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Margaret Thatcher secretly discussed issuing firearms to the police amid fears riots could disrupt the wedding of the Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer.
Files released by the National Archives in Kew, west London, under the 30-year rule, show the Metropolitan Police Commissioner was so concerned about the security situation he even raised it with the Queen.
In 1981, Mrs Thatcher's Conservative Government was rocked by the worst outbreak of civil unrest since Victorian times as rampaging youths battled the police in cities across England.
During the spring and summer, an explosive cocktail of inner city deprivation, rising unemployment, racial tensions and resentment at police tactics reached boiling point.
After riots erupted in Brixton, south London, in April, a fresh wave of disturbances broke out at the beginning of July - the month of the royal wedding - centred on Toxteth in Liverpool.
Further riots broke out in other cities, prompting fears of a breakdown of law and order.
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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? Cancer patients on Medicaid survive less time after their diagnosis than people with private or no insurance, data from Ohio show.
Looking only at highly treatable types of tumors, researchers found Medicaid enrollees were between 1.6 and 2.4 times as likely as other patients to die of their disease within five years.
It's unclear exactly how to interpret those findings, but researchers agree they're important.
"This shows that there are problems at a national level that we need to be aware of," said Dr. Derek Raghavan, who worked on the study.
"While Medicaid is potentially lifesaving, it is better to be able to support yourself and have insurance that protects at a higher level than just Medicaid," added Raghavan, who heads the Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Raghavan and colleagues looked at eight different cancers, such as testicular cancer and early-stage colon and lung cancer, in patients from an Ohio cancer registry.
With treatment patients typically survive more than five years with those diseases, so doctors often refer to them as "curable."
The new study, published in the journal Cancer, tracked more than 11,000 patients with private or no insurance and 1,345 Medicaid beneficiaries, half of whom enrolled after or around the time they got their diagnosis. All were between 15 and 54 years old.
Of the non-Medicaid patients, fewer than one in 10 died within five years of their cancer diagnosis.
By comparison, more than one in five Medicaid patients died during that period, and those who enrolled in Medicaid later survived the shortest time.
The latter result is crucial, said Dr. Karin Rhodes, who directs the Division of Health Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia and was not part of the new research.
"It is actually the impact of being uninsured," she told Reuters Health. "This really highlights the importance of fully implementing the Affordable Care Act and getting everybody fully insured."
However, she said, many factors might be involved in explaining the survival gap. Although the researchers tried to rule out some of those -- age, Zip code, and cancer stage, among others -- it's impossible to account for all the factors that might be at play.
Still, to Rhodes, it's a question of access to good primary care.
"I doubt that there are huge disparities in the type of treatment they got," she said. "I think it is when they got it."
Earlier this year, she published a study showing that sick kids covered by Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) must wait twice as long as those with private insurance to see a specialist.
"Physicians' willingness to give a timely appointment or to give an appointment to someone is directly proportional to how much reimbursement they get," Rhodes said.
What ends up happening is that many patients get treatment too late, she added.
"You are putting a lot of resources at the end of life -- that is where most of our expenses are, as opposed to doing prevention," Rhodes said, adding that the increased reimbursement rates promised with health reform might shift the balance to better preventive care and earlier treatment.
Raghavan was less convinced that differences in early care and prevention can explain his findings.
"What we think is, people who have been on Medicaid for a while understand the system," he told Reuters Health. When they get sick, "it is not such a shock for them" and they have an easier time getting treatment.
He said it's unlikely that the longer survival among non-Medicaid patients reflects more cancer screening, which might spot tumors earlier and that way artificially inflate a cancer patient's lifespan -- a phenomenon called lead-time bias.
"For lead-time bias to be relevant here, we would need to consider all stages of disease," not just the early stages, Raghavan said.
He added that more research is needed to find out whether Medicaid patients get worse treatment than others.
To Raghavan, universal health care is unlikely to get rid of all disparities, but he cautiously agreed with Rhodes that it might be helpful to some degree.
"Providing better insurance potentially will increase survival with one very important caveat, and that is, we need to be sure that our politicians have the mechanism to pay for their plan," he said.
Meanwhile, targeting health care access among minorities could go a long way toward solving the problem, he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/ucS8EX Cancer, online December 27, 2011.
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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Thursday, December 29, 2011
Heisman Trophy winner Robert Griffin III didn?t dazzle but Baylor still pulled out a thrilling Alamo Bowl victory over Washington in the highest-scoring bowl game in history. ...
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FILE - In this May 27, 2005 file photo, elephants drink at a water hole in Kenya's Tsavo East national park. It's been a disastrous year for elephants, perhaps the worst since ivory sales were banned in 1989 to save the world's largest land animals from extinction, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo, File)
FILE - In this May 27, 2005 file photo, elephants drink at a water hole in Kenya's Tsavo East national park. It's been a disastrous year for elephants, perhaps the worst since ivory sales were banned in 1989 to save the world's largest land animals from extinction, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo, File)
FILE - In this Dec. 13, 2011 file photo, Malaysian customs officers inspect elephant tusks which were seized on Dec. 12 in Port Klang, outside Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It's been a disastrous year for elephants, perhaps the worst since ivory sales were banned in 1989 to save the world's largest land animals from extinction, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. (AP Photo/Lai Seng Sin, File)
FILE - In this March 9, 2010 file photo, Kenya Wildlife Ranger Mohamed Kamanya is seen in front of a herd of elephants in the Tsavo East national park, Kenya. It's been a disastrous year for elephants, perhaps the worst since ivory sales were banned in 1989 to save the world's largest land animals from extinction, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said Thursday, Dec. 29, 2011. (AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo, File)
JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? It's been a disastrous year for elephants, perhaps the worst since ivory sales were banned in 1989 to save the world's largest land animals from extinction, the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC said Thursday.
A record number of large seizures of elephant tusks represents at least 2,500 dead animals and shows that organized crime ? in particular Asian syndicates ? is increasingly involved in the illegal ivory trade and the poaching that feeds it, the group said.
Some of the seized tusks came from old stockpiles, the elephants having been killed years ago. It's not clear how many elephants were recently killed in Africa for their tusks, but experts are alarmed.
TRAFFIC's elephant and rhino expert Tom Milliken thinks criminals may have the upper hand in the war to save rare and endangered animals.
"As most large-scale ivory seizures fail to result in any arrests, I fear the criminals are winning," Milliken told The Associated Press.
Most cases involve ivory being smuggled from Africa into Asia, where growing wealth has fed the desire for ivory ornaments and for rhino horn that is used in traditional medicine, though scientists have proved it has no medicinal value.
"The escalation in ivory trade and elephant and rhino killing is being driven by the Asian syndicates that are now firmly enmeshed within African societies," Milliken said in a telephone interview from his base in Zimbabwe. "There are more Asians than ever before in the history of the continent, and this is one of the repercussions."
All statistics are not yet in, and no one can say how much ivory is getting through undetected, but "what is clear is the dramatic increase in the number of large-scale seizures, over 800 kilograms (1,760 pounds) in weight, that have taken place in 2011," TRAFFIC said in a statement.
There were at least 13 large seizures this year, compared to six in 2010 with a total weight just under 1,000 kilograms (2,200 pounds).
In the most recent, and worst, case Malaysian authorities seized hundreds of African elephant tusks on Dec. 21 worth $1.3 million that were being shipped to Cambodia. The ivory was hidden in containers of handicrafts from Kenya's Mombasa port. Most large seizures have originated from Kenyan or Tanzanian ports, TRAFFIC said.
Fifty elephants a month are being killed, their tusks hacked off, in Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve, according to the Washington-based Environmental Investigation Agency.
With shipments so large, criminals have taken to shipping them by sea instead of by air, falsifying documents with the help of corrupt officials, monitors said.
Milliken said some of the seized ivory has been identified as coming from government-owned stockpiles ? made up of confiscated tusks and those of dead elephants ? in another sign of corruption.
"In 23 years of compiling ivory seizure data ... this is the worst year ever for large ivory seizures. 2011 has truly been a horrible year for elephants," said Milliken.
Rhinos also have suffered. A record 443 rhino were killed this year in South Africa, according to National Geographic News Watch.
That surpassed last year's figure of 333 dead rhino despite the government deploying soldiers to protect them this year in its flagship Kruger National Park. There, 244 of the rhino were killed in 2011, National Geographic reported this week. That figure is expected to rise before the end of the year. Kruger has more than 10,000 white rhinos and about 500 black rhinos. South Africa is home to 90 percent of the rhinos left on the continent.
Africa's elephant population was estimated at between 5 million and 10 million before the big white hunters came to the continent with European colonization. Massive poaching for the ivory trade in the 1980s halved the remaining number of African elephants to about 600,000.
Following the 1989 ban on ivory trade and concerted international efforts to protect the animals, elephant herds in east and southern Africa were thriving before the new threat arrived from Asia.
A report from Kenya's Amboseli National Park highlighted the dangers. There had been almost no poaching in the park, which lies in the shadow of Mount Kilimanjaro, for 30 years until a Chinese company was awarded the contract to build a highway nearby two years ago. Amboseli has lost at least four of its "big tuskers" since then.
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The HTC smartphone, which has a 4.3-inch screen, comes with 42 Mbps over T-Mobile's network. Amaze 4G, which is available in black and white colors, is priced at $299.99 with a 2-year T-Mobile contract.
Amaze 4G, which runs on Google's Android 2.3.4 Gingerbread OS, is adorned with dual-core 1.5 GHz Scorpion CPU, Adreno 220 GPU, 4.3-inch S-LCD capacitive display, 1 GB of RAM, and 16 GB of internal memory that could be expandable up to 32 GB microSD card.
HTC has already confirmed that Amaze 4G will be getting Google Inc.'s latest smartphone operating system Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich in 2012. The HTC smartphone has 8-megapixel dual-LED flash camera with 1080p video capture and 2-megapixel front-facing camera for video chat.
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Amaze 4G touts a 4.3-inch S-LCD Gorilla glass touch screen with 960 x 540 pixels resolution at about 256 ppi pixel density. It comes with 130 x 65.6 x 11.8 mm dimension and weighs 172.9 grams.
On the other hand, the Samsung Galaxy S2 Skyrocket runs on Google Inc.'s Android 2.3.5 Gingerbread OS. AT&T announced in the launch event that Skyrocket would receive an update to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich sometime in 2012.
The Skyrocket has a Scorpion dual-core processor, Adreno 220 GPU, Qualcomm APQ8060 Snapdragon chipset, 4.5-inch Super AMOLED (active-matrix organic LED) Plus display, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of internal memory, 4G LTE support, an 8 megapixel rear-facing LED flash camera with 1080p video capture and a 2 megapixel front-facing camera for video calls.
Let's look at the specifications of Samsung Galaxy S2 Skyrocket vis-?-vis HTC Amaze 4G.
Display:?Skyrocket touts a 4.5-inch Super AMOLED Plus Gorilla Glass display with a resolution of 800 x 480 pixels and about 207 ppi pixel density. On the other hand, Amaze 4G sports a 4.3-inch Super-LCD capacitive touchscreen with qHD resolution of 960 x 540 pixels with about 256 pixels per inch (ppi) density.
Size:?Skyrocket comes with 129.8 x 68.8 x 9.5 mm dimension and weighs 130.5 grams while Amaze 4G has 130 x 65.6 x 11.8 mm dimension and weighs 172.9 grams.
Processor:?Skyrocket features a 1.5 GHz Scorpion dual-core processor, Adreno 220 GPU, Qualcomm APQ8060 Snapdragon chipset with 1GB RAM. Amaze 4G packs a 1.5 GHz Scorpion dual-core processor, Adreno 220 GPU with 1GB RAM.
User Interface:?Skyrocket comes with Samsung's TouchWiz 4.0 version user interface while Amaze 4G has HTC Sense 3.0 version.
Camera:?Both smartphones sport rear-facing 8 megapixel cameras and additional 2-megapixel cameras for video chat. Skyrocket has 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash in the rear camera with 1080p video capture capability while Amaze 4G has 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, dual-LED flash with 1080p video capture.
Camera Features:?Skyrocket has geo-tagging, touch focus, face and smile detection, and image stabilization. On the other hand, Amaze 4G has geo-tagging, touch-focus, face detection, SmartShot, BurstShot, SweepShot, and ClearShot.
3G/4G:?Skyrocket has HSDPA 21 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps and supports 4G LTE while Amaze 4G has HSDPA 42 Mbps and HSUPA.
Operating System:?Both the smartphones have Android 2.3 Gingerbread operating system with both promised Google Inc.'s latest smartphone OS, Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich. Android 4.0 is a combination of Gingerbread and Honeycomb in one unit.
Android's Head of Engineering Mike Claren has announced the new OS as Google's "most ambitious release to date." The newest features include widgets in a new tab, a customizable launcher, Gmail with offline search with a two-line preview and new action bar at the bottom, better voice integration, improved copy and paste and a new tabbed Web browser that allows up to 16 tabs.
WLAN/Bluetooth/USB:?Both the smartphones have Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, DLNA, NFC, and microUSB 2.0 version (MHL). Skyrocket additionally has Wi-Fi Direct, Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 3.0 version+HS and USB On-the-go, while Amaze 4G has Bluetooth 3.0 version with A2DP, EDR.
Storage:?Both the smartphones have a fixed 16 GB of internal storage and expandable via microSD card of up to 32 GB.
Battery:?Skyrocket comes with a standard Li-ion 1850 mAh battery that gives up to 7 hours talk time and up to 256 hours of standby. Amaze 4G, on the other hand, has a standard 1730 mAh battery that gives up to 6 hours of talk time and up to 265 hours of standby.
Pricing:?Amaze 4G is priced at $299.99 with a two-year T-Mobile contract while it is available at $199.99 in Best Buy and Amazon.com. On the other hand, Skyrocket is priced at $149.99 with a two-year AT&T contract in selected areas.
Additional Features:?Skyrocket has accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass sensors, Assisted GPS, Adobe Flash, active noise cancellation with dedicated mic, SNS integration, MP4/DivX/XviD/WMV/H.264/H.263 player, MP3/WAV/eAAC+/AC3/FLAC player, Google Search, Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, and Picasa integration.
On the other hand, Amaze 4G has accelerometer, proximity, compass sensors, stereo FM radio with RDS, SRS sound enhancement, assisted GPS, Adobe Flash, active noise cancellation with dedicated mic, TV-out (via MHL A/V link), SNS integration, Google Search, Maps, Gmail, YouTube, Google Talk, Picasa integration, MP3/AAC+/WAV/WMA player, and MP4/H.263/H.264/WMV player.
Editors' Rating:?Both the smartphones scored 4 out of 5 stars in CNET editors' rating. PCMag has a score of 4.5 out of 5 stars for Skyrocket, much better than 4 stars for Amaze 4G.
Editors' Review of Skyrocket:?"If you live in an area that gets AT&T's LTE network, we highly recommend the powerful and beautiful Samsung Galaxy S2 Skyrocket," according to CNET.
"The Samsung Galaxy S2 Skyrocket offers blistering LTE data speeds, a massive screen, and very fast dual-core performance," according to PCMag.
Editors' Review of Amaze 4G:?"The HTC Amaze 4G is a beautifully designed and fast Android smartphone, with some advanced camera features, but don't go ditching your point-and-shoot camera just yet," according to CNET.
"The HTC Amaze 4G has a big beautiful screen, a great camera, and fast HSPA+ 42 speeds, making it a top choice for Android smartphones on T-Mobile," according to PCMag.
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Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/274522/20111230/htc-amaze-4g-vs-samsung-galaxy-s2.htm
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Red Apple driver Cynthia Origin looks on as passenger Ray Steiglman and his service dog Spank board the Express Line on Wednesday. (Kurt Madar The Daily Times)
FARMINGTON ? A new union has come to town, and it's already flexing a little muscle.A year ago, First Transit, the largest transportation company in the U.S., won the bid to operate Farmington's Red Apple Transit System. Prior to that, the red buses were operated by Presbyterian Medical Service.
Since First Transit took over, Red Apple drivers have seen a wage freeze, lost a dollar an hour in pay and had a drastic cut to their benefit package.
In response, the 12 drivers unionized in October, becoming part of the United Transportation Union.
"We were told that the transition was going to be seamless," said Red Apple driver and union spokesman Steve Moots. "It wasn't. One of the biggest issues is that they took away our health insurance."
Insurance under PMS was through Blue Cross Blue Shield, and Moots said "it was excellent insurance."
The transit company replaced the insurance plan with one that places a dollar limit on the coverage it provides, something that is only legal because the company received a waiver from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Under the Affordable Care Act, if a plan applies a dollar limit, it can't be less than $750,000 a year. With the waiver, the plan is limited to $10,000 a year of coverage with high deductibles and many procedures left uncovered.
"They came back to us and said we went to bat for you and got you some insurance," Moots said. "What they did was get a limited benefit PPO that didn't
pay much of anything."Limited benefit plans are most often used by companies that employ minimum wage workers and experience high turnover. It is also used by companies that employ seasonal labor.
"The reality didn't sink in until the claims started coming in," Moots said. "A couple of drivers had health issues by the middle of the year, and their claims started coming back unpaid."
Moots completely lost his insurance because he is a part-time driver.
Cynthia Orgin has driven Red Apple buses for the last three years.
"The thing of it is, we pay a lot of money for insurance," she said. "I was hospitalized for three days, and they only paid 10 percent. Now I am stuck with a bill for over $10,000."
Orgin had no idea this was going to be the case.
"I had to get a procedure done, and the doctor checked with the insurance company who said I had to pay a certain amount," Orgin said. "I paid it, and after the procedure was done, the doctor called me and said the insurance wasn't going to pay for it because they said I was a seasonal employee. I'm not a seasonal employee."
One of the ways companies get the federal waiver for limited benefit insurance is by classifying their employees as seasonal, yet Red Apple drivers drive year-round.
Moots did some research and discovered that First Transit is unionized in a lot of other places.
"They may offer different insurance, but if you don't have a union, you don't even get your foot in the door," Moots said.
So the drivers decided to unionize. Of the 12 drivers, 11 voted to form a union. They incorporated Oct. 1.
Since then, the newly formed union has repeatedly reached out to First Transit in an effort to start negotiations. Until last week, First Transit hadn't replied.
According to First Transit company spokesperson Timothy Stokes, the reason the transit company hadn't responded was that letters sent by the union had the wrong address.
"We didn't get a letter until one was forwarded to us by the company at the other address," Stokes said. "We immediately talked to some managers in the area and hope to have a meeting planned around mid- or late January."
Stokes' claim that the company hopes to have meetings in January is news to Bonnie Morr, alternate vice president of United Transportation Union, who was instrumental in helping the Red Apple drivers unionize.
"So far, all we have received is a very brief email with their contact information," Morr said. "We got that last week."
Despite having the wrong address, which came from the National Labor Relations Board, Morr said she has made repeated efforts to reach the company by telephone.
"At this point, it has been extremely difficult getting in touch with First Transit," Morr said. "I have been calling their labor council since October, and that individual never bothered to get back to me. It's very unusual. Generically, when there is an election and the union contacts a company, they usually get back in a reasonable amount of time."
The new union is small, but it still has bargaining power, which is something Moots and the other drivers were worried about.
Being new to unions, they weren't sure how much power they would have.
"We are worried that if we strike, they could just hire 12 new drivers," Moots said. "Then we would be completely out of a job. For many of us who are older, this is our last job."
That worry is pretty much unfounded.
"Not only does being in a union give them more strength because now they speak with one voice, they also have access to our experience and knowledge," Morr said. "If they did decide to strike, First Transit wouldn't be able to just hire new drivers without violating labor laws. Because Red Apple has federal funding in order to support the vehicles or operations, it gives certain job protections."
Farmington officials aren't involved in the dispute.
"It's really an issue between First Transit, who employs them, and the drivers," said Assistant City Manager Bob Campbell. "Of course, we are interested in a continued quality of service."
According to Campbell, First Transit received the contract for running the transit system because it had the most competitive bid.
"The city pays First Transit $54,197 a month," said General Services Office Manager Joanna Oliver. "This January, it goes up 3 percent."
The city paid $54,869 a month to PMS.
"Because that's considered an operating expense, the Federal Transportation Authority refunds the city 50 percent," Oliver said.
The drivers agree that the city isn't involved in the dispute and feel city officials have treated them with respect.
"We really don't want to strike," Moots said. "The city is desiring to get the bus system better, and they are involving us."
For Morr, it's all about what's fair.
"This is a small community and they already aren't high wage earners," Morr said. "But they are your residents and they support the community. When I heard that they had their wages cut and insurance slashed, I thought it was just awful."
Source: http://www.daily-times.com/ci_19637064?source=rss_viewed
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Bob Knight provided commentary for ESPN (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Notre Dame Head Coach Mike Brey (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Tray Woodall #1 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Tray Woodall #1 guarded by Scott Martin #14 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Pittsburgh Head Coach Jamie Dixon (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Ashton Gibbs #12 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Nasir Robinson #35 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Lamar Patterson #21 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Talib Zanna #42 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Nasir Robinson #35 and Tom Knight #25 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Lamar Patterson #21 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Mike Brey unhappy with a call (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Mike Brey talks to the team during a timeout (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
Jamie Dixon exhorts his players (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Talib Zanna #42 tangles with Tom Knight #25 (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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Jack Cooley #45 dunks (NCAA Basketball: Notre Dame 72 vs. Pittsburgh 59, Joyce Center, Notre Dame, IN, December 27, 2011)
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