মঙ্গলবার, ২৬ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

SPIN METER: In budget fight, sky is falling again

(AP) ? President Barack Obama and his officials are doing their best to drum up public concern over the shock wave of spending cuts that could strike the government in just days. So it's a good time to be alert for sky-is-falling hype.

Over the last week or so, administration officials have come forward with a grim compendium of jobs to be lost, services to be denied or delayed, military defenses to be let down and important operations to be disrupted. Obama's new chief of staff, Denis McDonough, spoke of a "devastating list of horribles."

For most Americans, though, it's far from certain they will have a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day if the budget-shredder known as the sequester comes to pass. Maybe they will, if the impasse drags on for months.

For now, there's a whiff of the familiar in all the foreboding, harking back to the mid-1990s partial government shutdown, when officials said old people would go hungry, illegal immigrants would have the run of the of the land and veterans would go without drugs. It didn't happen.

For this episode, provisions are in place to preserve the most crucial services ? and benefit checks. Furloughs of federal workers are at least a month away, breathing room for a political settlement if the will to achieve one is found. Many government contractors would continue to be paid with money previously approved.

Warnings of thousands of teacher layoffs, for example, are made with the presumption that local communities would not step in with their own dollars ? perhaps from higher taxes ? to keep teachers in the classrooms if federal money is not soon restored. Education Secretary Arne Duncan says teacher layoffs have already begun, but he has not backed up that claim and school administrators say no pink slips are expected before May, for the next school year.

To be sure, the cuts are big and will have consequences. Knowing what they will be, though, is far from a precise exercise.

And there is a lot of improbable precision in administration statements about what could happen: more than 373,000 seriously ill people losing mental health services, 600,000 low-income pregnant women and new mothers losing food aid and nutrition education, 1,200 fewer inspections of dangerous work sites, 125,000 poor households going without vouchers, and much more.

"These numbers are just numbers thrown out into the thin air with no anchor, and I think they don't provoke the outrage or concern that the Obama administration seeks," said Paul Light, a New York University professor who specializes in the federal bureaucracy and budget. For all the dire warnings, he said, "It's not clear who gets hurt by this."

The estimates in many cases come from a simple calculation: Divide the proscribed spending cut by a program's per-person spending to see how many beneficiaries may lose services or benefits under the sequester.

But in practice, through all the layers of bureaucracy and the everyday smoke and mirrors of the federal budget, there is rarely a direct and measurable correlation between a federal dollar and its effect on the ground.

That has meant a lot of tenuous "could happen" warnings by the administration, not so much "will happen" evidence.

So it was in Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius' letter to Congress laying out likely consequences of the spending cuts for her agency's operations. She said the sequester "could" compromise the well-being of more than 373,000 people who "potentially" would not get needed mental health services, which in turn "could result" in more hospitalizations and homelessness.

Duncan left himself less wiggle room. "This stuff is real," he said last week. "Schools are already starting to give teachers notices."

Asked to provide backup for Duncan's assertion, spokesman Daren Briscoe said it was based on "an unspecified call he was on with unnamed persons," and the secretary might not be comfortable sharing details.

Briscoe referred queries about layoffs to the American Association of School Administrators. Noelle M. Ellerson, an assistant director of the organization, said Monday that in her many discussions with superintendents at the group's just-completed annual meeting, she heard of no layoffs of teachers. While everyone is bracing for that possibility down the road, she said, "not a single one I spoke with had already issued pink slips."

Most school district budgets for the next school year won't be completed for two months, she said, meaning any layoff notices would come in early to mid-May. "No one had yet acted."

School districts in areas set aside for tribal lands or military bases count on Washington for a significant share of their budgets, and are to lose $60 million, or 5 percent of their federal payments, when the sequester starts. Nearly all money to run most of the nation's public schools comes from local sources such as property taxes that are not affected by the federal cuts.

As for the assertion that 600,000 women could be dropped from the Women, Infants and Children Program, that's not to say the rolls would be cut by that number. The actual number is likely to include women who are not enrolled in the program now and could be denied when seeking to join it. Federal officials say the true number will depend on how states can manage their caseloads.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood has warned of impending furloughs of air traffic controllers, who may need to take one day off every two weeks, and said air-travel delays are likely across the country. Asked Friday why the airline lobby predicted no major impact on air travel from the sequester, he said, "I don't think they have the information we're presenting to them today."

"The idea that we're just doing this to create some kind of a horrific scare tactic is nonsense," LaHood said. But it's a pressure tactic nonetheless: "What I'm trying to do is to wake up members of the Congress on the Republican side to the idea that they need to come to the table."

However the cuts fall, Light at NYU says the Washington Monument ploy, also known as the Firemen First principle, is at work.

It goes like this: Put someone's budget at risk and the first thing you'll hear is a threat to close a cherished national symbol or lay off firefighters and police, when in fact there are other ways to cut spending.

It so happens the Washington Monument is already closed, for earthquake repair. But Obama indulged in the Firemen First principle quite literally.

He appeared at the White House in front of officers in blue uniforms to warn of the consequences of the sequester. "Emergency responders like the ones who are here today ? their ability to help communities respond to and recover from disasters will be degraded."

The law gives little flexibility to agencies to protect favored programs, except for big ones specifically exempted from the automatic cuts, such as Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and veterans benefits. FBI and Border Patrol furloughs are expected. Still, the White House has directed agencies to avoid cuts presenting "risks to life, safety or health" and to minimize harm to crucial services.

In the partial government shutdown during his presidency, Bill Clinton and his officials told some tall tales and sketched dark scenarios that didn't come to pass, though some might have if the crisis had lasted weeks or months longer. The shutdown played out over two installments totaling 26 days from mid-November 1995 to early January 1996.

National park properties closed (yes, even the Washington Monument), passport and federal mortgage insurance processing were disrupted and toxic waste cleanup stalled as hundreds of thousands of federal workers went idle, paid retroactively later. But states, communities and private groups stepped up to tide over the neediest, keeping Meals on Wheels rolling with their own resources, for example, until Clinton found emergency money to cover the costs. Warnings that Medicare treatment would be withheld proved unfounded, and veterans got their care.

Contractors, who perform many key services for government, kept working for IOUs. A claim by the government that deportations "have virtually ended" was not so.

The Justice Department told the story of a Florida gas station rejecting the government-issued credit card of a drug-enforcement agent to illustrate the indignity of it all.

But the reality was humdrum: The card had merely expired.

___

Associated Press writers Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Mary Clare Jalonick, Joan Lowy and Philip Elliott contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-26-Budget%20Battle-Sky%20Is%20Falling/id-0d1f7c4d7f144b45ab7eaf8612404fb7

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সোমবার, ২৫ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Is Britney's "Breakover" a Step in the Right Direction?

Britney Spears has been having a rocky couple of months, but you wouldn't know it to look at her. The "Scream and Shout" singer showed up fashionably late to Elton John's Oscar-viewing party on Sunday, sporting a new brunette 'do, a sophisticated plunging-neckline dress, and natural-looking makeup.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/britneys-breakover-good-sign/1-a-523890?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Abritneys-breakover-good-sign-523890

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List of 85th annual Academy Award winners

List of the 85th annual Academy Award winners announced Sunday in Los Angeles:

1. Best Picture: "Argo."

2. Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis, "Lincoln."

3. Actress: Jennifer Lawrence, "Silver Linings Playbook."

4. Supporting Actor: Christoph Waltz, "Django Unchained."

5. Supporting Actress: Anne Hathaway, "Les Miserables."

6. Directing: Ang Lee, "Life of Pi."

7. Foreign Language Film: "Amour."

8. Adapted Screenplay: Chris Terrio, "Argo."

9. Original Screenplay: Quentin Tarantino, "Django Unchained."

10. Animated Feature Film: "Brave."

11. Production Design: "Lincoln."

12. Cinematography: "Life of Pi."

13. Sound Mixing: "Les Miserables."

14. Sound Editing (tie): "Skyfall," ''Zero Dark Thirty."

15. Original Score: "Life of Pi," Mychael Danna.

16. Original Song: "Skyfall" from "Skyfall," Adele Adkins and Paul Epworth.

17. Costume: "Anna Karenina."

18. Documentary Feature: "Searching for Sugar Man."

19. Documentary (short subject): "Inocente."

20. Film Editing: "Argo."

21. Makeup and Hairstyling: "Les Miserables."

22. Animated Short Film: "Paperman."

23. Live Action Short Film: "Curfew."

24. Visual Effects: "Life of Pi."

___

Oscar winners previously presented this season:

Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award: Jeffrey Katzenberg

Honorary Award: Hal Needham

Honorary Award: D.A. Pennebaker

Honorary Award: George Stevens Jr.

Award of Merit: Cooke Optics

___

Online:

http://www.oscars.org

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/list-85th-annual-academy-award-winners-045850211.html

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Laser mastery narrows down sources of superconductivity

Feb. 24, 2013 ? Identifying the mysterious mechanism underlying high-temperature superconductivity (HTS) remains one of the most important and tantalizing puzzles in physics. This remarkable phenomenon allows electric current to pass with perfect efficiency through materials chilled to subzero temperatures, and it may play an essential role in revolutionizing the entire electricity chain, from generation to transmission and grid-scale storage. Pinning down one of the possible explanations for HTS -- fleeting fluctuations called charge-density waves (CDWs) -- could help solve the mystery and pave the way for rapid technological advances.

Now, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have combined two state-of-the-art experimental techniques to study those electron waves with unprecedented precision in two-dimensional, custom-grown materials. The surprising results, published online February 24, 2013, in the journal Nature Materials, reveal that CDWs cannot be the root cause of the unparalleled power conveyance in HTS materials. In fact, CDW formation is an independent and likely competing instability.

"It has been difficult to determine whether or not dynamic or fluctuating CDWs even exist in HTS materials, much less identify their role," said Brookhaven Lab physicist and study coauthor Ivan Bozovic. "Do they compete with the HTS state, or are they perhaps the very essence of the phenomenon? That question has now been answered by targeted experimentation."

Custom-grown Superconductors

Electricity travels imperfectly through traditional metallic conductors, losing energy as heat due to a kind of atomic-scale friction. Impurities in these materials also cause electrons to scatter and stumble, but superconductors can overcome this hurdle -- assuming the synthesis process is precise.

For this experiment, Bozovic used a custom-built molecular beam epitaxy system at Brookhaven Lab to grow thin films of LaSrCuO, an HTS cuprate (copper-oxide) compound. The metallic cuprates, assembled one atomic layer at a time, are separated by insulating planes of lanthanum and strontium oxides, resulting in what's called a quasi-two-dimensional conductor. When cooled down to a low enough temperature -- less than 100 degrees Kelvin -- strange electron waves began to ripple through that 2D matrix. At even lower temperatures, these films became superconducting.

Electron Sea

"In quasi-two-dimensional metals, low temperatures frequently bring about interesting collective states called charge-density waves," Bozovic said. "They resemble waves rolling across the surface of a lake under a breeze, except that instead of water, here we actually have a sea of mobile electrons."

Once a CDW forms, the electron density loses uniformity as the ripples rise and fall. These waves can be described by familiar parameters: amplitude (height of the waves), wavelength (distance between waves), and phase (the wave's position on the material). Detecting CDWs typically requires high-intensity x-rays, such as those provided by synchrotron light sources like Brookhaven's NSLS and, soon, NSLS-II. And even then, the technique only works if the waves are essentially frozen upon formation. However, if CDWs actually fluctuate rapidly, they may escape detection by x-ray diffraction, which typically requires a long exposure time that blurs fast motion.

Measuring Rolling Waves

To catch CDWs in action, a research group at MIT led by physicist Nuh Gedik used an advanced ultrafast spectroscopy technique. Intense laser pulses called "pumps" cause excitations in the superconducting films, which are then probed by measuring the film reflectance with a second light pulse -- this is called a pump-probe process. The second pulse is delayed by precise time intervals, and the series of measurements allow the lifetime of the excitation to be determined.

In a more sophisticated variant of the technique, largely pioneered by Gedik, the standard single pump beam is replaced by two beams hitting the surface from different sides simultaneously. This generates a standing wave of controlled wavelength in the film, but it disappears rapidly as the electrons relax back into their original state.

This technique was applied to the atomically perfect LaSrCuO films synthesized at Brookhaven Lab. In films with a critical temperature of 26 degrees Kelvin (the threshold beyond which the superconductivity breaks down), the researchers discovered two new short-lived excitations -- both caused by fluctuating CDWs.

Gedik's technique even allowed the researchers to record the lifetime of CDW fluctuations -- just 2 picoseconds (a millionth of a millionth of a second) under the coldest conditions and becoming briefer as the temperatures rose. These waves then vanished entirely at about 100 Kelvin, actually surviving at much higher temperatures than superconductivity.

Ruling out a Suspect

The researchers then hunted for those same signatures in cuprate films with slightly different chemical compositions and a greater density of mobile electrons. The results were both unexpected and significant for the future of HTS research.

"Interestingly, the superconducting sample with the highest critical temperature, about 39 Kelvin, showed no CDW signatures at all," Gedik said.

The consistent emergence of CDWs would have bolstered the conjecture that they play an essential role in high-temperature superconductivity. Instead, the new technique's successful detection of such electron waves in one sample but not in another (with even higher critical temperature) indicates that another mechanism must be driving the emergence of HTS.

"Results like this bring us closer to understanding the mystery of HTS, considered by many to be one of the greatest problems in physics today," Bozovic said. "The source of this extraordinary phenomenon is slowly but surely running out of places to hide."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by DOE/Brookhaven National Laboratory.

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


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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/R3e5kmat5ag/130224142911.htm

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রবিবার, ২৪ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Deal of the Day ? Polaroid XS100HD 1080P sports video camera bundle

Sunday’s LogicBUY Deal is the?Polaroid XS100HD 1080P sports video camera bundle for?$143.95. ?Features: Full HD 1080p video and up to 16MP still images Waterproof Recording modes: Burst, Time-Lapse, Slow Motion MicroSD memory card slot (up to 32GB) Connectors: HDMI output, USB 2.0 Lithium-Ion Battery with up to 3 hours between charges Bundle includes:?8GB microSD card, [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/02/24/deal-of-the-day-polaroid-xs100hd-1080p-sports-video-camera-bundle/

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How would you change Nokia's 808 Pureview?

How would you change Nokia's 808 Pureview

Nokia's 808 PureView. It's a Symbian phone... but it's got a magical camera. It's a Symbian phone... but... that lens! You can imagine the wrangling when people were deciding if they wanted to buy one of these last summer. On one hand, it was running a Zombie operating system with weak internals. On the other, it had a camera sensor that took truly beautiful images. So, for the merry few of you who purchased this handset, what was it like to use on a daily basis? Normally, we'd ask you to chime in with suggestion on how you'd change it, but let's be honest. If Nokia slapped this 41-megapixel sensor on a Lumia 920, we'd have difficulty looking at anything else.

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Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/hwyc-nokia-808/

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It's personal and business in GOP fight over Hagel

The fierce Republican opposition to President Barack Obama's nomination of Chuck Hagel to be defense secretary is personal and business.

The nasty fight long has been seen as a proxy for the never-ending scuffles between the Democratic president and congressional Republicans, with barely any reservoir of good will between the White House and lawmakers, and the GOP still smarting over the November election results.

Barring any surprises, the drawn-out battle over Hagel's nomination probably will end this coming week with his Senate confirmation. But his fellow Republicans have roughed him up.

A vote is expected on Tuesday.

In the weeks after Obama secured a second term, Republicans knocked out a presidential favorite, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, and dashed her secretary of state hopes over her widely debunked remarks about protests precipitating the assault on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Libya on Sept. 11.

Emboldened Republicans then set their sights on Hagel, whose GOP classification won him no points with the party.

The former two-term Nebraska senator was widely viewed as a political heretic. He disagreed with President George W. Bush over the Iraq war, stayed on the sidelines in the 2008 president race between Obama and the Republican nominee, Arizona Sen. John McCain, and endorsed fellow Vietnam veteran and former Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey in last year's Nebraska Senate race.

Republicans remember it well.

"There's a lot of ill will toward Sen. Hagel because when he was a Republican, he attacked President Bush mercilessly, at one point said he was the worst president since Herbert Hoover, said the surge (of U.S. troops in Iraq) was the worst blunder since the Vietnam War, which is nonsense, and was anti-his own party and people," McCain said in an interview on Fox News on the day Republicans stalled Hagel's nomination.

Hagel didn't help his cause with his past opposition to unilateral penalties against Iran, his comment about the influence of the "Jewish lobby" in Washington, his support for reducing the nation's nuclear arsenal and remarks that created widespread doubts about his backing for Israel.

His halting and uneven performance at his confirmation hearing also hurt his nomination.

McCain, one of Hagel's friends during their years in the Senate, would have been a crucial vote to help sway other Republicans to back the nominee. Instead, he is one of more than a dozen opposing Hagel.

"I think he will have been weakened, but having said that, the job that he has is too important," McCain told reporters Friday during a visit to Mexico. "I know that I and my other colleagues, if he's confirmed, and he very likely will be, will do everything we can to work with him."

The nomination fight also is about the business of re-electing Republicans in 2014. Challenging the Democratic president over his nominations and policies is clearly a winner with the conservative base, a point not lost on GOP incumbents wary of challenges from the tea party.

South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, who's up for re-election next year, is getting high marks from Republicans for his relentless effort to get more information about the Sept. 11 attack in Benghazi, Libya, and his fierce opposition to Hagel.

"Most people down here think he's dead-on in his arguments and hope that he continues to press the issues," said Warren Tompkins, a longtime GOP strategist.

The Libya attack that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans has been a political flashpoint for Republicans who accused the Obama administration of an election-year cover-up of a terrorist assault.

An independent review conducted by respected former diplomats failed to mollify the GOP, who demanded testimony from Hillary Rodham Clinton, secretary of state when the attack occurred, and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

Graham has been at the forefront in seeking emails, communiques and videos while threatening to delay both Hagel's nomination and that of CIA Director-nominee John Brennan, who also has become entangled in the Libya dispute.

During a stop in Easley, S.C., this past week, Graham insisted that his effort has nothing to do with politics.

"It's not because he's a Democrat and I'm a Republican," he said, referring to Obama. "It's because it really was system failure and we need learn from it. We have not gotten the information, and we're going to get it if I have to die trying."

The White House has agreed to give the Senate Intelligence Committee additional documents related to the Benghazi attack, according to a congressional aide said. The material includes emails between national security officials showing the debate within the administration over how to describe the attack.

Graham also has been intense in opposing Hagel, portraying the former GOP senator as an out-of-the-mainstream radical. Some of the toughest questions of Hagel during his confirmation hearing last month came from Graham, who seized on Hagel's "Jewish lobby" remark and asked him to "name one dumb thing we've been goaded into doing due to pressure by the Israeli, Jewish lobby."

Hagel was often tentative in his response in the face of GOP grilling.

"He's leading, he's governing," Glenn McCall, the chairman of the York (S.C.) County Republican Party and a GOP committeeman, said of Graham. "More and more I talk to Republicans - and even those that are conservative Democrats - I think folks are looking for leadership."

Both Tompkins and McCall cited a Winthrop University poll released last week that showed Graham with strong support from registered Republicans in the state, with 72 percent holding a favorable opinion of the senator.

It's a turnaround from several years ago when Graham's work with Democrats on climate change and immigration as well as his votes for Obama's nominees for the Supreme Court angered South Carolina Republicans, with some calling him out of touch and Charleston and Lexington counties voting to censure him over his bipartisan work.

"It might be the right thing to do ... but when you partner with Hillary Clinton or you partner with John Kerry, you're going to be looked upon with a lot of suspicion in South Carolina," Tompkins said. "You have to be careful who you dance with."

Kerry, a former Democratic senator from Massachusetts, has just replaced Clinton as secretary of state.

Graham still may face a primary challenge, but he and other GOP incumbents are determined to head off any conservative uprising as Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch successfully did in his 2012 race. They want to avoid the fate of the only GOP primary loser last year - Indiana's longtime Sen. Dick Lugar.

Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the No. 2 Republican and a candidate next year, took the lead on the Senate floor to block a vote on Hagel on Feb. 14 and was one of 15 Republicans last week to call for Obama to withdraw the nomination.

Cornyn got a primary challenger last week.

Source: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2013/02/23/2486148/its-personal-and-business-in-gop.html?storylink=rss

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শুক্রবার, ২২ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

AP Source: 3 former Miami coaches want case tossed

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) ? Three former Miami assistant coaches filed a motion on Thursday with the NCAA asking that their infractions cases be dismissed because of the mistakes that governing body for college athletics made in their long investigation of the Hurricanes.

Former football assistant Aubrey Hill and former basketball assistants Jake Morton and Jorge Fernandez had their motion delivered to the NCAA's Committee on Infractions, according to a person who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither side authorized the release of any information.

The motion, according to the person, says the three coaches believe the NCAA's alliance with the attorney for the former booster at the center of the Miami scandal has created a scenario where they cannot "get a fair and reasonable proceeding."

A conference call on the matter is scheduled for Friday with the NCAA.

"It's unprecedented that all this is happening, and happening this way," the person said.

The NCAA believes Hill and Fernandez provided them with misleading information during the probe into Miami athletics, and cited them as believed to be in violation with what's known as Rule 10.1 ? the broad one governing ethical conduct. Morton was also cited in the case against the Hurricanes, after the NCAA said he, among other things, accepted "supplemental income" of at least $6,000 from the former booster, Nevin Shapiro.

Miami received its notice of allegations from the NCAA on Tuesday. In that letter, the NCAA said the Hurricanes had a "lack of institutional control" for the way they failed to monitor Shapiro, a convicted felon who provided cash, gifts and other items to players on the football and men's basketball teams over a span of about eight years.

Shapiro is currently serving a 20-year prison term for masterminding a $930 million Ponzi scheme.

It's unknown when the committee will decide anything related to the motion. The NCAA has told other coaches named in the notice of allegations, including Missouri basketball coach Frank Haith, that responses to the letter are due by May 20 ? and that the case may not be heard by the infractions committee until July unless all parties involve agree to an expedited schedule.

The case that will be presented on behalf of Hill, Morton and Fernandez is also expected to include the assertion that since the NCAA cooperated with Shapiro attorney Maria Elena Perez ? who deposed two witnesses that the NCAA wanted to hear from as part of her client's bankruptcy case and used subpoena power to do so, a tool the association does not have in its arsenal ? that fraud was also perpetrated on the bankruptcy court.

The news of the motion was just one part of yet another busy day as it relates to the Miami-NCAA saga, which almost seemed to be dragging along for the better part of two years before this wild week filled with acknowledgements of wrongdoing by investigators, the delivery of the actual charges, two extremely sharp-tongued statements issued by University President Donna Shalala about the process and now what essentially amounts to legal wrangling.

And one Florida state lawmaker has now called the NCAA's probe of the Hurricanes "a witch hunt."

At Louisville, the Cardinals have made the decision to keep assistant coach Clint Hurtt on staff while he answers NCAA allegations of ethical misconduct while he was an assistant with the Hurricanes. Louisville athletic director Tom Jurich said he doesn't see a need to change Hurtt's role or status with the program right now, but that he couldn't say whether Hurtt will be with Louisville next season.

"Clint is due his due process," Jurich said. "I think that's the only fair thing that we can do as a university. Clint's side of the story is much different than the allegations are so I think we wait the 90 days and see how it unfolds then."

Like Hill and Fernandez, Hurtt faces a charge that he breached the ethical-conduct provision from the NCAA.

A person familiar with the matter told The AP that the Rule 10.1 charge against Hurtt largely stems from the NCAA's belief that he was not truthful in a November 2011 interview with investigators, one that included questions about whether he provided improper meals, transportation and some lodging for a small number of recruits and players.

Also Thursday, a member of the Florida Senate wrote the state's Attorney General, asking that the NCAA be investigated for what he called "lack of institutional control" on the association's part.

Sen. Joseph Abruzzo wrote Attorney General Pam Bondi, saying that NCAA investigators "engaged in corrupt behavior in an attempt to manufacture misdeeds against the University of Miami" and in doing so, may have actually violated Florida law.

"I am requesting that the NCAA's admitted wrongdoing be investigated immediately before the NCAA's witch hunt against the University of Miami causes further damage," Abruzzo wrote.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-source-3-former-miami-coaches-want-case-015051829--spt.html

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H A R L E M + B E S P O K E: DRINK: Coffee Grinder @ Lenox Coffee

Thursday, February 21st, 8:00PM Coffee Grinder @ Lenox Coffee, 60 West 129th, east of Lenox Avenue. ?There's not really a lot of places for the LBGT community to meet in Harlem and Lenox Coffee is now trying a night out call Coffee Grinder. ?Come meet the neighbors at this gay mixer that will have DJ Bill Coleman providing the music. ?The bespoke coffee shop recently started up wine and beer service so should be the happening spot next Thursday. www.LenoxCoffee.com

Source: http://harlembespoke.blogspot.com/2013/02/drink-coffee-grinder-lenox-coffee.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২১ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১৩

The Corsair : SMC celebrates African American art

Bernard Kinsey (Right) shakes Mack Massey's hand (Left) after receiving a signed copy of the book with his father Bruce Massey (Center) at the African American Treasures Exhibit on Saturday, February 16, 2013 at the Santa Monica College Pete & Susan Barrett Art Gallery. (Photo: David J. Hawkins/Corsair)

Bernard Kinsey (Right) shakes Mack Massey's hand (Left) after receiving a signed copy of the book with his father Bruce Massey (Center) at the African American Treasures Exhibit on Saturday, February 16, 2013 at the Santa Monica College Pete & Susan Barrett Art Gallery. (Photo: David J. Hawkins/Corsair)

Ryan Sindon
February 20, 2013
Filed under Arts & Entertainment, Top Stories

Just in time for Black History Month, Santa Monica College held an opening reception for ?African American Treasures: History and Art from the Collection of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey? at the Pete and Susan Barrett Art Gallery on Friday evening.

The collection is organized in chronological order from left to right, with each piece displaying an integral part of American history and its involvement with African Americans. The story of African American culture is told by using paintings, sculptures, illustrations, and historical documents.

Featured throughout the exhibit is a letter from Malcolm X to his editor, a letter from Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to his literary agent, an illustration named ?First Colored Senator and Representatives,? and many more historical documents and art pieces.

The pieces in the room show the visitor that history does not just exist in textbooks. There are many sketches, illustrations, sculptures, and paintings ranging from traditional landscapes to abstracts, all created by African American artists.

Professor Ron Davis, chair of the art department, described the collection as a ?global setting for art.?

Members of many different communities showed up to the opening. Among them were administrators, trustees, professors, SMC students, artists and Santa Monica citizens. Artists that were in the collection showed up to the opening as well.

?It?s important to get out into the local community and see the artwork,? said SMC student Heather Tijman, an art major.

SMC President and Superintendent Dr. Chui L. Tsang expressed the importance of the exhibit, calling it ?a rich and wonderful collection to help students learn about the rich history of America.?

Trustee Rob Rader called the exhibit ?a unique collection that needs to be seen.?

?The collection is both aesthetically and socially significant,? Rader said.

The Kinseys are a retired couple who reside in the neighboring Pacific Palisades. They are collectors of art and historical documents.

?I collect the art of the living, and my husband collects the art of the dead,? Shirley Kinsey said.

The Kinseys gave two tours of the gallery throughout the evening, and spent time describing the importance of each piece in the collection.

?African American history is American history,? Shirley Kinsey said. ?We need to learn more about each other?s culture as well as our own.?

Bernard and Shirley Kinsey will also be hosting a lecture at the Broad Stage titled ?The Kinsey Collection: Black History Explored Through Art and Legacy.? The lecture will go over ideas such as the myth of absence. The event will take place on Feb. 28 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. with a reception in the art gallery.

?African American Treasures: History and Art from the Collection of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey? can be seen at the Pete and Susan Barrett Art Gallery in the Performing Arts Center, located at 1310 11th St.

Gallery hours are from noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays. The exhibit will be at SMC until March 9.

Source: http://www.thecorsaironline.com/arts-entertainment/2013/02/20/smc-celebrates-african-american-art/

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Academy Awards: Oscar-Nominated Songs That Should Have Won ...

These Songs Were All Just Travelin' Thru

It?s happened to so many of us who devote all the days (and evenings) of our lives to watching the litany of awards shows that come our way this time of year: you?re rooting for your favorite to take the statue, but when the winner is announced another guy, gal, song, artist or act wins. And you want to scream, cry or take to drinking (we do all three) because you know in your gut that another song should have secured that prize. Happens all the time, right?

Well, Hollywood?s big movie awards are less than a week away, and we?re still obsessing over the music. As we mull over this year?s Academy Award nominations for Best Original Song, we can?t help but wonder about what should have been from Oscars past. Sure, they may get it right most of the time, but sometimes the Academy misses the mark (as it did often in the early 2000s). Below we look back at the last 15 years and make a case for five of our favorite Oscar-nominated songs that should have landed the little bald dude, but didn?t.

Should Have Won: ?I Don?t Want to Miss A Thing? from Armageddon, 1998

Since you can?t win an Oscar for being the Most Awful Movie of the Year (or Ever), you might as well get to compete in a few other categories. With all of director Michael Bay?s stars-and-stripes-waving-in-the-wind scenes and meticulously-choreographed, slow-motion, mid-America montages, it would have seemed downright un-American, we suppose, for Armageddon not get some stateside awards attention. So why not let an icon like Diane Warren (who wrote the music and the lyrics) walk away with a statuette for the schmaltzy ballad that happens to be the very best thing about this disastrous disaster flick? If you can get past the image of a young Ben Affleck parading animal crackers on Liv Tyler?s bare midriff and belly button (seriously) while Liv?s dad Steven Tyler sings to the seduction of his daughter on a prairie somewhere, you know you just love Warren?s song ? even if it is a love/hate relationship. Sometimes cheeseball songs makes us feel better than, well, cheese or chicken soup, and we?re not ashamed to admit it. Besides, who remembers anything about a cartoon called The Prince of Egypt today, anyway? Anybody? C?mon now!

Winner: ?When You Believe? from The Prince of Egypt

Source: http://idolator.com/7442426/academy-awards-oscar-nominated-songs-aerosmith-dolly-parton-beyonce

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Movie about Bruce Lee?s most legendary fight is in the works

Bruce Lee obtained legendary status as a martial artist in part because of a 1965 fight in Oakland, Calif., against Chinese kung fu master Wong Jack Man. It was the last fight of Lee's career.

For nearly 50 years, there has been much speculation and heated debate about what occurred inside of that gym, as very few people witnessed it. But the upshot of the bout is that it helped to develop Lee's views on Jeet Kune Do, which is the forerunner of today's mixed martial arts.

On Tuesday, Deadline.com reported that a movie about the fight that will be called "Birth of the Dragon" will be produced by QED International and Groundswell Productions.

[Also: Courageous Liz Carmouche open about sexual orientation]

Groundswell CEO Michael London told Yahoo! Sports on Tuesday that the process of developing a screenplay has just begun.

It is not, however, designed to be a biography of Lee, who died in 1973, or the definitive account of the fight.

"We're actually not trying to re-tell the story of Bruce Lee," London said. "I think that's a natural impression people might get. The idea, actually, is to take that battle, which has been so mysterious and so powerful and so interesting to so many, and tell the lead-up to that story, which is Wong Jack Man's arrival in San Francisco.

"We've created a back story. There is a lot people that know about why Wong Jack Man came to San Francisco, but we're trying to create a dramatically satisfying story about why he's there. So we're taking license. That's why we say it's going to be inspired by that fight and isn't a literal telling of it."

London said the writers -- Christopher Wilkinson and Stephen Rivele -- have the belief that Jack Man was trying to help Lee to become the best version of himself and was trying to teach Lee lessons.

London said the fight sequences will be shown through the eyes of the people who were there. One of those was Lee's wife, Linda, who was eight months pregnant at the time with the couple's son, Brandon.

"There will be a slightly stylized quality to the actual fight sequences," London said. "That will allow different people who were there to come away with differing conclusions of what happened. ... The whole idea is that the 13 people who saw that fight came away with very differing ideas of what happened. The fight itself will be impressionistic."

[Also: UFC's Matt Riddle wants to push for change on pot ban]

Jack Man is reclusive and rarely does interviews and has rarely spoken of that fight. London said producers will approach him after finishing the screenplay. He said he hasn't reached out to Lee's family, either.

Lee's daughter, Shannon, who runs the Bruce Lee Foundation, said that the fight was significant in her father's life because of the impact it had upon him.

What Uncle Sam could learn from the Catholic Church

We absolutely ought to have a safety net for the very needy ? but it won't come cheap

Over the past few days, we have seen a number of conversations arise over the relevance of Catholicism in America, thanks to the historic resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. More than 57 million Catholic adults lived in the U.S. in 2008, according to Census figures, far and away the largest religious affiliation, with Baptists second at 36 million. Catholics accounted for almost a third of all self-identifying Christian adults, a group that comprises 76 percent of the total adult population; Catholics alone are 25 percent of the adult population.

With those numbers in mind, it might have surprised some to see the New York Times' Ross Douthat proclaim an end to "the Catholic moment" in his Sunday column. Douthat argued that the Catholic influence has waned due to scandals, and that overall, Christian thought on what makes a properly ordered society has been largely abandoned by both parties. Eight years ago, at the last papal transition, "a Catholic view of economics and culture represented a center that both parties hoped to claim," Douthat wrote. "Today's Republicans are more likely to channel Ayn Rand than Thomas Aquinas,?and a strident social liberalism holds the whip hand in the Democratic Party."

SEE ALSO: WATCH: Amazing footage of Russia's meteorite crashes

My friend and The Week colleague Matt Lewis largely agrees, but not about the cause. The culture war is now over, Matt says, and conservatives, along with the Catholic Church, have lost it as the politics of the U.S. grew much more secular. "Is it any surprise that conservatism?itself?would eventually evolve to mirror a society that is rapidly becoming more secular and less traditional?" Matt asks. Put together with the psychological impact of the 9/11 attack, the Great Recession, and the government economic interventions that followed, it's small wonder that a more secular conservatism and liberalism emerged. According to Matt, the rise of the Tea Party has defined conservatism even further toward the "Randian ethos" of objectivism, Ayn Rand's atheist philosophy that represents the radical opposition to both Barack Obama's call for "collective action" and George W. Bush's "compassionate conservatism."

Secular or not, and regardless of the reason, Douthat is correct in pointing out the issue. He diagnoses the real problem incorrectly, though. The problem isn't the leadership of the Catholic Church or the loss of influence ? it's the leadership of the United States, and more broadly the West, and the loss of integrity. The real issue isn't Rand vs Aquinas, but Diogenes and his search for honesty in public discourse.

SEE ALSO: Can the Vatican survive in our digital age?

Interestingly, I had a conversation less than two weeks ago with a fellow Catholic about the Rand/Aquinas conflict. The topic of my conservatism arose, and he asked me almost immediately whether I believed in the Randian philosophy, and whether people have a responsibility to the poor. In fact, I am no Randian; I believe that Jesus left pretty clear instructions on his followers' responsibility to care for the poor. I also believe that societies need to structure themselves to provide the proverbial "safety net" for those truly in need, if for no other reason than self-insurance. Any society with a large class of exploited poor will have no end of social difficulties and instability, the costs of which in a properly ordered system would far exceed the assistance extended. In Aquinas' terms, these would represent the structures necessary for a just society.

Society does not necessarily mean government, although it doesn't exclude it either. It certainly didn't mean "government" in Aquinas' time. The Christian church pioneered hospitals, outreach to the poor, and education for the masses long before governments decided to enter into those industries, even after they became industries. Ironically, these days government has mostly gotten in the way of Catholic attempts to provide a just society through individual and group action, by threatening their existence with mandates that force the Church and its organizations to choose between faithful adherence to their doctrine and outreach to the poor and homeless.?

SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: February 13, 2013

However, a couple of key elements are also necessary in this paradigm: responsibility and sustainability. The problem facing the American welfare system and the European nanny states is that they are designed with neither in mind. Their fiscal structure pays more in benefits than it receives, a very basic form of irresponsibility and unsustainability. That forces these systems to borrow massively against future production, which in essence means that these social systems pay benefits with someone else's money ? the children or grandchildren to come. One could consider that theft, or at the least taxation without representation.

It's not difficult to argue that neither of the two philosophers would endorse such a system. After all, even St. Thomas Aquinas did math.

SEE ALSO: Pope Benedict steps down: Who will be the next pope?

Anyone with a calculator can figure this out; it doesn't take philosophers to tell us that we can't borrow money forever without risking collapse. Yet we hear nearly nothing from the political class about the true costs of these programs, or the responsibility for the bills to be paid properly when incurred.?

One rare voice did arise on this point over the weekend in Howard Dean, former governor of Vermont and ex-chair of the Democratic National Committee. In an interview with pollster Scott Rasmussen, Dean explained that the middle class would have to choose whether to keep the systems as they are and start paying a lot more to maintain them, or demand reform that would include lower benefits. "This is the fundamental problem in American politics," Dean said. "Somebody has to tell the middle class that either your taxes are going up or your programs are going to get cut, or else we're going to go into financial oblivion."

SEE ALSO: Should U.K. schools shame students who use regional slang?

So who in today's political class wants to tell the middle class this very obvious truth? "No one," Dean replies, and he's right. This takes the reform argument entirely out of the equation, which brings us back to Douthat and Lewis on the "Catholic center" and just society. We have no voices in the current political arena, Catholic or otherwise, explaining that we can have programs that take care of the truly needy, which would require many more to sacrifice a little more ? either in eschewing ever-expanding benefits, or in taxes ? while ensuring sustainability and stability without taking money from our grandchildren to pay for our policies.?

When George Bush proposed some modest reforms of Social Security, including the gradual transformation of the program from a defined-benefit program to a defined-contribution program, he got ridiculed out of the effort ? and the reformers have been on the run ever since. With reform off the table, so too is the Catholic center of sustainable and responsible safety net programs, and the only other options are either government confiscation or every man for himself. And as long as no one will be honest with the public about the consequences of today's irresponsible and unsustainable systems, those will continue to be the only two political options.

SEE ALSO: 10 things you need to know today: February 11, 2013

This isn't a secular vs religious conflict. It's an honesty issue. In the current political climate, Diogenes would be swinging that lamp a very, very long time.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uncle-sam-could-learn-catholic-church-062300937.html

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Find the Importance of Personal Finance Budgeting In these days ...

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Source: http://yahoodiary.com/blog/44423/find-the-importance-of-personal-finance-budgeting-in-these-days/

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Extreme Rules tickets on sale Saturday, Feb. 23

Get ready to throw out the rulebook, St. Louis: WWE?s most out-of-control pay-per-view of the year, Extreme Rule, is coming to Scottrade Center on Sunday, May 19. Tickets for the event go on sale this Saturday, Feb. 23, at 10 a.m CT.

Members of the WWE Universe can purchase tickets at the Scottrade Center box office, all Ticketmaster outlets and Ticketmaster.com, as well as by phone by calling 800-745-3000.

Don?t miss Extreme Rules? debut in one of America?s most storied wrestling cities. Last year?s thrilling show culminated with a brutal fight between John Cena and Brock Lesnar. What will be in store for the WWE Universe come May 19, when the entire WWE locker room embraces their extreme side for one night?

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Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/extremerules/2013/tickets-on-sale

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Build a giant Android tablet (or kiosk) with an Android TV stick + touch frame

You can take any old Android TV stick, plug it into your TV and add a keyboard, mouse or remote to run Android apps on a big screen. But what if you want to add support for multi-touch so you can really use your big screen like a big tablet?

Peau Productions has put together a PQ Labs Android mini PC and an PQ Labs Touch Frame to create a TV-sized tablet that could be used for digital signage, a kiosk-type setup, or for some heavy-duty Angry Birds sessions on your TV.

PQ Labs iStick with touch frame

The PQ Labs iStick A200 is an Android mini PC with a Rockchip RK3066 dual core processor, Mali 400 quad-core graphics, 2GB of RAM, and 4GB of storage. There?s a USB port on one end and an HDMI port on the other. It sells for about $79 and comes pre-rooted.

The PQ Labs Multi-Touch G4 frame is a ?32 inch or larger overlay frame that you can use with a projector or TV display to add support for multi-touch input.

Prics for the frames start at about $467. So while the iStick A200 won?t put a big dent in your wallet, the whole kit doesn?t come particularly cheap. Still, it?s pretty impressive that you can set up a fully functional touchscreen device that runs Android apps including a web browser, video player, Google Maps, and many other apps.

via CNX-Software

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Liliputing/~3/8tVBkLYa4p0/build-a-giant-android-tablet-or-kiosk-with-an-android-tv-stick-touch-frame.html

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KSDK reports that Lindenwood University diving coach Kyle Friesenhahn was arrested on assault charges for trying to punch and sp...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Feb 19, 2013 @ 11:15am ET)

11:15 AM: The Wichita Eagle reports two brothers celebrated winning a $75,000 lottery ticket by buying some marijuana & meth, but then caused an explosion in their duplex when they tried to light their bongs with butane.

11:00 AM: The home arena for the Traktor Chelyabinsk hockey team, which was damaged in Friday's asteroid explosion, has been cleared by the KHL to host playoffs games starting on Thursday.

10:45 AM: KFOR-TV reports 41-year-old Gannon Mendez was arrested on child abuse charges for allegedly beating his 9-year-old son because the son said he likes Oklahoma better than Oklahoma State. Mendez is also accused of waking his son throughout the night & forcing him to do push-ups.

10:30 AM: Country singer Mindy McCready, who committed suicide on Sunday, reportedly shot a dog that belonged to boyfriend David Wilson before turning the gun on herself. Wilson was found dead at the same Arkansas home last month from an apparent suicide.

10:15 AM: KSDK reports that Lindenwood University diving coach Kyle Friesenhahn was arrested on assault charges for trying to punch and spit at police officers after he was pulled over for driving the wrong way down a street in St. Peters, Missouri.

10:00 AM: Texas A&M QB & 2012 Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Manziel says he's taking all his classes online this semester due to all the attention & autograph requests he gets on campus: "I went one day - it was a small class of 20 or 25 - and it kind of turned into more of a big deal than I thought."

9:00 PM: NBC Dallas-Ft. Worth reports on Justin Nicholas, a Frisco Wakeland High School basketball player who missed the last two months while battling cancer but was allowed to score one final basket during Wakeland's senior night game.

8:45 PM: The Dayton and Gardner-Webb college baseball teams got into a snowball fight during a weather delay in Saturday's game at Boiling Springs, North Carolina.

8:30 PM: During Sunday's first full squad meeting with manager Dale Sveum, Chicago Cubs players took off their jackets to reveal they were all wearing bright orange hunting gear. Sveum was shot in the ear by Robin Yount during a hunting trip this off-season.

8:15 PM: The Kansas City Chiefs have signed safety Husain Abdullah, a practicing Muslim who sat out the 2012 NFL season to go on a speaking tour of mosques across the country & make a pilgrimage to Mecca.

8:00 PM: The Baltimore Sun reports that the city of Baltimore spent $585,000 on a study on how the city can save money.

7:45 PM: NFL Hall of Fame QB Joe Montana & New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton visited Tulane football practice on Monday. Montana's son Nick is a QB for the Green Wave, while Tulane head coach Curtis Johnson was a former Saints assistant under Payton.

7:30 PM: A man was found dead on a golf course in Sunrise, Florida early Monday morning after shots were heard from behind a nearby gentlemen's club.

7:15 PM: Sacramento mayor Kevin Johnson said after speaking to NBA owners during All-Star Weekend about keeping the Kings from moving to Seattle: "I can just tell you that everyone I talked to - and I am not going to be specific - but everyone is rooting for Sacramento."

7:00 PM: New Jacksonville Jaguars general manager David Caldwell said he prefers to draft players from big schools: "I'm not saying I would never draft a small-school player, but they would have to dominate that level. I wouldn't say absolutes, but I'm a believer: Big school, big competition."

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=48326

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Marcellus Shale Fracking Study To Research Natural Gas Drilling Health Effects

DANVILLE, Pa. (AP) ? A Pennsylvania health company says it has gotten a $1 million grant to study possible health impacts of natural gas drilling on the Marcellus shale.

Geisinger Health System said Monday that the Degenstein Foundation had awarded the money to help underwrite what it called a "large-scale, scientifically rigorous assessment" of the drilling.

Most of the money will be used for data-gathering, and some will go toward developing studies of the data. Officials said they expect other funders to come forward.

The study is to look at detailed health histories of hundreds of thousands of patients who live near wells and other facilities that are producing natural gas from the Marcellus shale formation thousands of feet underground. The boom in drilling has generated jobs and billions of dollars in revenue for companies and individual leaseholders, but it also raised health concern.

Geisinger Health Systems of Danville, Guthrie Health of Sayre and Susquehanna Health will collaborate on planning and execution of the study, including developing a health surveillance network aimed at assessing and reporting on the patient data gathered from electronic health records.

"The goal is to create a cross-disciplinary, integrated and sharable repository of data on environmental exposures, health outcomes and community impacts of Marcellus shale drilling ? the first systematic longitudinal study to do so," the announcement said. "Some of the potential health effects that are likely to be investigated first include asthma, trauma and cardiovascular disease."

Preliminary results could be available within the next year, while other findings are expected in five years and over the next two decades.

Many federal and state regulators say hydraulic fracturing is safe when done properly, and that thousands of wells have been drilled with few complaints of pollution. But environmental groups and some doctors assert that regulations still aren't tough enough and that the practice can pollute groundwater and air.

A decision earlier this month by state regulators in New York to delay a decision on shale gas development pending a more in-depth health study in that state drew praise from environmental groups but protests from landowners eager to reap profits from their mineral resources and frustrated at another delay in a rulemaking process that has kept drilling on hold for 4? years.

Health Commissioner Nirav Shah cited Geisinger's planned study as one of several that have been initiated or published by the scientific community. Also cited was an EPA study on potential impacts of fracking activities on drinking water that is due to be completed in 2014 and a study recently announced by researchers from the University of Pennsylvania in collaboration with scientists from Columbia, Johns Hopkins and the University of North Carolina.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/18/marcellus-shale-fracking-study-natural-gas_n_2711589.html

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Miami responds to NCAA review

February, 18, 2013

Feb 18

6:27

PM ET

Miami president Donna Shalala issued a statement responding to the NCAA's enforcement review report, released Monday.
?The University takes full responsibility for the conduct of its employees and student-athletes. Where the evidence of NCAA violations has been substantiated, we have self-imposed appropriate sanctions, including unilaterally eliminating once-in-a-lifetime opportunities for our students and coaches over the past two years, and disciplining and withholding players from competition.

We believe strongly in the principles and values of fairness and due process. However, we have been wronged in this investigation, and we believe that this process must come to a swift resolution, which includes no additional punitive measures beyond those already self-imposed.

In September 2010?two and a half years ago?the University of Miami advised the NCAA of allegations made by a convicted felon against former players and, at that time, we pledged our full cooperation with any investigation into the matter. One year later, in August 2011, when the NCAA?s investigation into alleged rules violations was made public, I pledged we would ?vigorously pursue the truth, wherever that path may lead? and insisted upon ?complete, honest, and transparent cooperation with the NCAA from our staff and students.?

The University of Miami has lived up to those promises, but sadly the NCAA has not lived up to their own core principles. The lengthy and already flawed investigation has demonstrated a disappointing pattern of unprofessional and unethical behavior. By the NCAA leadership?s own admission, the University of Miami has suffered from inappropriate practices by NCAA staff. There have also been damaging leaks to the media of unproven charges. Regardless of where blame lies internally with the NCAA, even one individual, one act, one instance of malfeasance both taints the entire process and breaches the public?s trust.

There must be a strong sense of urgency to bring this to closure. Our dedicated staff and coaches, our outstanding student-athletes, and our supporters deserve nothing less.?

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/acc/post/_/id/52509/miami-responds-to-ncaa-review

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2013 Ford Focus to use Cooper tires

FINDLAY, OH (Toledo News Now)- Ford Motor Company has selected the Cooper Zeon RS3-A tire as standard original equipment on the 2013 Ford Focus SE and Titanium models.

The Cooper Zeon RS3-A is the latest ultra high performance all-season tire in the Cooper Tire performance line up. Size 215/50R17 (W speed rated) is the fitment specified for the two Ford Focus models.

"The Cooper Zeon RS3-A is a Consumer Digest Best Buy and has gained a strong consumer following for its dynamic handling and control in all seasons," said Cooper Tire Chairman, CEO and President Roy Armes. "We appreciate Ford's confidence in our products and capabilities and are excited to see our Cooper Zeon RS3-A tires rolling on these Ford Focus models. This new relationship with Ford marks our company's entry into the U.S. passenger car OE tire market, a strategic decision aligned with our goal to drive profitable sales by diversifying product mix, expanding sales channels and leveraging technology.?Cooper Tire will remain primarily focused on the replacement tire business where we've built a strong brand and enduring customer relationships. Our partnership with Ford provides another opportunity for growth and speaks to the increasing demand for our products, as well as the value proposition we deliver."

Cooper's headquarters?is in Findlay. Its?manufacturing, sales, distribution, technical and design facilities within its family of companies are located in 11 countries worldwide.

Burt Jordan, executive director for?Global Vehicle and Powertrain Purchasing, says Ford is pleased to announce this partnership.

"We look forward to this new relationship with Cooper, a manufacturer that has been crafting tires for nearly 100 years," said Jordan.

And local Ford dealers say the deal will benefit the whole Findlay community.

"The Cooper employees have always bought Fords from us, I mean a number of them have come out here," said Roger Barton of Reineke Ford. "And we've always sold Cooper Tires through our Quick Lane facility. So marrying the two together is very nice for us, I think."

Copyright 2013 Toledo News Now. All rights reserved.

Source: http://findlay.toledonewsnow.com/news/news/107855-2013-ford-focus-use-cooper-tires

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Every day, we grow older and our body undergoes a lot of breakdown process up until it reaches its limit. Along with the natural changes that occur in our body as we age is the growing concern of having those wrinkles in the face. These are actually the once that makes a person look old and crumpled.

But with the cosmetic surgery in Melbourne, you can now tuck that skin up again and make you look ten years younger. In just a matter of seconds, those wrinkles will be gone. Cosmetic surgery in Melbourne has been known to make older women look younger than their age by removing those hideous wrinkles from their face. A procedure called Botulinum or Botox can be done to stretch that skin and make it free from creases. The procedure is actually very simple and safe to do.

A substance called Botulinum toxin is being injected at the bottom of the skin where the wrinkles lie and in just a matter of seconds, the skin becomes tighter making it free from any wrinkle. Yet, not all people can have this procedure since there are contraindications before it can be done. It is not allowed for people who have neuromuscular disorders, hypersensitivity, pregnant clients, and unrealistic patient expectations.

Stress no more when you see a wrinkle on your face in the morning because in just a prick of a needle, your problem can already be solved. Cosmetic surgery in Melbourne indeed works wonders in making people look better than ever. With the cosmetic surgery in Melbourne, you are surely going to have your best face forward.

Find out more about Chelsea Cosmetics by visiting?http://chelseacosmetics.com.au

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Source: http://www.knupnet.com/latest-health-news/say-goodbye-to-your-wrinkles-with-chelsea-cosmetics/

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Goodell paid more than $29 million by NFL in 2011

NFL Goodells Pay Football

FILE - In this Dec. 12, 2012 file photo, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell smiles during a news conference after the NFL owners meeting in Irving, Texas. Roger Goodell was paid $29.49 million by NFL owners in 2011, nearly triple his compensation from the previous year. Goodell earned $11.6 million in 2010.

LM Otero, File ? AP Photo

? Nice job, Roger Goodell. Here's your pay: $29.49 million.

NFL owners nearly tripled the commissioner's compensation in the 2011 tax year and likely made Goodell the best paid commissioner in U.S. sports.

According to the league's most recent tax return, much of Goodell's pay comes in the form of a $22.3 million bonus. His base pay was $3.1 million. The NFL was scheduled to file the return Friday.

While the league declined comment on specifics, it must, by law, make the return available upon request.

In 2011, the NFL went through a long lockout prior to the season. Goodell helped work out the new 10-year labor deal that ended the labor strife. That was followed by lucrative new TV contracts with CBS, ESPN, FOX and NBC.

For the year beginning April 1, 2011, and ending March 31, 2012, Goodell was paid $29,490,000, which included $3,117,000 in base pay, $22,309,000 in bonus and incentive compensation, and most of the rest in "other reported compensation," the tax return said.

Goodell earned a total of $11.6 million in 2010.

"The NFL is the most successful and best-managed sports league in the world," said Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank, who is chairman of the league's compensation committee, in a statement. "This is in no small part due to Roger's leadership and the value he brings to the table in every facet of the sport and business of the league. His compensation reflects that."

By comparison, Saints quarterback Drew Brees is the league's highest paid player with a five-year deal averaging $20 million.

Goodell's compensation was first reported by SportsBusiness Daily.

The next-highest paid NFL official in 2011 was general counsel Jeff Pash. He earned $8.829 million, including $5.93 million in bonus compensation. Pash was the chief labor negotiator during the collective bargaining agreement talks.

Former Commissioner Paul Tagliabue received $8.58 million, all but $1 million in retirement and deferred compensation.

It is believed Major-League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig and NBA Commissioner David Stern earn somewhere in the mid-$20 million range, but neither league's tax returns are public. Both leagues are set up as for-profits.

"Unlike most CEO's of major companies, who are compensated with stock options, the NFL does not provide that," said Marc Ganis, the president of SportsCorp, which does consulting work with the NFL. "So a performance-based bonus is another way of compensation."

Source: http://www.bradenton.com/2013/02/15/4395922/goodell-paid-more-than-29-million.html

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