Thursday, November 3, 2011

House committee OKs new penalties against Iran (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A House committee has approved new and tougher penalties against Iran, focusing on companies that do business with Tehran as well as its central bank.

The House Foreign Affairs Committee approved two bills aimed at clamping down on Iran's nuclear weapons program. The committee chairwoman, GOP Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (ih-lay-AH'-nah rahs LAY'-tih-nehn) of Florida, says Iran's oil income and business indirectly benefit a government that sponsors terrorism.

The U.S. and the U.N. have imposed several rounds of penalties already because of widespread suspicions that Iran is trying to build nuclear weapons. Iran denies that and says its program is for peaceful purposes.

Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (ah-muh-DEE'-neh-zhahd), has acknowledged that the current penalties were impeding Iran's financial institutions.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iran/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111102/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_iran

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Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Pregnant women control birth to avoid Halloween

Fright night just got a little bit spookier. Pregnant women have their own little trick on Halloween ? they seem able to time the delivery of their baby to avoid giving birth on this day.

Rebecca Levy at Yale School of Public Health and colleagues examined 1.8 million US birth records from 1996 to 2006, and found that birth rates dropped by 11.3 per cent on 31 October, when compared with the two-week window surrounding the date. The significant declines in deliveries on Halloween applied to natural births as well as scheduled caesarean and induced births.

"The study raises the possibility that the assumption underlying the term 'spontaneous birth', namely, that births are outside the control of pregnant women, is erroneous," says Levy. She says a psychological influence over hormonal activity may be at work.

"We know that hormones control birth timing, and mothers do often express a desire to give birth on a certain day," she says. "But the process that allows those thoughts to potentially impact the timing, we don't know." More research is needed, she says, to determine the precise ways that thoughts or desires may affect birthing hormones.

Spooky psychology

Levy suggests that Halloween's associations with death and evil are in direct contrast with the idea of creating life and may subconsciously affect a woman's desire to give birth.

"Halloween can have pretty scary imagery of skeletons, death, devils, monsters," she says. "It's possible that death imagery is particularly salient as people are thinking about birth. [Perhaps] it evokes fear on some level."

A happier birthday

The team also examined birth rates around Valentine's day, traditionally associated with the positive feelings of love. On 14 February, they saw an overall spike of 5?per cent in births compared with the two-week window either side.

These findings mimic a 2003 study in Taiwan that showed increases in scheduled births on auspicious days and decreases on inauspicious days, according to the Chinese lunar calendar.

Journal reference: Social Science & Medicine, DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.07.008

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/19af0461/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cdn2110A30Epregnant0Ewomen0Econtrol0Ebirth0Eto0Eavoid0Ehalloween0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Wale Bringing His Ambition To 'RapFix Live'

Maybach Music rapper will join Sway on Wednesday at 4 p.m. ET on MTV.com to talk about his sophomore album.
By Nadeska Alexis


Wale
Photo: Getty Images

In February, Wale joined Rick Ross' Maybach Music roster. Since then, the D.C. rapper has been counting down until the release of his sophomore album, Ambition, which drops Tuesday. This Wednesday at 4 p.m. on MTV.com, Wale will sit down with Sway on "RapFix Live" to give fans some insight into his state of mind, 24 hours after the project's official release.

In anticipation of the album's debut, Wale has already rolled out the singles "Slight Work" featuring Big Sean and the title track "Ambition," which features his MMG cohorts Rick Ross and Meek Mill. One of the most buzzed-about collaborations, however, is the Kid Cudi-featured "Focused," which caused a splash thanks to a very public falling-out between the two rappers last year and an equally public reconciliation earlier this year.

"When they kept talking about me and Cudi in every magazine, this is the record I felt like they needed to hear," Wale told MTV News. "The one that everybody was going to get behind, and it was going to go top 40 and not be corny."

During his recent "Road to Release" series on MTV2's "Sucker Free," Wale revealed that he was much more selective about features this time around, including about half the amount of guests who appeared on his debut, Attention: Deficit. "We kept the features to a minimum because I wanted to give you more of me than I did on the previous project," Wale explained.

Attention: Deficit debuted in November 2009 — with features from artists such as Lady Gaga, Bun B and Gucci Mane — to a lukewarm reception. Some of the album's lackluster performance on the charts was attributed to under shipment from Wale's former label Interscope Records.

Not one to be deterred, Wale followed up with the August 2010 mixtape More About Nothing, which became a trending topic on Twitter. This year, he scored a major hit with the single "600 Benz" from Maybach Music's Self-Made Vol. 1 album, and he dropped another popular mixtape The Eleven One Eleven Theory in August.

Tune into "RapFix Live" this week to hear what Wale has to say about his journey to Ambition. Tweet your questions for Wale @MTVNews with the hashtag #RapFixLive.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673456/wale-ambition-rapfix-live-interview.jhtml

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Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Wayne Besen: Herman Cain's Implausible Spin

Earlier this month, Herman Cain told the protesters occupying Wall Street that "if you don't have a job... blame yourself." I hope he takes his own advice and accepts personal responsibility if he loses his job as a presidential candidate. This morning Politico dropped the bombshell that may well derail the surging the Cain Train. The report said that he had been accused of sexually harassing two women while he led the National Restaurant Association from 1996-1999.

Cain and his team initially stonewalled, but belatedly responded to the accusations: "I have never sexually harassed anyone -- anyone," said Cain. "And absolutely these are false allegations."

This may be true, but the manner in which it was handled from the outset makes it appear as if Cain has something to hide. At first Cain's campaign dodged questions by making it appear as if the candidate was unaware of past allegations. Cain spokesperson J.D. Gordon told Politico that the candidate indicated that he was "vaguely familiar" with the charges.

This is just nonsense. If one is unjustly accused of sexual harassment it has to be a jarring experience, not one that is brushed aside or easily forgotten. The only way Cain is "vaguely familiar" with the charges is if he is a serial harasser and has had so many victims that he can't keep track of them.

Cain's next implausible move was to take the "I'm too important and busy to notice" defense. He claimed that he wasn't aware of allegations because he "had thousands of people working for me" over the decades at various enterprises.

Yeah, and I've eaten thousands of meals that I can't remember, but I do recall the few that gave me food poisoning -- in the same way that Cain would remember the two women who accused him of being a sexual menace.

Next, Cain said he could not comment, "Until I see some facts or some concrete evidence." What's with the word parsing from a candidate who promised not to behave like a traditional politician? Why was it so difficult to refrain from equivocating and to simply tell the truth?

The embattled candidate then tried classic denial: "I am not going to comment on that." Finally, an exasperated and heavy breathing Cain glared at a questioning reporter and tried to turn the tables by brazenly asking, "Have you ever been accused of sexual harassment?"

It appears that Herman Cain doesn't understand that it is irrelevant if the reporter was drunk and had just come from a birthday party where cake was consumed off the tan buttocks of a stoned stripper. The reporter isn't an avowed Christian conservative running for president of the United States in the puritanical "family values" party.

Let me put it in simplistic branding language that Cain might comprehend: Don't bill yourself as a pepperoni pizza if you are actually a submarine sandwich. Either you are who you say you are -- or you're just another self-righteous Republican phony.

The fact that he dissembled on such a clear-cut issue and couldn't answer basic questions on whether he sexually harassed employees is a really bad sign.

The other troubling aspect of the situation is that Herman Cain appears completely unaware that both women left the NRA receiving separation packages that were in the five-figure range.

"If the restaurant association did a settlement, I wasn't even aware of it and I hope it wasn't for much," Cain told Fox News. "If there was a settlement, it was handled by some of the other officers at the restaurant association."

I'm sorry, but this man was not a lowly office assistant -- he was the CEO. I have a difficult time believing that the politically ambitious Cain doesn't know more about how these potentially career ending allegations were resolved. While he may not remember the specific dollar amounts of these legal settlements, it is improbable that he did not know that they had occurred. After all, as the man in charge, what did he think happened to the money that disappeared from his budget and landed into the bank accounts of his accusers?

Mr. self-reliance also loses points for playing the "liberal media" card. A statement on Cain's campaign website says "inside-the-Beltway media" and "political trade press" are "casting aspersions on his character and spreading rumors that never stood up as facts."

No, these reporters are just doing their jobs, in much the same way that they grilled Democrats Bill Clinton, John Edwards, Gary Hart and Eliott Spitzer when allegations of sexual impropriety surfaced.

I'm not sure if Cain is innocent or guilty, but I do know he has to do a better job of crisis management. The former Godfather's Pizza executive should know the old axiom: If you can't stand the heat get out of the kitchen.

?

Follow Wayne Besen on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Truthwinsout

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wayne-besen/herman-cain-sexual-harassment_b_1068493.html

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