Almost two out of three U.S. adults aged 70 or older have significant hearing loss, according to a new study.
Continue reading …The Army plans to toughen its fitness tests for the first time in 30 years to make sure all soldiers have the strength, endurance and mobility for battle, adding exercises like running an obstacle course in full combat gear. (March 1)
Continue reading …Moscow’s thousands of stray dogs have something to wag their tails about. Animal rights activists say the city has dropped a plan to round the dogs up and ship them to a camp far outside of town. (March 1)
Continue reading …The media's policy on leaks is obviously “Good for me, but not for thee.” It is okay for journalists to score scoops and win Pulitzer Prizes by printing everyone else’s secrets. It's okay for Julian Assange to goad the U.S. “military industrial complex” with WikiLeaks. But leak reporter E-mails, and you have no ethics whatsoever. Politico broke the story that Kurt Bardella, a spokesman for House Government Oversighty Committee chairman Darrell Issa, may have shared reporter E-mails with New York Times reporter Mark Leibovich, who's writing a book on Washington's “culture of self-love.' Issa fired Bardella for upsetting the reporters. The story included high dudgeon from Politico editor-in-chief John F. Harris, in a letter sent to Issa: “The practice of sharing reporter e-mails with another journalist on a clandestine basis would be egregiously unprofessional under any circumstances,” Harris wrote. “As the editor-in-chief of POLITICO, my concern is heightened by information suggesting that POLITICO journalists may have had their reporting compromised by this activity.” Politico editor Jim VandeHei echoed Harris in a video on their website, suggesting it's an “Extraordinary breach of the expectations that reporters have in dealings with a spokesman” and Republicans are “very upset, very nervous” about this “huge breach.” Then, when the Times fired back that Politico had submitted Freedom of Information Act requests for reporter E-mails, Harris shifted his spin. From Billy House at National Journal : In fact, within hours of Bardella’s firing, the Times appeared to fire back on Tuesday night by publishing an item revealing that Ken Vogel, a Politico reporter, had himself in 2009 made a broad Freedom of Information Act request to at least a half-dozen cabinet departments for all government communications with reporters or editors of 16 news organizations. The Times reported that in an interview about Vogel's FOIA request on Tuesday, Politico Editor-in-Chief John Harris said there was a difference between a routine request for correspondence under FOIA and an arrangement in which e-mails were passed on immediately to another reporter…. In a statement on Tuesday, Issa explained “While our review of allegations raised by Politico is not yet complete, it has become clear that the committee’s Deputy Communications Director Kurt Bardella did share reporter e-mail correspondence with New York Times journalist
Continue reading …Mutations in a gene linked to insulin resistance occur in nearly 10% of diabetes patients of white European descent, an international research team reports.
Continue reading …The nation’s biggest online banking site is on the fritz for many of its 29 million customers. Bank of America officials say it’s not a cyberattack, just a glitch resulting from an upgrade over the weekend, reports the Charlotte Observer . No customer information has been compromised, said a spokesperson. The…
Continue reading …The German government doesn’t want to alarm anyone but … one of its decommissioned satellites is expected to fall back to Earth at some point between October and December, and there’s a decent chance that the 2.4-ton contraption won’t entirely burn up on re-entry, reports Der Spiegel . Which means it…
Continue reading …