Thursday, January 31, 2013

Latest A-Rod troubles have team frustrated

NEW YORK (AP) ? Alex Rodriguez was speaking on a conference call.

"A huge debacle," he said. "Distasteful."

That was on Dec. 13, 2007, when he re-signed with the New York Yankees and was discussing his decision 1? months earlier to become a free agent.

Now those words describe how some in the team's front office feel about A-Rod's $275 million, 10-year contract.

Once considered a player who could shatter the career home run record, Rodriguez has transformed from All-Star to annoyance for some in the Yankees organization. He hasn't played a full season since he was voted his third AL MVP award in 2007, he's out for at least the first half of this year following hip surgery on Jan. 16 and now he's been accused of again receiving performance-enhancing drugs ? an allegation he denies.

Even before the charges were published Tuesday by the alternative weekly Miami New Times along with accusations against Melky Cabrera, Nelson Cruz, Gio Gonzalez, Bartolo Colon and Yasmani Grandal, some Yankees executives were wishing Rodriguez would just go away. Speaking on condition of anonymity because the team isn't publicly commenting on A-Rod's latest troubles, they revealed their frustration with the slugger.

And they have a big incentive for A-Rod to disappear. If he doesn't play again due to a career-ending injury, about 85 percent of the $114 million he's owed by the team would be covered by insurance, according to one of the executives who spoke on condition of anonymity.

New York also might be able to free itself from having the $27.5 million average annual value of Rodriguez's contract count in its luxury tax payroll in each of the next five seasons, a key factor as the Yankees try to get under the $189 million threshold in 2014.

If Rodriguez is on the disabled list, his contract is included. But if he's on the voluntary retired list, it would not be part of the total.

And if the Yankees fall under that $189 million benchmark, their luxury tax rate would drop from its current 50 percent to 17.5 percent for 2015. That would give them far more flexibility to pursue pitchers Clayton Kershaw, Felix Hernandez and Justin Verlander if they become free agents following the 2014 season.

New York is not likely to be able to void A-Rod's deal. Baseball's drug agreement between management and the players' association specifies the commissioner's office has all disciplinary authority for violations.

A-Rod's poor health, however, may provide the path to savings for the team.

While Rodriguez rebounded from right hip surgery in March 2009 to help the Yankees to their first World Series title since 2000, Dr. Bryan Kelly said recovery from his operation on A-Rod's left hip this month will be more complex if for no other reason than it receives more stress because Rodriguez is a right-handed hitter.

Even before the latest kerfuffle, A-Rod seemed to have worn out his welcome.

Yankees management tired of spotting him on the gossip pages with Madonna, Kate Hudson, Cameron Diaz and Torrie Wilson. They bristled when he was seen with a stripper in Toronto, at a swingers' club in Dallas and at an illegal poker club in New York.

They made their displeasure public in 2010 when they said they never authorized Rodriguez to be treated by Dr. Anthony Galea, who said he prescribed anti-inflammatories to A-Rod following the first hip operation. Indicted in part for illegal possession of human growth hormone with intent to distribute, the Canadian doctor pleaded guilty in 2011 to one count of introducing misbranded drugs into interstate commerce with the intent to mislead a U.S. agency.

Then came last year's playoffs, when Rodriguez was benched in three of nine games and pinch hit for in three others. He flirted with girls in the stands after he was removed from the AL championship series opener against Detroit.

Rodriguez's 647 home runs are 115 shy of tying Barry Bonds' career record but he has totaled just 34 the last two seasons and his 38th birthday is in late July. He has averaged 119 games, 21 homers and 81 RBIs over the last three years.

Before and after most games, when media is allowed to enter the Yankees' clubhouse, Rodriguez spends little time at his locker in the back left of the oval room, not too far from the entrance to the inner sanctum that contains the players' lounge, steam room, sauna, rubdown room, weight room, trainer's room and swimming pool. He doesn't have one of the prestige locations flanking the back entrance, held by Derek Jeter and Robinson Cano, who took over the spot when Jorge Posada retired.

He has never been accepted by Yankees' fans the same way they adored Jeter, Mariano Rivera, Andy Pettitte and Jorge Posada. And now, with his increasing tabloid notoriety and declining production, some of the team's executives have concluded he's more a handicap than a help as the team strives for World Series title No. 28.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/latest-rod-troubles-team-frustrated-000805287--mlb.html

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London marathon runner Claire Squires died of heart attack after taking sports supplement Jack3D

  • Claire Squires collapsed less than a mile from the marathon's finish line
  • The experienced runner had bought Jack3D online months before
  • Boyfriend Simon Van Herrewege said she planned to take some on the day
  • Product has since been banned in UK after being linked to several deaths

By Steve Nolan

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An energy supplement which has a similar effect on the body as amphetamines caused the heart attack death of a charity runner who collapsed less than a mile before the finish line of last year's London Marathon, a coroner said today.

Claire Squires, 30, whose death led to almost ?1 million of donations being made to the Samaritans, put a scoopful of Jack3D in her water bottle to give her an energy boost if she 'hit a wall', an inquest heard today.

But hairdresser Miss Squires collapsed on Birdcage Walk, close to Buckingham Palace, on April 22 last year.

Paramedics battled to save her, but she died later in hospital.

Recording a narrative verdict, Coroner Dr Philip Barlow laid the blame for her death on the supplement, which contains DMAA - an amphetamine-type stimulant linked to high blood pressure strokes and death.

Scroll down for video

Tragic: Marathon runner Claire Squires, pictured, collapsed and died less than a mile before the finish line of the London Marathon last year after taking a now banned energy supplement

Charitable: Claire Squires, pictured (right) raising funds for the Wings Appeal, had taken Jack3D which has now been banned in the UK

Charitable: Claire Squires, pictured (right) raising funds for the Wings Appeal, had taken Jack3D which has now been banned in the UK

Following today's inquest her family called for tighter regulations surrounding DMAA which was banned in Britain by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency last August.

Although it is not illegal to possess or even take DMAA, any supplement containing DMAA, including Jack3D, is not licensed in the UK after a ruling by the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency).

That means it is now illegal for any retailer to sell any substance containing DMAA in Britain. But it can still be bought and shipped from abroad.

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The MHRA said there were concerns about the side-effects of the product, including dizziness, headaches, nausea and there have been cases worldwide where it has been linked with heart attacks and breathing difficulties.

A spokesman for the MHRA said it had tried to take it off the UK market prior to last August but it was delayed by an appeal from one of the retailers of the product.

Her boyfriend Simon Van Herrewege had told the inquest that Miss Squires, who had run the marathon two years previously, had bought a tub of Jack3D on the internet two or three months before running the marathon and is said to have taken some on the day.

He told the inquest: 'She never really got on with it. I don't think she particularly liked it, but she said for the marathon she wanted to beat her previous time.

'She said she was going to take one scoop of it in her water bottle and if she hit a wall she would take it to give her a boost.'

Battle: Paramedics attempted to revive Miss Squires, pictured (right) fundraising with a friend, who collapsed at Birdcage Walk but they were unable to save her

Battle: Paramedics attempted to revive Miss Squires, pictured (right) fundraising with a friend, who collapsed at Birdcage Walk but they were unable to save her

Claire had taken part in several long distance races including the London Marathon, Belfast Marathon and Great North Run before and taken part in gruelling challenges like climbing Kilimanjaro.

Mr Van Herrewege said: 'She was very active. She would regularly run a number of miles at weekends and exercised at least five days a week. She knew what she was doing.'

The 31-year-old told how he waited with Claire's friends and family near the finishing line but she never crossed it.

Off-duty paramedic Donna Tucker was there supporting a colleague when she saw Claire collapse.

She said: 'I saw a female with dark hair in a ponytail and a blue T-shirt on with the name Claire go past me.

'She appeared tired and was slowing down. I called Claire's name to encourage her.

'She made eye contact as she started to run again. But then she slowed down suddenly and started to struggle towards the barrier reaching out with both hands in an attempt to steady herself.

She added: 'At this point Claire appeared to have a very mild seizure which lasted about five seconds.'

Seasoned runner: Claire Squires (right) with her friend Nicky Wells (left) while on holiday. An inquest into Claire's death has heard that she had taken Jack3D an energy supplement which has since been banned in the UK

Seasoned runner: Claire Squires (right) with her friend Nicky Wells (left) while on holiday. An inquest into Claire's death has heard that she had taken Jack3D an energy supplement which has since been banned in the UK

St John Ambulance volunteers rushed to Miss Squires's aid but Miss Tucker leapt over the barrier to help when she saw her lips and cheeks turn blue.

She said: 'She wasn't breathing and had no pulse. I started chest compressions.

'She was initially breathing very slow, gasping breaths which is common in cardiac arrest which then stops.

'St John's brought a defibrillator and ventilator bag and I continued until the London Ambulance Service got there.'


?'It would give someone a racing heart, increasing heart rate and make the heart work much harder than it naturally would.'

Dr Nicola Drake on the effects of Jack3D

Claire was taken to St Thomas' hospital but doctors were unable to save her.

She had been running the marathon in memory of her brother Grant, who died aged 25 from a drugs overdose in 2001.

Miss Squires, from North Kilworth in Leicestershire, was buried next to her brother and her funeral was attended by hundreds.

Reports of her death prompted thousands of people to log on to her Justgiving page to raise almost ?950,000 in her memory for the Samaritans.

She had posted on her page that she was initially taking part in the run for fun but that it was an opportunity to raise funds and 'change lives.'

Support: Donations flooded into Claire's Justgiving page after her death

Support: Donations flooded into Claire's Justgiving page after her death

Miss Squires was one of more than 37,000 people taking part in the London Marathon. Her death is the tenth since the event began in 1981.

The last competitor to die was a 22-year-old fitness instructor in 2007.

UK medicine watchdog MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) banned the Jack3D drink last August for public safety it was linked with several deaths in America.

Dr Nicola Drake, an A&E consultant at St Thomas', said it contained a stimulant called DMAA which acts 'like amphetamines.'

Claire Squires had run several long distance races in the past

Claire Squires had run several long distance races in the past

She said: 'It would give someone a racing heart, increasing heart rate and make the heart work much harder than it naturally would.

'I didn't know much about it at the time, but from research we did on the day Claire died I know it has been associated with deaths in America of soldiers doing extreme exercise.'

DMAA has also been linked with high blood pressure, headaches, vomiting and strokes.

Dr Drake said she could not say if this contributed to Claire's death, but added: 'It is not something I would expect to happen to someone who was running a marathon who is fit and healthy but I can't answer that.

'All I can say is it is very unusual.'

But cardiologist Professor William McKenna said that the supplement may have been an important factor in her death.

He told the inquest that a postmortem didn't find any significant abnormalities with Miss Squires's heart but found 'toxic plasma levels of an amphetamine-like substance which could have contributed to the development of a fatal arrhythmia.'

The inquest heard Claire went to visit acupuncturist Stephanie Curnoe in October 2011 who discovered she had an irregular heartbeat during treatment which later returned to normal.

Miss Curnoe said she told her to visit her GP as it could warrant further investigation but it is not believed she ever did.

However Professor McKenna said he believed her irregular pulse was 'probably a red herring' and added: 'The substance in the blood was probably an important factor in the outcome.'

Dr John Van Der Walt, who carried out the post-mortem on the runner, told the inquest the runner had died from heart failure brought on by extreme physical exertion.

The medic said the DMAA contained in the Jack3d taken by Claire - who was unaware of its dangers - had contributed to her deadly fatigue.

He told the inquest: 'There had already been several deaths in the American army and it had been banned by the American army.

High spirits: Claire Squires, pictured (left) the day before she ran the London Marathon last year, and smiling for a family photo, right

'I understand it is banned in several countries.

'On Amazon, Jack3d is still being sold. But DMAA has been removed from the product.

'DMAA causes vascular restriction and increases heart rate.

'On the balance of probability DMAA was a contributory factor on the cause of death.'

Another witness told that Claire lost an unusual amount of blood while being treated at the hospital.

Professor Sanjay Sharma, from St George's Hospital in London and medical director for the London Marathon, said: 'It (DMAA) may have contributed to the amount of blood seen. It was an unusual amount for a cardiac arrest in such a young person.'

He added that the he had no idea how many marathon participants are taking supplements such as Jack3d.?

Final preparations: Claire pictured in her running gear the night before the London Marathon

Final preparations: Claire pictured in her running gear the night before the London Marathon

Professor Andrew Kicman, a biochemist at King's College London, added that many sports people taking Jack3d were unaware of what they were taking.

Recording a narrative verdict at Southwark Coroners Court, Dr Philip Barlow said: 'She had taken a supplement containing DMAA which on the balance of probabilities and combined with extreme physical excursion caused acute cardiac failure which resulted in her death.'

Dr Barlow said he hoped others would learn from Claire's death and avoid taking
dangerous supplements.

He added: 'Claire Squires was an otherwise fit and healthy 30-year-old.

'We have heard that she trained hard and very seriously for that event.

'She had run marathons before and by any standards she was extremely fit.'

Dismissing evidence that an acupuncturist had warned Miss Squires that she had an irregular heartbeat, the coroner said it would have been likely that any problem would have become apparent on other occasions.

He said: 'Claire had run marathons before and exercised to a very high degree of excursion before.?

'DMAA is a supplement. It is clear that Claire had bought that and had put it in her water bottle to
take if she needed during the marathon.

'It was not a normal supplement for her, but she had taken it on this occasion.

'It was under the brand name Jack3d. Although we have heard DMAA may now have
been removed from Jack3d.

'It is very important to make the point that we have heard a lot of evidence today which has described DMAA as an amphetamine-like substance, I do not want anyone leaving this court today with the impression that Claire had taken amphetamines.

'There is no evidence that she had done so.

Huge event: Claire was one of 37,000 people who lined up at the start line of the annual race

Huge event: Claire was one of 37,000 people who lined up at the start line of the annual race

['DMAA is a blood constrictor, it narrows vessels and increases blood pressure. It has been linked with deaths in American army and banned in at least one other country.

'There is a risk of harm of taking that substance during extreme exercise. But there is not evidence that Claire was aware of that risk.

'On the balance of probability I accept the evidence that DMAA contributed to Claire's death.'

Following the verdict, Miss Squires's family said that she was very anti-drugs.

In a statement read outside Southwark Coroners Court her boyfriend Mr Van Herrewege, 31, said: 'This has been an extremely difficult year for us.

'Claire's death has left a gaping hole in our lives but we will remember her every day with a smile.

'She died running for charity. She was passionately against drugs and never used them and never thought they would end her life.

'She innocently took this supplement which was widely available at the time. It is now clear there should have been far better regulations in place so no tragedies like this can happen again.

'No other family should have to go what we've been through.

'Claire was a beautiful person who would do anything to help other and was liked by all who knew her.'

The family thanked the public for their support following Miss Squires's death.

'I hope it will help Claire's memory live on,' her boyfriend added.

The London Marathon organisers said today that they will include information about substances such as Jack3d for runners for future events.

Video: London Marathon runner's death blamed on supplement

BANNED IN THE UK SINCE AUGUST 2012 - THE ENERGY SUPPLEMENT WITH THE SAME EFFECT AS AMPHETAMINE

Banned: Jack3d contains a stimulant called DMAA

Banned: Jack3d contains a stimulant called DMAA

Jack3D contained a stimulant known as DMAA (dimethylamylamine) that has been linked to high blood pressure, headaches, vomiting, stroke and even death.

The UK?s medicines watchdog MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) ruled last August that it is unlicensed and that all other DMAA containing products needed to be removed from the market to protect public safety.

Although DMAA is not illegal to take or possess in the UK it is no longer licensed so cannot be sold.

The decision followed similar warnings around the world, including in the US and Australia where a man died after buying DMAA online.

Jack3d is said to boost energy, concentration and metabolism. But DMAA, most commonly used as a workout aid or dietary supplement, can have a physiological effect on the body by narrowing the arteries and raising the heart rate, said the MHRA.

This has been linked to suspected adverse drug reactions worldwide, ranging from shortness of breath to heart attacks.

An MHRA spokesperson said at the time: 'Jack3d is mainly bought over the internet although it is also available in sports stores specialising in work out products.

'If we find a shop selling it we will send them a written reminder asking them to remove it from their shelves. If they ignore this then our enforcement officers will move in and begin legal action.

'It is the most popular sports supplement in the UK because it is a stimulant that allows you to work out for longer.

'But it is for people who are really into their fitness. Your average person who goes to the gym once or twice a week is unlikely to have ever used it.'

A spokesman for the MHRA told MailOnline today it had tried to take it off the UK market prior to last August but it was delayed by an appeal from one of the retailers of the product.

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Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2270663/London-marathon-runner-Claire-Squires-died-heart-attack-taking-sports-supplement-Jack3D.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

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Blame Washington for the GDP Dip

Reporters surround Assistant Majority Leader Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., outside the Senate chamber during negotiations on the fiscal cliff.

Reporters surround Assistant Majority Leader Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., outside the Senate chamber during negotiations on the fiscal cliff.

Those Washington politicians think they're awfully important. Unfortunately, they're right.

The economy nose-dived during the last three months of 2012, with GDP shrinking by 0.1 percentage point, according to the latest government figures. That's the first time the economy shrank since 2009, during the final months of the recession. Most economists expected slow growth of 1 percent or so, but few predicted the size of the economy would actually decline.

One quarter of negative growth doesn't mean we're in a recession, and it's possible the discouraging GDP number could end up being revised higher, which happens sometimes. On the other hand, another quarter or two of such weak performance probably would signify a recession. More ominously, the forces that pushed down GDP at the end of 2012 are likely to intensify in 2013.

[RELATED: Economy Contracts for First Time Since 2009]

The big drag on growth in the fourth quarter was a 22 percent drop in defense spending. That fell because of the coming "sequester," a big set of spending cuts Congress first approved in 2011. The idea back then was to implement across-the-board spending cuts of about $110 billion per year, for 10 years, if Congress couldn't come up with a better way to start reducing the $16 trillion national debt. Congress couldn't, so those cuts were scheduled to go into effect starting Jan. 1, 2013.

The last-second fiscal cliff deal delayed those cuts by two months, giving Congress time to come up with a better plan. But defense agencies, not knowing what Congress would end up doing, apparently started to cut spending anyway late in 2012, anticipating that the cuts would go into effect. That makes sense, because you can't run complex, billion-dollar programs by simply turning off the flow of money as the calendar flips from one day to the next. Like any business, defense programs require extensive planning.

[READ:?Stock Market Up, Confidence Down]

Congress, however, is making a rational spending strategy virtually impossible. What it ought to do is lay out a long-range plan for gradually reducing spending and fixing Washington's finances, with clear deadlines that allow for predictability. Instead, Washington is consumed with petty brinkmanship that is harming the economy in real, tangible ways.

President Barack Obama isn't helping either. He ought to lay out clear spending priorities that gives Congress a template to work from. Yet he's playing his own tactical games with Congressional Republicans, hoping to gain political leverage that will carry him through his second term.

Dallying on the national debt means Congress faces yet another deadline for those $110 billion worth of spending cuts. If they kick in on March 1, it would cut GDP growth by 0.7 percentage points, according to forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers. The economy's weak performance in the fourth quarter of 2012?which occurred before any spending cuts were actually legislated?suggests there could also be potent knock-on effects that damage the psyche of the markets and harm the economy even more.

[NEWMAN:?What Phil Mickelson Got Right About Taxes]

There's a blithe assumption in Washington that as long as policymakers reach some kind of last-minute deal on every contentious matter, everything will turn out fine, with no net harm to economy. There's a pile of evidence that demonstrates how wrong that idea is. Political infighting has severely damaged trust in the U.S. government and harmed America's reputation. Global business leaders view it as increasingly risky to invest in the United States, largely because of manic policymaking (or no policymaking) that creates a needlessly turbulent business environment. In the latest survey of global competitiveness by the World Economic Forum, the United States ranked 41st in the quality of its institutions and 111th in macroeconomic stability. The world's model for democracy? Not any more.

There are signs that poor policymaking is already harming the economy in 2013. After rising for most of 2012, for example, consumer confidence has plunged so far this year, largely because of tax hikes that will reduce take-home pay for many Americans in the coming year. If the gloom persists, it will cut into spending, make businesses even more reluctant to hire and raise the risk of a recession.

Congress showed one flash of responsibility recently, by agreeing to temporarily extend the government's borrowing limit instead of forcing a destabilizing showdown and threatening default, just to make a point. Several more big decision points are coming soon, when politicians can either find a way to govern or cultivate friction and decline. The economy's recent performance suggests the odds are falling the wrong way.

Rick Newman's latest book is?Rebounders: How Winners Pivot From Setback To Success.?Follow him on Twitter: @rickjnewman.

Source: http://www.usnews.com/blogs/rick-newman/2013/1/30/blame-washington-for-the-gdp-dip?s_cid=rss:rick-newman:blame-washington-for-the-gdp-dip

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

10 Least Expensive Private Colleges and Universities

The U.S. News Short List, separate from our overall rankings, is a regular series that magnifies individual data points in hopes of providing students and parents a way to find which undergraduate or graduate programs excel or have room to grow in specific areas. Be sure to explore The Short List: College and The Short List: Grad School to find data that matters to you in your college or grad school search.

Private colleges often come with hefty price tags, which can be an automatic turnoff for prospective students. Close to 43 percent of incoming freshmen said they "carefully considered" cost when choosing which school to attend, according to an annual survey of more than 190,000 first-time, full-time students by the University of California--Los Angeles.

For price-conscious students, the cost of private school can be difficult to reconcile against their less expensive public counterparts. Average private school tuition for the 2012-2013 school year was $28,946, compared with $8,176 (in-state) and $18,855 (out-of-state) at public institutions, according to data reported by 1,088 ranked public and private universities in an annual survey by U.S. News.

[Discover tips and resources to help pay for college.]

But private does not always equal expensive. The average tuition and fees at the 10 least expensive private schools was $7,558 in 2012-2013--more than $21,000 below the average for private institutions--and some schools still fall far below that average.

At Berea College, a private liberal arts school in Kentucky, tuition and fees totaled just $980 for 2012-2013, less than any other private or public school, with the exception of military academies. In fact, all students at Berea work on campus in exchange for free tuition, and some receive financial aid to cover the cost of fees.

Tuition and fees at Brigham Young University--Provo, a private university in Utah, totaled $4,710 for 2012-2013, roughly $24,200 below the average sticker price for a private school and almost $3,500 less than average in-state tuition at public universities.

At BYU, a Mormon university, religious affiliation factors into the lower than average cost. Tuition for students who are not members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was $9,420 for 2012-2013, still far below the national average, thanks to a subsidy from the church, according to the school's website.

[Learn how your tuition dollars are spent.]

Several of the least expensive private schools are designated as Rank Not Published (RNP), which means they fell in the bottom one fourth of their ranking category. U.S. News calculates a numerical rank for these schools, but has decided not to publish them. Unranked colleges, which do not submit enough data for U.S. News to calculate a ranking, were not considered for this report.

Below are the 10 private colleges and universities with the lowest tuition and fees for the 2012-2013 school year (figures do not include room and board, books, and other miscellaneous costs):

School name (state) 2012-2013 tuition & fees U.S. News rank and category
Berea College (KY) $980 75, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Brigham Young University--Provo (UT) $4,710 68, National Universities
Arkansas Baptist College $7,800 RNP, Regional Colleges (South)
Rust College (MS) $8,300 RNP, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Lane College (TN) $8,560 RNP, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Concordia College (AL) $8,590 RNP, Regional Colleges (South)
Mid-Continent University (KY) $8,810 RNP, Regional Colleges (South)
Blue Mountain College (MS) $9,230 23, Regional Colleges (South)
Amridge University (AL) $9,260 RNP, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Life University (GA) $9,342 RNP, National Liberal Arts Colleges

Don't see your school in the top 10? Access the U.S. News College Compass to find tuition data, complete rankings, and much more.

U.S. News surveyed more than 1,800 colleges and universities for our 2012 survey of undergraduate programs. Schools self-reported a myriad of data regarding their academic programs and the makeup of their student body, among other areas, making U.S. News's data the most accurate and detailed collection of college facts and figures of its kind. While U.S. News uses much of this survey data to rank schools for our annual Best Colleges rankings, the data can also be useful when examined on a smaller scale. U.S. News will now produce lists of data, separate from the overall rankings, meant to provide students and parents a means to find which schools excel, or have room to grow, in specific areas that are important to them. While the data come from the schools themselves, these lists are not related to, and have no influence over, U.S. News's rankings of Best Colleges or Best Graduate Schools. The tuition and fees data above are correct as of Jan. 29, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-least-expensive-private-colleges-universities-174610869.html

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Hamlet Goes to College

Martin Luther, the radical father of the Protestant reformation, taught theology at Wittenberg University, Germany's most prestigious institute of higher learning. Elizabethan playwright Christopher Marlowe placed his quasi-mythical Doctor Faustus, who sells his soul to the devil, inside the school's hallowed halls as teacher of philosophy. Shakespeare put Hamlet here as student.

Luis Galindo as Dr. Faustus attempts to steer the mind of Ryan Schabach as Hamlet.

Bruce Bennett

Luis Galindo as Dr. Faustus attempts to steer the mind of Ryan Schabach as Hamlet.

Location Info

Details

Wittenberg

Through February 17. Stages Repertory Theatre, 3201 Allen Parkway. Purchase tickets online at stagestheatre.com or call 713-527-0123. $21-$48.

In his mind-bending Wittenberg (2008), a regional premiere from Stages Repertory, contemporary playwright David Davalos puts all three of these volatile characters in Wittenberg at the same time and shakes them vigorously. He mixes a stiff drink.

His "tragical-comical-historical" play is a bracing concoction that's fiery polemic, history lesson and Monty Python revue. It's consistently entertaining. Even if you're a bit hazy on convoluted 16th-century European church dialectics, never fear, Davalos lays it all out. He takes the facts, cuts the boring parts and adds a big splash of silliness to keep our interest. However, if you're not familiar with Hamlet, you're on your own, and many of the inside jokes might pass you by. But even so, you won't miss out on the good stuff. Davalos keeps that center stage.

There's more than a whiff of Tom Stoppard in old Wittenberg. Davalos is sloppier in his references than that master of historical deconstruction (Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Coast of Utopia), settling for the easier laugh, but his premise is solid and, you've got to hand it to him, those corny allusions and anachronisms about tenure, coffee enemas and Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey can be awfully funny. Hamlet's tennis game while stoned on Faustus's Turkish delight is a comic gem. In pantaloons and sweat band, the prince is jazzed. We get a contact high just watching.

But there's substance here, too. Luther and Faustus, friends but professorial rivals for prize student Hamlet's attention, furiously debate their opposing core beliefs: faith and doubt. "Man shall live by scripture alone," intones Luther like an Old Testament prophet. "Question everything," rages Faustus. "Think for yourself!" Both are adamant and will notbe swayed. That they spar while drinking to excess at the local tavern (St.Pauli is a favorite brew) keeps the seriousness in check.

The cast carries this serious farce with consummate ease, turning on a dime from Looney Tunes to Masterpiece Theatre. Kenn McLaughlin steps in front of Stages' footlights after seasons behind the scenes as artistic director and makes an astonishing debut as Luther. With his hair shaved in semi-tonsure, he even resembles Cranach's famous portrait. He brings solid religious fervor to the avid monk/professor. He knows his stance is right, and it wounds his pride that Faustus is so blind to his entreaties.

Luis Galindo blusters his way through libertine Faustus as if talking to someone deaf. Once you get used to the volume, he has lively conviction and a vaudevillian's timing. His best scene is with prostitute Helen (Molly Searcy as a quartet of eternal females), the love of his life. Echoing Marlowe, he finds his soul in her kiss, but she flips his argument over man's ability to choose by choosing to live without him. She goes for the gold instead. The rejection totally deflates him, opening the path for satanic temptation. "Exit my soul," he cries.

Ryan Schabach, audience-favorite "Buttons" in Stages' Christmas pantos, brings panache and puppy innocence to manic/depressive Hamlet. Wild-eyed, he listens to his teachers' arguments with an intensity that matches his troubled interior. He's a rash schoolboy ? and hilarious tennis player ? but something's rotten in his mind, eating him from the inside. If anyone will grow up into Shakespeare's man of inaction, it has to be Schabach. Davalos keeps him offstage for too many scenes so Luther and Faustus can debate, but when he's on he takes the light and runs with it.

In the 16th century, Wittenberg was the place to be. Today, it's Wittenberg. You get to think, laugh and groan at its bad puns. Who says education isn't fun?

Source: http://www.houstonpress.com/2013-01-31/culture/wittenberg-stages/

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Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor?If There?s Room After More PhDs

new-york-statue-of-liberty"In the 21st century we can no longer afford to have an immigration system where less than 10 percent of the people who come here do so based on the skills that they bring to this country," said immigration reform leader, Senator Marco Rubio, as he introduced a new high-skilled immigration bill. Once a country where "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free," was the mantra of immigration, the overwhelming presence of technology is changing America's values to prioritize the promise of innovation over the world's neediest.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/X3fsBKwPcUE/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Health Apps Fail First Full Checkup

By Lucas Larsen
(Click here for for the original article)

Health care via mobile technology is still in its infancy. Of 75 trials in which patients used mobile tech, such as text messaging and downloadable apps, to manage a disease or adopt healthier behaviors, only three showed reliable signs of success, according to a systematic survey. In an accompanying survey of medical personnel who used smart phones and other devices, to help deliver care, the same team found more success: 11 of 42 trials had positive, reliable results.

Yet mobile device-aided health care, called mHealth, attracts a lot of attention and dollars, as U.S. National Institutes of Health director Francis Collins wrote last year in Scientific American. In 2012 venture capital firms invested more than $900 million in mHealth, according to a report by Mobile Health Market News.

"There's a lot of enthusiasm for [mHealth] but [its effectiveness] wasn't very clear," says epidemiologist Caroline Free of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in England, the lead author of the reviews. In 2011, for example, the World Health Organization found that only 12 percent of mobile health initiatives included an evaluation.

So Free and colleagues conducted the reviews, which appear in PLoS Medicine, she says, to "put us in the position of knowing exactly in which areas there was good evidence where the evidence was promising." That information could help investors and researchers make better decisions about how to identify, improve and promote the best mobile health treatments.

In the first review, the team identified 334 relevant mHealth trials in seven medical databases. Most of the trials used text messaging to interact with patients, although some interacted through dedicated applications, downloadable audio and video or the Web. Only 75 of those trials included a control group, which allows researchers to compare experimental interventions with doing nothing.

Of the 75 controlled trials, 26 sought to change patient behavior by methods that included increasing exercise and 49 sought to help patients manage diseases medically such as by taking pills on time. That may not seem like many studies, but medical doctor Rahul Chakrabarti at Monash University in Australia, co-editor of the Journal of Mobile Technology in Medicine, calls it the most comprehensive meta-analysis of mHealth evidence to date.

The bad news is that most trials had weak designs, such as failing to randomize participants in the control group and the experimental group. Others relied on participants to self-report the results, but such methods can be unreliable. Free says such trials should use biochemical tests, instead. In some cases, it's too early to tell whether a result, such as smaller waist size, would last long enough to improve participants' health. Most trials also neglected the developing world, where mobile phones have the most potential to improve access to health care. "This does not undermine the outcomes," Chakrabarti says, "but shows that going forward, there is a clear need for improved methodology."

There were a few promising, reliable trials: For instance, receiving text messages helped smokers quit in one trial that did verify its results with biochemical tests. Reminders also helped diabetics stick to their treatments in another trial. In the only successful developing-world trial, in Kenya, SMS reminders to take antiretroviral drugs helped reduce HIV virus counts.

The limitations of today's mHealth treatments should not discourage researchers, Free says, because people can learn from interventions that did work. For instance, in some of the trials in Free's second review, mobile phones helped doctors and nurses communicate with one another and with patients. But mobile phone cameras turned out to be bad for making remote diagnoses.

"We're at an exciting time right now and these reviews are in some ways catalyzing much greater discussion within the community to take a harder look at the evidence for mHealth," says Patricia Mechael, executive director of the M-Health Alliance in Washington, D.C.

Chakrabarti says one challenge for the field will be to conduct studies in locations with a bigger impact. A successful trial in the U.K. may not translate in the developing world due to different regulations, culture or infrastructure. So there should be more mHealth trials in low- and middle-income countries, he says, and their designers need to use to the highest standard of evidence. He adds, "It has the potential to break down many barriers to access."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/29/health-apps-fail-first-full-checkup_n_2574254.html

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Public Debt Management for the Third Quarter of 2012-13 (Oct-Dec ...




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?The report on Public Debt Management for the third quarter of 2012-13 (Oct-Dec 2012) has been released by the Ministry of Finance and will be placed on the Ministry?s website i.e. www.finmin.nic.in today. The said report is attached here with as well.

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???? The present report pertains to the third quarter of the fiscal year 2012-13, viz., October-December 2012. It gives an account of the debt management and cash management operations during the quarter, and attempts a rationale for major activities. The report also tries to provide detailed information on various aspects of debt management. While all attempts have been made to provide authentic and accurate information, it is possible that some errors might have crept in inadvertently. Readers may inform us of such errors, as indeed their valuable suggestions, at mo-dea@nic.in.

?

? The Middle Office was set-up in September 2008 in Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Government of India. With the objective of enhancing transparency of debt management operations, the Middle Office began publishing on its website a quarterly report titled ?Public Debt Management - Quarterly Report? from the first quarter of the fiscal year 2010-11. The previous reports are available on the website of Ministry of Finance (http://finmin.nic.in/reports/Public_Debt_Management.asp).

?

Click here to See Report

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DSM/RS/rs

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(Release ID :91803)

Source: http://pib.nic.in/newsite/erelease.aspx?relid=91803

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Parrots can be great pets, but make sure to read up first | Reporter ...

Dunwoody resident Marie Frank with one of her cockatiels

Dunwoody resident Marie Frank with one of her cockatiels

When you ring the doorbell at Marie Frank?s Dunwoody home, she barely cracks the door.

?Come in quickly,? she says, opening the door just enough for you to squeeze through.

Once inside, the reason for her caution is clear. Frank has three pet cockatiels that fly freely about her home.

Dixie perches on the handle of her oven, singing to his reflection in the stainless steel appliance. Lucky hops over to the table where Frank is sitting, curiously inspecting her coffee mug.

Frank said her birds are always entertaining her. But she said most people don?t know what they are getting into when they buy a parrot.

?These are the best pets,? Frank said. ?But if you don?t treat them well, they can be your worst nightmare.?

Frank is passionate about teaching people about responsible bird ownership.

A-Pets-2Frank said when she got her first gray and yellow cockatiel, Dixie, she assumed it would be happy living in its cage. ?I had a 5-year-old son who wanted a parrot,? Frank said. ?I think people think ? like I did ? that you can buy a big cage and look at him because he?s pretty.?

But she soon learned that her bird needed to spend time outside of his cage, flying and interacting with her family.

?Dixie is kind of the one who trained us on how he wanted to be treated,? Frank said. ?To treat them properly, you have to give them little or no cage time.?

Since getting her first cockatiel, Frank has rescued three more and has traveled to Arizona to volunteer with a bird rescue sanctuary.

She said there are many things people don?t know about parrots ? the family of exotic birds that includes macaws, cockatoos and Amazons.

If birds are bored or unhappy in their cage, they can be very loud and destructive, she said.

Some birds will even pick out their feathers and bite their skin with their beaks if they are confined to a cage.

?People need to know they are social creatures, they do need stimulation, they do need interaction,? Frank said.

Frank said many people give away their parrots, annoyed by the noise the birds make. There are only a few bird rescue groups around the country, and there often isn?t much space.

?The rescues are bursting at the seams. They?re so overcrowded,? Frank said.

One reason those rescues are so crowded: birds have incredibly long life spans.

Smaller parrots like cockatiels can live up to 25 years. But some larger birds, like macaws and African Grey Parrots, have a life span of up to 100 years.

Ron Johnson, owner of Feathered Friends Forever, cares for 1,400 birds at his rescue facility near Augusta.

He said birds come to the rescue from around the country for a variety of reasons. Some have owners who have died, or owners who have moved and can no longer keep them. Some people turn their birds in because they are simply tired of being bitten by the birds or hearing them chirp.

Johnson said the problem is that breeders continue to sell the birds for a large profit.

?Breeders and pet stores don?t care what people buy so long as they collect their money,? Johnson said.

Johnson said someone recently dropped off a bird that was only six months old.

?A breeder convinced this lady that this was a quiet, lovable bird,? Johnson said. ?She paid $900 for the bird, $300 for the cage, and had it 48 hours because she couldn?t stand the noise that it made.?

He said it?s important to keep in mind that parrots are wild animals. They still have natural instincts that can make them unfriendly.

?They?re in a sense ?domesticated? in that they will take food from your hand and they will talk to you,? Johnson said. ?When it?s breeding season, you have Dr. Jekyll.?

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Source: http://www.reporternewspapers.net/2013/01/28/parrots-can-be-great-pets-but-make-sure-to-read-up-first/

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Ahead of the Bell: US durable goods

WASHINGTON (AP) -- U.S. companies likely increased their orders for long-lasting manufactured goods that reflect investment plans. That would be an encouraging sign for the economy.

Economists are forecasting that orders for durable goods rose 1.9 percent in December, according to a survey by FactSet. The Commerce Department will release the report at 8:30 a.m. EST Monday.

In November, companies for the second straight month ordered more goods that signal investment plans.

Orders for core capital goods, the category that is considered a proxy for business investment plans, increased a solid 2.6 percent in November after a 3 percent rise in October which had been the strongest gain in 10 months.

Factories appear to be recovering slowly from a slump earlier in the year although there are still concerns given a weak global economy that is restraining U.S. exports.

Analysts believe that companies will boost spending further on computers and other equipment to expand and modernize now that Congress and President Barack Obama have reached a deal on taxes that will remove uncertainty that had been weighing on business investment decisions.

The last-minute agreement was approved by Congress on Jan. 1 and signed by Obama the next day. It averted widespread tax increases that had threatened to push the country back into recession. Still, most Americans will see some increase in taxes this year, which will likely slow consumer spending.

The Institute for Supply Management reported that U.S. manufacturing had grown slightly in December with its manufacturing index rising to 50.7. That was up from a reading of 49.5 in November, which had been the lowest reading since July 2009, one month after the recession ended.

A reading above 50 indicates growth in manufacturing, while a reading below signals contraction.

The economy grew at an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the April-June quarter. The government will provide its first look at overall economic growth in the October-December quarter on Wednesday. Many analysts believe growth slowed in the final three months of last year to less than 2 percent.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ahead-bell-us-durable-goods-103157820.html

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10 Things Every Woman Going Through A Divorce ... - Huffington Post

Written by Aunt Becky on CafeMom's blog, The Stir.

When someone is blindsided by a divorce (even if it's a blessing in disguise), most of her friends and family don't quite know what to say. It doesn't matter how common the end of a marriage is. It never gets easier to come up with just the right words.

It's hard as the friend of the soon-to-be divorcee because you feel as though you're walking on eggshells, and you're trying not to make the situation worse.

As I'm in the middle of a divorce myself, though, I find the people who say nothing at all are the ones I will always remember. So here are some things you can say to your friend who's going through it all to let her know you care.

1) "Can I be your Plus 1 to (insert event here)?" For those of us who've had a built-in Plus 1 for many years, the prospect of going to a wedding or funeral alone can be daunting -- if not impossible.

2) "I love you." It doesn't, in the end, matter much who was at fault in the divorce -- if anyone was. Going through it makes one question everything they ever knew, including whether or not they're loved.

3) "You know I have your back." One of the most important things you can do for your divorced friend is to reassure her that no matter what, you're on her side.

4) "You're not a bad person -- this is just a hard situation." There's a lot of blame that goes around when you're divorcing -- and most of it is self-directed. Sometimes this gentle reassurance is all your friend needs to make it through the day.

5) "This sucks." Sometimes, we forget how hard it is to have your life tilted on its side. Seeing that someone else understands how much it sucks to be you (for the moment) can have a positive impact.

6) "Let's work on getting you sorted out." Especially if the divorcee is new to bills, finances, budgets, and other assorted running-a-household tasks, having someone to guide them through the process can be a lifesaver.

7) "Let me help you by bringing over (food, spa gift card, etc)." Often in the early days of a divorce, it's hard to remember to do the simple things, like eat, or take care of yourself. This is where you come in.

8) "One thing at a time." Your friend is probably so overwhelmed with court dates, kids, and moving out that she is pulled in every direction. Remind her that the only way to get a job done is to do it one baby step at a time.

9) "What do you need?" This can be anything from poring over divorce paperwork or helping brainstorm what to bring up to the lawyer to making grocery lists with your friend.

10) "You are not alone." After being in a relationship for years, a divorce can really do a number on your psyche. Which is why a reminder that you're not in it all by yourself can be exceptionally helpful.

How else can you best help someone who has just separated from her husband?

More from The Stir:

The Unfair Secret Trick to Staying Married

An Open Letter to My Happily Married Friends

Here's How Much a Divorce REALLY Costs

What NOT to Say to Your Spouse If You Want to Stay Married (VIDEO)

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Follow The Stir on Twitter: www.twitter.com/The_Stir

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/the-stir/10-things-every-woman-goi_b_2481888.html

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

The bacteria that use cholesterol to get into cells.

Although it usually only gets talked about when it starts causing problems, cholesterol is an important molecule to have in the body, as it is a component of cell membranes. The major component of cell membranes is a molecule called a phospholipid; an inorganic phosphate molecule joined onto lipid tails. Lots of these phospholipids all line up to form the cell membrane. Cholesterol is another lipid molecule, which fits in between the phosopholipids and can influence the membranes permeability and fluidity.

Diagram of the membrane that surrounds human cells. The two layers of phospholipids can be seen (blue and while spheres with the lipid tails pointing inwards) studded with bright red proteins. The yellow blobs within the phospholipid layer are cholesterol. Image from the National Institute of Standards and Tchnology - link below

There are two ways cells can get hold of the cholesterol needed for the membranes, by using food sources containing low-density lipoproteins (LDL), or by?synthesising?it within the cell. Defects in the cholesterol synthesis pathway can increase the likelihood of the cell breaking down through apoptosis or due to oxidative stress. Around 20-25% of the cell membrane is made up of cholesterol in?mammalian?cells.

Despite the above diagram, the phosolipid molecules are not rigidly stuck in place within the cell membrane, as long as they keep the phosphate facing outwards and the tails inwards both they and the steroids can travel around the membrane. This means that some areas will gather clumps of cholesterol, known as lipid rafts, which play important roles in cell signalling, membrane shape, and of course, bacterial invasion. Many bacteria target these lipid rafts when looking for places to attach onto human cells, and they act as the first point of cellular invasion.

Researchers found that limiting the amount of cholesterol in the mammalian cell membrane (by blocking the internal cholesterol synthesis pathway) led to far less effective invasion of bacteria and bacterial toxins. The diagram below shows an electron micrograph of mouse tissue, in the one on the left the cells cannot make cholesterol and in the one on the right the cells have normal cholesterol-making activity. Little black arrows show where the toxins produced by the cholera bacteria have been taken up by the cells.

Scale bar = 500 nm. Image from reference 1.

Only 9% of ?cholesterol cells contained 10 or more toxin-containing vacuoles, compared to 80% of the +cholesterol cells.

Repeating the assay shown above with different bacterial strains revealed that the bacteria C. burnetii also require cholesterol to enter the cells, ?while?Salmonella typhimurium and?Chlamydia trachomatis enter both cholesterol and non-cholesterol containing cells at the same rate. While lipid rafts are required for cell entry by some bacteria, it seems that others do not seem to rely on them.

(A). The number of internalized C. trachomatis was unchanged between ?cholesterol and +cholesterol calls. In contrast, internalization of C. burnetii was decreased by 87% (p = 0.0009) in ?cholesterol calls. (B). Wild type S. Typhimurium and a mutant without the Salmonella toxins invaded ?cholesterol and +cholesterol cells with equal efficiency. Image from reference 1.

The researchers suggest that as well as affecting bacterial cell attachment to the cell surface, the cholesterol may also be vital for the uptake of certain bacteria and their internal transport. It may therefore be possible that the cholesterol is not only important for helping bacteria enter the cells, but also for their further growth and development inside the host cell.

The particularly interesting thing about this research was the method used to remove cholesterol from the cells. Because it is such an important membrane component, chemical methods tend to drastically alter the shape of the cells which causes more problems for bacteria trying to get in. For this paper, the researchers instead targeted the cholesterol synthesis pathway, removing the final enzyme. This system therefore allows a cholesterol-free environment to be explored without causing any significant changes to the cell membrane integrity.

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Credit link for image 1

Reference 1:?Gilk SD, Cockrell DC, Luterbach C, Hansen B, Knodler LA, et al. (2013) Bacterial Colonization of Host Cells in the Absence of Cholesterol. PLoS Pathog 9(1): e1003107. doi:10.1371/journal.ppat.1003107

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=932b34a8c3862e84f00af58ba7d09c47

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Draco 5 Aluminum Bumper Case for the iPhone 5 review

This past December, I reviewed Element Case’s newly (at the time) released iPhone 5 aluminum bumper case, the Sector 5. While I found the Sector 5 Transformer-like and very tech-stylish, it was overall a bit extreme with too many rough edges for my taste. So, when Julie asked if I would like to review the [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/01/26/draco-5-aluminum-bumper-case-for-the-iphone-5-review/

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Chavez starting more cancer treatment in Cuba

SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) ? Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has begun additional medical treatment in Cuba after struggling with complications following cancer surgery more than six weeks ago, a government spokesman said Saturday.

Venezuelan Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said that it remains unclear how soon Chavez could return home, and did not specify the kind of treatment he is receiving.

"Vice President (Nicolas) Maduro estimates that the time it could take President Chavez to return is within weeks. But we haven't wanted to fix an exact timeframe for the president's recuperation," Villegas told reporters on the sidelines of summit meeting in Chile.

He read a statement that went beyond past government reports in providing additional information about Chavez's Dec. 11 surgery, but didn't describe the newest treatment. While refusing to release many details about the president's cancer, authorities in the past have reported on specific treatments, including radiation and chemotherapy.

"Forty-five days after carrying out a complex surgical intervention for the removal of a malignant lesion in the pelvis, with severe, acute complications, the patient's general evolution is favorable," Villegas said, reading the statement.

"At this time, the serious respiratory infection has been overcome, although a certain degree of respiratory deficiency persists and is being duly treated," Villegas said.

After that improvement, Villegas said, "systemic medical treatment for the fundamental illness began to be applied as a complement to the surgery."

Chavez hasn't appeared or spoken publicly since before the operation.

Maduro said early Saturday after meeting with Chavez in Cuba that the ailing president is now "in the best moment we've seen him in these days of struggle" following the surgery.

Maduro spoke on state television after returning from Havana to Venezuela, and before he traveled to Chile for the summit.

"We're taking a message prepared by the president, and we're going to turn it over to heads of state who attend the CELAC summit. He makes fundamental proposals," Maduro said, adding that the message was in Chavez's handwriting.

Maduro said Chavez also sent a message for Venezuelans, including that he was "very optimistic" about his treatment. Maduro said Chavez is "hanging on to Christ and to life."

Chavez has undergone repeated surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation treatment for an unspecified type of pelvic cancer. He has undergone much of his treatment in Cuba.

The 58-year-old president won re-election in October, and lawmakers indefinitely put off his inauguration earlier this month in a decision that was condemned by opponents but upheld by the Supreme Court.

The vice president said that Chavez "has reviewed and evaluated reports on different areas and has made decisions."

He said Chavez evaluated the country's economic situation and budget and made decisions about gold reserves, funding for public housing projects and "social investments and economic development." Maduro didn't give more details but said the actions approved by the president were intended to "guarantee the country's economic growth, infrastructure, housing."

Maduro said that one of the documents signed by Chavez dealt with the selection of his socialist party's candidates for mayoral elections later this year. The vice president showed the signature in red ink on one of the documents.

___

Associated Press writers Jorge Rueda and Ian James in Caracas, Venezuela, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chavez-starting-more-cancer-treatment-cuba-231848932.html

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