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  • Learn more about humanitarian organizations helping Nuba refugees

    Humanitarian organizations are not able to work in the Nuba Mountains.  However, here are some organizations that are effective in helping Nuba refugees who have fled into South Sudan:

    Photo credit: Ann Curry

    International Rescue Committee

    1-855-9-RESCUE
    P.O. Box 96651
    Washington, DC 20090-6651

    Samaritan's Purse

    1-800-528-1980
    P.O. Box 3000
    Boone, NC 28607-3000

    Doctors Without Borders

    1-888-392-0392
    P.O. Box 5030
    Hagerstown, MD 21741-5030

    Additionally, Ryan Boyette's civilian reporting team, Eyes and Ears Nuba, can be supported through Kickstarter:

    Nuba Reports

  • Warning on statins: FDA more open about risks

    By Robert Bazell
    Chief science and health correspondent
    NBC News

    Not long ago, statins were jokingly promoted by some doctors with a “put them in the drinking water” argument. Physicians and drug company experts suggested that the ubiquitous cholesterol-lowering drugs -- including Lipitor, Mevacor, Crestor and Zocor -- should be sold over the counter like cold medications, or offered to everyone above a certain age. The medications appeared so beneficial to health and seemed so free of side effects.

    But on Tuesday, the Food and Drug Administration issued a new health alert requiring the drugs carry labels warning about confusion and memory loss, elevated blood sugar leading to Type 2 diabetes, and muscle weakness.

    “These warnings should put an end to the all the silliness about giving the drugs to everyone,” says Dr. Garret FitzGerald, chairman of pharmacology at the University of Pennsylvania.

    Warnings for diabetes, memory loss added to statins

    There is no question that statins -- the most profitable and among the most prescribed drugs ever -- have saved or prolonged millions of lives and will continue to do so. Most people at elevated risk for heart disease should be taking statins. The big issue now will center on determining whose risk is low to moderate and may not need medication.

    The not-so-well-kept secret is that a daily dose of statin allows millions to eat whatever fatty food they like without worrying how it affects their cholesterol levels. That’s a tempting proposition. At the same time, drug companies find nothing more appealing than a pill that healthy people take daily for the rest of their lives. These two motivations combine to get million on statins who may not need them -- not much of a problem if there are no risks. But now we have evidence there is.

    The FDA approved the first statin, Merck’s lovastatin, in 1987. Other companies produced their own versions over the last two decades as evidence of the drugs’ effectiveness continued to accumulate, adding to their popularity.  But, early on, plenty of side effects warnings popped up. 

    Every time NBC News reported on statins I would receive many communications from viewers who had suffered the muscle-weakening condition, known as rhabdomyolysis, after taking the medication. When they stopped the drug, their muscles usually returned to normal. Doctors who frequently prescribe statins report that a certain percentage -- the best guess is about ½ to 1 percent -- suffer the muscle problems. That’s a rare occurrence as side effects go, but when many millions are taking the drugs, the numbers add up.

    As for elevated blood sugar and memory problems, both conditions have been reported for years, but it is harder to guess how widespread the complications are. In fact, last month, a survey of 150,000 participants in the Women’s Health Initiative -- the government’s gigantic study that ended most hormone replacement -- found that older women taking statins were 48 percent more likely to develop diabetes. (The researchers tried to control for obesity and other risk factors.)

    Because most people who take statins tend to be older, they’re already more likely to develop diabetes or memory problems. The only test to accurately measure the risk from statins would be a long, controlled trial of thousands of people at low risk for heart disease where half get the drug and half get a placebo. No drug company will pay for it.   

    Astra Zeneca’s Crestor remains the only statin still under patent protection, and it would be foolish for that company to go looking for harmful side effects. The government’s resources for big expensive studies grow ever more scarce. We may never know the true danger, but at least now the drugs have labels telling patients and doctors to be aware of them

    Why did the FDA chose to label the drugs now when the danger signs have been around for years? There is no official answer, but the officials in charge of the FDA now have shown far more willingness to be honest about public health risks than many of their recent predecessors.

    As for whether you or a loved one should be taking a statin drug: This is certainly not an automatic decision, but definitely a subject for a discussion with your physician. Because of the FDA’s labeling actions that decision should now be far better informed.

  • Romney wins Michigan, Arizona GOP primaries

     

    What we're following: 

    - Mitt Romney wins Michigan, Arizona GOP primaries

    - 4 killed as tornadoes roll through Midwest states

    - 1 dead, 3 missing after Coast Guard helicopter crashes

    And did you see...

    - Fears grow of Israel-Iran missile shootout

    - U.S. says North Korea agrees to nuclear moratorium

    - James Murdoch resigns as News International chairman

     

     


     

  • 'Devastation ... like we've never seen' in twister-hit town

    At least 12 people were killed after devastating tornadoes and storms steamrolled through the Midwest and South. NBC's Lester Holt and TODAY's Al Roker report.

     

    Updated at 8:45 p.m. ET: HARRISBURG, Ill. -- At least 12 people were killed -- including several crushed by debris -- as tornadoes marched across the Midwest, flattening parts of several towns including the tourist hub of Branson, Mo.

    Hardest hit was Harrisburg, where four women and two men died, some 100 others were injured and more than 200 homes were destroyed or damaged.

    Most if not all the Harrisburg dead were killed by a home tossed atop their own property early Wednesday, a witness said.


    Whitney Curtis / Getty Images

    Steve McDonald stands among debris from the home of his mother-in-law, Mary Osman, who was killed in the twister that raced through Harrisburg, Ill.

    "It's a house on top of a house," said Mike Hancock, 29, who with several others tried to rescue the victims. "We crawled in there as much as we could. Then there wasn't enough stability, the whole foundation was shaking. We had to get out of there," he said.

    "We have devastation in our community like we've never seen," Mayor Eric Gregg told a press conference, where officials said the twister had peak winds of 170 mph, making it an EF-4 on the 1-5 scale used by the National Weather Service, with 5 being the most severe.

    "There are hundreds of homes damaged, millions of dollars in damage," he added. "The hospital is severely damaged. There's a mall with 10 stores that was destroyed."

    Forecasters warned more twisters could strike the Tennessee Valley and southern Appalachians through Wednesday evening as the storm system moved east.

    Rock Center reports on the aftermath of the powerful tornadoes that ripped through America's heartland, killing at least nine people. The twisters blew houses on top of each other and toppled buildings as they hopscotched through parts of Missouri, Illinois and Kansas. NBC's Lester Holt and The Weather Channel's Jim Cantore report from Harrisburg, Ill., one of the towns hit hardest by the tornadoes.

    Three other deaths were reported in Missouri, where a suspected tornado hit a mobile home park outside the town of Buffalo. One person died there and around a dozen people were injured. Two others died in the Cassville and Puxico areas of Missouri, state officials said. Three deaths were reported in eastern Tennessee, The Associated Press reported.

    In Harrisburg, police issued a curfew overnight and the area most impacted was evacuated as a precaution. Some 3,300 customers were without power in the town of about 10,000.

    In Kansas, 12 people were injured when a EF-2 tornado made a five-mile-long run through Harveyville on Tuesday night, officials said. Three of the injured were in critical condition, and 40 percent of the town suffered damage.

    NBC affiliate KSHB TV reported that an apartment complex and a church were among the damaged buildings in the town of about 250 people.

    Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback issued a disaster declaration for the area, parts of which were without power.

    NBC's Al Roker reports on the unseasonable tornadoes that ripped through Illinois.

    Other hard-hit areas included Branson and Lebanon in Missouri.

    In Branson, 32 people were treated at one hospital for injuries, mostly cuts and bruises. A tornado moved through downtown overnight, heavily damaging the city's famous theaters and hopscotching up Highway 76, uprooting road signs and scattering debris.

    Officials on Wednesday gave the tornado a preliminary rating of EF-2 and said it ran an 8- to 10-mile path.

    The injuries could have been far worse had the storm hit next week, when the tourist season picks up.

    "If it was a week later, it'd be a different story," said Bill Tirone, assistant general manager for the 530-room Hilton and adjacent Branson Convention Center, where windows were shattered and some rooms had furniture sucked away by high winds. Hotel workers were able to get all guests to safety as the storm raged.

    Mark Schiefelbein / AP

    Storm debris is piled near the entrance to the Dick Clark's American Bandstand Theater in Branson, Mo., on Wednesday.

    John Moore, owner of the damaged Cakes-n-Creams '50s Diner, said the apparent twister appeared to "jump side to side" as it moved down the entertainment district, right through the convention center, across a lake and into a housing division.

    "The theater next to me kind of exploded. It went everywhere. The hotels on the two sides of me lost their roofs. Power lines are down. Windows are blown out," Moore said. "There's major, major destruction. There has to be millions dollars of damage all down the strip."

    Jennifer Verhaalen said she saw a white funnel cloud followed by a wall of rain as the storm closed in on the town around 1 a.m.

    She said she retreated to a back bedroom with her husband as the storm slammed into two hotel buildings, tearing the roof off one.

    PhotoBlog of the destruction

    Across the road, a strip mall lay in tatters, its roof missing and several walls collapsed.

    Branson has long been a touristy outdoor destination for visitors who came to see the beauty of the surrounding Ozarks. But the city rose to prominence in the 1990s largely due to the theater district, where venues featured the star power of country music and celebrities including the Osmonds and Andy Williams.  

    John Hanna / AP

    Damage in Harveyville, Kan., includes this home.

    In Lebanon, a tornado was reported at 12:25 a.m. and numerous reports came in of damage in the area.  A tractor-trailer was reported to have been blown off Interstate 44 nearby.

    Newburgh, Ind., also saw damage from severe storms. Several homes and a business were hit, though no injuries or deaths were reported.

    The National Weather Service said it was forecasting more tornadoes on Wednesday, including "one or two possibly strong" ones as well as "damaging wind over parts of the Tennessee Valley to southern Appalachians" into the evening.

    The system also skirted northern Arkansas, bringing gusts of up to 60 miles per hour in the northwest. A wall cloud was reported in Cherokee Village, where trees were scattered along roads, the weather service said. Residents of Clay County in northeastern Arkansas reported hail the size of golf balls, and similar-sized hail was reported in Mountain Home.

    Mathew Fowler / Harveyville Gazette via AP

    Damage is seen Wednesday morning in Harveyville, Kan., after an apparent tornado passed through Tuesday night.

    In northern Oklahoma, gusts of up to 80 mph flipped trailers and damaged homes near Cherokee.

    Tornado season normally starts in March, but it isn't unusual to see severe storms earlier in the year. Forecasters have a particularly difficult time assessing how serious a season will be in part because tornadoes are so unpredictable. This year, two people were killed by separate tornadoes in Alabama in January, and preliminary reports show 95 tornadoes struck that month.

    NBC News, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Fears grow of Israel-Iran missile shootout

    Iran's Revolutionary Guards test fire a missile during military maneuvers at an undisclosed location Sept. 27, 2009. The maneuvers were aimed at

    With tensions between Israel and Iran running sky high over the latter's nuclear program, U.S. officials and military analysts are growing increasingly concerned that Israel will launch a multi-phase air and missile attack that could trigger waves of retaliatory missile strikes from Tehran.

    Such a shootout could quickly spiral into a regional conflict that would potentially force the U.S. to intervene to protect its interests.

    The emerging consensus among current and former U.S. officials and other experts interviewed by NBC News is that that an Israeli attack would be a multi-faceted assault on key Iranian nuclear installations, involving strikes by both warplanes and missiles. It could also include targeted attacks by Israeli special operations forces and possibly even the use of massive explosives-laden drones, they say.

    The Iranian response to such an attack is uncertain, but many experts and officials believe it is likely to include retaliatory missile strikes. Iran has more missiles in its arsenal than Israel, according to some estimates, and has the capability of striking targets in most Israeli population centers.

    "I think that it would strike Iran as a reasonable response, an eye for an eye," said Christopher J Ferrero, a professor of diplomacy at Seton Hall University in New Jersey and an expert on Middle East missile forces.


    He also said Iran would likely attack major cities with its Shahab 3 missiles, which he said are not as accurate as the Israeli missiles, but would be an effective "instrument of terror … that could certainly cause significant damage to heavily populated suburban and urban areas.

     

     

    Israel possesses advanced anti-missile defenses, but those systems could be overwhelmed if Tehran launched large numbers of missiles, as Ferrero expects.

    Reuters

    The Center for Strategic and International Studies outlines these options for an Israeli strike on Iran. Click the image for the full-size chart.

    Given the immense difficulties in carrying out successful air strikes on the four key Iranian installations using its warplanes alone -- as laid out last week by the New York Times, U.S. officials say Israel would be likely to coordinate such airstrikes with waves of missiles. This would greatly increase the chances of penetrating fortifications that Iran has built to protect some of its key installations and overwhelm Iran's air defenses, said the former and current U.S. officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    "Two words:  Jericho missiles," said one former White House and Pentagon official, speaking on condition of anonymity, when asked how Israel would attack Iranian targets at great distances. "They are conventionally armed, have a very small CEP (circular error of probability, meaning they are highly accurate) and can be used in conjunction with a strike fighter operation."

    Israel has as many as 100 Jericho ballistic missiles – both short- and medium-range – as well as submarine-launched cruise missiles, though the officials say they believe the latter are unlikely to be used. The short-range Jericho I missiles would be of no use in an attack on Iran, because the targets are far beyond its 300-mile range. However, the  medium-range Jericho II's are capable of  hitting targets as far as 900 miles away – or as far east as Tehran. Israel also tested a Jericho III intercontinental ballistic missile in 2008 and Israeli media have reported that it may have deployed one or more of the weapons, which would put all of Iran within reach.

    The missiles would most likely be launched from the Hirbat Zekharyah missile range, midway between Israel and the Mediterranean Coast, according to "Critical Mass: the Dangerous Race for Superweapons in a Fragmenting World," by William E. Burrows and Robert Windrem, and various Israeli press reports.

    Although designed to be part of Israel's nuclear deterrent force, the Jerichos can be equipped with high explosives as well as nuclear warheads. U.S. officials have said that an Israeli attack, if it happens, would be intended to surgically take out the nuclear facilities, not inflict the mass casualties that would result from a nuclear attack.

    Related coverage:
    Israel teams with terror group to kill Iran's nuclear scientists, U.S. officials tell NBC
    Panetta report fuels concerns that Israel will attack Iran

    Iran has no capability to defend against a missile strike, said Ferrero, the expert on Middle East missile arsenals.

    "If the Jerichos are accurate enough to get to their targets, they will get to their targets," he said.

    What Iran does have is hundreds of Shahab 3 medium range ballistic missiles, according to U.S. estimates. The Shahab 3 also has a range of roughly 900 miles.

    Israel, possibly supplemented by U.S. shipborne anti-missile systems – the Aegis Standard Missile-2 -- could intercept and destroy some of the incoming Iranian missiles, said Ferrero. But the numbers favor Iran, he said.

    "I believe that (the Iranians) have a sufficient inventory that they could overwhelm those missile defenses and still get enough missiles through to cause damage," he said.

    The critical factor may be the number of  missile launchers in Iran's inventory, Ferrero said, because penetrating Israel's defenses would require numerous  missiles, but also enough launchers to be able to fire them off simultaneously. That number is a closely guarded secret, he said.

    Additionally, U.S. intelligence estimates say Iran has supplied Hezbollah with more than 40,000 short-range rockets and missiles since 2006. However, U.S. officials are uncertain whether Hezbollah would follow Iranian orders, and risk Israeli retaliation or, if they did, how many they would fire.  The majority of the rockets and missiles are unguided.  Israel and the U.S. have worked on a short-range missile defense system called Iron Dome, but there are concerns that waves of attacks could overwhelm the system.

    Also open to question in U.S. and Israeli military circles is whether an Israeli attack would meet its objective: setting back the Iranian nuclear program anywhere from two to five years.

    U.S. officials say Israel would be likely to concentrate its attacks on four key Iranian nuclear complexes. Key facilities within those complexes – the Natanz and Fordo centrifuge facilities, both south of Tehran; the Arak research reactor, southwest of Tehran; and a uranium hexafloride production and research facility near the city of Isfahan – are protected by heavy fortifications, they said.

    The Jerichos are stored in tunnels in limestone formations around Hirbat Zekharyah and rolled out for firing. They would likely be used as part of a one-two punch, the officials say. The first attack would be carried out by Israeli strike fighters and would be intended to breach the heavily fortified outer ceilings of the facilities. The second (and possibly even third) wave would be missile attacks aimed at destroying the facilities within, the officials said. 

    Asked if Jerichos would have the accuracy and the explosive power to take out hardened bunkers or fortifications believed to be protecting Iran's most-sensitive underground nuclear facilities, a current U.S. official replied, "You would be surprised at their accuracy." The official added that the missiles' warheads would contain a special mix of explosives that could penetrate the Iranian defenses.

    U.S. officials also say Israel may have learned the location of facilities that fabricate centrifuge components. These, too, could be targeted.

    A 2010 book on the possibility of an Israeli attack laid out the difficulties Israel would face if it attempted to use only its strike fighters on those targets.

     "Attacks against the sites at Natanz, Isfahan and Arak alone would stretch Israel's capability and planners might be reluctant to enlarge the raid further," wrote authors Steven Simon and Dana H. Allin, in "The Sixth Crisis – Iran, Israel and the Rumors of War." Simon, then a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, now heads the Middle East Desk at the National Security Council.

    The biggest problem is the fortification of the two centrifuge facilities. Simon and Allin describe the challenge using aircraft only.

    "Natanz is the only one of the … likely targets that is largely underground, sheltered by up to 23 meters (75 feet) of soil and concrete," they wrote. "… Bombs used in a ‘burrowing' mode, however, could penetrate deeply enough to fragment the inner surface of the ceiling structures above the highly fragile centrifuge arrays and even precipitate the collapse of the entire structure."

    But for the attack to have high odds of success, they argue, aircraft would have to drop additional bombs into the cavities created by the first bombs. That would require "time on target" -- a luxury that the Israeli jets at the outermost limits of their 1,100-mile range would likely not have. While they estimate the success rate of such a plan at "better than 70 percent," they call it "complicated and highly risky."

    Another difficulty for attacking Israeli aircraft would be finding a route to the targets that could be flown covertly or with the tacit approval of Sunni Arab states, who are at least as frightened of an Iranian nuclear capability as the Israelis.

    Simon and Allin (and others) have written that there are three "plausible routes" that Israeli warplanes would take to attack Iran: a northern approach, likely along the Syrian-Turkish border; a central path that would take them over Jordan and Iraq; and a southern route that would transit the lower end of Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. The southern route is the most likely, U.S. officials suggest, because the Saudis and other Sunni-dominated Gulf states are eager for someone to take out the Iranian threat. They prefer the U.S. do it, but have reportedly shared intelligence on the Iranian program with the Israelis, if only on a limited basis, according to the U.S. officials.

    No matter what route the fighter bombers take, they would use what one U.S. official described as "high-low, low-high" flight paths – flying high first to increase fuel efficiency, then low for most of the trip to evade radar, then climbing high again as the bombs are released in what is known as a "flip toss" from as far as 10 miles from the target.

    The Israelis would be prepared to lose aircraft if necessary, the officials said.

    Although Simon and Allin do not discuss adding a missile component, other experts, including many current and former U.S. officials, believe the Israelis already have made a decision to have them in the attack menu.

    Missile attacks would be coordinated with fighter-bomber attacks (presumably, the Israelis' F-16, F-18 and extended-range F-15I Strike Eagle). The missiles would have to be launched so that warheads strike targets following the strike fighter attacks.  Because of the short flight time, minutes rather than hours in the case of the aircraft, the missile launch would almost certainly take place at the last possible moment to ensure the secrecy of the overall attack.

    The Israelis are not planning to use their submarine-launched cruise missile force -- "not enough of them," one official said of the subs. (The Israelis have long had nuclear tipped sub-launched cruise missiles as part of their deterrent force.) 

    Beyond the strike fighters and the missile force, U.S. officials suggest the Israelis could use two other "weapons" against Iran.

    The first is special operations forces that would be secretly inserted into the country. At the least, they could be employed to illuminate aim points for laser-guided bunker-busting bombs. At the most, they could launch their own attacks on facilities, particularly those believed to contain enriched uranium.

    The other is a new generation of large drones with wingspans approaching those of a Boeing 777  (almost 200 feet). Costing $30 million each, the Heron drones are capable of remaining airborne for 40 hours at a time and have a range of 4,600 miles. While they can be equipped with surveillance and electronic warfare equipment, some officials call them "strike drones," meaning they could be loaded with explosives and used to attack Iranian targets.

    While the initial days of an Israeli-Iranian conflict would probably be bloody, most experts say that the open warfare would be expected to wind down within days or weeks, since neither side has the ability to occupy the other's territory or enough missiles to sustain attacks.

    But that would bring with it its own set of problems, as the conflict would be likely to continue on a lower level, involving covert operations and terrorism.

    "You could have a very nasty covert war emerge," said Ferrero.

    Robert Windrem is a senior investigative producer for NBC News.

  • FDA issues warning on statins

    The FDA has raised concerns about the popular cholesterol-fighting drugs, saying the risk of diabetes should be added to the drug's warnings and precautions. NBC's Robert Bazell reports.

    The Food and Drug Administration announced Tuesday that people who take popular cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins may have an increased risk of raised blood sugar levels and could also be at greater risk of getting Type 2 diabetes. In addition, some people who take statins have reported memory impairment.  

    Statins, some of the most-prescribed drugs on the market, are taken by millions of Americans.

    In a statement, the FDA noted the benefits of taking the drugs often outweigh the risks.

    “The value of statins in preventing heart disease has been clearly established,” said Amy G. Egan, M.D., M.PH., deputy director for safety in FDA’s Division of Metabolism and Endocrinology Products. “Their benefit is indisputable, but they need to be taken with care and knowledge of their side effects.”

    The FDA will be modifying the drug package insert found in the following statin products to include the federal safety agency's new concerns:

    • Altoprev (lovastatin extended-release)
    • Crestor (rosuvastatin)
    • Lescol (fluvastatin)
    • Lipitor (atorvastatin)
    • Livalo (pitavastatin)
    • Mevacor (lovastatin)
    • Pravachol (pravastatin)
    • Zocor (simvastatin).

    Products containing statins in combination with other drugs include:

    • Advicor (lovastatin/niacin extended-release)
    • Simcor (simvastatin/niacin extended-release)
    • Vytorin (simvastatin/ezetimibe).

    Click here to visit the FDA's website and learn more.

  • Fukushima disaster response frighteningly similar to Chernobyl, Three Mile Island

    NBC's Robert Bazell visited Fukushima in May 2011, and witnessed the tragic the effects of the nuclear disaster firsthand. People were forced to leave their homes in the area surrounding the plant due to high radiation levels.    

    By Robert Bazell
    NBC News

    The terrifying atmosphere of crisis, confrontation and lack of communication in the days following the accident at Fukushima burns through the report on the crisis just released by an elite commission set up by the Japanese government. The document details anxious moments when officials even considered the evacuation of Tokyo.  One of the world’s largest cities, Tokyo is home to almost 9 million people.  How an evacuation could be accomplished can only be horrific guesswork.

    The government set up the panel run by the Rebuild Japan Initiative with full investigatory powers in response to the ever-increasing evidence that Tokyo Electric Power, owners of the plant, and the government, had been far from forthcoming in describing the unfolding disaster and its implications for the public.  The report, first obtained by the New York Times and slated for release later this week, is likely to be the best history of the accident for years.

    During my time at NBC I covered the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pennsylvania in 1979, the Chernobyl disaster in the Ukraine in 1986 and Fukushima almost a year ago.  Despite major differences, there are frightening similarities.  In each case due to both a lack of information and a desire to calm the public, authorities offered false reassurances.  Only Chernobyl led to immediate deaths and huge numbers of additional cancer cases in the years since.  There was almost no radiation release from Three Mile Island, but it took years to discover how close the meltdown had come to releasing a catastrophic amount.  The health effects from Fukushima have so far led to relatively few worker injuries at the site and a hypothetical but small risk of additional cancers in many parts of Japan in the future.

    When I began covering Fukushima, I tried to be reassuring.  Despite the confusion described in this latest report during the first few days after the accident, there was increasing verifiable evidence that radiation in significant amounts was not spreading beyond the immediate vicinity of the plant.  But when I later returned I had more of a sense of how tragic the effects were on the 80,000 people who were forced to leave their homes in the 12 mile area surrounding the plant.  I am including video reports from the months after the accident; one dealing with the immediate effects of the disaster and the other with the nature of the future cancer risk.

    No one in Fukushima has shown signs of illness from radiation exposure, but more than 80,000 people have been turned into radiation refugees. Robert Bazell's report from June 2011.

    What are the lessons?  Nuclear power is attractive because it releases no greenhouse gases to increase global warming.  But because of concerns about safety it has always been enormously more expensive than other sources of energy, and Fukushima will make it even more so.  Accidents by definition happen when unexpected events strike, whether through human error or natural events like the monstrous tsunami that struck Japan.  These three accidents show that severe nuclear accidents are thankfully rare.  But consequences often exceed our worst fears.

  • Remembering students' birthdays, decades later

    By Janelle Richards
    NBC News

    LEXINGTON -- Lois Hayes sat at her wooden desk and pulled out something resembling a recipe box. She took off the lid, revealing notecards filled with dates – divided by month and by day: the birthdays of her former students. 

    Hayes, 66, has mailed nearly 400 handwritten birthday cards to her students for the past 20 years from her home in Lexington, Miss.

    It has become a weekly ritual. Using a lapboard, Hayes sits on her living room recliner, squinting through her glasses while composing notes in large, cursive handwriting.


    “When I retired, I really was afraid we would not be able to send cards anymore,” Hayes told NBC News. “I buy the cards by the box and it has never been a problem, coming up with the postage or buying the cards. The Lord has provided for us, so it has been a joy to be able to do it.” 

    After her four children got older, she realized that she should be recognizing her students’ birthdays – not just those of her close friends. Hayes wanted her students to know that they were special and that she was thinking about them. For her, sending handwritten cards felt like “a calling.”

    “It brings back memories to think of them, and what they were like when I taught them,” said Hayes who retired five years ago.

    NBC News

    And it brings back memories for her students too.

    Jessica Donald, 28, and her sisters Sara Sanders, 29, and Laura Shrock, 25, all had Hayes as their second grade schoolteacher.

    “I remember her being always a very caring teacher,” said Donald. “She of course wanted us to learn. But she always made sure that we knew we were loved, and that she loved us. She always had a passion for teaching and you could see that in her every day.”

    Donald eventually became a second grade teacher too, after working with Hayes during her senior year in high school.

    “When I see my former students out I always try to give them a smile, or a big old hug if they’re willing,” said Donald. “I try to keep up with their lives… it’s never too late. I may pick up the tradition of sending them birthday cards.”

    Some of Lois Hayes' former students on the difference she has made in their lives.

    Sanders and Shrock said they find the details in Mrs. Hayes’ cards impressive, especially because Hayes remembers how old they are each year.  

    “I think it’s that she really shows you how dedicated she is to you and then, after you leave her class, it doesn’t end. She has really made a lifelong dedication to her students,” said Sanders.

    “It’s always on time, which you can’t even say about most people. Even your own mom is sometimes late. But hers is always there, if not a day early,” Shrock added. “It’s just nice to know that someone is thinking about you and for a lot of people this might be the only card that they get, so I know it is extra special for many of her students.”

    Hayes’ daughter, Natalie McKinley, 33, describes her mother as “selfless.”

    “She tries to help other people before she would try to help herself,” said McKinley. “Her faith brings her to do this. It drives her to do good and to show love to other people.

    When I was younger, it was just so normal for her to send these cards. Then when I got older and parents started telling me how their child was still getting a card in their 20s, I realized how special it was. I think it’s just so great, reaching out to people. You don’t get cards in the mail anymore,” said McKinley, who is the mother of a 5-year-old.  “Some teachers don’t think it’s normal to get too involved with their kids… it takes a special teacher to do it.”

    For the majority of Hayes’ 33-year teaching career, she taught second grade. Most of her time was spent in classrooms in Lexington, Miss., a place Hayes describes as “very much a small town. Friendly, and like one big family in a way.” 

    She learns which students got married recently and who has a baby on the way through word of mouth.  

    When neighborhood residents can’t help her track down students who have moved away, Hayes uses Facebook to find them.

    “She sent me birthday cards, I can’t remember when it started, but she tracked me down all the years I was in Brazil, because I didn’t come back until I graduated from high school,” said Debbie Arnold Gyger, 52, who had Hayes as her fourth grade teacher in the late 1960s in Brazil where Hayes taught briefly after attending college.

    “I just have very happy memories of her,” Gyger said. “She taught by example and showed she cared more than just teaching us facts.”

    Now several of Hayes’ former students send her birthday cards, too. 

    “Some of my students write back, or even send pictures of their children, and tell me what’s going on in their lives and I always love that,” said Hayes. “It’s so fun to hear from them… it has been a joy to watch them grow up.”

     

     

     

  • Cost of gas rises 18 cents in the past two weeks

     

    What we're following: 

    - 4 injured in Ohio high school shooting

    - High stakes in tomorrow's GOP primaries

    - "The Artist" wins best picture at the Academy Awards

    And did you see...

    - Cost of gas rises 18 cents in the past two weeks

    - Burning of Qurans complicates U.S. pullout from Afghanistan

    - Nissan recalling vehicles for possible gas leaks

     

     


     

  • NBC's Afghanistan correspondent answers readers' questions about the Quran outrage

    Massoud Hossaini / AFP - Getty Images

    Angry afghans attacked U.S. bases after reports of Quran desecration.

    There have been violent protests across Afghanistan since it emerged on Tuesday that copies of the Quran, the Muslim holy book, used by detainees held at the Bagram military base had been burned. 

    The incident has become a public relations disaster for foreign forces in Afghanistan, more than 10 years after the U.S. invasion of the country began.


    On Thursday, President Barack Obama sent a letter to Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai apologizing for the burning of copies of the Quran at a NATO military base, but it is uncertain whether or not that will quell the anger.

    NBC News Correspondent in Kabul, Atia Abawi, answered reader questions about the controversy earlier today.

    Click on the link below to replay the chat.

  • President Obama apologizes to Afghanistan over Quran burnings

     

    What we're following: 

    - President Obama apologizes to Afghanistan over Quran burnings

    - 7 Marines killed after two helicopters collide in Arizona

    - Romney and Santorum battle at GOP presidential debate 

    And did you see...

    - President Obama to address gas prices, pitch energy policy

    - George Huguely found guilty of second-degree murder in the death of his ex-girlfriend

    - Websites to adopt 'No-Track' button

     

     


     

  • Horror and hope inside battered city of Homs, cradle of Syrian uprising

    The people of Homs have been under siege for weeks. Jonathan Miller, Channel Four Europe reports.

    HOMS, Syria – Faced with a daily rain of rockets, bombs and bullets, the people of Homs keep fighting, refusing to yield to President Bashar Assad's forces in an uprising that began 11 months ago.

    Their streets and homes have been shelled. They have few medical supplies, no power and very little food. And casualties are mounting. On Wednesday, Syrian forces killed more than 80 people, according to activists, whose claim could not be independently confirmed. But among the dead were two Western journalists.


    There seems to be no way out for the people in this besieged city, reduced to rubble and ruin, yet families and fighters share a moment to dancing in the streets for their “revolution of dignity and freedom.”

    A French photojournalist known as Mani, whose full name is being withheld for his own safety, has spent time living alongside the people of Homs. Jonathan Miller, Channel Four Europe reports.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

  • Eating disorder resources

    On Wednesday, "Nightly News" reported on a problem affecting at least one million males: eating disorders. Anorexia is typically associated with teenage girls, but now some treatment centers are seeing an increase in the number of boys seeking help. 

    Click HERE to read the story.

    If you think that you or a loved one may be suffering from an eating disorder, visit these helpful resources or call the National Eating Disorders live helpline at 800-931-2237 (Monday – Friday: 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. EST)
    National Eating Disorders Association: http://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/

    National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders: http://www.anad.org/

    National Association for Males with Eating Disorders: http://namedinc.org/

    International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals: http://www.iaedp.com/

    Eating Disorders Coalition: http://www.eatingdisorderscoalition.org/

    Families Empowered and Supporting Treatment of Eating Disorders: http://www.feast-ed.org/

    Eating Disorders Resource Center: http://www.edrcsv.org/

     


     

  • Boys dying to be thin: the new face of anorexia

    By Yardena Schwartz
    NBC News

    Brick, N.J.: Lindsey Avon and her 28-year-old husband Victor have been together for 10 years. But when Victor decided to lose some weight in college, Lindsey had no idea what he was really going through. It wasn’t until Victor checked himself into an inpatient eating disorder treatment center that Lindsey, 29, realized her then-boyfriend was fatally anorexic.

    Santa Cruz, Calif.: Nearly all of Avi Sinai’s school friends were girls, who constantly talked about how “fat” they were and how they longed to be thinner.  Avi’s mom and his girlfriends’ mothers were shocked that Avi, just 10 at the time, was the one who succumbed to the obsession with being skinny.

    Okemos, Mich.: Susan Barry, 60, spends every day wishing she had known more about male anorexia when her son, TJ Warschefsky, was still alive. He died in 2007 at the age of 22 after an eight-year battle with the disease. His heart gave out in the middle of his nightly routine of 1,000 sit-ups. He weighed 78 pounds.

    “He didn’t want to be skinny,” Barry said of TJ, who was a star athlete and straight-A student. “He wanted a six pack, he wanted rock hard abs. That’s how it all started.”

    TJ Warschefsky is pictured here at the age of 21 before -- and after -- receiving three months of treatment at Rogers Memorial, a non-profit Psychiatric hospital in Wisconsin. His mother, Susan Barry, said her son's perfectionism and desire for control may have made him more vulnerable to the disease that eventually took his life. Warschefsky died of anorexia in 2007 at the age of 22 after an eight-year battle. He was 78 pounds at the time.

    CLICK HERE to view a list of resources for individuals coping with an eating disorder. 

    Their stories may sound rare, but experts say cases like Avi Sinai, Victor Avon and TJ Warschefsky are growing more and more common. Far from the world of beauty magazines, pin-thin celebrities and runway models, anorexia is striking what many consider to be an unlikely group: boys and young men.

    “When the majority of people hear the word anorexia, they automatically assume it’s a girls' disease,” said Victor, who works in his family’s construction business and has since recovered. “The reality of anorexia is that it’s a psychological illness that does not discriminate,” he said. 
     

     

     

     


    According to the National Eating Disorders Association, at least one million males in the United States are battling anorexia or bulimia. Yet due to the shame that often comes with male eating disorders, experts say the statistics are skewed, and many more young men are left unaccounted for.

     

    “It appears that the prevalence of the disorder is increasing among boys,” said Dr. James Hudson, a Harvard psychiatry professor who has been treating and researching eating disorders for more than 26 years. “It may be that boys are simply more comfortable coming forward now than in the past.”

    In 2007, he was the lead author of a large study on eating disorders in the United States, one of the first of its kind. The study found that one in four people suffering from anorexia or bulimia are male, contradicting prior estimates that only 10 percent of people with eating disorders were male.

    The assumption that anorexia can only affect girls and women not only increases the stigma for young men fighting the disease, but it also means that they are often too ashamed to seek help. That leads many to become even sicker than their female counterparts.

    “Boys don't get identified,” said Dr. James Lock, a psychiatrist at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, where Avi Sinai was hospitalized.

    “They come later to treatment,” Lock said. “They have therefore had longer time to lose weight so they're physically sicker.  Sometimes that's allowed the psychological processes to be more reinforced in their own thinking and the behaviors.”

    On top of those hurdles, most of the resources that exist to help victims of anorexia are largely geared toward females, a fact that amplifies the feelings of isolation among male anorexics. When Victor was first diagnosed with the illness, he tried for months to find information online, but everything he read was tailored to girls and women.

    “It made me feel less of a man,” Victor said. “It made me feel broken and defective.”

    Courtesy of the Sinai family

    Avi Sinai, 14, began his battle with anorexia when he was just 10-years-old. Avi received treatment near his home in Santa Cruz, Calif., but is still recovering from the disorder.

    Victor finally found a treatment program for young men at Princeton University Medical Center, close to his home in Brick, N.J., but others are not as fortunate. When Susan Barry was looking for help for her son TJ, there was not a single residential program in their home state of Michigan that treated boys. It took more than a year for Barry to find an appropriate program for her son, eventually bringing TJ to Rogers Memorial Hospital in Wisconsin, hours away from his family.

    It was a similar crisis for Avi, now 14, when his family first sought treatment two years ago.

    “It often felt like there wasn’t enough awareness out there to help him,” said Avi’s mother, Nancy, 50, who eventually found a center near their home in Santa Cruz, Calif., that was willing to make room for her son. “If these boys need residential care, which Avi really did, there are hardly any treatment centers that have beds for boys. The beds are reserved for girls and women, and the language is written for females.”

    The link between personality and anorexia

    According to Lock, it takes a certain kind of personality to develop the illness.

    “It's very unusual for someone to come into my office for an assessment of anorexia if they do not have straight A’s,” said Lock.  “This is true for boys and this is true for girls.  And in sports, these are great athletes, usually, who drive themselves to the next level.”

    While boys who participate in sports such as wrestling or track may be more likely to want to lose weight, Lock warned that the desire to enhance athletic performance should not be confused with anorexia. Athletic pressure may increase the motivation to lose weight, he said, but not every elite athlete has an eating disorder.

    Barry said her son TJ’s perfectionism and desire for control may have made him more vulnerable to the disease that eventually took his life. Because TJ’s anorexia took over his ability to reason, said Barry, it was impossible for him to recover.

    “I think there's a point in this illness where the obsession and the control turns to complete out of control,” she said.  “The illness takes control.  And they become possessed.”

    As baffling as the causes of anorexia may be, so are the factors behind the increase in the disease among boys and young men.

    Dr. Jennifer Hagman has been running the eating disorder program at Children’s Hospital Colorado since 1993, where until five years ago, it was uncommon for her to see boy patients. “Now we almost always have one to three boys in the program,” she said. According to Hagman, these boys are victims of society’s obsession with appearance and the increased focus on childhood obesity.

    “The emphasis in our culture about eating healthier is no doubt the biggest factor,” she said. “In school they’re telling them to limit the fat in their diet. I hear from many kids in the program that it was after a health class that they started to limit their diets.”

    While it is important to educate children to live healthy lives, said Hagman, it is just as important to deliver that message in a balanced way, without triggering unhealthy habits.

    For Susan Barry and Nancy Sinai, there is an even more crucial message for parents who think their children may be suffering from an eating disorder.

    “Just like cancer or any other disease, early detection is key,” said Susan. She acknowledged treatment wasn’t enough to save TJ from the downward spiral of his disease, but nonetheless, she encourages parents to do whatever they can to find help.

    “A lot of parents will say that, ‘Well, your son went to residential treatment. It didn't help him.’” To which Susan tells them, “Think of all the people that are helped in hospitals. But there are several that aren't. You don't not send him to a hospital because some don't make it.”

    NBC's Dr. Nancy Snyderman and NBC producer Mary Murray contributed to this report.

     

    If you think that you or a loved one may be suffering from an eating disorder, visit these helpful resources or call the National Eating Disorders live helpline at 800-931-2237 (Monday – Friday: 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. EST)

    National Eating Disorders Association: http://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org/

    National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders: http://www.anad.org/

    National Association for Males with Eating Disorders: http://namedinc.org/

    International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals: http://www.iaedp.com/

    Eating Disorders Coalition: http://www.eatingdisorderscoalition.org/

    Families Empowered and Supporting Treatment of Eating Disorders: http://www.feast-ed.org/

    Eating Disorders Resource Center: http://www.edrcsv.org/

     

  • NBC's Richard Engel answers reader questions about Syria

    American journalist Marie Colvin and French photographer Remi Ochlik were killed Wednesday in the Syrian city of Homs. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

    The intense fighting in Syria between President Bashar Assad's forces and opposition rebels seems to be getting worse by the day. On Wednesday, a French photojournalist and a prominent American war correspondent working for a British newspaper were killed as Syrian forces intensely shelled the opposition stronghold of Homs. 

    Weeks of withering attacks on the city of Homs have failed to drive out opposition factions that include rebel soldiers who fled Assad's forces. Hundreds have died in the siege - galvanizing international pressure on Assad, who appears intent on widening his military crackdowns despite the risk of pushing Syria into full-scale civil war.

    NBC News' Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel is on assignment along the Turkey-Syria border. He answered reader questions about the ongoing conflict in Syria earlier today.

    Click on the box below to replay the chat.


  • Heart attack with no chest pain more likely in women

     

    What we're following: 

    - NBC Poll: Romney & Santorum neck-and-neck in Michigan

    - American journalist, French photographer killed in Syria

    - Heart attack with no chest pain more likely in women

    - Bank overdraft fees targeted in federal probe

    And did you see...

    - Google to sell augmented reality glasses by year's end

    - U.S. motorists logged fewer miles in 2011

    - White House to propose corporate tax cut

    - President Obama sings "Sweet Home Chicago"

     

     


     

  • Making a Difference: Kids fishing for (and catching) success

    The Florida Fishing Academy is not only teaching kids about the thrill of the catch, it's helping them cope with peer pressure and stay on the right track. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

     By Mark Potter, NBC News

     

    RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. — On a morning fishing trip to a reef near the South Florida coast, 13-year-old Ray Moody was having the time of his life as he reeled in an exotic-looking species.

    "Hey, it's a parrotfish," he yelled. "It's blue, it's a slippery blue one."


    Brad Houston/NBC News

    Anthony Del Valle, 16, gets a turn at the helm of Rich Brochu's fishing boat.

    Standing near him along the boat rail was 16-year-old Anthony Del Valle, who had also hooked one. Captain Rich Brochu offered encouragement and a quick angling lesson: "It looks like you may have something there. Yep, keep that rod tip up."

    The weekend trip was part of an after-school fishing program that Brochu, a former police officer and construction company owner, started at his daughter's school in Boynton Beach six years ago to help kids from low-income areas experience the excitement of fishing. Since Brochu opened the Florida Fishing Academy, more than 4,000 students, ages 8 to 18, have signed on to learn the thrill of the catch.

    "It's almost like playing a sport. You don't know what's on the other side; there's a kind of mystery to it," Brochu said. "If they catch a fish that's like 3 inches, it's the biggest smile. They love it."

    Along with ocean conservation, catch-and-release fishing techniques, boating safety and first aid, Brochu also teaches the kids how to avoid peer pressure, the dangers of drug abuse and the advantages of keeping busy and off the street corners.

    "All the kids benefit from activities like this. You know, it gives them something to look forward to," he said. "Obviously, we want to give them a choice in life and hopefully do something better with their life."

    In a high school classroom recently, Brochu and Bob Cawood, another fishing captain who helps teach the program, planned to teach knot-tying, But first, they took a few moments to talk about the dangers of smoking.

    "Cigarettes can cause mouth cancer. If you think that's true, raise your hands," they asked. Most hands went up. A short time later, the two men began teaching how to tie a clinch knot and made a game of it by insisting the students tie them behind their backs. The room erupted in noise and laughter as the students tried to see who could do it fastest.

    Brad Houston/NBC News

    Youngsters get a taste of the sea aboard Ray Brochu's fishing boat.

    Excitement also broke out at gymnasium in Riviera Beach when elementary school students learned how to cast toward plastic fish scattered along the floor, and during foot races for which the children had to first put on life jackets correctly before running to the other side of the room.

    A boating reward

    For students in the program who stay in class, keep out of trouble and do some volunteer work, there is a special reward most of them would never have a chance to experience otherwise. At a dock in Riviera Beach is a colorfully painted 38-foot fishing boat that students can go out on to fish with Brochu and Cawood.

    "Some of these kids have never been on a boat, never been on the beach. That's one of the goals, to get them out here," Brochu said.

    Derrick Campbell, an instructor at Village Academy in Delray Beach, is convinced the fishing program and the promise of boating trips work to inspire good behavior.

    "They're more disciplined. They don't act up," he said. "They know that there's something at the end of the rainbow."

    Vickie Verzi, a single mother, wholeheartedly agrees. She believes the fishing program has been "the salvation" of her teenage son, Donnie, by keeping him engaged and away from troublemakers.

    "It taught him how to fish," she said. "It gave him an interest in something that was good for him, and it gave him a direction in life."

    Donnie now volunteers on the boat and is known among his friends as an accomplished angler.

    Anthony Del Valle's mom, Tania Serrano, is also a fan of the program. "It's a new passion, and it keeps him busy," she said.

    A shark-fishing trip is a particular source of pride for Anthony, and his mom couldn't be happier.

    "A lot of people are like, 'wow, shark fishing?' and I'd rather have him out shark fishing than be hanging out with the sharks on the street."

    For Anthony, the fishing boat not only gives him something to do; it also brings him a sense of inner peace.

    "It gives me a second chance to do something I like and stay out of trouble," he said while cranking his fishing reel. "It just puts me in my own world."

    Sharing the experience

    The nonprofit Florida Fishing Academy program is paid for by donations, grants and fundraisers. Among the supporters is famed marine wildlife artist Guy Harvey, whose foundation wrote large checks to support the school and also supplied the colorful vinyl wrap that covers the boat hull.

    "What a win, win, win situation," said Steve Stock, president of Guy Harvey Inc. "What a great sport this is, but way beyond that, if we can turn some of these kids' lives around, pretty good."

    Brad Houston/NBC News

    Janel Scholine and Nick Corzo, in the background, cast their lures.

    During the recent weekend trip, 16-year-old Janel Scholine reeled in several fish and said she was thrilled to learn a new skill.

    "I love it. It's awesome. I didn't know anything about fishing, and now I do," she said, beaming. In fact, Janel learned so much that she is now a volunteer instructor teaching as many as 50 children at a time an academy program called Angling For A Healthy Future.

    Layne Reyka, also 16, says fishing with captains Brochu and Cawood is a lot of fun and matches his personality: "I'm very competitive, so it's definitely the pursuit and the hunt, whether it be a big fish or a small fish — preferably a big fish!"

    For Brochu, the size and the success of the program are a surprise. His plan had been to work just with the kids at his daughter's school. Since then, he said, the Florida Fishing Academy has taught in 46 Palm Beach County schools.

    "I set out for one goal, and that was to save one kid," he said. "Now it's one child at a time, and we've saved a lot."

    The reward, he said, is in hearing from parents how well their kids are doing and in watching kids fully engaged in a sport he and Cawood love.

    "Bob and I are both on their level. We just enjoy it. It's a great time sharing the experience with them. We're living the dream." he said. "Making a difference is more important to us than making money."

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

  • Europe agrees on $170 billion Greece bailout

     

    What we're following: 

    - Europe agrees on $170 billion Greece bailout to avoid default

    - Iran threatens pre-emptive action amid nuclear tensions

    - FDA has solution for short supply of cancer drug

    And did you see...

    - Special Ops forces killed in air crash in Horn of Africa

    - Strauss-Kahn held by French police over alleged prostitution links

    - 'Scream' painting expected to sell for more than $80 million

     

     


     

  • Breaking down cultural barriers with dance

    In a program called Dancing Classrooms, kids not only learn how to dance, they also learn how to respect one another. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    Reporter's notebook by Anne Thompson, NBC News

    In a world where social graces are increasingly an endangered species, one man is trying to instill civility and respect in children by teaching them ballroom dancing. 

    Pierre Dulaine's theory about the importance of the foxtrot, rhumba and tango is very simple. 

    "Sitting next to each other doesn't get you to know another person in the classroom," said Dulaine. "But having danced with one another somehow is a different thing.  And I think this is a success of Dancing Classrooms."


    Dulaine, a champion ballroom dancer and former cast member of Broadway's "Grand Hotel," started Dancing Classrooms 18 years ago in one New York City public school.  It is now in 600 schools around the world including Israel, Germany and Switzerland.

    In New York City, ballroom dancing is taught to 5th graders in some 200 public schools twice a week. "Nightly News" went to Brooklyn's P.S. 160 to see the 16-week program for ourselves. 

    You can't help but smile when you watch the children. The girls are often taller than the boys.  Boys and girls are still uncomfortable having to stand close to each other, clasp hands and hold each other.  They have to look each other in the eye, and it is not always easy.

    The teacher will call out, "What color is your partner's eyes?"  Everyone must answer. More than a few wipe off sweaty hands on their clothes.  The awkwardness is absolutely charming.

    These are not the dancing classes of the past.  No white gloves, navy blue blazers and dresses.

    Many of the students wear sweatpants and sneakers, although a few of the girls favor sparkly shoes.  But what is the same is the discovery of the joy of dancing, how much fun it is to glide across the floor in perfect rhythm with another person. 

    The students have fun being elegant and polite.  The young men smile as they escort the young ladies into the classroom.  "Thank you," is said each time they change partners.  It is a wonderful 50 minute class.

    Principal Margaret Russo brought Dancing Classrooms to P.S.160 when she arrived eight years ago. Russo told "Nightly News" that her school, where 62 percent of the students are enrolled in English as a Second Language classes, dancing helps breakdown cultural barriers. It gets children who may not interact with each other to know each other at least for one dance.  That, she said, improves the entire school. 

    "On that dance floor we're all the same so we're one community and I think that's really important," Russo said.

    Ballroom dancing really is a gift. Your posture improves, your confidence improves and awkwardness is replaced with physical grace.  Dulaine says it transformed him from a shy 14-year-old to a confident young man.  It is a skill that stays with you your whole life and always makes you want to get out on the dance floor. 

    "One of our teaching artists tell us that we are teaching children life lessons wrapped around ballroom dancing," Dulaine said. "And I think that puts the nail on the head."

    Jean-Marie Kennedy, a teacher at the Walter Francis Bishop elementary school in New York on the poise, confidence and good manners gained through ballroom dancing.

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