Thursday, October 31, 2013

Jane Seymour Files for Legal Separation from James Keach

Surviving over two decades together in Hollywood is quite a feat, but now Jane Seymour and James Keach are legally separated.


Last week, the "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman" star filed in L.A. County Superior Court after announcing their split back in April.


According to the paperwork, the 62-year-old actress cites irreconcilable differences and requests joint legal and physical custody of their 17-year-old twins.


Having long moved on from the hit series, next you can catch Jane in the upcoming TV movie, "Unknown Heart."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/celebrity-news/jane-seymour-files-legal-separation-james-keach-951201
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Obama to cite Mass. health care law's slow start

President Barack Obama speaks in Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013, during a memorial service for the late former House Speaker Thomas S. Foley. Foley was a 30-year veteran of the House who died last week at the age of 84. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)







President Barack Obama speaks in Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013, during a memorial service for the late former House Speaker Thomas S. Foley. Foley was a 30-year veteran of the House who died last week at the age of 84. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)







(AP) — President Barack Obama is citing the Massachusetts health care system's slow start to keep expectations low for early sign-ups for his own overhaul. And he's pointing to the bipartisan effort to get the program launched in Massachusetts to encourage his opponents to stop rooting for his law's failure.

The president planned to speak about the embattled law Wednesday from Boston's historic Faneuil Hall, where Massachusetts Republican Gov. Mitt Romney was joined by the late Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy to sign the state's 2006 health care overhaul bill.

There's been no such bipartisanship surrounding Obama's effort, particularly this month as the marketplace to allow individuals to buy health insurance went online with myriad technical problems. Republicans say the dysfunction is more reason to repeal the law, and they're pressing Obama administration officials for an explanation.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius was testifying Wednesday before a Republican-led House committee, a day after Medicare chief Marilyn Tavenner was questioned by lawmakers about the problems.

Tavenner apologized for the website woes, but stressed it was improving daily. She repeatedly declined to say how many people have been able to sign up despite problems accessing Healthcare.gov, saying the figures would be released in mid-November.

An internal memo obtained by The Associated Press shows that the administration had expected nearly 500,000 uninsured people to sign up for coverage in October, the program's first month. But Tavenner forecast less impressive figures. "We expect the initial numbers to be small," she said.

The White House said Obama planned to point out Massachusetts' sluggish start Wednesday. Jonathan Gruber, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology economics professor who advised both Romney and Obama on the development of their laws, said only 123 paying consumers signed up the first month of the Massachusetts law, with 36,000 coming on by the time penalties kicked in for failing to have insurance.

"That same kind of outcome will happen at the national level, but it will take time," Gruber said in a media call previewing the trip organized by the White House. "We need to be patient and measure the outcomes in months and years, not days and weeks."

While more people did sign up as the deadline approached in Massachusetts, its law never faced high-profile computer woes or such fierce opposition. Even though the federal law was modeled on Romney's, the former governor ran against Obama last year on a campaign to repeal the federal version.

In a statement Wednesday, Romney said he believes "a plan crafted to fit the unique circumstances of a single state should not be grafted onto the entire country."

While in Boston, Obama also planned to speak at a fundraiser for House Democrats at the home of his former ambassador to Spain, Alan Solomont. About 60 people paid $16,200 to $64,800 to dine on Spanish-influenced fare, to be followed by Red Sox cookies in honor of the World Series game being played in town the same night.

___

Associated Press writer Steve LeBlanc in Boston contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-30-US-Obama/id-b098be341cbc4d178183abc21fb004ea
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Here are all of Google's Halloween Easter eggs


Google must be a very boring place to work. As usual, Google's engineers leap at any opportunity to take a break from tinkering with Kit-Kat and toying with Google+'s photo functionality, to bring a few hidden gems to its users' experience.


And Halloween is just that type of opportunity! In honor of the ghoulish season, the search giant added a few secret jokes into the search graph for popular monsters. For example, searching for "werewolf," the side card on the right describes the werewolf as "a very real creature" whose food source is "anything it can chase, catch, and chomp."


Oh, Google, you so crazy! Anyways, here are all the Halloween eggs we could find. Drop a line in the comments if you dig up of any others.


Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2059226/here-are-all-of-googles-halloween-easter-eggs.html#tk.rss_all
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Procedural results from the RIBS V trial presented at TCT 2013

Procedural results from the RIBS V trial presented at TCT 2013


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

30-Oct-2013



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Contact: Judy Romero
jromero@crf.org
Cardiovascular Research Foundation



Good outcomes with both drug-eluting stents and drug-eluting balloons in treating patients with bare metal stent restenosis



SAN FRANCISCO, CA October 30, 2013 A clinical trial comparing the use of drug-eluting stents (DES) and drug-eluting balloons (DEB) in treating in-stent restenosis (ISR) from bare metal stents found that both techniques yielded positive long term outcomes. Findings from the RIBS V trial were presented today at the 25th annual Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF), TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine.


Treatment of patients with in-stent restenosis (ISR) remains a challenge. Drug-eluting balloons (DEB) have demonstrated effectiveness in patients with bare metal stent (BMS) ISR. However, the relative value of DEB versus new generation DES has not been measured.


In RIBS V, patients presenting with BMS ISR (>50 percent diameter stenosis) and angina or objective evidence of ischemia were eligible. Patients with very diffuse ISR (>30 mm), total occlusions or ISR in small vessels (

The primary endpoint of the study was the comparison of minimal lumen diameter (MLD) at nine month follow-up between the two arms.


A total of 189 patients with BMS ISR were randomized at 25 Spanish University Hospitals. Of these, 95 were allocated to DEB and 94 to EES. Mean age was 6611 years and 25 patients (13 percent) were female. Cross-over to DES was required in eight patients in the DEB arm. Late angiographic follow-up was obtained in 92 percent of eligible patients.


At follow up, MLD in segment (primary study endpoint) was 2.36 mm in the EES group and 2.01 mm in the DEB group. MLD in lesion was 2.44 mm in the EES group and 2.03 mm in the DEB group. These angiographic differences were statistically significant. However, restenosis rate (4.7 percent and 9.5 percent) and late loss were very low and similar in both groups.


"In patients with BMS-ISR both DEB and EES provide excellent long-term clinical outcomes with very low rate of clinical and angiographic recurrences," said lead investigator Fernando Alfonso, MD, PhD. Dr. Alfonso is Head of the Cardiac Department at the Hospital Universitario de la Princesa in Madrid, Spain.


"However, EES provide superior late angiographic results including MLD, the primary endpoint, and percent diameter stenosis. Further studies (larger and with longer follow-up) are required to elucidate if these superior late angiographic findings eventually translate into a clinical benefit."

###



The RIBS V trial was an investigators driven initiative (with unrestricted grants obtained from B. Braun Surgical and Abbott Vascular). The study was coordinated from the Hospital Clnico San Carlos in Madrid. Dr. Alfonso reported no disclosures.


About CRF and TCT



The Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) is an independent, academically focused nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the survival and quality of life for people with cardiovascular disease through research and education. Since its inception in 1991, CRF has played a major role in realizing dramatic improvements in the lives of countless numbers of patients by establishing the safe use of new technologies and therapies in interventional cardiovascular medicine. CRF is the sponsor of the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine. For more information, visit http://www.crf.org and http://www.tctconference.com.





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Procedural results from the RIBS V trial presented at TCT 2013


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

30-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail

]


Share Share

Contact: Judy Romero
jromero@crf.org
Cardiovascular Research Foundation



Good outcomes with both drug-eluting stents and drug-eluting balloons in treating patients with bare metal stent restenosis



SAN FRANCISCO, CA October 30, 2013 A clinical trial comparing the use of drug-eluting stents (DES) and drug-eluting balloons (DEB) in treating in-stent restenosis (ISR) from bare metal stents found that both techniques yielded positive long term outcomes. Findings from the RIBS V trial were presented today at the 25th annual Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF), TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine.


Treatment of patients with in-stent restenosis (ISR) remains a challenge. Drug-eluting balloons (DEB) have demonstrated effectiveness in patients with bare metal stent (BMS) ISR. However, the relative value of DEB versus new generation DES has not been measured.


In RIBS V, patients presenting with BMS ISR (>50 percent diameter stenosis) and angina or objective evidence of ischemia were eligible. Patients with very diffuse ISR (>30 mm), total occlusions or ISR in small vessels (

The primary endpoint of the study was the comparison of minimal lumen diameter (MLD) at nine month follow-up between the two arms.


A total of 189 patients with BMS ISR were randomized at 25 Spanish University Hospitals. Of these, 95 were allocated to DEB and 94 to EES. Mean age was 6611 years and 25 patients (13 percent) were female. Cross-over to DES was required in eight patients in the DEB arm. Late angiographic follow-up was obtained in 92 percent of eligible patients.


At follow up, MLD in segment (primary study endpoint) was 2.36 mm in the EES group and 2.01 mm in the DEB group. MLD in lesion was 2.44 mm in the EES group and 2.03 mm in the DEB group. These angiographic differences were statistically significant. However, restenosis rate (4.7 percent and 9.5 percent) and late loss were very low and similar in both groups.


"In patients with BMS-ISR both DEB and EES provide excellent long-term clinical outcomes with very low rate of clinical and angiographic recurrences," said lead investigator Fernando Alfonso, MD, PhD. Dr. Alfonso is Head of the Cardiac Department at the Hospital Universitario de la Princesa in Madrid, Spain.


"However, EES provide superior late angiographic results including MLD, the primary endpoint, and percent diameter stenosis. Further studies (larger and with longer follow-up) are required to elucidate if these superior late angiographic findings eventually translate into a clinical benefit."

###



The RIBS V trial was an investigators driven initiative (with unrestricted grants obtained from B. Braun Surgical and Abbott Vascular). The study was coordinated from the Hospital Clnico San Carlos in Madrid. Dr. Alfonso reported no disclosures.


About CRF and TCT



The Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) is an independent, academically focused nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the survival and quality of life for people with cardiovascular disease through research and education. Since its inception in 1991, CRF has played a major role in realizing dramatic improvements in the lives of countless numbers of patients by establishing the safe use of new technologies and therapies in interventional cardiovascular medicine. CRF is the sponsor of the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine. For more information, visit http://www.crf.org and http://www.tctconference.com.





[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

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]

 


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/crf-prf103013.php
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Red Sox win WS title, beat Cardinals 6-1 in Game 6

Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Koji Uehara and catcher David Ross celebrate after getting St. Louis Cardinals' Matt Carpenter to strike out and end Game 6 of baseball's World Series Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox won 6-1 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)







Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Koji Uehara and catcher David Ross celebrate after getting St. Louis Cardinals' Matt Carpenter to strike out and end Game 6 of baseball's World Series Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox won 6-1 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)







Boston Red Sox's David Ortiz carries relief pitcher Koji Uehara after winning Game 6 of baseball's World Series against the St. Louis CardinalsWednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox won 6-1 to win the series. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)







Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Koji Uehara jumps into David Ross's arms after defeating the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 6 of baseball's World Series Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox won 6-1 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)







Boston Red Sox relief pitcher Koji Uehara and catcher David Ross celebrate after getting St. Louis Cardinals' Matt Carpenter to strike out and end Game 6 of baseball's World Series Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. The Red Sox won 6-1 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)







St. Louis Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina looks back as home plate umpire Adam Wainwright call Boston Red Sox's Jonny Gomes safe on a three run RBI double by Shane Victorino during the third inning of Game 6 of baseball's World Series Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2013, in Boston. Left is Jacoby Ellsbury, Xander Bogaerts, center and second right, David Ortiz. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)







BOSTON (AP) — The old ballpark was packed for a celebration nearly a century in the making.

Players danced around the infield with their families.

Fans remained in the stands, savoring a long-awaited moment generations of New Englanders had never been able to witness.

Turmoil to triumph. Worst to first. A clincher at Fenway Park.

David Ortiz and the Boston Red Sox, baseball's bearded wonders, capped their remarkable turnaround by beating the St. Louis Cardinals 6-1 in Game 6 on Wednesday night to win their third World Series championship in 10 seasons.

When it was over, Ortiz took a microphone on the field and addressed the city, just as he did a week after the marathon bombings last April.

"This is for you, Boston. You guys deserve it," the Series MVP said. "We've been through a lot this year and this is for all of you and all those families who struggled."

And the Red Sox didn't even have to fly the trophy home. For the first time since Babe Ruth's team back in 1918, Boston won the title at Fenway. The 101-year-old stadium, oldest in the majors, was jammed with 38,447 singing, shouting fans anticipating a party that had been building for more than nine decades.

"Maybe they won't have to go another 95 years," said John Farrell, a champion in his first season as Boston's manager.

Shane Victorino, symbolic of these resilient Sox, returned from a stiff back and got Boston rolling with a three-run double off the Green Monster against rookie sensation Michael Wacha. Pumped with emotion, Victorino pounded his chest with both fists three times.

John Lackey became the first pitcher to start and win a Series clincher for two different teams, allowing one run over 6 2-3 innings 11 years after his Game 7 victory as an Angels rookie in 2002.

With fans roaring on every pitch and cameras flashing, Koji Uehara struck out Matt Carpenter for the final out. The Japanese pitcher jumped into the arms of catcher David Ross while Red Sox players rushed from the dugout and bullpen as the Boston theme "Dirty Water" played on the public-address system.

There wasn't the "Cowboy Up!" comeback charm of "The Idiots" from 2004, who swept St. Louis to end an 86-year title drought. There wasn't that cool efficiency of the 2007 team that swept Colorado.

This time, they were Boston Strong — playing for a city shaken by tragedy.

"We've dealt with a lot," Dustin Pedroia said. "But our team came together."

After a late-season collapse in 2011, the embarrassing revelations of a fried chicken-and-beer clubhouse culture that contributed to the ouster of manager Terry Francona, and the daily tumult of Bobby Valentine's one-year flop, these Red Sox grew on fans.

Just like the long whiskers on the players' faces, starting with Jonny Gomes' scruffy spring training beard.

"As soon as we went to Fort Myers, the movie's already been written," Gomes said. "All we had to do was press play, and this is what happened."

The only player remaining from the 2004 champs, Ortiz had himself a Ruthian World Series. He batted .688 (11 for 16) with two homers, six RBIs and eight walks — including four in the finale — for a .760 on-base percentage in 25 plate appearances, the second-highest in Series history.

"We have a lot of players with heart. We probably don't have the talent that we had in '07 and '04, but we have guys that are capable (of staying) focused and do the little things," Ortiz said.

Even slumping Stephen Drew delivered a big hit in Game 6, sending Wacha's first pitch of the fourth into the right-center bullpen for a 4-0 lead. By the time the inning was over, RBI singles by Mike Napoli and Victorino had made it 6-0, and the Red Sox were on their way.

"Hey, I missed two games. It's time to shine," Victorino said.

All over New England, from Connecticut's Housatonic River up to the Aroostook in Maine, Boston's eighth championship can be remembered for the beard-yanking bonding.

Fans bid up the average ticket price to over $1,000 on the resale market and some prime locations went for more than $10,000 each. Nearly all the Red Sox rooters stood in place for 30 minutes after the final out to view the presentation of the trophy and MVP award. A few thousand remained when a beaming Ortiz came back on the field with his son 75 minutes after the final out.

"It was an awesome atmosphere here," Lackey said.

The win capped an emotional season for the Red Sox, one heavy with the memory of the events that unfolded on Patriots Day, when three people were killed and more than 260 wounded in bombing attacks at the Boston Marathon. The Red Sox wore "Boston Strong" logos on their left sleeves, erected a large emblem on the Green Monster and moved the logo into the center-field grass as a constant reminder.

"There's I think a civil responsibility that we have wearing this uniform, particularly here in Boston," Farrell said. "And it became a connection initially, the way our guys reached out to individuals or to hospital visits. And it continued to build throughout the course of the season. I think our fans, they got to a point where they appreciated the way we played the game, how they cared for one another. And in return they gave these guys an incredible amount of energy to thrive on in this ballpark."

Red, white and blue fireworks fired over the ballpark as Commissioner Bud Selig presented the World Series trophy to Red Sox owners John Henry, Tom Werner and Larry Lucchino, leaving a haze over the field.

"When the fireworks went off at the presentation of the trophy out there, when the ballpark was filled with smoke, it was completely surreal," Farrell said. "To be in this position, given where we've come from, reflecting back a year ago at this time, there's been a lot that's happened in 13 months."

Players then put on goggles for a champagne celebration in the cramped clubhouse.

"They just found ways to win," Henry said. "At some point you have to think there's something special happening here."

Among the players blamed for the indifferent culture at the end of the Francona years, Lackey took the mound two days shy of the second anniversary of his elbow surgery and got his first Series win since the 2002 clincher. He pitched shutout ball into the seventh, when Carlos Beltran's RBI single ended the Cardinals' slump with runners in scoring position at 0 for 14.

Junichi Tazawa came in with the bases loaded and retired Allen Craig on an inning-ending grounder to first. Brandon Workman followed in the eighth and Uehara finished.

St. Louis had been seeking its second title in three seasons, but the Cardinals sputtered after arriving in Boston late Tuesday following a seven-hour flight delay caused by mechanical problems. Symbolic of the team's struggles, reliever Trevor Rosenthal tripped while throwing a pitch to Ortiz in the eighth, balking Pedroia to second.

"They were some frustrated guys in there, but overall you can't ask us to go about any better than how our guys did," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "Not too many people expected us to do what we did."

Wacha entered 4-0 with a 1.00 ERA in his postseason career but gave up six runs, five hits and four walks in 3 2-3 innings, the shortest start of the 22-year-old's big league career.

"I just made too many mistakes," he said. "It doesn't matter how hard you're throwing if you can't locate it."

Boston was a 30-1 underdog to win the World Series last winter but joined the 1991 Minnesota Twins as the only teams to win titles one season after finishing in last place. Now, the Red Sox will raise another championship flag before their home opener next season April 4 against Milwaukee.

Boston hit just .211, the lowest average for a Series champion in 39 years and 13 points lower than the Cardinals. But after falling behind 2-1 in the Series on the first-game ending obstruction call in postseason history, the Red Sox tied it the following night on the first-game ending pickoff in postseason play. That sparked the Red Sox to three straight wins and another title.

"When we started rolling," Ortiz said, "nobody ever stopped the train."

NOTES: Boston also won the Series at Fenway Park in 1912. The Red Sox won the first World Series in 1903 at the Huntington Avenue Grounds and in 1916 at Braves Field. ... Catfish Hunter and Jimmy Key each won Series clinchers for two clubs, as a starter and reliever. ... Freese, the 2011 World Series MVP, hit .158 (3 for 19) with no RBIs.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-31-World%20Series/id-53e422137c074aecab97e701bfc26e42
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Court rules that Deutsche Telekom can't throttle internet speeds on flat-rate plans

Suddenly, we fancy moving to Germany. A Cologne court has ruled that Deutsche Telekom can't implement a plan to throttle speeds to 2Mbps on wired, flat-rate internet service once customers exceed monthly data caps. The policy would pose an "unreasonable disadvantage" to subscribers that rely on ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/e6BrK1-90w0/
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Renan Barao happy to finally get fight against Dominick Cruz


Guilherme Cruz, MMA Fighting



Dominick Cruz will finally return at UFC 169, and Renan Barao is happier than ever to welcome him back to the Octagon.


Cruz, the undisputed UFC bantamweight champion, hasn’t fought since October 2011, when he scored a unanimous decision victory over Demetrious Johnson. Barao, the interim champion, is 5-0 since then, and they will unify the titles when they meet on Feb. 1 in Newark, N.J.


"I was really happy with the news," Barao told MMAFighting.com. "We’re finally getting in there to do the fight that everybody wants to see and find out who’s the real champion. I always wanted it and rooted for his recovery.


"I feel I’m the champion. Being in there and doing my work, I’m a champion already. He’s also the champion, but I am too. Let’s see who leaves the Octagon as the champion."


Barao has beaten five of the six fighters ranked below him in the UFC rankings, but he doesn’t believe Cruz’s long layoff gives him an advantage at UFC 169


"I don’t believe that gives me an advantage," he said. "What gives me an advantage is my training. I will work hard to get there at my best. I’m not counting him out because of the injuries."


After two knee surgeries, Cruz could be an easy target for low kicks in this fight.


"Let’s see which strategy Andre Pederneiras and Jair Lourenco will prepare for this fight," Barao said. "Whatever they decide, I’m doing in this fight."


Barao vs. Cruz will be the co-main event at UFC 169, as featherweight kingpin Jose Aldo puts his title on the line against No. 1 contender Ricardo Lamas. Aldo and Barao are teammates at Nova Uniao in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Barao sees the opportunity of fighting on the same night as his friend as a benefit.


"It will give me an extra energy," he said. "I was really happy when they told me I would be fighting at the same night as Jose Aldo. He’s doing great and should get another win."


Barao also expects Aldo to add another knockout to his record against Lamas.


"I’m sure he will train hard and do what he has to do to win when he enters the cage," Barao said. "Aldo will walk straight forward and score another big knockout. He hits hard and once Lamas makes a mistake, he will get knocked out."


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/30/5047044/renan-barao-happy-to-finally-get-fight-against-dominick-cruz
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