Saturday, March 30, 2013

Obama takes jobs pitch to Miami

President Barack Obama will promote a plan to create jobs by attracting private investment in highways and other public works during a visit Friday to a Miami port, the White House said.

The president will flesh out details of his proposals in a speech at the port, which is undergoing $2 billion in upgrades paid for with government and private money. Obama, in the quick trip to South Florida, will try to show that the economy remains his top priority in the midst of high-profile campaigns on immigration reform and gun control.

Among the proposals Obama will call for:

?Higher caps on "private activity bonds" to encourage more private spending on highways and other infrastructure projects. State and local governments use the bonds to attract investment.

?Giving foreign pension funds tax-exempt status when selling U.S. infrastructure, property or real estate assets. U.S. pension funds are generally tax exempt in those circumstances. The administration says some international pension funds cite the tax burden as a reason for not investing in American infrastructure.

?$4 billion in new spending on two infrastructure programs that award loans and grants.

?A renewed call for a $10 billion national "infrastructure bank" ? a proposal from his first term that gained little traction.

The president made private-sector infrastructure investment a key part of the economic agenda he rolled out in his State of the Union address last month. He also called in his address for a "Fix-It-First" program that would spend $40 billion in taxpayer funds on urgent repairs.

Obama's focus on generating more private sector investment underscores the tough road new spending faces on Capitol Hill, where Republican lawmakers often threaten to block additional spending unless it is paid for by tax cuts or other measures.

Any increased spending associated with the proposals Obama was outlining Friday would not add to the deficit, a senior administration official said. The official was not authorized to discuss the plan in advance of Obama's announcement and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The official did not detail how the costs would be paid for, saying only that more information would be included in the president's budget.

Obama will release his budget April 10.

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Follow Josh Lederman on Twitter: http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Follow Julie Pace on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-pitch-more-jobs-public-142807078.html

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Dorothy Hamill Endorses Smooth Fitness Equipment | Blablapost

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Source: http://blablapost.com/2013/03/30/dorothy-hamill-endorses-smooth-fitness-equipment/

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New study aims to prevent sports-related brain injury in youngsters

Mar. 28, 2013 ? Ice hockey accounts for nearly half of all traumatic brain injuries among children and youth participating in organized sports who required a trip to an emergency department in Canada, according to a new study out of St. Michael's Hospital.

The results are part of a first-of-its-kind study led by Dr. Michael Cusimano that looked at causes of sports-related brain injuries in Canadian youth and also uncovered some prevention tactics that could be immediately implemented to make sports safer for kids.

"Unless we understand how children are getting hurt in sport, we can't develop ways to prevent these serious injuries from happening," said Dr. Cusimano, a neurosurgeon and the lead author of the study. "One would think that we know the reasons why kids are having brain injuries in sports, but until know, it was based mainly on anecdotes."

The study used data from The Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program to look at the almost 13,000 children and youth aged 5-19 who had a sports-related brain injury between 1990 and 2009. The results appeared in the journal PLOS ONE today.

The researchers categorized injuries by players' ages, what sport they occurred in and what mechanisms had caused them -- "struck by player," "struck by object" (such as net or post), "struck by sport implement" (such as ball or stick), "struck by playing surface" and "other."

Hockey accounted for 44.3 per cent of all injuries and almost 70 per cent of them occurred in children over 10 as a result of player-to-player contact or being hit into the boards.

Dr. Cusimano said they expected to see high numbers in hockey because it's Canada's "national sport."

"This shows that body contact is still an area where we need to make major inroads to preventing brain injuries," Dr. Cusimano said. "For example, enforcing existing rules and making more effective incentives and disincentives about checking from behind could make huge improvements."

Nineteen per cent of the youth who suffered brain injuries got them during soccer, with most in the 10 to 14 or 15 to 19 age group. In these age ranges, the most common cause of injury was being struck by another player, kicks to the head or head-on-head collisions. In the younger group, age five to nine, players were more likely to suffer a traumatic brain injury from striking a surface or a goal post than those in older groups.

"There's a really straightforward solution here," Dr. Cusimano said. "Padding the goal posts could have potentially prevented a large number of these brain injuries in young children."

The results also found that the youngest age group was at the highest risk for getting seriously injured in baseball. Most of the 15.3 per cent of injuries occurred in children under the age of 14, with 45 per cent of them in children under nine.

Ball and bat injuries were most common, with the majority of injuries caused because the players stood too close to the batter or bat and were not supervised by an adult.

"These results give us a very specific prevention message for kids under nine who play baseball: make helmets and supervision a mandatory," said Dr. Cusimano. "The younger the child, the more supervision they need when using things like bats and balls. Simple rules around not being close to the batter can be taught to children and adults."

Football and rugby accounted for 12.9 per cent 5.6 per cent of injuries respectively, and the majority of them were caused by tackling.

Basketball made up 11.6 per cent of injuries, mostly caused by player-to-player elbowing, which increased as players got older.

"There is a real opportunity for prevention here," Dr. Cusimano said. "Having educational programs, proper equipment, rules and other incentives that support a culture of safety in sports should be a mandate of parents, coaches, players, sports organizations, schools, sports sponsors, and other groups like governments."

Funding for the research was provided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Ontario Neurotrauma Foundation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by St. Michael's Hospital, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Michael D. Cusimano, Newton Cho, Khizer Amin, Mariam Shirazi, Steven R. McFaull, Minh T. Do, Matthew C. Wong, Kelly Russell. Mechanisms of Team-Sport-Related Brain Injuries in Children 5 to 19 Years Old: Opportunities for Prevention. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (3): e58868 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0058868

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/3M3mmJkKrl8/130329125301.htm

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Sun block for the 'Big Dog'

Thursday, March 28, 2013

An international team of astronomers, including researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy and from the University of Cologne, successfully identified two titanium oxides in the extended atmosphere around a giant star. The object VY Canis Major is one of the largest stars in the known universe and close to the end of its life. The detection was made using telescope arrays in the USA and in France.

The discovery was made in the course of a study of a spectacular star, VY Canis Majoris or VY CMa for short, which is a variable star located in the constellation Canis Major (Greater Dog). "VY CMa is not an ordinary star, it is one of the largest stars known, and it is close the end of its life," says Tomasz Kami?ski from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR). In fact, with a size of about one to two thousand times that of the Sun, it could extend out to the orbit of Saturn if it were placed in the centre of our Solar System.

The star ejects large quantities of material which forms a dusty nebula. It becomes visible because of the small dust particles that form around it which reflect light from the central star. The complexity of this nebula has been puzzling astronomers for decades. It has been formed as a result of stellar wind, but it is not understood well why it is so far from having a spherical shape.

Neither is known what physical process blows the wind, i.e. what lifts the material up from the stellar surface and makes it expand. "The fate of VY CMa is to explode as a supernova, but it is not known exactly when it will happen", adds Karl Menten, head of the "Millimetre and Submillimetre Astronomy" Department at MPIfR.

Observations at different wavelengths provide different pieces of information which is characteristic for atomic and molecular gas and from which physical properties of an astronomical object can be derived. Each molecule has a characteristic set of lines, something like a 'bar code', that allows to identify what molecules exist in the nebula.

"Emission at short radio wavelengths, in so-called submillimetre waves, is particularly useful for such studies of molecules", says Sandra Br?nken from the University of Cologne. "The identification of molecules is easier and usually a larger abundance of molecules can be observed than at other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum."

The research team observed TiO and TiO2 for the first time at radio wavelengths. In fact, titanium dioxide has been seen in space unambiguously for the first time. It is known from every-day life as the main component of the commercially most important white pigment (known by painters as "titanium white") or as an ingredient in sunscreens. It is also quite possible that the reader consumed some amounts of it as it is used to colour food (coded as E171 in the labels).

However, stars, especially the coolest of them, are expected to eject large quantities of titanium oxides, which, according to theory, form at relatively high temperatures close to the star. "They tend to cluster together to form dust particles visible in the optical or in the infrared," says Nimesh Patel from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. "And the catalytic properties of TiO2 may influence the chemical processes taking place on these dust particles, which are very important for forming larger molecules in space", adds Holger M?ller from the University of Cologne.

Absorption features of TiO have been known from spectra in the visible region for more than a hundred years. In fact, these features are used in part to classify some types of stars with low surface temperatures (M- and S-type stars). The pulsation of Mira stars, one specific class of variable stars, is thought to be caused by titanium oxide. Mira stars, supergiant variable stars in a late stage of their evolution, are named after their prototype star "Mira" (the wonderful) in the constellation of Cetus (the 'sea monster' or the 'whale').

The observations of TiO and TiO2 show that the two molecules are easily formed around VY CMa at a location that is more or less as predicted by theory. It seems, however, that some portion of those molecules avoid forming dust and are observable as gas phase species. Another possibility is that the dust is destroyed in the nebula and releases fresh TiO molecules back to the gas. The latter scenario is quite likely as parts of the wind in VY CMa seem to collide with each other.

The new detections at submillimetre wavelengths are particularly important because they allow studying the process of dust formation. Also, at optical wavelengths, the radiation emitted by the molecules is scattered by dust present in the extended nebula which blurs the picture, while this effect is negligible at radio wavelengths allowing for more precise measurements.

The discoveries of TiO and TiO2 in the spectrum of VY CMa have been made with the Submillimetre Array (SMA), a radio interferometer located at Hawaii, USA. Because the instrument combines eight antennas which worked together as one big telescope 226-meters in size, astronomers were able to make observations at unprecedented sensitivity and angular resolution. A confirmation of the new detections was successively made later with the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) located in the French Alps.

###

Astronomy & Astrophysics, Volume 551, A113 (March 2013). DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201220290.

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft: http://www.mpg.de

Thanks to Max-Planck-Gesellschaft 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 35 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127502/Sun_block_for_the__Big_Dog_

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What Types of Writing Careers Exist Online? - Writing Speaking Tips

Number of View: 22

In the ?real world?, there are many different types of writing careers that you can get into if you are interested in writing for a living. You may want to write for your local newspaper or magazine, you could be an editor, or you could work on short stories, poems, or even a novel. But getting these types of jobs can be difficult if you don?t have experience and you don?t have a few degrees under your belt.

Thankfully, the internet has opened up a huge market for writers, both those with experience and those without. On the internet, you can be anyone you want to be, and if you say you are experienced, then who is anyone to question you? As long as you can turn out the work on time and it meets with your client?s satisfaction, then they have no reason to ask to see a copy of your diploma!

The fact is, there are an abundance of writing careers online right now, some of which pay extremely good money. Because the internet itself is based on lots and lots of text, someone has to be responsible for creating all of those stories, articles, website, and blogs ? and that someone could well be you. That is why writing careers are the fastest growing are of employment online.

For people who enjoy fast, informal writing, then writing blogs is an incredibly lucrative way to make money writing. These writing careers are essentially based on writing someone else?s blog so that they can make money selling a product or service. You are acting as a ghostwriter and your name will never be seen on the website. You can also write your own blog or website and make money on affiliate marketing, but that is often more effort than it is worth.

Article marketing is also a very profitable way to turn keystrokes into dollars. Many writers are finding that by writing articles on products or services for a client, there is an almost never-ending source of work. These articles are usually very short, easy to write, and require little to no research. You might not get paid much per article, but if you can type quickly, then this type of high-volume writing can provide you with a very good, steady income.

There are also more traditional writing careers online such as in the area of technical writing. Large companies with websites are always looking for freelance technical writers who can help them re-write their website, make it more user-friendly, or to introduce new material to their readership. The compensation on a per word basis is usually much better for technical writing, but it takes longer and there is not as much of this type of work online.

The truth is that as long as you can type, you have a computer, an internet connection, and you can find your way around the internet fairly easily, then you should have no trouble making a living online both now and in the years to come.

Vincent P. King is a professional ghostwriter who writes about any topic under the sun and helps good writers earn a great living.

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Source: http://www.writingspeakingtips.com/what-types-of-writing-careers-exist-online/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Are Hackers Heroes?

"Hacker" is one of the most loaded Internet words getting thrown around these days. To many (hi cable news), the label is inherently malicious, and goes hand in hand with threats to blow up the interwebs. Others who self-identify as such, will never ever stop whining about how it means just the opposite. But are hackers of either flavor heroes? Can they be? More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Sq2fsfI5VSQ/are-hackers-heroes

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

'Pawn Stars': John F. Kennedy's Presidential Cigar Box, Complete With Unsmoked Cigars (VIDEO)

  • "666 Park Avenue"

    <strong>"666 Park Ave.," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/666-park-avenue-canceled_n_2147290.html">ABC pulled the plug</a> on this supernatural drama earlier in the season.

  • "The Bachelor"

    <strong>"The Bachelor," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: While ratings may have dropped, "The Bachelor" will likely see another season on ABC as tabloids and viewers still care about the comings and goings of contestants.

  • "Body of Proof"

    <strong>"Body of Proof," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: ABC is keen on this Dana Delany drama, but the ratings for this upcoming third season will be the true test.

  • "Castle"

    <strong>"Castle," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed. <strong>Why</strong>: Strong ratings and a dedicated viewership will keep "Castle" on the schedule.

  • "Dancing With the Stars"

    <strong>"Dancing With the Stars," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The series is hurting in the ratings ... by "DWTS" standards. It's still a strong player for ABC, but the new season hasn't premiered yet.

  • "Don't Trust The B---- In Apt. 23"

    <strong>"Don't Trust The B---- In Apt. 23," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/22/apartment-23-canceled-dont-trust-the-b_n_2528858.html">ABC pulled the low-rated comedy</a> from it schedule and the stars took to Twitter to announce the cancellation.

  • "Family Tools"

    <strong>"Family Tools," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: This ABC comedy has yet to debut, but a May 1 premiere date doesn't look great.

  • "Grey's Anatomy"

    <strong>"Grey's Anatomy," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: America still loves McDreamy and the goings on at Seattle Grace. Expect "Grey's" to return.

  • "Happy Endings"

    <strong>"Happy Endings," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Always the bubble show, never the surefire renewal hit. "Happy Endings" has suffered from many ratings ailments, including bad scheduling (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/happy-endings-friday-abc_n_2683091.html">it's moving to Friday night</a>) and lack of promo. But this ahmahzing show has some serious fans that could keep it afloat for another season ... maybe on another network (a la "Cougar Town.")

  • "How To Live With Your Parents (For The Rest Of Your Life)"

    <strong>"How To Live With Your Parents (For The Rest Of Your Life)," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The ABC comedy starring Sarah Chalke has yet to debut, but its late season bow doesn't exactly bode well for its future.

  • "Last Man Standing"

    <strong>"Last Man Standing," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Viewers still love Tim Allen! Paired with "Malibu Country," "Last Man Standing" has been performing well on Friday nights and <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/jonathan-taylor-thomas-last-man-standing-home-improvement_n_2686307.html">will soon see Allen's "Home Improvement" co-star Jonathan Tyler Thomas</a>.

  • "Last Resort"

    <strong>"Last Resort," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/last-resort-canceled-abc_n_2147316.html">ABC killed the Shawn Ryan drama</a> in late 2012.

  • "Malibu Country"

    <strong>"Malibu Country," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: "Malibu Country" has been performing well on Friday nights. Lesson: Never underestimate the star power of Reba.

  • "The Middle"

    <strong>"The Middle," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Now in its fourth season, "The Middle" is still pulling in more than 8 million viewers an episode as the anchor of ABC's Wednesday comedies.

  • "Mistresses"

    <strong>"Mistresses," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The drama, which is based on the UK series of the same name, just got a Monday, May 27 premiere date. Though the scheduling struggle doesn't bode well, the ABC drama does have Alyssa Milano and "Lost" alum Yunjin Kim leading the foursome.

  • "Modern Family"

    <strong>"Modern Family," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A fan favorite and Emmy darling, "Modern Family" will be back and will make ABC lots of money in syndication.

  • "Nashville"

    <strong>"Nashville," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Critical acclaim doesn't always equate to rating success. The show has stabilized in Nielsen ratings, but its future really depends on the strength of ABC's drama pilots.

  • "The Neighbors"

    <strong>"The Neighbors," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: One of the few "hits" of the season, "The Neighbors" has found an audience and kept it pretty steadily week after week (<a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/11/abc-shows-fall-tv-2012-2013_n_1581796.html">much to our dismay</a>).

  • "Once Upon a Time"

    <strong>"Once Upon a Time," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A ratings hit in its second season, "Once Upon a Time" is almost sure to be back for a third season full of fairytale adventures.

  • "Private Practice"

    <strong>"Private Practice," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Ended <strong>Why</strong>: The "Grey's Anatomy" spinoff said goodbye in January 2013.

  • "Red Widow"

    <strong>"Red Widow," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: The show has a late February debut on ABC.

  • "Revenge"

    <strong>"Revenge," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: "Revenge" has fallen out of critical favor and seen lower ratings in its new Sunday night home. But none of ABC's freshman dramas are doing well, so that works in the show's favor.

  • "Rookie Blue"

    <strong>"Rookie Blue," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The Canadian co-production will return for a fourth season on ABC during the summer of 2013.

  • "Scandal"

    <strong>"Scandal," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Shonda Rhimes has another hit on her hands. Now in its second season, "Scandal" has benefited from word-of-mouth and has been rising in the ratings (even recently beating out its lead in "Grey's Anatomy"). A likable star -- Kerry Washington -- and continued buzz will keep "Scandal" on the schedule.

  • "Suburgatory"

    <strong>"Suburgatory," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: The series started Season 2 off strong in the ratings, but its audience has slowly eroded. Its not the worst-performing ABC sitcom, but its buzziness has died down as well.

  • "Zero Hour"

    <strong>"Zero Hour," ABC</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: The Anthony Edwards vehicle debuted to 6.3 million viewers with a 1.3 rating in the key 18-49 demographic, making it <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/15/zero-hour-ratings_n_2695800.html">the least-watched premiere for a scripted series in ABC's history</a>. Things only got worse from there.

  • "2 Broke Girls"

    <strong>"2 Broke Girls," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: It's not doing "The Big Bang Theory" numbers, but "2 Broke Girls" has maintained a viewership over its two seasons.

  • "The Amazing Race"

    <strong>"The Amazing Race," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: As an Emmy and fan favorite, "The Amazing Race" has been a strong player for CBS.

  • "The Big Bang Theory"

    <strong>"The Big Bang Theory," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Now in its sixth season, "Big Bang" is reaching series-high ratings. Even up against reality powerhouse "American Idol," "The Big Bang Theory" has been delivering with crazy high numbers in the 18-49 demographic, beating out what was once Fox's juggernaut.

  • "Blue Bloods"

    <strong>"Blue Bloods," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The Tom Selleck-fronted police drama is a strong ratings performer for CBS on Fridays. It will likely be back to help launch new Friday shows and produce enough episodes to enter syndication.

  • "Criminal Minds"

    <strong>"Criminal Minds," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: As one of CBS's strong procedural players, the series has been steady in the ratings and will likely be renewed to help anchor a night and launch a new drama.

  • "CSI"

    <strong>"CSI," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Of the two "CSI" shows on the air, "CSI" is the stronger player in the TV landscape. The show is nowhere near its earlier ratings, but after such a successful run, CBS would be smart to bring the show -- and some old faces back -- for an abbreviated farewell season.

  • "CSI: NY"

    <strong>"CSI: NY," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: The spinoff series will be entering Season 10 in the 2013-2014 season. The ratings have faded over the years, but they're still pretty stable, especially for Fridays. It's a toss up, depending on how well CBS's development slate goes.

  • "Elementary"

    <strong>"Elementary," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: One of the very few freshman series hits during the 2012-2013 TV season, CBS is very keen on this modern-day take on Sherlock Holmes. The audience has been steady and the network even gave it the post-Super Bowl timeslot.

  • "Golden Boy"

    <strong>"Golden Boy," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Too soon to tell <strong>Why</strong>: CBS certainly has a handsome star at the front of this cop drama, but its late season entry and Friday timeslot could be a hint toward CBS's confidence in the show.

  • "The Good Wife"

    <strong>"The Good Wife," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: A former ratings champ, "The Good Wife" has slipped to series low ratings on Sunday nights. Blame football overrun, fan-detested storylines or too many guest stars, but "The Good Wife" is certainly in the danger zone. What it has going for it: star power and critical praise, plus its nearing a good syndication sweet spot.

  • "Hawaii Five-0"

    <strong>"Hawaii Five-0," CBS</strong <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Its ratings -- bouncing around 8-10 million viewers an episode, are great ... if you're a show on NBC. By CBS standards, they're kind of meh, but this show has stars with very active fan followings. CBS could axe the drama to make room for new procedurals, or stick with it to get the show close to syndication gold.

  • "How I Met Your Mother"

    <strong>"How I Met Your Mother," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS handed out a ninth and final season to this comedy with the entire cast returning. Expect to meet the mother, finally.

  • "Made In Jersey"

    <strong>"Made In Jersey," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: CBS pulled the plug on this legal drama very early on in the season because of low ratings.

  • "The Mentalist"

    <strong>"The Mentalist," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: "The Mentalist" has fallen to mediocre ratings -- by CBS standards -- and could be axed in favor of making room for a new drama.

  • "Mike & Molly"

    <strong>"Mike & Molly," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The ratings are down a little bit from last year, but Melissa McCarthy's star continues to rise. CBS will likely bring the show back for another season.

  • "NCIS"

    <strong>"NCIS," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS reached a deal with series star Mark Harmon in early 2013, keeping the No. 1 show in America around for a Season 11.

  • "NCIS: LA"

    <strong>"NCIS: LA," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: Viewers love their "NCIS," in any form. The ratings have been strong and the network is producing a backdoor spinoff pilot for this spinoff show. A full night of "NCIS" could be in CBS's future.

  • "Partners"

    <strong>"Partners," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Canceled <strong>Why</strong>: Low ratings and unfavorable reviews led to the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/16/partners-canceled-cbs_n_2145832.html">early demise</a> of this CBS comedy.

  • "Person of Interest"

    <strong>"Person of Interest," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The series has developed a nice-sized audience, bigger than its first season.

  • "Rules of Engagement"

    <strong>"Rules of Engagement," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Honestly, who knows <strong>Why</strong>: This comedy has been on the bubble since it premiered ... yet is now in its seventh season. It's too soon to look at the numbers for this season, but the show has been a midseason success for CBS in the past. However, series co-star <a href="http://insidetv.ew.com/2013/02/07/cbs-orders-comedy-pilot-starring-patrick-warburton/">Patrick Warburton is attached to star in a new pilot</a> ... for CBS.

  • "Survivor"

    <strong>"Survivor," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: A strong player for the last 13 years, "Survivor" will likely be back. But due to its <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/14/survivor-ratings-lowest-premiere-ever_n_2687591.html">most recent premiere ratings</a>, we might not see it during the fall season, though a midseason or summer return -- with some new gimmick -- is definitely in the cards for the reality series.

  • "Two and a Half Men"

    <strong>"Two and a Half Men," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: CBS wants another season of this bawdy hit, it's just a matter of getting its stars to sign back on.

  • "Undercover Boss"

    <strong>"Undercover Boss," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Likely to be renewed <strong>Why</strong>: The show is enjoying life in syndication and its Season 4 numbers are better than most of its third season.

  • "Unforgettable"

    <strong>"Unforgettable," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: Uncanceled <strong>Why</strong>: CBS canceled the Poppy Montgomery drama last season ... and then revived it! Season 2 premieres Sunday, July 28.

  • "Vegas"

    <strong>"Vegas," CBS</strong> <strong>Status</strong>: On the bubble <strong>Why</strong>: Despite star power, the series hasn't been a breakout hit in the ratings. CBS previously canceled "Unforgettable" (then uncanceled it) last season when it was doing about the same as "Vegas."

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/12/pawn-stars-jfk-cigar-box-video_n_2858217.html

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    WD TV Play


    Western Digital's latest media hub, the WD TV Play, tries to strike a balance for cord-cutters, offering some streaming services along with local file playback for a lower price ($69.99 list) than its Roku 2 XD (and $100 soon-to-be-reviewed Roku 3)?and Apple TV competitors. But as a cord-cutter myself, I found that the WD TV Play doesn't offer quite enough of anything, so I'd suggest that you pay a little more for your set-top box.

    Three Different Approaches to Cord-Cutting
    While many of today's smart HDTVs and Blu-ray players come with Netflix and the ability to play local files from USB sticks, serious cord-cutters often still turn to dedicated streaming boxes like the Play. The streaming apps tossed onto Blu-Ray players can feel like buggy afterthoughts, and these players rarely offer the range of local file format support you see in media hubs.

    Roku, Apple, and WD TV come from three different set-top box lineages. Apple's box is all about extending the company's smooth, seamless, and closed ecosystem to TVs. It's a great ride as long as you're comfortable with doing everything Apple's way and buying only from iTunes. Roku, on the other hand, is a streaming native. It aims to deliver as many streaming services as it can, without fear or favor, so you get a half-dozen big-name movie services, for instance. But it's always had an uneasy, clunky relationship with any media you actually possess at home.

    Born from a hard-drive purveyor, the WD TV line has always been the choice for people like myself who have large personal media libraries. While they also stream from a range of services, the current WD TV Live and WD TV Live Hub products really shine when they're playing media from local or network drives, and their ability to crunch almost any file format is legendary.

    The Play is WD's attempt to eat Roku's lunch. By stripping out some codec support and a USB port and focusing on streaming, WD is appealing to the plug-and-play cord-cutter who doesn't have a big library of ripped DVDs. But it can't quite measure up to the competition.

    Physical Features and Performance
    The WD TV Play is a petite plastic box measuring 1 by 4.1 by 4.1 inches (HWD) and weighing just 4.9 ounces, making it only slightly bigger than the tiny Roku 3 and Apple TV. Around back, there's a USB port for local storage, along with an Ethernet port and composite video, HDMI, and digital audio outputs. The only indicator on the front is a dim, blue power light, and there are no controls on the box itself other than a reset hole on the bottom. I hooked the box to an HDTV up in less than a minute by plugging in power, Ethernet, and HDMI.

    The black plastic IR remote is simple to use, with big dedicated rubber buttons for Netflix, Hulu, and Vudu video services. Unfortunately, our test unit often responded sluggishly to the remote, and the directional keypad is a drag when you're typing searches into on-screen keyboards. I had better luck with WD's free smartphone remote app, which works with Android and iOS phones. The Play responded very quickly to the app, which has multiple screens, a pop-up QWERTY keyboard, and quick access buttons for all of the Play's services. You can also plug a USB keyboard into the single USB port, although you then lose the ability to access local storage.

    I had no trouble connecting the Play to both wired Ethernet and wireless 802.11n networks, and connecting via HDMI to both 720p and 1080p TVs. It auto-detected each TV's maximum resolution and set itself up appropriately. You need a good 10Mbps Internet connection to stream 1080p video, but I had no problem doing so from several different services.

    I ran into some bugs and instability while testing the Play. Some of the channels didn't support the remote's Back button, only Home, and at one point I needed to pull the plug to kill a misbehaving CinemaNow screen. WD has assured me that a bug-fixing firmware update in the works.

    33 Channels and?What's On?
    The best thing about the new WD TV Play is its configurable home screen. Like an Android phone, it's a set of user-configurable, resizable widgets. You can stick with the default collection or paste your favorite services onto the main home screen. That means you'll never have to page through channels you don't use. You can also install live widgets which show updates right on the home screen?the weather one is best?or shortcuts to folders deep within a big local hard drive.

    Joy turns into a bit of frustration when you dip into the full list of WD's 33 streaming channels. Netflix, Hulu+, and Vudu are the flagship services. In terms of big-name entertainment you can also get CinemaNow, Pandora, Spotify, Vimeo, and YouTube.?

    I immediately noticed two huge gaps, which might be deal-breakers: Amazon is missing, and there's no professional sports content. While WD has two college sports channels, you won't find NBA, MLB or NHL, unlike on Roku and Apple TV boxes. I also missed Epix, Crackle, VEVO, and HBO GO, all available on Roku's boxes. WD says more channels are coming, but it won't say what or when.

    The company seems to have burned some energy on writing its own semi-pointless social networking apps. The Twitter and Facebook apps here show simple, low-density news feeds rather than doing smart things like finding a way to integrate Tweets with the particular movie or TV show you're watching.

    Other channels include AOL.TV (video blogs from AOL Web sites), AccuWeather, Comedy Time (stand-up comedy clips), an odd linear feed from DailyMotion, Facebook, Flickr, Flixster (movie trailers), Funspot (casual games), Launchpad (which looks like it has big names like A&E and FunnyOrDie, but very limited content from each one), Live365 radio, an RSS reader, Picasa, Red Bull TV, Shoutcast radio, SlingPlayer, SnagFilms (indie stuff), TuneIn Radio, Viewster (more random indie films), WatchMojo ('infotainment') and YuppTV (Indian subcontinent programming).

    Options to play your own media are more limited than what you get with WD's other products. There's one USB port which accepts flash drives or hard drives, and the box can also detect DLNA servers on your home network. The ability to put arbitrary local folders on the home screen puts the Play way ahead of Roku on that count. The Play also continues WD's legacy of being able to handle a really wide variety of formats, including H.264, x.264, Xvid, DivX, MOV, WMV, and AVI and MKV containers, along with multiple audio and subtitle tracks.

    However, the Play can't handle some video formats that the higher-end WD TV Live can play, like "raw" ripped DVD folders, MPEG2 video, DTS audio, and 1080p video files at greater than 24 frames per second. More annoyingly, I found that the box had trouble with a few completely arbitrary Xvid and MKV files that an older WD TV could play, while other Xvid and MKV files worked fine on the new box. Maybe this will also get fixed with a firmware upgrade, but it underscores the fact that the WD TV Live Hub is the one to get for people with large locally stored video libraries.

    A positive note for a chosen few: Like other WD TVs, this box appears to be hackable and based on a considerable amount of GPLed open-source code. Earlier WD TV boxes have a lively alternative-firmware community, so that could happen for the Play as well.

    Conclusions
    If you're looking to stream content off the Internet, the Roku boxes, including the $50 Roku LT), are a better bet than the WD TV Play; they have far more channels available, including professional sports, a better selection of movies, and HBO.

    If you have a lot of downloaded or ripped content, you should turn to the $100 WD TV Live or $200 WD TV Live Hub, depending on whether or not you already own a big external hard drive. Those models play an even wider range of video formats than the WD TV Play does, including maintaining the menu layouts of ripped DVDs. They're the gold standard for local media jukeboxes.

    Apple's Apple TV, meanwhile, has received rave reviews because of its gorgeous interface and extreme ease of use, as long as you're willing to live within an all-Apple world for your purchased media.

    That leaves the WD TV Play in an uncomfortable middle spot. It doesn't support enough services to be a streaming king, and doesn't play enough formats to be a local-video hero. While I absolutely love its configurable interface, I'd like to see that interface appear next on a more capable product.

    More Media Hub and Receiver reviews:
    ??? WD TV Play
    ??? Dish Network Hopper With Sling
    ??? Vizio Co-Star VAP430
    ??? Sony Internet Player With Google TV (NSZ-GS7)
    ??? NuVo P100 Wireless Player
    ?? more

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/cKQFRR5xuRo/0,2817,2416400,00.asp

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    Wednesday, March 13, 2013

    6 months post-Benghazi, Obama taps new Libya envoy

    FILE - In this March 8, 2010 file photo, then-US Ambassador to Kuwait Deborah Jones is seen in Kuwait City. President Barack Obama nominated a new ambassador to Libya on Wednesday, filling a post that has been vacant since Chris Stevens was killed in the Sept. 11 Benghazi attack and signaling the United States' commitment to the North African country as it undergoes a perilous transition from decades of dictatorship. The White House tapped Deborah K. Jones, a career diplomat who has served in Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and the now-shuttered U.S. Embassy in Syria. Jones, who currently works as a scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington, also has spent time at embassies in Turkey and Ethiopia. (AP Photo/Gustavo Ferrari, File)

    FILE - In this March 8, 2010 file photo, then-US Ambassador to Kuwait Deborah Jones is seen in Kuwait City. President Barack Obama nominated a new ambassador to Libya on Wednesday, filling a post that has been vacant since Chris Stevens was killed in the Sept. 11 Benghazi attack and signaling the United States' commitment to the North African country as it undergoes a perilous transition from decades of dictatorship. The White House tapped Deborah K. Jones, a career diplomat who has served in Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and the now-shuttered U.S. Embassy in Syria. Jones, who currently works as a scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington, also has spent time at embassies in Turkey and Ethiopia. (AP Photo/Gustavo Ferrari, File)

    Secretary of State John Kerry, accompanied by Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan gestures as he speaks to reporters during their joint news conference at the State Department in Washington, Wednesday, March 13, 2013. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

    (AP) ? President Barack Obama nominated a new ambassador to Libya on Wednesday, filling a post that has been vacant since Chris Stevens was killed in the Sept. 11 Benghazi attack and signaling the United States' commitment to the North African country as it undergoes a perilous transition from decades of dictatorship.

    The announcement came as Secretary of State John Kerry was meeting Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zidan, and two days after the six-month anniversary of the storming of the U.S. diplomatic mission in the eastern Libyan city. No one has yet been captured for the attack, which has caused significant political headaches for Obama and his foreign policy team.

    "The United States will continue to stand with Libya during this difficult time of transition," Kerry told reporters. "The Libyan people have begun to chart the course for their own future, and they're defining it. Obviously there are challenges ahead and we understand that, from building political consensus to strengthening the security and protecting human rights, and growing the Libyan economy."

    Kerry thanked the Libyan government for its cooperation after the Benghazi attack and insisted that "those who killed Americans in Benghazi will be brought to justice." He promised Zidan that America would continue working for a stable Libya.

    "We must not walk away from the difficult work that Chris Stevens and his cohorts were so dedicated to," Kerry said. Stevens was the first ambassador killed in the line of duty since the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan in 1979.

    To replace Stevens, the White House tapped Deborah K. Jones, a career diplomat who has served in Kuwait, United Arab Emirates and the now-shuttered U.S. Embassy in Syria. Jones, who currently works as a scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington, also has spent time at embassies in Turkey and Ethiopia.

    Jones will assume a difficult position heading the embassy in Libya's capital, Tripoli. The North African country has been beset by lawlessness, militant group rivalries and political instability since rebels, with the help of the U.S. and other governments, overthrew long-time dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

    "She is a very capable and experienced diplomat," Kerry said of Jones. "I have no doubt that she will help to strengthen the partnership between us."

    Zidan also met with Obama and his national security adviser Tom Donilon at the White House.

    The president added his support Libya's democratic efforts and outlined areas the U.S. could help the government strengthen its institutions and improve the rule of law, according to a statement by Caitlin Hayden, spokeswoman for the National Security Council.

    From Washington's perspective, the most pressing problem is insecurity.

    Stevens and three other Americans were killed a half-year ago when a large group of men, possibly tied to Islamic extremist groups, assaulted the American outpost in Benghazi, and the help that arrived proved far too little and too late.

    The militant group Ansar Al-Shariah is suspected of carrying out the attack, which the administration initially attributed to a protest over an American-made, anti-Islam video that spiraled out of control. Officials later retracted that account and called it a terror attack. But no one has been punished in Libya or elsewhere for involvement.

    Zidan has been trying to reassert government control over Libya. Last month, he called on militias to evacuate buildings and headquarters and join government security forces, vowing that his government will take a hardline stand against any armed group that tries to hijack control of "Tripoli or Benghazi or any other city."

    However, the Libyan government heavily depends on security provided by commanders of several powerful militias that the president has labeled "legitimate" forces. Militias in Libya often act with impunity, running their own prison cells, making arrests and taking confessions in total absence of state control and oversight.

    The lawlessness also has allowed Gadhafi's once-vast stock of weapons to fall into the hands of extremists who've sparked a civil war in neighboring Mali. A France-led intervention has pushed back the Islamist militants after they seized half the country last year.

    Speaking next to Kerry, Zidan thanked Obama and the U.S. for its key contribution in the effort to defeat Gadhafi. He said Libya would partner the U.S. in stabilizing his country and region.

    "This relationship will be at the best level," Zidan, in his first to trip to Washington as prime minister, said through an interpreter.

    ___

    Associated Press National Security Writer Lara Jakes contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-13-US-US-Libya/id-c2b7f92cb0ee4cbd845852d60de97805

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    Saturday, March 9, 2013

    Cats Die After Family Abandons Home | WREG.com ? Memphis ...

    (Bartlett) ? For days a vile smell has seeped out of a home at 3129 Marr Cove in Bartlett.

    It?s the unmistakable smell of death.

    ?Whenever I walk outside my door I smell it,? neighbor Ashley Brustow said. ?I saw the cats in the window and I thought they were dead.?

    Brustow?s worst suspicions were confirmed Thursday when police searched the home after getting a tip from a concerned neighbor.

    Inside they say feces covered the entire floor and furniture.

    Four cats were found dead.

    ?I?m really just kind of shocked by the whole incident,? neighbor Michael Geiger said.

    Neighbors said Robert and Teresa Massie and their two daughters Emma and Caitlin abandoned their home about four months ago.

    ?One day out of nowhere they just weren`t around anymore,? Geiger said.

    The daughters told police they would stop by the home every two to three weeks to feed the cats, but police say they didn?t find any water for the cats inside.

    According to city records the water was shut off at the home on February 20th for nonpayment. The family owes the city more than $1000.

    The veterinarian determined the cats all died from ?complications due to severe dehydration.?

    ?That`s very unfortunate given the fact that had someone have known something we could have provided some aid,? Geiger said.

    Police call the Massie family?s actions ?depraved and sadistic.?

    Friday each one of them was charged with four counts of aggravated animal cruelty and given a $5,000 bond.

    Neighbors hope the next step will be condemning the home they call an unsanitary horror.

    Source: http://wreg.com/2013/03/08/cats-die-after-family-abandons-home/

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    Why Almost Nobody Likes News About Pakistani Nuclear Security

    HONOLULU --?There?s an old adage about blaming the messenger who bears bad news ? a practice often applied to journalists -- but when it comes to disturbing media revelations about the potential theft or unauthorized use of Pakistani nuclear weapons, fingers point in all directions.

    Pakistani officials blame their U.S. counterparts for press leaks on some of the most sensitive aspects of their security apparatus. South Asia experts in Washington decry media coverage for sometimes being inaccurate, inflammatory or harmful to relations between the two countries. Public interest advocates in both nations criticize the Pakistani military for a lack of transparency on nuclear security policies and practices that might endanger the region?s population.

    Over the years, Pakistanis have said Western news reports focus undue attention on periodic violent assaults by extremists against the nation?s military bases, and on the possibility that someday an atomic weapon might be seized.

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    Last August, for example, armed militants attacked the Minhas air force installation roughly 25 miles northwest of the capital, where some of the nation?s estimated 100 nuclear warheads are believed stored. The two-hour battle left one security official and eight insurgents dead.

    Pakistani military officials reportedly said in 2012 the army had bolstered defenses at another key nuclear site, the Dera Ghazi Khan installation, after seeing indications it could come under Taliban attack.

    Though it is unclear whether the Pakistani Taliban has designs on acquiring a nuclear weapon or materials for a radiological ?dirty bomb,? al-Qaida operatives also present in the region have said they would use a Pakistani bomb to attack the United States, if the opportunity arose.

    As not much reporting about Pakistan has focused lately on good news, officials in Islamabad and some in Washington complain that Westerners are left with a simplistic and overly dire impression of a highly vulnerable arsenal, mistaking speculation and media hype for facts.

    Twenty-one Pakistani and U.S. journalists are gathering here this week to discuss this and other challenges affecting their respective news coverage at a forum co-sponsored by the Honolulu-based East-West Center and the Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency, headquartered in Islamabad.

    Pakistani nuclear weapons have been shrouded by secrecy since their initial development in the early 1970s. Even now, little about them is publicly known. The information deficit underscores public concerns about security measures in a country that has become home base for several jihadist organizations.

    Leading up to Islamabad?s first nuclear test-detonation in 1998, Washington and other capitals opposed Pakistani development of a deterrent that, like neighboring rival India?s, falls outside the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty regime. It has thus lacked the international legitimacy given to the world?s five officially recognized atomic arsenals in China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and United States.

    Stability in Pakistan is today a mixed bag. This month, new national elections are to be called for what would be the country's first peaceful civilian transfer of power. While the overall number of terrorist incidents declined in 2012, sectarian-based attacks were on the rise, according to a recent report by the Pak Institute for Peace Studies. Fears are also growing about cross-border instability as U.S. troops withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

    U.S. diplomats and military leaders have for years conducted an off-and-on dialogue with their Pakistani counterparts about how best nuclear weapons and sensitive fissile materials might be safeguarded from theft or misuse.

    Islamabad?s warheads are believed stored at multiple sites apart from their delivery vehicles. Washington officialdom has repeatedly expressed public confidence in the arsenal?s safety, but occasionally has also sounded notes of concern.

    On even the smallest chance that the Pakistani government might someday lose control of nuclear arms in a crisis or potentially even civil war, U.S. military planners have developed contingency plans for entering the South Asian nation with the aim of helping secure the arsenal, Global Security Newswire and other media have reported.

    The desktop exercises are among hundreds carried out by each U.S. combatant command -- with scenarios ranging widely from likely to wacky -- as a means of being ready for almost any global crisis in which the president might conceivably order a military mission.

    Though such Defense Department thought drills are highly secret, they have been accompanied by public calls from Bush-era envoy John Bolton and a number of others who say a potentially explosive mix of jihadists and nuclear weapons might require U.S. military intervention.

    Published commentaries of this sort -- as well as media reporting on so-called Pentagon ?what if? drills -- have gone viral in Pakistan. The alleged military vulnerabilities understandably have provoked much public anxiety.

    The nation?s civilian politicians and powerful military, staunchly supporting what Pakistanis widely view as their defense trump card, have at times suspected that the prolific talk of crisis-contingency plans belie a serious U.S. desire to seize its atomic arms.

    ?When the U.S. says that they are worried about the security [of] Pakistan?s nuclear arms, it means it fears that these might fall in the hands of such elements as the extremists Taliban,? said a commentary published by Pakistan?s Frontier Post in late 2011. ?However, when [former Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood] Qureshi says so, he means that these are in danger of being whisked away by the U.S. armed forces.?

    The same year, the nation?s Daily Mail reported that one well-known strategic analyst and newspaper columnist had claimed on Islamabad?s version of ?Meet the Press? that the U.S. interest in Pakistan?s arsenal is part of a broad strategy to control the South Asian country, gain access to its energy resources and contain China.

    ?The U.S. intends to [put] nuclear assets of Pakistan under the supervision of the United [Nations]? and ?that is why she pressurizes Pakistan by painting a picture of chaos and instability in the country,? Shireen Mazari was quoted as saying.

    Pakistani concerns of this sort became particularly acute following the May 2011 U.S. assault that killed al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden, according to issue experts.

    Many uniformed officers in Islamabad suspect their U.S. counterparts in the military and diplomatic corps of leaking stories about Pakistani atomic force weaknesses -- and about potential grab-and-go operations -- as a means of sowing public doubt and humiliating the South Asian nation, Washington officials say.

    After a number of these news reports have appeared, Pakistani officials have gone silent about the nuclear arms in military-to-military and other bilateral dialogues, reportedly citing a loss of trust, according to U.S. government sources.

    U.S. issue experts have voiced concern that chilled exchanges could ultimately harm security by effectively cutting off Pentagon and State Department guidance and support for Pakistan in joint efforts to prevent a catastrophic incident.

    Public calls for a possible U.S. military intervention during a crisis ? or even simply voicing concerns about Pakistan?s nuclear safeguards in peacetime ? have ?really made it difficult? for Washington officials to sustain a dialogue with that nation?s army about possible security improvements to be made, said one U.S. government official interviewed last week.

    ?Anything that?s out there that paints Pakistan in a negative light -- on what they consider the crown jewel of their security -- has an impact on our bilateral relationship,? the source said.

    This Washington official and a number of others agreed to be interviewed for this article on condition of not being named, citing diplomatic sensitivities.

    ?I believe that the commentary and reporting about contingency planning to scoop up nuclear weapons in Pakistan is certainly not helpful,? agreed Michael Krepon, co-founder of the Stimson Center and director of its South Asia program. ?It?s your job to report the news. But reporting the news is different than reporting speculative assessments.?

    Though Pentagon planning drills might be uncontroversial in the United States, they are perceived quite differently halfway around the world, according to some issue experts.

    ?Whatever the U.S. says gets amplified a thousand times in Pakistan,? Pervez Hoodbhoy, a physics professor at Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, said in an e-mail exchange last week. ?It is therefore better that its worries about Pakistani nukes be kept private.?

    A Defense Department spokesman took a moderate stance on the matter.

    ?Media reporting plays an important role in informing the public, and it is important to us that the reporting is accurate,? Lt. Col. James Gregory said in a written response to questions last week. ?But our relationship with Pakistan is in no way driven by it.?

    Without news reports about the dysfunction of national institutions, serious problems could be hidden from public view and remain insufficiently addressed, said Zia Mian, a physicist who directs Princeton University?s Project on Peace and Security in South Asia.

    ?The fact that people do report [such stories] is important. And the fact that there are whistleblowers is important,? he said in an interview last week.

    Particularly in a nation such as Pakistan with a strong national security establishment protecting nuclear secrets, some voice on behalf of the public interest is needed, he argued.?

    Secrecy is needed to some degree to protect national assets, but it also ?allows incompetence, mismanagement, violations of law and prevents a democratic process from actually working,? Mian said, noting that the Pakistani media has faced enormous impediments to reporting on these issues.?

    ?If the international community basically goes silent on this question also -- the international media, in particular -- then there is actually no possibility of learning from mistakes,? he said. ?If things failed catastrophically, is that what you want??

    Hoodbhoy has argued for years that given the high stakes involved in potential extremist access to nuclear arms or materials, the Pakistani government must demonstrate to the world that its arsenal stewardship is terrorist-proof.

    The Pakistani military saying, ??Trust us,? isn?t good enough,? Hoodbhoy told GSN this week. ?But an incredibly fierce reaction follows every time this point is raised by the U.S. media.

    ?Actually, that reaction is also very visible when raised by a Pakistani,? added Hoodbhoy, who recently lost his post at Lahore University of Management Sciences after years of publicly raising concerns about military and security shortcomings. ?The safety of the nuclear arsenal is now a sacred cow.?

    Mian acknowledged that occasionally news reports on the Pakistani nuclear stockpile or on Pentagon planning complicate life for Washington envoys in gaining the trust of Islamabad?s nuclear establishment -- the Strategic Plans Division or SPD -- in discussing these matters.

    ?You should report everything that you possibly can, as long as it?s done accurately and fairly,? Mian said. ?And if it kind of makes life difficult for DOE [the U.S. Energy Department] about getting SPD to talk to them, well, that?s DOE?s problem. Let them work it out.?

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-almost-nobody-likes-news-pakistani-nuclear-security-113419932--politics.html

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    Wednesday, March 6, 2013

    Alabama rally too late to help NCAA hopes



    Alabama?s Nick Jacobs defends against Ole Miss guard Marshall Henderson on Tuesday night. The Crimson Tide hit six 3-pointers in the last 1:55 but had too large a deficit to overcome.

    The Associated Press

    Published: Tuesday, March 5, 2013 at 3:30 a.m.
    Last Modified: Tuesday, March 5, 2013 at 11:38 p.m.

    OXFORD, Miss. | All week long, ESPN did its best to promote Tuesday night?s Alabama-Ole Miss game as a game with NCAA Tournament ramifications.

    Clearly, Alabama wasn?t listening.

    The Crimson Tide came out with little energy, never leading and rarely looking interested until the waning minutes of an 87-83 loss at the hands of the homestanding Rebels.

    ?We waited until the last two minutes to try and win it,? Crimson Tide forward Nick Jacobs said. ?We waited too late.?

    The defeat dropped the Crimson Tide to 19-11 overall and 11-6 in Southeastern Conference play and denied UA a chance to clinch a two-round bye in the upcoming SEC Tournament in Nashville, Tenn. UA could still earn a bye depending on what happens Saturday. UA hosts Georgia in the regular-season finale.

    The Crimson Tide trailed 74-60 with three minutes remaining, then went on a monumental run that included six 3-pointers in the final 1:55 of play. But after Trevor Lacey?s 3-point shot with 6 seconds left cut the deficit to 86-83, Ole Miss was able to ice the game on a Jarvis Summers free throw.

    ?I thought our guys gave effort at the end,? Alabama coach Anthony Grant said. ?I am going to give them credit. They have multiple guys who can score. That was difficult to deal with. I thought there were a couple of stretches where (Marshall) Henderson gave them some separation. You look at what they were able to do with their young guys. I give them the credit.?

    It took just more than eight minutes for Ole Miss to build a double-digit lead, pulling ahead 19-8 at the 11:40 mark of the first half. The Crimson Tide did halve that deficit down to seven points, 30-23, with 3:45 to go in the half, but Ole Miss went on a 7-2 run from there, taking a 37-25 halftime lead.

    ?I thought 14 turnovers in the first half really made a big difference,? Grant said. ?We were able to get that number down in the second half, but it hurt us.?

    The second half started with more of the same as Ole Miss seemed to put the game away with a 7-0 run.

    The Rebels maintained a double-digit lead for the majority of the half. Alabama, which allowed nearly 20 points more than its per-game defensive average in previous SEC play, rarely managed to get back-to-back stops until the late going.

    ?It was spooky, man,? Ole Miss forward Murphy Holloway said of Alabama?s late 3-point flurry. ?They were making crazy shots.?

    Lacey led Alabama with 19 points, while Jacobs added a career-high 18 for the Crimson Tide. Henderson led Ole Miss with 24 points in 25 minutes, while Ladarius White dame off the bench to score 17 points for the Rebels (22-8, 11-6).

    Reach Cecil Hurt at cecil@tidesports.com or 205-722-0225.

    Source: http://www.tuscaloosanews.com/article/20130305/news/130309871

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    Book on Fox News? Ailes reveals thoughts on Biden, Rubio

    Roger Ailes (Fox News/2MK)

    Fox News chief Roger Ailes reportedly called Newt Gingrich a "sore loser" after the former House Speaker complained that the top-rated cable news network's support for Mitt Romney was one of the reasons he lost the 2012 Republican primary.

    ?Newt?s a prick," Ailes told his personal spokesman, according to an upcoming book, "Roger Ailes Off Camera," by Zev Chafets, a writer who was given unprecedented access to the outspoken executive. Excerpts from the book were published Wednesday by VanityFair.com.

    Following Gingrich's public complaints, the spokesman had asked Ailes for guidance on how to respond.

    ?Brush him back,? Ailes said, according to Chafets. ?He?s a sore loser and if he had won he would have been a sore winner.?

    In the book, due later this month, Ailes sounds off on several other figures of the 2012 presidential race:

    ?I like Marco Rubio,? Ailes told a staff meeting of Fox News Latino when talk about the Florida senator being Mitt Romney?s vice-presidential pick was at fever pitch. ?But I don?t know about as a vice-presidential candidate. He?s a nice guy, and that role requires kicking the crap out of your opponents.? He paused, thinking about vice presidents he had known. ?I have a soft spot for Joe Biden,? he said. ?I like him. But he?s dumb as an ashtray.?

    Ailes also spoke about his relationship with his boss, News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch:

    ?Does Rupert like me? I think so, but it doesn?t matter. When I go up to the magic room in the sky every three months, if my numbers are right, I get to live. If not, I?m killed. Our relationship isn?t about love?it?s about arithmetic. Survival means hitting your numbers. I?ve met or exceeded mine in 56 straight quarters. The reason is: I treat Rupert?s money like it is mine.?

    And President Obama:

    ?Obama?s the one who never worked a day in his life. He never earned a penny that wasn?t public money. How many fund-raisers does he attend every week? How often does he play basketball and golf? I wish I had that kind of time. He?s lazy, but the media won?t report that.?

    Ailes himself is portrayed as a bit of a micromanager with a paranoid streak. During a tour of Fox Business' street-level studios in New York with the network's chief engineer, Ailes had discussed the installation of bullet-proof glass:

    Ailes walked over to the huge windows facing Sixth Avenue.

    ?What?s the stop on this glass??

    ?Three fifty-seven caliber,? said the engineer.

    ?At what range??

    ?Close up,? the engineer said.

    Ailes nodded. You put a television show on street level, you had better be prepared for armed critics.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/fox-news-ailes-newt-prick-biden-rubio-obama-130038762--election.html

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    Tuesday, March 5, 2013

    Self-help books and websites benefit people with severe depression ...

    By Larbi Arbaoui

    Morocco World News

    Taroudant- March 04, 2013

    According to HealthDay News, self-help books and websites can benefit people with severe depression.

    The study suggests that books and interactive website browsing should be included as part of the first line of treatment.

    The research included about 2500 adult patients with varying degrees of depression, who have received treatment outside of hospitals.

    The findings indicate that low-intensity interventions like self-help books and interactive websites should be part of first treatment to the disease.

    According to the report published on Feb. 26 in the BMJ, ?Patients with more severe depression derived at least as much benefit from low-intensity interventions ? such as self-help books and interactive websites ? as those with less severe depression.?

    In a news release, Arfanakis said that ?Reading the newspaper, writing letters, visiting a library, attending a play or playing games, such as chess or checkers, are all simple activities that can contribute to a healthier brain?.

    According to PubMed Health, depression may be described as feeling sad, blue, unhappy, miserable, or down in the dumps, and clinical depression is a mood disorder in which feelings of sadness, loss, anger, or frustration interfere with everyday life for a longer period of time.

    HealthDay specializes in producing and licensing daily health news for consumers and professionals and delivering the news several times a day.

    Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/03/81011/self-help-books-and-websites-benefit-people-with-severe-depression-a-study/

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    Chinese Communist Party: 20-somethings unsentimental

    The Chinese Communist Party inspires little support among young Chinese professionals: the best they can say is that it's a necessary nuisance.

    By Peter Ford,?Staff writer / March 3, 2013

    Saturday lunch at Zhong 8, a restaurant famed for its southwestern Chinese cuisine, is a relaxed, noisy affair as young couples and tables full of families tuck into their food with familiar Chinese gusto.

    Skip to next paragraph

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    Over a meal of sour rice noodle soup, braised mushrooms, crispy pork belly, and fried silkworm larvae (a regional specialty), four 20-something professionals talk freely about their attitudes toward the Communist Party ? and why it doesn't mean much to them.

    Guo Wei, who runs the server at a small software company, joined the party when he was at university "because that's what the best students do" as an additional mark of their status.

    Today, though, he says, "I don't have strong feelings about the party, and the last time I went to a party meeting was two years ago, when I was still a student." It was a lecture on national affairs and party policy, he remembers, followed by a discussion. "The best thing about the meetings was we got to know our teachers and other students better," he says.

    From time to time he pays his party dues, ? about $15 a year ? but there is no party cell in his firm, and "in privately owned companies there is no difference between members and nonmembers when it comes to promotion."

    His friend Li Chunyan, striking in turquoise nail varnish, finds herself in different circumstances, working in real estate for a state-owned company.

    "In those sorts of firms, party members are considered an advanced group, and you need to be a member to get ahead," she explains. So for the past 18 months, she has been trying to join by attending party meetings and handing in regular written reports about why she wants to join and how she is "getting closer to the party," she says. "It's difficult."

    She volunteers that she also has some idealistic reasons: "Party members have to show more self-discipline, and they do more to help needy people, or if there are disasters," Ms. Li says. In a country where nongovernmental organizations are often still suspect, the party is the safest channel for civic participation.

    "Party members play a more active role solving problems, and that's the kind of thing I'd like to do," she says.

    Bao Yongxing, a long-haired former fine arts student who now works as a website designer, would never consider joining either a state-owned company, where he says that the prevailing conformism means that "you just have to follow the ladder, step by step," or the party). "Once you're a member, you have less freedom and you have to watch what you say," he says, and that's not his style.

    The party means little to Qi Xin, who develops mobile-phone applications. "The party is too distant from us, and I don't have much connection with it," he says, hunched over his food. What bothers him most about the government? "Internet censorship," he shoots back. "As an IT engineer, I need to visit foreign websites, and they are not always easy to access."

    None of the four see any reflection of their own values in the party that rules their lives. "The party's values are basically concerned with how to keep the party in power," scoffs Mr. Bao.

    Mr. Guo is even more scathing. "When the party was a revolutionary party, it used values such as liberty and equality and fraternity and justice to overthrow the government of the time," he says. "But since it has been the ruling party, its main concern has been how to stop other people using those same values to fight against them."

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/OPrESxBt1A8/Chinese-Communist-Party-20-somethings-unsentimental

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    Walrus basks in Orkney attention

    A walrus has turned up on a small Scottish island in what has been described as a "once-in-a-lifetime" event.

    The animal, thought to be a young male, was spotted on the shoreline of North Ronaldsay in Orkney.

    It appeared to be in good health and happy to be the centre of attention.

    Wildlife experts said it was extremely unusual for a walrus to be spotted so far south of the North Pole and Arctic Ocean.

    The animal was first discovered on Sunday morning by Mark Warren, an assistant warden at the North Ronaldsay Bird Observatory.

    Continue reading the main story

    ?Start Quote

    At first I thought it was a dead whale so I threw a stone at it and it woke up?

    End Quote Mark Warren North Ronaldsay Bird Observatory

    He told the BBC Scotland news website: "I was walking along the beach looking for birds, basically. At first I thought it was a dead whale so I threw a stone at it and it woke up.

    "It does seem to be in OK health and certainly has plenty of battle scars which suggests it has been in a few scraps. A few people have suggested it might be quite a young one because its tusks aren't as big as some you see.

    "You do get seals and sometimes killer whales around here, which people come and have a look at, but never a walrus".

    Steve Sankey, who leads wildlife tours in the islands, said he had never before heard of one of the creatures turning up in Orkney.

    He added: "It is extremely unusual indeed. Orkney should be well beyond the southern range of a walrus.

    "If you look back in history the early Scots used to go walrus hunting because ivory was a very valuable trading commodity, but they pushed them further and further north over the years".

    Alan Jackson of the Orkney Marine-Life Aquarium said it had a walrus skull among its collection, but it was thought to have been brought back from Canada by a sea captain rather than having belonged to a local animal.

    The large flippered marine mammals, characterised by their long tusks, spend significant amounts of their lives on the sea ice.

    Their population dropped rapidly as they were widely killed by humans for their blubber, walrus ivory and meat during the 19th and 20th centuries.

    However, their population rebounded after hunting them became largely outlawed.

    Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-21647421#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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