Saturday, November 10, 2012

"Dancing" co-host Brooke Burke has thyroid cancer

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Dancing with the Stars" co-host Brooke Burke said on Thursday that she has been diagnosed with thyroid cancer and will need surgery.

The television presenter and model said in a three-minute video posted on the website Modernmom.com that she will need her thyroid removed.

"I need to have thyroid surgery and a thyroidectomy, which means I'm going to have a nice, big scar right here on neck," Burke said, drawing a finger across her throat.

Burke, a former winner of ABC's celebrity ballroom dancing competition, said she had a biopsy in July, but it had taken her months to go public with the results.

"I'm ready to deal with it, and I'm going to be fine," she said.

There was no word on when the surgery would take place, but Burke's publicist said her work schedule for "Dancing with the Stars" would not be affected.

Burke, 47, said in July that her doctor suggested she undergo a thyroid ultrasound after he felt a lump in her neck during a routine physical.

The thyroid is a gland in the neck that produces hormones that regulate vital body functions, such as heart rate and blood pressure.

Burke's co-host Tom Bergeron said on Thursday during an appearance on the CBS chat show "The Talk" that he had known about her condition for several months. "We are all there with her," he said.

"I've known about this for a few months ... I have had experience with this in my family. You never want to hear the word cancer. But thyroid cancer is one of the most treatable cancers. It has an incredibly high success rate," he said.

(Reporting By Eric Kelsey; Editing by Jill Serjeant)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dancing-co-host-brooke-burke-thyroid-cancer-221622054.html

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Draghi comments at ECB news conference

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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Maryland passes in-state tuition law for undocumented immigrants ...

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WASHINGTON (CNS) -- The immigration status of Maryland students will no longer be an obstacle to them receiving lower tuition rates available to other in-state residents, after 59 percent of voters approved a referendum Nov. 6.

The Maryland Catholic Conference and other church leaders were among supporters of the law, likened to the federal DREAM Act, which has languished in Congress.

The law will require students to first obtain an associate's degree or at least 60 hours of credit at a community college before they are eligible for the in-state tuition rate at a four-year state university. It will extend to Maryland residents who lack legal immigration status, and who meet other requirements, the same reduced rate available to other Marylanders. At the University of Maryland in College Park, for example, full-time in-state undergraduates pay about $4,400 a semester, while the out-of-state rate is about $13,600 a semester.

The law was passed by the Maryland General Assembly in 2011, but opponents forced a public referendum.

The Maryland Catholic Conference, which advocates for public policy on behalf of the state's bishops, said the election result shows "what can be achieved when voters are able to learn the plain facts about an issue." A statement from the conference said a coalition of supporters working with churches and schools helped explain "the fairness of allowing immigrant students who pay taxes, work hard and graduate from our high schools to pay the same in-state tuition rate as their other classmates."

Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, who advocated for the measure, said it "opens doors for deserving young people in a very appropriate way."

In an interview with The Catholic Review, Baltimore's archdiocesan newspaper, Jesus Perez, 20, who campaigned for the law, was ecstatic about its passage.

He said he now plans to enroll in a community college, as a first step to going to a university.

Paying for college will still be difficult, he said, but it now may be possible for him. Perez also said it made him feel good to know as a Catholic that his church supported the measure.

"It's a joy to know that they have our backs, and they know what's right," he said.

Among supporters of the referendum is University of Maryland President Wallace D. Loh, who told The Washington Post that few students are likely to qualify for the benefit each year -- perhaps as few as 20.

"Yes, they are undocumented," Loh told the Post. "But we're talking about people who came here as children." He called the issue a matter of "fairness and justice" and said Maryland has a vested interest in providing higher education access, at a low price, to all of its high school graduates.

A dozen other states allow undocumented residents to pay in-state tuition rates. Others are extending the reduced rate benefit to recipients of deferred deportation status, under the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program launched this summer.

That initiative of the Obama administration allows young adults who were brought to the United States as children and who meet various requirements to apply for deferred deportation for two years. Successful applicants also receive a work permit and Social Security number, which some states and some individual schools accept as eligibility for in-state tuition rates.

- - -

Contributing to this story was Maria Wiering in Baltimore.

Copyright (c) 2012?Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

Source: http://www.uscatholic.org/news/2012/11/maryland-passes-state-tuition-law-undocumented-immigrants

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