Saturday, June 30, 2012

Tiny Tyrannosaur's Mysterious Origins Divide Scientists

Years before the Mongolian president intervened in the auction of a tyrannosaur skeleton thought to have been illegally taken from that country, a fossilized dinosaur with similarly controversial origins followed a very different path.

Once removed from the rock, the bones of this dinosaur would, to some, reveal the existence of a new species of tiny but unmistakable predator. However, given few clues as to where these fossils came out of the ground, paleontologists have yet to resolve the debate about the dinosaur's true identity.

At a fossil show about nine years ago, a dealer approached Henry Kriegstein, a fossil collector and eye surgeon in Massachusetts, with photos of a block of rock that contained the remains of a small, meat-eating dinosaur curled up in a death pose. Enough of the fossils had been exposed for Kriegstein to suspect he was looking at a juvenile tyrannosaur, and he purchased the chunk of stone and fossil. [Image Gallery: Dinosaur Daycare]

An illegal export?

The dealer told Kriegstein that he had bought the fossils from someone else and offered only the most vague details about its origin, Kriegstein said. "I knew it came from Asia, so I had suspicions it may have been removed illegally."

He was suspicious because Asian nations, such as Mongolia and China, don't allow the export of fossils excavated within their borders. In the case of the tyrannosaur, a species known as Tarbosaurus bataar, paleontologists say the specimen originated in Mongolia, where law makes fossils the property of the state and smuggling them out a crime.

Too important to keep

Kriegstein said he sent his purchase to a commercial paleontological company, Western Paleontological Laboratories in Utah, to have the fossils removed from the rock. While work was under way, the company sent Kenneth Carpenter, a paleontologist at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, photos of the specimen.

"When they contacted me they had not finished the cleaning of the bones. It still had a lot of rock on it, but what I saw in the pictures was tantalizing. It looked different," said Carpenter, who is now curator of paleontology at the Prehistoric Museum at Utah State University-Eastern. [Image Gallery: Dinosaur Fossils]

Later, after seeing the fossils in person, Carpenter told Kriegstein in a letter that the fossils were important to science and should be donated to a museum. ?

"I don't want to have an important specimen like that in my living room," Kriegstein said after receiving the letter.

He sent photos to Paul Sereno, a University of Chicago paleontologist he admired.

?

Dinosaur detective work

"This was not a composite of multiple specimens or a forgery carved by a desperate fossil dealer.? I could see a mini tyrannosaur," Sereno wrote.

Kriegstein agreed to donate the dinosaur to the University of Chicago, so Sereno could formally describe it, requesting that the new dinosaur be named after his father, Roman Kriegstein.

Figuring out where the dinosaur came from was crucial to understanding what it was. In research published in the journal Science in 2009, Sereno and colleagues concluded it was taken from the ground in the Yixian Formation of northern China based on characteristics of the fossils, the sandstone that entombed them, and the mollusks and fish bones contained with them. This origin would make the specimen about 125 million years old.

Based on an examination of the bones, they suggested the 9-foot-long (less than 3 meters) specimen was something extraordinary: A miniature ancestor and look-alike to the giant tyrannosaurs epitomized by Tyrannosaurus rex and its Asian cousin, Tarbosaurus bataar. This little dinosaur, which they classified as a young adult, shared their distinctive features, including the oversize head with powerful jaws, puny arms and lanky hind legs for running, but it evolved much earlier, Sereno?s team concluded. ?

Keeping with Kriegstein?s request, Sereno named the dinosaur Raptorex kriegsteini.

The debate

But not everyone accepts his take. A re-analysis published in PLoS ONE in 2011 by other researchers challenged Sereno's conclusion regarding the age of the dinosaur and its origin, suggesting the fossils actually belonged to a juvenile Tarbosaurus from Mongolia.

Carpenter, whose letter prompted Kriegstein to donate the fossils, agrees to this latter assessment, citing features of the vertebrae that he says indicate the dinosaur had not yet matured.

"Of course, it depends on where it comes from, if it is from rocks much older than any tarbosaur, then Paul is essentially correct," Carpenter said.

Tarbosaurus specimens have been found only in the Nemegt Formation in Mongolia, a rock formation dated to the Maastrichtian Age, beginning around 70 million years ago ? much younger than Sereno's estimate for Raptorex.

"That is why it would be crucial to find out where this specimen came from," Carpenter said.

At this point, he puts the chances of a definitive answer at "zip," saying, "Nobody is going to come forward and say, 'Yes, we are the ones who plundered the site.'"

Sereno has stood by his initial conclusion ? "We are confident it is not a tarbosaur," he said ? although he considers the fossils origin to be in dispute and has continued looking for more conclusive evidence to tie them to a particular place.?

"We've tried every line of attack," he said. Currently, he is hoping mollusks found with the specimen will solve the puzzle.

Sereno has made arrangements to send the fossils to a museum in China near the site where he believes they were discovered.

Follow Wynne Parry on Twitter @Wynne_Parry?or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tiny-tyrannosaurs-mysterious-origins-divide-scientists-194955088.html

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Marvel?s Guardians Of The Galaxy Screenwriter Came Up The Disney Inside Track

With Marvel now putting their Guardians of the Galaxy movie into gear for a 2014 release, leaving Black Panther to play catch up, more details of the film are squeaking out ahead of an official announcement at Comic-Con in? well, just over two weeks.

According to Variety there?s a finished, well-liked script for the film by Nicole Perlman, a graduate of Disney?s screenwriting program. She?s previously been lauded for other scripts, with Google turning up references to Kiss and Tango, Challenger and Capture the Flag, though neither seems to have entered production. Challenger would have been about Richard Feynman?s part in investigating the Space Shuttle disaster. Sounds like an incredibly good starting point for a story. Capture the Flag would be about privately funded space travel.

Basically, it looks like she?s good on the subject real science. Which is exactly why I want to see her write something like Guardians, with its space faring Raccoons and plant creatures.

Perlman apparently once wrote an essay called Nicotine and Chocolate Cake which either pays homage to Rufus Wainwright or would seem to owe him some royalties.

In short, I?ve not been able to find much interesting info on Ms. Perlman lying around on the internet. I wanted to stumble upon one of her screenplays. Maybe I wasn?t trying hard enough.

Source: http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/06/29/marvels-guardians-of-the-galaxy-screenwriter-came-up-the-disney-inside-track/

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Every Man a Historian Means Every Man: Speaking with the Fringe

The amazing power of the internet age is the pure democratizing ethic it has injected into our culture. We aren't simply pleased when the world around us solicits and listens to our opinions, we've come to expect it. Every news story has a comment thread; every article asks for our feedback. The White House solicits input from the American "user" and offers meaningful responses. In short, we are a people who are growing more vocal in our daily lives. The brilliant constitutional law professor and master of cultural Lawrence Lessig has called our culture "Read-Write" as opposed to "Read-Only."

What does this have to do with anything? This past weekend was the annual Civil War Institute at Gettysburg College. One of the perks of being a faculty member is getting to sneak into the back for a few of the sessions. I snuck into Sunday's panel on Civil War Blogging, featuring A-list bloggers Kevin Levin (CWMemory.com), Brooks D. Simpson (Crossroads) and Keith Harris (Cosmic America). And one of the challenges which arose from the audience during the conversation was a desire for authority in blogs.

One commenter noted that he reads Crossroads because he has faith in Simpson as a historian, that he trusts Brooks' authority thanks to his published work. Another commenter asked if the Organization or American Historians or the CWI should publish a listing of "approved blogs."

Luckily, Brooks eviscerated the concept pretty handily by noting that the commenter was simply trying to impose a new authority on a medium essentially lacking in authority. And Brooks voiced the fear that if there were authoritative blogs, the world of the Civil War internet would simply devolve into a mirror of academia: historians writing for themselves and themselves alone. Brooks' comments were masterful, and will hopefully show up on C-SPAN sooner rather than later.

But the strongest conversation came when moderator Peter Carmichael the question of why we even listen to the fringe elements floating on the internet. Why should we even allow the voices of the "uninformed" enter the dialogue at all?

But here's the flaw in demanding authority be exercised on the democratic net: it's undemocratic. If every man is an historian, able to read the sources, find the data and come to his own conclusions, then we need to encourage every man to be an historian, not just the ones we think aren't whackjobs.

We do get to set the rules of the debate in our forums. On our blogs, that means we can ask commenters to be civil, and some of us go as far as to choose not to host comments we find counterproductive. In our parks and historic sites, that means we can ask folks to be civil, to listen to others' views respectfully and to investigate the historical sources honestly. But if we truly believe in the ethic of the internet, we can't simply allow only those who agree with us to speak.

In the end, democracy is about faith in the marketplace of ideas. I trust the intelligence of the American people. I think they can all be their own historians. Writing off a portion of the people is never going to help them to see the historical evidence, read it carefully and find true meaning in the past.

Writing them off, refusing to have real meaningful dialogue with them can only serve to alienate them.

The "every" in "every man a historian" really means "every." If you start from that point and move forward, the democracy of ideas truly means something.

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Keeping Your Home Cool For Less! | Kent HVAC Contractor

Heat getting you down? The cost of cooling your living environment even worse? Well, you?re in luck with these tips to keep your house or apartment cooler while remaining eco-friendly. The old-fashioned fan being at the top of this list. Ceiling or floor fans help to circulate the air while creating a nice, cooling breeze. A trick called ?ice-water fanning? (placing a bowl of shallow ice water behind a directional fan) will create a cooler breeze for any room! However, fans circulate the air, but do not necessarily cool your entire house. Therefore, when leaving a room, turn the fan off to conserve electricity.

Outdoor Ceiling Fan Keeping Your Home Cool For Less

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Utilize your windows during the evening hours once the sun goes down. Doing so gives your air conditioning unit a nice break while letting in that sweet summer air. While the sun is beaming high during the day, be sure to keep your blinds and shades closed tightly to keep out the extra heat that is assisting in warming your house.

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Be weary of the usage of appliances in your house as well. The use of your oven, washing machine, dish washer, or dryer may be putting off some unwanted heat. A few alternative options are available for the lack of use with your routinely used appliances; grill your food, air-dry your clothing, hand wash the dishes.

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Make sure your house has proper insulation. Insulating your home thoroughly, especially your attic space, will create vast improvements in keeping you cool without cranking up your thermostat. Not only will this insulation keep out the heat in the winter and keep in your cold, it will have the opposite effect in the winter. Weather stripping around your windows and doors will also assist in keeping the heat out and the cool air in.

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Cost-efficient and eco-friendly; keep cool for less!

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Texas man gets 40 years in stand-your-ground case

Raul Rodriguez weeps in the beginning of his trial at Harris County Criminal Courthouse on Monday, June 25, 2012, in Houston. Relatives of Rodriguez, who claimed Texas' version of a stand-your-ground law allowed him to fatally shoot a neighbor after an argument about a noisy party, told jurors Monday he was not an abusive person and always stressed the importance of gun safety. He faces up to life in prison for the 2010 killing of Kelly Danaher. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Mayra Beltran)

Raul Rodriguez weeps in the beginning of his trial at Harris County Criminal Courthouse on Monday, June 25, 2012, in Houston. Relatives of Rodriguez, who claimed Texas' version of a stand-your-ground law allowed him to fatally shoot a neighbor after an argument about a noisy party, told jurors Monday he was not an abusive person and always stressed the importance of gun safety. He faces up to life in prison for the 2010 killing of Kelly Danaher. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Mayra Beltran)

Raul Rodriguez sits in court in the beginning of his trial at Harris County Criminal Courthouse on Monday, June 25, 2012, in Houston. Relatives of Rodriguez, who claimed Texas' version of a stand-your-ground law allowed him to fatally shoot a neighbor after an argument about a noisy party, told jurors Monday he was not an abusive person and always stressed the importance of gun safety. He faces up to life in prison for the 2010 killing of Kelly Danaher. (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Mayra Beltran)

(AP) ? A man who claimed Texas' version of a stand-your-ground law allowed him to fatally shoot a neighbor after an argument about a noisy party was sentenced Wednesday to 40 years in prison for murder.

Raul Rodriguez, 46, had faced up to life in prison for the 2010 killing of Kelly Danaher. He will be eligible for parole in 20 years.

"I think it sends a clear message that this was not a case of stand your ground," prosecutor Kelli Johnson said of the sentence.

Rodriguez, a retired Houston-area firefighter, was angry about the noise coming from a birthday party at his neighbor's home. He went over and got into an argument with 36-year-old elementary school teacher Danaher and two other men at the party.

In a 22-minute video he recorded on the night of the shooting, Rodriguez can be heard telling a police dispatcher "my life is in danger now" and "these people are going to go try and kill me." He then said, "I'm standing my ground here," and fatally shot Danaher and wounded the other two men.

Rodriguez's reference to standing his ground is similar to the claim made by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer who is citing Florida's stand-your-ground law in his defense in the fatal February shooting of an unarmed teenager, Trayvon Martin. Rodriguez's case, however, was decided under a different kind of self-defense doctrine.

Defense attorney William Stradley said Rodriguez's family was disappointed with his sentence and that the case was tragic for everyone involved.

"He understands that what he's done is difficult and obviously if he could go back and change it he would," Stradley said.

Mindy Danaher, the wife of the man Rodriguez killed, said, "Nothing will be enough. It's not going to bring Kelly back. I just want (Rodriguez) to be in there forever."

Kelly Danaher's mother, Connie, read a statement in court in which she called Rodriguez a "hateful coward."

"Eternal fire and damnation is not enough for what you took from us," she said.

Prosecutors called Rodriguez the aggressor who took a gun to complain about loud music and could have safely left his neighbor's driveway in Huffman, an unincorporated area about 30 miles northeast of Houston, any time before the shooting. Defense attorneys argued Rodriguez was defending himself when one of the men lunged at him and he had less than a second to respond.

At trial, prosecutors tried to show Rodriguez had a history of not getting along with Danaher and other neighbors.

One neighbor testified that Rodriguez, who had a concealed handgun license, bragged about his guns and told her a person could avoid prosecution in a shooting by telling authorities you were in fear of your life and were standing your ground and defending yourself. During the trial's punishment phase, neighbors, former co-workers and Rodriguez's ex-wife testified that Rodriguez was abusive, a bad neighbor and that he once shot a dog.

Rodriguez's attorneys did not present any witnesses before the jury convicted him on June 13. But during the punishment phase, they called more than a dozen witnesses, including his wife and sons. They and other family members testified that he was not abusive, always stressed the importance of gun safety and that he was not cavalier with his weapons. One son said Rodriguez shot the dog because it was attacking his family.

Texas' version of a stand-your-ground law is known as the Castle Doctrine. It was revised in 2007 to expand the right to use deadly force. The new version allows people to defend themselves in their homes, workplaces or vehicles. It also says a person using force cannot provoke the attacker or be involved in criminal activity at the time.

Associated Press

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World champ Williams makes team despite struggles

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) ? The persistent rain ruined high jumper Jesse Williams' rhythm and nearly washed away his Olympic chances right along with it.

The reigning world champion bowed out of the competition in fourth place at the U.S. Olympic trials on Monday night.

A potential disaster for a jumper the Americans are counting on to secure some sort of medal at the London Games.

Only the top three earn spots to the Olympics, provided they have reached the Olympic "A'' standard of 7 feet, 7 inches. And someone did indeed fail to hit that mark, third-place finisher Nick Ross.

Like that, Williams backed his way onto the team in an event that Jamie Nieto won with a jump of 7-5 ?, while Erik Kynard took second.

It wasn't the way Williams wanted to make the squad. He vowed to train more in the rain, especially because this just might be the type of weather he encounters in London.

"These conditions, they were tough," said Williams, who struggled at 7-5 ?, missing it twice before finally clearing the height. "It was difficult for me to get in a groove and jump to my capabilities.

"The whole goal was to make London and now I'm there and I want to get on top of the podium. This is not deterring my goal."

While Williams made it to London through the backdoor, 800-meter runner Nick Symmonds finished in style. He won his fifth straight U.S. title by easily holding off 35-year-old Khadevis Robinson and Duane Solomon.

For Symmonds, there was nothing wrong with a little drizzle. He's used to this type of inclement weather, being that he went to nearby Division III Willamette University and was running for the Oregon Track Club elite. He started far back in the pack but surged into the lead in the final 100 meters for the victory.

As Symmonds crossed the finish line, he spread out his arms in celebration and soaked up the cheers from the fans.

"This crowd just doesn't want to see me make the team," Symmonds. "They want to see me win. That makes me run with a little more aggression."

Around these parts, Symmonds is a rock star. And this only adds to his lore ? a date with hotel heiress Paris Hilton. There were even rumors swirling around that she might even show up at Hayward to watch him run. But she was a no-show.

Symmonds did make a little reference to her in his news conference, saying how his travels around the planet have led to some "incredible dates."

Robinson took it from there.

"What kind of program you on?" he said. "We're just at the track with our coach."

On this dreary night, Alysia Montano definitely stood out by wearing a bright yellow flower in her hair. The plastic decoration has become her trademark.

So has this: stepping up at big events. Montano earned her way to London in the 800, along with Geena Gall and Alice Schmidt.

In the javelin final, Sam Humphreys earned a win but not a spot on the team. His best throw of 268-7 failed to meet the required "A'' standard. Same with runner-up Sam Crouser.

So that means Craig Kinsley, Sean Furey and Cyrus Hostetler will represent the team ? the third-, fourth- and fifth-place finishers.

But at least that event has three qualifiers going. The women's triple jump will only send Amanda Smock to the Olympics because none of the others met the standard.

The trials will now take a two-day break, with the third-place tie between Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh in the women's 100 meters still hanging over the competition.

USA Track and Field came up with new procedures Sunday night designed to determine the third and final spot on the Olympic team for the London Games. Tarmoh was originally declared the third-place finisher in Saturday's race and the official scoring said she edged training partner Felix by 0.0001 seconds. But the results were reviewed, and after a lengthy delay, the dead heat was announced.

This has touched off a wave of controversy, especially because the national governing body had no protocol in place at the time to decide such situations.

But any publicity, good or bad, is just that ? publicity.

"I've seen this on everything from 'CNN' to the 'Today' show," said Max Siegel, the recently hired CEO for USATF. "We've got to capitalize on the attention they're giving us."

USATF President Stephanie Hightower also has seen this situation explode.

"I'm getting text and voice mails from all over the world," she said. "They are stay-at-home moms to retired folks to business leaders in my community, texting me, saying, 'They've got to do a runoff, not the coin toss.' It's becoming a media topic that I think is good for the sport."

Bobby Kersee, who coaches both sprinters, said Tarmoh and Felix won't decide anything until after they run the 200, with the final scheduled for Saturday.

Here are the options for Felix and Tarmoh to mull over during the down time: They can either decide who goes to London in the 100 by a flip of the coin or through a runoff.

"All we can do right now is understand what they're proposing," Kersee said. "We told them we're going to focus on the 200 meters and we'll deal with their proposal after the finish."

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Duplicate spending on veterans' care costs billions

Duplicate spending on veterans' care costs billions [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Carole Gan
carole.gan@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
916-734-9047
University of California - Davis Health System

(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) A new study published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) found that the federal government made about $13 billion in duplicative payments to provide health-care services to veterans who were simultaneously enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans from 2004-2009. The study was conducted by researchers at Brown University, VA Palo Alto Medical Center and the Institute for Population Health Improvement at UC Davis Health System.

Some veterans are entitled to health-care coverage through both the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System and Medicare. But under current law, the federal government often ends up paying twice for care of veterans when they are also enrolled in Medicare Advantage managed-care plans. And with the growing popularity of Medicare Advantage plans among all seniors, including veterans, the annual duplicative costs are rising. Nearly 30 percent of Medicare beneficiaries are now enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans.

"These 'dual eligible' veterans earned the right to receive care through both VA and Medicare, but that does not mean that the government has to pay twice for their care," said Kenneth W. Kizer, a former VA Under Secretary for Health and now a professor and director of the Institute for Population Health Improvement at the University of California, Davis, Health System."The problem could be fixed without reducing benefits to veterans."

"Duplicative costs occur because of way the federal government pays for Medicare Advantage services for veterans, not because veterans are receiving unnecessary care or doing anything wrong," he added.

Veterans who are disabled or over age 65 and have been paying into the Medicare program are eligible for Medicare just like any other American. Veterans who live far from a VA hospital or clinic may especially rely on Medicare coverage for acute or emergency care. But unlike the traditional Medicare fee-for-service program, Medicare Advantage plans are paid in advance to provide all needed care for the beneficiary. If the person enrolled in the Medicare Advantage plan then gets his or her medical care in another federal health plan such as the VA, it means that the federal government has paid twice for care of the same person. Most of the Medicare Advantage plans are for-profit health plans.

To assess duplicative costs, the researchers conducted a comprehensive review of VA and Medicare records for more than 1 million veterans over a 6-year period. The researchers found that 61 percent of doubly-covered veterans used both VA and Medicare Advantage coverage, with 10 percent of dual-eligible veterans receiving all their health care from the VA. That is, 10 percent of these dual eligible veterans received all their health care from the VA despite Medicare paying the Medicare Advantage plan to provide those services. About 4 percent of the dual-eligible veterans sought no care from Medicare Advantage or the VA, and 35 percent used Medicare only.

The number of veterans doubly covered by Medicare Advantage and the VA has risen nearly 53 percent in recent years, from 485,651 in 2004 to 924,792 in 2009. The yearly federal spending in the VA for these dual-eligible veterans rose from $1.3 billion in 2004 to $3.2 billion in 2009. The costs to take care of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries now amounts to 10 percent of the VA's budget for medical care.

But Kizer believes the government can eliminate the duplicative spending without reducing care for veterans by changing the way that Medicare Advantage payment rates are calculated or by changing the law so that the VA could bill Medicare Advantage plans for care that it provides to veterans, as is currently the case with private insurance plans. While the VA may bill private insurers, the law does not allow VA to bill Medicare or Medicare Advantage plans.

"In light of the severe financial pressure facing the Medicare program, policymakers should take steps to identify and eliminate redundant expenditures such as found in this study," Kizer said.

###

In addition to Kizer, the study's other authors include Amal Trivedi, Regina Grebla, Lan Jiang and Vincent Mor at the Providence VA Medical Center and Jean Yoon at the VA Palo Alto Medical Center.

The VA and the National Institute on Aging funded the research.

UC Davis Health System is improving lives and transforming health care by providing excellent patient care, conducting groundbreaking research, fostering innovative, interprofessional education, and creating dynamic, productive partnerships with the community. The academic health system includes one of the country's best medical schools, a 619-bed acute-care teaching hospital, a 1000-member physician's practice group and the new Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing. It is home to a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center, an international neurodevelopmental institute, a stem cell institute and a comprehensive children's hospital. Other nationally prominent centers focus on advancing telemedicine, improving vascular care, eliminating health disparities and translating research findings into new treatments for patients. Together, they make UC Davis a hub of innovation that is transforming health for all. For more information, visit healthsystem.ucdavis.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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


Duplicate spending on veterans' care costs billions [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Jun-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Carole Gan
carole.gan@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu
916-734-9047
University of California - Davis Health System

(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) A new study published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) found that the federal government made about $13 billion in duplicative payments to provide health-care services to veterans who were simultaneously enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans from 2004-2009. The study was conducted by researchers at Brown University, VA Palo Alto Medical Center and the Institute for Population Health Improvement at UC Davis Health System.

Some veterans are entitled to health-care coverage through both the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Care System and Medicare. But under current law, the federal government often ends up paying twice for care of veterans when they are also enrolled in Medicare Advantage managed-care plans. And with the growing popularity of Medicare Advantage plans among all seniors, including veterans, the annual duplicative costs are rising. Nearly 30 percent of Medicare beneficiaries are now enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans.

"These 'dual eligible' veterans earned the right to receive care through both VA and Medicare, but that does not mean that the government has to pay twice for their care," said Kenneth W. Kizer, a former VA Under Secretary for Health and now a professor and director of the Institute for Population Health Improvement at the University of California, Davis, Health System."The problem could be fixed without reducing benefits to veterans."

"Duplicative costs occur because of way the federal government pays for Medicare Advantage services for veterans, not because veterans are receiving unnecessary care or doing anything wrong," he added.

Veterans who are disabled or over age 65 and have been paying into the Medicare program are eligible for Medicare just like any other American. Veterans who live far from a VA hospital or clinic may especially rely on Medicare coverage for acute or emergency care. But unlike the traditional Medicare fee-for-service program, Medicare Advantage plans are paid in advance to provide all needed care for the beneficiary. If the person enrolled in the Medicare Advantage plan then gets his or her medical care in another federal health plan such as the VA, it means that the federal government has paid twice for care of the same person. Most of the Medicare Advantage plans are for-profit health plans.

To assess duplicative costs, the researchers conducted a comprehensive review of VA and Medicare records for more than 1 million veterans over a 6-year period. The researchers found that 61 percent of doubly-covered veterans used both VA and Medicare Advantage coverage, with 10 percent of dual-eligible veterans receiving all their health care from the VA. That is, 10 percent of these dual eligible veterans received all their health care from the VA despite Medicare paying the Medicare Advantage plan to provide those services. About 4 percent of the dual-eligible veterans sought no care from Medicare Advantage or the VA, and 35 percent used Medicare only.

The number of veterans doubly covered by Medicare Advantage and the VA has risen nearly 53 percent in recent years, from 485,651 in 2004 to 924,792 in 2009. The yearly federal spending in the VA for these dual-eligible veterans rose from $1.3 billion in 2004 to $3.2 billion in 2009. The costs to take care of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries now amounts to 10 percent of the VA's budget for medical care.

But Kizer believes the government can eliminate the duplicative spending without reducing care for veterans by changing the way that Medicare Advantage payment rates are calculated or by changing the law so that the VA could bill Medicare Advantage plans for care that it provides to veterans, as is currently the case with private insurance plans. While the VA may bill private insurers, the law does not allow VA to bill Medicare or Medicare Advantage plans.

"In light of the severe financial pressure facing the Medicare program, policymakers should take steps to identify and eliminate redundant expenditures such as found in this study," Kizer said.

###

In addition to Kizer, the study's other authors include Amal Trivedi, Regina Grebla, Lan Jiang and Vincent Mor at the Providence VA Medical Center and Jean Yoon at the VA Palo Alto Medical Center.

The VA and the National Institute on Aging funded the research.

UC Davis Health System is improving lives and transforming health care by providing excellent patient care, conducting groundbreaking research, fostering innovative, interprofessional education, and creating dynamic, productive partnerships with the community. The academic health system includes one of the country's best medical schools, a 619-bed acute-care teaching hospital, a 1000-member physician's practice group and the new Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing. It is home to a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center, an international neurodevelopmental institute, a stem cell institute and a comprehensive children's hospital. Other nationally prominent centers focus on advancing telemedicine, improving vascular care, eliminating health disparities and translating research findings into new treatments for patients. Together, they make UC Davis a hub of innovation that is transforming health for all. For more information, visit healthsystem.ucdavis.edu.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


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


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Business traveller in Tokyo? isde-summit-2008.org


Just landed in Tokyo, and I had little time to prepare this trip (other than the business side). I just have a guide book, and 10 days ? most will be business, but if someone has good idea about what to do else ? bearing in mind that a woman travelling alone can be made feel "unconfortable" here?.

Ideally, I am looking at a couple of off-the-beaten-track ideas, some shopping ideas (not the classy department stores at a zillion dollars for a pantyhose!!!), and one or two night-time ideas that are safe and will take me out of my lonely hotel room with a blasting japanese tv (courses of german in japanese was this morning?s show).

THHHHAAAANKKKKKKKS!!!

I am a lonely lilith here.
oh, yeah? I should have said I am in Akasaka.

For tourist kinds of things, I recommend the Tokyo Tower, the Imperial Palace or Meiji Park/Shrine. For shopping, your options there are endless. There are an endless number of department stores.

http://www.tourism.metro.tokyo.jp/english/

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Under the abaya, Saudi women grasp reform toehold

(Reuters) - Deema al-Mashabi is eager to show off the gold brocade decorating the folds of her abaya. She designed her own robe ? the traditionally all-black, enveloping gown that observant Muslim women wear in public.

For al-Mashabi, appearing in public in a customized style is not just a fashion statement, but a symbol of the changes taking place in her native Saudi Arabia.

"A lot of women are designing their own abayas now," she said of her reversible garment.

Indeed, the glitzed-up abayas being seen all over Saudi Arabia, stand as a metaphor for the gains women are making in this oil-rich kingdom. Women are not throwing off their cloaks, but they are making modest inroads in loosening the restrictions that govern this male-ordered, conservative country, which is a key U.S. ally in the Middle East.

That is the impression gained by a group of senior American editors ? including this reporter - who visited Riyadh last month as fellows of the International Reporting Project at Johns Hopkins University. Although men remain dominant and women's rights are severely limited by Western standards, there are signs of incremental change in education and politics, as well as fashion.

Like the decorations on the abayas, the movement is often nuanced and visible only on the fringes.

Like Henry Ford and his Model T, which he told customers they could have in any color so long as it was black, abayas still come almost exclusively in only one color. But in Riyadh's upscale Faisaliah mall, many now boast glittery embroidered caricatures and carry a price tag in riyal equivalent to $500. In Jeddah's old town market, rows of abayas selling for about $20 showcase beadwork of flowers and sunbursts. Women are finally being allowed to sell lingerie to other women, a significant change from the days when only men could handle the sale of bras. Soon, women will be allowed to sell make-up, too.

Livelier clothes hardly make for a Saudi Spring, but the 18 months of protests and uprisings that have shaken the region have left their mark on this conservative kingdom. The ruling monarch, King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, swiftly responded to the Arab Spring turmoil with a package of incremental reforms that analysts say are aimed at maintaining the status quo without provoking a backlash from the powerful religious clergy.

Last year, he announced a $93 billion financial aid package for citizens and promised that women will be allowed to take part in the next municipal elections in 2015 - the only elections held in Saudi Arabia, which is ruled by an absolute monarchy. He also decreed that women can serve as full members of the Consultative Council, or Majlis al-Shura, a 150-member advisory council he appoints for four-year terms.

The king also acted swiftly after the death of Crown Prince Nayef last week to safeguard his reforming legacy by appointing a moderate successor. Less than a day after leading funeral prayers Sunday for his late heir, King Abdullah appointed as crown prince the pragmatic Prince Salman, a brother considered likely to continue the monarch's initiatives.

REINING IN THE MUTAWA

Perhaps the most noticeable Saudi lifestyle change comes from the reining in of the religious police, known as the mutawa but officially titled the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice. The commission's members often have functioned as volunteer vigilantes, raiding malls to chastise women for showing their hair or trying to catch couples suspected of dating.

Saudi analysts say the monarch is trying to curb the mutawa by his recent appointment of a more moderate leader and last month's firing of a royal adviser who criticized the mingling of men and women in the courts.

Analysts say the new mutawa head, Sheikh Abdullatiff Abdel Asiz al-Sheikh, is navigating a fine line between placating conservative clerics and curbing abusive mutawa. Earlier this month, he made local news when he criticized one of his men for ordering a woman out of a Riyadh mall for coloring her nails.

The nail incident was recorded and posted on YouTube by the woman involved ? an increasingly common publicity tactic used by Saudi women against the religious police.

It remains unclear, however, how much of a reformist the new religious police chief really is. Arrangements for our group to interview him stalled because it included women.

"We were told that he was reluctant to meet with a mixed gender group," said Louise Lief, the deputy director of the International Reporting Project, who led the editors' delegation to Saudi Arabia. "We were told that he would meet only with the men, but I would not agree to do that."

A Saudi Ministry of Information official told Reuters there had been an "unfortunate miscommunication" with the editors' group. One official familiar with the interview request believed the mutawa leader may have avoided it so as not to give ammunition to his conservative critics.

Meanwhile, bearded members of the mutawa continue to patrol for women who show strands of hair in public and to remove men ? only recently allowed to enter malls alone ? who they think are looking too closely at the robed female shoppers.

Other forms of gender segregation continue to be rigidly enforced: men and women have to stand in separate lines at fast food restaurants and eat in separate sections of coffee shops and food courts. Museums have different opening days for male and female visitors. Access to clothing stores is often restricted by gender, with "ladies only" signs at lingerie stores like the upscale La Perla chain.

Even in international hotels, foreign female guests are barred from the swimming pools or gyms. For exercise they are confined to makeshift hotel rooms ? often with euphemistic names such as the make-up room ? equipped with just two or three exercise machines.

For Saudi women and girls, restrictions extend to the playing field. Girls don't have exercise classes at school, and the few women's soccer and basketball teams must practice secretly. Saudi Arabia also refuses to include women in its London Olympics team, although one Saudi female equestrian may yet be permitted - but probably not as an official team member.

Saudi women do try to exercise in spite of the obstacles. There is a waiting list for the Curves gym in Riyadh, and the all-women Luthan hotel draws a loyal clientele to its elegant spa that comes complete with a biggest loser exercise class, a well-equipped gym, weight room and indoor pool.

EDUCATION IS KEY

One sign of change is that Saudi women are being encouraged to pursue world-class educations, with new schools opening for gifted girls and a greater emphasis on attending university. In 1965, the country's female literacy rate was 5 percent. Today, 60 percent of the college students in Saudi Arabia are women, and their employment rate has nearly tripled from 5.4 percent to 14.4 percent, according to a report in Thursday's Saudi Gazette.

The king has also launched a generous scholarship program for young Saudis to study abroad with about 130,000 students now enrolled at universities outside the country, about half of whom are in the United States. Many are women, yet they only are granted an award if a male relative travels with them.

Still, as these women return, the king may be hoping their exposure to the outside world will help him move mainstream opinion in favor of controlled change, observers say.

"I think it's a great success story," James B. Smith, the U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said of the scholarships. "Nothing is more valuable than cultures coming together and sharing experiences."

Even so, not all Saudi women necessarily want change. "For the average middle-class Saudi woman who comes from a healthy family background, life is pretty good," Eman Al Nafjan wrote this month in an op-ed column in the International Herald Tribune.

Nafjan, who spent part of her childhood in the American Middle West, in Kansas, agrees that Saudi women suffer from a "comparative lack of rights," but said that international coverage was forcing "painful cultural conflicts."

Affluent and educated Saudis do not consider their family members to be oppressed, she wrote, and "many Saudis regard the requirement that their mothers, wives and sisters obtain permission slips to leave the country or pursue higher education as nothing but a minor inconvenience."

But for some women, the limited reforms are not enough. A group of female activists this week called on women to get behind the wheel next week in defiance of a ban on women drivers, though many women say this is not their key concern.

"If you want to pick a battle, driving is the wrong one," said Princess Ameerah Al-Taweel, wife of Saudi billionaire businessman Prince Alwaleed bin Talal and the vice chairwoman of the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundations. "There are much more serious issues here."

The biggest issue, she said, is that divorced women are forced to give custody of their daughters to their ex-husbands.

"What I really want is a legal identity," said Fawziah Baker al-Bakr, a professor of education at King Saud University in Riyadh. "Women don't want to be kept as perpetual minors who need their husband's signature for everything."

Bakr does care about driving. Her participation in a public driving protest in the early 1990s led to her losing her job and having death threats force her out of her home. She's back at work now, but still has not met her male boss in person because women have to work in separate buildings.

Nonetheless, she remains optimistic that change in Saudi Arabia is indeed afoot. "There is a real ease in the pressure," she said. "But the problem is that the easing is not systematic. It's inconsistent and contradictory."

(Reporting by Arlene Getz; Editing by Angus McDowall and Leslie Adler)

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Saturday, June 23, 2012

What Is Included In SEO Services

Companies need a strong online presence to keep customers coming back for more. SEO services help businesses get to the top of searches and boost website traffic.

Millions of dollars are spent online and building a website for customers can boost business. Web design companies help companies reach a broad audience with different development techniques like flash animation and interactive media. Web developer services provide businesses with a web page that is easy to use and attractive to potential customers. It is important to maintain a site and do everything possible to get it to the top of search results because 89% of internet users find sites with the help of search engines according to Pew Research.

Hiring a website designer and a company that provides SEO services helps any business improve their online presence. Search engine optimization involves online advertising, marketing, and building a page that will come up early on search pages. 7Strategy is a full service website design company that handles web pages as well as online marketing. There are several different kinds of online marketing that help generate new customers and keep existing customers around. Some of the online marketing techniques and SEO services we use are email marketing, social media marketing, pay-per-click advertising, and link building.

At 7Strategy, we offer web design and development which includes the creation of mobile applications for smart phones. Mobile apps are becoming more important in the world of iPhones and Androids. We also handle order management and processing for ecommerce sites. The developers are experienced in Flash, interactive design, and even 3D services. An estimated 99% of web pages are not optimized for search engines. Businesses that take advantage of SEO can rise to the top. More information about 7Strategy and what we do to help businesses is available at http://www.7strategy.com.

7strategy is a progressive web design company and interactive agency that will help you develop engaging, functional and strategic solutions. We will show you how to harness the benefits of online customer engagement to ensure a quantifiable return on investment.

The following divisions of our company work in unison to strategically plan, develop and deploy your marketing solutions.

- Web Design & Development (including Microsites and Custom Ecommerce)
- Flash Design, Motion Graphics & Post Production
- 3D & Interactive Animation
- SEO Services & Search Engine Marketing (SEM)
- Strategic Planning & Brand Identity Development

For more information feel free to visit our website

http://www.7strategy.com

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Commerce Secretary Resigns (WSJ)

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Tabatha Coffey's Wedding Day Hair Dos

Tabatha Coffey

Brides-to-be have another reason to smile: Tabatha Coffey is turning their wedding day into a great hair day, too.

"Don't get so wrapped up in the dress and event details that you forget all about your hair until the last minute," the Tabatha Takes Over star warns BellaSugar.

Take the first step toward your dream ?do by doing your research. "I recommend that my clients look at fashion magazines and celebrity rags over wedding magazines for ideas. If you have a few different ideas for your hairstyle, then bring pictures to your pre-wedding hair consultation so that you can discuss your options with your hairstylist."

By the way, Kim Zolciak, you were right: Cutting your hair on your wedding day ? wig or not ? is a big no-no (SEE HER WEDDING PHOTO ALBUM). "I'm always surprised at the number of brides who want to cut and color their hair the day of the wedding. What if something goes wrong? Timing aside, haircuts and hair color usually look best once they've had time to ?settle in' and soften," T adds.

As her final blissful word to the wise, the It's Not Really About the Hair author reminds brides, "Be yourself ? but better. You don't want to be unrecognizable at your own wedding or, worse, cringe when you look back at your photos in the years to come. Go for a dressed-up version of a hairstyle that is most flattering to your face and figure."

Get more hair do and don't advice from Tabatha using our Tweet Tracker.

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96% Yellow Submarine

I don't mean to sound trite, but they should just rename this film "Drug Trip: The Movie" and be done with it. Seriously.Ok then, with that out of the way, I must say, this is a bit of a hard film to really rate or review. Obviously I'm gonna have to do just that, but it is a bit difficult for me.This fantasy centered around The Beatles going out to stop a bunch of creatures caleld Blue Meanies who have taken over a place called Pepperland combines the terrific music of The Beatles with really cool and unique art disrection and visual styles to create a film that is really just an otherworldlt experience. Just so you know, I didn't see this high, but I did have a couple of drinks. I really cn't say what would be the best way to experience this film. I leave that up to you.There's a story, but it's pretty much just a thin clothesline to hang some great tunes and trippy visuals on. This will probably not appeal to some people, but, I at least got something out of it, even if I don't truly know how I feel about this film-hence why my rating is mainly a formaility.I do think this should be seen though, because it is entertaining, and there's some wild stuff going on, even if it does get a bit too self indulgant with the psychedelia. At least there's the music and some subtle, dry humor to make the film more than just trippiness.

April 16, 2007

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Now She Tells Us (talking-points-memo)

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

America, Being Dumb (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

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overboard

Nissan says Leaf charger will start powering homes in July, details new battery (video)

nissan-leaf-charger-will-start-powering-homes-in-july

We kicked the tires on Nissan's Leaf-based EV Power Station in Tokyo a while back, and now the company has announced that Japanese customers will start receiving the home power backups in July. On top of trundling you around town, the EV's battery will supply 6kWh of juice to your house, keeping it powered for up to two days. It also features an advanced charger, which can juice the Leaf to 80% capacity in only four hours, compared to the eight usually required to get to that level. It'll be sold through Nissan dealers and will run 480,000 yen ($6,000), or less with government subsidies -- in addition to the $35K you'd need for the car itself, of course. Roll on past the break for the video details.

Continue reading Nissan says Leaf charger will start powering homes in July, details new battery (video)

Nissan says Leaf charger will start powering homes in July, details new battery (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 08:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sincerely Ink And Brit Morin?s Weduary Team Up On Wedding Invites Collection

sincerelyink_wedding_weduary_suiteSincerely, the startup behind photo and card-printing mobile apps?Postagram,?PopBooth,?Sincerely Ink?and?Dotti, has partnered with?Brit Morin's latest venture,??Weduary, a service for designing social wedding websites. Through the new partnership, Weduary will now offer a special collection of wedding invitations and other wedding-related cards within Sincerely's flagship app, Sincerely Ink.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

'Oprah's Next Chapter': 50 Cent Struggles To Name People Who Love Him; Have His Back (VIDEO)

There is a high price to fame that non-famous people can probably never fully understand. But Oprah Winfrey certainly does. So she was coming from a place of understanding and commiseration when she asked 50 Cent to name the people he knows genuinely love him on "Oprah's Next Chapter" (Sun., 9 p.m. ET on OWN).

50 Cent struggled to answer the question, unable to come up with someone outside of his grandmother and his son.

"Short periods of time? Lots of people," he said. But that's not true love. That's perhaps opportunistic love.

She hit an even bigger block when she asked him who he was certain had his back. As it turns out, in a pinch 50 Cent doesn't feel that there's anyone he can definitely count on no matter what.

"I have asked myself this question," Winfrey said of the love query. "It's not a very long list." It painted a surprising picture of loneliness amidst such fame and adoration.

"Oprah's Next Chapter" continues Sundays at 8 p.m. ET on OWN.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

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US Olympic horses travel to London in style

FILE - In this Aug. 12, 2008 file photo, Gold medalist, German rider Hinrich Romeiker, celebrates with his horse Marius after winning the Eventing Individual at the Beijing 2008 Olympics Equestrian in Hong Kong. Bringing horses across the Atlantic for Olympic equestrian competition is a logistical feat _ one small example of the many people and efforts under way in the shadows to make the games go off without a hitch. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 12, 2008 file photo, Gold medalist, German rider Hinrich Romeiker, celebrates with his horse Marius after winning the Eventing Individual at the Beijing 2008 Olympics Equestrian in Hong Kong. Bringing horses across the Atlantic for Olympic equestrian competition is a logistical feat _ one small example of the many people and efforts under way in the shadows to make the games go off without a hitch. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)

LONDON (AP) ? They didn't have to absolutely, positively get them there overnight, but when the U.S. Equestrian Federation sent some of its horses to London for the Olympics, it was a special delivery.

The elite U.S. three-day eventing equine squad landed in London on Monday on a FedEx flight, having taken the red eye from Newark, N.J. They're not the first competitors to arrive as the countdown to the games clicks to less than 40 days away, but they are among the most pampered.

"They are all special," said Tim Dutta, who owns the international horse transport company that organized the trip. "We are working on everybody's dream."

Bringing these elite athletes across the Atlantic Ocean is a logistical feat ? one small example of the many people and efforts under way behind the scenes to make the games go off without a hitch. This is particularly true for horses ? the only animals that take part in the games, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12.

Let's just start by saying that these 10 are not just any old group of horses. These animals have passports that would be the envy of any human wishing to travel the world. That said, they get used to traveling, and most of the time, they don't ask for much ? not even an in-flight meal.

But grooms traveling with Twizzel, Mighty Nice, Arthur and the other seven horses that made the journey would maybe give them a bit of hay.

Horses like these can move in their boxes quite a bit, unlike human sardines on regular flights. But in case any of them gets bothered by the noise, the grooms might stuff some cotton in their ears, says Dr. Brendan Furlong, the veterinarian for the American eventing team.

Carrots are always a good way to calm any horse who gets nervous ? or even a horse tranquilizer in the rare case a prized animal gets really edgy. The goal is to get them to London stress-free.

As for the grooms, the vet, and the other humans that cater to these pampered prancers, well, they aren't exactly going first class. Furlong says he'll usually ask the pilots to keep the plane kind of cool, so sometimes this crowd finds itself wrapped in blankets to keep warm. There's no in-flight movie, so jokes about whether they choose between "Seabiscuit" or "War Horse" don't really cut it.

"It's not a job for the faint of heart," Furlong said. "You need to have someone who is a very confident flier and who can intervene quickly to calm a stressed horse."

After all, 1,200 pounds (544 kilograms) of stressed horse can be an intimidating prospect.

Furlong says the crews are usually very accommodating ? and always want to come back even briefly to see their precious cargo.

But even these horses didn't escape Britain's strict rules on quarantine. Furlong arranged to have a farm near Newark International Airport set up as a special quarantine area to comply with the U.K.'s rules ? though admittedly the cherished 10 only needed five hours of intense scrutiny to meet the criteria. Nothing but the best for this crowd. Really.

But do they know ? do the horses know that it's the Olympics? That it's a special event that happens only every four years?

Dutta swears they do.

"They're athletes," Dutta said of horses that jump big big fences and run oh so fast. "They love what they do."

Associated Press

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Sunday, June 17, 2012

Fun., Black Keys, Wiz Khalifa Get MTV Movie Awards Sales Bump

Sales of the Black Keys' singles were up by double-digits thanks to their Johnny Depp-assisted Movie Awards performances.
By Gil Kaufman


Fun. and Janelle Monae perform at the 2012 MTV Movie Awards
Photo:

It took an extra week, but the performers from this year's MTV Movie Awards got a Billboard chart bump after participating in the Russell Brand-hosted big screen blow-out. Among the big winners were the Black Keys, Wiz Khalifa and Fun., who all saw double-digit increases for sales of their albums and/or singles after their spots on the show.

The Keys got the biggest lift, with an assist to Generation Award
 winner Johnny Depp
, who sat in on a pair of songs with the Akron, Ohio, blues duo. Thanks to their prominent spot on the show, sales of the band's El Camino were up 18 percent last week to 10,000, according to the Hollywood Reporter. (The sales increases didn't factor in until this week because the Movie Awards took place on Sunday, June 3 and the SoundScan reporting week ends at the close of business on Sunday.)

The two songs they performed with Depp also saw some chart love, with "Gold on the Ceiling" up 30 percent and "Lonely Boy" taking a 19 percent hike up the charts. A spokesperson for the group's label said that not only did the Depp cameo help lift sales of Camino, but the prominent spot on the show also created a "healthy" spike of the Key's back catalog of singles and albums.

Khalifa was no slouch, either, with his new single, "Work Hard, Play Hard," selling 78,000 copies for a 37 percent increase over the previous week. It was a mix of news for fun., whose smash single, "We Are Young," got the celebs in the crowd up on their feet singing and clapping along, even as sales dropped by 25 percent after a strong six-week run at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart. Even as the single dropped, sales of the band's album, Some Nights, picked up by 33 percent to 18,000.

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