Sleep Critically Affects Childhood Brain Development

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By Robert Rosenberg

In this month’s British Medical Journal, there’s a report on a study demonstrating the relationship of sleep to brain development in kids. It is called the Millennium cohort Study, and it followed 11,000 children. Those children who demonstrated irregular bedtimes up to the age of three were the most negatively affected when it came to reading, math skills and spatial awareness. When followed over time, they continued to lag developmentally even by the age of seven — and girls more than boys. The authors concluded that the first three years of life seem to be a particularly sensitive time for sleep and its relationship to brain development.

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Volcanic Ash Shuts Down Mexican Airport After Popocatepetl Volcano Erupts

MEXICO CITY — An airport serving Mexico’s fourth-largest city suspended operations for seven hours because of volcanic ash from the Popocatepetl volcano.

The international airport in Puebla was temporarily closed as a precautionary measure, said Puebla airport spokesman Herbert Lopez Palma.

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In China, Landslide Traps Dozens Of Tourists

BEIJING — At least 100 tourists, including 38 Vietnamese nationals, were trapped in northwest China after a landslide cut off a road amid weeklong storms that have flooded rivers and triggered mudslides, killing at least 69 people, state media reported Saturday.

The tourists got trapped Friday night in the northwest province of Gansu after a landslide cut off traffic, China’s official Xinhua News Agency said. They were en route to a nature reserve in Sichuan province, which has been hit the hardest by the storms, and road repair work was under way in an effort to free them, the report said.

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Reporters’ Groups Offer Cautious Praise For New DOJ Journalism Guidelines

(Adds reaction from reporters, publishers groups)

By Lawrence Hurley

WASHINGTON, July 12 (Reuters) – The U.S. Justice Department on Friday proposed curbing the ability of prosecutors to seize reporters’ records while investigating leaks to the media, after complaints that journalists’ rights were violated in recent high-profile cases.

A revised set of guidelines proposed by the department said that search warrants would not be sought against journalists carrying out “ordinary news-gathering activities.”

In another change, the department would in most instances notify news organizations in advance if a subpoena is being sought to obtain phone records.

The changes were contained in a report which the department prepared at the request of President Barack Obama and which was given to the president by Attorney General Eric Holder on Friday.

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Newspaper Association of America praised the changes but both said that they fell short of what was needed.

“We continue to believe that an impartial judge should be involved when there is a demand for a reporter’s records, because so many important rights hinge on the ability to test the government’s need for records,” the Reporters Committee said in an emailed statement.

NAA called for a federal shield law, which would also mandate a federal judge review any request for confidential source information.

Two cases sparked debate earlier this year about whether the Justice Department had been overzealous in investigating government leaks and had infringed on rights of free speech.

In one, prosecutors obtained a warrant to search Fox News correspondent James Rosen’s emails. He was named a “co-conspirator” in a federal leaks probe involving his reporting on North Korea.

In the other, the Justice Department seized Associated Press phone records without prior notification as part of a probe into leaks about a 2012 Yemen-based plot to bomb a U.S. airliner.

Erin Madigan White, an AP spokeswoman, said the description of the guidelines offered by the department “indicates they will result in meaningful additional protection for journalists.” A Fox spokeswoman had no immediate comment.

One of the proposed changes would require the director of national intelligence to certify that a leak threatened national security before an investigation into an unauthorized disclosure could start.

Another would create a role for the department’s director of public affairs and privacy and civil liberties officer in reviewing decisions relating to journalists.

The changes will go into effect “almost immediately,” a Justice Department official said, but it was not immediately clear exactly when that would be.

‘FIRMLY COMMITTED’

Holder said in a statement that the department was “firmly committed to ensuring our nation’s security, and protecting the American people, while at the same time safeguarding the freedom of the press.”

Matt Lehrich, a White House spokesman, said the president believed the report was “an important step towards finding the balance between dealing with dangerous leaks of classified national security information and protecting the rights of journalists to freely gather and report the news.”

David Anderson, an expert in media law at the University of Texas at Austin, said the changes would make a “substantial difference” because U.S. attorneys who want news media records would have to “jump through some hoops” to get them.

The change in search warrant policy meant that prosecutors would face a “higher burden” if they sought a warrant to get access to a reporter’s work under a law called the Privacy Protection Act, the Justice Department official said.

In the future, the Justice Department would not seek warrants in relation to reporters “if the sole purpose is the investigation of a person other than the member of the news media,” the report said.

Under the previous policy concerning notification of media organizations of subpoena requests, the department had a presumption against such a move. Now, notice will be given unless prosecutors can show that it would “present a clear and substantial threat to the integrity of the investigation,” the report said.

The attorney general would have to sign off on such a finding. Previously, it was the head of the criminal division.

Holder said the department had gone as far as it could go within existing law in seeking to protect journalists. A proposed media shield law, which Obama has said he supports, would go further, Holder said.

As part of the review process, Holder met with representatives of various media organizations, including Reuters.

Holder has said that prosecutors followed all laws and guidelines in recent cases. He personally authorized the searches of Fox News records, while his deputy, James Cole, authorized the search of Associated Press records.

Existing Justice Department guidelines allow searches under rare circumstances, usually with notice to the news organization affected.

In the Associated Press case, investigators focused on how reporters learned about a U.S. operation in Yemen to foil a plot to bomb an airliner, government officials have said. An AP story in May 2012 described the plot. The AP has reported that it delayed publishing the story at the request of government officials until security concerns were allayed.

U.S. officials have said, however, that the leak compromised a U.S. agent working to undermine the Yemen-based group Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

In the Fox case, Rosen, who was not prosecuted, had reported secret views of U.S. intelligence officials about North Korea. The Justice Department is prosecuting Stephen Kim, a former State Department contract analyst, for leaking the information to Rosen. (Additional reporting by Steve Holland and Diane Bartz; Edited by Howard Goller, David Storey and Eric Walsh)

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Jenny McCarthy, Donnie Wahlberg Dating: New Couple Reportedly Spent July 4th Together

Looks like Jenny McCarthy has found herself a new man, and he’s none other than Mark Wahlberg’s brother Donnie, of New Kids on the Block.

Us Weekly exclusively reports that the couple are officially an item. “Yes, they recently started dating and are having a lot of fun,” a source told the magazine, adding that the two spent 4th of July weekend together.

Wahlberg was a guest on McCarthy’s VH1 show back in March and the two playfully sucked on lollipops and exchanged pillow talk (see video below).

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Boy Rescued From Indiana Sand Dune After Being Trapped For Hours

MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. — An 8-year-old boy who was playing near a large sand dune at Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore along Lake Michigan partially fell into a hole and then got trapped under 11 feet of sand before rescuers managed to pull him out.

It took a crew using heavy excavating equipment more than three hours to pull the boy out of a dune known as Mount Baldy on Friday, Lakeshore Ranger Bruce Rowe said. The boy was taken to Franciscan St. Anthony Health Medical Center, but was later flown to a Chicago hospital.

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Neanderthal Language & Speech Shared With Modern Humans A Million Years Ago, Researchers Say

When you picture Neanderthals, you might imagine subhuman brutes grunting — but new research suggests these ancient hominids might have been more articulate than previously thought.

A recent paper, authored by Dutch scientists at the Max Planck Institute of Psycholinguistics, argues that not only did Neanderthals and humans interact and interbreed — but they also likely shared some elements of speech and language.

In fact, this new research claims that modern language and speech date back to the most recent ancestor we shared with the Neanderthals, Homo heidelbergensis. And it’s even possible that the languages we speak today retain some elements of Neanderthal language.

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Gluten-Free Breakfast Recipes, Suggestions and Photos

Even though gluten-free is a buzzword, we all know it isn’t really a panacea when it comes to giving your diet a makeover. But for those who need to avoid the wheat (and rye and barley) protein gluten, finding healthy alternatives can be an additional challenge. And that goes especially for the carb-craving that often accompanies a decadent weekend breakfast or brunch. Sure, you could just go for gluten-free pancake mixes and toast bread, but we’re interested in morning meals that are as healthful as they are appropriate for gluten intolerance.

We scoured our favorite gluten-free resources and talked to expert Dawn Jackson Blatner RDN, CSSD, LDN to get the lowdown. Read on for some creative and delicious breakfast dishes that everyone (everyone!) can enjoy.

Crustless Quiche

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Syrian Rebels Battle Jihadi Groups In Aleppo

BEIRUT — Western-backed opposition fighters and a faction of al-Qaida-linked rebels turned their guns on each other Saturday in Syria’s largest city, battling for control of a key checkpoint in the latest eruption of infighting among the forces trying to topple President Bashar Assad’s regime, activists said.

The clashes between rebels affiliated with the Free Syrian Army and fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant throws a spotlight on the growing phenomenon rebel-on-rebel violence that has sapped strength from the broader anti-Assad movement. It also underscores the rebels’ enduring inability more than two years into the conflict to unite around a unified command, as well as the deepening rift between more secular opposition fighters and Islamic extremists in the rebel ranks.

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The Heroic Absurdity Of Dan Brown

As a believer in the enjoyably awful, I would recommend this book wholeheartedly if I could.

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