Tuesday, April 30, 2013

As Dutch prepare for new king, republicans ask to abolish monarchy

On Tuesday, Queen Beatrix will abdicate and her son will ascend to the Dutch crown. But some Dutch see the monarchy as an unwanted anachronism in an otherwise modern democracy.

By Peter Teffer,?Correspondent / April 29, 2013

A man wearing shades displays a T-shirt depicting Dutch Queen Beatrix in a souvenir shop in Amsterdam today. The Netherlands is preparing for Queen's Day on April 30, which will also mark the abdication of Queen Beatrix and the investiture of her eldest son, Willem-Alexander.

Cris Toala Olivares/Reuters

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On Tuesday, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands will abdicate and her eldest son, Willem-Alexander, Prince of Orange, will be inaugurated as the new king. It's expected to be a major event that will be celebrated across the country by a supportive public.

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But just a few days ago, some 500 yards away from the Dam Square in central Amsterdam where the abdication and inauguration will take place, a small group of Dutch republicans met to discuss how best to call for the abolition of the country's 200-year-old monarchy and instate a true republic.

The workshop was organized by the movement #HetIs2013 ? Dutch for "It's 2013" ? which was started in February when a student protester named Joanna was forcibly removed by police from an event in Utrecht that the queen was attending.

Joanna had been holding up a sign that read "Away with the monarchy, it's 2013" ? which the policemen took to be a violation of the Netherlands' lese majeste law, which still prohibits insulting the royal family despite the country's general support of freedom of speech.

Willem-Alexander later said during a TV interview that the policemen had made "a mistake" by removing her. But the incident spurred like-minded Dutch to call for a royal-free future.

?I intend to visit the Dam wearing white and carrying white balloons,? says one of the attendants of the workshop. The republicans have called on people to dress in white instead of orange ? the Dutch national color, derived from the royal family's last name Van Oranje ? to show their opposition to the hereditary form of rule.

To be sure, the anti-monarchists numbers are small. The workshop in Amsterdam was attended by nine republicans ? they were almost outnumbered by journalists.

Yet more and more people are becoming republican, says Anjo Clement, president of the New Republican Society. The organization, unrelated to but supportive of #HetIs2013, was established in 1998. At the beginning of this year it only had 1,200 members, but that number has more than doubled since Queen Beatrix announced her abdication plans. ?The society has almost three thousand members now,? says Mr. Clement.

The goal of the society is to establish a Dutch republic. ?We prefer an elected head of state,? says Clement. ?Every government official should be subject to scrutinizing by voters. Our democracy is not finished yet.?

An unusual monarchy

The Dutch monarchy, established exactly two centuries ago this year, is something of an oddity in Europe. While many European nations had a monarchy first and then a republic, the Netherlands took a different, anachronistic route.

At the end of the 16th century, during a decades-long struggle against the Spanish king, seven northern provinces decided that they needed no ruler above them. They, in rather de facto fashion, formed a decentralized federation: the Republic of the Seven United Provinces.

In the following centuries, the Republic was alternately ruled by oligarchies and the descendants of nobleman Willem van Oranje (1533-84), who had led the revolt against Spain. Towards the end of the 18th century, Napoleon Bonaparte conquered the region and set up a satellite state, to be governed by his brother. Louis Bonaparte became king of Holland in 1806 and actually became rather popular with the Dutch. But after a series of military defeats elsewhere in Europe, Napoleon decided to pull out his troops from Holland in 1813.

Dazed and disillusioned, the Dutch once again looked to a descendant of Willem van Oranje as their savior. Three self-proclaimed Dutch rulers sent out messengers to find the Prince of Orange, another Willem (1772-1843), and offer him the sovereignty of the Netherlands, on behalf of the Dutch people.

On December 2, 1813, he was inaugurated as King Willem I in Amsterdam, which became the new capital. Willem I was given substantial powers, and the monarchy received international legitimacy when the great powers of that day decide the Kingdom of the Netherlands should be expanded with Belgium, as a buffer state against France.

But just 30 years later, his son Willem II saw revolutions everywhere in Europe, and preemptively decided to give up many of his powers. Under the new constitution that Willem II ordered, the government would be led by a cabinet of ministers answerable to an elected parliament.

However, the monarch remains a part of the government up to present day. Queen Beatrix held weekly meetings with the prime minister, and Willem-Alexander has said he will continue that tradition, to the disapproval of the republicans.

?Those meetings are secret. Why? Do they have something to hide?? Clement asks. ?We want to know what influence the king exercises and we call for an end to this sneakiness.?

Recently though, the most important remaining political power was removed. Until 2012, the monarch had the authority to appoint a person to lead coalition talks after an election. Last year, parliament decided that they no longer needed that help.

A cultural monarchy

Willem-Alexander ?would obviously accept it,? if the Dutch parliament decides to take away all political powers, the upcoming king said in the recent interview.

However, there is no parliamentary momentum for a so-called "ceremonial monarchy."

Left-wing parties, which were much more vocal in their republicanism some decades ago, now acknowledge the affinity the Dutch people have with the royal family. If Willem-Alexander proves as popular as his mother, politicians will likely not see the need for change: an attitude towards the monarchy that Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad described as ?rationally against, emotionally in favor.?

The public seems similarly unmotivated. In a poll?that was released in mid-April, three out of four respondents said they would choose to maintain the monarchy if they had to make a yes-or-no decision. The same amount thinks monarchy is ?part of Dutch culture.?

What doesn't help the republican cause is that the elected official who would replace the monarch as head of state would most probably come from a political party. While 67 percent of those recently polled have confidence in Willem-Alexander, only 12 percent have confidence in ?politics.?

The monarchy also has the added appeal of all the traditions that come with it ? many of which are highly popular with the public, and even with the activists present at the workshop in Amsterdam. One young woman who plans to protest says she hopes not to be arrested on the day of the abdication, which is also Queen's Day, a popular national holiday.

?I don't want to miss the party and the [Queen's Day] flea market,? she says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/1Z1BoDLjt0Y/As-Dutch-prepare-for-new-king-republicans-ask-to-abolish-monarchy

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Russia charging NASA $70 million per rocket seat

Members of the next mission to the International Space Station, U.S. astronaut Karen Nyberg, left, Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin, center, and European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano pose for the media before their final preflight practical examination in a mock-up of a Soyuz TMA space craft at the Russian Space Training Center in Star City outside Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, April 30, 2013. The three are scheduled to blast off to the International Space Station from Baikonur Cosmodrom on a Russian made Soyuz TMA-09M space craft on May 29. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)

Members of the next mission to the International Space Station, U.S. astronaut Karen Nyberg, left, Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin, center, and European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano pose for the media before their final preflight practical examination in a mock-up of a Soyuz TMA space craft at the Russian Space Training Center in Star City outside Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, April 30, 2013. The three are scheduled to blast off to the International Space Station from Baikonur Cosmodrom on a Russian made Soyuz TMA-09M space craft on May 29. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)

(AP) ? NASA is paying $424 million more to Russia to get U.S. astronauts into space, and the agency's leader is blaming Congress for the extra expense.

NASA announced its latest contract with the Russian Space Agency on Tuesday. The $424 million represents flights to and from the International Space Station aboard Russian Soyuz spacecraft, as well as training, for six astronauts in 2016 and the first half of 2017.

That's $70.6 million per seat ? well above the previous price tag of about $65 million.

Russia currently provides the only means of getting people to and from the space station, and its ticket prices have soared with each new contract.

Several U.S. companies are working on rockets and spacecraft to launch Americans from U.S. soil. But that's still a few years away. The ability to launch crews into orbit from America ended with NASA's shuttle program in 2011. Even before the shuttles retired, the U.S. had been relying on Russia to transport long-term residents to the space station.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said if Congress had approved the space agency's request for more funding for its commercial space effort, the latest contract would have been unnecessary. He is urging full funding of the Obama administration's 2014 budget request of $821 million in seed money for the commercial crew program.

"Because the funding for the President's plan has been significantly reduced, we now won't be able to support American launches until 2017," Bolden, a former shuttle commander, wrote in a NASA blog.

It could take longer if Congress does not fully support the 2014 request, he said.

"Further delays in our Commercial Crew Program and its impact on our human spaceflight program are unacceptable," Bolden said.

The California-based Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, already is making cargo shipments to the space station. Its founder and chief designer, billionaire Elon Musk, previously has said his company could be ferrying astronauts aboard beefed-up versions of its Dragon capsules by 2015.

Orbital Sciences Corp. of Virginia completed a successful test launch 1? weeks ago. It plans to start sending supplies to the space station this summer, but has no interest in carrying passengers.

The six seats included in the latest Russian contract covers not only Americans, but European, Canadian or Japanese astronauts under barter agreements between NASA and those countries.

___

Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/commercial

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-30-NASA-Russia/id-92d03d2a1fd94ae4a85f6fc1415d37d3

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How to disable location reporting in Google Search for iPhone and iPad

How to disable location reporting in Google Search for iPhone and iPad

If you snagged the update to Google Search yesterday, you're probably ecstatic that you now have some of the features Android users have been enjoying including Google Now capabilities. You may have also noticed that it likes to use location services like crazy. If that bothers you or you're worried about conserving some battery when you don't need Google Search polling your location, you can disable location reporting within the app.

Here's how:

  1. Launch the Google Search app for iPhone or iPad.
  2. Tap on the Settings icon in the upper right hand corner.
  3. Now tap on Privacy.
  4. Scroll down and towards the bottom, turn Location Reporting to Off.

That's it. Google Search will now not report your location unless you want it to.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/jJdWpNtmoKA/story01.htm

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Nurse Manager III - Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health ...

Intermountain Home Care is currently seeking to employ Nurse Manager III - Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health on Mon, 29 Apr 2013 23:41:43 GMT. This position is responsible for providing management and oversight of daily Nursing activities to the Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health Unit and the outpatient Day Treatment. He/she will work in partnership with Nursing leadership and other facility management and departments to ensure the provision of optimal patient care, attainment of financial goals, and development of leaders. Job...

Location: Ogden, Utah

Description: Intermountain Home Care is currently seeking to employ Nurse Manager III - Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health right now, this vacancy will be dwelled in Utah. More complete informations about this vacancy opportunity please read the description below. This position is responsible for providing management and oversight of daily Nursing activities to the P! ediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health Unit and the outpatient Day Treatment. He/she will work in partnership with Nursing leadership and other facility management and departments to ensure the provision of optimal patient care, attainment of financial goals, and development of leaders.

Job Essentials:
Leadership:
Responsible for the environment in which clinical nursing is practiced. Contributes to the strategic planning process, day-to-day operations, standards of care, and attainment of organizational goals. Facilitates collaborative problem solving among interdepartmental disciplines. Advocates for and allocates available resources to promote efficient, effective, safe and compassionate nursing care based on current standards of practice. Promotes shared decision-making and professional autonomy by providing department input into executive-level decisions, and by keeping staff informed of executive level activities. Implements and role ! models the vision, mission, core values of the Nursing Philoso! phy of CARING and Intermountain Healthcare's Healing Commitments.

Operational Effectiveness:
Responsible for development, implementation and management of annual capital/operating and personnel (FTE) budget for department. Uses resources effectively and manages expenses to meet financial goals of department.

Employee Engagement:
Models and fosters an environment of professionalism and employee engagement on the department. Responsible for recruitment, retention, and employee satisfaction. Ensures competent and sufficient number of staff to meet patient care needs, which includes hiring, orientation, and managing staffing to a changing census. Ensure that new skill training and ongoing competency verification is completed annually. Evaluate staff competency through use of performance reviews and peer reviews. Mentors staff and provide professional educational opportunities. Utilizes participative practice management models.

Clinical Excellence:
Responsible for department performance and compliance with patient safety initiatives, federal, state and other regulatory bodies such as Joint Commission, OSHA, CMS, DOPL, and other department specific accrediting and certifying bodies. Ensures achievement of clinical program goals and implements action plans to improve performance as needed. Effectively uses professional and organizational best practices to ensure the delivery of quality patient care. Participating member of a professional nursing organization appropriate to position and service line. Facilitates and encourages staff nurse participation in professional organizations. Facilitates use of resources by nursing staff such as nurse practitioners, other expanded role RNs, and other specialty roles.

Service Excellence:
Monitors and improves patient satisfaction utilizing available service metrics and national benchmarks to develop and implement action plans to ach! ieve desired outcomes in service excellence goals. Acts as a role model! for staff and encourages the incorporation of Healing Commitments and Healing Connections in every aspect of patient care delivery. Ensures that staff incorporates evidence based practice into all aspects of care delivery.

Physician Engagement:
Partner with physicians at the department level to achieve clinical, operational, and service goals.

Community Stewardship:
Communicates to staff and encourages participation in opportunities for community outreach activities (ex: health fairs; middle and high school education). Manage, coordinate, and support student nurse activities. Supports staff participation in outside community organizations such as volunteer health clinics, health fairs and advisory boards for not for profit organizations.

Benefits Eligible: Yes
Shift Details: Full time, 40 hours a week.
Department: Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health and Outpatient Day Treatment - McKay-Dee! Hospital
Minimum Requirements

Bachelor's degree in Nursing (BSN) from an accredited institution. Intermountain verifies both degree attainment and educational institution accreditation following an offer of employment.

Registered Nurse (RN) License valid in the State of Utah

Leadership or supervisory experience

Two or more years clinical experience

Basic Life Support (BLS) certification for Healthcare Providers.

Physical Requirements

Carrying, Hearing/Listening, Lifting, Manual Dexterity, Pushing/Pulling, Seeing, Speaking, Standing, Walking.

Preferred Qualifications

Experience in Behavioral Health

Experience in Pediatric or Adolescent Behavioral Health

Master's degree

Please Note
All positions subject to close without notice
Intermountain Healthcare is an equal opportunity employer M/F/D/V

Salary: . Date posted:

- .
If yo! u were eligible to this vacancy, please give us your resume, with salar! y requirements and a resume to Intermountain Home Care.

Interested on this vacancy, just click on the Apply button, you will be redirected to the official website

This vacancy starts available on: Mon, 29 Apr 2013 23:41:43 GMT


Apply Nurse Manager III - Pediatric and Adolescent Behavioral Health Here

Source: http://pediatriciansjob-ut.blogspot.com/2013/04/nurse-manager-iii-pediatric-and.html

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

Hacker Challenge: Share Your Best Spring Cleaning Hack

Hacker Challenge: Share Your Best Spring Cleaning HackWelcome, Lifehackers, to our next Hacker Challenge! Each week, we issue a new challenge. You get until Sunday to prepare your submission and send it to us. That gives you a few days to think about it and a whole weekend to work it up. Our editors pick the best submissions and our favorite will win a copy of the Lifehacker book!

Let's get started!

This Week's Hacker Challenge: Share Your Best Spring Cleaning Hack

For this week's challenge, we'd like to see your best spring cleaning hack?anything clever or out of the ordinary you do to get you and yours ready for spring after those long winter months. We're flexible here. Entries can be about cleaning or organizing your home, car, computer or wherever else you're able to strike fear in the hearts of clutter and disorganization. We've shown you how you can declutter your life and embrace minimalism. We've also talked about spring cleaning tips for your home and computer.

Now, it's your turn. We want to see your best spring cleaning hack.

How to Submit Your Entry

Make sure to follow these instructions when you submit your entry:

  • Post your entry below or send it to challenge@lifehacker.com with the subject Hacker Challenge: Spring Cleaning. If you post your entry below and need to include more than one image, just reply to your own comment or host your extra pics on a free, quick image-hosting site like imgur and link out to your gallery.
  • We will accept entries up through Sunday night, April 14 at 11:59pm Pacific Standard Time
  • We will showcase the best submissions and announce our favorite Tuesday, April 16.

So get to work! And don't forget to check back for new challenges every week.

Standard Gawker contest rules apply, so be sure to check them out before submitting your entry.

Images by Brian A Jackson (Shutterstock) and Tina Mailhot-Roberge.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/CMzOyNDGjHs/hacker-challenge-share-your-best-spring-cleaning-hack

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Sensational success in patients with major depression

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Researchers from the Bonn University Hospital implanted pacemaker electrodes into the medial forebrain bundle in the brains of patients suffering from major depression with amazing results: In six out of seven patients, symptoms improved both considerably and rapidly. The method of Deep Brain Stimulation had already been tested on various structures within the brain, but with clearly lesser effect. The results of this new study have now been published in the renowned international journal "Biological Psychiatry."

After months of deep sadness, a first smile appears on a patient's face. For many years, she had suffered from major depression and tried to end her life several times. She had spent the past years mostly in a passive state on her couch; even watching TV was too much effort for her. Now this young woman has found her joie de vivre again, enjoys laughing and travelling. She and an additional six patients with treatment resistant depression participated in a study involving a novel method for addressing major depression at the Bonn University Hospital.

Considerable amelioration of depression within days

Prof. Dr. Volker Arnd Coenen, neurosurgeon at the Department of Neurosurgery (Klinik und Poliklinik f?r Neurochirurgie), implanted electrodes into the medial forebrain bundles in the brains of subjects suffering from major depression with the electrodes being connected to a brain pacemaker. The nerve cells were then stimulated by means of a weak electrical current, a method called Deep Brain Stimulation. In a matter of days, in six out of seven patients, symptoms such as anxiety, despondence, listlessness and joylessness had improved considerably. "Such sensational success both in terms of the strength of the effects, as well as the speed of the response has so far not been achieved with any other method," says Prof. Dr. Thomas E. Schl?pfer from the Bonn University Hospital Department of Psychiatry und Psychotherapy (Bonner Uniklinik f?r Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie).

Central part of the reward circuit

The medial forebrain bundle is a bundle of nerve fibers running from the deep-seated limbic system to the prefrontal cortex. In a certain place, the bundle is particularly narrow because the individual nerve fibers lie close together. "This is exactly the location in which we can have maximum effect using a minimum of current," explains Prof. Coenen, who is now the new head of the Freiburg University Hospital's Department of Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery (Abteilung Stereotaktische und Funktionelle Neurochirurgie am Universit?tsklinikum Freiburg). The medial forebrain bundle is a central part of a euphoria circuit belonging to the brain's reward system. What kind of effect stimulation exactly has on nerve cells is not yet known. But it obviously changes metabolic activity in the different brain centers.

Success clearly increased over that of earlier studies

The researchers have already shown in several studies that deep brain stimulation shows an amazing and?given the severity of the symptoms? unexpected degree of amelioration of symptoms in major depression. In those studies, however, the physicians had not implanted the electrodes into the medial forebrain bundle but instead into the nucleus accumbens, another part of the brain's reward system. This had resulted in clear and sustainable improvements in about 50 percent of subjects. "But in this new study, our results were even much better," says Prof. Schl?pfer. A clear improvement in complaints was found in 85 percent of patients, instead of the earlier 50 percent. In addition, stimulation was performed with lower current levels, and the effects showed within a few days, instead of after weeks.

Method's long-term success proven

"Obviously, we have now come closer to a critical structure within the brain that is responsible for major depression," says the psychiatrist from the Bonn University Hospital. Another cause for optimism among the group of physicians is that, since the study's completion, an eighth patient has also been treated successfully. The patients have been observed for a period of up to 18 month after the intervention. Prof. Schl?pfer reports, "The anti-depressive effect of deep brain stimulation within the medial forebrain bundle has not decreased during this period." This clearly indicates that the effects are not temporary. This method gives those who suffer from major depression reason to hope. However, it will take quite a bit of time for the new procedure to become part of standard therapy.

###

Rapid Effects of Deep Brain Stimulation for Treatment Resistant Major Depression, Biological Psychiatry, DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.01.034

University of Bonn: http://www.uni-bonn.de

Thanks to University of Bonn for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127676/Sensational_success_in_patients_with_major_depression

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

FDA approves return of drug for morning sickness

(AP) ? Talk about a comeback: A treatment pulled off the market 30 years ago has won Food and Drug Administration approval again as the only drug specifically designated to treat morning sickness.

That long-ago safety scare, prompted by hundreds of lawsuits claiming birth defects, proved to be a false alarm.

Monday's FDA decision means a new version of the pill once called Bendectin is set to return to U.S. pharmacies under a different name ? Diclegis ? as a safe and effective treatment for this pregnancy rite of passage.

In the intervening decades, the treatment is widely believed to have undergone more scrutiny for safety than any other drug used during pregnancy.

"There's been a lot of buzz about this. Nothing better has come along" to treat morning sickness in those 30 years, said Dr. Edward McCabe, medical director for the March of Dimes, who welcomed the step.

"We know safety-wise, there's zero question," said Dr. Gary Hankins of the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, who headed one of the company-financed studies of Diclegis that led to its approval.

U.S. sales of Diclegis are expected to begin in early June, according to Canada-based manufacturer Duchesnay Inc. The company has long sold a generic version of the pill in Canada under yet another name, Diclectin.

For all the names, the main ingredients are the same: Vitamin B6 plus the over-the-counter antihistamine doxylamine, found in the sleep aid Unisom. U.S. obstetricians have long told nauseated pregnant women how to mix up the right dose themselves.

In fact, in 2004 the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued guidelines calling the combination a first-line therapy.

The difference that prescription-only Diclegis would offer: Combining both ingredients with a delayed-release coating designed to help women take a daily dose before their nausea sets in.

The return of an FDA-cleared treatment is needed, said ACOG spokesman Dr. Jeffrey Ecker, an obstetrician at Massachusetts General Hospital who wasn't involved in the study of Diclegis.

"It's not magic," Ecker cautioned, saying few women see their symptoms completely disappear with the medication. "But for some it allows them to be much more functional."

In Hankins' study, about 260 U.S. women with morning sickness were given either Diclegis or a dummy pill for two weeks. The Diclegis users missed on average 1 1/2 fewer days of work than their counterparts.

Duchesnay wouldn't reveal a U.S. price.

About three-quarters of women experience at least some nausea and vomiting with the hormonal surges of early pregnancy. Although it often occurs upon waking, some women have trouble all day. It usually ends by the second trimester.

About 1 percent of women undergo dangerously severe vomiting called hyperemesis gravidarum, the condition that made headlines last December when in Britain, Prince William's wife Kate was briefly hospitalized.

An initial version of Bendectin began selling in 1956, and 33 million women around the world were estimated to have taken it before the lawsuits began. At the time, the FDA continued to call the drug safe; appeals courts ruled in favor of Bendectin maker Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals; and eventually a U.S. Supreme Court decision would render continuing suits unlikely. But Merrell Dow declared the litigation cost too high, and quit making Bendectin in 1983.

What happened? The government estimates 1 in 33 babies are born with birth defects regardless of medication use during pregnancy, and studies eventually concluded that Bendectin didn't increase that baseline risk. McCabe of the March of Dimes says it's important to recognize that when a drug is widely used in pregnancy, some babies will be born with birth defects that are a coincidence.

Doctors advise trying some other steps before turning to medication for morning sickness: Eat protein snacks before bed. Nibble crackers or sip ginger ale before getting out of bed. Eat frequent small meals. Avoid nausea-triggering odors.

When that doesn't work, Ecker says vitamin B6 alone helps some women. His next step is the B6-and-antihistamine combination that will form Diclegis. A next-step option includes the drug Zofran, normally used to treat nausea from cancer therapy.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-08-Morning%20Sickness%20Drug/id-d7d53c7da53049b89c34bb2918d76ac7

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Many fouls, few points as season draws to a close

Louisville's Stephan Van Treese (44) vies for a loose ball against Wichita State's Fred Van Vleet (23) as Louisville's Peyton Siva (3) looks on during the second half of the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball semifinal game Saturday, April 6, 2013, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Louisville's Stephan Van Treese (44) vies for a loose ball against Wichita State's Fred Van Vleet (23) as Louisville's Peyton Siva (3) looks on during the second half of the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball semifinal game Saturday, April 6, 2013, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Syracuse's Michael Carter-Williams (1) falls to the court as Michigan's Tim Hardaway Jr. (10) vies for the ball during the second half of the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball semifinal game Saturday, April 6, 2013, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

(AP) ? Once the nets are down and the confetti stops flying, it will be safe to open your eyes again, basketball fans.

Yes, 2012-13 has been one ugly season.

Scoring hasn't been this low in decades and the same for shooting percentages. Foul calls also are way down, which turned much of this year's action into something more like wrestling with occasional breaks for free-throw shooting.

Long delays for video reviews, confusion over the charge-block call, hand-checking, arm-blocking and always, always, an endless string of TV timeouts added to a feeling among even basketball lovers that many nights were hard to sit through.

"It doesn't take long, if you're really watching, to see what's happening and say, 'Oh my God, this is awful,'" said ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who has been one of the most outspoken critics of the state of the game.

The season capped off by the Michigan-Louisville NCAA title game Monday night has been one marked by amazing parity ? something the leaders of most sports strive for, but one that may have played into the muddle that has become college hoops.

At one point, the top spot in The Associated Press poll changed for five straight weeks. Only one top-seeded team, Louisville, made it to the Final Four and there were two No. 4s and a No. 9; overall, this was only the fourth time since seeding began in 1979 that only one top-3 seed made it to the sport's biggest stage.

Better coaching, better preparation, more good players and the willingness of many of the best ones to enroll at less-heralded schools all played into the evenness. As early as junior high, players in the same age bracket go against each other on traveling AAU and All-Star teams. When college rolls around, the intimidation factor is gone. If today's dynamic were in place in the 1970s, almost every player at the Final Four would've played against Bill Walton at least once.

"Some of these guys couldn't score, so is that ugly?" said Bill Raftery, one of the sport's most effervescent color commentators. "Some would prefer high scoring and free-wheeling but preparation is such that it's not going to be that way. And the kids all know one another, so they're not in the least bit in awe of an opponent. You get Wichita State playing Louisville and they don't really give a damn. It's just another team to them."

It can make for unexpectedly close games and exciting finishes ? see No. 1 Louisville's come-from-behind 72-68 win over that plucky underdog, No. 9 Wichita State, in the national semifinals.

Still, the overall product suffered this year and the statistics back that up:

? Teams averaged 67.49 points, lowest since 1951-52, decades before either the 3-point line or the shot clock were introduced to college basketball.

? Field goal percentage was 43.3 percent, lowest since 1964-65.

? Shooting from the 3-point line was a tad over 34 percent, the worst it's been since 1996-97.

? The average team's 17.66 fouls per game were the lowest since the stats started being recorded in 1947.

? March Madness did not provide a reprieve. This has been the lowest scoring version of the NCAA tournament since the 3-point line came into effect in 1987, at 131.2 points per game.

Given those numbers, it seems almost fitting that the tournament's most enduring moment was cringe-worthy: the compound leg fracture suffered by Louisville guard Kevin Ware. And then, in the run-up to the Final Four, there was the unsavory story of Mike Rice, coach of a losing program at Rutgers who got fired for his brutish tactics during practices.

"A failure of process," school president Robert Barchi called the Rice fiasco, which also led to the resignation of the athletic director, who failed to fire the coach when first presented with video evidence of his abuse.

While that story keeps unfolding over the offseason, the leaders in college basketball will spend the time off trying to clean things up on the court.

Raftery predicts the sport's powers will take a long look at the "arc" ? that befuddling semicircle drawn underneath the basket that a defensive player cannot be standing in if he hopes to draw a charge call.

"They're going to do some things with the rules," Raftery said. "But I enjoy the game, so it doesn't really offend me the way it does a lot of my pals."

But he, too, thinks the number of video reviews needs to be pared.

Officials stop action to parse through college's very specific rules on flagrant fouls, which call for checking the video any time one player's elbow makes contact with another's head, whether it's obviously intentional or not. Refs also stop play to determine whether shooters are behind the 3-point line and to put tenths of seconds back on the clock late in games. Those stoppages often deprive fans of a bang-bang, sometimes fantastic finish so officials can huddle around video monitors to study the clock while coaches huddle with their teams to draw up a play.

Louisville coach Rick Pitino said he remembers the same sort of troubles bogging down play in the NBA when he coached there in the 1980s and '90s. The commissioner, David Stern, called some of the sport's best minds into a room and they started figuring out how to make things better.

Pitino said it all comes down to "freedom of movement," which can only be assured if the officials start calling the games more tightly, doing away with all the grabbing, hand-checking and arm-barring that clogs up the flow of these games.

"The only way to do it is the first 10 games of the season, the games have to be ugly," Pitino said of the extra stoppages and free throws that could ensue while refs try to clean things up. "Then the players will adjust, then you'll see great offense again. Like the NBA now, you see all those great scoring teams. Now they have a great product, and we need to go the route of the NBA."

___

AP National Writer Paul Newberry in Atlanta contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-08-NCAA-Rough%20Season/id-5d281717fc7d4f87baebc0be7baec609

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Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0: A Worthy iPad Mini Rival?

The Low-Down


Samsung's new Galaxy Note 8.0, which hits stores on April 11, is a Android tablet with an 8-inch screen. Like its smaller and larger brothers, the 5.5-inch Galaxy Note II and 10.1-inch Galaxy Note 10.1, the Note 8.0 uses the company's EMR (electromagnetic resonance) S-Pen stylus, which works with a Wacom digitizer layer beneath the screen. It's a compelling midsize tablet, but the price is a bit rich, considering the competition.

Hardware


Samsung may be the most market-reactive company on the planet. After many in the tech press predicted its demise, the original Galaxy Note turned out to be a hit. Then the iPad Mini blazed a trail in the near-8-inch-screen category. Combine those two developments and you get the Galaxy Note 8.0. Incredibly, Samsung already has a tablet playing in the 7-inch category?part of its Galaxy Tab series. Samsung has so flooded the market with tablets that, if you include the Galaxy S 4 (which is technically a phone with a 5-inch screen), the only screen size from 5 to 10 inches that the company has neglected is 9 inches.

That said, 8 inches does seem to be the screen sweet spot. The Note 8.0 is comfortable to hold in the hand, has plenty of screen real estate to scribble on, offers plenty of battery life, and is perfect for movie watching. In typical Samsung style, the hardware is handsome without being remarkable. The Note 8.0 is slightly wider, taller, and thicker than the iPad Mini, yet the plastic case makes its construction feel cheaper than Apple's cool-milled aluminum. The 1280 x 800?pixel screen has a slightly higher resolution than its Apple rival, but the different is insignificant given the Note's slightly larger screen and wider aspect ratio. Still, images look crisp, if lacking the razor-sharp quality of the high-pixel-density screens that have become the norm lately.

Aside from the S Pen, the hardware feature that most differentiates the Note 8.0 from the iPad is the infrared emitter that enables the Note's WatchOn remote control functionality (more about that in a bit). Embedded IR seems to be a trend in mobile electronics?the new HTC One has it too. Strangely, it's a data-transmission feature that dates back to the Palm Pilot.

Software


The Note 8.0 runs the Android Jelly Bean OS, but it is obscured beneath a thick coating of Samsung's own TouchWiz Nature UX and augmented even further by specialized S Pen software. Some of the TouchWiz features are inspired, including the pop-out thumb-scrollable menu of frequently used apps, and the MultiWindow mode that allows you to run multiple apps at the same time.

The S Pen works with the same specialized S Note apps found on the Galaxy Note II oversize phone. Like that device, the Note 8.0 also has handwriting recognition that works pretty well and "hover over" functionality that delivers pop-up previews of files and photos (although this is somewhat inconsistent?sometimes info pops up, sometimes it doesn't).

Samsung also has a Reading Mode that optimizes the backlight and tint for reading. Curiously, though, this doesn't work with the Kindle for Android app. The Note 8.0 also includes an S Pen-friendly version of Flipboard, in which hovering over a tile launches a pop-up menu that lets you jump directly to a story.

Like the new HTC One, the Note 8.0 includes an app that turns the device into a universal remote control. Samsung's app is called WatchON, and like HTC's offering it includes a recommendation engine that checks what is on TV now and can offer suggestions based on your preferences. WatchON also delivers up content from Hulu, Blockbuster, and Netflix and can play that content on the device. It's an interesting way to get users started on an integrated second-screen experience. For the moment, WatchON seems to be focused on content discovery, but in the not-too-distant future, I expect many tabletmakers will be looking for a way to use these devices to steal away viewers' attention to streaming video. Broadcasters and cable operators, beware.

Samsung also includes a lot of other productivity goodies such as Polaris Office, which lets you edit and create Microsoft Office documents, and Awesome Note, a slick-looking to-do list manager, plus 50 GB of free Dropbox storage for two years. And if all of your friends also have Samsung devices, the Note 8.0's Group Play feature lets you share music and video and collaborate on documents.

There's so much software stuffed onto the Note that it can get a bit confusing when you just want to play a song, look at a picture, watch a video, or surf the Web. Do I use Music Hub, Music Player, or Play Music? Do I use Play Movies & TV, Video Player, or WatchON? Do I use the Internet app or Chrome? Extra choices aren't always helpful when you just want to get something done.

Performance


With its 1.6-GHz quad-core processor and 2 GB of RAM, the Note 8.0 is fast and snappy, with no performance lags in our testing. The screen is fine for reading and video watching but a bit disappointing when viewed next to high-pixel-density screens such as the full-size iPad. (It's worth mentioning, by the way, that the Note is a formidable video player, with built-in support for MPEG4, H.263, H.264, WMV, and DivX.) The 4600-millamp battery is impressive; we made it through an entire weekend without recharging. But the Note's cameras?5-megapixel on the back, 1.3-megapixel on the front?are letdowns. Low-light photos were universally disappointing.

On the whole, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 is a likable, useful tablet with impressive performance. It would be a no-brainer purchase were it not for the price: Samsung wants $400 for it. That's $70 more than the baseline 16 GB iPad mini, and $200 more than a 7-inch Nexus 7. Maybe some folks are really into the S Pen technology, but I have a hard time believing that a stylus merits a 20 percent markup. It's a shame, too, because at $300, the Galaxy Note 8.0 would be a pretty compelling device.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/gadgets/reviews/samsung-galaxy-note-8-0-a-worthy-ipad-mini-rival-15328518?src=rss

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Smoking may negatively impact kidney function among adolescents

Apr. 8, 2013 ? Exposure to tobacco smoke could negatively impact adolescent kidney function; this is according to a new study led by a team of researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins Children's Center. They examined the association between exposure to active smoking and kidney function among U.S. adolescents and found the effects of tobacco smoke on kidney function begin in childhood. The results are featured in the April 2013 issue of Pediatrics.

"Tobacco use and exposure to secondhand tobacco smoke are major health problems for adolescents, resulting in short-term and long-term adverse health effects," said Ana Navas-Acien, MD, PhD, senior author of the study and an associate professor with the Bloomberg School's Department of Environmental Health Sciences. "In this nationally representative sample of U.S. adolescents, exposure to tobacco, including secondhand smoke and active smoking, was associated with lower estimated glomerular filtration rates -- a common measure of how well the kidneys are working. In addition, we found a modest but positive association between serum cotinine concentrations, a biomarker of tobacco exposure, among first-morning albumin to creatinine ratio. These findings further support the conclusion that tobacco smoke may damage the kidneys."

Using a cross-sectional study of 7,516 adolescents ages 12 to 17, the authors assessed participant tobacco use and exposure to secondhand smoke through self-reported data from a home questionnaire and serum cotinine. Participants who reported having smoked "at least one day" in the last month or "at least one cigarette" in the last month, or those who had serum cotinine concentrations over 10 ng/ml were classified as active smokers. Secondhand smoke exposure was defined as non-active smokers who reported living with at least one person who smoked, or who had cotinine levels greater than or equal to 0.05 ng/ml, but less than or equal to 10 ng/ml even if they reported not living with a smoker. Participants with serum cotinine levels below 0.05 ng/ml, not living with a smoker and not smoking in the last month, were classified as unexposed to tobacco.

Earlier studies examining U.S. adolescent tobacco exposure have indicated more than 600,000 middle school students and 3 million high school students smoke cigarettes and 15 percent of non-smoking adolescents report exposure to secondhand smoke at home. Among adolescents, active smoking has been associated with increased asthma risk, reduced lung function and growth, early atherosclerotic lesions and increased cancer risk as well as premature mortality in adulthood. According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, smoking is also a risk factor for several autoimmune diseases, including Crohn's disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

"Small changes in the distribution of estimated glomerular filtration rate levels in the population could have a substantial impact in kidney-related illness, as it is well known for changes in blood pressure levels and hypertension-related disease. Evaluating potential secondhand smoke exposure and providing recommendations to minimize exposure should continue to be incorporated as part of children's routine medical care," noted Jeffrey Fadrowski, MD, MHS, co-author of the study and an assistant professor in Pediatric Nephrology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

"Tobacco as a chronic kidney disease risk factor is of great concern given the high prevalence of use and the chronicity that most often accompanies this exposure. Protecting young people from active smoking is essential since nearly 80 percent of adults who smoke begin smoking by 18 years of age," said Navas-Acien.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Esther Garc?a-Esquinas, Lauren F. Loeffler, Virginia M. Weaver, Jeffrey J. Fadrowski, and Ana Navas-Acien. Kidney Function and Tobacco Smoke Exposure in US Adolescents. Pediatrics, 2013 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-3201d

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/nW0pbiakyh8/130408152955.htm

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Intel announces next generation, 20Gbps Thunderbolt

Intel announces new version of Thunderbolt

Intel has announced the next generation of its Thunderbolt interface with support for up to 20Gbps throughput, as well as support for 4K. Code-named Falcon Ridge, this new version of Thunderbolt sports some impressive capabilities. According to Engadget

But let's talk about the real news: the next-gen Thunderbolt tech (code-named Falcon Ridge) enables 4K video file transfer and display simultaneously in addition to running at 20 Gbps.

In addition to its impressive output, Falcon Ridge will be compatible with the first-generation ports and connectors. The current version of Thunderbolt, formerly Light Peak, has a maximum throughput of 10Gbps, and has been on various Macs since 2011.

Of particular interest to Mac users -- current Thunderbolt connectors can't support enough bandwidth for a theoretical Retina 27" LED Thunderbolt display. This one could.

Falcon Ridge is expected to start production in 2014.

Source: Engadget

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/yIpEyVHWzvo/story01.htm

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OpenX Launches Revenue Intelligence To Help Online Publishers Calculate The Value Of Their Content

openx logoDigital advertising company OpenX announced today that it's launching a new service called Revenue Intelligence, allowing online publishers to calculate and increase the amount of ad revenue that each piece of content is earning. Last fall, OpenX acquired JumpTime, which provided a similar service. OpenX's new Revenue Intelligence team is being led by JumpTime co-founder Anke Audenaert, and the company says it's "blending" OpenX ad tech with JumpTime's technology.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/yAni92Xbse4/

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Carbon dioxide released from burning fuel today goes back into new fuels tomorrow

Apr. 8, 2013 ? The search for ways to use megatons of carbon dioxide that may be removed from industrial smokestacks during efforts to curb global warming has led to a process for converting that major greenhouse gas back into the fuel that released it in the first place. Research on the project was a topic in New Orleans on April 8 at the 245th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).

"It may seem like trying to put the genie back into the bottle," Wojciech Lipi?ski, Dr. Sc.Techn.,said. "But it already has been proven with laboratory scale equipment. The process uses three of the world's most abundant and inexpensive resources. Sunlight is the energy source and carbon dioxide and water are the raw materials."

Lipi?ski also discussed another project that uses inexpensive calcium oxide, made from ordinary limestone, to capture carbon dioxide (CO2) before it leaves the smokestacks of coal-fired electric power stations. The CO2 reacts with calcium oxide, forming calcium carbonate, the same material in blackboard chalk, some calcium dietary supplements and some antacids. The calcium carbonate then goes into a reactor that removes the CO2 and regenerates the calcium oxide for another encounter with CO2.

Both processes use highly concentrated sunlight as the energy source. The test facility built at the University of Minnesota by Lipi?ski and his colleague Jane Davidson, Ph.D., is a high-flux solar simulator consisting of seven 6,500-watt light bulbs and mirrors that focus the light into a spot about 2 inches in diameter. Temperatures in that spot can reach 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit, way beyond the melting point of steel.

In smokestack process, that heat would remove the carbon dioxide from calcium carbonate and regenerate the calcium oxide. In the genie-out-of-the-bottle CO2 process, that heat fosters breakdown of carbon dioxide and water to form carbon monoxide and hydrogen, the two components of "synthesis gas" or "syngas."

The name comes from its time-tested use -- for more than a century -- in making or synthesizing other products. Syngas can be converted into synthetic hydrocarbons, for instance, gasoline, diesel and jet fuel or aviation kerosene. Jet fuel is already industrially produced in significant quantities from syngas obtained from coal and natural gas. Lipi?ski and his colleagues are developing prototype reactors to demonstrate syngas production from water and captured carbon dioxide in the solar simulator. A full-scale commercial facility would use a field of mirrors to focus sunlight onto a central reactor, similar to the emerging concentrated solar power, or CSP, facilities that now use heat from sunlight to produce electricity.

Lipi?ski noted that the sunlight-to-synfuels technology could be the basis of "carbon-neutral" energy production, in which CO2 is reused, with the same amount released into the air from burning of fossil fuels removed and put back into synfuels. With their similarity in composition to conventional fuels and long history of use, synfuels made with the solar process also would not require a new infrastructure.

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Story Source:

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

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/BNXzlEN75YM/130408152855.htm

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A Reporter Explains Why Gun Coverage Is So Biased (Powerlineblog)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/297215129?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Manuel Llorente resigned as president of Spanish La Liga football club Valencia...

Manuel Llorente resigned as president of Spanish La Liga football club Valencia after almost four years in charge. Llorente quit Friday over the new patrons of Valencia Foundation, which is the club's maximum shareholder, Xinhua reports. Llorente had ?

Source: http://www.facebook.com/barcelonanewsnet/posts/508036865927593

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Your Income Tax Return - Made Simple | Visual.ly

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://visual.ly/your-income-tax-return-made-simple

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Mike Tyson's Wife Files Lawsuit Against Stalker

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/mike-tysons-wife-files-lawsuit-against-stalker/

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Shadow Creek golf course: Where not even the president can get a tee time

Image

Courtesy of Shadow Creek

Shadow Creek Golf Club, located in North Las Vegas and owned by MGM Resorts International, was listed at No. 10 on ?Golfweek?s? Best Modern Golf Courses?list.

Click to enlarge photo

Mark Brenneman, general manager of famed golf course Shadow Creek in North Las Vegas.

Michael Jordan 2011 Celebrity Invitational

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Michael Jordan's MJCI at Shadow Creek

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Map of Shadow Creek Golf Course

3 Shadow Creek Drive, North Las Vegas

Mark Brenneman traces his history as manager of Shadow Creek ? the swank, exclusive golf club owned by MGM Resorts International ? to a day 12 years ago when he was caddying.

Mind you, Brenneman was caddying that day for golfing great Nick Faldo, whose playing partner was Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. The venue was Pebble Beach, a public golf resort steeped in American golf lore.

It?s about a nine-hour car ride from the Monterey Peninsula and Pebble Beach to Shadow Creek, a golfing oasis in the Mojave Desert that has grown to be somewhat of its own legend ? a course where Tiger Woods practices and former U.S. presidents and movie stars come to unwind.

Brenneman, in his job running Shadow Creek, now serves as golf pro and caddy for the most elite players. The course opens its gates to the public only on rare occasions, including this weekend's Michael Jordan Celebrity Invitational.

But back to that round between Faldo and Gates.

It was a few days before the U.S. Open. Brenneman wanted to be close to Faldo, a three-time winner of the British Open and owner of three green jackets signifying championships at the Masters. Brenneman, the golf pro at Spyglass Hill at Pebble Beach, assigned himself to be Faldo's caddy that day.

At the end of the round, Brenneman got an unexpected phone call from a corporate headhunter about a job in Las Vegas.

"Which golf course?" Brenneman remembered asking the recruiter.

"I can't tell you," he answered.

"Then I'm not interested," Brenneman said.

Still, the headhunter asked for Brenneman?s r?sum?. Brenneman had it handy on his computer, so he attached it to an email and sent it with a shrug. He was scheduled in a few days to be at the U.S. Open at Hazeltine National Golf Club in Chaska, Minn. But the next day, the headhunter called back. Bobby Baldwin, CEO of MGM Mirage Resorts, wanted to hire Brenneman.

Finally, Brenneman learned the golf course he was supposed to run was Shadow Creek.

"This course had been shrouded in mystery and people talked about it in whispers," Brenneman said. "I at least wanted to see it."

He took the job, and the golf course retains the same level of mystery today.

"It's never been on TV," he said. "We don't advertise and don't market ourselves. You have to stay at an MGM Resorts property."

No matter who you are.

A few years back, Brenneman got a call asking if then-President George W. Bush could play a round while he was in Las Vegas. Problem was, Bush was staying at a hotel owned by a competitor of MGM Resorts International. Sorry, Brenneman had to say. Just weeks later, Brenneman received a call from the office of Canada's prime minister, who was visiting under the same circumstances. Brenneman said sorry, again.

"You understand we're talking about the prime minister of Canada," the voice on the other end of the phone said.

"I know," Brenneman answered. "But if I can't let our president of the United States play here, then the prime minister can't either."

Bush would get his chance to play at the course last year, when he was speaking at the Aria, which also serves as host resort for the Jordan Celebrity Invitational. Bush?s father, George H.W. Bush, also has been a regular at Shadow Creek and keeps a fishing pole above his locker. He fishes out of one of the ponds on the course. Former President Bill Clinton has played there, too, along with high-rollers from MGM casinos who want to take a break from the craps or blackjack tables or baccarat rooms.

"We have greens fees of $500 a person that people can pay, but most are invited guests of the casino," Brenneman said.

Except for an occasional former president fishing in a pond, Shadow Creek is all about golf. There are no swimming pools or tennis courts typically seen at other golf clubs.

"You can find those at the casinos," Brenneman said in a voice that always sounds like he's smiling.

Steve Wynn built Shadow Creek for somewhere between $45 million and $60 million in 1989 on a flat piece of desert land, just off Losee Road in North Las Vegas. Designed by Tom Fazio, who has planned more of the 100 top-rated golf courses than any other architect, Shadow Creek rose out of imported dirt on the desert floor, with winding brooks with waterfalls, where players cross cobblestone bridges and walk amid pine and juniper trees. Snowy white egrets and blue herons swoop overhead. The Air Force Thunderbirds fly practice rounds in the distance from nearby Nellis Air Force Base.

MGM took over the 320-acre course in the same deal in which it acquired the Bellagio and Mirage from Wynn.

Even after all these years, Brenneman still marvels at how nearby mountains look off one of the tees.

"See how the mountain range goes high left to low right?" Brenneman says. "Your eyes will always move along a diagonal."

At the end of that line is the green and the hole.

"And that's where you want to go," he said. "Little stuff like that makes all the difference. All the mountain ranges come into play in all these interesting ways."

Tall trees line the fairways, both as a buffer to the industrial areas surrounding the picturesque golf course as well as hiding what's around the next corner.

"You'll be driving along and all of the sudden the course reveals itself," Brenneman said. "You never know who's going to jump out of a limo and walk through the door; you don't know what's around the next corner."

Matt Damon, George Clooney and Sylvester Stallone have their names on brass plates over lockers. The plates are magnetic and can be swapped out to put another name next to the lockers of celebrities such as Jordan and Woods.

"I remember one day, Matt Damon was here, and he was walking through the locker room," Brenneman said. "He made a beeline right to his locker to make sure it was still there. When he saw his name, he pumped his fist. It's interesting to see people, no matter how famous they are or how much money they have, get excited about these things."

Such excitement can be attributed to Brenneman's own personality. He reacts with glee and amazement, showing visitors around a course he's seen daily for 12 years. It?s like a child seeing wrapped presents under the tree on Christmas morning. Each day, he drives from his home near Sahara Avenue and Valley View Boulevard toward an area of storage rentals and auto-repair shops. Most people making the turn off Craig Road onto Losee Road and toward the hidden valley of Shadow Creek usually arrive by limousine.

Just like his journey to Las Vegas started with a golf game between a golf champion and a titan of business, Brenneman continues to live a kind of fantasy life amid a forest carved out of the desert.

And that's kind of what Shadow Creek is meant to be ? an escape from the Strip.

"See that arched bridge over there?? Brenneman asks as he drives a cart around the course. ?Normally, an architect would put that front and center, like, ?Look at me.? Here it's 50 yards off the hole. It's subtle. That's different.

"Las Vegas is known for a lot of things, and subtlety isn't one of them. On a conscious level, the players who come here know they're in Las Vegas, but you also look at this and think you could be anywhere else but Nevada."

Shadow Creek Golf Course

3 Shadow Creek Drive North Las Vegas, NV 89031

702-399-7111

Source: http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2013/apr/06/jordan-celebrity-invitational-allow-rare-public-gl/

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