Thursday, March 21, 2013

GOP Lawmakers Who Voted Against Iraq War Stand Their Ground 10 Years Later

WASHINGTON -- When Congress voted to authorize the Iraq War in October 2002, only seven Republicans voted against it -- and they took heat for bucking their party. Looking back now, on the 10-year anniversary of the invasion, many of those Republicans maintained they were right all along and fear that the war wasn't worth the costs, both financially and in human lives.

In interviews with The Huffington Post, five of those seven Republicans explained why they broke ranks and opposed the war resolution, which authorized President George W. Bush to "use any means necessary" against Iraq. Two of those Republicans -- Rep. John Duncan (Tenn.) and former Rep. John Hostettler (Ind.) -- did not respond to interview requests.

"To me, it was about growing up in the Vietnam era and not wanting to go through that again," said Rhode Island Gov. Lincoln Chafee, who, in 2002, was the only GOP senator to vote against invading Iraq. "I remember the difficulty the soldiers had coming back here after Vietnam. They had the same issues: PTSD, re-immersion, alcoholism. You have to be prepared to take all that on."

"There was no threat to our national security, and also the arguments that they were using [for] why we had to go in, I didn't believe them," said former Rep. Ron Paul (Texas), one of the six House Republicans who opposed the war. "I could see where it was going to cost us a lot of money, and I kept saying this even before -- it's going to cost us a lot of money, a lot of lives. It's going to go on a long time."

Former Rep. Connie Morella (Md.) said she couldn't separate war from being the mother of nine.

"I had to look at it as a parent, but also look at the fact that the we're talking about sending young people into conflict," Morella said. "There was also the idea that we had not gone through checking with the UN and getting support of allies. We were doing this unilaterally.

"That was the 88-ton gorilla or whatever they say," Morella added. "I think it was valid then, and I think it's valid now."

"I just felt it was the wrong war at the wrong time," said former Rep. Amory Houghton (N.Y.), who said he never believed that Iraqi leaders were building weapons of mass destruction.

"The information I'd gotten on weapons of mass destruction made me think they were not there," Houghton said. Asked how he came to that conclusion when so many others didn't, Houghton replied, "Everybody had the same information I had. It's all about how you interpret it, isn't it?"

Of course, it was the allegations of weapons of mass destruction that sparked the Iraq invasion in the first place -- and that turned out to be false. In the meantime, Bush plotted a war that was supposed to require few troops and even less time. Instead, it dragged on for nine years, cost the United States at least $800 billion and resulted in nearly 4,500 U.S. soldiers being killed. That doesn't include the more than 32,000 wounded Americans and the horrific estimates of Iraqi civilian fatalities, which range from 100,000 to 600,000.

Former Rep. James Leach (Iowa) said he never believed that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or that Iraqi leaders had ties to al Qaeda, which is why it wasn't hard for him to oppose the war.

"If we didn?t know after years of review and international inspections where alleged nuclear capacities were located and where alleged biological weapons were stored in a society filled with dissenters, it appeared to me that the Iraqi WMD threat served more as an exaggerated rationale for war than a true challenge to our national security," said Leach.

Most of the GOP war detractors said they received a steady stream of criticism after their votes. Morella said people would leave notes at the front door of her house saying they disagreed with her. Some called her children, who were grown and living elsewhere, to say they disagreed with Morella's vote.

Chafee said he took heat from his GOP colleagues, but was "adamant" in his position. Houghton said he, too, faced criticism from colleagues, but said he didn't really care since he was 60 years old when he got elected to Congress and didn't feel the need to walk in lockstep with leadership.

"I didn't have any aspirations for the brass ring," Houghton said. "I just wanted to try to do the right thing for the country."

After nearly nine years of combat in Iraq, President Barack Obama brought home the last batch of U.S. troops in 2011. Saddam Hussein is gone, and in place of his dictatorship, a democratically run government. The question of whether the war was worth it remains. For some of the original GOP dissenters, the answer is a resounding no.

"I just think that it was a disaster. It was wrong, and we should have prevented it," Paul said. "Yeah, we got rid of a dictator. It makes no sense. It demonstrates the stupidity of our foreign policy. What it does, it says at one time we can be an ally of Saddam Hussein, but the next week we can turn around and say he's our worst enemy."

"I would question, was this worth the loss of credibility?" Morella asked. "Even more than that, was it worth the loss of people? I guess the Iraqi people will show whether it was."

Still, she added, "Certainly, I stand by my vote 10 years ago."

Some said they worried that political leaders learned nothing from missteps with Iraq -- and will be just as likely to launch into another war given the right emotional spin.

"You would think after Vietnam, people would be hesitant, but it happened," Chafee said. "Any time you get these emotions of fear and anger, it's always possible. It's groupthink."

Others dismissed the idea that the Iraq war will be a stain in the history books for the U.S.

"We've done a lot of dumb things, but I don't think this is one," said Houghton. "There's a self-correcting gene in Americans. We have this ability to bounce back."

Leach, meanwhile, had a Zen outlook when asked if there were lessons to be learned from the war.

"Wisdom is linear," Leach said. "A smart person, we are told, learns from his or her mistakes. But a really smart person also learns from the mistakes of others. And a sage learns both from mistakes and the wise decisions of those who came before."

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/20/gop-iraq-war_n_2910618.html

horsetail falls ice t president day new york knicks lin j.r. smith espn jeremy lin

Why red algae never colonized dry land

Mar. 20, 2013 ? The first red alga genome has just been sequenced by an international team coordinated by CNRS and UPMC at the Station Biologique de Roscoff (Brittany), notably involving researchers from CEA-Genoscope[1], the universities of Lille 1 and Rennes 1 and the Mus?um National d'Histoire Naturelle[2]. The genome of Chondrus crispus, also known by the Breton name 'pioka', turns out to be small and compact for a multicellular organism. It has fewer genes than several other species of unicellular algae, which raises a number of questions about the evolution of red algae. This low number of genes could explain why these organisms never colonized dry land, unlike their green counterparts-from which all terrestrial plants are descended. These findings open up new perspectives on the natural history of algae and of terrestrial plants.

They are published online in the journal PNAS on March 11th 2013.

Chondrus crispus is a multicellular red alga of about 20 cm in length. It is very common on the rocky coasts of the North Atlantic where it plays an essential role as a primary producer in these ecosystems. Certain red algae are now used in the agri-food industry for the thickening properties of the carrageenans from their cell walls. These sulfated polysaccharides correspond to the food additive E-407, which goes into many desserts and other dishes. Beyond industrial applications, this first sequencing of a red alga genome sheds new light on plant evolution as a whole.

The Chondrus genome had some surprises in store for the researchers. With only 9,606 genes and 105 million base pairs, it is indeed very small for a multicellular organism. By way of comparison, the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has 14,516 genes, while the multicellular terrestrial plant Arabadopsis thaliana has 27,416. The Chondrus genome is also very compact, with each function generally corresponding to a single gene. Gene families are small, and genes closely spaced.

To explain these surprising characteristics, the researchers proposed the hypothesis that, more than a billion years ago, red algae experienced a massive loss of genetic material as a result of extreme environmental conditions. This dramatic event in their evolutionary history would have had many consequences. One result could be the loss of flagellar genes, still present in most other organisms and responsible for the motility of certain cells (such as the gametes during sexual reproduction in most organisms, including humans).

Had this massive gene loss never occurred, red algae might have extensively colonized the terrestrial environment, in the same way as green algae, which are the ancestors of all land plants. Yet this event-a real evolutionary bottleneck-has denied red algae the plasticity and genetic potential necessary to adapt to life on land.

The sequence of the Chondrus genome thus opens the archives of more than 1,500 million years of evolutionary history of terrestrial and marine plants. It provides a new basis for the study of red algae biology and is the first step in a program aiming to improve our understanding of the origin of life on Earth, the adaptation of red algae to their environment and the biosynthesis pathways of biomolecules of interest, such as carrageenans. The scientists of the group are also hoping to discover new enzymes of interest for marine biotechnology.

[1] CEA-Genoscope was in charge of the sequencing and annotation facility.

[2] Led by the research unit V?g?taux marins et biomol?cules (CNRS/UPMC), this study also involved the following French laboratories: G?nomique m?tabolique (CEA/CNRS/Universit? d'Evry) at CEA-Genoscope, Glycobiologie structurale et fonctionnell'e (CNRS/Univ. Lille 1), Laboratoire d'oc?anographie microbienne (CNRS/UPMC), Ecosyst?mes, biodiversit?, ?volution (CNRS/Univ. Rennes 1), Biologie des organismes et ?cosyst?mes aquatiques (CNRS/Mus?um National d'Histoire Naturelle/IRD/UPMC), Adaptation et diversit? en milieu marin (CNRS/UPMC) and G?nome et d?veloppement des plantes (CNRS/Universit? de Perpignan).

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by CNRS (D?l?gation Paris Michel-Ange), via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. J. Collen, B. Porcel, W. Carre, S. G. Ball, C. Chaparro, T. Tonon, T. Barbeyron, G. Michel, B. Noel, K. Valentin, M. Elias, F. Artiguenave, A. Arun, J.-M. Aury, J. F. Barbosa-Neto, J. H. Bothwell, F.-Y. Bouget, L. Brillet, F. Cabello-Hurtado, S. Capella-Gutierrez, B. Charrier, L. Cladiere, J. M. Cock, S. M. Coelho, C. Colleoni, M. Czjzek, C. Da Silva, L. Delage, F. Denoeud, P. Deschamps, S. M. Dittami, T. Gabaldon, C. M. M. Gachon, A. Groisillier, C. Herve, K. Jabbari, M. Katinka, B. Kloareg, N. Kowalczyk, K. Labadie, C. Leblanc, P. J. Lopez, D. H. McLachlan, L. Meslet-Cladiere, A. Moustafa, Z. Nehr, P. Nyvall Collen, O. Panaud, F. Partensky, J. Poulain, S. A. Rensing, S. Rousvoal, G. Samson, A. Symeonidi, J. Weissenbach, A. Zambounis, P. Wincker, C. Boyen. Genome structure and metabolic features in the red seaweed Chondrus crispus shed light on evolution of the Archaeplastida. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1221259110

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/IR6FcsDLf_I/130320095036.htm

brad and angelina herniated disc luke scott tom benson royals nicole richie lyme disease symptoms

AP PHOTOS: A look back at 10 years of war in Iraq

The images remain fresh even as the memories fade ? the blinding flash of "shock and awe" bombing, the square-jawed confidence of an American president leading his people into war, the cowering prisoner trembling on the ground in the face of a small piece of American power.

Fast forward and the images transform like the war itself: the pain of an Iraqi mother's loss, grief-scarred faces of benumbed survivors, terrified soldiers under fire, mutilated bodies of slain Americans hanging from a bridge in a town few Americans had ever heard of.

The Iraq war began on March 20, 2003, to rid Iraq of a dictator and eliminate his weapons of mass destruction. No WMD was ever found. The dictator Saddam Hussein was caught ? literally hiding in a hole ? tried and hanged.

Yet the conflict dragged on in a grinding litany of bullets, bombs and barbarity. Dusty backwaters like Fallujah, Haditha and Ramadi became household words for Americans. The war was marked by the savagery of televised beheadings, Abu Ghraib prison and IEDs.

By the time U.S. troops left in December 2011, nearly 4,500 Americans and more than 100,000 Iraqis had lost their lives. Hundreds of billions of American taxpayer dollars were gone.

For Americans, the war's end in December 2011 brought relief and for the men and women who fought it, joy at reunions with loved ones.

For Iraqis, the war is harder to forget. Its signs are all around, from shattered bodies of survivors, to ongoing spasms of violence, to the pock-marked buildings still unrepaired.

Ten years after that first attack, Iraq languishes in a state between war and peace. And on the eve of the anniversary, a wave of bombings shook the Iraqi capital, killing at least 65 people and wounding more than 240.

___

Follow photographer David Guttenfelder on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dguttenfelder

Follow photographer Maya Alleruzzo on Twitter: https://twitter.com/mayaalleruzzo

Follow photographer Jerome Delay on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeromedelay

Follow photographer Evan Vucci on Twitter: https://twitter.com/evanvucci

Follow AP photographers on Twitter: http://apne.ws/XULOIG

The text for this gallery was written by AP foreign correspondent Robert H. Reid: https://twitter.com/rhreid

___

BEHIND THE IMAGES

As the 10th anniversary of the start of the Iraq War approached, six AP photographers ? people now based in bureaus from Paris to Taipei ? reflected on iconic images they captured related to the conflict. Here's what they had to say about the circumstances surrounding the photos ? how they got them, what it was like to be where they were and what was going through their minds at the time.

___

WALLY SANTANA, AP photographer, Taipei, Taiwan

"I am going to witness an execution," Santana thought amid the dust, extreme heat and smell of burning plastic as he photographed a U.S. soldier aiming his weapon at a man in Mosul, Iraq, who had just been shot in the neck by a soldier while attempting to flee on July 23, 2003.

"I noticed the commanding officer take note of a suspicious person who arrived in a small cargo van behind the crowds. In a flash, the officer yelled to his men and darted on a 200-meter dash toward the man as he slipped back into the crowd. The eight or so soldiers in full battle gear ran flat out, parting the local crowd as they leaped over rows of their barbed wire, yelling for the man to stop."

"As the man jumped into his van and started to speed away down a back alley, the soldier next to me raised his rifle and fired two or three shots through the back window, puncturing the left side of his neck. The vehicle stopped, the man rolled out, with blood gushing, and he pleaded for his life in broken English as he was forced to the ground."

"After moments went by, a medic was called to tend to the wound and the man was taken away for interrogation."

___

LAURENT REBOURS, AP chief of service for photos, Paris

Two days after Saddam was captured, Rebours photographed a U.S. soldier demonstrating access to the spider hole near Tikrit, Iraq, where Saddam had hidden. Rebours explains what struck him about the scene:

"The silence, because it was in a farm in the middle of nowhere and because everyone ? U.S. soldiers and journalists ? had the feeling that we were at a stage of an important moment in history."

"The challenge was to find the proper picture to tell the story and when you have in front of you a hole. The best thing is always to bring a human being, and in that case a soldier could provide a kind of scale. How big was the rat hole? Tiny!"

___

MUHAMMED MUHEISEN, AP chief photographer, Islamabad

Muheisen shares his memories from April 26, 2004, when he shot a photo of an Iraqi man celebrating on top of a burning U.S. Army Humvee in the northern part of Baghdad:

"At the site people were running and screaming, and in such an atmosphere you can never tell if you are welcome ? you could be simply beaten by the crowds. I remember from other occasions that Arabic words used to be said about photographers being spies ? being bad people ? which can get you beaten badly, so you are always afraid to put your feet in the wrong place."

"The other fear is to be in the middle if U.S. troops come by and start shooting to disperse the crowds. So it's never been a safe or a comfortable situation, but the heat of the war and the excitement to be there covering the war takes away this fear."

"I remember the sounds of people screaming, shouting, chanting victory words and the smell of the burning Humvee and the man standing on top shouting 'Allahu akbar! Allahu akbar!' ('God is great! God is Great!'). I pointed my camera and took the frame. Suddenly the man noticed me and I could see the anger in his face. It was frightening. He decided to run after me so I had to flee the site running as fast as I could back to our vehicle to leave the place."

___

MAYA ALLERUZZO, AP photo editor, Cairo

Alleruzzo describes her thought process as she decided how to capture an image of detainees kneeling in prayer at Camp Cropper in Baghdad on Nov. 10, 2008:

"I knew that I would be subject to military review of all of my images that day. Post-Abu Ghraib, the U.S. military and the administration were terribly concerned about images of people in their custody. The challenge was to make photos that would not reveal the identities of the prisoners ? this, they said, would be a violation of the Geneva Conventions. I knew I could not screw it up."

"I decided to use shallow depth of field, and in other photos worked with light and shadow, rather than cropping or letting the military censors make decisions for me."

___

JEROME DELAY, AP chief photographer for Africa, Johannesburg

Delay reflects on his photo of a Saddam statue being toppled in Baghdad on April 9, 2003:

"I almost missed the moment as I was with Alexandra Boulat (a photographer for National Geographic at the time) shooting pictures of looting at the other end of town. So we kind of stumbled upon this on the way back to the hotel!"

___

J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, AP photographer, Washington

Applewhite recalls his experience visiting the USS Abraham Lincoln and capturing a picture of President George W. Bush giving a thumbs-up on May 1, 2003, the day Bush declared the end of major combat in Iraq ? a speech remembered by many for the "Mission Accomplished" banner than hung from the aircraft carrier:

"I had arrived on the carrier shortly before Bush with the 10-man White House travel pool, that small group of reporters and photographers that go just about everywhere with the president. ... As Bush arrived we were still a little pumped after 'catching the wire,' where our plane was jolted to a sudden halt on the pitching deck."

"Usually the pool is separate from the crowd and can move freely but there were so many Navy guys and additional press already on board for the event that I just remember thinking that I have to be in position, I can't get shut out.

"I recall locking arms with my lifelong friend (and competitor) Larry Downing from Reuters to keep everyone else from squeezing us out. It was far more aggressive and physical than normal. Larry and I have been around the world many times on presidential trips and we have a saying about this kind of scrum: Air Force One will get you the first 10,000 miles ? the last 10 yards are up to you. "

___

This gallery was curated by news producer Caleb Jones in New York: https://twitter.com/CalebNews

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-look-back-10-years-war-iraq-112447144.html

kevin kolb sarah shahi rutgers dharun ravi george clooney arrested ravi leigh

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

BankBazaar | Invest early in your career!

by BankBazaar.com Desk on ???0 |

Investing for your retirement may not be the most important thing on your mind when you start your career. For most people, investing may not even be on the priority list when they start their career. When you start your career, your saving capacity may not be much in absolute terms, as your salary itself may not be much. But this should not deter you from making investments. This is because the first few years of your earning life has a huge impact on your future finances.

As with anything else in life, investing also benefits with an early start. The earlier you do your retirement planning, the greater will be your return on investment. There are more reasons than one for you to start investing early in your career. Let?s look at the various benefits of early investing.

The Effect of Compounding:

The most important reason for you to start investing early in your career is to get the benefit of compounding. Compound interest works magic for any investor. As you know, compound interest means the interest earned on interest. If you continuously reinvest your earnings, your return on investment will increase exponentially.

When you regularly invest from the start of your career, you are increasing the return you receive on your returns. A monthly investment of as low as Rs.1,000 or Rs.2,000 will have a large impact on your financial position. Let?s understand the effect with a few examples:

Example 1: X is 25 years old and has 35 years left for retirement. He starts to invest Rs. 1000 per month for 35 years at a return of 12% per annum. The corpus left with X at the end of 35 years will be Rs. 64 lakhs.

Y is 30 years old and has only 30 years left for retirement. He also starts to invest Rs. 1000 per month. But as he has started investing late in his career, he can invest this amount only for the next 30 years at 12% per annum. The corpus left with Y at the end of 30 years will be Rs. 35 lakhs. This is the difference 5 years of investment has made to the final corpus value. If Y needs the same Rs. 64 lakhs for his retirement, he will need to shell out Rs.1830 per month instead of Rs. 1000.

To understand the wonder of compounding, let?s look at another example:

Example 2: Both X and Y are 30 years of age and have 30 years left for retirement. Now, X invests Rs. 2000 every month for the first 15 years at a return of 12% per annum. He totally invests Rs. 3.6 lakhs. At the end of 15 years of his investment, he does not invest further and also does not withdraw the money. His total corpus at the end of 30 years will be close to Rs. 55 lakhs.

Now Y invests only Rs. 1000 per month at a return of 12% per annum. But he invests for 30 years. Y?s total investment is also Rs. 3.6 lakhs ? same as X?s total investment. But his corpus after 30 years is only Rs. 35 lakhs. Thus for the same total investment, X?s corpus is much higher than Y?s corpus. This is because X had invested more in the initial years and had allowed this money to get compounded for the total period.

Thus, the most important advantage of beginning to invest early in your career is to realise the full benefits of compounding. There are other reasons why it makes sense to start investing early in your career -

Improvement in spending habits: As you begin to save early in your career to start investing, you have lesser disposable cash with you. This helps you in being more prudent and brings about a discipline in your spending habits.

Ability to take risk: Not all of us get our investment options correct the first time. When you begin exploring investment avenues early in your life, you have a greater ability to take risk and experiment, compared to someone who starts investing later. This is because, at a later stage in life, if you realise you do not have sufficient savings; you will be more cautious in your choice of investments.

Money available during emergencies: When you begin to invest early, you would have a comfortable cushion backing you up. Thus, you can be rest assured that your savings will be of use to you in times of need.

Better choices in life: As seen in the examples above, the corpus built by investing early in life is much bigger than the corpus built by someone who starts a little later. As a result of the savings back-up, you can afford a better lifestyle and an improved quality of life, helping to fulfill your financial goals.

Thus, beginning to invest early in your career can help you in building a secure future.

Source: http://loans.msn.bankbazaar.com/guide/invest-early-in-your-career-2/36575/

barry sanders jimmie johnson juan pablo montoya crash chardon high school shooting mark martin cleveland news daytona race

Renewed nuke sale fear after recent NKorea test

A North Korean soldier looks at the southern side through a pair of binoculars at the border village of the Panmunjom (DMZ) that separates the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. The United States is flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers on training missions over South Korea to highlight Washington's commitment to defend an ally amid rising tensions with North Korea, Pentagon officials said Monday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A North Korean soldier looks at the southern side through a pair of binoculars at the border village of the Panmunjom (DMZ) that separates the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. The United States is flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers on training missions over South Korea to highlight Washington's commitment to defend an ally amid rising tensions with North Korea, Pentagon officials said Monday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A North Korean soldier, right, looks at the southern side as a South Korean soldier stands guard at the border village of the Panmunjom (DMZ) that separates the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. The United States is flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers on training missions over South Korea to highlight Washington's commitment to defend an ally amid rising tensions with North Korea, Pentagon officials said Monday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

A North Korean soldier, left, salutes to his senior North Korean soldier as a South Korean soldier stands guard, center bottom, at the border village of the Panmunjom (DMZ) that separates the two Koreas since the Korean War, in Paju, north of Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, March 19, 2013. The United States is flying nuclear-capable B-52 bombers on training missions over South Korea to highlight Washington's commitment to defend an ally amid rising tensions with North Korea, Pentagon officials said Monday.(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)

North Koreans walk past posters reading "Forward to the ultimate victory under the leadership of the great party!" left, "not with words but with arms," center, and "Higher, faster," right, on Tuesday, March 19, 2013, on a street in Phyongchon District in Pyongyang, North Korea. The banner partially shown at right reads in its entirety "Let?s strengthen and enhance our party as the party of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il!" (AP Photo/Jon Chol Jin)

A couple walks past posters reading "not with words but with arms," left, and "Higher, faster," second from left, as well as a banner reading "Let?s strengthen and enhance our party as the party of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il!" on a street in Phyongchon District, Pyongyang, North Korea, on Tuesday, March 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Chol Jin)

(AP) ? North Korea's nuclear test last month wasn't just a show of defiance and national pride; it also serves as advertising. The target audience, analysts say, is anyone in the world looking to buy nuclear material.

Though Pyongyang has threatened to launch nuclear strikes on the U.S., the most immediate threat posed by its nuclear technology may be North Korea's willingness to sell it to nations that Washington sees as sponsors of terrorism. The fear of such sales was highlighted this week, when Japan confirmed that cargo seized last year and believed to be from North Korea contained material that could be used to make nuclear centrifuges, which are crucial to enriching uranium into bomb fuel.

The dangerous message North Korea is sending, according to Graham Allison, a nuclear expert at the Harvard Kennedy School: "Nukes are for sale."

North Korea launched a long-range rocket in December, which the U.N. called a cover for a banned test of ballistic missile technology. On Feb. 12, it conducted its third underground nuclear test, which got Pyongyang new U.N. sanctions.

Outside nuclear specialists believe North Korea has enough nuclear material for several crude bombs, but they have yet to see proof that Pyongyang can build a warhead small enough to mount on a missile. The North, however, may be able to help other countries develop nuclear expertise right now, as it is believed to have done in the past.

"There's a growing technical capability and confidence to sell weapons and technology abroad, without fear of reprisal, and that lack of fear comes from (their) growing nuclear capabilities," Joel Wit, a former U.S. State Department official, said at a recent nuclear conference in Seoul.

Pyongyang says it needs nuclear weapons because of what it calls a hostile U.S. policy aimed at invading the North. The U.S., South Korea and others say North Korean brinksmanship meant to win aid and other concessions is the real motive. Even China, North Korea's most important ally, opposes its neighbor's nuclear ambitions.

North Korean nuclear sales earn the impoverished country money that can be pumped back into weapons development, analyst Shin Beomchul at the South Korean-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul said Tuesday.

Its growing capabilities could make North Korea more attractive to buyers, especially if it is determined that highly enriched uranium was used in last month's test.

Proliferation worries have ramped up since late 2010, when North Korea unveiled a long-suspected uranium enrichment operation. North Korea's first two nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009, were suspected to be fueled by its limited plutonium stockpile. A crude uranium bomb is easier to produce than one made with plutonium, and uranium production is easier to conceal.

Little is known about North Korea's uranium program, but Washington and others are keenly interested in whether it is producing highly enriched uranium for bombs and whether uranium was used in the third test ? two things suspected, but not yet confirmed, by outsiders.

A nuclear test using highly enriched uranium "would announce to the world ? including potential buyers ? that North Korea is now operating a new, undiscovered production line for weapons-usable material," Allison, the Harvard nuclear specialist, wrote in a New York Times op-ed after the North's test.

U.S. officials have hinted that retaliation would follow should Washington discover North Korean cooperation behind any atomic attack on an American city or U.S. ally.

Pyongyang's nuclear transfers and any use of weapons of mass destruction "would be considered a grave threat to the United States and our allies, and we will hold North Korea fully accountable for the consequences," President Barack Obama's national security adviser, Tom Donilon, said last week.

U.S. officials have long tracked North Korean dealings in nuclear and weapons technology. Sanctions have cut down on missile sales, but Iran and Syria, two countries seen by Washington as rogue actors, may continue to be customers.

In November, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization proposed observing North Korea's nuclear test, the Japanese news agency Kyodo reported, citing an unidentified Western diplomatic source privy to Pyongyang-Tehran ties.

North Korea is believed to have helped Syria build what senior U.S. intelligence officials called a secret nuclear reactor meant to produce plutonium. In 2007, Israeli jets bombed the structure in a remote Syrian desert.

Japan's government said Monday that it has determined that a shipment believed to have originated in North Korea violated U.N. sanctions because it contained material that could be used to make nuclear centrifuges.

The shipment of an aluminum alloy was seized from a Singaporean-flagged ship transiting Tokyo last August. The ship was reportedly bound for Myanmar from the Chinese port of Dalian, although Japanese government officials didn't confirm Myanmar as the destination.

Japan's chief government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, said officials searched the ship because they believed it carried North Korean cargo. News reports said the United States tipped off Japan. Suga said officials had determined in subsequent analyses that the rods were made of an alloy that suggests they were intended for use in a nuclear centrifuge.

Suga said the seizure was the first to be conducted under a law Japan passed in 2010 to clamp down on the movement of materials that could be used for nuclear weapons development being brought into, or exported from, North Korea.

The murkiness of the clandestine nuclear trade is a major worry. It's difficult to know how a buyer would use atomic material or know-how, or where material could end up after being sold.

"The terrorist threat of an improvised nuclear device delivered anonymously and unconventionally by a boat or a truck across our long and unprotected borders is one against which we have no certain deterrent or defensive response," Robert Gallucci, a former senior U.S. diplomat who negotiated a U.S.-North Korea nuclear deal used to defuse a nuclear crisis in the 1990s, said late last month in Seoul.

"For Americans, this threat is far greater than the unlikely threat that may someday be posed by North Korean nuclear weapons delivered by a ballistic missile," he said.

___

Eric Talmadge in Tokyo and Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul contributed to this report. Follow Foster Klug on Twitter at twitter.com/APKlug

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-19-AS-NKorea-Nukes-For-Sale/id-fc1007934a0f456a985466bbe5606023

bracket beyonce Ncaa Tournament 2013 2013 NCAA Bracket NCAA Bracket 2013 ncaa ncaa basketball

Lawmakers launch new effort to pass China currency bill

By Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A bipartisan group of lawmakers began a new attempt on Wednesday to pass legislation that puts pressure on China to change its currency practices, reviving an effort that previously failed to make it to the finish line.

The legislation, which has 101 co-sponsors, is similar to bills that passed the House of Representatives in 2010 and the Senate in 2011, but ultimately failed to win final congressional approval.

It came as Treasury Secretary Jack Lew was wrapping up a two-day visit to China, where he pressed Beijing to allow the yuan to rise further against the dollar.

"China's exchange rate should be market-determined. That's in our interest and China's interest. They recognize the need to do it for internal reasons as well," Lew told reporters.

Although China's yuan has appreciated 16 percent in real terms against the dollar since June 2010 and hit an all-time high against the dollar on Wednesday, many lawmakers believe Beijing keeps it at an artificially low value to give Chinese companies an unfair trade advantage.

Representative Sandy Levin of Michigan, the top Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee, introduced the currency bill with fellow Democrat Tim Ryan of Ohio and Republican lawmakers Tim Murphy of Pennsylvania and Mo Brooks of Alabama.

"Currency manipulation by our trading partners has been going on for far too long, with American workers feeling the impact through lost jobs and lower wages," Levin said.

It is supported by U.S. labor groups and domestic textile, steel and other manufacturers that compete in the U.S. market against Chinese imports.

"It's clear the administration is not going to do enough to really press China on currency. That's why congressional action is so important," said Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing.

But some business groups such as the U.S.-China Business Council have fought the legislation, fearing it would worsen trade ties.

The bill would allow U.S. companies to seek countervailing duties against Chinese goods on a case-by-case basis to offset any exchange rate advantage.

After the Senate passed a similar bill in 2011, Republican House Speaker John Boehner blocked a vote in the House because he said he was worried it could start a trade war.

"This is the year that Speaker Boehner and (Ways and Means Committee) Chairman (Dave) Camp should free the currency bill, or they will show they are completely out of step with the American people, Republicans in Congress, and the vast majority of Republican voters," Paul said.

FALLING YEN

Many U.S. lawmakers also believe Japan is unfairly driving down the value of its yen to help the country export its way out of decades of slow growth.

That has increased pressure on the Obama administration to use talks on a proposed free trade agreement in the Asia-Pacific region to craft rules against currency manipulation, particularly if Japan is allowed into the talks in coming months.

At a Senate Finance Committee hearing on Tuesday, acting U.S. Trade Representative Demetrios Marantis avoided taking a stand, but said the administration was exploring the costs and benefits of including currency in the Asia-Pacific trade talks.

Aluisio de Lima-Campos, a Brazilian trade scholar, has proposed that countries such as Brazil and the United States bring a number of countervailing duty cases against China to pressure it into negotiations on new currency rules.

In a visit to Brasilia this week, acting U.S. Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank played down the idea of using countervailing duties to try to correct currency imbalances.

"Our countervailing duties efforts have a very different focus. They are really designed to enforce fairness, a leveled playing field for U.S. companies and to make sure that everybody is abiding by the (World Trade Organization) rules," Blank told reporters.

(Additional reporting by Alonso Soto in Brasilia; Editing by Eric Beech and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawmakers-launch-effort-pass-china-currency-bill-182054638.html

Sherman Hemsley Olympics Opening Ceremony Katherine Jackson Olympics Opening Ceremony Time paris jackson paris jackson US weekly

Global Health: Scottish Bagpipers Urge Cleaning to Prevent Infection

[unable to retrieve full-text content]After a longtime member of a bagpiping school nearly died of a lung infection from fungi, a warning was issued to pipers to clean their instruments regularly.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/19/health/scottish-bagpipers-urge-cleaning-to-prevent-infection.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

steve appleton bishop eddie long madonna give me all your luvin video roseanne barr president green party day 26 new hunger games trailer

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Kate Upton Prom Invite: High School Senior Aims High!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/kate-upton-prom-invite-high-school-senior-aims-high/

diane lane drew peterson Argo bonnaroo robin roberts Ashley Morrison El Chapo Guzman

CA-NEWS Summary

Cyprus reworks divisive bank tax, delays vote

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Cypriot ministers scrambled to revise a plan to seize money from bank deposits before a parliamentary vote on Tuesday that will either secure the island's financial rescue or threaten its default. The weekend announcement that Cyprus would impose a tax on bank accounts as part of a 10 billion euro ($13 billion) bailout by the European Union broke with previous practice that depositors' savings were sacrosanct. The euro and stock markets fell on concern the euro zone crisis was reigniting.

Many questions, few answers await Obama on Mideast visit

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - President Barack Obama is due to make his first official visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories this week, looking to improve ties after sometimes rocky relations with both sides during his first term in office. Obama is not expected to come with any new Palestinian peace initiative and will spend most of his time in Israel, the closest U.S. ally in the Middle East, where he will make a keynote speech to hundreds of students.

Nigeria Islamists holding hostages threaten Cameroon

PARIS (Reuters) - The father of a family of seven French tourists kidnapped by a Nigerian Islamist group read out a threat by them in an audio tape to increase kidnappings and suicide bombings in Cameroon if authorities there detain more of the group's followers. Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, in a tape obtained by local journalists in Nigeria on Monday and whose authenticity was being checked by the French Foreign Office, appealed to the government of Cameroon, where his family was kidnapped last month, to free prisoners of Islamist sect Boko Haram as a condition of the family's release.

Jailed Kurdish rebel to make "historic call" in Turkey peace process

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Jailed Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan said he would make a "historic" appeal on Thursday, raising expectations of ceasefire in a 28-year-old conflict which has riven Turkey, killing some 40,000 people, and battered its economy. Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) leader Selahattin Demirtas, a member of parliament, conveyed Ocalan's statement on his return to Istanbul on Monday from a visit to his prison on the island of Imrali. A ceasefire could cement talks with the government that have been progressing tentatively since October.

Car bomb kills at least 10 in Somali capital

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A suicide bomber who set out to assassinate a senior Somali security official blew up his car in central Mogadishu on Monday, missing his target but killing at least 10 people in the city's deadliest attack this year, police and rebels said. Witnesses said the car bomb exploded near a vehicle carrying Mogadishu security chief Khalif Ahmed Ilig and other officers along the capital's busy Maka al Mukarram road.

Argentina's Fernandez asks Pope to intervene over Falklands

ROME (Reuters) - Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez has asked Pope Francis to intervene in support of Buenos Aires in a dispute with Britain over the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, she said on Monday. Fernandez had lunch with the former Buenos Aires Archbishop Jorge Bergoglio in the Vatican shortly after arriving in Rome to attend his inaugural papal mass on Tuesday.

Lawyers for Kenya's Kenyatta say war crimes case in tatters

THE HAGUE (Reuters) - Lawyers for Kenya's president-elect Uhuru Kenyatta said charges of crimes against humanity against him should be withdrawn after the collapse of the case against his co-accused, but prosecutors at the International Criminal Court said they had new evidence. Kenyatta, whose election earlier this month is being challenged by his rival, faces charges at the ICC over bloodshed in the aftermath of Kenya's 2007 election.

Europe wants actions from Azerbaijan on human rights

TBILISI (Reuters) - Azerbaijan must uphold European human rights standards and move from promises to real promotion of basic freedoms, the Council of Europe's commissioner for human rights said on Monday. Azerbaijan, a mainly Muslim former Soviet republic, has been governed by President Ilham Aliyev since he succeeded his father in 2003. It has been courted by the West because of its role as an alternative to Russia in supplying oil and gas to Europe.

NATO chief says Karzai accusation "absolutely ridiculous"

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The head of NATO said on Monday it was "absolutely ridiculous" for Afghan President Hamid Karzai to accuse the United States of colluding with the Taliban and said Kabul should recognize sacrifices made by other countries on Afghanistan's behalf. Karzai marred a debut visit to Afghanistan by the new U.S. defense secretary, Chuck Hagel, on March 10 by accusing Washington and the Taliban of colluding to convince Afghans that foreign forces were needed beyond 2014, when NATO is set to wrap up its combat mission and most foreign troops are to withdraw.

Rwanda says war crimes suspect surrenders at U.S. Embassy

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Rwandan-born former Congolese general Bosco Ntaganda, wanted by the International Criminal Court for suspected war crimes in Congo, has given himself up at the U.S. Embassy in Kigali, Rwandan Foreign Minister Louise Mushikiwabo said on Monday. "We have learned today that Bosco Ntaganda entered Rwanda and surrendered to (the) U.S. Embassy in Kigali," she posted on Twitter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ca-news-summary-002901942.html

sturgis whitney houston laid to rest daytona bike week mary kay ash tiny houses maya angelou joan of arc

Gantz brothers discuss 'American Winter' documentary

Premiering on HBO on March 18, 2013, AMERICAN WINTER is a powerful and timely documentary that follows the stories of eight families struggling to survive in the aftermath of the Great Recession, and reveals the impact of rising economic inequality, cuts to social services, and the fracturing of the American Dream.

By Barbara Raab, Senior Producer, NBC News

??Forget the dreams, how do we make it to tomorrow?? asks Ben, ?a husband and father who?s been laid off from his job at the credit branch of a car company, has fallen behind on the mortgage and is struggling to provide the basics for his family.

Ben is one of the distressed Americans trying to keep his head above water in ?American Winter,? a documentary produced by Emmy award-winning filmmakers Joe and Harry Gantz, and debuting tonight on Monday, March 18th on HBO. It tells the story of the worst recession of our lifetime through the eyes of eight families in Portland, Oregon during one winter.

Working with the nonprofit organization 211info in Portland, the Gantz?s were given full access to monitor and record calls from families calling the emergency hotline for help. They followed some of these callers over the next several months.


NBC News talked with Joe and Harry Gantz about their film, and about what they hope to achieve with their firsthand view of the struggle millions of Americans are experiencing.

NBC News: The tag line to the film is ?a documentary about a country in search of its promise. ? What do you mean by that?

Joe Gantz: The promise is that America is the land of opportunity. The American dream is that anybody can make it in this country, ?that we?re all having equal opportunity, and if you try hard, you work hard, and you?re talented, you can achieve a comfortable life. I think that is slipping away in a lot of respects. It?s becoming harder and harder for somebody to raise a family. The wages for many Americans even if they?re working fulltime and overtime,? they?re working at very low paid jobs and they?re not able to support a family.? The families we followed in this film were comfortable three or four years ago, many of them were solidly middle class, they never envisioned being in this situation. As [Portland Commissioner] Nick Fish says in the film, we?re in a ?one strike and you?re out? economy, and so these families find themselves falling over the cliff, struggling in ways they never envisioned.

NBC News: Were you shocked at what you found when you really got into their homes and their lives and their stories?

Harry Gantz: I wouldn?t say we were shocked, but it certainly affected us to see the level of desperation and how it affects everybody emotionally. It?s not just trying to find a job, or trying to navigate the social services. That?s a full time job in itself. But it?s the emotional impact. Hearing these kids feel like they don?t know what their futures are going to be. This is the first generation of families that feels like it?s not going to get better. And because of the lack of decent social services and decent paying jobs, people feel like, the American dream, as one of the subjects in our film says, is [just] turning the heat on, turning the lights on.

Joe: ?We could listen to all the [211info] calls coming in. And there are hundreds of calls every day. ?And that is overwhelming. You?re just inundated by the level of desperation in this country. The people who aren?t in that situation often don?t know what 211is and don?t know what it?s like for the people who are in that situation. But you listen to those phone calls, ?how do I get my heat on??, ?how do I get help for getting my electricity turned off??, ?how do I get help with my rent? , ?how do I get food?? It?s just call after call after call.

NBC News: In some ways, the people you got to know are in plain sight. And yet, people who are not in that situation don?t seem to be aware of them.

Joe: There may be a bit of willful ignorance, on the one hand, by the people who are making it. But on the other hand, the people who are struggling are so ashamed. Our society says if you work hard and you?re talented, you push and go by the rules, you will succeed. And they?re not succeeding, they?re struggling mightily, so they are ashamed. They don?t tell people. We were working with families, and the children?s friends would come over, and I?d meet the family of that child that was visiting, and I?d explain what we were working on, and they?d say, ?We?re in the same boat.? But they wouldn?t talk to each other because the parents had so much shame, they wouldn?t want to tell what was going on in their households. The shame keeps everyone extremely isolated.

Harry: The fear of destitution is inherent in everybody. So it?s in everybody?s best interests in this country to have a strong middle class, and to help people ascend from poverty.

Joe: The way people ignore this vast chunk of America that is falling off the financial cliff is by using these derogatory stereotypes about people who need help. They say they?re lazy, they made their own mistakes, if they were capable they would be succeeding, they should pull themselves up on their own. But when you follow these families as we did, over months, and you live with them and walk in their shoes and see what they?re dealing with, these families are all extremely hard-working, they?re loving families, and they want nothing more than to get back on their feet and be a contributing member of society.

NBC News: When you talk about help, what is your answer? Is it to put more money into the traditional safety net, or something else?

Harry: Whether it?s from taxpayers, or secular social services, or religious social services, it takes all of those three in order to deal with this problem. That?s the short term solution. Of course the longer term solution is a living wage job and a safety net that if you have a bump in the road and your kid gets sick or you lose your job, that there?s a net that society provides to help you get back on your feet.

Joe: And not just a net that helps you barely survive, not just a safety net that allows you not to starve. But a safety net that really helps you get back to where you once were so you can contribute once again.

Harry: There?s such a backlash right now about anything the government is doing.? [Poor people] have been demonized to the point where it?s better just to cut government spending and ?good luck, we?re all on our own, we?ll make it that way, leave me alone.? There are people in our film who felt that, and then found themselves in this situation and suddenly they had so much more insight and compassion for people in this position. What I learned is that no parent is perfect ? most of these people got in this situation through no fault of their own. But even if it was their fault, and they made a bad decision ? do the children deserve to suffer? No.

Joe: When the children suffer, the repercussions last for 20 or 30 years. They don?t graduate from high school, they don?t get a good job, they can wind up in prison ? and the repercussions and costs for those kids go on and on.

NBC News: Do you feel after doing this project that there?s some takeaway that?s optimistic or some reason for hope?

Joe: What?s not depressing is spending time with these families. And seeing how their backs are against the wall, and seeing how these families come together because they have no one else to rely on. Most of these families don?t have financial help through their circle of friends or family. They have this core of love for each other and they?re determined to get through it. When you?re in a low paying job that takes a tremendous amount of your time, it takes a tremendous amount of time to track down social services, they don?t just come to your door and hand it to you. You spend so much time just calling and going to places and seeing what you can get, so it?s difficult. The difficulties of being on the financial edge are unimaginable if you haven?t been there. And yet these families have this much love for each other and this much struggle to keep going and be positive and keep their hopes up. The human spirit is something I?m optimistic about on an individual basis.

Harry: I feel the same way as the families do. If you?re not at least optimistic, what are your children going to say? They?re going to feel like they?re doomed. Part of the American spirit is to be optimistic and if you?re not optimistic, it?s hard to get up in the morning and go on in that situation. This film is advocating for not cutting social services. The system can?t take any more.

Joe: Demonstrations are good too! People have to get together and show, this is the majority of this country.? And if by putting these faces in front of the public rids the shame that?s associated with being poor, ?that might empower more poor people to advocate for themselves.

Source: http://inplainsight.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17301003-5-questions-for-the-gantz-brothers-about-the-toll-of-the-great-recession?lite

mad cow pennsylvania primary jerome simpson hand sanitizer obama on jimmy fallon google drive pilar sanders

Saturday Postal Pullback in Limbo (WSJ)

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 and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/291767549?client_source=feed&format=rss

Paul Ryan Speech chris cooley chris cooley condoleezza rice Perry Hall High School bill cosby us open

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Ryan budget would add jobs, analysis shows

A balanced federal budget that reduces the national debt, like the one proposed by House Republicans this week, would add about 5 million more jobs to the economy by 2023 compared to current spending levels, suggests an analysis provided to Yahoo News by the American Action Forum, a center-right policy group.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan on Tuesday released his new budget proposal, which calls for slowing the growth of federal spending by $4.6 trillion and balancing the federal budget over the next 10 years. The proposal also would shrink the debt-to-GDP ratio to under 90 percent by 2019.

Under current projected spending levels, that ratio is expected to remain above 90 percent every year over the next decade. Based on the premise that national economies grow by about one percent less when debt exceeds 90 percent of GDP, former Congressional Budget Office director Douglas Holtz-Eakin predicts that the Republican budget would allow for five percent more in economic growth than under current law, translating to an estimated 5 million new jobs by the end of the decade.

"There are many perspectives from which to analyze a budget resolution: the economic assumptions on which it is based, the entitlement and tax reforms it enables, the defense and non-defense appropriations it permits, and the debt levels it implies. In this case, however, it is the latter that is most important," Holtz-Eakin and AAF analyst Gordon Gray write in their forthcoming analysis of the Ryan Budget, which also argues that incomes would grow as the debt shrinks. "Using the administration?s estimates, one percentage point in growth translates into approximately 1 million jobs created. The budget resolution would avert such job losses and increase job gains by 5 million over the 2019-2023 period."

Democrats have dismissed Ryan's method of achieving a balanced budget, which calls for overhauling the nation's Medicare system, repealing the federal health care law passed in 2010 and implementing major cuts to other government spending. (A separate analysis, from the liberal Center for American Progress, argues that Ryan's budget cuts could actually damage the economy.)

But despite the benefits of lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio, there is not widespread bipartisan agreement on whether balancing the budget should be a top priority. While Ryan's plan would balance the budget through spending cuts alone, the Democratic plan calls for a combination of discretionary spending reductions, tax increases and boosting infrastructure spending, but it does not balance the budget in the foreseeable future. In an interview with ABC News this week, President Barack Obama said he was not interested in balancing the budget "just for the sake of balance."

?My goal is not to chase a balanced budget just for the sake of balance. My goal is how do we grow the economy, put people back to work, and if we do that we are going to be bringing in more revenue," Obama told ABC News. ?We?re not gonna balance the budget in ten years because if you look at what Paul Ryan does to balance the budget, it means that you have to voucher-ize Medicare, you have to slash deeply into programs like Medicaid,you?ve essentially got to ? either tax ? middle class families a lot higher than you currently are, or you can?t lower rates the way he?s promised."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/former-congressional-budget-chief-balanced-budget-increase-job-121049514--politics.html

delmon young arrested the raven the raven zerg rush david wilson playstation all stars battle royale kim zolciak

Hands on with Chameleon Launcher for phones

Android Central

Whatever your own personal opinions on the birth of the Chameleon Launcher project, one thing remains the same. People are talking about it. As people talk, interest grows, and Chameleon certainly brought a whole new take to the custom launcher scene. Very much a widget-orientated UI, there's no denying that it could completely change the look and feel of your Android tablet. 

And that's the other thing of course. Initially Chameleon launched exclusively for Android tablets. Then, not all that long ago, we got a first glimpse at a phone version in early testing. Things have progressed well since then, and the finished product is here. Sort of. At the moment, Kickstarter backers and pre-order customers can snag a copy of the phone version of Chameleon, ahead of it going on general release soon. So, how well does it transition to the smaller screen? Let's find out. 

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/hQQCGEvr5SY/story01.htm

Democratic National Convention 2012 myocardial infarction What Is Labor Day jersey shore Pasquale Rotella Michael Clark Duncan michael jackson

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Poll: Engadget Expand asks, "What should robots be helping us with?"

Poll Engadget Expand asks, 'What should robots be helping us with'
We're just a few days away from Expand, and all of us are insanely excited about the agenda we have lined up. To get you pumped for our Sunday morning session with Chris Anderson (CEO, 3D Robotics and former editor-in-chief, Wired), Steve Cousins (CEO, Willow Garage) and Marc Raibert (President & Chief Robot Lover, Boston Dynamics) we have a little thought experiment for you.

Read on to take our short and sweet robotics poll...

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/zDrGloxVMtg/

howard hughes nationwide race wanderlust gone tyler perry good deeds pretty in pink shark tank

See Justin Timberlake's Best 'SNL' Moments!

For his fifth time hosting Saturday Night Live, Justin Timberlake pulled out all the stops, including loads of guest stars, tuxedo-clad dancers, and a full orchestra. He even brought along his feud with Kanye West! The episode garnered SNL's biggest audience in over a year, but just in case you missed it, watch the highlights (and that Kanye diss) below!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/video-see-justin-timberlakes-best-snl-moments/1-a-526708?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Avideo-see-justin-timberlakes-best-snl-moments-526708

academy awards 2012 nominations independent spirit awards 2012 jan brewer independent spirit awards 2012 oscar predictions jim jones tony stewart

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Owner says vehicle in deadly Ohio crash was stolen

WARREN, Ohio (AP) ? Investigators Monday tried to piece together what eight teenagers crammed into an allegedly stolen SUV were up to before the vehicle flipped over into a pond, killing six of them.

Authorities gave few details on where the group of friends had been and why they were out around daybreak Sunday, speeding down a two-lane road. On Monday, the SUV's owner met with police and filed a stolen-car report; police said none of the teens were related to the owner or had asked to use the vehicle.

While the father of one of the dead said the teenagers were coming home from a sleepover at a friend's house, the mother of another boy killed said that her son and his best friend had lied about staying over at each other's homes that evening. She said she thinks they went to a party.

"If only he had listened," said Lisa Williamson, mother of 14-year-old Brandon Murray. "I told him, 'Don't you go nowhere.' But they're kids."

The SUV hit a guardrail in an industrial section of town and landed upside down in about 5 feet of water, filling up within minutes, State Highway Patrol Lt. Brian Holt. Five boys and a young woman, ages 14 to 19, were killed.

Two boys smashed a rear window, wriggled out of the wreckage and swam away, then ran a quarter-mile to a home to call 911, authorities said. Brian Henry, 18, and Asher Lewis, 15, suffered only minor injuries.

Investigators said they believe excessive speed was a key factor in the crash, which took place in a 35 mph zone alongside a steel mill near what's known in the neighborhood as "Dead Man's Curve." Authorities did not say how fast the SUV was going. They were also awaiting the results of drug and alcohol tests.

All eight teenagers were from Warren, a mostly blue-collar city of 41,000 near the Pennsylvania line, about 60 miles east of Cleveland.

Friends and family members described the teens as good kids who weren't troublemakers. Williamson said many of them would hang out and stay overnight in her basement to play video games, listen to music and watch movies.

She said her son called late Saturday night and said he was staying at the home of his best friend Ramone White. She said it wasn't until after the accident that she found out that wasn't true.

"It's what we did when we were growing up, too," said Williamson, who was wearing a rubbery "Jesus Loves You" bracelet that she took off her dead son's wrist.

Andre Bennett Sr., whose son Andrique was among those killed, said that his son and the others had all stayed over at a friend's house and that a girl offered them a ride home.

Chris Jones, 16, said he used to see most of the victims every day at school and in their neighborhood. He knew all but two in the crash.

"They're not always the best kids. They're not out there looking for straight A's," he said. "But none of these kids should be where they are today. This should have never had happened."

Five of the dead were trapped inside the sunken SUV. A sixth was thrown from the vehicle and was found underneath it when it was taken out of the water.

State police identified them as the 19-year-old driver, Alexis Cayson; Andrique Bennett, 14; Brandon Murray, 14; and Kirklan Behner, Ramone White and Daylan Ray, all 15. Cayson, Murray and Ray drowned, the coroner said. Autopsies on the others were incomplete.

"All I know is my baby is gone," said Derrick Ray, who came to the crash site after viewing his 15-year-old son Daylan's body at the morgue. He said he knew that his son, a football player who was looking forward to playing in high school, was out with friends, but didn't know their plans.

None of the teens in the five-seat 1998 Honda Passport were wearing seat belts, state police said.

___

Associated Press writers Tom Sheeran in Warren, John Seewer in Toledo, Dan Sewell in Cincinnati and Kantele Franko in Columbus contributed this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/owner-says-suv-fatal-ohio-crash-stolen-222303995.html

a wrinkle in time benjamin netanyahu storm shelters nick lachey chevy volt christina hendricks lifelock

Why Are Sen. Terry Brown's Campaign Finance Reports Incomplete ...

In the spirit of Sunshine Week, here?s a blog post by conservative political operative Keith Plunkett. In it, he details a rather serious lack of oversight by Senate President Pro Tem Terry Brown, whose campaign finance reports for the past several years are severely lacking.

Senator Brown has reported raising $119,750 and spending $88,854 from May 10, 2007, to the most recent filing deadline of January 31, 2013. Yet, he has provided no information in campaign finance reports of where he got the money or where he spent it. Think that is something the good folks in District 17 in Lowndes County may want to know?

Candidates are required to provide itemized reports of donations or receipts above $200, and an aggregate of that amount in donations or receipts to or from a person or entity during an election cycle. What Senator Brown is reporting is that he has never spent or received campaign money over the amount of $200 to or from anyone in the past 6 years.

How likely is that? Not very. Campaign signs alone run around five dollars a piece, and that doesn?t include ads in the local paper, bumper stickers and the myriad of other simple expenses. Are we also to believe that no one gave the Senator over $200 as a campaign donation?

Actually, Plunkett is wrong on one account. In reviewing Brown?s campaign finance reports, the senator did provide an accounting of contributions made to him.

However, Brown did not file a single itemized expense report for campaign finance activity in 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011 or 2012. I couldn?t find any reports for 2009 campaign contributions or expenditures.

This raises two questions:

  1. Why has Brown failed to file these reports?
  2. Why has the secretary of state failed to enforce the campaign finance laws in this matter?

The Associated Press has put together a series of articles on Sunshine Week, which looks at open record laws across the state. In an article looking at campaign finance laws for municipal elections. Municipal campaign finance reports are the responsibility of city clerks, who are then supposed to forward them to the secretary of state?s office.

?We do train the municipal clerks and emphasize that they shall forward the copies. All of that said, we do not receive all of the filings,? (Secretary of State Delbert) Hosemann said.

He said his office posts campaign finance reports online for officials elected on the state level, but it would be impractical to post reports for local officials. Local campaigns are often too small to warrant the expense of processing, verifying and posting all of the reports, he said.

It makes you wonder what good posting reports for state office candidates ? much less elected officials ? does if state law is not enforced. It?s a real oversight, and the lack of transparency should not be tolerated.

As a side note? I?m well aware of the fact that Plunkett served as communications director for former state Sen. Billy Hewes during the 2011 Republican primary for lieutenant governor. But Hewes and Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves filed their reports as required. Any criticism of Brown on this issue is fair game, regardless who is making it.

Source: http://blogs.clarionledger.com/samrhall/2013/03/12/why-are-sen-terry-browns-campaign-finance-reports-incomplete/

andy williams Lady Gaga New Girl Avalanna Gigi Chao Jimmy Hoffa Ed Hochuli

Monday, March 11, 2013

Signaling molecule may help stem cells focus on making bone despite age, disease

Monday, March 11, 2013

A signaling molecule that helps stem cells survive in the naturally low-oxygen environment inside the bone marrow may hold clues to helping the cells survive when the going gets worse with age and disease, researchers report.

They hope the findings, reported in PLOS ONE, will result in better therapies to prevent bone loss in aging and enhance success of stem cell transplants for a wide variety of conditions from heart disease to cerebral palsy and cancer.

They've found that inside the usual, oxygen-poor niche of mesenchymal stem cells, stromal cell-derived factor-1, or SDF-1, turns on a survival pathway called autophagy that helps the cells stay in place and focused on making bone, said Dr. William D. Hill, stem cell researcher at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University and the study's corresponding author.

Unfortunately with age or disease, SDF-1 appears to change its tune, instead reducing stem cells' ability to survive and stay in the bone marrow, said Samuel Herberg, GRU graduate student and the study's first author. Additionally cells that do stay put may be less likely to make bone and more likely to turn into fat cells in the marrow.

The researchers believe it's the changes in the normal environment that come with age or illness, including diminished nutrition, that prompt SDF-1's shifting role.

"You put new cells in there and, all of the sudden, you put them in a neighborhood where they are being attacked," Hill said. "If we can somehow precondition the transplanted cells or modify the environment they are going into so they have higher levels of autophagy, they will survive that stress."

Autophagy is the consummate green, survival pathway, where the cell perpetuates itself by essentially eating itself over and over again, in the face of low food sources, other stress or needing to eliminate damaged or toxic product buildup. The researchers believe autophagy slows with age, so deadly trash starts piling up in and around cells, Hill said.

"Your cells normally have a reminder to take out the trash," said Dr. Carlos Isales, MCG endocrinologist and Clinical Director of the GRU Institute of Regenerative and Reparative Medicine. "That reminder, SDF-1, becomes inconsistent as you get older, so rather than being an activator of the trash signal, it becomes an inhibitor."

Herberg led efforts to genetically modify stem cells from mice to overexpress SDF-1 ? in fact the researchers were in the enviable position of being able to adjust expression up or down ? and control autophagy in their novel cells. They found that while SDF-1 didn't increase stem cell numbers, it protected stem cells hazards related to low oxygen and more by increasing autophagy while decreasing its antithesis, programmed cell death, or apoptosis.

"They get away with lower oxygen needs and lower nutrient needs and stem cells are able to survive in a hostile environment as they are attacked by damaging molecules like free radicals," Hill said. In fact, the cells can thrive.

"The success of stem cell transplants is mixed and we think part of the problem is the environment the cells are put into," said Isales. "Ultimately we want to find out what is the triggering event for aging, what is the chicken, what is the egg and what initiates this cascade. This new finding gives us a piece of the puzzle that helps us see the big picture."

They've already begun looking at what happens to SDF-1 in human bone marrow stem cells and have identified a couple of drugs used to treat other conditions that increase SDF-1 production and protection. They envision a collagen matrix, almost like a raft, that delivers SDF-1 and stem cells or SDF-1 alone where needed, enabling targeted bone regrowth in the case of a bad fracture, for example.

It was already known that stem cells secrete SDF-1 and that the cell survival pathway, autophagy, was up-regulated in stem cells. "We started thinking, if SDF-1 is secreted here in response to low oxygen, it must be important in cell survival," said Hill and the researchers became the first to put the pieces together.

Cell survival and its antithesis, apoptosis, are both tightly regulated and necessary, Herberg notes. And, in excess, both can be deadly. In fact, cancer therapies are under study that block autophagy with the idea of making cancer more vulnerable to chemotherapy. One of SDF-1's major roles is helping the body properly assemble during development. It's produced by stem cells and found in high levels in the lungs and bones. MCG researchers are looking for other sources of SDF-1 production in the body and how those might change with age.

Bone formation tends to decrease at about age 60, notes Isales, principal investigator on the $6.3 million Program Project Grant from the National Institutes of Health that funded the study.

###

Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University: http://www.mcghealth.org

Thanks to Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 20 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127225/Signaling_molecule_may_help_stem_cells_focus_on_making_bone_despite_age__disease

war of the worlds rock and roll hall of fame severe weather wichita brian wilson storm chasers david blaine