Kamis, 23 Februari 2012

Is Mike Wallace Worth The Price For Patriots?

Vincent Pugliese-US Presswire


Pro Bowl wide receiver Mike Wallace is a restricted free agent this offseason and will likely not be returning to Pittsburgh. Wallace is coming off of two strong seasons which have made him one of the NFL’s most sought after wide receivers. It is expected that to get Wallace, a team would have to give up a first-round draft pick and a big enough structured contract that Pittsburgh would not match it. With the New England Patriots looking for a top wide receiver, is Wallace worth that price?
Wallace has become a top receiver while in Pittsburgh. In 2010, he caught 60 passes for 1,257 yards and 10 touchdowns. He followed that season up in 2011 in which he caught 71 passes for 1,182 yards and eight touchdowns while only playing in 15 games. In each of his three seasons in the NFL, he’s averaged over 16 yards a catch. He certainly is a player the Patriots could use. However it’s not whether or not the Patriots want Wallace but rather is he worth the price.
The Patriots currently have one of the strongest offenses in the league without any additions. It is expected that Wes Welker will return, Deion Branch could return, and the Patriots still have tight ends Aaron Hernandez and Rob Gronkowski who are an important part of the passing game. With the contract maneuvering the Patriots would have to make to sign Wallace, it’s possible it would be a choice between Wallace and Welker.
There are certainly other options for New England as well. The Patriots are the defending AFC Champions who finished the regular season with the best record in the conference. That means that players want to go there. The Patriots have a strong running game, a strong offensive line, and one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history. Rather than losing a first-round pick that can be used to fix defensive secondary problems, the Patriots would be better off ignoring Wallace and picking up a player such as Brandon Lloyd or Vincent Jackson.
While Lloyd has only had one season that can compare with Wallace, Jackson has had comparable stats in three of his last four seasons. Other than 2010 in which Jackson only played five games, the 29-year old pro bowler has averaged 62 receptions for 1,124 yards and eight touchdowns in three of the last four years. He is coming off a 2011 season in which he caught 60 passes for 1,106 yards and nine touchdowns. Certainly Wallace has an advantage in that his is only 25 and could sign a longer contract but the Patriots have recently been known for signing older free agents such as Randy Moss and Chad Ochocinco to fill the role that they are currently trying to fill.
Mike Wallace would be a valuable piece to the New England Patriots in 2012 but he is probably not worth the price. The Patriots have pressing needs in the defensive secondary, they’re in need of a pass rusher on the defensive line, and will probably be looking to draft a young wide receiver. With those issues to confront plus the stellar offense they already possess, it is unlikely Wallace would be worth what the Patriots would lose. 


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Romney Jabs at Santorum’s Record in CNN Debate


MESA, Arizona — Rick Santorum found that his position at the top of polls made him the biggest target in Wednesday’s CNN Republican presidential debate, possibly the last of the GOP primary and caucus campaign.
Mitt Romney, who has been front-runner off and on through the campaign but saw his momentum blunted by Santorum’s recent surge, went after the former Pennsylvania senator over his record in Congress, trying to shoulder past him before Tuesday’s primaries in Arizona and Michigan, which most polls show neck-and-neck between the two.
“Voting for the debt ceiling five different times without voting for compensating cuts,” said Romney, describing Santorum as a big spender in Congress. “Voting to fund Planned Parenthood, voting to expand the Department of Education. During his term in the Senate spending grew by some 80% of the federal government.”
Santorum, who surged to the top of state and national polling after sweeping the February 7 contests in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri, was sitting center stage next to Romney and was quick to fire back.
“When you look at my record of never having raised taxes — Gov. Romney raised several hundred million dollars in taxes and fees in Massachusetts. I never voted to raise taxes,” Santorum said. “Gov. Romney even today suggested raising taxes on the top 1%, adopting the Occupy Wall Street rhetoric. I’m not going to adopt that rhetoric.”
Santorum’s opponents joined together to attack a vote he made in support of larger bill that, in part, provided funds to Planned Parenthood.
“If you voted for Planned Parenthood, like the senator has, you voted for birth control pills,” Paul charged. “And you literally, because funds are fungible, you literally vote for abortions because Planned Parenthood gets the money … they have the money left over to do abortion.”
Romney followed up aggressively, saying Santorum had not backed away from the vote in a subsequent interview.
Santorum insisted he had always been clear that as president he would defund Planned Parenthood.
“I admit I voted for large appropriation bills and there were things in there I didn’t like,” he said, but explained he had also created a program that funded abstinence-based education in schools
The candidates confronted each other in a lengthy and contentious argument over the congressional process of earmarking, often derided as “pork-barrel” spending.
“Congress has a role to play when it comes to appropriating money,” Santorum declared in a full-throated, detailed defense of the process — one he said Romney had taken advantage of when he requested funds for the 2002 Olympic Games in Utah.
“I didn’t follow all of that,” Romney cracked after Santorum finished speaking. While criticizing Santorum for some of the earmarks he supported, Romney defended his request for Olympic funds.
“While I was fighting to save the Olympics, you were fighting to save the ‘Bridge to Nowhere,’ ” he said.
Santorum did not back down, telling Romney: “You don’t know what you’re talking about.”
The former senator said Romney’s defense of that Olympic funding request amounted to approval of the earmarking process.
“What you just suggested as to how earmarks should work in the future is exactly how they worked in the past,” Santorum said. “So I suspect you would have supported earmarks if you were in the United States Senate.”
Romney also came up with a new line of defense against Santorum’s repeated attacks on the health care plan passed in Massachusetts when he was governor as being the blueprint for Obama’s national health care law by attacking Santorum’s support of former Republican Sen. Arlen Specter against conservative challenger Pat Toomey. Specter later switched parties and voted for Obama’s health care law.
“If we had said ‘no’ to Arlen Specter, we would not have ObamaCare,” Romney told Santorum.
The two were seated next to each other at a table, flanked by Texas Rep. Ron Paul and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and often turned to each other as they attacked.
While listening to Santorum’s criticism, Romney shook his head or looked slightly to the side with a pained expression on his face. Santorum raised his eyebrows at Romney’s attacks at him and looked off to the side as if he was running Romney’s words through his mind.
Meanwhile, at several points Gingrich was captured chuckling at the other candidates’ statements.
The debate, hosted by CNN and the Republican Party of Arizona at the Mesa Arts Center, was the 20th in the campaign and the last before the candidates will share a stage before primaries in Arizona and Michigan on Tuesday, before Washington state holds a contest on March 3, and before 10 more states hold primaries or caucuses on Super Tuesday on March 6. And no more debates are scheduled. CNN canceled a debate in advance of Super Tuesday after Romney, Santorum and Paul pulled out.
The four last met on January 26 before the Florida primary. Romney went on to win big there and in Nevada, while Gingrich, who had just scored an impressive victory in South Carolina, faded fast.
While Romney and Santorum grew heated at times, Paul deflated the tension a bit when asked why he had labeled Santorum a fake in a television ad that attacked the former senator’s conservative credentials.
“Because he’s a fake,” Paul said.
That line drew cheers, laughter and boos, before Santorum assured moderator John King that he was real.
“Congratulations,” Paul responded.
A question on contraception gave Gingrich the opportunity to attack moderator King and a chance for agreement between Santorum and Romney.
When King related a viewer’s question on whether the candidates believed in birth control, Gingrich took immediate offense.
“You did not once in the 2008 campaign, not once did anybody in the elite media ask why Barack Obama voted in favor of legalizing infanticide. OK? So let’s be clear here,” Gingrich said, which brought applause from the audience. “If we’re going to have a debate about who the extremist is on these issues, it is President Obama who, as a state senator, voted to protect doctors who killed babies who survived the abortion. It is not the Republicans.”
However, Santorum and Romney did reach general agreement on the budding controversy over the issue, as both bemoaned the number of American children born out of wedlock.
“How can the country survive if children are being raised in homes where it’s so much harder to succeed economically?” Santorum asked, but added he was speaking ideologically rather than advocating government intervention.
“Just because I’m talking about it doesn’t mean I want a government program to fix it,” he said.
Romney suggested the president should be “willing to say” the best opportunity a parent could give his child is a mother and a father.
Paul, a former obstetrician, said government should not insert itself into a debate over contraception. But, likening a user of birth control to a gun owner, Paul said the problem was not the contraception pill but the “immorality” of society.
“I think it’s sort of like the argument — conservatives use the argument all the time about guns. Guns don’t kill, criminals kill,” Paul said. “So, in a way, it’s the morality of society that we have to deal with. The pill is there and, you know, it contributes, maybe, but the pills can’t be blamed for the immorality of our society.”
Asked to use one word to describe themselves, Paul proudly replied, “consistent.”
Santorum’s word was “courage,” and Romney’s was “resolute.”
The curmudgeonly Gingrich got a laugh when he described himself as “cheerful.” 


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Nancy Pelosi Appears On The Colbert Report After Vowing To Never Be A Guest

Wednesday night, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi appeared as a guest on The Colbert Report after vowing, for years, to never be on the program. Host Stephen Colbert, with Ash Wednesday ashes on his forehead, didn’t waste any time addressing her promise.
“She swore up and down she would never appear on my show,” Colbert said, introducing Pelosi, “so don’t tell her this isn’t the set of The Price Is Right.”
When Pelosi came on, Colbert began by pointing out what was on everyone’s minds.
“You said you’d never come on here…do you often break your promises?”
“This is part of my Lenten promise to do good works, be kind to Republicans,” Pelosi explained. “So here I am.”
The two joked about Pelosi not having ashes yet –as the show broadcasts a little before midnight — because it’s three hours behind in California and there was still time.
“That’s a loophole that Jesus didn’t anticipate,” Colbert remarked.
Colbert then moved the discussion to Pelosi’s DISCLOSE Act, which would establish more disclosure with money in elections.
“You’ve got this sort of fetish for transparency,” Colbert told her. The two eventually got to the bottom of the Act’s purpose — to shine more light on corporations that are giving millions of dollars to fund Super PACs. Colbert brought up the example of people boycotting products that were funding Super PACs of candidates they didn’t like — for example, Brawny paper towels, owned by the Koch brothers, who are big GOP backers.
They “want to own the presidency,” Pelosi said.
“Of course you want to own the presidency,” Colbert said, “because if you keep the receipt, you can exchange it for a new president if you don’t like him.” 


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Danica Patrick Takes On NASCAR’s Daytona 500

The 54th running of the Daytona 500 kicks off the 2012 Sprint Cup series and the start of a new season of stock-car racing.  Forty-three of the top drivers in the world will compete in “The Great American Race,” NASCAR’s biggest, richest and most prestigious event. While the Daytona 500 is a huge motor racing event on its own, it is made even larger this year because of the debut of Danica Patrick, the country’s most popular female race driver, who becomes just the third woman to take the green flag.
It might seem intimidating to have the eyes of the world watching, but Patrick knows a bit about life in the fast lane. Over the past seven years, the diminutive driver has become one of the biggest brands in motor racing. In her rookie year in the IndyCar Series, she finished fourth in the Indianapolis 500, open-wheel racing’s premier event, and even held the lead late in that race. After racing full-time in the IndyCar Series, Patrick now makes the switch to a full-time ride in NASCAR. Her gradual transition to stock-car racing began in 2010, when she drove a part-time schedule in the second-tier Nationwide Series with GoDaddy.com as her sponsor.  Having started 13 Nationwide events in 2010 she ended the year 43rd in the points standings
Patrick did better last season although she competed in just 12 of the 33 race starts. She did have a couple of top-ten finishes, which was one of her goals. Patrick came in fourth at Las Vegas Speedway and finished 10th at Daytona International Speedway in July in a race that she actually led for 13 laps. The fourth-place finish is the highest ever by a female driver in a NASCAR national event.
Patrick is scheduled to compete in all 33 Nationwide races in 2012 and also run in 10 Sprint Cup events beginning this weekend. She held her own in qualifying for the Daytona 500 racing faster than both two-time winner Michael Waltrip and 2004 Sprint Cup champion Kurt Busch. Qualifying 29th wasn’t close to having historical significance especially since she had a guaranteed spot based on a partnership made between Stewart Haas and Tommy Baldwin Racing, a move some believe is the equivalent of buying her way into the race. Her starting position won’t be determined until Thursday’s 150-mile qualifying races.
“To say I wasn’t nervous at all is a lie,” Patrick said. “Of course I was, a little bit. I want to do a good job.”
As expected, Patrick drew enormous attention from the media and racing fans many of whom consider her a sex symbol. In fact, what most people see first – before they see a race car driver – is the fact that Patrick is an attractive young woman. In 2003 she famously did a photo shoot for FHM magazine draped over a classic car while wearing very little and she’s followed up with a number of provocative marketing campaigns. Patrick told reporters at NASCAR media day that she was over being called sexy but Laurie at Draft Day Suit thinks the lady doth protest too much.
Since the Daytona 500 is known for creating legends, breathtaking moments and  unforgettable memories, many are wondering what will happen when Patrick’s skills are matched to the max against the best drivers in the sport. Will we see another first-time winner?  Last year, Trevor Bayne came from nowhere and at the age of 20 became the youngest winner of the Great American Race.
Although Patrick herself concedes that the odds are extremely long that she would win the Daytona 500 in her first attempt, she has supporters who are more optimistic including her team co-owner Tony Stewart. “Anything can happen here. It’s anybody’s ballgame. Talent-wise, there’s no doubt in my mind she got the ability to do it.”
If Patrick does well, every talent scout will be looking for the “new” Danica (if they aren’t already). The fact is somewhere in America right now is a girl setting records at her local track dreaming of being the next NASCAR star. Thanks to Patrick, it’s not a gender specific dream anymore.
All the action begins Sunday February 26, 2012 1:00 pm ET at the Daytona International Speedway.


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Arizona Republican debate: Winners and losers

Through the first four contests in the GOP presidential race, there were more than 20 debates. For the next 14 contests (at least), there will be only one debate.
That debate was held Wednesday night in Arizona, and its impact on the GOP presidential race will become clear in the days ahead.
Here’s our snapshot of the debate, presented as usual in the form of winners and losers:
WINNERS
* Ron Paul: Who knew the Texas congressman was such an attack dog? While we’ve seen flashes of it in previous debates, he really went after Rick Santorum on Wednesday and got himself plenty of camera time in the process.
The takeaway if you were seeing Paul for the first time: ‘I’m not a politician like these guys. I’m principled.’ He used Santorum as a counter-balance in that effort, and it worked.
* Mitt Romney: It wasn’t his strongest performance, but he did what he had to do for the here-and-now — knock Santorum down a few pegs.
Romney’s performance isn’t likely to re-inspire confidence in his frontrunner status, which is probably more his long-term concern. But he bought himself time to work on that, at the very least, by stunting Santorum’s momentum.
* Debates: This might have been the last debate of the 2012 GOP presidential race, but even if it was, it’s been a very good year for debates generally.
The Republican race has turned several times thanks to the results of these debates, and despite some questions about the enthusiasm for the GOP canddiates, there was unprecedented enthusiasm for the debates, which drew record TV audiences.
There may be a call for fewer debates four years from now, but if anything, 2012 makes a strong case for more debates.
LOSERS
* Rick Santorum: For a guy who finally gained frontrunner status after a long haul, he didn’t handle it very well on the debate stage. As we noted Wednesday night, many of his counterpunches were difficult to follow and went way too far into the weeds.
“I didn’t follow all of that,” Romney said after Santorum spent a while explaining the earmarking process.
Neither did the audience and most voters, which was Santorum’s problem.
* Arlen Specter: This guy didn’t exactly have a great end to his political career, and now his name is again being dragged through the mud in a GOP presidential primary.
It continues to surprise The Fix how much vitriol there is for Santorum’s eight-year-old endorsement of Specter in the 2004 Senate race. But it’s a real thing in conservative circles, and Romney was smart to broach it.
* Congress: Want to know more about the earmarking process? Just watch a replay of Wednesday night’s debate.
What’s that? You don’t want to know more about earmarks? Of course you don’t.
Some of Santorum’s weakest moments came when he tried to justify his actions by pointing to how Congress works. The problem is that people don’t think Congress works, period. Paul took advantage of this; Santorum did not.
* Arizona: Besides a question or two about immigration, was there any indication that this debate was in Arizona?
Generally, these debates will include a good amount of local flavor. Poor Arizona broke the Republican Party rules by moving its primary into February and got its own debate — only to see the debate focus more on the other state holding its primary the same day as Arizona, Michigan.
Barbour says somebody else could still run: Haley Barbour, who is about as close to a Republican Party sage as they come, says it’s reasonable to think another candidate might yet get in the GOP presidential race.
“If the Republican primary voters continue to split up their votes in such a way that nobody is close to having a majority, then there is a chance that somebody else might get in,” Barbour, the former governor of Mississippi and former RNC chairman, told ABC News.
Barbour said that such a scenario is unlikely, but that it’s increasingly possible. He also said it’s possible that the GOP nominee won’t be known by the time of the GOP convention, but he said that might not be a bad thing.
“It is not accurate to say that a hotly contested convention is necessarily bad,” Barbour said. “I am not saying it is necessarily good, but I don’t think it is accurate to say it is necessarily bad. Let’s just see.”
Meanwhile, Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), who has also broached the idea of an open convention, says Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) is the only GOP candidate who could enter the race late and compete. But he added that Daniels’s wife is against him running for president and would probably prevent it.
Fixbits:
The Grand Rapids, Mich., Press joins the Detroit News in backing Romney.
Another Michigan poll shows the race there within the margin of error. This one has Santorum at 37 percent and Romney at 34 percent.
Santorum super PAC benefactor Foster Friess says he is also looking at spending his money on top 2012 Senate races.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) challenges his party to rethink its approach to Latinos.
The Indiana election board will take up a challenge to Sen. Richard Lugar’s (R-Ind.) residency.
Texas Senate candidate and tea party favorite Ted Cruz won’t commit to backing Texas Sen. John Cornyn for Senate Republican Whip. A similar situation occurred in the 2010 Senate primary in Kentucky, when then-GOP candidate Rand Paul declined to back Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for GOP leader.
A new NBC/Marist poll in Michigan shows former congressman and Senate candidate Pete Hoekstra (R) losing ground after running a controversial Super Bowl ad. The poll shows him trailing Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) 53 percent to 32 percent. Most other polling had put his deficit around 10 percent or less.
The same pollster shows Rep. Jeff Flake (R) with an 11-point lead on former U.S. surgeon general Richard Carmona (D) in Arizona. 


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Notable moments from GOP debate in Arizona

Notable moments from the GOP presidential debate Wednesday night in Mesa, Ariz.
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SANTORUM UNDER FIRE
Rick Santorum’s first debate since surging to the top of polls might be one he’d like to forget. The former Pennsylvania senator took fire from all sides — even from an unsympathetic audience that twice booed him during answers.
Santorum’s chief rival for the GOP nomination, Mitt Romney, led the attack. Within moments of the beginning of the debate, the former Massachusetts governor criticized Santorum for votes during his years in Congress to raise the debt ceiling, place earmarks in bills, and provide money for Planned Parenthood and the Education Department.
Romney wasn’t alone. Rep. Ron Paul dismissed Santorum’s conservative credentials, saying he was a “phony” conservative.
The audience took its shots when Santorum explained why he voted for the No Child Left Behind law, President George W. Bush’s signature education plan, and when he tried to talk over Romney during the debate.
Santorum fought back, attacking Romney for the health care plan he crafted as governor and for his support of the Wall Street bailout. But Santorum spent much of the night on the defensive.
___
BIRTH CONTROL
CNN debate moderator John King pressed the candidates for their views on contraception, a topic that’s arisen as a point of contention in the Republican primaries. The candidates — and the audience, which booed King’s question — were having none of it, though. They quickly pivoted to attacks on President Barack Obama.
Gingrich said that rather than discuss his own views on contraception he’d rather talk about Obama’s support of “infanticide.” Romney said Obama’s polices on birth control have been an attack on religious tolerance.
Santorum used the discussion to warn about the dangers of out-of-wedlock pregnancies.
Paul, a doctor, says that contraception doesn’t lead to immorality, immorality leads to contraception.
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IN A WORD
Forget the in-depth plans and white papers that candidates like to brag about. The GOP candidates were asked to describe themselves in a single word. Ron Paul said he is “consistent.” Santorum described himself as “courageous.” Romney said he is “resolute.” There was a bit of laughter in the debate hall when the occasionally dour Gingrich chose his word: “Cheerful.”
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BLAME FOR OBAMACARE
Romney and Santorum’s sharpest exchange was on Obama’s health care plan. And, if you listen to them, the other candidate is the one to blame for it.
Santorum said Romney used government money to “fund a federal takeover of healthcare in Massachusetts” — a reference to the state law passed during Romney’s time as governor. Santorum said that law was a precursor to a federal overhaul by Obama and said Romney’s plan was used as the basis for Obama’s federal law mandating people have insurance.
Romney, in turn, said Santorum shared some of the blame for Obama’s plan — even though Santorum wasn’t in office at the time the law was passed in 2010. Romney said that Santorum’s support in a 2004 primary battle for then-Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania helped ensure his re-election. Specter eventually voted for Obama’s health care law. 


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Poyet shows pride in staying put with resolute Brighton

As Wolverhampton Wanderers widened their search for a successor to Mick McCarthy by talking to Walter Smith, the former Rangers and Everton manager, Gus Poyet, another candidate on their radar, ruled himself out of a potential move to Molineux.

"There was an official approach but not to me," the Brighton manager revealed. He added: "So I've not had any decisions to make, but I'm happy here."
Having taken the fast lane to footballing humiliation at the M62's western terminus in Liverpool three days earlier, Brighton enjoyed a rather more fruitful trip to its eastern extremity, restoring self-respect by maintaining their hopes of back-to-back promotions with a valuable draw, earned largely thanks to their goalkeeper.
Peter Brezovan shipped six goals in the chastening FA Cup defeat at Anfield, but the visitors were in much more determined mood against a Hull side who equalled a 104-year-old club record with a sixth consecutive clean sheet. Both sides remain within tantalising reach of the Championship play-offs after a night where the excellence of the Slovakian was matched by his counterpart in the Hull goal, Vito Mannone.
The former was indebted rather more to luck, Liam Bridcutt blocking a shot on the line from Cameron Stewart, who later saw a long-range effort hit the bar when on another night he might have claimed a hat-trick. The former Manchester United trainee failed in a one-on-one with the imposing Brezovan, who also denied Matty Fryatt on three occasions.
Brighton kept Mannone busy with Ashley Barnes, Craig Mackail-Smith and Abdul Razak, the teenager impressing on his debut on loan from Manchester City, forcing saves from the keeper borrowed from Arsenal as the hosts stretched their unbeaten league sequence to six games. "On another day we'd have come away with a few goals and won the game," Nick Barmby, the manager, insisted. Brighton are without a defeat in eight league games, a run aided by a glaring late miss from Aaron Mclean. Poyet added: "We showed we're a decent team."
Hull City (4-2-3-1): Mannone; Rosenior, Chester, Hobbs, Dawson; Evans (Cairney 67), McKenna; Stewart, Koren, Brady (Mclean 63); Fryatt. Substitites not used Gulacsi, Dudgeon, King.
Brighton & Hove Albion (4-4-2): Brezovan; Jara, Greer, El-Abd, Mattock; Razak (Assulin 77), Bridcutt, Navarro, LuaLua (Buckley 67); Mackail-Smith, Barnes. Substitutes not used Ankergren, Calderon, Vokes.
Referee C Berry (Surrey). 


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GOP presidential debate: It gets nasty

Republican presidential candidates got down, dirty and petty on Wednesday night in their last televised debate before next week’s Michigan and Arizona primaries, the Washington caucuses and “SuperTuesday.”
The exchanges often had little to do with the Great Recession, the economy or problems facing America in the world.
Rick Santorum hit Mitt Romney over a health plan he developed with bipartisan cooperation as governor, under which 94 percent of Massachusetts residents have health care.
“What you did was use federal dollars to fund the government takeover of health care in Massachusetts,” Santorum said.
Mitt Romney attacked Santorum his Senate vote for a funding bill that included an infamous proposed bridge between Ketchikan, Alaska, and neighboring Gravina Island.
“While I was fighting to save the Olympics, you were fighting to save the Bridge to Nowhere,” Romney charged.
“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” Santorum retorted.
Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, continued a habit dating back to last year.  Paul goes on the attack against whatever candidate is rising to threaten Romney.  He ran “hit” TV ads on Texas Gov. Rick Perry, and then ex-House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and now Rick Santorum — and went after Santorum on Wednesday night.
“I find it really fascinating that when people are running for office, they’re really fiscally conservative:  When they’re in office they do something different,” Paul said in a shot at Santorum.
Paul was asked about a statement he made calling Santorum “a fake.”
“He is a fake,” said Paul.
“I’m real, I’m real,” Santorum shot back.
The candidates went into contortions trying to out-conservative each other. “When we have programs that teach abstinence in our schools, the liberals go crazy and try to stop them,” said Romney, once a pro-choice politician and supporter of gap rights.
Santorum used out-of-wedlock births and “teens who are sexually active” to argue against contraception.  He denounced Romney for a Massachusetts policy in which hospitals had to provide so-called “morning after” pills to rape victims.  The policy was “entirely voluntary,” Romney shot back.
Gingrich wasn’t hitting at his opponents, but accused Obama of supporting “legalized infanticide” while he was an Illinois state senator, namely legislation “to kill babies who survived abortion.” 


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Romney To Santorum: While I Worked For Olympics, You Voted For Bridge To Nowhere

ROMNEY: I didn't follow all of that, but I can tell you this -- I would put a ban on earmarks. I think it opens the door to excessive spending, spending on projects that don't need to be done.

I think there are a lot of projects that have been voted for. You voted to the "Bridge to Nowhere." I think these earmarks, we've had it with them.

SANTORUM: Yes.

ROMNEY: If Congress wants to vote in favor of a bill, they should take that bill, bring it forward with committees, have people say -- vote it up or down on the floor of the House or the Senate, have the president say yes or no, and move forward. But the earmark process is broken. There are thousands and thousands of earmarks, money being used inappropriately.

And I'll tell you this -- he mentioned coming to the Olympics, coming to the United States Congress, asking for support. No question about it. That's the nature of what it is when you lead an organization or a state.

You come to Congress and you say, these are the things we need. In the history of the Olympic movement, the federal government has always provided the transportation and security. So we came to the federal government asking for help on transportation and security.

I was fighting for those things. Our games were successful. But while I was fighting to save the Olympics, you were fighting to save the "Bridge to Nowhere." 


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Rabu, 22 Februari 2012

Vivus Weight-Loss Pill Qnexa Wins Backing of FDA Panel

(Updates with after-market trading in fifth paragraph.)
Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Vivus Inc.'s weight-loss pill Qnexa won the backing of a U.S. advisory panel as the company seeks to gain approval for the first new obesity drug in 13 years. The shares doubled in late trading.
Advisers to the Food and Drug Administration voted 20-2 today that Qnexa's benefits outweigh its risks at a meeting at agency headquarters in Silver Spring, Maryland. The FDA isn't required to follow the panel's recommendation. The agency is due to decide on the drug, which it rejected in 2010, by April 17.
Qnexa is one of three medications vying for the first U.S. approval of a prescription weight-loss treatment since Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding AG's Xenical in 1999. The FDA plans to have advisers discuss in March the possibility of requiring heart-risk studies for all weight-loss drugs. Panel members discussed whether Vivus should conduct such a study before or after approval.
“Of all the obesity drugs, this one has the highest efficacy in terms of weight loss, so that shifts the balance in terms of requiring a post-approval study rather than a pre- approval study,” said Sanjay Kaul, a cardiology professor in the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Cedar Sinai Medical Center and a panel member.
Vivus surged $10.55 to $21.10 at 6:58 p.m. New York time. Trading in the stock was halted during the day before the FDA panel vote.
Heart Risk Concerns
Regulators raised concerns that Qnexa may contribute to a greater risk of heart ailments and birth defects. The medicine combines the appetite suppressant phentermine with topiramate, an antiseizure and migraine drug. The Mountain View, California- based company has proposed a post-approval trial to assess Qnexa in reducing major heart complications in obese, at-risk patients. The trial would involve 11,300 patients and take four and a-half years.
Analysts say the drug, if approved, may generate $448 million in sales in 2015.
Topiramate is the active ingredient in Johnson & Johnson's Topamax. The anticonvulsant is also associated with confusion, difficulty with concentration and memory loss.
Vivus' analysis of heart risks for Qnexa was “somewhat reassuring,” though the significance of an observed increase in heart rate was “uncertain,” FDA staff said Feb. 17 in a report.
More than one-third of U.S. adults are obese, and another third are overweight, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The obesity rate among adults has more than doubled since 1980 to 72 million people.
Obesity Risks
Obesity raises the risks of diabetes, heart attacks and stroke, and costs the U.S. economy an estimated $147 billion a year in medical expenses and lost productivity, according to the Atlanta-based CDC.
Orexigen Therapeutics Inc., based in La Jolla, California, and San Diego-based Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc. also are seeking approval for their obesity medicines, which the FDA refused to approve without more data on safety risks.
Vivus examined medical claims data and found five oral clefts in a group of 1,740 children whose mothers had taken topiramate alone in the first trimester of pregnancy, for a prevalence rate of 0.29 percent, the company said Dec. 21 in a statement. That compared with a rate of 0.16 percent in the group whose mothers had taken antiseizure drugs, including topiramate, before pregnancy.
Study Results
Vivus plans to finish the results in the third quarter of this year, after the April 17 deadline for the FDA to decide whether to approve the drug. The risk of oral clefts hasn't been fully answered by the interim data, FDA staff said.
The FDA asked Vivus in January to remove wording from Qnexa's proposed prescribing label advising women with the potential to become pregnant against taking it. The FDA staff said in the Feb. 17 report severely restricting Qnexa isn't practical because topiramate also treats other serious conditions.
Panel members suggested the FDA should consider restricting topiramate used for seizures and migraines for women of childbearing age.
“I just can't get my mind around why it would be different,” said Lamont Weide, chief of diabetes and endocrinology at the Truman Medical Centers Diabetes Center in Kansas City and a member of the panel.
Russell Katz, director of FDA's neurology products division, said the agency hasn't considered restricting the drug because there aren't many options for migraine prevention.
Vivus has suggested restricting distribution of Qnexa to less than 10 large mail-order pharmacies with pharmacists trained in dispensing the drug, Barbara Troupin, senior director of global medical affairs at the company, said.
In addition to Roche's Xenical, London-based GlaxoSmithKline Plc's Alli, a half-dose version of Xenical's active ingredient, won FDA clearance in 2007 as the first diet drug available without a prescription. 


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Marie Colvin mourned by family, colleagues

 Photo credit: AP | This is an undated image made available Wednesday Feb. 22, 2012 by the Sunday Times in London of Sunday Times journalist Marie Colvin photographed in Tahrir square in Cairo. The French government spokeswoman on Wednesday identified two Western reporters killed in Syria as American war reporter Marie Colvin and French photojournalist Remi Ochlik . Colvin, from Oyster Bay, New York, had been a foreign correspondent for Britain's Sunday Times for two decades, reporting from the world's most dangerous places. She lost the sight in one eye in Sri Lanka in 2001 but did not let that deter her.(AP Photo/Ivor Prickett Sunday Times)

Marie Colvin's editor urged her to leave Syria immediately because it had become too dangerous, but the veteran foreign correspondent from Long Island insisted on staying one more day -- to file yet another battlefield dispatch.
That story would not be told. Colvin, who courageously covered war zones for a quarter century, was killed Wednesday in a government rocket attack near the embattled city of Homs.
"She was totally, totally committed to what she did," her mother, Rosemarie Colvin, said at her home in East Norwich. In the living room, a photography book -- "Modern Muses" by Bryan Adams -- was open to a portrait of her daughter.

MORE: Photos of Marie Colvin | Newsday archive: Colvin hit by grenade | Video: CNN interview (Warning - graphic content)
Recounting the story of her daughter's refusal to leave Syria, she added: "She died doing what was really important to her."
Marie Colvin, 56, a 1974 graduate of Oyster Bay High School, earned international acclaim as a fearless reporter for The London Sunday Times. From the West Bank, Sri Lanka, Kosovo, Zimbabwe and East Timor, to the recent Arab uprisings in the Middle East, Colvin made it her mission to expose injustice and human suffering.
While in Sri Lanka in 2001, an exploding hand grenade destroyed her left eye. Ruling out a prosthetic, she chose to wear a black eye patch -- making her a striking figure in the field.
"I never met a person with more courage," journalist T.D. Allman of The Daily Beast wrote. "She was always on the side of truth. She was always on the side of the oppressed. She never once tired. She never once faltered."
John Witherow, editor of the Sunday Times, said she was "driven by a passion to cover wars in the belief that what she did mattered. She believed profoundly that reporting could curtail the excesses of brutal regimes and make the international community take notice."
She won numerous awards, including the 2000 Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women's Media Foundation. In 2010, the Foreign Press Association honored her as Woman Journalist of the Year.
Colvin, a Yale University graduate who lived in London for years, idolized Martha Gelhorn, the famous war correspondent who once partnered with Ernest Hemingway, her family said.
"She grew up in a time when a lot things were happening with women, with Vietnam and the civil rights movement," Rosemarie Colvin said, noting that her daughter marched in Washington, D.C., to protest Vietnam when she was in high school. "Everything she did, she did with determination and passion."
"She was always after the truth," said Jerelyn Hanrahan, 55, of Oyster Bay, who counted Colvin as her best friend in high school. "In a way, it kept her grounded because she really believed in everything she was doing."
Colvin went to Yale planning to be an anthropologist, but then took a seminar with "Hiroshima" author John Hersey and "just got hooked on writing," her mother said.
Joe McDermott, who now leads the Consortium for Worker Education, said he hired Colvin in 1978 fresh out of Yale to write for the Local 237 Teamster's News and Views newspaper. She worked there until 1980, when she became a reporter for United Press International.
"It was glorious," McDermott said. "She was full of life."
He described her as a dynamo with long black hair who had an amazing presence. "She caught on fast and she wrote fast," he said.
Colvin, who joined the Sunday Times about 25 years ago, was the oldest of five children. She had been previously married twice.
Survivors include her brothers William, of East Meadow, and Michael, of South Norwalk, Conn.; and her sisters Cathleen Colvin of Oyster Bay, and Aileen Horton of Alpharetta, Ga. Funeral arrangements are pending the family's efforts to get Colvin's body out of Syria. 


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Star Jones returns to 'The View'

It's been nearly six years since Star Jones has been on "The View," but the lawyer and media personality made her return to the talk show Wednesday morning.
A lot has changed, but Barbara Walters, of course, wasted no time getting right to Jones' 2006 exit: "People keep saying to me, why did she leave, and why hasn't she been back in six years, and we have never discussed it," Walters said.
The veteran journalist started to recall "the truth" about Jones' leaving when Jones interrupted to ask, "Barbara, are we really going to go here? Do we care at this point, my sister? I honestly don't."

Well, as Walters points out, some people do.
Back in 2006, Jones' contract wasn't renewed "for various reasons," Walters went on. She recalls that Jones was told she could say whatever she wanted, and they had picked the date to reveal the news, "and instead, you surprised us on the air," Walters told Jones. "Why did you do that?" (In the summer of 2006, Jones made the announcement that she was leaving while on air without warning.)
"It was ugly. Everything around was ugly," Jones said. "It was a bad, emotional time. Nasty things were being said in the media. It was just not a good, emotional time. Barbara, I take real responsibility for my own behavior at all times, but I won't take responsibility if I have not made a decision I can live with. I made the decision, and wanted to go out on my own terms. I wanted to be able to control it, so I could walk back in here...and feel good about it."
Walters told her, "What we were trying to do then, was protect you," to which Joy Behar interjected, "we tried to protect you a lot, I think, when you were here." .
As they were clearing the air, Behar brought up Jones' 2003 gastric bypass surgery - and congratulating her, saying, "By the way, you're now a skinny b****."
Recalling Jones' significant weight loss, Behar says, "We were told, don't say it's a gastric bypass. Say it's Pilates and dieting, or whatever, portion control."
Jones denied that saying, "No, I said, don't talk about my private way I decided to lose weight. Because, when you all had private things, I did not discuss them."
Walters interjected, "But you did say that it was diet and Pilates. And really, because we loved you, we did lie."
But to Jones, the question was, "Why do you care? I look good."
It may sound as though things got a little testy on "The View" set, but Jones has tweeted that it was all in good fun.
"Fun @theviewtv," she wrote Wednesday. "It is easy to walk through the PAST when your PRESENT is so good & your FUTURE is so promising. See you @todayshow tomorrow." 


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‘National Enquirer’ Publishes Whitney Houston’s Open Casket Photo

Though Whitney Houston’s millions of fans around the globe were invited to take part in the singer’s “home going” service by watching the event on television and online, there are some things that should be kept private. Case in point: the National Enquirer — who previously staged Whitney’s final moments in an utterly disgusting move — reach a new low by posting a photo of Houston laying in her casket on the cover of their magazine. The mag claims the photo was taken at the Whigham Funeral Home in New Jersey, not at the church where the funeral service was held. If you’re feeling extra morbid right now, you can head over to ONTD to see the photo. And stay classy, National Enquirer.  


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Kate Walsh Bares All on Shape Cover

"Private Practice" star Kate Walsh showed off her beautiful physique, posing nude for the March issue of Shape magazine.
Shape Magazine

"Right now, I feel really healthy, confident, and sexy," the 44-year-old actress said of her decision to take it all off for the cover. "I'm enjoying my 40s and wanted to share that. Is it a mid-life crisis? I do drive a Porsche, so maybe it is!" 


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Scores die in Argentina train crash

At least 49 passengers killed and 500 more injured after commuter train rams into barrier in a Buenos Aires station.
 martin quintana/EPA
Argentina's worst train crash in decades
Scores of passengers were killed and hundreds of others injured after the commuter train rammed into a barrier at a Buenos Aires station.


A packed train has crashed into the end of the track in a Buenos Aires railway station, killing at least 49 commuters and injuring more than 500 others, with the death toll expected to rise.
The train came in too fast and hit the barrier at the end of the platform at about 20km per hour, smashing the front of the engine and destroying the coaches behind it, Juan Schiavi, Argentina's transportation secretary, said at the Once station on Wednesday.
"There are people still trapped, people alive, and there may have been fatalities. We don't know if there are dead people" in the wreckage, Schiavi said.
One coach penetrated nearly 20ft into the next, he said.
Monica Yanakiev, a journalist at the scene of the train crash, told Al Jazeera, that "there are between 30 and 60 people still trapped in the train", with ambulances filling the streets.
"The last report, which has not been confirmed yet, is that a seven-year-old boy apparently died in the crash," she said. "There are three or four hospitals that are crowded with victims" of the accident that occured during rush hour.
Injured by metal and glass
Most damaged was the first coach, where passengers make space for bicycles. Survivors told the TeleNoticias television channel that many people were injured by metal and glass.
Passengers said windows exploded as the tops of train cars separated from their floors. The trains are usually packed with people standing between the seats, and many were thrown into each other and to the floor by the force of the hard stop.

"People started to break windows and get out however they could." one survivor said.
"Then I saw the engine destroyed and the train driver trapped among the steel. There were a lot of people hurt, a lot of kids, elderly."
Many people suffered bruises, and many with lesser injuries were waiting for attention on the Once station's platforms as helicopters and more than a dozen ambulances took the most seriously injured to nearby hospitals.
The driver has been taken to a hospital and the union has not been able to speak to him yet, Sobrero said.
Ruben Sobrero, union chief on the Sarmiento line, the commuter rail service in Buenos Aires, told local media that reports speculating the crash was caused by the train's inability to stop fast enough due to brake problems could not be verified.
"This machine left the shop yesterday and the brakes worked well," he said.
"From what we know, it braked without problems at previous stations. At this point I don't want to speculate about the causes."
Argentina has seen five serious train accidents since December 2010. The most deadly of these happened last September, when a bus crossed the tracks in front of an oncoming train, killing 11 people. 


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Fat Tuesday: Mardi Gras celebrations around the country - watch a live feed from the parades

 Enlarge Actor Will Ferrell reigns as Bacchus XLIV for the Krewe of Bacchus parade on Napoleon Ave. in New Orleans on Sunday, Feb.19, 2012. Ferrell has been in New Orleans since November, filming a movie recently renamed "The Campaign." (AP Photo/The Times-Picayune Matthew Hinton)

It is that time of the year again: Mardi Gras.
Celebrations are happening all over the place but, the biggest parades and festivities are in New Orleans.
As a well known party destination, celebrities are already showing up to take part in the fun. People have already seen actor Will Ferrell as Bacchus XLIV for the Krewe of Bacchus parade. Other notable names include actress Mariska Hargitay, actress Hilary Swank, musician/ reality TV star Bret Michaels and actress Patricia Clarkson.
One interesting aspect of Mardi Gras are the “Indians.” There are around 40 tribes that collect and participate in the parades during Mardi Gras. The most notable thing about them are their giant “suits.” These “suits” are hand made out of feathers, beads, and a whole lot of colorful thread. Some say their “best experience each year is donning the suit.” Learn more about the Mardi Gras Indians with this story.
Take a look through the gallery to see the beginnings of the Mardi Gras celebrations or watch it live on streaming video below.
For more news check out our sister site nola.com. You can check out breaking news stories on Mardi Gras, stories about history of the event, parade routes and times. You can even listen to a radio station made up entirely of Mardi Gras inspired music.


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Indiana lawmaker: Girl Scouts in league with Planned Parenthood

(CNN) -- An Indiana lawmaker who opposes celebrating the centennial anniversary of the Girl Scouts of America says the group "sexualizes" young girls, promotes homosexuality and is a tactical arm of Planned Parenthood.
In a letter sent to members of the Republican Caucus, Indiana State Rep. Bob Morris said many parents were "abandoning the Girl Scouts because they promote homosexual lifestyles."
"As members of the Indiana House of Representatives, we must be wise before we use the credibility and respect of the 'Peoples' House' to extend legitimacy to a radicalized organization," he said, warning them not "to endorse a group that has been subverted in the name of liberal progressive politics and the destruction of traditional American family values."
In the Febraury 18 letter, obtained by CNN affiliate WRTV, Morris lobbied lawmakers to oppose a nonbinding resolution celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Girl Scouts.
Morris was the only member not to sign the measure.
After doing a "small amount" of research on the Internet, Morris said, he and his wife came to the conclusion that the Girl Scouts have become a tactical arm of Planned Parenthood and are part of an agenda that includes "sexualizing" young girls.
Morris' two daughters have been pulled from the Girl Scouts, he said, and instead will become active in American Heritage Girls Little Flowers organization -- a group that "will not confuse their conservative Hoosier upbringing."
Morris said he takes the stand despite the knowledge that "99.9% of Girl Scout troops in this country" are run by good leaders, he told WRTV. The concern, he said, is where the money goes on the national level.
Planned Parenthood of Indiana President and CEO Betty Cockrum said she was disappointed in Morris' words, calling them "inflammatory, misleading, woefully inaccurate and harmful."
The controversy is the latest involving Planned Parenthood and its affiliates.
The Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation briefly cut funding for some Planned Parenthood projects amid increased scrutiny by Congress over how the organization provides abortion services.
After Komen's initial decision, Planned Parenthood said money from the foundation has largely paid for breast exams at local centers. In the past five years, it said, grants from Komen have directly supported 170,000 screenings, making up about 4% of the exams performed at Planned Parenthood clinics nationwide.
Karen Handel, a vice president with the Komen Foundation, resigned her position this month following a controversy.
In stark contrast to his Republican colleague, House Speaker Brian Bosma handed out Girl Scout cookies on the floor of the General Assembly Tuesday.
"There are a lot of sideshows at the General Assembly ... and all walks of life, and you just have to determine which one's you're going to go into," Bosma told CNN affiliate WISH. 


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Bradley, Graves in Doctor Who Series 7

Actors David Bradley and Rupert Graves are to guest star in Series 7 of Doctor Who.
Veteran actor David Bradley is probably best known for his more recent role as school caretaker Argus Filch in the Harry Potter movies (yes, another one from Hogwarts!) He also appeared in an episode of Game of Thrones last year.
This isn’t actually Bradley’s first outing in the Whoniverse though; he was the voice of the vulture-like Shansheeth in The Sarah Jane Adventures story Death of the Doctor.
Rupert Graves meanwhile, will be recognisable to many readers as Detective Inspector Lestrade in Steven Moffat’s other show Sherlock.
The pair join Mark Williams, who was caught on set when filming began on Monday. 


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NFL Combine: Scheme versatility coveted

The NFL has become a spread it out type game. With offenses going to multiple receiver sets and throwing the ball more than ever, defenses have been forced to adjust and not just from one season to the next. Defensive coordinators have had to switch week to week and in several cases during the course of a game. That’s why front seven prospects at this year’s NFL Combine that offer a versatile skill set to play in a 4-3 or 3-4 defensive front might be more coveted than ever.
“Everybody plays a little bit of everything on defense,” said Bills scout Brian Fisher. “You don’t see teams staying in 30 fronts 70-80 percent of the snaps. If it’s half the time it’s a lot. You’re in nickel 50-60 percent of the time, so for the most part even 30 front teams are in over fronts most of the time. Guys on defense that can play and put their hand down, stand up on certain downs and give you scheme versatility… that’s valuable.”
“The reason you have to (be so multiple on defense) is with four and five wides and no backs and three tight ends and everything else they make you match up,” said Bills GM Buddy Nix of NFL offenses.
The Bills are one of two teams in the AFC East alone that are switching to a 4-3 base defense from a 3-4 (Miami is the other). Buffalo found themselves with four down linemen on the field about half the time anyway so they’re not anticipating the transition to be daunting in the least.
Even in Chan Gailey’s first season as head coach in 2010 his defense had to go with four down linemen a good portion of the season due mainly to a run defense that needed a fourth player on the line of scrimmage. Changing the defensive formula on a weekly basis that season prompted Nix and his personnel staff to draft defensive players that offered scheme versatility.
“The guys we drafted last year, Marcell Dareus can play in any defense,” said Nix. “Aaron Williams, he’s going to play no matter what you do. Kelvin Sheppard can play in either defense. Da’Norris Searcy he’s going to play in either. All of our defensive draft picks last year would fit either defense.”
Having the body type and skill set to seamlessly adapt from one defensive scheme to another is an asset that could very well boost the overall grade on a prospect in the eyes of many NFL clubs.
Bills new defensive coordinator Dave Wannstedt said last week that he’s looking for pass rushers at end and fast linebackers. That might seem like a one-dimensional description for those positions, but Wannstedt made his preferences clear in his press conference last week.
“The thing that you want to try to avoid is situational players as much as you can,” he said.
Players like Nick Barnett or Kyle Williams that are true three down players no matter the scheme or personnel package are what Buffalo and a lot of other teams are seeking.
“With all the creative offenses going on you’ve got to have more athletic guys on defense,” said Bills scout Matt Hand. “A prospect’s intelligence is also important because they have to be able to line up and know what they’re doing in multiple spots.”
So what front seven prospects on defense in this year’s draft class offer the best scheme versatility?
Unfortunately for the Bills most of them are defensive tackles in what is a deep class for interior defensive linemen.

“The best guy right now would be a Michael Brockers from LSU,” said ESPN NFL draft analyst Mel Kiper. “In a 3-4 he can be an end and in a 4-3 he can be an inside guy in a four-man front. Dontari Poe from Memphis could be a nose tackle in a 3-4 and a DT in a 4-3.”
Some defensive ends that Kiper believes have a chance to also play on their feet as an outside linebacker include Whitney Mercilus from Illinois, Andre Branch from Clemson and Nick Perry from USC.
Two of the more versatile pass rushers in the entire draft class are South Carolina’s Melvin Ingram and Alabama’s Courtney Upshaw.
“Ingram has tremendous scheme versatility,” Kiper said. “For what he did at South Carolina and the fact that he can also play on his feet he’s one of the better options. Courtney Upshaw gives you a little bit of that. Some believe he’s more of a 4-3 end, but I think he’s a 3-4 OLB.”
The problem is just like Kiper, NFL talent evaluators in many cases will be projecting that versatility. Knowing the defensive concepts rarely change week to week in college football the opportunity to see a prospect in a different scheme to effectively determine their versatility is often limited to postseason all-star games.

That’s why the testing and drills on the Lucas Oil Stadium field over the next week will be an important part of the process. It will provide a measure of guidance to NFL personnel men as to just how adaptable a defensive prospect can be. 


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Nightline's Look into Apple's Foxconn Factories

ABC aired their Nightline special tonight where they took an inside look at Apple's Foxconn factories. Apple allowed Nightline access to the Foxconn factories that produce iPhones and iPads. Foxconn is the world's largest electronics manufacturing company that has contracts with most major U.S. electronics companies. The full video is not available online at this time.
 Overall, the report held no real surprises. They summarized many of the events leading up to the bad press surrounding Foxconn's working conditions. The cluster of suicides was mentioned over the past few years that led to the installation of suicide netting to discourage impulsive suicide attempts. Nightline did note that the suicide rate at Foxconn was still below the Chinese national average. Tim Cook, then Apple's COO, flew to China during that time to help coordinate the response. Beyond the suicide netting, pay was increased and counseling offices were set up.

Work on the factory line is described as monotonous with 12 hour shifts with two hour long meal breaks. When questioned, workers complained about cramped dorms and low pay, but the jobs were in high demand with thousands coming to Foxconn for work. Nightline traveled to a nearby village to compare those living conditions which didn't seem any better. The families who remained in the village told Nightline that their living conditions were better with the "young people" working in the factories.

The Verge compiled some interesting statistics from the report:

- It takes 141 steps to make an iPhone, and the devices are essentially all handmade
- It takes five days and 325 hands to make a single iPad
- Foxconn workers pay for their own food — about $.70 per meal, and work 12 hour shifts
- Workers who live in the dorms sleep six to eight a room, and pay $17.50 a month to do so
- Workers make $1.78 an hour
Nightline's visit coordinated with Fair Labor Association who is compiling their own report on the factories.

Overall, the report was fair-to-positive making it seem like Apple was being very responsive to the concerns. 


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BerganPAC Announces Upcoming Events: Oyster Cult, Paul Anka & More

bergenPAC has announced the following shows on sale: Blue Oyster Cult (April 21st), Squeeze with special guest The English Beat (April 23rd), Paul Anka (May 23rd), Steve Miller Band (June 19th), and Wilson Phillips (July 13th) on sale Friday, February 24th at 11:00am.  Tickets are available at Ticketmaster.com or bergenPAC.org or by calling the box office at 201 227 1030.
Blue Oyster Cult have fused science fiction with guitar driven rock for over 30 years, charting such anthems as “Don’t fear the Reaper,” “Godzilla,” and “Burning for You.”  Blue Öyster Cult has sold over 24 million albums worldwide including 7 million in the United States alone.  Blue Öyster Cult's current lineup includes long-time members, Donald "Buck Dharma" Roeser (lead guitar, vocals) and Eric Bloom (lead vocals, rhythm guitar, keyboard), as well as Jules Radino (drums, percussion), Richie Castellano (keyboard, guitar, vocals), and Rudy Sarzo (bass guitar).
Squeeze is a British pop band who has provided a string of hits including, most notably “Pulling Muscles From a Shell” and “Tempted.”  The English Beat fuses ska with pop and has scored many hits including “Mirror in the Bathroom”.
Paul Anka first became famous as a teen in the late 1950s and 1960s with hit songs like "Diana," "Lonely Boy," and "Put Your Head on My Shoulder." He went on to write such well-known music as the theme for The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and one of Tom Jones's biggest hits, "She's a Lady," and the English lyrics for Frank Sinatra's signature song, "My Way" (originally French song "Comme d'habitude").
Steve Miller's career has encompassed two distinct stages: one of the top San Francisco blues-rockers during the late '60s and early '70s, and one of the top-selling pop/rock acts of the mid- to late '70s and early '80s with hits like "The Joker," "Fly Like an Eagle," "Rock'n Me," and "Abracadabra".
Wilson Phillips first appeared in 1990, flaunting a harmony-rich sound that helped send three singles from their first album, "Hold On," "Release Me," and "You're in Love," to the top of the Billboard charts. Carnie WilsonWendy Wilson, and Chynna Phillips comprise the vocal trio, whose sudden success was matched by an equally impressive pedigree. The two Wilson sisters had grown up in California with their father, Beach Boy bandleader BrIan Wilson, and often made appearances on his albums


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Jamie Lee Curtis on 'NCIS': What did you think of Gibbs' new foil?

On Tuesday night, actress Jamie Lee Curtis made a rare TV appearance (well, unless you count those old-people yoghurt commercials) as a Dr. Samantha Ryan on "NCIS" opposite Mark Harmon. In the episode, Gibbs turns to Ryan to uncover the truth behind the possible suicide of a Navy Reservist.

Curtis' arc continues next week, with potential romantic tension building between the doctor and Gibbs. Curtis told ET that she had a great time working with Harmon, who she also co-starred with in the Lindsay Lohan/Chad Michael Murray masterpiece, "Freaky Friday."

"I'm very fond of him and he's very fond of me. That's just a given, I'm not going to lie to you and say this is a horrible, difficult job to [work] with him," she said. "I'm happy to have it, I'm happy to be here. I'm not going to say anything more than that. He makes me blush a little bit, because he's such a sweet guy."

Curtis says she'd be interested in returning to TV on a more full-time basis. "I've raised my children and so I could clearly see myself doing more regular work now because my youngest is 15-and-a-half and the last person he wants to see is me," she says. "I think I've done my job right. He wants nothing to do with me."

Did you enjoy the introduction of Curtis' character? Will you tune in to her second episode next week?


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Hepatitis C Kill More Americans Than HIV

But, it doesn't have a rich, powerful political constituency. So, big deal!
A new study indicates that one in every 33 baby boomers has the Hepatitis C virus, and many don’t even know they have this liver destroying disease.
 Federal health officials say Hepatitis C is now killing more people than the AIDS virus, and most are over 45 years of age.

Dr. Robert Bettiker, associate professor of medicine in infectious diseases at Temple University School of Medicine, says that once symptoms appear, the liver is already damaged.
My mother has this virus. What color ribbon should I be wearing?

Brady Quinn apologizes, claims comments on Tim Tebow were ‘inaccurate’

Quarterbacks Tim Tebow #15 and Brady Quinn #9 of the Denver Broncos take the field during warm ups before playing the New England Patriots at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on December 18, 2011 in Denver, Colorado. (Patrick Smith/Getty Images)


In Michael Silver’s GQ article that examined the first months of Tebowmania this morning, Brady Quinn was quoted over several different time periods.
Across those time periods and through different quotes, Quinn: conveys jealousy of Broncos fans’ support of Tebow, questions Tebow’s humility and appropriateness of his public displays of faith, and attributes the Broncos’ success to luck. It was a damning number of quotes toward Tebow, and an even more damning number of quotes for Quinn, who comes off petty, sour, and as a bad teammate and employee.
Now he’s in damage control mode, and released the following statement on Twitter:
The comments attributed to me in a recent magazine article are in NO WAY reflective of my opinion of Tim and the Broncos. Tim deserves a lot of credit for our success and I’m happy for him and what he accomplished. Most importantly, he is a great teammate. That interview was conducted three months ago, and the resulting story was a completely inaccurate portrayal of my comments. I have addressed my disappointment with the writer and have reached out to Tim to clear this up. I apologize to anyone who feels I was trying to take anything away from our Team’s or Tim’s success this season.
We’re sure Quinn’s article comments don’t accurately capture his feelings toward Tebow or the Broncos. We didn’t even hear a whisper of malcontent from Quinn to this point. But an “inaccurate portrayal of (Quinn’s) comments” are still a reflection of Quinn’s comments. Michael Silver may stir the Tebow/Broncos pot, but his words are never baseless.
Will John Elway and the Broncos look at the body of Quinn’s behavior rather than these snippets from a GQ article? It’s possible, especially since Elway and John Fox have each gotten themselves in public hot water over Tebow comments. But nothing they said were damning to this degree.
Brady Quinn, who is set to become an unrestricted free agent in a few weeks, has been in the spotlight far too long to make a mistake like this, and no amount of backtracking on Twitter is going to erase the damage done. Brady Quinn: Bronco no more.


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Kombucha Tea Health Benefits?

My grandpa used to make the Kombucha tea at home when I was a kid. I actually never thought of it as having adverse effects. I drank it like grandpa did. But does Kombucha tea have health benefits?
Dr. Brent A. Bauer from Mayo Clinic explains:

Kombucha tea is a fermented drink made with tea, sugar, bacteria and yeast. Although it’s sometimes referred to as kombucha mushroom tea, kombucha is not a mushroom — it’s a colony of bacteria and yeast. Kombucha tea is made by adding the colony to sugar and tea, and allowing the mix to ferment. The resulting liquid contains vinegar, B vitamins and a number of other chemical compounds.
Health benefits attributed to kombucha tea include stimulating the immune system, preventing cancer, and improving digestion and liver function. However, there’s no scientific evidence to support these health claims.
There have, however, been reports of adverse effects such as stomach upset, infections and allergic reactions in kombucha tea drinkers. Kombucha tea is often brewed in homes under nonsterile conditions, making contamination likely. If ceramic pots are used for brewing, lead poisoning might be a concern — the acids in the tea may leach lead from the ceramic glaze.
In short, there isn’t good evidence that kombucha tea delivers on its health claims. At the same time, several cases of harm have been reported. Therefore, the prudent approach is to avoid kombucha tea until more definitive information is available.


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