Friday, July 26, 2013

Patriots move to address arrest of Hernandez

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) ? With Aaron Hernandez's arrest hovering over the start of training camp, the New England Patriots sent out quarterback Tom Brady and coach Bill Belichick to shed some light.

Brady spoke for 17 minutes Thursday and said the murder charge against his former tight end is "zero" distraction to him.

Belichick spoke for 22 minutes Wednesday and said the team would learn from the "terrible experience."

Both spoke with greater patience and candor than they usually do as the Patriots hurried to remove the stain from their reputation ? and lower media attention ? before their first practice on Friday.

"You talk about the 'Patriot Way' and to me that means mental toughness and to me it means dealing with different situations and adversities over the course of a season and offseason," Brady said, "and how you can put those things behind you and focus on your job."

The Patriots were happy to get back on the field during conditioning tests Thursday.

Brady was asked about the team's morale.

"It's fun. It's exciting," he said. "This is a new year for us. Last year didn't end the way that we would have hoped so we have a chance to go out there and try to do a lot better this year."

The Patriots lost the AFC championship game to the Baltimore Ravens.

"The fate of our season is going to be determined by the guys in the locker room," Brady said, "and, hopefully, nothing else."

Not only must they improve on the field, but, Brady said, the Patriots must work hard to "re-establish what we're all about" after the arrest of Hernandez.

"It's been a challenging offseason," he said. "But we're going to try to move forward as best we know how."

Brady talked at length for the first time since Hernandez's name surfaced in connection with the shooting death of Boston semi-professional football player Odin Lloyd on June 17. Hernandez was arrested on June 26 and cut by the Patriots before he was charged that afternoon. He is being held without bail after pleading not guilty.

"Certainly, it's a very tragic thing that happened and someone loses their life," Brady said, "but all those things were out of the players' control here. We're not really a part of that situation."

He declined to answer several questions, saying he had been advised not to. They included whether he had spoken with Hernandez or whether Hernandez had apologized to him after the tight end was linked to the investigation.

During Hernandez's three seasons since being drafted by the Patriots, he was one of Brady's top receivers.

Asked if he thought he knew Hernandez, Brady said, "the relationship that you have as a football player, the relationship you have within the walls of (Gillette Stadium) are what they are and then people have their own life."

Might people not know others as well as they think they do?

"I don't know if you quantify those things," Brady said. "How well do you know your kids? You try to do the best you can do, but everyone is ultimately accountable for their own decision making."

Asked if Hernandez had fit in with his former teammates, Brady said, "I don't think any of that really matters to me or matters to anything that's going on with the legal process or anything like that."

On the day before camp opened, Belichick displayed unusual patience with questioners and gave more detailed answers than usual after making an opening statement while using notes.

On Thursday, it was the turn of the team's best player.

"It's a terrible thing that happened," Brady said. "There's a very human, compassionate element that we all have and when it's someone that has been on our team, it's a very sad thing. So I think that we, as a team, have tried to move forward with better awareness and understanding of these types of things."

He listed several former teammates ? Tedy Bruschi, Kevin Faulk, Troy Brown, Mike Vrabel ? who represented the Patriots well on and off the field.

"Everyone who has played here has played a part of what the New England Patriots are all about," said Brady, wearing a dark blue sweatshirt with the words, "PATRIOTS ESTABLISHED IN 1960" on the front. "We realize that in light of the recent situation that probably those things get overshadowed and we've got to work hard to kind of re-establish what we're all about.

"And that's, like we said, to win games and to be the best representatives of this team and organization and representatives for this city that we can possibly be."

Defensive tackle Vince Wilfork also spoke Thursday but didn't mention Hernandez's name.

"You're dealing with a real-life situation, so it's easy to get caught up in the media or speculations. We're not here for that," Wilfork said. "I feel bad for the victim's family, but we have to move forward as a football team. That's sad to say, but that's reality."

It's important, he said, to keep off-field issues separate from players' jobs on the field.

"It's going to test this team's chemistry. It's going to test everyone that's in this locker room," Wilfork said. "It's going to test to see how important football is to us. As a family, you just have to take it day-by-day, move forward day-by-day. At the end of the day, the ball is going to continue to roll and the last thing we want to do is be stuck behind the ball."

On Wednesday, a probable cause hearing for Hernandez was rescheduled for Aug. 22 to give prosecutors more time to present evidence to a grand jury.

Might Wilfork be distracted from football if he's called before a grand jury?

"What can I do," he asked. "The only thing I can do is control what I can control and that's playing football. Whatever happens in the future, happens. We'll handle it then."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/patriots-move-address-arrest-hernandez-002918385.html

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Drivers may see even more pain at the pump?

energy

23 hours ago

Taking that affordable summer road trip?or just driving around town for errands?might suddenly be a budget buster, due to rising gas prices.

On Monday, the national average for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline hit $3.61, according to AAA. That's up 14 cents from a week ago, and the largest price spike since February, said AAA spokesman Michael Green.

Worse, analysts expect prices could go even higher, edging up another 5 to 15 cents per gallon before the end of July.

"Crude oil prices are up 10 percent in last three weeks, and gas prices have some catching up to do," said Patrick DeHaan, senior petroleum analyst for GasBuddy.com. "When oil prices are up, gasoline is bound to follow."

Several other factors have also played a role. Crude prices have trended higher on news of minor production problems at several U.S.refineries, as well as continued violence in Egypt. "That spooks the market," Green said. News on either issue could push prices higher, or lower if the news points to increased supply.

Image: Gas prices

Toby Talbot / AP

Analysts expect prices could go even higher, edging up another 5 to 15 cents per gallon before the end of July.

Prices aren't likely to settle before Labor Day, or even September. "The 500-pound gorilla that's ready to walk in the door is the upcoming peak of hurricane season" in August, said DeHaan. After Hurricane Katrina damaged refineries in the Gulf of Mexico in 2005, spiking prices and stretching supply, major storms moving in that direction generate worries of similar problems. That can also edge crude prices higher.

That said, drivers in most states won't see prices top $4 per gallon, Green said. (On Tuesday, just three?Alaska, California and Hawaii?had prices surpassing that mark.)

Strategies abound for drivers to cut their pain at the pump.The U.S. Department of Energy's FuelEconomy.gov recommends strategies including observing the speed limit (saving 7 to 14 percent), and clearing extra items from your vehicle (1 to 2 percent savings per 100 pounds).

But the best recourse for drivers, experts say, is to assess local prices before filling up. "When prices are volatile, that can mean a wider gap between the cheapest and most expensive stations," said DeHaan. Per-gallon savings could be as much as 70 cents just by choosing one gas station over another.

Apps like GasBuddy and AAA TripTik display local prices,helping drivers determine which stations in an area are cheapest. (Some sites and apps rely on users to submit new prices; check when a price was submitted before banking on it as the best savings.)

Pair that with the right payment method. Some gas stations offer savings of roughly 5 cents per gallon for paying with cash. Convenience store chain Cumberland Farms launched a payment app in January offering discounts of 5 to 10 cents per gallon for users.

Plenty of credit cards also offer generous rewards on gas purchases, said Odysseas Papadimitriou, chief executive of comparison site CardHub.com. Look for a general rewards card rather than one tied to a specific station, which lets drivers shop around. General cards are also less apt to cap rewards earned, making them more generous than station-specific cards when prices are rising, he said.

CardHub.com's top pick is the PenFed Platinum Rewards card, which offers 5 percent cash back on gas purchases. Cardholders must be members of the credit union, but can sign up for as little as $15.

Supermarket loyalty programs may offer another avenue for savings. Although memberships in such programs fell 1 percent since 2010, according to research firm Colloquy, chains have added more gas discounts based on grocery purchases. In some cases, shoppers can earn vouchers for more than $1 off per gallon on a single fill-up, based on something they would do anyway?buy groceries.

?By CNBC.com's Kelli B. Grant. Follow her on Twitter @KelliGrant.

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2eb2740d/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cdrivers0Emay0Esee0Eeven0Emore0Epain0Epump0E6C10A642339/story01.htm

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

95% A Band Called Death

All Critics (40) | Top Critics (14) | Fresh (38) | Rotten (2)

Fortunately, Bobby and Dannis, the surviving brothers, prove genial company.

If the brothers seem a little drunk on their own myth, they're also genuinely humbled by the band's rediscovery and warmed by the fact that their kids have carried on the family tradition.

Their story can feel almost too ready-made for the telling, but it's well worth a listen.

... a must-watch for fans of punk music, vinyl record wonks, or even those interested ... a visionary entertainment dream.

[A] generous, spirited documentary [that captures] one of the strangest and most inspiring of all family stories of tragedy and triumph that this crazy country has produced.

It was fans' ardor that began the Death revival and propels the movie's exhilarating second half.

Directors Mark Christopher Covino and Jeff Howlett tell this part of A Band Called Death without much artifice, relying on the natural charm and sunny dispositions of the surviving Hackney brothers to draw us in.

It's a soul-stirring tribute to a man whose vision was too bold and revolutionary for his lifetime, or the convention-bound ways of the music industry, but was ultimately too powerful to be denied.

An amazing story -- about the history of rock, about the capriciousness of fame and, perhaps most importantly, about the power of family.

Like 'Searching For Sugar Man,' 'A Band Called Death' takes its cue from the modesty and joyfulness of its subjects, letting the glory of their music speak for itself.

It's less about the rediscovery of genius than it is the value of obscurity, a sentiment that should give hope to every garage band out there.

Questions about what that reputation is worth today, and how the Hackney brothers struggled to find a foothold, give filmmakers Mark Covino and Jeff Howlett plenty of material to work with.

A Band Called Death shines the light on a previously unexplored corner of musical history and does it in an accessible, straightforward manner.

A Band Called Death is a film that is all heart, as was the band it looks to explore.

Death never got very far, and their story is a fascinating one, told beautifully by Jeff Howlett and Mark Christopher Covino.

Thanks to the new revelatory and inspiring documentary A Band Called Death, the truth behind the band's nearly simultaneous birth and death may yet find them their proper place in music history.

It is a deeply moving story of a family that was both bound together and driven apart by art, and it tells this personal story so beautifully that there were several moments that gave me actual chills.

Even if you didn't know a thing about the band and you don't even typically listen to the kind of music they play, you're going to find yourself thankful that the Hackney brothers are now in your life.

The story of Death sure adds an interesting and virtually unknown footnote to the annals of punk rock.

Still sounding amazingly fresh, the brothers' good spirits and storytelling are as infectiously appealing as their punk rock seems to be a fountain of youth

In the vein of Searching for Sugar Man, this earnest and engaging doc again proves that all the best nonfiction music stories aren't tied up in bitterness and acrimony, and certainly aren't related to any level of achieved fame.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/a_band_called_death_2013/

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Italy's Eni lowers targets at Iraq oil field

The Italian oil company Eni says it has agreed to lower production targets at a major oil field in Iraq's south while extending the length of the contract by five years.

Foreign oil companies have helped turn around Iraq's dilapidated oil industry in recent years, but export bottlenecks have forced Iraqi officials to rethink the pace of oil field development.

Eni says the deal signed Monday in Baghdad sets a new target at the Zubair field of 850,000 barrels of oil per day through 2035.

The 20-year deal it signed with Iraq in 2010 originally called for 1.2 million barrels of daily production.

Eni is the main contractor developing the 4.1 billion barrel Zubair field as part of a consortium that includes Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum and South Korea's KOGAS.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/15/3501138/italys-eni-lowers-targets-at-iraq.html

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Pregnancy possible for many after childhood cancer

By Andrew M. Seaman

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Despite research indicating that women who had cancer as girls have difficulty getting pregnant, a new study suggests that most can conceive, though it might take longer than usual.

Researchers from the U.S. and Canada found that female childhood cancer survivors tended to take longer to conceive than their sisters, but nearly two-thirds of the infertile survivors eventually did get pregnant.

"The main message counters what some people have thought, which is if you had cancer you won't be able to get pregnant or have children," said Dr. Lisa Diller, the study's senior author, from the Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.

Historically, childhood cancer survivors have been counseled that they may be unable to get pregnant because cancer-fighting chemotherapy and radiation can damage their ovaries.

For the new study, Diller and her colleagues used data from questionnaires in an ongoing study of 3,531 cancer survivors and 1,366 of their sisters between the ages of 18 and 39 years old.

The survivors were all diagnosed before age 21 with cancer at one of 26 medical centers in the U.S. or Canada from 1970 through 1986. The women had all been cancer free for at least five years.

Compared to their sisters, cancer survivors were more likely to be clinically infertile, which means they had been trying unsuccessfully to get pregnant for more than a year.

Thirteen percent of survivors were clinically infertile, compared to 10 percent of their sisters.

Still, 64 percent of the 455 clinically infertile survivors eventually got pregnant.

That pregnancy rate is similar to what has been observed in clinically infertile women without a history of cancer, Richard Anderson, a professor of clinical reproductive science at the University of Edinburgh in the UK, writes in an editorial accompanying the new study in the journal Lancet Oncology.

The same proportion of cancer survivors and their sisters sought help from fertility specialists - about 3 percent, but the researchers found that survivors were less likely to opt for treatments to help improve their chances of getting pregnant.

"We don't know what the reason for that is. That wasn't specifically pursued in the questionnaire," said Dr. Elizabeth Ginsburg, medical director of assisted reproductive technologies at Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital and one of the study's authors.

It also took survivors longer to get pregnant, compared to their sisters.

Overall, it took 13 percent of cancer survivors more than a year to get pregnant, compared to 8 percent of the sisters who had never had cancer.

But Dr. Mitchell Rosen, director of the University of California, San Francisco Fertility Preservation Center, cautions that the new study cannot predict how childhood cancer survivors' fertility will change as they get into their late 30s or their 40s.

Rosen, who wasn't involved in the new study, told Reuters Health that getting pregnant gets harder about 10 years before women go through menopause and childhood cancer survivors tend to go through early menopause.

That means childhood cancer survivors' fertility problems may be amplified in their late thirties and early forties, compared to women without a history of cancer.

"I think the awareness is important that these patients may be affected and if we want to optimize their care, improve their quality of life? then we all have to be aware and prompt consultations are important," said Rosen.

Ginsburg agreed that cancer survivors may have an increasingly difficult time getting pregnant the longer they wait, but she said the study provides hope for women who are survivors of childhood cancer.

"If people aren't totally sterilized by their chemotherapy, they have a pretty good chance of getting pregnant," Ginsburg said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/12rRw3y and http://bit.ly/12rRtVI Lancet Oncology, online July 12, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pregnancy-possible-many-childhood-cancer-175820944.html

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