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Old 03-24-2011, 08:57 PM   #1
Gotogritice
 
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'My Perestroika': Revolution's Children, 20 Years On
{Not only can you apply online to be the next voice of the Aflac duck, but you can also try to get into one of the casting calls (shouldn't that be "quacking calls?") that will be held next week in six cities.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|Seniors getting health care in their homes will soon have to see a doctor to certify the need for care, or Medicare will not pay for it. Some opponents of the new rule say it places an undue burden on patients and doctors.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|"I would like to tell her that I totally forgive her and I would love to meet for coffee," says the creator of The Asians in the Library Song video about the young woman who posted a racist rant that also went viral.|The Postal Service says it would save $3.1 billion annually. The commission that regulates USPS says that's $1.4 billion too high.|A senior Pentagon official said the handover could happen as soon as Thursday. Meanwhile, a French jet fired on a Libyan plane near the city of Misurata, while coalition missiles targeted sites in and around Tripoli in an overnight show of Western air power.|One woman was reported killed when a brick wall collapsed on her. The quake could be felt as far away as Bangkok, 480 miles south of the epicenter.|While the government says it may lift restrictions on freedom that have been in place since 1963, it has also reportedly continued to crack down on the opposition.|Amateurs armed with Geiger counters are taking radiation readings in Japan and sending their results to a website for mapping. Radiation experts caution the results, while intriguing, are prone to error.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The subcontractor said he had measured cables that would take power to safety systems at a power plant now under construction. But prosecutors allege he never did the work.|The FBI has told agents that in "exceptional cases" they can question suspects for a longer amount of time before reading them their Miranda rights. There must be an "immediate threat" to public safety.|For decades, the Hispanic population in the United States has seen rapid and steady growth. New numbers out from the Census today show that, in just the last ten years, Hispanics accounted for more than half of the increase in the U.S population. To discuss how that growth in numbers has manifested in American culture and politics, guest host Farai Chideya speaks with syndicated columnist Gustavo Arellano and Veronica Vargas Stidvent, a former Special Assistant to President George W. Bush and now a University of Texas McCombs School of Business program director.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The people of Iceland are voting on whether to make good on a failed bank's debts. Help our Icelandic intern decide how to vote.|Japanese automakers are trying to get going again, but the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami have disrupted their supply chains.|Linguist Geoff Nunberg says everyone's using the phrase "we're broke" these days to justify cuts in government programs and services. But what does "we're broke" actually mean? The answer, says Nunberg, is trickier than you might think.|As college basketball dives into the Sweet 16, March Madness has never been so crazy ? or so rich. Despite a surge in players leaving for the NBA, the tournament is setting ratings and money records.|U.S. companies trimmed their orders for long-lasting manufactured goods by 0.9 percent in February, while a key category that signals business investment fell for a second month. Manufacturing activity has been expanding since the recession officially ended in June 2009.|Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, evidence that layoffs are slowing and employers may be stepping up hiring. Claims dropped 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 382,000, the fourth drop in the past five weeks.|Two planes landed at Washington's Reagan National Airport on Tuesday night without control tower clearance. They were in communication with a regional air traffic control facility in Virginia.|Nintendo is releasing its new 3DS handheld device in the U.S. this weekend. It's the first 3D game system that doesn't require special glasses. Harold Goldberg, who covers video games for G4TV.com and Boys' Life magazine, talks to Steve Inskeep about the video game industry, and whether its been affected by the disasters in Japan.|Insurance company Aflac is taking applications from people who want to be the new voice of its signature duck. The company fired comedian Gilbert Gottfried after he posted insensitive remarks on Twitter about the disaster in Japan, a place where Aflac makes much of its money.|This week marks 100 years since a fire at the Triangle Waist Company factory in New York City killed 146 people, most of them poor young women. The event is often cited as the catalyst for modern workplace safety rules, and a major boost to the nascent union movement. A century later, the debate over the nation's labor laws continues to rage.|Earlier this month, the Justice Department created a special task force, putting a veteran mob prosecutor in charge. Analysts say putting criminal prosecutors in charge instead of environmental prosecutors could mean something important for BP and other likely targets.|The United Auto Workers union met in Detroit this week to prepare for contract negotiations this summer with Chrysler, Ford and General Motors. Each of the Big Three automakers is in better shape now than when they last signed labor contracts in 2007.|Bank of America said the Federal Reserve has objected to its plan for raising its dividend in the second half of this year, a setback that suggests regulators need to see more evidence that the nation's largest bank is strong enough to weather another recession.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|Officials in Japan have been fielding a lot of questions about radiation in drinking water. Tokyo's local government discovered slightly elevated levels of radioactive iodine in the city's water. Parents were advised not to give tap water to babies, who are especially vulnerable to this form of radiation. The advisory created a run on bottled water.|No country is more familiar with nuclear peril than Japan. One might think then that people in Japan would be traumatized by the calamity at the nuclear power complex in Fukushima. But the reality is more nuanced than that ? even the most horrible events fade from cultural memory.|In the second installment of Tell Me More's conversation on the future of nuclear power in the United States, guest host Farai Chideya explores safer energy alternatives. The debate on the safety of nuclear energy has been reignited by the continuing radiation threat at the Fukushima power plant in Japan. About twenty percent of the country's electricity is generated by nuclear facilities. Chideya speaks with Jigar Shah, CEO of Carbon War Room, a non-profit group championing clean energy technology. She also hears from leading environmental justice activist Robert Bullard, about how new power plants might disproportionately affect minority communities.|Workers in Japan want to look inside three troubled reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. But intense radiation inside the buildings means that it is too dangerous for them to enter. One solution? Robots. They're good at going places where people just don't want to go. And they could be at the site in a matter of days.|Reaction to Japan's nuclear crisis has differed sharply across Europe. In Italy, fear of losing upcoming local elections has forced the conservative government to slow its push to re-introduce nuclear power. Rome is calling for a one-year moratorium on nuclear power. Anti-nuclear activists say it's just a ploy to buy time.|Human beings are two-thirds water ? and one could think of us forming a river as we move through life. Contemplating these striking photos from St. Petersburg, it's not so hard to believe.|Early indications suggest most of the radiation released comes from iodine-131 ? and that decays quickly, with a half-life of just eight days. That means that over the course of two or three months, virtually all of the radiation should be gone.|Melting snow might be a welcome sign of spring for many of us. But in Minnesota, a heavy snow melt feeds into its rivers and can mean record flooding. Robert Siegel talks with Mark Voxland, mayor of Moorhead, Minnesota, about what they're doing to prepare.|Early photographs tell the colorful story of Sir Ernest Shackleton's ill-fated voyage to Antarctica.|Workers were forced to evacuate from Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant Monday, putting efforts to restore the plant's cooling systems on hold. Residents and officials also face concerns about radiation-tainted food and water, while essential supplies remain scarce across northeastern Japan.|In Japan, engineers are still trying to reduce the hazards at the damaged nuclear reactor complex. Over the weekend, they made some progress but there were setbacks on Monday.|The tragic events in Japan are causing widespread concern in Europe about the safety of nuclear power. The European Union is trying to forge a joint response, but with attitudes sharply differing across the member states, it is proving a difficult task.|Over the weekend, radioactive iodine and cesium emitted by the crippled facility turned up in milk, spinach and other greens, canola seeds, fava beans and drinking water.That poses a new problem: How to inform the public about the multiplying and scary-sounding test results without unduly scaring them.|
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{Not only can you apply online to be the next voice of the Aflac duck, but you can also try to get into one of the casting calls (shouldn't that be "quacking calls?") that will be held next week in six cities.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|Seniors getting health care in their homes will soon have to see a doctor to certify the need for care, or Medicare will not pay for it. Some opponents of the new rule say it places an undue burden on patients and doctors.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|"I would like to tell her that I totally forgive her and I would love to meet for coffee," says the creator of The Asians in the Library Song video about the young woman who posted a racist rant that also went viral.|The Postal Service says it would save $3.1 billion annually. The commission that regulates USPS says that's $1.4 billion too high.|A senior Pentagon official said the handover could happen as soon as Thursday. Meanwhile, a French jet fired on a Libyan plane near the city of Misurata, while coalition missiles targeted sites in and around Tripoli in an overnight show of Western air power.|One woman was reported killed when a brick wall collapsed on her. The quake could be felt as far away as Bangkok, 480 miles south of the epicenter.|While the government says it may lift restrictions on freedom that have been in place since 1963, it has also reportedly continued to crack down on the opposition.|Amateurs armed with Geiger counters are taking radiation readings in Japan and sending their results to a website for mapping. Radiation experts caution the results, while intriguing, are prone to error.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The subcontractor said he had measured cables that would take power to safety systems at a power plant now under construction. But prosecutors allege he never did the work.|The FBI has told agents that in "exceptional cases" they can question suspects for a longer amount of time before reading them their Miranda rights. There must be an "immediate threat" to public safety.|For decades, the Hispanic population in the United States has seen rapid and steady growth. New numbers out from the Census today show that, in just the last ten years, Hispanics accounted for more than half of the increase in the U.S population. To discuss how that growth in numbers has manifested in American culture and politics, guest host Farai Chideya speaks with syndicated columnist Gustavo Arellano and Veronica Vargas Stidvent, a former Special Assistant to President George W. Bush and now a University of Texas McCombs School of Business program director.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The people of Iceland are voting on whether to make good on a failed bank's debts. Help our Icelandic intern decide how to vote.|Japanese automakers are trying to get going again, but the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami have disrupted their supply chains.|Linguist Geoff Nunberg says everyone's using the phrase "we're broke" these days to justify cuts in government programs and services. But what does "we're broke" actually mean? The answer, says Nunberg, is trickier than you might think.|As college basketball dives into the Sweet 16, March Madness has never been so crazy ? or so rich. Despite a surge in players leaving for the NBA, the tournament is setting ratings and money records.|U.S. companies trimmed their orders for long-lasting manufactured goods by 0.9 percent in February, while a key category that signals business investment fell for a second month. Manufacturing activity has been expanding since the recession officially ended in June 2009.|Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, evidence that layoffs are slowing and employers may be stepping up hiring. Claims dropped 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 382,000, the fourth drop in the past five weeks.|Two planes landed at Washington's Reagan National Airport on Tuesday night without control tower clearance. They were in communication with a regional air traffic control facility in Virginia.|Nintendo is releasing its new 3DS handheld device in the U.S. this weekend. It's the first 3D game system that doesn't require special glasses. Harold Goldberg, who covers video games for G4TV.com and Boys' Life magazine, talks to Steve Inskeep about the video game industry, and whether its been affected by the disasters in Japan.|Insurance company Aflac is taking applications from people who want to be the new voice of its signature duck. The company fired comedian Gilbert Gottfried after he posted insensitive remarks on Twitter about the disaster in Japan, a place where Aflac makes much of its money.|This week marks 100 years since a fire at the Triangle Waist Company factory in New York City killed 146 people, most of them poor young women. The event is often cited as the catalyst for modern workplace safety rules, and a major boost to the nascent union movement. A century later, the debate over the nation's labor laws continues to rage.|Earlier this month, the Justice Department created a special task force, putting a veteran mob prosecutor in charge. Analysts say putting criminal prosecutors in charge instead of environmental prosecutors could mean something important for BP and other likely targets.|The United Auto Workers union met in Detroit this week to prepare for contract negotiations this summer with Chrysler, Ford and General Motors. Each of the Big Three automakers is in better shape now than when they last signed labor contracts in 2007.|Bank of America said the Federal Reserve has objected to its plan for raising its dividend in the second half of this year, a setback that suggests regulators need to see more evidence that the nation's largest bank is strong enough to weather another recession.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|Officials in Japan have been fielding a lot of questions about radiation in drinking water. Tokyo's local government discovered slightly elevated levels of radioactive iodine in the city's water. Parents were advised not to give tap water to babies, who are especially vulnerable to this form of radiation. The advisory created a run on bottled water.|No country is more familiar with nuclear peril than Japan. One might think then that people in Japan would be traumatized by the calamity at the nuclear power complex in Fukushima. But the reality is more nuanced than that ? even the most horrible events fade from cultural memory.|In the second installment of Tell Me More's conversation on the future of nuclear power in the United States, guest host Farai Chideya explores safer energy alternatives. The debate on the safety of nuclear energy has been reignited by the continuing radiation threat at the Fukushima power plant in Japan. About twenty percent of the country's electricity is generated by nuclear facilities. Chideya speaks with Jigar Shah, CEO of Carbon War Room, a non-profit group championing clean energy technology. She also hears from leading environmental justice activist Robert Bullard, about how new power plants might disproportionately affect minority communities.|Workers in Japan want to look inside three troubled reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. But intense radiation inside the buildings means that it is too dangerous for them to enter. One solution? Robots. They're good at going places where people just don't want to go. And they could be at the site in a matter of days.|Reaction to Japan's nuclear crisis has differed sharply across Europe. In Italy, fear of losing upcoming local elections has forced the conservative government to slow its push to re-introduce nuclear power. Rome is calling for a one-year moratorium on nuclear power. Anti-nuclear activists say it's just a ploy to buy time.|Human beings are two-thirds water ? and one could think of us forming a river as we move through life. Contemplating these striking photos from St. Petersburg, it's not so hard to believe.|Early indications suggest most of the radiation released comes from iodine-131 ? and that decays quickly, with a half-life of just eight days. That means that over the course of two or three months, virtually all of the radiation should be gone.|Melting snow might be a welcome sign of spring for many of us. But in Minnesota, a heavy snow melt feeds into its rivers and can mean record flooding. Robert Siegel talks with Mark Voxland, mayor of Moorhead, Minnesota, about what they're doing to prepare.|Early photographs tell the colorful story of Sir Ernest Shackleton's ill-fated voyage to Antarctica.|Workers were forced to evacuate from Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant Monday, putting efforts to restore the plant's cooling systems on hold. Residents and officials also face concerns about radiation-tainted food and water, while essential supplies remain scarce across northeastern Japan.|In Japan, engineers are still trying to reduce the hazards at the damaged nuclear reactor complex. Over the weekend, they made some progress but there were setbacks on Monday.|The tragic events in Japan are causing widespread concern in Europe about the safety of nuclear power. The European Union is trying to forge a joint response, but with attitudes sharply differing across the member states, it is proving a difficult task.|Over the weekend, radioactive iodine and cesium emitted by the crippled facility turned up in milk, spinach and other greens, canola seeds, fava beans and drinking water.That poses a new problem: How to inform the public about the multiplying and scary-sounding test results without unduly scaring them.|
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Old 03-24-2011, 08:58 PM   #2
876e64n54
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 17
876e64n54 is on a distinguished road
Default

斯通夫妇

  因17岁时诊断患有睾丸癌,英国一名男子不得不接受手术切除部分睾丸。手术前,他冷冻储存 了一些精子,深圳手机窃听货到付款

  16年后,他成功战胜癌症,借助试管婴儿技术得来的儿子也将在明年1月降生。

  年少患癌

  克里斯托弗・斯通来自英国设菲尔德的希利,现年33岁,黄冈窃听器,确诊患有睾丸癌时只有17岁。

  “对一个17岁的孩子而言,面对并处理这样一个事实非常可怕,”英国《每日邮报》11月29日援引斯通 的话报道,“然后我被告知,最有效治疗方法是手术切除。任何年龄的人对此都很难接受,尤其在人生的这个阶段 。”

  手术前,斯通冷冻储存了一些精子样本,希望有朝一日依然可以生儿育女。

  医生们起初认为,手术时斯通体内癌细胞还未扩散,手术成功后将完全治愈。但几个月后他们发现,癌细胞已 经部分扩散,斯通开始接受三四个月的化疗。

  反复发作

  20岁时,斯通与大学女友菲奥娜结婚。由于之前化疗效果很好,他出现积极好转迹象。可惜好景不长,婚礼 后仅仅两周,医生就在斯通的胃里发现了肿瘤,他必须再次接受手术。

  手术结束后仅仅6个月,刚刚从手术中恢复的斯通又要上手术台,这次要切除的是颈部淋巴腺处的肿瘤。之后 ,他度过了一段相对平稳期,手机监听器

  挫折再次袭来是在2006年夏天。他注意到身体开始出现一些“熟悉”症状,最终确诊睾丸癌 复发。

  终成正果

  自17岁被确诊患有癌症开始,斯通在十几年里一直忍受癌症折磨,手机窃听器是真的吗。由于治疗的需要,他曾被迫放弃攻读设菲尔德哈勒姆大学信息技术学位,但最终他获得这所大学商业信息系统专 业的学位并找到工作,红外线透视眼镜价格

  如今经历一个疗程的放射性治疗后,斯通体内癌细胞终于被全部清除,常规身体检查周期也缩减为一年一次。 应该说,他的健康状况已经基本平稳。

  借助试管婴儿技术,医生用当年斯通冷冻的精子让菲奥娜怀孕。现在,他们正期待明年1月儿子 的降生。

  “绝对不可思议,”斯通说,“我们一直在杰索普医院的照料下休养,试管婴儿的第二阶段也非 常成功。”

  张晶(新华社供本报特稿)
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