Friday, May 24, 2013

Report: Nation's kids need to get more physical

FILE - This May 10, 2011 file photo shows children at Tracy Elementary School running across a field as they take part in after-school exercise activities on the campus in Baldwin Park, Calif. Reading, writing, `rithmetic _ and PE? The prestigious Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide opportunities for at least 60 minutes of physical activity each day for students and treat physical education as a core subject. The report says only about half of the nation's youngsters are getting at least an hour of vigorous or moderate physical activity every day. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File)

FILE - This May 10, 2011 file photo shows children at Tracy Elementary School running across a field as they take part in after-school exercise activities on the campus in Baldwin Park, Calif. Reading, writing, `rithmetic _ and PE? The prestigious Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide opportunities for at least 60 minutes of physical activity each day for students and treat physical education as a core subject. The report says only about half of the nation's youngsters are getting at least an hour of vigorous or moderate physical activity every day. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, File)

FILE - In this Dec. 11, 2012 file photo, students hold their position during a yoga class at Capri Elementary School in Encinitas, Calif. Reading, writing, `rithmetic _ and PE? The prestigious Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide opportunities for at least 60 minutes of physical activity each day for students and treat physical education as a core subject. The report says only about half of the nation's youngsters are getting at least an hour of vigorous or moderate physical activity every day. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

(AP) ? Reading, writing, arithmetic ? and PE?

The prestigious Institute of Medicine is recommending that schools provide opportunities for at least 60 minutes of physical activity each day for students and that PE become a core subject.

The report, released Thursday, says only about half of the nation's youngsters are getting at least an hour of vigorous or moderate-intensity physical activity every day.

Another concern, the report says, is that 44 percent of school administrators report slashing big chunks of time from physical education, arts and recess since the passage of the No Child Left Behind law in 2001 in order to boost classroom time for reading and math.

With childhood obesity on the rise ? about 17 percent of children ages 2 through 19 are obese ? and kids spending much of the day in the classroom, the chairman of the committee that wrote the report said schools are the best place to help shape up the nation's children.

"Schools for years have been responsible for various health programs such as nutrition, breakfast and lunch, immunizations, screenings," Harold W. Kohl III, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Texas School of Public Health, said in an interview with The Associated Press.

"Physical activity should be placed alongside those programs to make it a priority for us as a society," he said.

The report calls on the Education Department to recommend that PE be adopted as a core subject.

It says physical education in school is the "only sure opportunity" for youngsters to have access to activity that will help keep them healthy.

The majority of states, about 75 percent, mandate PE, according to the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance. But most do not require a specific amount of time for PE in school, and more than half allow exemptions or substitutions, such as marching band, cheerleading and community sports.

Many kids also aren't going to gym class at school every single day. According to the CDC, only about 30 percent of students nationwide attend PE classes five days a week.

Specifically, the report recommends:

?All elementary school students should spend an average of 30 minutes each day in PE class.

?Middle and high school students should spend an average of 45 minutes each day in PE class.

?State and local officials should find ways get children more physical activity in the school environment.

PE isn't the sole solution, though.

The report advocates a "whole-of-school" approach where recess and before-and-after-school activities including sports are made accessible to all students to help achieve the 60-minutes-a-day recommendation for physical activity. It could be as simple as having kids walk or bike to school, or finding ways to add a physical component to math and science class lessons.

The report also cautions against taking away recess as a form of punishment, and it urges schools to give students frequent classroom breaks.

Schools can do this if they make it a priority, said Paul Roetert, CEO of the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance.

"We have an obligation to keep kids active," Roetert said in an interview. "We have research to show that physical activity helps kids perform better in school. It helps them focus better in the classroom ... and they behave better in school. So there are all kinds of side benefits."

Kitty Porterfield, spokeswoman for The School Superintendents Association, said nobody is opposed to physical education.

"Everybody would love to see more of it in schools," said Porterfield. "Given the testing and academic pressures for excellence on schools, often physical education slides to the bottom of the barrel."

The idea of putting more of an emphasis on physical education in schools has support in Congress.

Rep. Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio, plans to introduce the PHYSICAL Act on Thursday. It would recognize health education and physical education as core subjects within elementary and secondary schools. Reps. John Lewis, D-Ga., and Jared Polis, D-Colo., will join Fudge as co-sponsors.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-05-23-US-America's-Schools-More-PE/id-e44787d768124b10b2735519652aacfe

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Joe Francis apologizes for 'appalling' interview

Celebs

11 hours ago

Joe Francis.

AP file

Joe Francis.

Joe Francis is apologizing for "appalling" remarks he made in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, where the "Girls Gone Wild" founder railed against "mentally f------ retarded" jurors in his latest legal dust-up and said they "should all be lined up and shot!"

Joe Francis juror responds to 'retarded' slam

Francis issued this statement Thursday morning:

I deeply regret the remarks attributed to me in the interview with the Hollywood Reporter. They were hurtful and do not reflect my true feelings. While I disagree with the jury's verdict as I am completely innocent of the charges and intend to appeal, I was afforded a fair trial, and if I lose at the appellate level, I will reluctantly but fully accept the jury's verdict. This was a 6 hour interview with the Hollywood reporter where I detailed to the reporter all of the evidence and why I believed the evidence showed I am 100% innocent. The reporter also interviewed my attorney David Houston for over 3 hours, but failed to include one shred of evidence from the trial that proved beyond a reasonable doubt my innocence. I did NOT commit a crime at all whatsoever. All that was publicized were my most intemperate remarks that were borne out of frustration but with no intent to cause anyone harm. I am not, nor have I ever been a violent person. My comments are appalling, but anyone who has ever been wrongfully convicted of a crime that they did NOT commit would be as frustrated as I am. I want to apologize to all the jurors, the court, the City Attorney and my attorneys for my comments that were manipulated by the media, and please know I am truly ashamed of my conduct. I am truly, truly sorry. I hope everyone will understand I was not being serious and that I fully and deeply apologize for my remarks.

Convicted "Girls Gone Wild" mogul Joe Francis breaks silence: "Retarded" jury "Should Be Shot Dead"

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/girls-gone-wild-founder-apologizes-appalling-interview-quotes-6C10038819

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

How the French economy compares to Germany's, UK's

PARIS (AP) ? Here's how the struggling French economy stacks up compared to Germany's and Britain's.

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (2012)

France: 2 trillion euros ($2.7 trillion)

Germany: 2.6 trillion euros ($3.3 trillion)

Britain: 1.9 trillion euros ($2.4 trillion)

MANUFACTURING AS A PERCENT OF GDP (2009)

France: 10.7 percent

Germany: 19.3 percent

Britain: 11.0 percent

GROWTH RATE (2012)

France: 0.0 percent

Germany: 0.7 percent

Britain: 0.3 percent

UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

France: 11 percent (March)

Germany: 5.4 percent (March)

Britain: 7.7 percent (February)

TOP CORPORATE INCOME TAX RATE (2012)

France: 36.1 percent

Germany: 29.8 percent

Britain: 24.0 percent

TOP PERSONAL INCOME TAX RATE (2012)

France: 46.8 percent

Germany: 47.5 percent

Britain: 50.0 percent

AVERAGE HOURLY LABOR COSTS (2012)

France: 34.20 euros ($44.01), of which 33.6 percent is taxes

Germany: 30.40 euros ($39.12), of which 21.9 percent is taxes

Britain: 21.60 euros ($27.80), of which 15.1 percent is taxes

AVERAGE RETIREMENT AGE (MEN, 2011)

France: 59.1

Germany: 61.9

Britain: 63.6

AVERAGE ANNUAL WAGES (2011)

France: 34,284 euros ($47,704)

Germany: 33,766 euros ( $46,984)

Britain: 36, 197 euros ($50,366)

AVERAGE WORKWEEK (FULL-TIME WORKERS, 2012)

France: 41.1 hours

Germany: 41.9 hours

Britain: 42.8 hours

STOCK INDEX OVER PAST 10 YEARS

France's CAC-40: +37 percent

Germany's DAX: +197 percent

Britain's FTSE 100: +68 percent

___

Sources: Eurostat, World Bank, OECD, FactSet

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-economy-compares-germanys-uks-092540115.html

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CSN: Vogelsong out 6 weeks with fractured hand

Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong fractured his throwing hand in Monday night?s game after being hit by a pitch in the fifth inning against the Washington Nationals.

Vogelsong was in the middle of easily his best start of the season when he swung at an inside pitch from Craig Stammen. The ball appeared to hit him squarely on the knuckles of his right hand, and Vogelsong was in obvious pain. He left the game and was replaced by pinch hitter Nick Noonan.

Nicole Vogelsong tweeted an injury update on her husband during Monday's game:

The Giants led 6-0 at the time and Vogelsong had allowed just three hits. No National had advanced past second base. The right-hander entered the night with a 8.06 ERA and was in desperate need of a good start.

Source: http://www.csnbayarea.com/giants/vogelsong-fractures-hand

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Rare View of Ancient Galaxy Crash Revealed

Astronomers have caught two big ancient galaxies in the act of colliding, shedding new light on the role such megamergers played in galactic evolution during the universe's youth.

The colossal smashup will eventually produce one giant elliptical galaxy, researchers said, suggesting that most such behemoths formed rapidly in this manner long ago, rather than growing slowly over time by gobbling up a series of relatively small galaxies.

"I think at least 90 percent of elliptical galaxies at this mass were formed through this channel," study lead author Hai Fu, of the University of California, Irvine, told SPACE.com. [Photos of Great Galactic Crashes]

Two galaxies becoming one

The merger is occurring 11 billion light-years away, meaning that astronomers are seeing the two colliding galaxies as they were about 3 billion years after the Big Bang?that created the universe. During this epoch, "red and dead" elliptical galaxies full of old stars were common.

Fu and his colleagues initially thought the two merging galaxies were a singleton, dubbed HXMM01, when they saw it with the European Space Agency's infrared Herschel space telescope.

But follow-up observations with a variety of other instruments, both on the ground and in space, revealed that HXMM01 is actually two galaxies on a collision course, separated by about 62,000 light-years at the moment.

The gas-rich two-galaxy system contains the stellar equivalent of about 400 billion suns and is churning out new stars at a fantastic clip ? about 2,000 per year, researchers said. For comparison, just two to three new stars are born every year in our own Milky Way.

At this rate, the newly forming elliptical galaxy will exhaust its gas reservoirs and cease birthing stars in just 200 million years, going red and dead in what researchers describe as a surprisingly short period of time.

"The common thought was that massive galaxies form by accreting smaller galaxies and the growth, though rapid, would last more than 200 million years," co-author Asantha Cooray, also of UC-Irvine, told SPACE.com via email.

"And the formation was expected to not be as efficient as we have observed," Cooray added. "The 40 percent efficiency of star formation, the efficiency at which gas is converted to stars in one rotation of the system, was unexpected."

Fu and his colleagues report their results online today (May 22) in the journal Nature.

Star-formation mystery

The HXMM01 system's startling efficiency explains how elliptical galaxies can go red and dead so fast, Fu and Cooray said. Ellipticals' quick transformation had been a mystery, with some astronomers suggesting that their star-forming raw materials had been ejected by superpowerful phenomena such as quasars.

But this efficiency raises intriguing new questions, which Fu and his colleagues hope to tackle by further studying these ancient galaxies and their merging progenitors.

They want to "truly understand what is going on in those galaxies ? why the star-formation efficiency is 10 times higher than normal star-forming galaxies," Fu said. "That part is a total mystery right now."

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?and?Google+.?Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook?or Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

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

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rare-view-ancient-galaxy-crash-revealed-170519843.html

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The Irish Economy ? Blog Archive ? International Corporate Tax

The international tax principles underlying the taxation of corporate income are attracting more and more attention.? Ireland, in particular, has come under the spotlight.? There is merit to some of the complaints made but most of it is little more than political posturing.? Few substantive proposals are being made.

The latest is a report prepared for US Senators Levin (D) and McCain (R) which includes a very interesting appendix on Apple.? The appendix opens:

?The Apple case study examines how Apple Inc., a U.S. corporation, has used a variety of offshore structures, arrangements, and transactions to shift billions of dollars in profits away from the United States and into Ireland, where Apple has negotiated a special corporate tax rate of less than 2%.?

The submission by Apple to today?s Senate hearing is here.

There are no special corporate tax rates in Ireland.? There are rules (which apply to all companies) on how taxable income is calculated to determine the figure to which the 12.5% rate is applied.? This rate is applied to taxable income not gross profit.

Royalty payments for intellectual property licenses are one of the largest differences between gross income and taxable income for some companies.? For example, if a company with a gross income of A incurs a trade charge of B for royalty payments then taxable income (to which the 12.5% rate is applied in Ireland) is A minus B.

Effective tax rates can be calculated using gross profit as the base but tax is actually charged on taxable income.? Aggregate figures from the Revenue Commissioners show that the effective tax rate in Ireland on the gross income of companies in 2010 was 6.0%.? However, the effective tax rate on taxable income was 10.3%.? The important thing is how taxable income is calculated not ?special? rates.

Are royalty payments on intellectual property licenses a legitimate business expense? Yes.? Are there issues in how the prices for such licenses are set? Yes.? Are the rules for setting these prices individual to each country? No.

The report accuses Ireland of being a tax haven on the basis that the effective tax rates on Apple?s gross income are very very small.? They are.? But this is achieved because the trade charges on intellectual property are very very large.? The intellectual property (which was not created in Ireland) is held somewhere else and subject to tax there.

The intellectual property used by Google is held by a Bermuda-resident company and its income is subject to the 0% rate of corporation tax there.? The interesting thing in the Apple case is that the Levin-McCain report suggests that the holding company is not tax-resident anywhere!? These profits will not be subject to Irish tax but should be tax-resident somewhere.

The main problem from a US perspective is when these companies are subject to the 35% tax on corporate profits.? This has to be paid when global profits are repatriated to the US.? From a US perspective it doesn?t really matter how much tax is paid in Ireland, Bermuda or the like.? The US wants its 35% share.

The problem is that companies are indefinitely deferring this tax by holding the money offshore and not repatriating it.? The money will be subject to the 35% rate when it is repatriated but the companies refuse to do so.?

Apple has more than $100 billion of cash (mostly held by subsidiaries outside the US) but recently issued $17 billion of bonds to engage in a share-buyback to return some of that cash to shareholders.? Apple didn?t use its own cash because that would have meant repatriating it and incurring the 35% tax.? This key concern of the US has very little to do with Ireland.

The provision that allows these companies to defer their US corporation tax is the ?same country exemption? for Subpart F Income in the US tax code.? The scheme for royalty income works because of this exemption granted by the US rather than any provision in the Irish tax code.? The body of the Levin-McCain report discusses the ?same country exemption? and a useful, short summary of Subpart F Income is here.

International taxation is hugely complex and should not be reduced to simple sound-bites but I can?t resist.? Ireland is not a tax haven.

Source: http://www.irisheconomy.ie/index.php/2013/05/21/international-corporate-tax/

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Dish Anywhere on Android gets On Demand content streaming, tablet app

Dish Anywhere on Android gets On Demand content streaming, tablet app

A fresh release of Dish Anywhere for Android just hit Google Play, bringing it up to speed with its iOS counterpart. Now, the application allows users to stream On Demand content from wherever they have an internet connection, and adds Facebook and Twitter sharing. The experience has also received a dedicated app for tablets running Google's mobile OS, sporting a look that makes better use of the extra screen real estate, and a skinned remote to boot. In addition to a few miscellaneous bug fixes, the update includes support for handsets with large screens, such as the Droid DNA. Jab the links below to grab ahold of the latest version.

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Source: Dish Network, Google Play

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/21/dish-anywhere-app-android-on-demand-content-tablet-app/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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10 of the Year's Most Beautiful Science Images

Who knew an artificial neural network could be so pretty? The winners of Princeton's annual science photography contest, Art of Science, were announced a few days ago. And boy, are some of these images beautiful.

Every year, a jury of Princeton professors gets together to hum and haw over the thousands of images its students produce during their studies. The great thing about the competition is that it's totally open?undergrads, grads, and doc students from nearly every department apply, ranging from computer science to architecture to biology.

It's the best of both worlds: we get to ogle the beautiful images that result from years of intense research, but we miss all of the hard academic labor. [Art of Science]

East-West, West-East by Martin Jucker

Ever wonder what the winds look like as they move across the globe? This image visualizes the strong West to East wind patterns that dominate earth's weather systems (in blue), plus the East to West wind, mainly at the poles, in red. "As a result," explains author Martin Jucker, "atmospheric phenomena can travel around the globe, exchanging information even from remote places of the Earth easily."


Cobalt Blue by Jason Krizan

Krizan is part of chemistry research group called Cava Lab, which cooks up new materials. To do so, he and his peers heat new materials to 1400 degrees Celsius in alumina containers?and just like with regular cooking, stuff gets stuck on the pan. The group will often use molten glass, which beads and condenses the materials. This blue is from black cobalt oxide, beading inside of the molten glass.


Maze Dweller by Chhaya Werner

"That sweet little face peering out of a coral labyrinth is that of a a goby fish," explains Chhaya Werner, the undergard who took this photo. "A goby fish is dependent on coral for its home, and in turn will often clean algae that would otherwise smother the coral." Symbiosis!


C. instagram by Meredith Wright

The hilariously named C. instagram worm eats E. coli, which they gorge on before clumping together in these patterns. Meredith Wright caught the phenomenon using her smartphone?hence the name of the photo. "I've since shared the photo on social networking sites and have had friends who've never been interested in biology ask me more about my work because of this photo," she explains. "To me, this image represents the simple pleasure of finding something beautiful when you don't expect to, and it shows how easy it is to connect science with new audiences by simply clicking 'share.'"


Brainbow Rainbow by Jess Brooks, Esteban Engel, and Lynn Enquist

These kidney monkey cells are infected with a herpes virus, which makes the cells express colors that turn a variety of neon colors. That makes it easier for scientists to identity individual neurons and the circuits they form.


Crushed Birch by Michael Kosk

Why doesn't wood rot? Mainly because of its hyper-dense cellular structure, which was broken apart and photographed as part of a material research course by Michael Kosk. Those patterns? They're the pathways that distribute water and nutrients through each layer of the tree.


Cocoa Engineering by Alex Jordan, Sigrid Adriaenssens, and Axel Kilian

This structural component?and its chocolate-welded hinges?were made entirely out of chocolate by engineering and architecture students. "While it sounds like something out of Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, the idea has a serious goal," explains the group, "to systematically understand how the process of design can interact with unexplored materials." The curved shape has a remarkable strength-to-weight ratio of 24 times less than that of concrete.


Mirror Sphere by Sema Berkiten

I don't completely understand the technology behind this beautiful image, so I'll let author Sema Berkiten explain: "In computer vision, there are several methods to create a 3-D model of an object. One of them, called ?photometric stereo,? uses multiple images of the object under different light directions. In this 3-D reconstruction technique, we need to calculate surface normals of the object as an intermediate step, and this picture is the result of that step. The image depicts the surface normals of a mirrored sphere... The surface normals depicted in this image are not all geometrically correct because the algorithm assumes that the surface is not shiny like a mirror, so what we see in this image are actually some artifacts caused by highlights and shadows."


Light Eddies by Mitchell A. Nahmias and Paul R. Prucnal

Nahmias and Prucnal are interested in increasing the speed of global communication. They imagine an artificial neural network , combined with current laser technology, that would deliver information at speeds even the fastest computers couldn't compete with today. "Our brains are composed of billions of individual cells called neurons, which communicate along millions of billions of channels with electrochemical signals," the duo explain. "This computer model visualizes a laser that behaves like a neuron by plotting a so-called 'phase space...' Studying these trajectories helps us understand how our devices emit and receive pulses of light that mimic the way in which neurons communicate."


Exposed by Ohad Fried

This face came from a completely anonymized video?in other words, when it arrived, the tape contained a blurred and unrecognizable human face. Using "mutual data" shared between each individual frame, Fried was able to reconstruct the original face. "The result," Fried explains, "is an intriguing 'ghost image' of the subject."


Source: http://gizmodo.com/10-of-the-years-most-beautiful-science-images-508969751

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Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up ...

Canadian wedding photographer and filmmaker Zachary Rose (23) takes the common saying about pets and their owners to the next step.

Zachary shoots an photograph of a pet using a DSLR and then takes another photo holding the DSLR in a specific way so the head of the pet seems attached to the body of the pet's owner.

Zach (@zachdriftwood on Instagram) than uploads the photos to Instagram with the #petheadz hashtag.

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

I asked Zachary about the inspiration for this series:

"I have always heard animals look like their owners and I lived with some roommates with cats and it just sort or was a creative exercise that caught on. I usually meet with the owner and get a good feel for them/ their pet. Take the photo of the pet and then hold it in front of their face"

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

About where and how he gets his subjects:

"It was mostly local, however, now I am traveling around. I am from Toronto and have traveled a few hundred km and been able to do some, now I am in northern PA and talking with strangers to see if they are interested! I create them all the time, whenever, wherever (within reason)"

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Lastly, about his gear, Zachary says:

"I just use my iPhone, my DSLR and a 50mm, and most importantly patience (for me, the pet, and their owners)"

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Instagram fed starting in 3,2,1...

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

Photographs Of Pets And Their Owners Mashed Up

[petheadz via Photojojo via Instagram]

Source: http://www.diyphotography.net/photographs-pets-and-their-owners-mashed

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10 Things to Know for Tuesday

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Tuesday:

1. TORNADO ROARS THROUGH OKLAHOMA CITY SUBURBS

The twister, with winds up to 200 mph, reduces block after residential block to ruins and leaves dozens dead.

2. A RARE AND DEADLY COINCIDENCE

Monday's powerful storm followed roughly the same route as a killer twister that slammed the region in 1999.

3. THE PATH THAT LED TO A $1.1 BILLION PAYDAY

David Karp dropped out of high school, then created Tumblr, which has been acquired by Yahoo in a blockbuster deal.

4. WHO WAS OUT OF THE LOOP ON THE IRS AUDIT

Top advisers say they did not immediately inform Obama, reflecting an apparent desire to distance him from troubles threatening his administration.

5. JODI ARIAS TRIAL IN TURMOIL

Her lawyers try to quit in the middle of the death-penalty phase, then say they'll call just one witness: Arias herself.

6. THE SCOPE OF NYPD SPYING

A detective describes surveillance of Muslims as narrowly targeted on a few individuals. But text messages obtained by the AP show a wide-ranging effort.

7. WHY BLOODSHED IN IRAQ IS ESPECIALLY TROUBLING

A wave of deadly attacks is raising fears that the country could be turning down the path toward civil war.

8. MANDELA'S DECLINE ACCOMPANIED BY DISILLUSIONMENT

The sense of possibility that the aging leader embodied is fading in South Africa as the gulf between rich and poor widens.

9. WHERE LAND IS AT A PREMIUM

Across the Midwest, farmers are planting crops on almost any scrap of available acreage to take advantage of high corn and soybean prices.

10. FOUNDING MEMBER OF THE DOORS DIES AT 74

Keyboardist Ray Manzarek helped form the seminal '60s band after meeting then-poet Jim Morrison in California.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-tuesday-103642113.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Benghazi-disciplined diplomat a prolific poet (cbsnews)

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EU law key to ending 'too big to fail' banks: BoE's Tucker

By Huw Jones and Claire Davenport

LONDON/STRASBOURG, France (Reuters) - A European Union law up for a vote on Monday will only fully shield taxpayers from bailing out troubled banks if there is a global framework as well, a top UK regulator said on Monday.

Bank of England Deputy Governor Paul Tucker said the EU law on bank recovery and resolution would be a milestone towards a global system and help convince markets that governments were no longer willing to rescue "too big to fail" lenders.

Since governments had to shore up banks during the 2007-09 financial crisis, regulators have wanted to stop markets assuming big banks would not be allowed to go out of business.

The European Parliament's economic affairs committee holds a first vote in Strasbourg, France at 1830 GMT. It has joint say with EU states on the law that gives regulators powers to impose losses on creditors, replace management and take other steps when a bank gets into trouble.

In a speech in the Netherlands, Tucker said there had been "marked convergence" recently on a global approach to winding down banks which typically have operations in many countries.

But more political impetus was needed as it would still be a "nightmare" to wind down a big bank, he added.

The EU law will have powers to force big banks to hold a cushion of bonds that can be converted into equity to shore itself up without taxpayer cash. Tucker said a discussion on such a cushion at the global level was still needed.

This "loss-absorbing" cushion should be equivalent to the amount of capital a lender holds in its capital buffer with an added margin for safety, he said.

The biggest banks will have to hold a core capital cushion of up to 9.5 percent by 2019 though many are already at or above this level due to market and supervisory pressures.

Banks should not hold large amounts of bonds of other banks and nor should insurers hold chunks of bank debt, Tucker said.

He backed EU consensus that depositors with up to 100,000 euros ($128,000) in their account should not suffer losses in a bail out, a step Monday's vote is expected to confirm.

There was also case for some uninsured depositors, such as small businesses and charities to be shielded also, he added.

EU finance ministers agreed last week that large, uninsured depositors should be subject to losses and the vote on Monday is expected to back this, on condition that any losses are imposed only after the bank's bondholders have been tapped first.

Even with an EU system in place, many banks will still need to restructure themselves to be wound up easily, Tucker said. The EU's financial services chief Michel Barnier will say in the autumn whether big banks should be broken up.

($1 = 0.7798 euros)

(Editing by Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-law-key-ending-too-big-fail-banks-111243677.html

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Enraged by kidnapping, Egyptian police block Gaza border

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian police angered by the kidnapping of seven colleagues by Islamist gunmen kept a crossing into the Gaza Strip closed again on Saturday, stranding hundreds of Palestinian travelers, witnesses said.

The protest began on Friday when police strung barbed wire across the Rafah border post and chained up the gates, local residents said, a day after the abductions.

Gunmen demanding the release of jailed Islamist militants had seized seven policemen and soldiers on a road between the Sinai towns of el-Arish and Rafah. Three of those abducted had worked at the Rafah border crossing, locals said.

"We will not open the crossing until the kidnapped soldiers are freed and the interior minister arrives to listen to our demands so that these attacks on us are not repeated," one of the protesting policemen said on Saturday.

Hardline Islamist groups in North Sinai have exploited the collapse of state authority after the overthrow of former President Hosni Mubarak in 2011 to launch attacks across the border into Israel and on Egyptian targets.

The protesting policemen called on Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, who belongs to the Muslim Brotherhood, to help free their colleagues.

Security sources said on Saturday all seven hostages remained missing, retracting their report the previous day that one policeman had been released.

A spokesman for the Palestinian Islamist Hamas movement, which runs the Gaza Strip, criticized the Egyptian police action and said contacts were under way to resolve the standoff.

"There are promises to follow up on the matter, but in spite of these promises the suffering is still building up. We consider the continued closure of the crossing unjustified and incomprehensible," Sami Abu Zuhri told Al Jazeera television.

(Reporting by Yousri Mohamed and Omar Fahmy; Writing by Shaimaa Fayed; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/enraged-kidnapping-egyptian-police-block-gaza-border-135457201.html

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Internal wrangling marks Dems' Senate campaigns (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306637684?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Powerball jackpot closing in on another record

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) ? A little more than a year after three tickets split a world-record lottery prize, the jackpot for Saturday's Powerball drawing was nearing historic territory.

Should nobody pick the correct six numbers, the prize money will roll over to next week's drawing and almost certainly eclipse the $656 million doled out to winners in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland in the Mega Millions game in March 2012.

But the record could fall Saturday night too if a flurry of last-minute ticket purchases pushes the jackpot much above its current $600 million level. Since the previous drawing on Wednesday, it had grown by at least $236 million.

"If there was no chance, you wouldn't do it," said New Jersey attorney Rubin Sinins, who represented five construction workers who claimed a colleague cheated them out of a share of a multimillion-dollar lottery jackpot.

It seems simple enough: Just correctly pick five white balls out of a drum of 59 and one red one out of a drum of 35.

However, the odds of a single $2 ticket hitting the correct combination are about 1 in 175.2 million. That's slightly less likely than randomly drawing the name of one specific female in the United States: 1 in 157 million, according to the last census.

With such an astronomic payoff available for the lucky ticket holder, some buyers are content to settle for just a share of the winnings.

In Houston, city firefighter John Paetow and a dozen of his colleagues kicked in $10 each for the drawing, as they do occasionally when a the stakes soar into the lottery stratosphere.

"With firemen it's a camaraderie thing," said Paetow, 59. "It just makes sense to pool our money; it buys more tickets, gives us a better chance of winning."

Even if Saturday's drawing doesn't top last year's Mega Millions jackpot, it's already the highest in Powerball history, surpassing that game's $587.5 million record set in November 2012.

A major reason for the sales surge is that last month, Powerball landed the nation's most populous state as California joined 42 others that offer the game. California lottery director Robert O'Neill said the state had brought "sunshine and good fortune" to Powerball.

The Multi-State Lottery Association conducts the drawing live Saturday night from Tallahassee, Fla. The balls are weighed and X-rayed, and there are practice runs before the official televised version.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/powerball-jackpot-closing-another-record-084632540.html

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Electric and magnetic characteristics of a material which could be used in spintronics: Promising doped zirconia

May 17, 2013 ? Materials belonging to the family of dilute magnetic oxides (DMOs) -- an oxide-based variant of the dilute magnetic semiconductors -- are good candidates for spintronics applications. This is the object of study for Davide Sangalli of the Microelectronics and Microsystems Institute (IMM) at the National Research Council (CNR), in Agrate Brianza, Italy, and colleagues.

They recently explored the effect of iron (Fe) doping on thin films of a material called zirconia (ZrO2 oxide). For the first time, the authors bridged the gap between the theoretical predictions and the experimental measurements of this material, in a paper about to be published in The European Physical Journal B.

Spintronics exploit an intrinsic property of the electrons found in semi-conductors called spin, akin to the electrons' degree of freedom. This determines the magnetic characteristics, known as magnetic moment, of the material under study. The challenge is to create such material with the highest possible temperature, as this will ensure that its magnetic properties can be used in room-temperature applications.

To study iron-doped zirconia, they examined its magnetic properties and its electronic structure from both a theoretical and experimental perspective. They then compared theory and experiments to find the most stable configuration of the material. Theoretical work included first-principles simulations. In parallel, their experimental work relied on many different well-established analytical techniques, including X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and alternating gradient force magnetometer measurements.

Sangalli and colleagues therefore gained a better understanding of doped zirconia, which features oxygen vacancies, playing a crucial role in providing its unique electronic and magnetic characteristics. They have also predicted theoretically how the deviation from the standard structure influences this material's properties. They are currently investigating, experimentally, how the magnetism evolves with changing concentrations of iron and oxygen vacancies to confirm theoretical predictions.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Davide Sangalli, Elena Cianci, Alessio Lamperti, Roberta Ciprian, Franca Albertini, Francesca Casoli, Pierpaolo Lupo, Lucia Nasi, Marco Campanini, Alberto Debernardi. Exploiting magnetic properties of Fe doping in zirconia. The European Physical Journal B, 2013; 86 (5) DOI: 10.1140/epjb/e2013-30669-3

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/GcElie8Nbh8/130517094600.htm

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Kendrick Lamar, Kings Of Leon ... And Fine Art? Welcome To Hangout 2013

MTV is on the ground at Hangout 2013 ... and getting a little culture while we're here.
By James Montgomery



Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707585/hangout-music-fest-2013-art.jhtml

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Fred Armisen and Jason Sudeikis: Likely Leaving SNL

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Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/pacific-rim-trailer-monsters-vs-robots/

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Faulty energy production in brain cells leads to disorders ranging from Parkinson's to intellectual disability

May 16, 2013 ? Neuroscientist Patrik Verstreken of VIB (Flanders Institute for Biotechnology) and KU Leuven has shown for the first time that dysfunctional mitochondria in brain cells can lead to learning disabilities. The link between dysfunctional mitochondria and Parkinson's disease is known, but this new research shows that it is also present in other brain disorders.

Patrik Verstreken (VIB / KU Leuven): "This discovery shows that energy production in brain cells is the basis of various brain disorders. We hope that a better understanding of the mechanisms used by the cell to maintain optimum energy levels will lead in the long term to medical applications that prevent or cure these diseases."

Dysfunctional mitochondria toxic for the brain cell

Well-functioning mitochondria -- the organelles that generate energy in cells -- are essential for a healthy brain. They provide the energy needed for communication between brain cells, which is crucial for transmitting stimuli and signals and thus for optimal functioning of the body. Earlier research has shown that Parkinson's disease is often paired with dysfunctional mitochondria. Moreover, dysfunctional mitochondria are not efficiently discarded from the cell, which complicates the operation of other healthy mitochondria and leads to insufficient energy production in the cell. They can be compared to a faulty engine that emits toxic fumes.

Quality control by the brain cell

The Leuven-based VIB researchers Dominik Haddad, Vanessa Morais and Patrik Verstreken have unraveled the mechanism by which brain cells trigger the destruction of dysfunctional mitochondria. Once the mechanism is triggered, communication between brain cells is reestablished. The researchers were surprised to find that this mechanism is not only defective in Parkinson's disease, but also in specific cases of intellectual disability. These results indicate the wider importance of mitochondria for optimal functioning of our brains. Haddad, Morais and Verstreken hope that their insights eventually contribute to the prevention of various brain disorders.

Brain disorders in Europe

1 in 3 Europeans will suffer from a brain disorder during his or her lifetime. All of us know people with dementia, schizophrenia, intellectual disability or another brain condition. Each of these diseases penetrates to a person's core and have a huge impact on the patient and his or her family. They also carry an economic impact: ?800 billion is spent each year in Europe to cover brain disorder-related health needs.

Bart De Strooper (VIB/KU Leuven): "The brain is decisive in shaping who we are, but from a scientific standpoint, it is uncharted territory. This research constitutes an important piece of the complex puzzle. Brain research is vital, especially because brain disorders weigh so heavily on patients, their families and society. I am delighted that May 2013 has been designated the European Month of the Brain."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/drkXmNyBxZg/130516123804.htm

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Observation of second sound in a quantum gas

May 15, 2013 ? Second sound is a quantum mechanical phenomenon, which has been observed only in superfluid helium. Physicists from the University of Innsbruck, Austria, in collaboration with colleagues from the University of Trento, Italy, have now proven the propagation of such a temperature wave in a quantum gas.

The scientists have published their historic findings in the journal Nature.

Below a critical temperature, certain fluids become superfluid and lose internal friction. In addition, fluids in this state conduct heat extremely efficiently, with energy transport occurring in a distinct temperature wave. Because of the similarities to a sound wave, this temperature wave is also called second sound. To explain the nature of superfluids, the famous physicist Lev Landau developed the theory of two-fluid hydrodynamics in Moscow in 1941. He assumed that fluids at these low temperatures comprise a superfluid and a normal component, whereby the latter one gradually disappears with decreasing temperature. Until now superfluidity has experimentally been observed only in liquid helium and in ultracold quantum gases. Another example of a superfluid system is a neutron star, and evidence also been found in the atomic nucleus. Superfluidity is closely connected to the technologically important superconductivity, the phenomenon of zero electrical resistance at very low temperatures.

Observation of temperature waves

Ultracold quantum gases are ideal model systems to experimentally observe quantum mechanical phenomena such as superfluidity. In these experiments hundreds of thousands of atoms are cooled in a vacuum chamber to almost absolute zero (?273.15 ?C). By using lasers the particles in this state can be controlled and manipulated efficiently and with high accuracy. "Despite intensive research in this field for over ten years now, the phenomenon of second sound has proven elusive for detection in quantum gases," says Rudolf Grimm from the Institute of Experimental Physics at the University of Innsbruck and the Institute of Quantum Optics and Quantum Information at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. "However, in the end it was amazingly easy to prove." In the laboratory, Grimm's team of quantum physicists prepared a quantum gas consisting of about 300,000 lithium atoms. They heated the cigar-shaped particle cloud locally with a power-modulated laser beam and then observed the propagating temperature wave. "While in superfluid helium only one entropy wave is generated, our Fermi gas also exhibited some thermal expansion and, thus, a measurable density wave," explains Grimm the crucial difference. It was also the first time that the Innsbruck physicists were able to measure the superfluid fraction in the quantum gas. "Before us nobody had been able to achieve this, which closes a fundamental gap in the research of Fermi gases," says Rudolf Grimm.

Confirming a theory after 50 years

The research work, published now in the journal Nature, is the result of a long-term close collaboration between the physicists in Innsbruck and the Italian scientists. The theoretical physicists from the Trento Bose-Einstein Condensation Center led by Sandro Stringari and Lev Pitaevskii adapted Lev Landau's theory of the description of second sound for the almost one-dimensional geometry of the Innsbruck experiments. Actually Lev Pitaevskii was one of Lev Landau's pupils. "With this model it became easy to interpret the results of our measurement," says Rudolf Grimm. "Moreover, our colleagues from Trento intensely supported our experiment conceptually. The results represent the pinnacle of the collaboration with our partner university in Trento and it is a vital indication for research cooperation within the European Region the Tyrol-South Tyrol-Trentino." In June the University of Innsbruck will award an Honorary Doctorate to Lev Pitaevskii for his close collaboration with the local scientists.

The scientists are supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and the European Research Council (ERC).

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/GcKiFLVR44s/130515131508.htm

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

South Carolina mom shot, killed her two young kids, police say

By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

Two South Carolina children are dead, their father is hospitalized and their mother is accused of murder.

An autopsy report released by the Pickens County Sheriff?s Office on Wednesday said the children ? Sawyer Simpson, 5, and Carly Simpson, 7,?-- were shot multiple times, NBC station WYFF in Greenville, S.C., reported.

An arrest warrant obtained by the station shows that Suzanna Simpson, known as Anna, is charged with two counts of murder and attempted murder of her husband, Michael.?

Suzanna Simpson was under guard at a Greenville hospital, the station reported.

Deputies responding to a vehicle crash in the tiny community of Dacusville just after 6 a.m. on Tuesday found a pickup truck on the side of the road with Anna Simpson behind the wheel, Pickens County Sheriff?s Office spokesman Creed Hashe told the station.

Using the registration document for the truck, deputies went to the Simpson home in the Cherokee Trail area of the town and found the children dead and their father, Michael Simpson, severely wounded.

Michael Simpson remains in critical condition with life-threatening gunshot wounds, according to the sheriff?s office.?

Suzanna Simpson will be booked into county jail as soon as she is released from the hospital, the sheriff?s office said.

A representative with Pickens County Schools, John Eby, told the station Sawyer was a?kindergartner?and Carly was in first grade. Anna Simpson was a very active parent, Eby said.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2bfa6389/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A50C150C182823520Esouth0Ecarolina0Emom0Eshot0Ekilled0Eher0Etwo0Eyoung0Ekids0Epolice0Esay0Dlite/story01.htm

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Buying Real Estate: Why so much? |

There are plenty of expenses when you buy a home. Fees, commissions and charges quickly add up. For some, the extra costs may not be revealed until it is too late; the purchaser is already committed and must pay the fees or lose their deposit.

The largest expense is Land Transfer Tax. The best way to know this amount is to use an online calculator, and there are several if you use Google to find one. The next most obvious cost is the Lawyer. The fees they charge you will be for investigating title to the property you wish to buy, and for time spent reviewing the survey and drafting the appropriate paperwork to protect your interests.

Less obvious charges can arise in the form of adjustments. The Purchase Price will be adjusted to reimburse the seller for any prepaid property taxes, or in the case of a condo, common expenses. Fees are also charged for providing Condominium documents and estoppel certificates. Prepaid utilties can increase the price of your property, as can service charges for moving or establishing new accounts with the utility companies, for phone and for cable or satellite providers. You also have to put some Property insurance in place, and your premiums will start right away. Inspections, appraisals and surveys can also each cost over $150. Find out if you need these services, and confirm the cost of them ahead of time.

Adjustments can also arise in the funding of your mortgage. Interest adjustments are made to ensure that your monthly payments start fresh as principle and interest. Mortgage loan insurance premium and application fees can apply to high ratio mortgages, meaning that you will not be using all of the money you are borrowing toward the cost of the house itself. Some mortgages, though not many, will require you to pay any mortgage broker fees directly, as opposed to the lender paying a commission.

?

Finally, there are moving costs; Trucks, movers, beverages and pizza for your friends and family. With all of these expenses, it?s a wonder anyone ever buys a house.

With all of these costs, your home is a big investment, and an expensive one. Your lawyer is a key player in protecting that investment, and your rights.

Source: http://www.wjpc.ca/?p=541

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U.S. sets $1 billion healthcare innovation initiative

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Obama administration on Wednesday announced a $1 billion initiative to fund innovations in federal healthcare programs aimed at cutting costs while improving the health results.

The Department of Health and Human Services said the money will be used to award and evaluate projects that test new payment and delivery models for federal programs including Medicare, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program.

The announcement marks the second round of innovation initiatives for the administration under President Barack Obama's 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The government is looking for models that can quickly cut costs in outpatient or post-acute settings, improve care for people with special needs, transform healthcare providers' financial and clinical models or improve health conditions by clinical category, geographic area or socioeconomic class.

The application period runs from June 14 to August 15.

(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-sets-1-billion-healthcare-innovation-initiative-140919323.html

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IRS "failed to be completely truthful" to House committee, lawmakers say (Washington Bureau)

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