Thursday, January 31, 2013

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Monday, January 28, 2013

When Science Meets Fiction

This weekend I?ll be at Science Online 2013 in North Carolina, moderating a panel with io9?s Annalee Newitz on science and science fiction. It?s a topic near and dear to both our hearts, and Annalee kicked off a pre-discussion last week with her post exploring the evolutionary biology of Star Trek. I?d like to do the same by talking a bit about the history of how science has fed into popular culture over the years ? especially science fiction.

The prevailing scientific worldview of a given era has always been reflected in the art and literature of the time ? not to mention the theology. This was certainly the case in the 1500s, when the ancient Ptolemaic worldview still prevailed, with the Earth nestled at the center of the solar system, and the moon, Sun and known planets at the time revolving around it in perfect circular orbits. That movement was believed to produce a celestial music ? the ?music of the spheres? ? undetectable to sinful human beings on the fallen Earth. Anything below the moon was ?sublunary,? separate from the rest of the solar system?s state of grace.

Allusions to this worldview abound in Milton, Shakespeare, John Donne and many other leading literary figures, but by the time Sir John Davies penned his poem ?Orchestra? in 1596, the Ptolemaic system was beginning to crack as the Copernican revolution gained momentum:

Only the earth doth stand forever still,
Her rocks remove not nor her mountains meet;
Although some wits enricht with learning?s skill
Say heav?n stands firm and that the earth doth fleet
And swiftly turneth underneath their feet

Illustration from Jules Verne's "From the Earth to the Moon"

Ah, but then came the dawn of science fiction in the 19th century, beginning (arguably) in 1818, when Mary Shelley?s Frankenstein was first published anonymously in London. (Fans of classic sci-fi from this era should totes be reading Skulls in the Stars; Dr. Skyskull is an expert on the subject.)

By the time Jules Verne?s From the Earth to the Moon (1865) and H.G. Wells? First Men in the Moon appeared, science fiction was an established genre, one that inspired many young kids to dream of traveling to other worlds ? most notably rocket pioneers J. Robert Goddard and Werner von Braun, who helped launch the 20th century space program.

No longer was it just science seeping into the popular culture: now popular culture was inspiring scientists in turn. And then came film and television! Verne?s novel inspired Georges Melies to make the first science fiction silent film, A Voyage to the Moon.

The 1950s was a veritable Golden Age of cheesy B-movie science fiction, and? as the decades rolled on, you even had sly references to scientific breakthroughs showing up in mainstream films. Sure, it took a few decades, but Hubble?s discovery that the universe was expanding went on to give little Alvy Singer nightmares in Woody Allen?s Annie Hall:

These days, science is everywhere in film, TV, books, music, theater, art ? you name it. It?s handy for people like me, who love to ferret out the science in popular culture ? or physicists like Jim Kakalios, whose book The Physics of Superheroes is a must-read for any lover of classic comic books. My own book (shameless plug alert!), The Physics of the Buffyverse, combed through episodes of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spinoff, Angel, to compare and contrast the science in Whedon?s world with that of our own.

World-building in science fiction is all about establishing the rules of how your world works; it is artistically essential, because a world with no constraints has no conflict, and hence no story. Those rules might evolve over time, and inconsistencies invariably creep in, but they exist ? even in the Buffyverse which has its own thermodynamics of magic. There are costs incurred, consequences that must be paid, and above all, strict rules as to how and when it can be used. Willow even cites energy conservation in a Season 7 episode, declaring, ?Magic works on physics!? At least, it does in the Buffyverse.

The Buffyverse (and much of popular culture in general) abounds in what I like to call ?found physics?: elements that perhaps aren?t central to the world-building aspect, but nonetheless provide ?teachable moments.? For instance, in the Emmy-nominated ?Hush,? the Gentlemen are fairy tale monsters that steal everyone?s voices, so their victims can?t scream when the creatures arrive to surgically remove their still-beating hearts. It?s necessary because the Gentlemen are extremely sensitive to any kind of noise. Eventually, Buffy figures out how to get her voice back and emits a single loud, prolonged, and high-pitched scream that causes the monsters? heads to explode, scattering green goo everywhere.

The Gentlemen's heads on the verge of exploding.

Sound can affect the heads of creepily cadaverous demons because it is mechanical energy.? Still, it is not a simple feat for Buffy to cause the heads of the Gentlemen to explode. The secret is a precisely tuned frequency, combined with long duration, and lots of decibels. Every material object has a natural resonant frequency at which it vibrates. That?s why running your damp finger along the rim of a crystal wine glass produces a faint hum.

We?re basically talking about forced oscillation resonance: if an object has a particular natural rate of vibration, and if one pumps in more energy of the same resonance, the object will vibrate so strongly it can shatter, just like the wine glass in those old Memorex commercials.

Similarly, the Gentlemen?s exploding heads would have to have a resonant frequency perfectly matched to the pitch of Buffy?s scream in order for this to happen. Buffy?s sustained scream would probably have to be at least 135 decibels in order to generate sufficient mechanical vibration to cause them to explode. Unlikely? Sure. But it?s good enough for Purposes of the Plot.

Of course, there are plenty of groan-worthy gaffes in the Buffyverse, too, as there are in just about any form of popular entertainment that dares to inject a bit of science. That?s why nerd-gassing is such a popular and time-honored pastime among the geekerati. I went to see J.J. Abrams? Star Trek reboot with five PhD physicists, and the post-movie nerdgassing reached Olympic proportions. Their unanimous conclusion: ?Red matter? didn?t have to happen.

Some people are in favor of this kind of sci-fi handwaving, as detailed in this post by Steven Padnick at Tor.com.? I think Padnick is right in principle (science fiction should stretch the imagination and look beyond what is currently possible, and you don?t want to bog down your story with lengthy technical explanations) and wrong in the specific example of red matter, which is so ridiculous that it actually pulls the viewer out of the story ? something no self-respecting creator of a fictional world wants to do.

For an example of an error that still works in the fictional context, consider this scene from Third Rock from the Sun, in which visiting alien Dick Solomon ? now a physics professor ? finally proves his career isn?t, like, totally boring and useless when he gets a criminal to confess using physics:

Dick: Using Coulomb?s Third Law, I was able to prove that he did it.
Tommy: What does that have to do with it?
Dick: Nothing. All I proved was that he?s rotating around the sun, but he didn?t know that. That?s the wonderful thing about physics, nobody understands it.
Sally: So you can use your knowledge to bully people into submission.
Dick: That?s the plan. As long as America?s educational system remains woefully inadequate, I rule!

The physics literate no doubt spotted the problem: the writers have conflated Coulomb?s Law with Newton?s Law of Universal Gravitation. Both employ the inverse-square law, and whether we?re talking about electrons moving around an atomic nucleus or planets moving around the sun, we?re still dealing with spherical objects with point charge and point mass. But Newton?s law deals with very large mass, while Coulomb?s law deals with objects with little mass but large charges. Also, gravitation is just attraction; Coulomb?s law incorporates both attraction and repulsion. Here?s the thing: the scene still works. When it comes to scientific bloopers, this one?s a misdemeanor.

The science should always be in service to the narration, but it?s always marvelous when you can both tell a terrific story and have it be reasonably accurate. Some of the best examples include such classic films as Contact and Apollo 13 ? and a lesser-known portrayal of the invention of the atomic bomb, Fat Man and Little Boy. My favorite scene depicted a famous experiment dubbed ?tickling the dragon?s tail,? in which physicists tried to find the critical mass points of different materials to see which would be the best choice to set off the first stage of a nuclear chain reaction.

Needless to say, it was incredibly dangerous, yet Manhattan Project scientists sometimes skimped on the safeguards ? like removing the shims separating? the two halves of the beryllium sphere housing the plutonium core. John Cusack?s character is based on a physicist named Louis Slotin, one of two men who died as a result of botched criticality experiments. The first was in August 1945; at the time, Enrico Fermi told Slotin, ?Keep doing these experiments the way you?ve been doing them, and you?ll be dead within the year.?

Fermi?s fears were realized. A few months later, Slotin was using a screwdriver to tweak his experiment, when the screwdriver slipped and the two halves of beryllium came together for a moment, producing an intense burst of hard radiation. Fat Man and Little Boy recreates that moment in exquisite detail, right down to marking where each man was standing at the time of the accident (so the different doses of radiation received by each could be calculated) and removing all metal from their persons. Only Slotin, who manually separated the spheres and stopped the reaction, died. Horribly. Within nine days.

The current fictional descendent of Dick Solomon is Sheldon of The Big Bang Theory, currently the top sitcom in the US, garnering a whopping 19 million viewers for a recent episode (that?s on a par with Friends, one of the most popular sitcoms of all time). The show has its own physicist as a technical adviser ? UCLA?s David Saltzberg ? and its writers are justly proud of the fact that the equations on the whiteboard, the posters, books, and other props are drawn from actual physics departments.

But the geekerati are never satisfied; where?s the fun in that? There are frequent objections to the show?s stereotypical characters: socially awkward, poorly dressed, pining for unobtainable women, and so forth. I usually point out that the depiction is exaggerated, but not necessarily 100% wrong (we?ve all run into a real-world version of Howard Wolowitz), and comedy thrives on exaggeration. The nerdy guys actually get the girls in the end (well, except for Raj, who complains at one point that he never thought Sheldon would get a girlfriend before him). And Sheldon is a sex symbol among the fandom: he is by far the most popular character, as any attendee of the annual Big Bang Theory panel at Comic-Con can attest.

In one classic scene, Sheldon uses the paradox of Schroedinger?s Cat to give Penny advice on whether or not to go on a date with Leonard and give their budding romance a chance. (You can watch the clip here; embedding is disabled.) Never mind that nobody should be seeking advice on love from Sheldon; his explanation is dead-on ? and also works really well metaphorically. Personally, I?ll take Sheldon?s loveable nerd over Flash Forward?s cringe-inducing scene where sleazy quantum physicist Simon uses Schroedinger?s cat to pick up a young woman on a train:

There is a time-honored tradition of satirizing scientists: back in 1676, Thomas Shadwell wrote a play called The Virtuoso, with bumbling, pedantic character based on Robert Hooke of Micrographia fame. The caricature was so dead-on, Hooke exclaimed in a letter, after attending a performance,? ?Dammd Doggs. Vindica me Deus, people almost pointed.?

Sometimes whether or not you accept the scientific premise of a film depends on your perspective. The Time Lord and I loved Inception, and shared our enthusiasm with psychologist Carol Tavris over dinner one night. We especially savored the careful attention to physics details, notably a scene in an elevator that served as the perfect cinematic depiction of Einstein?s equivalence principle. Check it out:

It?s a great example of using physics principles in a ?what if?? kind of way to explore how the rules could change (or not) in the dreamscape. But for Tavris, the very premise ? that the most difficult thing to accomplish is to implant an original idea in someone else?s mind, such that they believe it is their own (the ?inception? of the title) ? was ludicrous, making it impossible for her to suspend her disbelief. ?Inception is easy,? she declared.

It is the issue of authorship that is significant. The film makes clear that planting an idea in someone?s head is simple enough: tell someone not to think of pink elephants, and chances are that images of pink elephants will spring to mind. But they know that the pink elephants came from an outside suggestion. Tavris? point was that it is just as easy to manipulate someone into thinking the pink elephants were their idea all along, and there?s a lot of psychology research to back her up.

Finally, sometimes long-discarded scientific ideas can come full circle and find their way back into fiction. Remember the music of the spheres? We no longer adhere to the Ptolemaic cosmology, but the notion is still inspiring science fiction, as in this special episode of Doctor Who (penned by Robertson Davies):

The Doctor?s explanation is an extrapolation of something very real: there is indeed a kind of ?music? in the universe, and we can ?hear? it through techniques like sonification ? like this video showcasing the sound of Saturn?s rings, based on data collected by the Cassini spacecraft. It sounds very similar to the sound effects in that Doctor Who clip.

As Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek and Betsy Devine observed in Longing for Harmonies: ?The marvelous dream [of the music of the spheres] is in fact closely realized in the physical world. The spheres, however, are not planets, but electrons and atomic nuclei, and the music they emit is not in sound, but in light?. If our eyes were more perfect, we would see the atoms sing.?

?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=9e005ebced3934c7c060eb3ca3a59af4

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9to5Mac: Apple preparing another 4th gen iPad SKU, signs point to 128GB model

9to5Mac: Apple preparing to release another 4th gen iPad SKU, signs point to 128GB model

Still waiting for a 128GB iPad? One could come sooner than you think. According to 9to5Mac, Cupertino is preparing to add a new SKU to its fourth-generation tablet line up, slotting next to the existing 16GB, 32GB and 64GB configurations as a premium model. A source at a well known US retailer shared the devices' SKU information with the outlet, marked up with internal Apple terminology that described both WiFi-only and cellular-capable slates in black and white facades. The devices' description column features a lone adjective, too: ultimate.

9to5Mac couldn't confirm that the description meant a 128GB model was inbound, but the assumption seems reasonable enough -- developers are finding references to 128GB iOS devices in iOS 6.1 beta code, and icons for the size were found in iTunes 11. Moreover, "good," "better" and "best" have all been used to describe different iPad configurations in the past -- ultimate seems like the next logical step. Strong evidence, to be sure, but we'll hedge our bets until we see something official. Read on to see the leaked SKU information for yourself.

9to5Mac Apple preparing to release another 4th gen iPad SKU, signs point to 128GB model

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Source: 9to5Mac

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/27/Apple-preparing-128gb-ipad/

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Patients' own skin cells are transformed into heart cells to create 'disease in a dish'

Jan. 27, 2013 ? Most patients with an inherited heart condition known as arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C) don't know they have a problem until they're in their early 20s. The lack of symptoms at younger ages makes it very difficult for researchers to study how ARVD/C evolves or to develop treatments. A new stem cell-based technology created by 2012 Nobel Prize winner Shinya Yamanaka, M.D., Ph.D., helps solve this problem. With this technology, researchers can generate heart muscle cells from a patient's own skin cells. However, these newly made heart cells are mostly immature. That raises questions about whether or not they can be used to mimic a disease that occurs in adulthood.

In a paper published January 27 in Nature, researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute and Johns Hopkins University unveil the first maturation-based "disease in a dish" model for ARVD/C. The model was created using Yamanaka's technology and a new method to mimic maturity by making the cells' metabolism more like that in adult hearts. For that reason, this model is likely more relevant to human ARVD/C than other models and therefore better suited for studying the disease and testing new treatments.

"It's tough to demonstrate that a disease-in-a-dish model is clinically relevant for an adult-onset disease. But we made a key finding here -- we can recapitulate the defects in this disease only when we induce adult-like metabolism. This is an important breakthrough considering that ARVD/C symptoms usually don't arise until young adulthood. Yet the stem cells we're working with are embryonic in nature," said Huei-Sheng Vincent Chen, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor at Sanford-Burnham and senior author of the study.

To establish this model, Chen teamed up with expert ARVD/C cardiologists Daniel Judge, M.D., Joseph Marine, M.D., and Hugh Calkins, M.D., at Johns Hopkins University. Johns Hopkins is home to one of the largest ARVD/C patient registries in the world.

"There is currently no treatment to prevent progression of ARVD/C, a rare disorder that preferentially affects athletes. With this new model, we hope we are now on a path to develop better therapies for this life-threatening disease," said Judge, associate professor and medical director of the Center for Inherited Heart Disease at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Disease in a dish

To recreate a person's own unique ARVD/C in the lab, the team first obtained skin samples from ARVD/C patients with certain mutations believed to be involved in the disease. Next they performed Yamanaka's technique: adding a few molecules that dial back the developmental clock on these adult skin cells, producing embryonic-like induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). The researchers then coaxed the iPSCs into producing an unlimited supply of patient-specific heart muscle cells. These heart cells were largely embryonic in nature, but carried along the original patient's genetic mutations.

However, for nearly a year, no matter what they tried, the team couldn't get their ARVD/C heart muscle cells to show any signs of the disease. Without actual signs of adult-onset ARVD/C, these young, patient-specific heart muscle cells were no use for studying the disease or testing new therapeutic drugs.

Speeding up time

Eventually, the team experienced the big "aha!" moment they'd been looking for. They discovered that metabolic maturity is the key to inducing signs of ARVD/C, an adult disease, in their embryonic-like cells. Human fetal heart muscle cells use glucose (sugar) as their primary source of energy. In contrast, adult heart muscle cells prefer using fat for energy production. So Chen's team applied several cocktails to trigger this shift to adult metabolism in their model.

After more trial and error, they discovered that metabolic malfunction is at the core of ARVD/C disease. Moreover, Chen's team tracked down the final piece of puzzle to make patient-specific heart muscle cells behave like sick ARVD/C hearts: the abnormal over-activation of a protein called PPAR?. Scientists previously attributed ARVD/C to a problem in weakened connections between heart muscle cells, which occur only in half of the ARVD/C patients. With the newly established model, they not only replicated this adult-onset disease in a dish, but also presented new potential drug targets for treating ARVD/C.

What's next?

Chen's team was recently awarded a new grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to create additional iPSC-based ARVD/C models. With more ARVD/C models, they will determine whether or not all (or at least most) patients develop the disease via the same metabolic defects discovered in this current study.

Together with the Johns Hopkins team, Chen also hopes to conduct preclinical studies to find a new therapy for this deadly heart condition.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Changsung Kim, Johnson Wong, Jianyan Wen, Shirong Wang, Cheng Wang, Sean Spiering, Natalia G. Kan, Sonia Forcales, Pier Lorenzo Puri, Teresa C. Leone, Joseph E. Marine, Hugh Calkins, Daniel P. Kelly, Daniel P. Judge, Huei-Sheng Vincent Chen. Studying arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia with patient-specific iPSCs. Nature, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nature11799

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/SopuqUp_z60/130127134201.htm

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Dems and GOP members joke about Clinton and 2016 (The Arizona Republic)

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Too discriminatory? Bill backs father-daughter dances

Lori Stratford / cranston.patch.com

Father-daughter dances like this one would be allowed -- once again -- if a proposed state law passes.

By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

The age-old tradition of father-daughter dances may get an encore performance on school dance floors in Cranston, R.I.

A lawmaker is sponsoring a bill that she hopes will amend Rhode Island's language on gender discrimination laws just enough to allow gender-specific events, such as father-daughter dances or mother-son baseball games, to make a comeback after they were banned last fall.

?I don?t believe the intent of these events was ever to be overtly discriminatory, but we all have to live with the language of the law. This bill, if approved and enacted, should ensure that these events can continue without weakening our resolve to oppose discriminatory activities,? State Sen. Hanna Gallo, who represents Cranston, said in a statement.

The legislation would amend state law to permit schools "to provide activities for students of one sex provided that reasonably comparable activities are provided for students of the other sex," Gallo said a in a statement.

Cranston banned father-daughter dances last year,?saying they were a violation of state gender laws after the American Civil Liberties Union?sent a complaint on behalf of a single mom, who said her daughter couldn't attend because she didn't have a dad to accompany her.

?A dance for girls and a baseball game for boys, particularly in light of the stereotypes they embody, are not, we submit, ?reasonably comparable? activities. To the contrary; the stereotypes at their core undermine the goal of school anti-discrimination laws,? the ACLU?letter read.?

At least one Cranston elementary school has managed to avoid the controversy altogether: Hold family dances instead.

"The stereotypical family doesn't really exist anymore," Robyn Ladouceur, a parent of a sixth-grader at Garden City School in Cranston. "We know for a fact that we have families from lesbian couples that have children, and adopted children, and all different faiths and religions. Why don't we just have an event for whoever you'd like to bring?"

Ladouceur is the parent facilitator of the Family Engagement Network, a PTO-type organization.?She hopes her school will be a role model for others in Cranston, regardless of the outcome of Gallo's legislation.

"I'm trying to grasp what they're losing in calling a father-daughter dance 'a family dance,' what they're losing in calling a mother-son bowling 'family bowling,'" she said. "Anybody who has listened to both sides would say if the kids aren't losing out on anything and all we're doing is making it more acceptable for all people to come, and you just want your husband to take your daughter to the family dance, no one is going to look differently upon you."

The town of Cranston, located a few miles outside of Providence, is no stranger to controversy. In April 2011, a 15-year-old girl teamed up with the ACLU and filed a lawsuit over a prayer banner that hung in her high school's auditorium. Jessica Ahlquist, an atheist, received death threats for insisting that the banner, which had been up for decades, be removed; ultimately, she won the lawsuit.?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/23/16660589-banned-by-town-father-daughter-dances-may-make-comeback?lite

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

Te'o tells Couric he briefly lied about girlfriend

This Jan. 22, 2013 photo released by ABC Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o, right, speaking with host Katie Couric during an interview for "Katie," in New York. Te'o has told Katie Couric that he briefly lied about his online girlfriend after discovering she didn't exist, while maintaining that he had no part in creating the hoax. Pressed by Couric to admit that he was in on the deception, Te'o said he believed that his girlfriend Lennay Kekua had died of cancer and didn't lie about it until December. The interview will air on Thursday, Jan. 24. (AP Photo/Disney-ABC, Lorenzo Bevilaqua)

This Jan. 22, 2013 photo released by ABC Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o, right, speaking with host Katie Couric during an interview for "Katie," in New York. Te'o has told Katie Couric that he briefly lied about his online girlfriend after discovering she didn't exist, while maintaining that he had no part in creating the hoax. Pressed by Couric to admit that he was in on the deception, Te'o said he believed that his girlfriend Lennay Kekua had died of cancer and didn't lie about it until December. The interview will air on Thursday, Jan. 24. (AP Photo/Disney-ABC, Lorenzo Bevilaqua)

(AP) ? Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o has told Katie Couric that he briefly lied about his online girlfriend after discovering she didn't exist, while maintaining that he had no part in creating the hoax.

Pressed by Couric to admit that he was in on the deception, Te'o said he believed that his girlfriend Lennay Kekua had died of cancer and didn't lie about it until December.

"Katie, put yourself in my situation. I, my whole world told me that she died on Sept. 12. Everybody knew that. This girl, who I committed myself to, died on Sept. 12," Te'o said in an interview to air Thursday on Couric's syndicated talk show. A segment of the interview with Te'o and his parents was broadcast Wednesday on "Good Morning America."

The Heisman Trophy runner-up said he only learned of the hoax when he received a phone call in December from a woman saying she was Kekua.

"Now I get a phone call on Dec. 6, saying that she's alive and then I'm going be put on national TV two days later. And to ask me about the same question. You know, what would you do?" Te'o said.

An Associated Press review of news coverage found that the Heisman Trophy runner-up talked about his doomed love in a Web interview on Dec. 8 and again in a newspaper interview published Dec. 10.

Te'o's father defended his son when Couric pointed out that many people don't believe the Irish star, suspecting he used the situation for personal gain.

"People can speculate about what they think he is. I've known him 21 years of his life. And he's not a liar. He's a kid," Brian Te'o said with tears in his eyes.

On Tuesday, the woman whose photo was used as the "face" of the Twitter account of Te'o's supposed girlfriend says the man allegedly behind the hoax confessed and apologized to her.

Diane O'Meara told NBC's "Today" show that Ronaiah Tuiasosopo used pictures of her without her knowledge in creating a fake woman called Lennay Kekua.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-23-Notre%20Dame-Te'o-Couric/id-3466a12a8c084b90bc7da931e36982a8

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Monday, January 21, 2013

Taliban attack on Kabul police HQ kills 3 officers

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? Two Taliban suicide bombers blew themselves up at the gates of the Kabul traffic police headquarters early Monday before another group of militants stormed the compound, battling security forces for nine hours in an attack that left three policemen and all five attackers dead, authorities said.

The coordinated assault was the second brazen raid in the heart of the Afghan capital in less than a week, a sign that the insurgency is determined to keep carrying out such spectacular attacks even as the U.S. and Afghan governments try to coax the Taliban into holding peace talks.

Nine hours after Monday's insurgent attack began with two of the five attackers blowing themselves up, police commandos killed the last two insurgents holed up in the police headquarters, Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi said. He added that four traffic policemen and 10 civilians were also been wounded in the fighting.

Kabul Police chief Mohammad Ayub Salangi said two Taliban suicide bombers died at the gate when their vests exploded, another blew himself up inside the building and two more were killed by security forces before they managed to detonate their explosive vests.

He said a sedan packed with explosives blew up near the gate a short time later. Such secondary devices are rigged to timers and designed to kill as many first responders as possible.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the attack, which he said was targeting a police training facility "run by foreign military forces."

The traffic police headquarters is not heavily guarded, though it is located on a square leading to the parliament and is also next to the zoo. It is also adjacent to the Afghan border police headquarters and a police training facility ? which may have been the more likely target. The traffic police facility, usually teeming with civilians seeking to get drivers licenses and registrations for vehicles, was nearly empty at the time of the attack.

Sediqi, the Interior Ministry spokesman, said Afghan forces carried out the operation against the militants without any assistance from NATO, adding that "this shows the ability of the Afghan forces, that they are leading the operation."

A unit of NATO special forces that trains and mentors Afghan police was at the scene but not taking part in the fighting.

Gul Rahman, who owns a shop near the traffic police compound, said he heard at least two blasts when the attack began just before dawn. An Associated Press reporter at the scene said a number of big explosions were heard from inside and around the building, along with heavy gunfire.

It was the second insurgent attack inside Kabul in five days.

Last Wednesday, six Taliban suicide bombers attacked the gates of the Afghan intelligence agency in downtown Kabul, killing one guard and wounding dozens. That operation bore several similarities to Monday's attack, including the use of a secondary car bomb placed outside the government compound.

The attacks came as the Afghan government has been pushing to get the Taliban to the negotiating table and as President Hamid Karzai and the U.S. negotiate for a quicker pullout of American forces. President Barack Obama said after meeting Karzai in Washington earlier this month that the U.S.-led military coalition would hand over the lead for security around the country to Afghan forces this spring ? months ahead of schedule.

Obama also said he agreed with Karzai that the Taliban should open a political office in the Gulf state of Qatar to facilitate peace talks.

Pakistan, the other regional powerbroker, also said last week that it plans to release more Afghan militant detainees in an attempt to boost the peace process ahead of the departure of international troops at the end of 2014. Islamabad made the announcement after talks with Afghan and American officials in Abu Dhabi. Pakistan is thought to hold more than 100 Taliban prisoners and has so far released 26.

In general, Kabul has pressed hard for Pakistan to release Afghan detainees, with some officials saying that they hope the released Taliban can serve as intermediaries. But Washington is concerned about specific prisoners it considers dangerous, saying they could take up arms again.

___

Associated Press writers Heidi Vogt and Patrick Quinn contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/taliban-attack-kabul-police-hq-kills-3-officers-103146291.html

lance armstrong

Transfluid offers new hybrid drive system for tube processing ...

?Efficient machines need efficient drive?:?

Advantages of electrical and hydraulic systems in a newly developed solution combined?

Compromises in many areas of everyday life might often be a good way. When developing new technologies they prevent often the best solution. In tube processing this applies especially to the selection of the drive system for bending and forming machines or manufacturing cells. Electric drives are energy efficient, highly accurate and largely independent of external influences. The hydraulic drives have a unique power density and robustness. No system can to cover both as standard. This gap covers transfluid with a new development. For the best solution, the engineers of the South Westphalian (German) transfluid Maschinenbau GmbH have developed a unique system that combines some advantages of both systems and exclude disadvantages. With these new hybrid drive options, the advanced tube processing technology is brought into best form.

Up to 20% increase in energy efficiency

The hybrid drives are effectively matched to the requirements of the corresponding machines. Hydraulic units of the new system are equipped with constant pumps and are driven by a powerful servo motor. Almost the entire control of the system takes place via the power or rotation speed of the motor. It is very energy efficient. Generally improves the energy efficiency by 15 to 20%, since the power is always given in accordance with the consumer.

Quieter, smaller, more precise

Its advantages shows the technology especially in areas where powerful drives are requiredas well as with several hydraulic cylinders of different sizes and at different speeds. This applies especially for bending processes and axial forming machines. The hybrid drives are not only smaller and much quieter in operation. Also the heating in the process is minimized. The hydraulic unit needs up to 20% less volume of oil and the required performance of the external cooler is correspondingly lower.

Unique for hydraulic drives is the new positioning accuracy due to the hybrid system. Since each consumer is supplied with a specific volume of oil positions (depending on the consumer) can be approached in the 1/10 mm range. Via the electrical control, the consumption volumes are pre-selected or stored and via the rotational speed of the drive motor submitted precise.

Responsible for high precision means is not least the specially designed control system.?It provides a synchronization of the desired speed of the consumer in relation to the required volume. To ensure that no excess volume is generated. With the combination of electronics and hydraulics, the new solution of transfluid , thus ensuring improved efficiency and ensures that requirements are met in the best possible terms of drive technology.

trade-shows:?

transfluid at the Hannover Messe (April 08-12, 2013): Hall 17 / Stand B 71

transfluid Maschinenbau GmbH?transfluid is worldwide a demanded partner for the production of tube bending machines and tube forming machines. Since 1988 transfluid is developing its technologies for tube processing more customer oriented and offers tailor-made solutions ? for plant and machine construction, automotive and furniture industry, shipbuilding and railing constructions . As a world famous brandthe company from South Westphalia is on the spot with its service offices in Europe and Asia.

www.tube-processing-machines.com

Source: http://www.wireandtubenews.com/2013/01/21/transfluid-offers-new-hybrid-drive-system-for-tube-processing-machines/

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'Cosmic bang' hit Medieval Earth

A gamma ray burst, the most powerful explosion known in the Universe, may have hit the Earth in the 8th Century.

In 2012 researchers found evidence that our planet had been struck by a blast of radiation during the Middle Ages, but there was debate over what kind of cosmic event could have caused this.

Now a study suggests it was the result of two black holes or neutron stars merging in our galaxy.

This collision would have hurled out vast amounts of energy.

The research is published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

Gamma ray bursts are very, very explosive and energetic events?

End Quote Professor Ralph Neuhauser University of Jena, Germany

Nature's snapshot

Last year, a team of researchers found that some ancient cedar trees in Japan had an unusual level of a radioactive type of carbon known as carbon-14.

In Antarctica, too, there was a spike in levels of a form of beryllium - beryllium-10 - in the ice.

These isotopes are created when intense radiation hits the atoms in the upper atmosphere, suggesting that a blast of energy had once hit our planet from space.

Using tree rings and ice-core data, researchers were able to pinpoint that this would have occurred between the years AD 774 and AD 775, but the cause of the event was a puzzle.

Continue reading the main story

Gamma ray bursts

  • Gamma ray bursts were discovered in the 1960s by satellites designed to detect explosions from nuclear bombs on Earth
  • They are hundreds of times brighter than supernovae and about a million trillion times brighter than the Sun
  • Some gamma ray bursts have travelled over 13 billion light years, meaning they originated from some of the most distant objects ever detected

The possibility of a supernova - an exploding star - was put forward, but then ruled out because the debris from such an event would still be visible in telescopes today.

Another team of US physicists recently published a paper suggesting that an unusually large solar flare from the Sun could have caused the pulse of energy. However some others in the scientific community disagree because they do not think that the energy produced would tally with the levels of carbon-14 and beryllium-10 found.

So now German researchers have offered up another explanation: a massive explosion that took place within the Milky Way.

One of the authors of the paper, Professor Ralph Neuhauser, from the Institute of Astrophysics at the University of Jena, said: "We looked in the spectra of short gamma-ray bursts to estimate whether this would be consistent with the production rate of carbon-14 and beryllium-10 that we observed - and [we found] that is fully consistent."

These enormous emissions of energy occur when black holes, neutron stars or white dwarfs collide - the galactic mergers take just seconds, but they send out a vast wave of radiation.

Prof Neuhauser said: "Gamma-ray bursts are very, very explosive and energetic events, and so we considered from the energy what would be the distance given the energy observed.

"Our conclusion was it was 3,000 to 12,000 light-years away - and this is within our galaxy."

Although the event sounds dramatic, our medieval ancestors might not have noticed much.

If the gamma-ray burst happened at this distance, the radiation would have been absorbed by our atmosphere, only leaving a trace in the isotopes that eventually found their way into our trees and the ice. The researchers do not think it even emitted any visible light.

Rare events

Observations of deep space suggest that gamma ray-bursts are rare. They are thought to happen at the most every 10,000 years per galaxy, and at the least every million years per galaxy.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The gamma ray burst explanation is about 10,000 times less likely to be true?

End Quote Professor Adrian Melott University of Kansas

Prof Neuhauser said it was unlikely Planet Earth would see another one soon, but if we did, this time it could make more of an impact.

If a cosmic explosion happened at the same distance as the 8th Century event, it could knock out our satellites. But if it occurred even closer - just a few hundred light-years away - it would destroy our ozone layer, with devastating effects for life on Earth.

However, this, said Prof Neuhauser, was "extremely unlikely".

Commenting on the research, Professor Adrian Melott from the University of Kansas, US, said that although he thought a short gamma-ray burst was a possible conclusion, his group's research suggested that a solar flare was more likely based on observations of Sun-like stars in our galaxy.

He said: "A solar proton event and a short gamma-ray burst are both possible explanations, but based on the rates that we know about in the Universe, the gamma-ray burst explanation is about 10,000 times less likely to be true in that time period."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21082617#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Visualizing Silver As An Investment | Zero Hedge

Silver is like gold in many ways; both are precious metals with long histories as currencies. They are malleable, lustrous, ductile, resilient, and rare. However, as Visual Capitalist illustrates in this spectacular infographic, silver investors should be aware of the three main differences between silver and gold. From silver's relative volatility and correlation to industrial demand, track record, diversification benefits, and the three ways to get exposure to silver, this colossal image provides everything you need to know in one place.

Click image for massive (legible version).

?

Source: Visual Capitalist

Your rating: None Average: 4.1 (19 votes)

Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-01-19/visualizing-silver-investment

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Sunday, January 20, 2013

Pricey Inauguration hotels (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/278156766?client_source=feed&format=rss

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FCC Chairman Genachowski tells ISPs to stop dragging their feet, start building gigabit broadband

FCC Chairman GenachowskiFCC Chairman Genachowski

Sorry, American Internet service providers: Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius Genachowski is still not impressed. In a guest editorial written for Forbes, Genachowski implored ISPs in the United States to set their horizons higher and to start investing in building out broadband networks capable of moving data at gigabit speeds. At the same time,?Genachowski scolded ISPs that have called gigabit networks unnecessary, and particularly singled out?National Cable & Telecommunications Association CEO Michael Powell, who recently described achieving gigabit speeds as an ?irrelevant exercise in bragging rights.?

[More from BGR: Nintendo?s Wii U problems turn into a crisis]

?Gigabit networks can enable genetic sequencing to treat cancer patients, immersive and creative software to support lifelong learning from home, and ways for small businesses to take advantage of Big Data,? Genachowski wrote. ?Greater network speeds will certainly lead to unexpected new inventions. That?s been consistently true since the Internet began.?

[More from BGR: Samsung?s latest monster smartphone will reportedly have a 5.8-inch screen]

American ISPs have recently come under fire from a wide variety of critics, including?Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter David Cay Johnston and?Cardozo School of Law professor Susan Crawford, for allegedly stifling competition by sectioning off regions of the United States where they simply do not compete with one another.?Crawford, in particular, recently said that most major ISPs are very similar to the railroad and steel monopolies of the 19th century, in that the providers face minimal competition in areas where they operate and benefit from high barriers to entry for prospective new providers.

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fcc-chairman-genachowski-tells-isps-stop-dragging-feet-043809259.html

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Friday, January 18, 2013

KAWS Vinyl Boba Fett Action Figure: Galaxy?s Most Bad-Ass Bounty Hunter Redone

Vinyl Boba Fett

Yeah, that?s Boba Fett, although you might be wondering why the bad-ass bounty hunter from Star Wars?is sporting some extra curves on his head and body.?Created by Brooklyn street artist and designer?Brian Donnelly (aka ?KAWS?),?the overall form and design of the figure is based on another one of his characters called Companion. You?ll get what I mean when you check out what KAWS? Companion looks like.

The figure will be released online on KAWSONE.com?on?January 26th, 2013.

(via Laughing Squid)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NerdApproved-NewsAndReviews/~3/iJDIA_xFBr0/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Life Under Construction -Watch for Falling Objects: Reconnecting

This one is going to be really?quick.

It's confession time...ready?

I've slipped. ?Like an AA member who fell of the wagon, I've slipped back into complacency. ?I realized in the last week or so that, while we might be in church a lot, there's not a lot of time and heart being put into seeking God at home...at all.

I mean, sure, I still pray all the time and I sing to Him in the car...but let's face it folks...neither of those things is a replacement?for being IN His Word. ?It just isn't.

We went to church last Sunday, and I knew exactly where our Bible's would be...in the car...where we left them last Sunday.

If that's not lukewarm, then I'm not really sure what is.

Think about it this way...how great would your relationships with other people be if all you did was talk, but never listened to the other person. ?Shallow? ?One-sided? ?I'm thinking it's the same thing.

So, I've made a date with myself. ?Tonight, while the kids and Josiah are at Awana, I will be at Lifeway looking looking for a new book. ?Now, I know...you don't need a study book to read the Bible. ?I understand that. ?However, I also feel like having a book to aid?in my study, especially one that I really look forward to reading and that assists me in delving deeper into the Word, helps me stay on track and motivated to KEEP studying.

I miss the time spent with God in the morning. ?I miss the deep connection I felt when I was reading His Word every day and listening to what He had to say about my life.

I'm looking forward to reconnecting. :)

Source: http://alissaslifeunderconstruction.blogspot.com/2013/01/reconnecting.html

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Student charged in college shooting attacked cabby

ST. LOUIS A part-time student with a history of crime and mental health issues was charged Wednesday for allegedly shooting an administrator at a downtown business school in a dispute over financial aid, then turning the gun on himself.

St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce charged Sean Johnson, 34, of St. Louis, with first-degree assault, armed criminal action and two firearms violations for the shooting on Tuesday at Stevens Institute of Business & Art.

Both Johnson and the shooting victim, financial aid director Greg Elsenrath, remain hospitalized following surgery. The school said Elsenrath is expected to make a full recovery.

A probable cause statement said Johnson and Elsenrath had a heated exchange about Johnson's financial aid on Monday. The statement said that after another discussion on Tuesday, Johnson shot Elsenrath in the chest at Johnson's fourth-floor office. Police found Johnson in a stairwell between the third and fourth floors with a bullet wound to the side.

Authorities have not released Johnson's condition, but the prognosis for Elsenrath was good. The school posted on its Facebook page Wednesday that Elsenrath "came through surgery last night with flying colors and is expected to make a full recovery."

"This unimaginable act of violence has proved the strength of our bonds as a Siba family and we intend to come out of this event with those bonds intact and stronger than ever," it said.

The shooting created what Police Chief Sam Dotson described as a "chaotic scene," as the 40 or so students in the building at the time, along with faculty and staff, scrambled to get out of the five-story historic building, some taking refuge in neighboring businesses. Others huddled in closets or under desks until police arrived.

Police arrived to find Elsenrath near an elevator. The handgun Johnson allegedly used was near where police found him in the stairwell.

A woman answering the phone at Johnson's home declined an interview request on Wednesday. He did not yet have an attorney.

Johnson has been in trouble before.

He pleaded guilty to unlawful use of a weapon and second-degree assault for attempting to slash a taxi driver with a box cutter in 2009. Court documents show that the crime happened as the cab was being driven along Interstate 70 in St. Louis County. After the cab crashed into a median, the driver and Johnson struggled until police arrived.

Johnson was sentenced to five years of probation and required to take medication for an undisclosed mental health condition. He is still on probation for that case.

His attorney at the time, Eric Barnhart, said Wednesday that Johnson was a productive part of society "when he was taking his medication," but struggled when off of it. Barnhart said he is not currently representing Johnson and declined to disclose the mental health condition or comment further.

The probable cause statement said Johnson also had prior convictions for drug trafficking and drug possession.

The school's website said Elsenrath has a bachelor's degree from Missouri Valley College and an MBA from Lindenwood University. Elsenrath, of Winfield, Mo., has worked in financial aid for 15 years.

The school has about 180 students in programs including business administration, tourism and hospitality, paralegal studies, fashion, and retail and interior design. It relocated to its current building from another downtown building in 2010.

Dotson said police arrived within one minute of getting a call about the shooting and used an "active shooter" protocol developed after a 2010 shooting spree in which a man killed four people and wounded five others at ABB Inc., a transformer manufacturing firm.

Officers went inside and hurriedly got everyone out, and using tactical teams and dogs to sweep the building in search of the shooter or shooters.

The school will be closed until 8 a.m. Tuesday. Several messages left Wednesday with the school's president, Cynthia Musterman, and members of the staff were not returned.

Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/01/15/3790270/gunman-shoots-man-himself-at-st.html

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

2012-13 NFL Conference Championships Fantasy Football QB Rankings

. Here are the Lester?s Legends quarterback rankings for the? the AFC & NFC Conference Championship Games of the 2012-13 NFL Playoffs. . 1. Tom Brady, New England Patriots Losing Rob Gronkowski hurts, but Brady just keeps on rolling. He lit up the Houston Texans for 344 yards and three touchdowns. Brady had one of his worst playoff performances against the Baltimore Ravens in last year?s AFC Championship game. I expect a stronger performance this time around. . 2. Colin Kaepernick, San Francisco 49ers Kaepernick?s athleticism was on full display as he set the quarterback rushing record in the Divisional Round win over the Green Bay Packers. The Atlanta Falcons struggled to contain Cam Newton and Russell Wilson. I think they?ll bottle a heck of a lot better than Green Bay, but his running ability and strong arm makes Kaepernick a strong fantasy football option in the Conference Championship. . 3. Matt Ryan, Atlanta Falcons Ryan should be breathing easier after finally getting that first playoff win. It wasn?t always pretty, but Ryan threw three touchdown passes. Michael Turner and Jacquizz Rodgers gave him enough of a running game to keep the defenses honest. He?ll need some of that balance against the 49ers? stout defense. Julio Jones, Roddy White, and Tony Gonzalez give Ryan the top trio of weapons left in the playoffs. . 4. Joe Flacco, Baltimore Ravens Flacco has averaged 306.3 yards with seven touchdowns and just one interception in his past three playoff games, including 306 yards and two touchdowns in last year?s meeting with the Patriots. Flacco has the most favorable matchup against New England?s secondary. I have Flacco ranked fourth, but I don?t think there is a big difference between the quarterbacks this week. . . Also check out: 2012-13 Conference Championship NFL Picks

Read more at: 2012-13 NFL Conference Championships Fantasy Football QB Rankings
Syndicated from:

Source: http://elitestv.com/pub/2013/01/2012-13-nfl-conference-championships-fantasy-football-qb-rankings

monta ellis

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Workers say NY gun control law would cost jobs

Posted at: 01/14/2013 3:43 PM | Updated at: 01/14/2013 5:13 PM
By: AP

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - More than a dozen workers have driven two hours to Albany to protest a tentative deal for a gun control law they claim will cost 300 to 700 jobs.? ? ??

The workers say the issue isn't guns, but jobs. ? ? ? ??

The workers are from the Remington Arms manufacturing facility in Ilion, in the economically hard-hit Mohawk Valley. ? ??

Unionized worker Jamie Rudwall, who has a son in second grade, says Monday he was horrified by the shooting deaths at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school. But, he says, the tentative deal in Albany to tighten a ban on assault rifles will devastate the region because Remington and its 1,200 workers fuel the economy. ? ?

Assemblyman Marc Butler, who represents the region, says legislators are using secret meetings to trample the Second Amendment.

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)


Source: http://wnyt.com/article/stories/s2895985.shtml?cat=300

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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Math is on Hagel?s side in confirmation fight

President Barack Obama and former Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

President Barack Obama's decision to name former Sen. Chuck Hagel to lead the Defense Department may have sparked a fury of noisy opposition and concern from both parties, but pending a hearing before the Senate Armed Service Committee, the Nebraska Republican will likely make the cut.

Simply put, the math is on Hagel's side.

Democrats hold a 14-12 majority in The Armed Services Committee, which will conduct the confirmation hearings. Once he passes that threshold, he will need at least 60 votes of approval from his former colleagues in the Senate. Democrats control 55 seats in the chamber, meaning Obama must only pick off five Republicans to secure Hagel's appointment.

"That just doesn't seem like a tall order," a senior Senate Republican aide told Yahoo News.

Hagel will undoubtedly face a gauntlet of criticism from members of the Armed Services Committee. Republicans are preparing to interrogate Hegel on controversial comments he made in the past about the United States' relationship to Israel and Iran's nuclear program.

South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham has called Obama's choice of Hagel an "in your face" nomination, Graham, an Armed Services Committee member, is considered a likely no vote.

To be sure, securing all 55 Democratic votes is not yet a forgone conclusion. Before the lawmakers left Washington for recess last week, Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin appeared uncommitted, but open to being convinced.

Schumer and Gillibrand both expressed concern about Hagel's views on Israel and Iran. Baldwin, recently sworn in as the first openly gay member of the Senate, said she wondered whether Hagel was sincere when he apologized for comments he made about a gay diplomat in 1998.

Hagel is expected to make a series of courtesy visits to senators on the fence about his nomination, particularly Republicans in an effort to bring at least five on his side.

If necessary, Obama could dispatch Vice President (and former Democratic senator) Joe Biden, who has proven a talent for delivering messages and negotiating with members of Congress in a way Obama severely lacks.

Biden would probably be happy to vouch for him, too. For years, Biden and Hagel shared a close relationship while serving together on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The two visited northern Iraq in December 2002 and even shared a moment together when they called their mothers while driving through Turkey to the border of Kurdistan. In February 2008, Biden and Hagel were in a helicopter in Afghanistan that made emergency landing during a snowstorm, an experience Biden later said brought them closer.

"I have such a comfort zone with the guy," Biden said of Hagel in a 2008 interview with The Hill newspaper.

Whether Hagel needs Biden's help or not, he can rest comfortably knowing that it is rare for the Senate to reject a Cabinet nominee -- particularly when the Senate is controlled by the president's own party.

A Democratic-controlled Senate rejected John Tower, a former Texas Republican senator who was President George H.W. Bush's nominee to be Secretary of Defense. But other nominees who foundered generally did so before their nominations were put to a vote.

President Bill Clinton withdrew the nominations of Zoe Baird for Attorney General, Anthony Lake for CIA director and Hershel Gober for Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs. President George W. Bush withdrew Linda Chavez's nomination for Labor Secretary and Bernard Kerik's to head the Department of Homeland Security. In 2009, Obama withdrew the nomination of former Sen. Tom Daschle to lead Health and Human Services.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/math-hagel-side-confirmation-fight-181940262--politics.html

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Rhino Poaching at Record High in South Africa

Rhinoceros poaching soared to a record high level in South Africa last year. The country's government said 668 rhinos were killed within its borders in 2012, up from 448 in 2011, according to the World Wildlife Fund, an international conservation group.

A whopping 425 of those deaths last year occurred in Kruger National Park, a top safari destination and home to South Africa's largest population of both black and white rhinos. That figure marks a sharp increase from the 252 rhinos killed in the park in 2011.

The poaching boom is largely due to heightened demand for rhino horns in Asia, where the grim prizes are believed to have medicinal properties and are seen as highly desirable status symbols, especially in Vietnam. TRAFFIC, a nongovernmental global network that monitors wildlife trade, recently issued a report describing how some affluent Vietnamese individuals often use the horn as a hangover cure and general health tonic, grinding it up and mixing it with water or alcohol.

"Viet Nam must curtail the nation?s rhino horn habit, which is fuelling a poaching crisis in South Africa," Sabri Zain, TRAFFIC's director of advocacy, said in a statement. "Rhinos are being illegally killed, their horns hacked off and the animals left to bleed to death, all for the frivolous use of their horns as a hangover cure."

Last year also saw some crackdowns. Arrests of suspected poachers and smugglers increased in 2012, with 267 people now facing rhino-related charges and one Thai man sentenced to a record 40 years in prison for conspiring to smuggle horns to Asia, WWF officials said. Last month, Vietnam and South Africa also signed an agreement aimed at strengthening law-enforcement efforts and sharing intelligence to tackle the illegal wildlife trade.

According to WWF, an additional five rhinos have been killed since the beginning of 2013, and two men were arrested in separate incidents in Vietnam and Thailand this month for smuggling rhino horns.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook?& Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rhino-poaching-record-high-south-africa-131610622.html

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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Moore County Parks and Recreation Softball | SandhillsKids.com

Youth Softball

alt

Leagues start at age 5 and run through age 15.

?


?

9-15 Softball

9-10, 11-12, and 13-15 Softball
Registration Deadline: Friday, February 22nd, 2013
Games start first week of April

Age cut off date for ages 9-15 Softball is January 1st, 2012!

Cost:
$30 ? Ages 9-15

$10 late registration fee will be added after deadline
if space is available

All games will be played at Hillcrest Park!

Register now

(Click here for 9-15 Yr Old Softball Registration Form!)


5-6 T-Ball (Co-Ed) and

7-8 Coach Pitch Softball

Registration Deadline: Friday, May 3rd, 2013

Games start mid-June

**This year the 7-8 year old league will

be a Coach Pitch league and not Machine Pitch.**

Age Determined as of May 1st 2013 for 5-6 T-Ball

Age Determined as of January 1st 2013 for 7-8 Coach Pitch Softball

Games start mid-June

Cost:

$20 ? ages 5-8
$10 late registration fee will be added after deadline
if space is available


For more information call Moore County Parks and Recreation at

(910) 947-2504!

Source: http://www.sandhillskids.com/2013/01/moore-county-parks-and-recreation-softball/

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CSN's McAdam: A PED-free Hall of Fame ballot


It used to be that filling out the Hall of Fame ballot every winter involved sorting through statistics and awards and All-Star honors. Now it involves Congressional testimony, the Mitchell Report and failed drug tests.

It used to be about RBI. Now it's about PEDs.

It used to be a challenge. Now it's almost impossible.

And it used to be fun. Now it's more thankless.

This isn't just about evaluating a player's career, as if that weren't already a formidable responsibility. It's now about ethics and morals and right and wrong and accountability. It's being asked to make tough decisions because others failed to make easy ones.

After much deliberation, I voted for two players on the 2014 Hall of Fame ballot: Curt Schilling and Jeff Bagwell.

Those choices came after some soul-searching and not a little deliberation on my part.

I voted for Schilling despite the fact this his win total -- 216 in the regular season -- is rather slight compared to others. I gave plenty of weight to his postseason performance (11-2 record and a 4.38:1 strikeout-to-walk ratio, the best since 1900).

I also voted for Schilling because of his place in baseball history. He was a central figure in both the 2001 and 2004 postseasons, two of most dramatic in modern baseball history. And finally, beyond all the statistical achievements, I voted for Schilling because it's impossible to tell the story of baseball from 1990 through 2007 without referencing Schilling. And that should count for something.

I voted for Bagwell because of his remarkably consistent and productive career, which features eight 100-RBI seasons, nine seasons with 30 or more homers, and a lifetime OPS of .948.

I do so, of course, knowing that Bagwell was the subject of plenty of speculation during his career. The same player who hit four homers one season at Double A with the Red Sox went on to hit 449 in his major-league career.

But while there have been allegations of PED use with Bagwell, there's been nothing concrete. He wasn't named in the Mitchell Report and there are no eye-witnesses who saw him inject anything.

I had two tough omissions: Craig Biggio and Mike Piazza.

Biggio, who was never linked to PED use, collected 3,060 career hits -- a figure topped by just 20 others -- and is fifth in career doubles. But in 20 seasons, Biggio had just two seasons in which he finished with more than 80 RBI, one season in which he hit 25 or more homers, and hit over .300 just four times. In those two decades, he finished in the Top 10 of MVP voting only twice.

And there is this: As impressive as his career totals are, I never considered Biggio one of the best players in the game.

Piazza was trickier. The case could be made that he's the best offensive catcher in modern history, better even than Yogi Berra and Johnny Bench. But he was below average as a catcher, and there are the persistent suggestions that Piazza's greatness as a hitter was aided and abetted by PED use.

These same concerns initially prevented me from voting for Bagwell in his first year of eligibility, until I decided that there was no hard evidence against him. In time, I may feel the same about Piazza. But for now, those nagging concerns, coupled with his defensive shortcomings, kept him off this year's ballot.

Meanwhile, I left a number of others off my ballot, including Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds, all of whom unquestionably posted Hall of Fame-worthy numbers. But to me, there's overwhelming evidence that all three used PEDs and as such, I cannot in good conscience vote for any of the three -- or anyone else whom I have good reason to believe used PEDs.

Obviously, this leads to some questions and counterpoints, some of which I've anticipated below, along with my responses.

1) "You're acting as judge and jury!"
Why, yes -- yes I am.

That's part of the process. As a longstanding member of the Baseball Writers Association of America, I'm being asked to give my informed opinion. And I have.

It's the same stance I had more than a decade ago, before the ballot was full of tainted and allegedly tainted players. In those innocent times, I was judging a player's career and his worthiness for Cooperstown.

It's no different now, except that there are mitigating circumstances. And those circumstances are, to me, part of equation.

On the ballot, there's reference to a player's "record, playing ability, integrity, sportsmanship (and) character . . . '' I find it impossible to dismiss those factors.

And, if you've ever voted in any sort of election -- local, state-wide or presidential -- you, too, have acted as "judge and jury.'' It's unavoidable.

2) "Everybody did it!''

No, everybody didn't do "it" - "it" being the use of performance enhancing drugs.

While PED use certainly appears to have been far more widespread than we initially imagined, many players didn't succumb to the temptation.

To suggest otherwise is every bit as naive as suggesting that PED use was non-existent.

Many -- perhaps even most -- players cheated. But not all. And to look the other way with those who did is to excuse that behavior and offer no consequences.

3) "But Bonds and Clemens were already Hall of Famers before their alleged use began.''
This is probably true. Before Bonds began using -- and remember, Bonds has acknowledged using the Clear and the Cream, but insisted he didn't know what they were -- he had already won three MVPS and finished second in another season. He had won eight Gold Gloves and had hit more than 400 career homers.

If you put Clemens' before-and-after date at 1996, he had won three Cy Young Awards, an MVP and had tied Cy Young as the winningest pitcher in Red Sox history.

But to me, ignoring the fact that both cheated in the second half of their careers is akin to looking the other way on a golfer who insisted he only started to cheat on the back nine and would have won his round anyway.

4) "Clemens was found innocent in a court of law.''

Clemens was found "not guilty" on charges of perjury. The fact that the government failed to convict him of perjury doesn't necessarily mean that Clemens never used PEDs.

Look at the overwhelming evidence against Clemens -- his career renaissance after first meeting Brian McNamee in Toronto; his admission that McNamee adminstered PEDs to both his wife, and his closest friend in the game, Andy Pettitte; and the documentation in the Mitchell Report -- and it's virtually impossible to come away believing he was clean.

If the PED era has taught us anything, it's that the period -- or our knowledge and understanding of it -- is constantly evolving. Perhaps in a year's time, we'll have definitive proof, one way or another -- about some of the players left off ballots, and some whom we've already elected.

Context is important and in time, I may reconsider my approach.

But for now, that's how I feel.

Tags: Hall of Fame, Boston Red Sox, Sean McAdam, Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, Sammy Sosa, Curt Schilling, Jeff Bagwell

Source: http://www.csnne.com/baseball-boston-redsox/redsox-talk/One-mans-PED-free-Hall-of-Fame-ballot?blockID=821323&feedID=10430

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