadequate regime of 'care'," she wrote.


The coroner suggested re-examining the law and requiring annual medical reviews from those who receive the carer's benefit.


In the meantime, Marguerite's brother and sister-in-law declined to be interviewed. Police refused to talk. Centrelink referred AP's questions to the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, which refused to say whether it would change its assessment policy. The state attorney general released a brief statement saying he had referred the case to the Director of Public Prosecutions — which refused to comment. And, following a freedom of information request from the AP, the state Department of Justice and Attorney-General released just 30 heavily-redacted pages from the 660 in Cynthia's case file.


From all involved: Silence.


"With elder abuse, no one wants to touch it. Any nugget of information that might lead to revelations of abuse is always swept under the carpet," says Lynda Saltarelli, founder of Aged Care Crisis, an Australian advocacy group. "As a community, we should all hang our heads in shame over the fact that it's remained hidden."


___


In the end, the lawyer concluded there was no evidence of malice from Marguerite, but her explanations were "quite ridiculous."


The coroner grappled with all the unknowns. How had Cynthia become so isolated?


"The evidence is so troubling that an elderly person who is so dependent, so vulnerable, died such a death," Clements said. "The question is, how as a society can we help such an event occurring? We don't want it to happen again."


Does it come down to changing the law? she mused. Or is it about moral, family, social responsibility?


Her voice was resigned.


"I don't know that, unfortunately, Ms. Thoresen has gained much insight into her own family workings through this process," Clements said. "I don't know whether she herself needs some help."


The coroner let out a small sigh.


"I don't know."


Her words were met with silence. Marguerite had already left the room.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=239112946&ft=1&f=
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Global ocean currents explain why Northern Hemisphere is the soggier one

Global ocean currents explain why Northern Hemisphere is the soggier one


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

20-Oct-2013



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Contact: Hannah Hickey
hickeyh@uw.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington






A quick glance at a world precipitation map shows that most tropical rain falls in the Northern Hemisphere. The Palmyra Atoll, at 6 degrees north, gets 175 inches of rain a year, while an equal distance on the opposite side of the equator gets only 45 inches.
Scientists long believed that this was a quirk of the Earth's geometry that the ocean basins tilting diagonally while the planet spins pushed tropical rain bands north of the equator. But a new University of Washington study shows that the pattern arises from ocean currents originating from the poles, thousands of miles away.

The findings, published Oct. 20 in Nature Geoscience, explain a fundamental feature of the planet's climate, and show that icy waters affect seasonal rains that are crucial for growing crops in such places as Africa's Sahel region and southern India.

In general, hotter places are wetter because hot air rises and moisture precipitates out.

"It rains more in the Northern Hemisphere because it's warmer," said corresponding author Dargan Frierson, a UW associate professor of atmospheric sciences. "The question is: What makes the Northern Hemisphere warmer? And we've found that it's the ocean circulation."

Frierson and his co-authors first used detailed measurements from NASA's Clouds and Earth's Radiant Energy System, or CERES, satellites to show that sunlight actually provides more heat to the Southern Hemisphere and so, by atmospheric radiation alone, the Southern Hemisphere should be the soggier one.

After using other observations to calculate the ocean heat transport, the authors next used computer models to show the key role of the huge conveyor-belt current that sinks near Greenland, travels along the ocean bottom to Antarctica, and then rises and flows north along the surface. Eliminating this current flips the tropical rain bands to the south.

The reason is that as the water moves north over many decades it gradually heats up, carrying some 400 trillion (that's four with 14 zeroes after it) watts of power across the equator.

For many years, slanting ocean basins have been the accepted reason for the asymmetry in tropical rainfall.

"But at the same time, a lot of people didn't really believe that explanation because it's kind of a complicated argument. For such a major feature there's usually a simpler explanation," Frierson said.

The ocean current they found to be responsible was made famous in the 2004 movie "The Day After Tomorrow," in which the premise was that the overturning circulation shut down and New York froze over. While a sudden shutdown like in the movie won't happen, a gradual slowing which the recent United Nations report said was "very likely" by 2100 could shift tropical rains south, the study suggests, as it probably has in the past.

The slowdown of the currents is predicted because increasing rain and freshwater in the North Atlantic would make the water less dense and less prone to sinking.

"This is really just another part of a big, growing body of evidence that's come out in the last 10 or 15 years showing how important high latitudes are for other parts of the world," Frierson said.

Frierson's earlier work shows how the changing temperature balance between hemispheres influences tropical rainfall. A recent study by Frierson and collaborators looked at how pollution from the industrial revolution blocked sunlight to the Northern Hemisphere in the 1970s and '80s and shifted tropical rains to the south.

"A lot of the changes in the recent past have been due to air pollution," Frierson said. "The future will depend on air pollution and global warming, as well as ocean circulation changes. That makes tropical rainfall particularly hard to predict."

###


Co-authors of the paper are Yen-Ting Hwang, Elizabeth Maroon, Xiaojuan Liu and David Battisti at the UW; Neven Fuckar at the University of Hawaii; Richard Seager at Columbia University; Sarah Kang at South Korea's Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology; and Aaron Donohoe at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, the National Aeronautic and Space Administration, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Department of Defense.

For more information, contact Frierson at 206-685-7364 or dargan@atmos.washington.edu.




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Global ocean currents explain why Northern Hemisphere is the soggier one


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

20-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Hannah Hickey
hickeyh@uw.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington






A quick glance at a world precipitation map shows that most tropical rain falls in the Northern Hemisphere. The Palmyra Atoll, at 6 degrees north, gets 175 inches of rain a year, while an equal distance on the opposite side of the equator gets only 45 inches.
Scientists long believed that this was a quirk of the Earth's geometry that the ocean basins tilting diagonally while the planet spins pushed tropical rain bands north of the equator. But a new University of Washington study shows that the pattern arises from ocean currents originating from the poles, thousands of miles away.

The findings, published Oct. 20 in Nature Geoscience, explain a fundamental feature of the planet's climate, and show that icy waters affect seasonal rains that are crucial for growing crops in such places as Africa's Sahel region and southern India.

In general, hotter places are wetter because hot air rises and moisture precipitates out.

"It rains more in the Northern Hemisphere because it's warmer," said corresponding author Dargan Frierson, a UW associate professor of atmospheric sciences. "The question is: What makes the Northern Hemisphere warmer? And we've found that it's the ocean circulation."

Frierson and his co-authors first used detailed measurements from NASA's Clouds and Earth's Radiant Energy System, or CERES, satellites to show that sunlight actually provides more heat to the Southern Hemisphere and so, by atmospheric radiation alone, the Southern Hemisphere should be the soggier one.

After using other observations to calculate the ocean heat transport, the authors next used computer models to show the key role of the huge conveyor-belt current that sinks near Greenland, travels along the ocean bottom to Antarctica, and then rises and flows north along the surface. Eliminating this current flips the tropical rain bands to the south.

The reason is that as the water moves north over many decades it gradually heats up, carrying some 400 trillion (that's four with 14 zeroes after it) watts of power across the equator.

For many years, slanting ocean basins have been the accepted reason for the asymmetry in tropical rainfall.

"But at the same time, a lot of people didn't really believe that explanation because it's kind of a complicated argument. For such a major feature there's usually a simpler explanation," Frierson said.

The ocean current they found to be responsible was made famous in the 2004 movie "The Day After Tomorrow," in which the premise was that the overturning circulation shut down and New York froze over. While a sudden shutdown like in the movie won't happen, a gradual slowing which the recent United Nations report said was "very likely" by 2100 could shift tropical rains south, the study suggests, as it probably has in the past.

The slowdown of the currents is predicted because increasing rain and freshwater in the North Atlantic would make the water less dense and less prone to sinking.

"This is really just another part of a big, growing body of evidence that's come out in the last 10 or 15 years showing how important high latitudes are for other parts of the world," Frierson said.

Frierson's earlier work shows how the changing temperature balance between hemispheres influences tropical rainfall. A recent study by Frierson and collaborators looked at how pollution from the industrial revolution blocked sunlight to the Northern Hemisphere in the 1970s and '80s and shifted tropical rains to the south.

"A lot of the changes in the recent past have been due to air pollution," Frierson said. "The future will depend on air pollution and global warming, as well as ocean circulation changes. That makes tropical rainfall particularly hard to predict."

###


Co-authors of the paper are Yen-Ting Hwang, Elizabeth Maroon, Xiaojuan Liu and David Battisti at the UW; Neven Fuckar at the University of Hawaii; Richard Seager at Columbia University; Sarah Kang at South Korea's Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology; and Aaron Donohoe at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, the National Aeronautic and Space Administration, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Department of Defense.

For more information, contact Frierson at 206-685-7364 or dargan@atmos.washington.edu.




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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uow-goc101613.php
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HTC One Max with AT&T-friendly LTE sneaks past FCC


HTC One Max goes through FCC with AT&Tfriendly bands


HTC's latest supersized handset might be making its way to the land of the supersized meal, if this recent FCC listing is any indication. The documents show a HTC handset that bears the model number OP3P500, a slight variation of the international One Max's OP3P510 model number which you can see here. Further, the OP3P500 appears to support LTE band 17, a clear sign that the phone is compatible with AT&T and could be making its way stateside some time soon. Of course, no pricing or availability information can be gleaned from the filing, but you can check out our full review of the One Max before you decide if you want such a giant phone in your life. At least it's smaller than the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0, right?


Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/22/htc-one-max-att-lte/?ncid=rss_truncated
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Monday, October 21, 2013

Engineers: Engadget is hiring!

I'm guessing by the fact that you're reading this that maybe you like Engadget. What I'm hoping is that you also happen to be an engineer who loves working on highly visible, globally-used products with massive scale.

If so, give us a shout! Positions are based in SF, and besides working on the ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/XPPnb3Ufres/
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The Ten Most Spectacularly Designed Automotive Graphics

The Ten Most Spectacularly Designed Automotive Graphics

Cars produce thousands of data points every second, yet we've been trained to believe that a car should give us information with these tiny mechanical gauges that mostly hover somewhere in the middle. Boring. Here are ten cars that use the best technology available to communicate all the data a car produces.

Read more...


    
Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/OjbxKMPiNMg/@barrett
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Microsoft, the sleeping giant of the cloud


Microsoft, the sleeping giant of the cloud

Credit: iStockphoto



We're accustomed to thinking of Microsoft as a lumbering giant encumbered by its PC legacy. But think about it: What other company in the world has such a massive collection of software and services to offer through the cloud, not to mention the cloud infrastructure to deliver it?


Microsoft has the resources to crush it. The question, as usual, is how well it can execute.


[ Stay on top of the cloud with the "Cloud Computing Deep Dive" special report. Download it today! | From Amazon to Windows Azure, see how the elite 8 public clouds compare in InfoWorld's review. | For a quick, smart take on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today. ]


Brad Anderson, corporate vice president of the Cloud and Enterprise division at Microsoft, helps oversee a big chunk of the private and public cloud portfolio: Windows Server, System Center, SQL Server, Windows Azure, and Visual Studio. InfoWorld Executive Editor Doug Dineley and I spoke with him for over an hour last week. In particular, our conversation focused on the connection between Windows Server and Azure, although we began by addressing the commitment Microsoft has made to its public cloud.


Gearing up for dominance
The Microsoft reorg changed the name of Microsoft's Server and Tools division to the Cloud and Enterprise division. But according to Anderson, little changed in terms of responsibility, except that Global Foundation Services became part of his group. These are the guys who are responsible for Microsoft's entire data center infrastructure, including Azure data centers.


I had heard Microsoft was investing heavily, but still, I was surprised by the scale. "We think that we were the No. 1 purchaser of servers in the world last year," says Anderson. "Every six months we're having to double our compute and our storage capacity. To give you a frame, in the last three years we've spent over $15 billion on cap ex."


That's one heck of a cloud launching pad. Plus, although Office 365 is outside Anderson's purview, he couldn't resist noting it reached a $1 billion annual run rate faster than any product in Microsoft history (although some have questioned that claim). In addition, back in June, Azure general manager Steven Martin claimed that the number of Azure customers had risen to 250,000 and was increasing at the rate of 1,000 per day.


No doubt many of those Azure customers were drawn by Microsoft's decision in mid-2012 to offer plain old IaaS (as opposed to PaaS), which InfoWorld's Peter Wayner characterized as having "great price-performance, Windows toolchain integration, and plenty of open source options." You can bet a bunch of customers will also discover Azure by crossing the bridge Microsoft is building between Windows Server and System Center on the one hand, and Azure services on the other.


The boundaryless data center
The overarching message is that Windows Server customers can now use Azure as an extension to their local server infrastructure. "We're the only organization in the world delivering consistency across privately hosted and public clouds," Anderson says. "You're not going to be locked into a private or to a public cloud. You can dev and test in Azure, deploy on private. You can move your virtual machine up into Azure without changing a line of code, without changing your IT processes."


Anderson also claims technology development on Azure is being ported to Windows Server. "The ability to take direct-attached storage, have all of the content replicated, tiering ... all those kinds of pieces come from Azure," he said, referring to Windows Server 2012's Storage Spaces and the new storage functionality in Windows Server 2012 R2.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/cloud-computing/microsoft-the-sleeping-giant-of-the-cloud-229125?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_
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Morning Report: Dana White trying hard to like 'delusional' Roy Nelson


Now dropping back-to-back fights, Roy Nelson isn't getting cut much slack by UFC president Dana White, not that he ever was. Nelson, who struggled against Daniel Cormier in the co-main event of UFC 166, attributed his frustrating appearance to a tentative dance partner. Out-struck 74-17 (3-0 on takedowns) by Cormier, Nelson didn't garner much sympathy from White.


"It's stuff like that," said White during his post-fight media scrum. "He said Cormier wasn't engaging enough. [Cormier] outwrestled him, and he punched the living s--t out of him. How much more does he want to be engaged? Huh? He says some dumb s**t and he's very delusional."


"He says we've never given him a title shot when we should have got a title shot. Every time you get that close to a title shot, you get beat by the best in the world. That's why you've never had a title shot."


Once calling his relationship with the Prez more similar to that of a husband and wife, Nelson and White have traded barbs through the media for years. With Nelson signing a new nine-fight deal in July, some thought the pair had largely reconciled.


"Contrary to popular belief, I try so hard to like Roy Nelson. It's like, I saw him backstage before I came out to talk to you guys. 'What's up Roy? You looked good. You lost weight,' this and that. Then I come out and hear the stupid s**t he said to you guys right before I walk out there. The guy says the dumbest s**t I've ever heard in my life and he's very delusional.


That being said, I think he's an incredibly tough guy, with his physique and everything. I'm blown away he can compete at this level. How talented he is and what a great chin he has. But every time he gets above No. 5, he looks like he doesn't belong in the top 10. You get him in there with some guys that aren't and he looks like a world beater. Everybody starts yelling 'He should get a title shot!' Then you see him fight guys that are athletic and talented and he looks like he doesn't belong in the top 10."


Under contract for eight more and looking slimmer than ever, we'll have to see if Nelson follows Cormier's move to 205lbs.


Star-divide


5 MUST-READ STORIES


Dana scrum. Get the latest buzz from Dana White's UFC 166 post-fight media scrum.


UFC 166 Aftermath. Another dominating performance over Junior dos Santos behind him, Cain Velasquez still has plenty to prove before earning the moniker of 'best ever.' Dave Doyle breaks down the event's big stories.


Fortunes change for five. Dave Metlzer examines what happens next for UFC 166's biggest winners and losers.


The Purge. With Dana saying the UFC roster is too bloated as is, could we see leashes tighten across divisions to make way for new talent?


The Female Conor McGregor? See who fans are begging Dana and Co. to bring into a blossoming UFC women's bantamweight division.


Star-divide


MEDIA STEW


Star-divide


Cain retains the belt.



Star-divide


One for the ages.



Star-divide


Weekend edition of the Tommy Toe Hold Show.



Star-divide


One FC 11 Total Domination highlights.



Star-divide


Behind the scenes at Glory 11.



Star-divide


Video blog with Bas Rutten. Bas coaches his fighters at an amateur MMA event.



Star-divide


Quick Brazilian KO.



Star-divide


TWEETS



As always, make sure to check out our extensive Pro React piece to see what fighters had to say during the fights.



Star-divide


The morning after.














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Matchmaking?



Star-divide


Maybe check out Gil/Diego.



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Stone Cold.



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Busy busy.



Star-divide


Salt in the wound.



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GSP, the Terminator, who's next?



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I still like Dodson's chances.



but together...



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FIGHT ANNOUNCEMENTS


Announced yesterday (Oct. 10 2013)


Mike Wilkinson out, Robert Whiteford vs. Jimy Hettes at UFC Fight Night 30


Star-divide



FANPOST OF THE DAY



Today's Fanpost of the Day comes via SocratesRising.


Velasquez; I'm not sold.



Ok, ok I know what you are thinking - wtf dude, he just mauled JDS AGAIN for five rounds. Hear me out. I just watched the fight and I listened to Joe Rogan (I love him as an announcer btw) wax on about Cain's amazing cardio, talk at length about his work ethic and wrestling prowess. Cain is impressive as hell with those attributes. I was left somewhat dissatisfied by this performance though. Taking nothing away from Cain; I saw a fighter who is capable of absolutely smothering his opponent with constant movement and a relentless pace. I believe 95% of those 25 minutes were spent with Cain pressing JDS against the fence. When they broke either because of the rare occasion when JDS was able to create space or Cain just decided to grant space, JDS looked much better. Whenever they had space, JDS was clearly the more dangerous, dynamic and skilled fighter.


The old saying, just because you can doesn't mean you should - to me that rings true in a weird way here. If Cain doesn't possess great finishing skills, punching power or submissions - he should thank God every night he was blessed with 4 gas tanks when the average HW has 1/2 of one. He certainly is using the tools in his belt to the best of his ability. But to me that fight didn't seem fair in a weird way. It was like Cain was thinking, "I know you can beat me standing, so let me hold you here against this wall for 22 minutes of the next 25 and pitter pat you until you wear out."


...



Check out the rest of the post here.


Star-divide


Found something you'd like to see in the Morning Report? Just hit me up on Twitter @SaintMMA and we'll include it in tomorrow's column.


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/21/4858856/morning-report-dana-white-delusional-roy-nelson-ufc-166-cain-velasquez-dos-santos-cormier-melendez
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