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Brown Rice Instead of White Rice May Lower Diabetes Risk

By Denise Mann, Health.com June 14, 2010 4:20 p.m. EDT Researchers note that brown rice intake was associated with “a more health-conscious lifestyle” and diet. (Health.com) — The next time you order Chinese food or need a side dish to serve with dinner, you're better off choosing brown rice instead of white. Eating more brown rice and cutting back on white rice may reduce your risk of diabetes, a new study reports. “People at risk of diabetes should pay attention to carbohydrates in their diet and replace refined carbohydrates with whole grains,” says the lead author of the study, Dr. Qi Sun, M.D., a nutrition researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, in Boston, Massachusetts. If you eat a little more than two servings of white rice (about 12 ounces) per week, switching to brown rice will lower your risk of developing type 2 diabetes by 16 percent, Sun and his colleagues estimate. And if you replace those servings of white rice with whole grains in general, they estimate, your diabetes risk will decline even further, by 36 percent. White rice is produced by removing the husk-like outer layers of brown rice. Those discarded layers contain nutrients (such as magnesium and insoluble fiber) that have been shown to guard against diabetes, which may in part explain the study's findings, Sun says. White rice may also contribute to diabetes risk because it causes blood-sugar levels to rise more rapidly than brown rice does. (This is known as having a higher glycemic index.) Type 2 diabetes occurs when your body loses its sensitivity to insulin, a hormone that helps convert blood sugar (glucose) into energy. The result is that blood sugar, which is toxic at high levels, can creep into the danger zone. Eating lots of foods with a high glycemic index– such as refined carbohydrates– has been linked to diabetes risk in the past. “White rice is digested much faster and converted into sugar in your blood much quicker, so your body puts out a lot more insulin in response to white rice,” says Alissa Rumsey, R.D., a nutritionist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, in New York City. “Whole grains like brown rice are broken down into glucose a lot slower.” In the study, which is published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, Sun and his colleagues analyzed survey data from nearly 200,000 nurses and health professionals who participated in three long-running studies. Roughly 5 percent of the participants were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes during the studies, which lasted from 14 to 22 years. People who ate five servings or more of white rice per week had a 17 increased risk of developing diabetes compared to those who ate little or no white rice, the researchers found. On the other hand, people who ate at least two servings of brown rice had an 11 lower risk of diabetes compared with those who ate barely any brown rice. Although the researchers controlled for a number of diet and lifestyle factors (such as red meat intake, smoking, and physical activity), it's possible that the findings partly reflect the type of people who tend to prefer white versus brown rice. For instance, the researchers note that brown rice intake was associated with “a more health-conscious lifestyle” and diet. People who ate the most brown rice tended to be more physically active, were slimmer, and ate more whole grains, while they were less likely to smoke or have a family history of diabetes. Indeed, though brown rice is more nutritious than white rice, the study doesn't necessarily prove that white rice will contribute to diabetes, says Dr. Loren Wissner Greene, M.D., a clinical associate professor of medicine at New York University's Langone Medical Center, in New York City. “More brown rice is helpful because it is higher in fiber and that may protect against diabetes, but white rice may not increase the risk,” Greene says. At least half of your daily grain intake should be whole grains, Rumsey says. “Look for brown foods such as whole-wheat bread, whole-wheat wraps, or whole-grain or blended pastas,” she suggests. “There are a lot of whole grains– such as barley, bulgur, oatmeal, and quinoa– that are easy to cook with.” Check ingredients and nutrition labels when food shopping, Rumsey says. The first ingredient should say “whole grain” or “whole wheat,” and the foods should have at least 3 grams of fiber per serving. “Whole grains have so much more fiber, vitamins, minerals, and protein, so you get a lot more nutritional bang for your buck than with refined carbohydrates like white rice or white bread,” she says. http://www.ogiimpex.com/images/content_pic/brown_rice.jpg added by: EthicalVegan

Oil Spill Hits Utah, Official says Oil spill hasn’t reached Great Salt Lake

Imagine if an oil spill happened in your town and contaminated a whole park… that's exactly what just happened in this Utah town. http://heraldextra.com/news/state-and-regional/article_b28deb54-3914-5051-8ce0-d… Emergency workers believe they have stopped a 21,000-gallon oil leak from reaching the environmentally sensitive Great Salt Lake, one of the West's most important inland water bodies for migratory birds that use it as a place to rest, eat and breed. But the spill has taken a toll on wildlife at area creeks and ponds, coating about 300 birds with oil and possibly threatening an endangered fish. The leak began Friday night when an underground Chevron Corp. pipeline in the mountains near the University of Utah broke. The breach sent oil into a creek that flows through neighborhoods, into a popular Salt Lake City park, and ultimately into the Jordan River, which flows into the Great Salt Lake. The 10-inch pipeline was shut off Saturday morning, when workers at a nearby Veterans Administration building smelled oil and called the Salt Lake City fire department, which notified Chevron. The pipe carries crude oil from western Colorado to a refinery near the Salt Lake City International Airport. Jason Olsen, spokesman for the Salt Lake City Joint Information Center, said Sunday that emergency workers believe they have contained the spill to the Jordan River. But the spill still took its toll on birds at Red Butte Creek and at a large pond at Liberty Park, where visitors often feed birds from the shore and on rented paddle boats. About 300 birds were coated in oil and cleaned at Utah's Hogle Zoo. Fewer than 10 have died, said Salt Lake City spokeswoman Lisa Harrison-Smith. Most of the birds were Canada geese, although some ducks were also covered. Harrison-Smith said the oil also flowed through several other riparian areas, which could threaten the June sucker. It's been listed as an endangered species since 1986. Most of Liberty Park reopened Sunday. The pond remained closed, and Olsen urged those who live near affected waterways to stay away from them. “Wherever the oil is, the smell is still fairly strong,” Olsen said. The Salt Lake City Police Department told residents whose yards were polluted by the spill not to clean them up, but to file a claim with Chevron first. Chevron has said it is taking full responsibility for the spill and will pay for its cleanup. Harrison-Smith said Chevron had investigators at the scene of the leak Sunday and that the Environmental Protection Agency had brought in a U.S. Coast Guard water recovery expert to assist with cleanup efforts. She said city officials were hoping to receive a report on the spill from Chevron sometime Sunday evening. U.S. Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, said he spoke by telephone Sunday with Becky Roberts, president of the company's Chevron Pipe Line Co. unit. Matheson said Roberts told him that until Chevron crews dig up the broken section of pipe, the company can't be sure what caused the leak. Matheson is urging full disclosure on the leak's cause, and said his office will follow up to make sure Chevron follows EPA regulations. “I would say they are responding very aggressively to it. I think they know there is a heightened concern among people in this country about oil spills,” Matheson said. “I think they understand it's in their best interest to do everything they can to fix this as soon as possible.” Online: http://www.chevron-pipeline.com added by: captainplanet71

Vince Young Fight over Longhorn Smack Talk

Filed under: Vince Young , TMZ Sports , Celebrity Justice The strip club brawl involving Tennessee Titans quarterback Vince Young was all over two things — the University of Texas and cash money, according to sources in the club. Multiple sources who were inside Club Onyx tell TMZ the fight started when Vince… Read more

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Vince Young Fight over Longhorn Smack Talk

Conservative-Bashing Hypocrites at WaPo Publish Smerconish Attacking Cable News for ‘Polarized Politics’

A month ago, The Washington Post editorial page was dropping rhetorical bombs on conservative Republican Ken Cuccinelli for investigating ClimateGate. The headline at the top of the paper’s May 7 editorial page (now scrubbed online) was “Mr. Cuccinelli’s witch hunt: Virginia’s attorney general declares war on academic freedom and climate reality.” It began: WE KNEW Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II (R) had declared war on reality. Now he has declared war on the freedom of academic inquiry as well. We hope that Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) and the University of Virginia have the spine to repudiate Mr. Cuccinelli’s abuse of the legal code. If they do not, the quality of Virginia’s universities will suffer for years to come. That’s an unsigned staff editorial, not some fulminating columnist with a byline. But these very same Washington Post editorial page staffers offered space on Friday to alleged conservative Michael Smerconish to trash cable news bookers at Fox News and CNN for wrecking America with “polarized politics.”   The producer asked whether CNN could identify me as a conservative. “Well, if someone who supports harsh interrogation, thinks we should be out of Iraq but in Pakistan, doesn’t care much if two guys hook up, and believes we should legalize pot and prostitution is conservative, fine,” I replied. More silence… Another time, a Fox News producer invited me to appear on a program to discuss then-candidate Barack Obama. I was told they were “looking for someone who would say he’s cocky and that his cockiness will hurt him, if not in the primary, definitely in the general election against McCain.” I declined. A few hours later, the same producer made a new pitch: “What about a debate off the top of the show on whether or not Hillary is trustworthy? We have someone who says she is and we’re looking for someone who says she isn’t.” The message of both episodes is clear: There is no room for nuance. Either you offer a consistent (possibly artificial) ideological view or you often don’t get a say…. All of which leaves more elected officials beholden to the fringe elements of their parties, which in turn means less gets done. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy, and it is robbing our televisions and radios of the substantive dialogue the country desperately needs, while leaving our politics a petty and unproductive mess. Other than favoring the legalized pot and prostitutes, Smerconish is often a supporter of cringing moderation, so cringing and opportunistic that you switch parties when your polls look bad. Recall Smerconish in April helping NBC proclaim a devastated Republican Party when Arlen Specter swapped parties: “The Republican Party in the aftermath of the presidential race should have come to him and tried to clone him. They need more Arlen Specters.” It’s Specter right now who looks like he’s leaving politics as a petty and unproductive mess.

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Conservative-Bashing Hypocrites at WaPo Publish Smerconish Attacking Cable News for ‘Polarized Politics’

AP Exclusive: Scuba Diving in the Gulf Oil Spill

“A rare and different perspective at the oil spill from beneath the surface. The AP's Rich Matthews got an exclusive look at the spill by joining a dive team who explored how the oil is impacting the Gulf of Mexico. (June 9)” Watch the video. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGX7krQYI_4&feature=player_embedded added by: lookatmypix

Solar Panels Fatally Attractive to Aquatic Insects

Photo: Flickr , CC “Like going to the most amazing 3D movie you’ve ever seen and you can’t leave” A new study discovered that solar panels are apparently mesmerizing to certain types of insects (mostly aquatic). What happens is that solar panels reflect light in a way that is similar to how water reflects light, and this fools the insects, attracting them to the panels. “It’s like these organisms become dazzled to death,” said Bruce Robertson of Michigan State University’s W.K. Kellogg Biological Station in Hickory Corners who l… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Solar Panels Fatally Attractive to Aquatic Insects

Sarah Palin: Competent Manager

How Sarah Palin says she would have dealt with the oil spill, why white people in Santa Monica are dodging immigrant police and why the EPA is after the Amish. On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies. The links below open in a new window. Newer ones are on top. SIGNS OF DEMI-SEMITISM Progressive Review – Because coverage of Jewish issues is so biased in the media, you are probably not aware of a J Street poll this spring of American Jews that found they had a more favorable opinion of Obama, Biden, Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic Party than they do of Netanyahu or Rabin. If You Can’t Beat Them, Brand Them The security firm formerly known as Blackwater is looking for new ownership, announcing Monday it is pursuing a sale of the company that became renowned and reviled for its involvement with the U.S. government in Iraq and elsewhere. EPA Officials Target Amish Farmers With simplicity as their credo, Amish farmers consume so little that some might consider them model environmental citizens. Palin Claims She Could Have Handled Oil Spill Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said President Barack Obama’s acknowledgment that he hasn’t directly spoken to BP’s chief executive shows it “bodes well to have some sort of executive experience before occupying the Oval Office.” Harvard’s Fake-Harvard-Credit Business I’ve gotten a few e-mails today complaining about the use of the word “fake” in my latest Chronicle column: “Harvard has the opposite of a brand deficit. It has a brand surplus. The name is so strong that Harvard can run a side business selling fake Harvard credits and nobody bats an eye.” U. of California Tries Just Saying No to Rising Journal Costs The University of California system has said “enough” to the Nature Publishing Group, one of the leading commercial scientific publishers, over a big proposed jump in the cost of the group’s journals. Improving sidewalk traffic in NYC Judge Walker’s Amazing Questions for Closing Argument There was big news yesterday in California about “the trial of the century.” Judge Vaughn Walker today issued a series of questions (see document below) for the parties to the federal Prop. 8 trial that began in January and was put on by Ted Olson and David Boies and colleagues and defended by the oxymoronic “Protect Marriage” proponents of Prop. 8. Sorry, you are being deported to Europe HOW THE WASHINGTON POST’S OMBUDSMAN THINKS LABOR PROTESTS SHOULD BE COVERED The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) organized protests in Maryland at the homes of several bank executives, along with follow-up rallies in Washington, D.C., at bank branches and offices. Related Entries June 9, 2010 A Loss Won’t Silence the Democratic Left June 9, 2010 Why We Can’t Just ‘Look Forward’

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Sarah Palin: Competent Manager

NBA Leads Sports in Diversity

Professional sports have long had a disconnect between the players and management where diversity is concerned, so hats off to the NBA for setting an example for baseball, football and that weird boring ice game. The basketball league scores an A in both racial and gender diversity, with women sitting at 44 percent of the desks in league offices. AP via ESPN: The NBA was again the only men’s professional sports league to receive a combined “A” for race and gender in the annual report released Wednesday by the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport. Women made up 44 percent of professional employees at the league offices. That increased by one percent from last year, higher than any other men’s professional league in any previous study but still below the NBA’s high of 49 percent in the 1995-96 season. There also were 34 women in vice president positions in the league office, an increase of three. And while the league received high marks for gender again, Lapchick said that might be the area the NBA can make the biggest strides. Read more Related Entries May 31, 2010 What’s Not to Like About Civil Rights? May 31, 2010 Memorial Day and Our Discontents

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NBA Leads Sports in Diversity

Desert Oasis Water Source Traced Back to Nuclear Test Site

Photo credit Brigham Young University, via Our Amazing Planet In the middle of the dessert near Death Valley, Nevada is a water source that bubbles up 100,000 gallons of water per minute. The oasis is home to 24 species that are found no where else on earth, including an incredibly endangered Devil’s Hole pupfish that numbers only around 120. Until now, the source of that water has been a mystery. But geologists from Brigham Young University have succeeded … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Desert Oasis Water Source Traced Back to Nuclear Test Site

President Obama Surprises High School Contest Winners — Watch Now!

Before giving his commencement speech, Obama pops in on some unsuspecting Kalamazoo Central students. By James Montgomery, with additional reporting by Sean Lee Kalamazoo Central High School are visited by President Barack Obama on Monday Photo: MTV News On Monday (June 7), hours before he was set to deliver the commencement address for Kalamazoo Central High School’s class of 2010 , President Barack Obama gave those graduating students the surprise of their lives, bringing the already energized group to a frenzy with an unannounced meet-and-greet at an intimate, pre-commencement ceremony. MTV News was there exclusively, and we’ve got the footage for you right now! Backstage, in the moments prior to their commencement — which was held at nearby Western Michigan University, due to the overflow crowd — Kalamazoo Central Principal Von Washington Jr. brought the nearly 300 graduating seniors together in an adjoining holding area for what they only assumed to be little more than a quick pre-commencement pep talk. After some initial comments from U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, Washington announced that he had another special guest he’d like to introduce. The seniors in the room were shocked to see none other than President Obama himself bound out into the center of the floor. The room erupted in excitement and stayed charged throughout Obama’s brief-but-encouraging words on the hard work Central’s students had put in and the school’s embrace of diversity. Then he flashed his megawatt smile and began shaking hands with the still-stunned students, working the room with an enthusiasm reminiscent of his days back on the campaign trail. For the soon-to-be-graduates, the unexpected moment capped a week of excitement, one that kicked off with the announcement that Central had won the White House’s inaugural Race to the Top Commencement Challenge video competition (co-sponsored by education organization Get Schooled) aimed at finding the school that best exemplified academic excellence and college readiness. It was, needless to say, a day they won’t soon forget. “He took the time to shake everyone’s hand and looked everyone directly in the eye,” one student shared. As another simply put it: “This day has changed our lives.” What would you think if President Obama showed up unannounced? Let us know in the comments!

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President Obama Surprises High School Contest Winners — Watch Now!