Thursday, July 11, 2013

Rockford Pro/Am helps Barbara Olson Center of Hope - WREX.com ...

ROCKFORD (WREX) -

A Rockford area organization, providing hope to people with disabilities gets a little help of its own, thanks to Rockford's Pro/Am. The tournament will give people a good work-out, but we're not talking about the golfers or spectators.

"A lot of people don't realize that individuals with disabilities need a lot of help with nutrition and with exercise." -says Barbara Olson Center of Hope Executive Director Carm Herman.

You might say it's common knowledge that healthier is better. Experts tells us to exercise and eat right. Barbara Olson Center of Hope's Wellness Center can provide a healthier lifestyle for people living with developmental disabilities.

"A lot of our individuals don't have the opportunity to exercise at home and this way it gives them an opportunity to exercise, to learn about health and fitness and so they can carry that into their lives at home and into the community." -Herman explains.

Organization leaders say you can see firsthand how the Wellness Center changes lives.

"One young lady has lost 50 pounds since she's been here, she looks great. Other people have lost weight." -Herman says.

The work out room is constantly buzzing with people.

"Our participants rotate through that room, like, 100 participants during the day."

Which is a good thing, except for one aspect.

"We've had these bikes now for a couple years, but when you have that many people using them on a daily basis... They really do wear down quickly."

That's where the golf tournament comes in.

"We wrote to the Pro/Am because they're really into health to see if they could help us replace our recumbent bikes and our regular bikes which are used everyday and that's what we will be using that money for." -Herman adds.

The center's been providing services to disabled individuals for 65 years. The Pro/Am starts Monday, July 15th, 10:15 a.m. at Forest Hills Country Club.

Source: http://www.wrex.com/story/22809063/2013/07/10/rockford-organization-giving-clients-hope-gets-help-of-its-own

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Top Republican won't delay Senate vote on EPA pick

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Louisiana Republican Sen. David Vitter said Tuesday that he won't delay a Senate vote on President Barack Obama's pick to lead the Environmental Protection Agency after securing a deal to boost transparency at the agency.

Vitter, the top Republican on the Senate environment panel, has been one of the biggest obstacles to Gina McCarthy's nomination. In May, he led a GOP boycott that delayed a critical vote to advance her bid. She eventually cleared the panel solely on votes from Democrats.

But Republican Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri is still threatening to block a vote on McCarthy, who now leads the agency's air pollution office over delays on a flood control project.

In a letter to Vitter Tuesday, the EPA agreed to obtain data used in its air pollution studies and convene an expert panel to review how it estimates the costs and benefits of pollution rules.

It will also publish online efforts, including legal notices, by outside groups to influence the timing of regulations.

"I see no further reason to block Gina McCarthy's nomination, and I'll support moving to an up-or-down vote on her nomination," Vitter said in a statement.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-republican-wont-delay-senate-130821190.html

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Fatal train wreck fuels debate over oil transport

The Quebec town of Lac-M?gantic resembles a war zone, with 13 people confirmed dead and about 40 still unaccounted for, after a train laden with crude oil slipped its brakes, derailed and exploded on 6 July. The catastrophe has already touched off the latest chapter in the debate over whether the US should permit the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline ? which would transport oil from Canada's tar sands to US refineries on the Gulf of Mexico.

"[I]s it safer and less environmentally destructive to move huge quantities of crude oil by train or by pipeline?" asked The New York Times, before quoting one environmentalist as saying there was no conclusive research.

In fact, there are some solid numbers to go from, but they paint a complex picture. First, to make a fair comparison, you have to correct the numbers to account for the amount of oil involved and the distance it travelled. According to an analysis of US government data by the Manhattan Institute, a pro-business think-tank in New York City, pipelines caused just 0.01 injuries per billion tonne-kilometre of oil and petroleum products transported between 2005 and 2009, compared with 0.38 for transport by rail.

Safety vs environment

The number of spills also favours pipelines, which do not burst as often as trains get into accidents. But in terms of the amount of oil and petroleum products spilled, the Manhattan Institute found pipelines outpaced rail transport. Between 2005 and 2009, pipelines spilled 62,400 litres per billion tonne-kilometre versus just 19,400 for rail.

Other groups have come to similar conclusions. "For the safety of humans, it looks like pipelines are better than rail," agrees Carl Weimer, executive director of the Pipeline Safety Trust in Bellingham, Washington, a public-safety advocacy group formed after a fatal pipeline explosion in 1999. But when a pipeline ruptures, he notes, the spills are typically much larger than from rail accidents.

The Manhattan Institute makes no secret of its support for the Keystone XL pipeline, and its report stressed human safety. "What is paramount in our society is the value of a human life," argues report author Diana Furchtgott-Roth, formerly chief economist with the US Department of Labor.

Weighing the relative importance of human versus environmental safety is just one aspect of the looming decision currently facing US president Barack Obama's administration over whether to approve the Keystone XL pipeline.

Also hotly debated is how much oil from Canada's tar sands will end up being moved by rail if the pipeline is not built. In March, the US State Department suggested that if the pipeline was dropped then rail transport would expand to transport the same amount of oil that the pipeline would have carried. But the US Environmental Protection Agency has since questioned this analysis.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2e62bbd8/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cdn238330Efatal0Etrain0Ewreck0Efuels0Edebate0Eover0Eoil0Etransport0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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Blumenthal visits Eastern Connecticut State University to discuss student loan interest rate

Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, right, standing with Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., discusses a graph and legislation to try and prevent the increase in the interest rates on some student loans during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, June 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

WILLIMANTIC ? Sen. Richard Blumenthal is visiting Eastern Connecticut State University in Willimantic to discuss interest rate increases on student loans.

Blumenthal is set to meet with students, faculty and administrators Monday morning to discuss how they will be affected by the rate increases.

Rates on subsidized Stafford student loans doubled from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent on July 1, after an effort to prevent the increase failed in Congress. More than 7 million students nationwide could face an additional $1,000 in student loan debt.

Blumenthal wants Congress to retroactively prevent the rate increase. He's also participating in a social media campaign against the rate hike.

Democratic senators and White House officials say they expect a deal on bringing the rates back down to be reached before students return to campus.

Source: http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2013/07/08/news/doc51daa93db2f45956720882.txt

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Asian shares hit 2-week low on Fed taper fears after jobs data

By Dominic Lau

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares tumbled on Monday as strong U.S. jobs growth increased the chances of the Federal Reserve rolling back its stimulus in coming months, sending the dollar to a three-year high against a basket of major currencies.

Chinese stocks and regional sentiment were hurt by Beijing's plan to choke off credit to force consolidation in industries plagued by overcapacity as it seeks to end the economy's reliance on investment funded by cheap debt.

European shares were expected to open higher, however, with Britain's FTSE 100 seen trading up as much as 1 percent and Germany's DAX up as much as 0.7 percent, according to spreadbetters.

U.S. employers added 195,000 new jobs to their payrolls last month, beating expectations of 165,000. Adding to the positive sentiment, the figures for April and May were revised up by a combined 70,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 7.6 percent as more people entered the workforce.

Friday's sharp selloff in U.S. Treasuries - with the 10-year yield suffering its biggest one-day rise in nearly two years, Reuters data showed - accelerated losses that started in May over the uncertainty of the Fed's $85 billion a month bond-buying programme.

Yields on 10-year U.S. Treasuries, which move opposite to price, were at 2.6924 percent, turning lower after climbing to a nearly two-year high of 2.755 percent in Asian trade. They jumped 23.3 basis points to 2.736 percent on Friday, driving up U.S. dollar borrowing costs.

"The money in the market is very short term right now. Most investors have given up hope for any stimulus from Beijing, but now it seems they could be rolling out stricter ground rules to aid the restructuring of the economy," said Jackson Wong, vice-president for equity sales at Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong.

MANIC MONDAY

Shares in MSCI's Asia-Pacific ex-Japan index shed 1.8 percent to a two-week low, while Chinese equities lost 2.2 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dropped 2.1 percent.

China's resolve to overhaul its economy for long-term improvement will be tested this month if a slew of data shows growth is grinding towards a 23-year low, as expected.

The median forecast of 21 economists surveyed by Reuters show China's economy likely expanded 7.5 percent in April-June from a year ago, slowing from the previous three months as weak demand dented factory output and investment growth.

The CSI300 index has lost nearly 14 percent so far this year, while the MSCI Asian gauge is down 10 percent.

The weakness in Chinese markets dragged Tokyo's Nikkei average down 1.4 percent. Earlier, the Japanese benchmark climbed as much as 1.3 percent to a six-week high.

"I don't think it's negative for Japan," said a hedge fund manager, who declined to be identified, referring to higher dollar borrowing costs.

"For ASEAN countries, it is more of a concern if rates continue to go up. A lot of the funding for some of these countries is dollar-denominated."

The selloff in Treasuries also hurt Japanese government bonds on Monday, with the 10-year yield up 2.5 basis points to 0.880 percent.

DOLLAR HIGH

The dollar hit a six-week high of 101.54 yen after gaining 1.2 percent on Friday, its biggest one-day rise in a month.

"The dollar looks likely to gain further. But then again, if Chinese shares face more pressures, we could see a bigger dip in the dollar/yen," said Koichi Takamatsu, forex manager at Nomura Securities in Tokyo.

Against a basket of major currencies, the dollar advanced 1.6 percent to a three-year high.

The euro dipped 0.1 percent to $1.2820, not far off a seven-week low of $1.2806. It dropped 1.4 percent versus the dollar in the previous two sessions on the U.S. jobs data and the European Central Bank's dovish policy guidance.

Brent crude prices added 0.3 percent to $108 a barrel, extending Friday's 2.1 percent rise on the strong U.S. data and concerns over Egypt's unrest increasing instability in the Middle East.

Copper prices eased 0.2 percent to stay below $6,800 a tonne after shedding 2.3 percent in the previous session as the dollar firmed, while gold eased 0.2 percent, extending Friday's 2 percent decline.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-hit-2-week-low-fed-taper-080128369.html

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Biologists Program E. Coli To Patrol For Pathogens

Bacteria can share DNA [wikipedia.org] with other bacteria. (I don't know if it applies here, but I don't know that it doesn't) If the DNA for this toxin jumps to a different strain of bacteria (say... Pseudomonas aeruginosa) and becomes an infection... We need to ask what this toxin does to human tissue. If it isn't harmless, we could be building a drug resistant, toxin spewing bacteria!

That's one thing that could go wrong.

(No, I didn't read the article. I'm just assuming it doesn't cover this eventuality.)

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/lE2N1Www2nc/story01.htm

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Thursday, July 4, 2013

Apple's New Google Docs Competitor Is Now in Beta

Apple's New Google Docs Competitor Is Now in Beta

Apple's long-overdue stab at a cloud editing service has finally come to, well, some of the masses. If you happen to be an Apple developer, iWork for iCloud is available to you right now.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/_BYKhAl37jM/apples-new-google-docs-competitor-is-now-in-beta-662081894

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How to manage Notification Center alerts and Do Not Disturb for iPhone and iPad

How to manage Notification Center alertts and Do Not Disturb for iPhone and IPad

Today on Talk Mobile we're talking about whether or not we have trouble putting down our smartphones. How connected we are nowadays by a device that fits in the palm of our hands can sometimes make us forget about real life going on around us.

The iPhone and iPad both have notification options that can make separating our real world lives and digital lives a little more manageable. Let's take a look at how Notification Center and Do Not Disturb mode can help.

Notification Center

Notification Center is where you can dictate what apps can give you either audible notifications or popup notifications. Not only can making changes to Notification center save you battery life, it can also help keep you in check when it comes to how often you're on your iPhone by letting you prioritize what's really important.

Disabling lock screen notifications not only enhances privacy, but keeps you from continually looking at your iPhone's screen every time it lights up. I've managed to spend less time on my iPhone and more time with the people around me by simply tweaking what notifications I really need to know about and which ones can wait until I have a spare minute.

Do Not Disturb mode

With iOS 6 Apple brought Do Not Disturb mode to both iPhone and iPad. This feature allows you to disable alerts between certain times altogether and only let through important items such as phone calls from favorites.

Not only can you simply toggle it on whenever you'd like, you can set it to auto turn on during certain times every day. I've found setting Do Not Disturb mode for the evening when I'd like to spend time with my family is a great way to make sure I'm not spending more time with my iPhone than I am the people around me. It's been a big help when it comes to relaxing and de-stressing after a long work day.

Your notification setup

All of us have different priorities which means vastly different settings when it comes to notifications. Let us know below what you do when you need to disconnect from your digital life and pay attention more to real life. Do you use Do Not Disturb mode and Notification Center or do you shut your iPhone off altogether?

Make sure to check out the conversation going on over at Talk Mobile and let us know how much trouble you have putting down your smartphone. Is it a problem in your home and what do you do to solve it?

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/O7k-1gwcWvA/story01.htm

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LeAnn Rimes Performs at Anti-Bullying Concert, Gets Emotional on Stage

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/leann-rimes-performs-at-anti-bullying-benefit-concert-gets-emoti/

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Redbox Instant app for Android updated to work on rooted devices

Redbox Instant app for Android updated to work on rooted devices

When Redbox Instant's mobile apps launched earlier this year some users noticed that it refused to work on rooted Android hardware. Now a new update, noted in the log as "changed the way we handle rooted devices," is allowing playback no matter what your superuser status is. Many other premium video apps (but not Netflix, for example) have similar blocks on rooted / jailbroken mobile hardware, although users can usually work around them. Still, it's annoying and mostly unnecessary especially since the block is so easily overcome, so it's good to see Redbox making the change. The ban on rooted hardware and its limited library of subscription streaming content -- although it does throw in the convenience of kiosk rental credits -- have been the source of a large number of negative reviews for the app, hopefully with one looming issue out of the way the other will be addressed shortly.

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Source: Google Play

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/03/redbox-instant-app-for-android-updated-to-work-on-rooted-devices/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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TSA's New Instagram Account Highlights The Crazy Things People Try To Sneak On Planes

Disabled GrenadeSeemingly tired of being chewed out by every third traveler to step through their scanners, the TSA is trying something new to connect with the people: Instagram. Over the last few days, the TSA has been Instagramming some of the crazier things they've confiscated from people who didn't get the whole "don't bring things that can kill people on planes" memo. Guns! Grenades! Secret spy knives!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/d6YPGucBzpk/

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Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Nuke test radiation can fight poachers who kill elephants, rhinos, hippos

July 1, 2013 ? University of Utah researchers developed a new weapon to fight poachers who kill elephants, hippos, rhinos and other wildlife. By measuring radioactive carbon-14 deposited in tusks and teeth by open-air nuclear bomb tests, the method reveals the year an animal died, and thus whether the ivory was taken illegally.

"This could be used in specific cases of ivory seizures to determine when the ivory was obtained and thus whether it is legal," says geochemist Thure Cerling, senior author of a study about the new method. It was published online the week of July 1 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"The dating method is affordable and accessible to government and law enforcement agencies," costing about $500 per sample, says the study's first author, geochemist Kevin Uno, who did the research for his University of Utah Ph.D. thesis.

"It has immediate applications to fighting the illegal sale and trade of ivory that has led to the highest rate of poaching seen in decades," says Uno, now a postdoctoral researcher at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

Not only can the method help wildlife forensics to combat poaching, but "we've shown that you can use the signature in animal tissues left over from nuclear weapons testing in the atmosphere to study modern ecology and help us learn about fossil animals and how they lived," says Cerling, a distinguished professor of geology and geophysics, and biology at the University of Utah.

The method uses the "bomb curve," which is a graph -- shaped roughly like an inverted "V" -- showing changes in carbon-14 levels in the atmosphere -- and thus absorbed by plants and animals in the food chain. The carbon-14 was formed in the atmosphere by U.S. and Soviet atmospheric nuclear weapons tests in Nevada and Siberia from 1952 through 1962. Those levels peaked in the 1960s and have declined ever since but still are absorbed by and measurable in plant and animal tissues.

The study was funded by the National Science Foundation, the National Geographic Society and the University of Utah. Cerling and Uno conducted it with geologist Jay Quade, a former Utah doctoral student now at the University of Arizona; Daniel C. Fisher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; George Wittemyer, Colorado State University; Iain Douglas-Hamilton, founder of Save the Elephants; and Samuel Andanje, Patrick Omondi and Moses Litoroh, all of the Kenya Wildlife Service.

Ivory Trade Drives Elephant Slaughter

International agreements banned most trade of raw ivory from Asian elephants after 1975 and African elephants after 1989. In the United States, raw and worked African ivory (jewelry, figurines, gun and knife handles) is legal if it was imported before 1989 or, if worked ivory is imported after, it must be at least 100 years old.

Yet tons of illegal ivory still are sold because dealers claim the ivory was taken before the ban and there has been no test to prove them wrong -- until now.

"With an accurate age of the ivory, we can verify if the trade is legal or not" when the age is combined with existing DNA analysis to determine if an elephant is from Africa or Asia, says Uno, who earned his University of Utah Ph.D. last year. "Currently 30,000 elephants a year are slaughtered for their tusks, so there is a desperate need to enforce the international trade ban and reduce demand."

Only 423,000 African elephants are left. Conservation groups say 70 percent of smuggled ivory goes to China. The United States is the next biggest illegal market. Rising ivory prices have drawn organized crime and spurred militias in Darfur, Uganda, Sudan and Somalia to kill elephants and sell tusks so they can buy guns.

How the Study Was Performed

Neutrons from the nuclear tests bombarded nitrogen -- the atmosphere's most common gas -- to turn some of it into carbon-14. Cosmic rays do that naturally at a low level, but open-air nuclear tests in the 1950s and 1960s sharply increased atmospheric, plant and animal carbon-14 levels, followed by a steady decline ever since.

The method in the study is a bit like telling a tree's age by its rings, but instead of counting rings, Cerling, Uno and colleagues measured carbon-14 levels at various points along the lengths of elephants' and hippos' tusks and teeth.

The conventional way of measuring carbon-14 is to wait for and count when the isotope decays radioactively. In the study, the researchers used accelerator mass spectrometry, or AMS, which requires 1,000 times less material for analysis -- a big advantage when sampling fossils or small pieces of worked ivory, Cerling says.

In AMS, the material being analyzed is bombarded with cesium atoms, which sputters off carbon atoms so the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 can be measured.

The researchers tested the accuracy of carbon-14 dating in 29 animal and plant tissues killed and collected on known dates from 1905 to 2008. The samples included elephant tusks and molars, hippo tusks and canine teeth, oryx horn, hair from monkeys and elephant tails, and some grasses collected in Kenya in 1962.

Samples came from museums in Africa and elsewhere, and from Amina, an elephant that died naturally in Kenya in 2006, and from Misha, an African elephant euthanized in 2008 due to declining health at Utah's Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City.

The analysis revealed that various tissues that formed at the same time have the same carbon-14 levels, and that grasses and the animals eating them had the same levels. By determining carbon-14 in these samples of known dates, the researchers now can measure carbon-14 levels in other ivory to determine its age, within about a year.

The four oldest samples -- from animals died between 1905 and 1953 -- had minimal carbon-14 because they died before atmospheric nuclear weapons tests. So the test can identify pre-1955 ivory by its low, pre-nuclear-test levels of carbon-14.

Cerling says the method can determine the year of death for any animal killed after 1955, identifying the time of the most recent tissue formation -- at the base of a tusk or tooth, for example. The method is less precise for animals killed more recently; it can tell if an animal died between 2010 and 2013, but not more precisely.

It takes about 5,700 years for half of carbon-14 to decay radioactively. But the amount in Earth's atmosphere after the 1950s and 1960s bomb tests faded much more quickly because oceans and trees absorb carbon dioxide -- including carbon-14 -- from the atmosphere. So the method won't work for tusks or other tissues that grow after about 15 years from now, when atmospheric carbon-14 returns to pre-bomb levels.

Understanding Ancient and Modern Ecosystems

While the method's use against poaching is important, "the scientific part is the importance of understanding time in the formation of animal tissues and how diet and physiology is recorded in those tissues over time" as they grow, Cerling says.

Cerling says that will improve understanding of what prehistoric and modern animals ate over time, especially when combined with existing isotope analysis of ratios of carbon-13 to carbon-12 in teeth -- data that reveal whether animals ate diets based on tree and shrub leaves and fruits, or upon grasses and grazing animals.

So as part of the new study, the scientists also analyzed another 41 samples to determine the growth rates for tusks and teeth from elephants and hippos, and elephant tail hair, Cerling says.

Extrapolating the growth rates of tusks, teeth and hair to fossil or modern elephants and other animals "will help us improve the chronology of the diet history of an individual fossil or modern animal," Cerling says.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ZBGcLb1BO0M/130701151445.htm

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Yankees 3B Rodriguez set for 1st minor league game

FILE - Alex Rodriguez, right, seen in this May 6, 2013 file photo and the New York Yankees are not seeing eye to eye on his hip injury. The star third baseman tweeted Tuesday night June 25, 2013 that his hip surgeon has cleared him to play in rehabilitation games, a move that angered Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, seen in this March 6, 2009 file photo, according to ESPN.com. (AP Photo/File)

FILE - Alex Rodriguez, right, seen in this May 6, 2013 file photo and the New York Yankees are not seeing eye to eye on his hip injury. The star third baseman tweeted Tuesday night June 25, 2013 that his hip surgeon has cleared him to play in rehabilitation games, a move that angered Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, seen in this March 6, 2009 file photo, according to ESPN.com. (AP Photo/File)

(AP) ? New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez is set to play his first minor league game on a rehabilitation assignment.

The Yankees said Monday that Rodriguez is scheduled to start Tuesday night for Single-A Charleston in the South Atlantic League. Rodriguez is supposed to play at least three innings against Rome during the game in South Carolina.

Rodriguez has been working out at the Yankees' spring training complex in Florida this year while recovering from surgery on his left hip on Jan. 16. The three-time AL MVP turns 38 later this month.

Rodriguez has 647 career home runs. The Yankees have struggled this season while Rodriguez and several other stars have been on the disabled list.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-07-01-BBA-Yankees-Rodriguez/id-6ae336b2887049b691aa20a72cfb20e2

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Monday, July 1, 2013

All hail the Reference King! | Pedagogical Skepticism

Allow me to say initially that I love the references on this paper- really just reading the references made me excited to read the paper. However there are 10 pages of references for an 8 page paper- is this appropriate?? This paper has an interesting premise- that the concept of culture, indicted as an obstacle to adoption of pedagogical and curricular reform, is underdeveloped theoretically. The discussion of three perspectives, individual, interactional, and social was very interesting.? Durkheim and Latour seem to make strange bed-fellows, and one is prompted to wonder whether the authors will articulate the ways in which these authors relate to one another (where are they complementary and where do they depart from one another?). While this paper may not be the place for that kind of theoretical work, it does pertain to the assertion made by the authors that they seek to employ a ?well articulated plurality? of ideas. I love the idea of using Latour for this kind of analysis in mathematics education and think that it will really work within the framework of the separate ethnographic case study (which the authors reference as in press), given Latour?s use of similar approaches in his seminal work, ?Laboratory Life?. The illustrative case study presented in this paper focuses on analysing the practice of one teacher from the three perspectives of culture. The assertion that the collective (or social?) perspective of culture is focused on understanding the describing and explaining the persistent features of a culture seems limited, and might be served by reference to more critical socio-cultural theoretical perspectives on culture or perhaps even some ideas from Critical Mathematics Education ala Skovsmose (and why not as the authors have already indicated their willingness to use a plurality of ideas?). It is interesting though that even as the authors claim that the perspective aims primarily to understand and describe, this framed as being so that ?we? can help educators change their practices to be more effective. The conclusion seems sound, and reminds me of a talk given by Paul Cobb at IOE a few years back about a large multi-level project that looked at instructional change at the level of the district, the school and the classroom- this research may be served by, or contribute to, interaction with the researchers engaged in that work.

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Dan Persons: Mighty Movie Podcast: Writer Katie Dippold on The Heat

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2013-06-30-The_Heat_DF05582_R2_rgb_410.jpgSo in the midst of the interstellar conflicts, zombie plagues, and giant robots, how about a summer movie that's a little more grounded? How about Sandra Bullock as a Type A, by-the-book FBI agent clashing up against Melissa McCarthy as a loose-cannon Boston police detective as they try to take down a drug lord? The Heat isn't shy about acknowledging its debts to the buddy-cop comedies of yore, but throws in a few, gender-twisted wrinkles all its own (you never saw Eddie Murphy and Nick Nolte in a drunken hug-dance, did you?).

Writer Katie Dippold makes her feature film debut with The Heat, after logging time on the writing staffs of MADtv and Parks and Recreation. I sat down with her to discuss her spin on this hallowed genre, and her experience working on-set with director Paul Feig.

Click on the player button to hear the interview, or right-click the title to download.

Mighty Movie Podcast: Writer Katie Dippold on The Heat

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dan-persons/mighty-movie-podcast-writ_b_3523750.html

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Sunday, June 30, 2013

Penguins' Bylsma to coach US Olympic team in Sochi

NEW YORK (AP) ? USA Hockey has tabbed Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Dan Bylsma as the coach for the U.S. Olympic men's hockey team at the 2014 games in Sochi, Russia.

USA Hockey president Ron DeGregorio made the announcement Saturday.

The 42-year-old Bylsma is 201-92-25 in four-plus seasons with Pittsburgh and led the Penguins to the 2009 Stanley Cup. The Michigan native won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL Coach of the Year in 2011. The Penguins posted the best record in the Eastern Conference this spring and advanced to the conference finals before being swept by the Boston Bruins.

The U.S. won the silver medal at the Vancouver Olympics three years ago, losing the gold medal game to Canada 3-2 in overtime.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/penguins-bylsma-coach-us-olympic-team-sochi-151014508.html

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You don?t have to tell me how it feels not to be in love
You see that was my oldest game, darlin, it was my claim to fame
And I knew that when I met you, all that you would need is more than what I got
Oh so baby please just stop

Swoon.

Source: http://itsthebrooke.tumblr.com/post/54217018764

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Samsung Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Plus 6.3 now official

It came out of nowhere, and after months of waiting ? it?s finally out. The Samsung Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Plus 6.3 is the company?s next flagship phone, and it features a combination of all the things that you would actually look for in a phone.

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Earlier this morning, the company?s CEPNATSOC (Chief Executive in Product Design, Naming and All Things Samsung Of Course), Samson Sung, was asked in an interview on why they would release such a product. Here is his reply:

?We already have a lot of great products out in the market already ? and yet, people are complaining; why can?t we just produce a device that had it all? And so we made the Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Plus 6.3.?

Originally, the display of the device should have been at 8-inches, however they thought of adding the Mini moniker to it, so they had to make it the same size as the Mega 6.3 instead ? 6.3-inches.

In addition to that insanely small form factor, Samsung puts the sensor found on the S4 Zoom and adds it to the device, calling it larger than life. Also, as inspired by the S4 Active, the phone is waterproof and dustproof.

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The Samsung Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Plus 6.3 will come in Exynos Quad, Exynos Octa, Snapdragon 600, 800 & Tegra 4 variants ? which will be released in different time frames for your convenience. When they were asked on which ones will receive software updates faster, all they said was ?it will arrive someday?.

A part of the interview as well, Sung also mentioned that they didn?t want to keep it all for the Galaxy S5; they wanted to produce as much S4 devices so that everyone will have an S4.?This is the most perfect strategy ever since customers will now be extremely satisfied, and this is expected to save the company from its falling shares of stocks and slowing down S4 sales.

The Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Plus 6.3 will be available this month for a price of Php39,990 (not to be confused with the Galaxy S4 Active Zoom Mini Note that is in the works ? will be released next month).

Editor?s Note: Just in case it was not clear, this is a satire.

Source: http://www.yugatech.com/curious/satire-samsung-galaxy-s4-active-zoom-mini-plus-6-3-now-official/

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Large-scale quantum chip validated: Prototype quantum optimization chip operates as hoped

June 28, 2013 ? A team of scientists at USC has verified that quantum effects are indeed at play in the first commercial quantum optimization processor.

The team demonstrated that the D-Wave processor housed at the USC-Lockheed Martin Quantum Computing Center behaves in a manner that indicates that quantum mechanics plays a functional role in the way it works. The demonstration involved a small subset of the chip's 128 qubits.

This means that the device appears to be operating as a quantum processor -- something that scientists had hoped for but have needed extensive testing to verify.

The quantum processor was purchased from Canadian manufacturer D-Wave nearly two years ago by Lockheed Martin and housed at the USC Viterbi Information Sciences Institute (ISI). As the first of its kind, the task for scientists putting it through its paces was to determine whether the quantum computer was operating as hoped.

"Using a specific test problem involving eight qubits we have verified that the D-Wave processor performs optimization calculations (that is, finds lowest energy solutions) using a procedure that is consistent with quantum annealing and is inconsistent with the predictions of classical annealing," said Daniel Lidar, scientific director of the Quantum Computing Center and one of the researchers on the team, who holds joint appointments with the USC Viterbi School of Engineering and the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

Quantum annealing is a method of solving optimization problems using quantum mechanics -- at a large enough scale, potentially much faster than a traditional processor can.

Research institutions throughout the world build and use quantum processors, but most only have a few quantum bits, or "qubits."

Qubits have the capability of encoding the two digits of one and zero at the same time -- as opposed to traditional bits, which can encode distinctly either a one or a zero. This property, called "superposition," along with the ability of quantum states to "tunnel" through energy barriers, are hoped to play a role in helping future generations of the D-Wave processor to ultimately perform optimization calculations much faster than traditional processors.

With 108 functional qubits, the D-Wave processor at USC inspired hopes for a significant advance in the field of quantum computing when it was installed in October 2011 -- provided it worked as a quantum information processor. Quantum processors can fall victim to a phenomenon called "decoherence," which stifles their ability to behave in a quantum fashion.

The USC team's research shows that the chip, in fact, performed largely as hoped, demonstrating the potential for quantum optimization on a larger-than-ever scale.

"Our work seems to show that, from a purely physical point of view, quantum effects play a functional role in information processing in the D-Wave processor," said Sergio Boixo, first author of the research paper, who conducted the research while he was a computer scientist at ISI and research assistant professor at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering.

Boixo and Lidar collaborated with Tameem Albash, postdoctoral research associate in physics at USC Dornsife; Federico M. Spedalieri, computer scientist at ISI; and Nicholas Chancellor, a recent physics graduate at USC Dornsife. Their findings will be published in Nature Communications on June 28.

The news comes just two months after the Quantum Computing Center's original D-Wave processor -- known commercially as the "Rainier" chip -- was upgraded to a new 512-qubit "Vesuvius" chip. The Quantum Computing Center, which includes a magnetically shielded box that is kept frigid (near absolute zero) to protect the computer against decoherence, was designed to be upgradable to keep up with the latest developments in the field.

The new Vesuvius chip at USC is currently the only one in operation outside of D-Wave. A second such chip, owned by Google and housed at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, is expected to become operational later this year.

Next, the USC team will take the Vesuvius chip for a test drive, putting it through the same paces as the Rainier chip.

This research was supported by the Lockheed Martin Corporation; U.S. Army Research Office grant number W911NF-12-1-0523; National Science Foundation grant number CHM-1037992, ARO Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative grant W911NF-11-1-026.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/4cI-LVzkB_4/130628131027.htm

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Endorsement watch: The firefighters still don?t like the Mayor (Offthekuff)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/315811582?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Egypt group: 22 million signatures against Morsi

CAIRO (AP) ? More than 22 million Egyptians have signed a petition calling for the country's Islamist president to step down, the youth group leading the signature campaign said Saturday on the eve of planned mass protests aimed at forcing Mohammed Morsi from office.

The planned demonstrations, which could plunge Egypt once again into a dangerous round of civil unrest, reflect the growing polarization of the nation since Morsi took power, with the president and his Islamist allies in one camp and seculars, liberals, moderate Muslims and Christians on the other.

Already, clashes across a string of cities north of Cairo over the past week have left at least seven people dead, including an American, and hundreds injured, and there are deep-rooted fears in the country that Sunday's protests will turn violent and quickly spiral out of control.

The Tamarod, or Rebel, movement says its petition is evidence of the widespread dissatisfaction with Morsi's administration, and has used the signature drive as the focal point of its call for millions of people to take to the streets Sunday to demand the president's ouster.

Mahmoud Badr, a Tamarod leader, told reporters Saturday a total of 22,134,460 Egyptians have signed the petition. He did not say whether there had been an independent audit of the signatures.

Morsi's supporters, who have long doubted the validity and authenticity of the collected signatures, expressed skepticism about the final count.

"How do we trust the petitions?" asked Brotherhood member Ahmed Seif Islam Hassan al-Banna. "Who guarantees that those who signed were not paid to sign?"

If authenticated, the collection of so many signatures would deal a symbolic blow to Morsi's mandate and put in stark terms the popular frustrations with an administration perceived to have failed to effectively deal with the country's pressing problems, from tenuous security and inflation and power cuts to traffic congestion and high unemployment.

Tamarod, which began its campaign with the goal of collecting more signatures than the 13 million votes Morsi garnered in his 2012 election victory, announced its final tally the day before protests that organizers vow will bring millions into the streets to push the president from power.

Morsi, meanwhile, sought to project a business-as-usual image Saturday, meeting with the defense and interior ministers to review preparations to protect the protesters and vital state facilities during Sunday's demonstrations.

Egypt has been roiled by political unrest in the two years since the uprising that ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak, but the round of protests set to kick off Sunday promises to be the largest and holds the potential to be the bloodiest yet.

In the past week alone, at least seven people have been killed in clashes between the president's supporters and opponents in cities in the Nile Delta, while on Friday protesters ransacked and torched as least five Brotherhood offices across the country.

Adding to the tension, eight lawmakers from the country's interim legislature announced their resignation Saturday to protest Morsi's policies. The 270-seat chamber was elected early last year by less than 10 percent of Egypt's eligible voters, and is dominated by Islamists who support Morsi.

With a sense of doom hanging over the country, Defense Minister Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi last Sunday gave the president and his opponents a week to reach a compromise and warned that the military would intervene to prevent the nation from entering a "dark tunnel." It was the strongest expression of the military's discontent with conditions in the nation since Morsi took office a year ago.

In South Africa, President Barack Obama said the U.S. supports freedom of speech in Egypt and the right of protesters to peacefully assemble, and called on called on both sides in Egypt to avoid violence.

"We would urge all parties to make sure they're not engaging in violence (and) police and military are showing appropriate restraint," he said.

The opposition, feeling that Morsi may be on the ropes and frustrated by past offers of dialogue that proved to be mostly symbolic, has shown no inclination to compromise, and Morsi offered no concessions to his opponents when he addressed the nation for 2 ? hours on Wednesday.

The focus of Sunday's protests is Morsi's Ittihadiya palace in Cairo. As a precaution, the president and his family are reported to have moved into the Cairo headquarters of the Republican Guard, the branch of the army tasked with protecting the president and presidential palaces.

As the country waits to see what transpires Sunday, thousands of supporters and opponents of the embattled president held rival sit-ins Saturday in separate parts of the capital.

With expectations of violence running high, the military has dispatched troops backed by armored personnel carriers to reinforce military bases on the outskirts of cities expected to be flashpoints.

In Cairo, the additional forces were deployed to military facilities in the suburbs and outlying districts. Army troops are also moving to reinforce police guarding the city's prisons to prevent a repeat of the nearly half dozen jail breaks during the chaos of the 2011 uprising.

The opposition is demanding Morsi's ouster, saying he has lost his legitimacy through a series of missteps and authoritarian policies. They say early presidential elections should be held within six months of his ouster.

Hard-line Islamists loyal to Morsi have repeatedly vowed to "smash" the protesters, arguing that they were a front for loyalists of Hosni Mubarak, the autocrat ousted in Egypt's 2011 revolt, determined to undermine Morsi's rule. They also say that Morsi is a freely elected president who must serve out his four-year term before he can be replaced in an election.

Many Egyptians fear the new round of unrest could trigger a collapse in law and order similar to the one that occurred during the 2011 revolt. Already, residents in some of the residential compounds and neighborhoods to the west of the city are reporting gunmen showing up to demand protection money or risk being robbed.

The police, who have yet to fully take back the streets after they disappeared in unclear circumstances in 2011, have stepped up patrols on the outskirts of the city, ostensibly to prevent weapons and ammunition from coming into the city to be used in the case of an outbreak of violence. The army is advertising hotlines for civilians to call if they run into trouble.

In the latest reminder of the near lawlessness that has plagued the Sinai Peninsula bordering Gaza and Israel since the 2011 revolt, a senior security official officer was assassinated Saturday in the coastal city of el-Arish as he arrived home from work. Police Brig. Mohammed Tolbah was instantly killed and his driver seriously injured.

___

Associated Press writer Maggie Michael contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-group-22-million-signatures-against-morsi-125919145.html

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