Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Google Music gets iTunes-like 'match,' but free

13 hrs.

Google has updated its music storage and streaming service with a handy new song-matching?feature pioneered by Amazon and Apple?? but unlike those companies' services, Google's is free.

Apple launched its "iTunes Match" service just over a year ago, which for $25 a year would scan your music library and offer to replace your own music files (wherever they came from) with Apple's own. Amazon began offering a similar service in July, for the same price but with a limited free option.

Google's service, which launched as Google Music last year and was?later?renamed Google Play Music, let you upload your songs to the cloud but lacked the matching feature?? until Tuesday.

Users can now let the service scan their library and assemble an online version of it using Google's own version of the?tracks. No need to upload gigabytes of MP3s; Google just verifies the artist and album and makes it available for you to stream to any supported devices (or through the Web app) in 320?kbps quality?? that's higher than the 256 kbps Amazon and Apple offer.

Best of all, the feature is totally free, and if you're already using the service, you don't need to do anything: Google is?already looking through the tracks you've uploaded and making high-quality versions available.

So if you're not paying, who is? Apparently, Google: All Things D reports that Google is cutting checks up front to music makers instead of giving them a piece of whatever they charge users.

One caveat: The high-quality versions of the songs can't be downloaded for local use?? only streamed online. So if you had visions of replacing your old 1999-era,?96?kbps CD rips with shiny new tracks freshly formed by Google, you're in for a disappointment.

The feature was announced in this Google+ post.?You can use the service by logging into or creating a Google account and going to the?Music app.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/google-music-gets-itunes-match-function-free-1C7662757

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Tuesday, December 11, 2012

EU condemns Israel over settlements

BRUSSELS (AP) ? The European Union warned Israel of unspecified consequences Monday if it goes through with plans to build thousands of new settler homes in Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The bloc's 27 foreign ministers said they were "deeply dismayed" by Israeli plans to expand settlements in East Jerusalem and particularly the E1 project, which would separate the West Bank from east Jerusalem, the Palestinians' hoped-for capital, and drive a big wedge between the northern and southern flanks of the West Bank.

"The E1 plan, if implemented, would seriously undermine the prospects of a negotiated resolution of the conflict by jeopardizing the possibility of a contiguous and viable Palestinian state and of Jerusalem as the capital of two states," said the ministers said in a joint statement. "It could also entail forced transfer of civilian populations."

The EU views any Israeli settlements on territory occupied during the 1967 Mideast war as a breach of international law.

"The EU will closely monitor the situation and its broader implications and act accordingly," the ministers said.

The new settlement plans have drawn widespread international condemnation, with the U.S. also urging Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to call off the plans.

The Israeli government reacted by calling the EU focus "mistaken."

"Facts and history both prove that Jewish settlement never constituted an obstacle to peace," said Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor. "Therefore, the EU's focus on this issue is mistaken."

Netanyahu also decried what he saw as a double-standard.

"We cannot accept that when Jews build homes in their ancient capital, Jerusalem, the international community has no problem finding its voice, but when Palestinian leaders openly call for the destruction of Israel, the one and only Jewish state, the world is silent," Netanyahu said Monday.

But Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said Europe's political view of the Mideast had changed profoundly since Israel announced plans to build 3,000 new settler homes in the West Bank and east Jerusalem.

Bildt, speaking as ministers gathered for Monday's meeting, said the Israeli plans had caused "extreme concern" in Europe.

"What the Israelis did on E1 has shifted opinions in Europe," Bildt said. "I don't think the Israelis are aware of this."

Some advocacy groups want the EU to prohibit the sale of goods made by Israeli settlers from being labeled as made in Israel. The labeling issue may come up but was not officially on the agenda.

The 27 EU foreign ministers also considered the crisis in Syria, where activists say more than 40,000 people have died since an uprising against President Bashar Assad began in March 2011.

They were briefed by Mouaz al-Khatib, a moderate cleric who heads the new, Western-backed opposition coalition in Syria. Hard-line Islamist groups in the country have not joined the new coalition, and al-Khatib told the EU ministers about attempts to unify the Syrian opposition as the coalition seeks greater diplomatic recognition.

The EU does not itself offer formal recognition ? that is left to the individual member countries ? but it has said the coalition is a legitimate representative of the Syrian people.

EU ministers said they were seriously concerned about the potential use of chemical weapons in Syria.

"In a situation of chaos, it is exceedingly dangerous if these things start floating around in the region," Bildt said.

He said it was important for EU foreign ministers to send a message of strong support to the opposition, and also to Lakhdar Brahimi, the joint U.N.-Arab League peace envoy for Syria, who Bildt said has been making "good progress."

In their statement, EU ministers reiterated that all those responsible for crimes against humanity will be held accountable.

"There should be no impunity for such violations and abuses," said the statement, which called on the U.N. Security Council to consider referring Syria to the International Criminal Court.

"We must recognize the terrible situation in Syria and the responsibility (Assad) bears for it," EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said.

Syria is not a party to the International Criminal Court and the U.N. Security Council has not referred the conflict to the war crimes tribunal.

Also Monday, the foreign ministers approved the concept of an EU noncombat training mission in Mali, where the central government has lost control of the northern part of the African nation to armed Islamist groups.

The U.S. and the European Union want the Malian army and other African troops to be properly trained before they try to retake the north.

The move allows EU military planners to start preparations for the mission, which would provide instruction to the Malian military. Another council decision will be needed before the Mali mission is deployed.

___

Don Melvin can be reached at http://twitter.com/Don_Melvin..

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eu-condemns-israel-over-settlements-174809420.html

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Monday, December 10, 2012

Dmitry Medvedev, Russian Prime Minister, Jokes About Secret Alien, Extraterrestrial Files

  • Bill Clinton

    2005 -- Former Pres. Bill Clinton (D), speaking in Hong Kong, discussed UFOs, Roswell and Area 51: "The Roswell thing, I think, really was an illusion - I don't think it happened. I did attempt to find out if there were any secret government documents that reveal things, and if there were, they were concealed from me, too. I wouldn't be the first president that underlings have lied to or that career bureaucrats have waited out. But there may be some career person, sitting around somewhere, hiding these dark secrets, even from elected presidents. But, if so, they successfully eluded me, and I'm almost embarrassed to tell you I did try to find out."

  • Ronald Reagan

    1974 - California Gov. Ronald Reagan (R) was one of four people in a Cessna Citation plane who witnessed an unusual object that was a steady light which elongated and went from a normal cruising speed to a rapid acceleration. Reagan told the Wall Street Journal, "We followed it for several minutes. It was a bright white light, and all of a sudden to our utter amazement, it went straight up into the heavens."

  • Ronald Reagan

    1987 - Pres. Ronald Reagan (R) told the United Nations General Assembly: "In our obsession with antagonisms of the moment, we often forget how much unites all the members of humanity. Perhaps we need some outside, universal threat to make us recognize this common bond. I occasionally think how quickly our differences worldwide would vanish if we were facing an alien threat from outside this world."

  • Jimmy Carter

    1969 - Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter (D) filed an official report in which he claimed to have seen a UFO - a "self-luminous" object "as bright as the moon." Most skeptics and debunkers have maintained that the future president had only misidentified the planet Venus in Leary, Ga.

  • John F. Kennedy

    1963 - Pres. John F. Kennedy (D) sent a memo to the head of the CIA, seeking documents about UFOs, just 10 days before he was assassinated. In a letter dated Nov. 12, 1963, JFK wanted a review of all UFO intelligence files that might affect national security. On the same day, Kennedy sent a separate memo to NASA, indicating he wanted to cooperate with the then-Soviet Union on outer space activities.

  • Barry Goldwater

    1975 -- Ariz. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R) revealed he had previously attempted to find out what was in the building at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, where UFO information was allegedly stored. His request was denied because it was classified above Top Secret. In a 1988 interview with Larry King, Goldwater said he believed secret government UFO investigations were going on.

  • Fife Symington

    1997 -- Ariz. Gov. Fife Symington (R) was one of thousands of eyewitnesses to the historic Phoenix Lights, a mass UFO sighting, which he didn't admit was real until 10 years later, and which he felt was an extraterrestrial vehicle.

  • Bill Richardson

    2004 -- New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson (D), and 2008 presidential candidate, calls on the U.S. government to declassify all Roswell UFO documents. Richardson wrote: "The mystery surrounding this crash has never been adequately explained. Clearly, it would help everyone if the U.S. government disclosed everything it knows. The American people can handle the truth -- no matter how bizarre or mundane."

  • John Podesta

    2007 - Former Clinton White House Chief of Staff John Podesta (D) tells a National Press Club press conference about the need for UFO disclosure: "I think it's time to open the books on questions that have remained in the dark and the question of government investigations of UFOs. It's time to find out what the truth really is that's out there. We ought to do it because the American people, quite frankly, can handle the truth."

  • Dwight Eisenhower

    2010 -- NH State Representative Henry W. McElroy (R) records a video on which he claims to have seen a briefing document from the 1950s that described how benevolent aliens were present in the U.S. and that a meeting could be arranged between them and former Pres. Eisenhower.

  • Gerald Ford

    1966 -- Michigan Rep. Gerald Ford (R), before becoming president, called for an official government hearing on the subject of UFOs after his home state experienced a wave of sightings. This was the incident which resulted in the famous use of the phrase "swamp gas" as a possible explanation for UFOs. Ford wrote a letter to the House Armed Services committee that read, in part: "In the firm belief that the American public deserves a better explanation than that thus far given by the Air Force, I strongly recommend that there be a committee investigation of the UFO phenomena. I think we owe it to the people to establish credibility regarding UFOs and to produce the greatest possible enlightenment on this subject."

  • Richard M. Nixon

    1974 -- Pres. Richard Nixon (R) became part of UFO folklore when he allegedly took comedian Jackie Gleason to Homestead Air Force Base in Florida in 1974 and showed him wreckage of a flying saucer as well as the remains of several extraterrestrials. The story was made public by two people: Gleason's wife, Beverly, told Esquire Magazine that her husband had related this tale to her. And Gleason, who was known to have a strong interest in UFOs, reportedly told the story to author Larry Warren, who had been involved in real UFO encounters experienced by many American military personnel at the RAF Bentwaters base in the U.K. in 1980.

  • Dennis Kucinich

    2007 -- Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D) entered the UFO culture during one of the 2007 Democratic presidential debates, by admitting he had seen a UFO. "It was an unidentified flying object, OK? It's like, it's unidentified. I saw something. More people in this country have seen UFOs than I think approve of George Bush's presidency," he said.

  • Richard B. Russell

    1955 -- Georgia Sen. Richard B. Russell Jr. (D), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, was on a trip to Russia, traveling on a train when he and others in his party saw a disc-shaped craft take off near the train tracks. The reports filled out to the U.S. Air Force by Russell and his aides were classified as Top Secret and remained that way until they were eventually released via the Freedom of Information Act.

  • Harrison Schmitt

    1982 -- New Mexico Sen. Harrison Schmitt (R), the Apollo 17 astronaut who was the last man to walk on the moon, was also interested in UFOs. He's quoted saying, "If the government has any information on UFOs, it should be released to the public -- barring anything that might affect national security. We ought to be involved in a search to find out if there's any good evidence that UFOs really are spacecraft that are being piloted by extraterrestrial beings."

  • Edward Roush

    1968 -- Indiana Rep. J. Edward Roush (D), a member of the Science and Astronautics Committee, was the chairman of a UFO symposium in 1968, which included six scientists invited to discuss the various aspects of UFOs. In 1975, Roush told HuffPost's Lee Speigel, "The people want to know what a UFO is, and therefore, any chance that we have to learn, we should take advantage of it. When you tell an American, 'I can't explain it,' he wants to know, 'Why can't you explain it? Why doesn't someone explain it?' And I think that kind of pressure is going to change the view of many government officials and members of Congress in the future."

  • John Gilligan

    1973 -- Ohio Gov. John Gilligan [D] reported that while he and his wife were driving near Ann Arbor, Mich., in October 1973, they saw what might have been a UFO. Gilligan described the object as vertical-shaped and amber-colored.

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/09/dmitry-medvedev-aliens_n_2267373.html

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    Celebrates Ribbon Cutting For New $1.5M School | Osprey Observer

    By Tamas Mondovics

    Students, teachers and some 80 special guests have gathered in a brand new ?cafetorium? for plaques and presentations, as well as a ribbon cutting last month on what school officials called a gleaming new 12,000 sq. ft. charter school in Ruskin.

    The celebration at Redlands Christian Migrant Association (RCMA) Leadership Academy located off U.S. 301, on the campus of Beth-El Mission, at 18234 U.S. Highway 301 South in Wimauma, marked the end of a fundraising campaign that began in 2008, a construction project that began in March and final touches on a cafeteria and auditorium that opened just one week prior.

    School officials proudly emphasized that collectively the festivities? honored guests generated more than $1.5 million in donations for the project.

    According to RCMA Director of Communications and Marketing Bill Coats, opening this fall Leadership Academy, currently cares for 52 students in grades six and seven, but at capacity, will serve 132 students in grades 6-8.

    ?It is a sibling to the 12-year-old RCMA Wimauma Academy, an elementary school next door,? Coats said. It was created to provide high-quality education customized to the bi-cultural lives of south Hillsborough County?s low-income families are extensions of RCMA?s larger role of early childhood education for Florida?s rural poor that runs 18 child care centers in the Tampa Bay area and 71 statewide.

    RCMA Leadership Academy now boasts eight classrooms, a 900 sq. ft. area for administrative offices, the cafeteria and auditorium.

    Honorees included Gary Wishnatzki, an RCMA board member and owner of Plant City-based Wish Farms, which along with an annual tennis tournament, accounted for more than $330,000 in donations to the Leadership Academy building campaign.

    In Wishnatzki?s honor, the school named the cafeteria bearing his family name as well as planted a live oak on the grounds and mounted a painting of strawberry pickers in the office.

    Also on the roster of honored guests was Tampa businessman John Kirtley, founder of Step Up For Students and leader of Florida?s movement for parental choice in schools.

    Kirtley personally donated $100,000, while Step Up for Students matched that amount.

    ?A live oak was also planted in front of the school in honor of Kirtley and his family,? Coats said.

    Also honored were two local groups that contributed more than $50,000 apiece: the Interfaith Council of Sun City Center and the Community Foundation of Greater Sun City Center.

    ?Building this school was like giving birth,? said Mainster. ?Once it was done, we could forget all the pain.?

    For more information about RCMA Wimauma Academy, please visit www.rcma.org.

    ?

    Source: http://www.ospreyobserver.com/2012/12/celebrates-ribbon-cutting-for-new-1-5m-school/

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    Obama, Boehner meet to discuss 'fiscal cliff'

    House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio gestures as he speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012, to discuss the pending fiscal cliff. Boehner said there's been no progress in negotiations on how to avoid the fiscal cliff of tax hikes and spending cuts and called on President Barack Obama to come up with a new offer. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

    House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio gestures as he speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Friday, Dec. 7, 2012, to discuss the pending fiscal cliff. Boehner said there's been no progress in negotiations on how to avoid the fiscal cliff of tax hikes and spending cuts and called on President Barack Obama to come up with a new offer. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

    FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 6. 2012, photo, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., is surrounded by, from left, his wife Elizabeth, and daughters Emily and Julia, as he speaks to supporters at an election night victory rally at the Cabana Restaurant on Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2012, in Nashville, Tenn.S enate Republicans would probably agree to increased tax rates on the wealthiest Americans if it meant getting a chance to reform massive government entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security,Corker said Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/Mark Zaleski, File)

    (AP) ? President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner met Sunday at the White House to discuss the ongoing negotiations over the impending "fiscal cliff," the first meeting between just the two leaders since Election Day.

    Spokesmen for both Obama and Boehner said they agreed to not release details of the conversation, but emphasized that the lines of communication remain open.

    The meeting comes as the White House and Congress try to break an impasse over finding a way to stop a combination of automatic tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to kick in at the beginning of next year.

    Obama met in November with Boehner, as well as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi. The president spoke by telephone with Reid and in person with Pelosi on Friday.

    Obama has been pushing higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans as one way to reduce the deficit ? a position Boehner and other House Republicans have been steadfastly against. Republicans are demanding steeper cuts in costly government entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security.

    One GOP senator said Sunday that Senate Republicans would probably agree to higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans if it meant getting a chance to overhaul entitlement programs.

    The comments by Bob Corker of Tennessee ? a fiscal conservative who has been gaining stature in the Senate as a pragmatic deal broker ? puts new pressure on Boehner and other Republican leaders to rethink their long-held assertion that even the very rich shouldn't see their rates go up next year. GOP leaders have argued that the revenue gained by hiking the top two tax rates would be trivial to the deficit, and that any tax hike hurts job creation.

    But Corker said insisting on that red line ? especially since Obama won re-election after campaigning on raising tax rates on the wealthy ? might not be wise.

    "There is a growing group of folks looking at this and realizing that we don't have a lot of cards as it relates to the tax issue before year end," Corker told "Fox News Sunday."

    If Republicans agree to Obama's plan to increase rates on the top 2 percent of Americans, Corker added, "the focus then shifts to entitlements and maybe it puts us in a place where we actually can do something that really saves the nation."

    Besides getting tax hikes through the Republican-dominated House, Corker's proposal faces another hurdle: Democrats haven't been receptive to GOP proposals on the entitlement programs. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., on Sunday was skeptical about proposals to increase the eligibility age for Medicare from 65 to 67. He said he doesn't see Congress addressing the complicated issue of Medicare overhaul in the three weeks remaining before the end of the year.

    "I just don't think we can do it in a matter of days here before the end of the year," Durbin said. "We need to address that in a thoughtful way through the committee structure after the first of the year."

    And hard-line fiscal conservatives in the House are holding fast to their position.

    "No Republican wants to vote for a rate tax increase," said Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, chairman of the House Republican Conference.

    Added Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn.: "I'm not sure there is support for the rate hikes. There is support for revenue by cleaning up the code."

    Still, at least one House Republican has said there is another way. Rep. Tom Cole, of Oklahoma, has said Obama and Boehner should agree not to raise tax rates on the majority of Americans and negotiate the rates for top earners later. Cole said Sunday that most House Republicans would vote for that approach because it doesn't include a rate hike.

    "You know, it's not waving a white flag to recognize political reality," Cole said.

    Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., already has said he could support higher tax rates on upper incomes as part of a comprehensive plan to cut the federal deficit.

    When asked Sunday what it would take to sign on to a tax rate increase, Coburn echoed Corker's comments by responding, "Significant entitlement reform." He quickly added, however, that he has estimated that such a tax rate increase would only affect about 7 percent of the deficit.

    "Will I accept a tax increase as a part of a deal to actually solve our problems? Yes," Coburn said. "But the president's negotiating with the wrong people. He needs to be negotiating with our bondholders in China, because if we don't put a credible plan on the discussion, ultimately, we all lose."

    Obama's plan would raise $1.6 trillion in revenue over 10 years, partly by letting decade-old tax cuts on the country's highest earners expire at the end of the year. He would continue those Bush-era tax cuts for everyone except individuals earning more than $200,000 and couples making above $250,000. The highest rates on top-paid Americans would rise from 33 percent and 35 percent to 36 percent and 39.6 percent.

    Boehner has offered $800 billion in new revenues to be raised by reducing or eliminating unspecified tax breaks on upper-income people. The Republican plan would cut spending by $1.4 trillion, including by trimming annual increases in Social Security payments and raising the eligibility age for Medicare.

    Hensarling and Coburn spoke on ABC's "This Week." Blackburn and Cole spoke on CNN's "State of the Union." Durbin spoke on NBC's "Meet the Press."

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-12-09-Fiscal%20Cliff/id-c91ba1eab08443e99b284955341255f0

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    Sunday, December 9, 2012

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    Source: http://forums.ferra.ru/index.php?showtopic=53417

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    Elsmere Christmas Parade to cause DART bus detours

    Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

    Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/article/20121207/NEWS15/121207037/1004/RSS05

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    Mount Union defeated Mary HardinBaylor 4835 on Saturday to advance to its eighth straight NCAA Division III title game 16th ...

    SbB LIVE FROM LA (Dec 8, 2012 @ 7:17pm ET)

    Comments | SbB Live RSS Feed
    Saturday, December 08, 2012

    7:15 PM: University of Cincinnati president Santa J. Ono tweets on the Bearcats hiring Tommy Tuberville as their new football coach: "We have a coach that led a Auburn to #2 in America. #hottestcollegeinamerica is going to sizzle next year #justsaying"

    7:00 PM: St. Thomas (Minnesota) defeated Wisconsin-Oshkosh 28-14 to advance to their first-ever NCAA Division III title game, where they will face 10-time national champion Mount Union.

    6:45 PM: Navy defeated Army 17-13 on Saturday to give the Midshipmen their 11th straight win over the Black Knights.

    6:30 PM: Jonathan Feigen of the Houston Chronicle reports that Kevin McHale will coach the Rockets tonight against the Dallas Mavericks. It will be McHale's first game back since the death of his 22-year-old daughter Sasha.

    6:15 PM: New South Florida football coach Willie Taggart during his press conference Saturday: "I always said I wouldn't leave WKU unless I had a chance to win the national championship and I truly believe we can do that here."

    6:00 PM: Notre Dame LB Manti Te'o confirms that Texas A&M QB Johnny Manziel wouldn't give him any info on Alabama: "His loyalty to the SEC is a little bit too strong."

    5:45 PM: Mount Union defeated Mary Hardin-Baylor 48-35 on Saturday to advance to its eighth straight NCAA Division III title game & 16th overall.

    5:30 PM: Arkansas-Pine Bluff defeated Jackson State 24-21 in OT on Saturday to give the Golden Lions their first SWAC championship since 1966.

    5:15 PM: Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones released a statement saying the team was "deeply saddened" by the death of linebacker Jerry Brown, who was killed in a car accident. Cowboys nose tackle Josh Brent has been charged with intoxication manslaughter over the accident.

    5:00 PM: The Oregonian reports three Oregon State football players have been arrested on assault & disorderly conduct charges.

    4:45 PM: American skier Lindsey Vonn won her fourth World Cup race of the season in Saturday's Super-G in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

    4:30 PM: Dallas Cowboys nose tackle Josh Brent, who is charged with intoxication manslaughter in the death of teammate Jerry Brown, had pleaded guilty to a DUI charge in 2009 while playing at Illinois.

    4:15 PM: The El Paso Times reports Pittsburgh Steelers offensive line coach Sean Kuglerhas been named UTEP's new head football coach. Kugler will stay with the Steelers through the rest of the season before taking over the Miners.

    4:00 PM: New Tennessee Volunteers football coach Butch Jones has agreed to a six-year, $18.2 million contract.

    3:45 PM: New Texas Rangers pitcher Josh Lindblom tweets after being traded by the Phillies: "Super Excited to join the @Rangers organization and be a part of bringing a championship back to Dallas."

    ? previous entries

    Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=45524

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    Saturday, December 8, 2012

    Jake Schmidt: Countries Acting At Home to Address Global Warming: The Key Fight Ahead

    Empty Plenary Hall Doha.jpgLast year global emissions of carbon pollution rose to record levels, with declines in some key countries but with rising emissions elsewhere offsetting those declines. These are depressing statistics, especially in light of the significant signs of global warming that are already emerging. Some new actions are emerging that will hopefully reduce this growing pollution and set the stage for even stronger action in the very near future. This movement will be supported by progress at the climate negotiations, but real progress will only occur if we win the fights in the capitals, boardrooms, and courtrooms of the key countries.

    Some of these battles have been won this year, but more confronts us. Here are some examples of actions by key countries and why it is critical that we succeed on these efforts in the next few years.

    MORE ACTIONS ARE EMERGING FROM KEY COUNTRIES

    Since 2009 we?ve seen two important shifts. First, most countries aren?t just talking about what they might be able to do in the future to reduce emissions ? they are beginning to act on those possible actions. Second, the list of countries with specific commitments has increased in recent years ? it isn?t only the main players that have come forward (the Dominican Republic ? a poor country ? has recently joined the effort).

    Here are some examples.

    The U.S. has finalized standards for the global warming pollution from new?passenger vehicles that will double the efficiency from today?s levels. The?U.S. has proposed new rules for the carbon pollution from power plants and finalized standards for volatile organic compounds that will also reduce methane emissions from new natural gas facilities.?More than three million citizens have submitted comments in support of the power plant rules and called for action on existing power plants?the most in the history of any environmental rule in the U.S.?In addition, the U.S. government has finalized important standards for major appliances that will significantly reduce how much energy they use (e.g.,?clothes washing machines?and?microwaves). Right now there are no national standards for America?s biggest climate polluters?the 1500 existing power plants which are responsible for 40 percent of U.S. carbon pollution, so NRDC recently released a report showing how the Obama Administration can use the Clean Air Act to take a big bite out of these emissions ? 26 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. Finalizing power plant standards and rejecting Keystone XL are critical global warming decisions in the coming months.?

    India is making major strides in its efforts to reduce its reliance on fossil fuels and increase its production and use of clean, sustainable energy. The country is already a global leader in wind energy ? with the world's fifth largest wind energy production. And its installed solar power jumped to more than 1 GW in 2012, from just 17 MW in 2010 thanks to its ambitious National Solar Mission. India is preparing to double the amount of clean energy by 2017. And they are beginning to put in place critical policies to tap into the huge energy efficiency potential that is available. India recently launched the Perform, Achieve and Trade program?an energy efficiency cap-and-trade scheme?for energy intensive industries that has the potential to reduce 25 million tons of CO2 equivalent emissions annually by 2015. The State of Andhra Pradesh recently took a historic step towards this potential by adopting the Energy Conservation Building Code by early 2013. More than a third of the states in India are now taking action towards setting building standards that would help improve the energy intensity of its buildings. Continuing this kind of action will be essential to help reduce India?s global warming pollution.

    Mexico has adopted a national law?which formalizes the country?s target to reduce its emissions 30 percent below business-as-usual emissions by 2020 and 50 percent below 2000 levels by 2050.? And they have recently announced new vehicle efficiency standards which will significantly reduce the carbon pollution from cars and trucks sold in Mexico (unfortunately some of the car companies are suing to block this new standard from going into effect).? Even greater action will have to be taken by President Pe?a Nieto as he?ll have to finalize the new vehicle standard and take even greater steps to deploy renewable energy and improve energy efficiency. Taking action on vehicles will save Mexican consumers money and reduce pollution so this should be a no-brainer.

    The South Korean Government approved a mandatory carbon trading program?for its biggest polluters. The legislation is set to go into effect in 2015 and would cap the carbon pollution from power plants, steel plants, ship makers, and large universities.? The government recently outlined the final details for implementing this law. Some Korean industry has fought this effort.?

    South Africa announced that it will introduce a rising price on carbon pollution from major sources starting in 2013.? The proposal is to implement the carbon tax at a level of $16 per ton in 2013, with annual increases of 10 percent through 2019.? Final details could come soon, but some South African industry has been fighting to kill or weaken the measure. In addition, South Africa ? a coal-dominated electricity country ? is starting to get serious about renewable energy. They recently approved the final details for adding 1425 MW of new renewable energy projects ? estimated at $5.4 billion in new investments. A further 1040 MW of renewable energy projects have also been approved (final financial agreement are expected early next year).

    Brazil has continued to reduce its deforestation emissions towards their commitment to cut deforestation 80 percent by 2020?a commitment they made in Copenhagen and subsequently enshrined in domestic law.? New data for 2012 found that there was a decrease of deforestation to 1,798 square miles ? down 27% from last year. This amounts to a 75% cut in the deforestation rate from the average that occurred from 1996-2005. More work lies ahead as some signs have raised red flags of late.

    Europe has proposed new rules for the emissions from passenger vehicles and a phase-down of the ?super greenhouse gases?. Recent analysis has shown that with these measures will reduce its emissions 25 percent below 2005 levels by 2020. This is leading many to call for Europe to increase its ambition to 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2020.?

    China is continuing to strengthen policies begun in the previous Five Year Plan to help it meet its energy and climate intensity targets. In 2011, it reduced its energy intensity by a little over 2 percent compared to 2010. Key among these efforts are its policies to improve the efficiency of its heavy industry and power sector (the largest coal-consuming sectors) and to shift its economy towards less energy-intensive high technology manufacturing and service sectors, to improve the efficiency of its buildings and appliances (including beginning a phase-out of incandescent lights), and to encourage the use of fuel efficient vehicles and public transportation. China has also become a leader in renewable energy manufacturing and, increasingly, deployment. In 2011, it installed 16 GW of wind power, the most in the world, and it implemented a solar PV feed-in tariff to add to its existing windpower and biomass power feed-in tariffs. China is increasingly looking to expand its distributed energy sources, including distributed PV, with the State Grid corporation recently announcing a policy to support free connection to the grid for distributed rooftop PV projects under 6 MW in size. China is also experimenting with market mechanisms to supplement its low-carbon policies, with provincial and city carbon trading pilots set to begin as early as next year. As it goes forward grappling with the pollution from coal is a key challenge that confronts China with policies like a coal cap being actively debated.

    Clean, sustainable energy technologies like wind and solar power are on the rise in Chile. After all, Chile made a commitment to cut its global warming pollution 20 percent below business as usual levels in 2020. As my colleague pointed out, a strengthened energy policy will be critical to further ramp up the development of these resources, including Chile?s vast geothermal reserves. ?Rescinding its 20 percent by 2020 renewables target sends the wrong signal. They?ll also need to find new ways to unleash energy efficiency.?

    THIS ACTION IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT

    Current actions aren?t sufficient, but they provide an important foundation for more. This kind of action is extremely important for international efforts to address global warming since an international agreement without action at home doesn?t solve the problem. But it is also important in setting the stage for a strong international agreement in 2015. Here is why:

    • Action reduces actual emissions (promises without action don?t). This is obvious, but sometimes we get so focused on what each country has pledged and we forget to focus on what is happening on the ground in key countries.
    • Action makes it easier to take more action in the future (creating a positive reinforcement for more action). As countries implement changes on the ground they will likely find that: (a) it isn?t as painful as some people predicted (their economy won?t collapse); (b) there will be a lot of benefits of acting (e.g., job creation, reduced dependence on imported oil, and saved lives from reduced air pollution); and (c) it will become easier to take even greater action in the future (e.g., they?ll find additional win-win opportunities , tightening the policy over time will be easier, etc.).
    • Can?t have a new global agreement in 2015 if countries aren?t prepared at home. If we get to 2015 and countries haven?t laid the groundwork at home with real action to reduce emissions, then no amount of negotiating the framework of the agreement will matter. We?ll have all the architecture in place for an agreement, but it won?t be accepted as countries won?t be ready to implement it.

    As one key commentator rightly pointed out:

    ?The battle is being waged in energy and finance ministries around the world, and in the boardrooms of energy companies and their bankers. It is the battle between a high-carbon and a low-carbon energy future. And the outcome is unclear.?

    It is a battle that must be won. Failure is definitely not an option. So let?s roll-up our sleeves and get it done.

    ----------------

    Photo: Empy plenary hall on Saturday morning in Doha; waiting for agreement to be reached.

    This post benefited greatly from NRDC experts that are constantly focused on on the ground actions in China, India, and?Latin America.

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jake-schmidt/countries-acting-at-home_b_2261222.html

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    Apple Lists the iPhone 5 as 'In Stock' for Several Countries Including the U.S.

    iClarified - Apple News - Apple Lists the iPhone 5 as 'In Stock' for Several Countries Including the U.S. '); document.write('

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    Source: http://www.iclarified.com/26098/apple-lists-the-iphone-5-as-in-stock-for-several-countries-including-the-us

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    Are Venus' Volcanoes Active? Clues Suggest Yes

    New evidence hints that Venus may be volcanically active, which has long been a controversial topic among scientists.

    Six years of observations by the European Space Agency's Venus Express spacecraft have shown significant changes in the sulfur dioxide content of the planet's atmosphere over time, which could be explained by a bout of volcanism.

    Immediately after arriving at Venus in 2006, the spacecraft recorded a significant increase in the average density of sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere, followed by a sharp decrease, according to a release from the European Space Agency (ESA).

    Venus' atmosphere contains much higher levels of sulfur dioxide than on Earth. On our planet, the smelly, toxic gas is produced by volcanoes. [Planet Venus: Quiz Yourself on Venus Facts]

    Sulfur dioxide doesn't last long in Venus' upper atmosphere, because it is broken down by sunlight. Any sulfur dioxide in the upper regions must have recently arrived there from the thick protective clouds that swirl beneath. Some scientists think the spike in sulfur dioxide suggests that a large volcano ? or several volcanoes ? must have erupted.

    Venus is covered in hundreds of volcanoes, but whether they remain active today is much debated, and settling this question is an important scientific goal for Venus Express.

    The mission has already found clues pointing to volcanism in the planet's recent geological past, within the last few hundreds of thousands to millions of years. Previous measurements of infrared radiation from the surface pointed to lava flows atop a volcano, suggesting that the volcano had erupted recently.

    NASA's Pioneer Venus mission, which orbited the planet from 1978 to 1992, saw a similar peak and decline in sulfur dioxide. At that time, the preferred explanation was an earlier injection of sulfur dioxide from one or more volcanoes.

    "If you see a sulfur dioxide increase in the upper atmosphere, you know that something has brought it up recently, because individual molecules are destroyed there by sunlight after just a couple of days," said Emmanuel Marcq of LATMOS, a French research institute, in the statement. Marcq is the lead author of a paper describing the findings, published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

    "A volcanic eruption could act like a piston to blast sulfur dioxide up to these levels, but peculiarities in the circulation of the planet that we don't yet fully understand could also mix the gas to reproduce the same result," noted co-author Jean-Loup Bertaux in the release.

    Venus has a bizarre atmosphere that whips around the planet in just four Earth-days, much faster than the 243 days the planet takes to complete one rotation about its axis. Such rapid atmospheric circulation spreads the sulfur dioxide around, making it difficult to isolate any individual points of origin for the gas.

    Follow SPACE.com on Twitter @Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?and?Google+.

    Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/venus-volcanoes-active-clues-suggest-yes-174201467.html

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    New chemical reaction could explain how stars form, evolve, and eventually die

    ScienceDaily (Dec. 7, 2012) ? University of North Dakota scientist Mark Hoffmann's version of Star Search goes a long way -- a very long way -- out into the universe.

    Hoffmann, a computational chemist, and his colleagues Tryve Helgaker, a well-known Norwegian scientist, and co-authors E.I. Tellgren and K. Lange, also working in Norway, have discovered a molecular-level interaction that science had puzzled over for decades but had never seen.

    That discovery, it turns out, may redefine how science views chemical compound formation. It also answers questions about what goes on in places like white dwarfs, the super dense cores of stars nearing the end of their life cycles.

    "We discovered a new type of chemical bonding," said Hoffmann, known globally for his pioneering work in the theory and computer modeling of chemical compound formation.

    "That's a pretty bold statement, but I'm not kidding you! It's a brand new type of chemical bonding, not previously known to science."

    Hoffmann and his colleagues have rewritten the chemical rule book for assessing what happens in the night sky. It's about answering timeless questions such as how stars form, evolve, and eventually die.

    Their work also provides the secret for how some compounds form in the distant universe. This momentous discovery appears in an article in a recent issue of the journal Science.

    "Our discovery addresses one of the mysteries in astrophysics about the spectrum of white dwarf stars," Hoffmann said. "White dwarfs have an unusual spectrum that has been thought to result from polymerized hydrogen and helium which, of course, do not occur on Earth.

    "It's possible out there because the magnetic fields on white dwarfs are several orders of magnitude larger than anything that can be generated on Earth."

    The closest white dwarf, Sirius B, is a faint twin to the brightest star in the night sky, Sirius A. It's about the same size as our sun, but much denser; its average density is 1.7 metric tons per cubic centimeter, or about 3,000 pounds compressed into a box the size of a sugar cube.

    Hoffmann and his team described a magnetically induced bonding process between materials. "There was speculation that this phenomenon should exist, but no one had the proof, and no one -- until the team I'm on described the process -- had the theoretical structure and the computational tools to address this," he said.

    On Earth, even the boldest military experiments generate a peak of maybe 1,000 Tesla -- a measure of magnetic force (refrigerator magnets generate a thousandth of one Tesla). But on Sirius B, for example, magnetic fields are on the order of 200,000 to 400,000 Tesla, enough to challenge the electronic interactions that dominate the chemistry and material science we know on Earth.

    Such vast magnetic fields directly alter the way atoms come together, and can alter the chemical reality we know on Earth.

    "What we had before we discovered this was basically a paper-and-pencil model of what goes on in the universe. Compared to what's out there in places such as white dwarf stars, the magnetic fields we can generate here -- even with the strongest magnets -- are pathetic."

    So how did they do it?

    "We computationally modeled the behavior that we theorized, based on universally applicable physical principles," Hoffmann said.

    The team's computer model supported their theory. Now it's up to astrophysicists to test the model by old-fashioned observation of the stars.

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    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of North Dakota, via Newswise.

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


    Journal Reference:

    1. K. K. Lange, E. I. Tellgren, M. R. Hoffmann, T. Helgaker. A Paramagnetic Bonding Mechanism for Diatomics in Strong Magnetic Fields. Science, 2012; 337 (6092): 327 DOI: 10.1126/science.1219703

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

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

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/CBhmqg8OIcs/121207174415.htm

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    Concordia College -- Today, Heaven Sings

    December 7, 2012

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    ST. PAUL, Minn. ? Each of the past few Decembers, vocalists and instrumentalists from Concordia College in Moorhead perform a series of holiday concerts on campus. At the end of those performances they make the long bus ride to Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis to do an encore performance. "Today, Heaven Sings" was recorded in December 2011 and features The Concordia Choir, The Chapel Choir, the Bel Canto singers, Cantabile, Mannerchor and the Concordia Orchestra. Classical Minnesota Public Radio's Steve Staruch hosts the broadcast.

    Broadcast Dates

    Source: http://feeds.mpr.org/~r/MPR_ClassicalMusic/~3/tfndUhqCFj4/

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    Winter Pineapple Classic runs through North Bend farm, raises $450K to help fight blood cancer

    The Hawaiian-themed Winter Pineapple Classic, a five-kilometer fun run benefiting the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, was held on Saturday, Nov. 10, at Mountain Meadows Farm in North Bend.

    The run raised an estimated $450,000 for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Washington/Alaska chapter. Nearly 2,500 participants, some donning grass skirts, costumes and even a bikini or two, battled the winter elements to finish the 5k obstacle course and help raise money for the fight against blood cancers.

    ?This is our seventh Winter Pineapple Classic and we are once again blown away by the amazing outpouring of support and enthusiasm from the thousands of people in our community who joined us,? said Wilma Comenat, deputy executive director of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Washington/Alaska chapter. ?The event continues to grow both locally and nationally. With every step participants take, we move closer to finding a cure for blood cancers.?

    At the end of the race, participants were rewarded with a full-scale Hawaiian luau that featured free food and beer provided by Kauai Family Restaurant and Georgetown Brewing Company.

    The Winter Pineapple Classic was developed seven years ago by Eric Cox after his wife and son were able to successfully recover from a simultaneous battle with breast cancer and leukemia. Since its inception in 2006, the event has raised nearly $2.5 million for LLS? mission, and has become one of the most anticipated fundraising events of the winter season.

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    Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/svrlifestyles/~3/VRewRtVgcnw/182433171.html

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    Saturday, November 24, 2012

    Dot Earth Blog: Creating a Vital Long View for Gauging Environmental Change

    [Production note: I'm helping my older son relocate to New Orleans (22 hours of driving) so comment moderation and posting will be unavoidably sporadic for a few days.]

    Last year,?Michael SanClements, an ecologist affiliated with the?Institute?of Arctic & Alpine Research at the University of Colorado, sent a Dot Earth ?Postcard? about a project studying soil microbes in Antarctica. Here?s a fresh contribution from SanClements, along with colleague Jeff Taylor,?from the other end of the planet ? Alaska?s Arctic tundra.

    They are both staff scientists with the?National Ecological Observatory Network, an initiative supported by the National Science Foundation that has a goal of creating a view of ecological change that spans the continent over the next three decades. As they explain below, without consistent monitoring, it?s hard to gauge the scope and causes of changes in environmental conditions:?

    Some ecosystems provide economic and social benefits at the local level. Others exist far from our cities in inconceivably large landscapes and have the ability to influence processes at the global scale. The tundra is such a place ? remote, vast and home to enormous stores of frozen carbon which play a critical role in our climate?s future. Earlier this fall, we visited the tundra as part of a massive new project which will monitor ecological change across all of the continent?s major ecosystems.

    Toolik Field Station ? 158 miles north of the Arctic Circle in Alaska. ?It?s dusk and we?ve just arrived. Thom Walker, the assistant camp manager, has been kind enough to save us some dinner.? From the windows in the cafeteria, we can see ptarmigan, white against the brown of the tundra. And in the distance, more white ? the snow-covered Brooks Range rising to meet an enormous autumn moon. A beautiful landscape, and one we consider ourselves lucky to spend time in.

    We?re here because we need to prepare a temporary meteorological station to survive the long dark winter. Built in June by Dr. Henry Loescher, the tower, located high on a ridge overlooking the Trans-Alaska Pipeline and Dalton Highway, is collecting data on prevailing wind directions and annual temperature variations that are crucial for the design and construction of a National Ecological Observatory Network research site. Eventually, a tower will be built here that will measure not just meteorological data, but a suite of observations related to solar radiation, greenhouse gases, pollutants, the terrestrial carbon cycle and soil.

    With six such sites planned in Alaska, and 60 total in the United Sates, this network, best known under the acronym NEON, is the world?s first continental scale ecological observatory. Over the next 30 years, these sites will collect hundreds of terabytes of ecological data annually to help understand the impacts of climate change, land-use change and invasive species on natural resources and biodiversity.

    The Toolik Field Station and tower site are extremely remote. We flew into Deadhorse, or Prudhoe Bay as it?s often called. It?s not so much a town as a rugged industrial work camp situated near the frigid Arctic Ocean at the far end of the pipeline; it exists mainly to facilitate the extraction and pumping of oil. From there, you head south on the Dalton highway, the lone road, for hundreds of miles. After three bumpy, sometimes scary and always beautiful hours you?ll find Toolik Field Station. Situated on the north side of the Brooks Range and the shores of Toolik Lake, the station supports hundreds of scientists each year as they study the changing Arctic.

    In this era of rapid environmental change driven by the pressures of expanding human population and a changing climate, long-term ecological research is more important than ever. Short-term data sets are like snapshots of the environment at a single point in time. They lack the temporal context to effectively answer questions about the trajectory and causes of environmental change.

    Initiatives like NEON and the Long Term Ecological Research Network aim to help us to track and understand the effects of human activities on ecosystems that provide valuable services to society. It may not be as sexy as the Mars Curiosity Rover or a big field campaign to an exotic place, but sustained, long-term observations are essential to answering many scientific questions and may one day be used by future generations to answer questions that haven?t been asked yet.

    Source: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/23/creating-a-vital-long-view-for-gauging-environmental-change/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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    Wednesday, November 21, 2012

    The CITE: Publishers Find Ways to Make iBooks Work


    Welcome to The CITE -- a blog on Course materials, Innovation, and Technology in Education, created by Mark Nelson and now part of the Publications Department of the National Association of College Stores. CITE is a pun with multiple meanings - referring to cite as in citation, something people reference; site as in location, website, or place people go to; and sight as in foresight or looking ahead to what is coming. Comments, discussion, feedback and ideas are welcome.

    Source: http://thecite.blogspot.com/2012/11/publishers-find-ways-to-make-ibooks-work.html

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    Monday, November 12, 2012

    martinhendersonuu: 2013 Intramural and Recreational Sports ...

    ?

    Morale, Welfare and RecreationFort Campbell, KY ? The Family and MWR Sports & Fitness office has released the 2013 Intramural & Recreation Sports Calendar.

    There are so many wonderful sports activities to choose from such as basketball, racquetball, flag football, softball, volleyball, track, soccer, wrestling and more. There are two new and exciting sporting events being added to 2013, dodge ball starting on June 17th and a Sand Volleyball Tournament starting on July 8th.

    Eligible participants include Brigade, Battalion, Company Level, Individual, Women, Co-ed and Recreational. All Brigade, Battalion, and Company level participants must be Active Duty Military and assigned to the unit they will be playing for.

    Individual, Women, Co-ed and Recreational participants must be at least 18 years old with a valid ID card.? Registration deadlines, POC meetings, locations and starting dates vary for each activity.

    Complete information can be found at www.fortcampbellmwr.com/Recreation/sports/2013SportsCalendar.pdf

    For more information about Intramural and Recreational Sports, please call the Sports & Fitness Office at 270.798.3320 or 270.956.1006


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    basketball, Dodge Ball, Flag Football, Fort Campbell KY, Morale Welfare and Recreation, MWR, Racquetball, Sand Volleyball, Soccer, Softball, Track, volleyball, Wrestling

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    Source: http://www.clarksvilleonline.com/2012/11/11/2013-intramural-and-recreational-sports-calendar-for-fort-campbell-mwr/

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    Source: http://martinhendersonuu.blogspot.com/2012/11/2013-intramural-and-recreational-sports.html

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    Obama lays wreath, honors nation's veterans

    At the Arlington cemetery in Virginia, President Barack Obama paid tribute to veterans. "Each year on the 11th day of the 11th month, we pause as a nation and as a people to pay tribute to you," the president said. NBC's Lester Holt has more.

    By NBC News staff and news services

    President Barack Obama honored the nation?s military veterans on Sunday, paying tribute at a Veterans Day ceremony at Arlington Memorial Cemetery to "the heroes over the generations who have served this country of ours with distinction."?

    In keeping with tradition, he laid a wreath he laid at Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., an act he said was intended to "remember every service member who has ever worn our nation's uniform."


    Obama said in a speech at the cemetery's Memorial Amphitheater that America will never forget the sacrifice made by its veterans and their families.?

    Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

    President Barack Obama places a Veterans Day wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va., on Sunday.

    "Whenever America has come under attack, you?ve risen to her defense. Whenever our freedoms have come under assault, you?ve responded with resolve," the president said.

    "Today, the proud nation expresses our gratitude but we do so mindful that no ceremony or parade, no hug or handshake is enough to truly honor that service."

    Obama also noted, "This is the first Veterans Day in a decade in which there are no American troops dying and fighting in Iraq" -- a statement that drew polite applause from the crowd.

    Carlo Allegri / Reuters

    The country expresses its gratitude for veterans and their service with ceremonies and parades.

    The president touted the work of first l ady Michelle Obama and Jill Biden, wife of Vice President Joe Biden, for their involvement with the Joining Forces campaign, which urges businesses to hire veterans. He also reaffirmed his commitment to continuing the post-9/11 GI Bill program, which provides college education funding for those who have served, and said soldiers suffering war-related health problems will get the care they need. ? ?

    "No one who fights for this country overseas should everhave to fight for a job, or a roof over their head, or the carethat they have earned when they come home,'' he said.

    After the speech, Obama visited Arlington National Cemetery?s Section 60, the final resting place for the service members who lost their lives during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Dozens of family members and individuals were at the area?paying respects.?The president and first lady talked quietly with some of them.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this story.

    More Veterans Day stories:

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    Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/11/15089691-obama-lays-wreath-honors-nations-veterans?lite

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    Saturday, November 3, 2012

    In the Badger State, divided over and baffled by Obamacare

    BELOIT, Wisconsin (Reuters) - To Tim Givhan, Obamacare shouldn't be an excuse for election-year polemics: "It's a lifeline."

    A former IT specialist, Givhan tripped on a machine at work and landed on his head, suffering neurological damage. His employer's insurance company wouldn't pay for an operation, saying the outcome was iffy. Plagued by debilitating migraines and tremors, he quit work. His wife, an attorney, divorced him.

    Givhan, 49, has moved back to his mother's home in Beloit, Wisconsin. He has no health insurance but expects to get it once the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, takes full effect. "I often think of killing myself," he said. "But I have a 2-year-old son, and I can't do that to him."

    Whether the sweeping 2010 law is fully implemented, as President Barack Obama intends, or repealed, as GOP nominee Mitt Romney pledges, no policy difference in next week's election is likely to affect more Americans in their daily lives.

    This small Midwestern city - which anthropologist Margaret Mead once called "a microcosm of America" - offers a window into what is at stake. Obamacare is dividing patients and doctors, hospitals and government regulators, workers and employers, constituents and politicians. And here, as elsewhere, many are confused about the law's provisions.

    A nationwide Reuters/Ipsos survey shows 49 percent of registered voters favor it, and 51 percent oppose it. At the same time, many who disagree with the legislation support key provisions such as cutting drug costs for seniors, expanding Medicaid coverage for the poor, and banning insurance companies from capping lifetime reimbursements or refusing coverage for preexisting conditions.

    Beloit's Community Healthcare Center, where Givhan was picking up a prescription on a recent morning, is tucked in a corner of a shopping mall. It is a tidy place with comfy chairs and wall-to-wall carpeting. Helpful receptionists nod sympathetically behind a glass window. Brochures promote vegetables in your diet.

    But the small public clinic is also a place where mounting rage against the machine of American healthcare is palpable. A quarter of the patients lack health insurance. Others are in life-or-death struggles with their insurance companies. Some can't find a surgeon who will take Medicaid.

    The Affordable Care Act is expected to cut the number of uninsured Americans by 30 million over the next decade. Lynn Larsen, a clinic administrator, is eager for the law to remain in place.

    "Most of our patients are working poor," she said. "Some have 32-hour-a-week jobs at Wal-Mart and can't afford insurance. Others were laid off from factories - their unemployment insurance has run out and they've lost their homes."

    The community center, with two family physicians, three registered nurses and a handful of support staff, has no beds. Seriously ill patients are referred to Beloit Memorial Hospital. "But try to find an oncologist who takes an uninsured person," Larsen said. "They want 50 percent up front, and treatment can cost $500,000. If someone has lung cancer and needs charity, they're probably going to die."

    SLOW RECOVERY

    In Beloit, a city of 37,000, industry has been shrinking for decades. Shuttered hulks of century-old brick factories, some with broken windows, line the Rock River. On a recent evening a homeless man tended three fishing rods, and pulled out a wriggling sheepshead for his dinner.

    The city has fought blight by preserving its historic downtown, building a sculpture-adorned bike path and fostering a farmer's market. The economy is slowly recovering, but unemployment remains high, at 9.9 percent. That's down from 19.1 percent in 2009 after a General Motors plant in nearby Janesville closed.

    In a Reuters/Ipsos poll, 55 percent of Americans "strongly agree" with the statement "All Americans have a right to healthcare." Another 21 percent "somewhat agree," and only 10 percent express any disagreement.

    With a 130-bed hospital, a $520 million budget and a staff of 1,400, Beloit Health System is the largest employer in town. Its administrators are divided over Obamacare, anticipating reforms with a mixture of hope and dread.

    Senior Vice President Timothy McKevett said the law's incentives spurred the hospital to set up an electronic records network. "We had three computer systems which didn't talk to each other," he said.

    Under Obamacare, "regional information exchanges will allow a doctor anywhere in the state to see, ?Oh, that patient had a lab test two weeks ago. We don't need to do it again.'"

    However, McKevett said the Affordable Care Act will cost the hospital $22 million over 10 years. Even before the law was enacted, Medicare and Medicaid paid less than a quarter of hospital or physician costs for treating recipients. "When we see these patients, we lose money," he said.

    Under Obamacare, more Beloiters would be covered by Medicaid, and new efficiency rules for Medicare will take effect. For example, hospitals can be denied reimbursement for some patients who are readmitted after previous stays. Doctors object because patients are often readmitted when they fail to follow instructions, rather than because of hospital negligence.

    The hospital has been taking steps to cut costs. By merging with a local doctors group and eliminating duplicative CT-scanners and labs, it is saving $3.4 million a year. But with Obamacare, McKevett said, "We will have to do even more with less."

    'THE SYSTEM IS COLLAPSING'

    Emergency room doctor Richard Barney, who serves as Beloit Memorial's chief of staff, flatly opposes the law. "We can't afford to provide healthcare to millions more people," he said. "We already have a physician shortage. Not everyone should be able to have a knee replacement because their knee hurts."

    Given low reimbursements for private physicians, he said, "Sprained ankles and strep throats end up in our overwhelmed ERs where federal law prohibits enforcing copays. You bill till you are blue in the face, but they're not going to pay a dime. We are the only industry in the world where you can dine and dash."

    Barney acknowledges that something must be done: "Healthcare costs are out of control. The system is collapsing before our eyes." He favors parts of Obamacare, including the ban on denying coverage for preexisting conditions and lifting the lifetime coverage cap.

    But instead of this "monstrosity of a law," he said, the system should "be fixed piece by piece." Barney is upset that the law fails to curb malpractice suits, which fuel expensive and unnecessary tests. "Billions are spent on defensive medicine, and nobody gives a crap because they're in the back pocket of lawyers," he said.

    In the campaign, Democratic ads have mostly avoided the subject of Obamacare, focusing instead on attacking GOP plans to reform Medicare. Republicans and business-funded groups, who launched fierce attacks against Obamacare in the 2010 midterm elections, have continued to use it as campaign fodder.

    In one spot, GOP Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan, whose congressional district adjoins Beloit, advises, "You should be in charge of your health, not government or insurance bureaucrats."

    A Romney ad criticizes Obama for "taxing wheelchairs and pacemakers" and "raiding $716 billion from Medicare" to pay for the program. The Medicare figure, though, is the amount expected to be saved from hospital and doctors' costs under new regulations and does not involve cutting seniors' benefits.

    According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the law's $938 billion cost over 10 years would be funded by wringing waste from Medicare and Medicaid, along with new levies, such as a tax on generous "Cadillac" insurance plans. The CBO estimates the law would cut the national deficit by $124 billion over a decade.

    Several of Obamacare's major provisions do not take effect until 2014, but the ones in place are having an impact. Fairbanks Morse Engine, which employs 370 workers, is among Beloit companies forced to lift a million-dollar lifetime cap for health insurance spending. Several employees with cancer have benefited.

    INFORMATION GAP

    At the city's Bushel & Peck's market, cashier Kat Tow, 23, is now covered by her father's health insurance plan, thanks to the law's ban on companies cutting off children before age 26. Her boyfriend, who has a seasonal job with the city parks, also gets insurance through his parents.

    "Obamacare is a godsend," she said.

    At the community health center, Johnson Moore, 58, is among the clinic's 5,000 uninsured patients to be affected once the law is fully implemented. Filling out forms on a recent morning, Moore said he has never had insurance, public or private. Since the bakery where he worked went out of business, he has been unable to afford his diabetes medicine.

    "It is slowly killing me," he said.

    A few seats away, Wanda Taylor, a former restaurant manager, is also counting on the law. Her son Colin, 18, a hemophiliac, will age out of the Medicaid system next year. "It scares me half to death," she said. "Even if he gets a job, he probably won't get health insurance. Most people his age don't."

    Neither Moore nor Givhan, the former IT specialist, has been able to get Badgercare, the state's Medicaid program, which is largely reserved for mothers and children. Wisconsin, under Republican Governor Scott Walker, has joined a dozen other states in tightening access to benefits.

    Obamacare would move in the opposite direction, adding as many as 11 million to Medicaid, including 170,000 in Wisconsin. Anyone earning up to 133 percent of the poverty line would be covered.

    Walker, who beat back a union-sponsored recall election in June, contends Obamacare "would require the majority of people in Wisconsin to pay more money for less healthcare."

    He returned $38 million in federal funds allocated to Wisconsin for setting up insurance exchanges under the law, saying he hopes it will be repealed. The exchanges, which would give the state's half-million uninsured a central place to compare and buy plans, are to take effect in 2014.

    Ignorance of the law's benefits is widespread. Among two dozen Beloiters interviewed during a recent visit, few could name even a single Obamacare provision. None were aware that, under the law, nearly 2 million Wisconsonites have been able to get free preventive services such as mammograms and colonoscopies with no copays.

    None were aware that the law has saved Wisconsin Medicare recipients $84 million on prescription drugs since 2010; or that insurance companies are now banned from dropping people when they get sick; or that Wisconsonites got $10.4 million in insurance refunds because companies must now spend 80 percent of healthcare premiums on care.

    "What does Obamacare do?" asked Jennifer Lorenz, a nurse at Beloit Memorial Hospital, genuinely puzzled. "I don't know the specifics." An Obama supporter, she was nonetheless unsure if she favors the law.

    A few Beloiters were aware that Obamacare would require all Americans to have insurance - the so-called individual mandate. In the Reuters/Ipsos national survey, when questions detailing the law's specifics were posed, that so-called individual mandate was the only provision with less than majority backing. Asked about "requiring all U.S. residents to own health insurance," 40 percent agreed, 36 percent disagreed and 23 percent were undecided.

    None of the Beloiters interviewed were aware that the law would offer subsidies for purchasing insurance to those with incomes between 133 percent and 400 percent of the poverty level.

    'A SICK-CARE SYSTEM'

    At his apple stand in Beloit's Saturday farmer's market, Brian Van Laar said he opposes Obamacare. "I don't think the government should get more involved in healthcare," he said. "The constitution doesn't say it should."

    Van Laar, whose orchard is a side business, has a day job as an engineer for an appliance manufacturer. With the new law ensuring coverage to individuals through insurance exchanges, "People at work are worried that the company will stop offering benefits," he said. "They'll just kick us over to Obamacare and say, ?You're on your own.'"

    Under the law, employers who cancel their plans would be liable for penalties. Nonetheless, Jeffrey Klett, a Beloit agent who handles benefits for 70 companies, said, "I have two larger clients thinking about doing away with health insurance altogether. Clients ask, ?Am I better off just paying the fine?' There's a lot of uncertainty."

    John Bottorff, vice president for human resources at Fairbanks Morse Engine, predicts that "most employers will want to continue to provide healthcare coverage. If you drop it, you could be at a competitive disadvantage in attracting and retaining employees."

    In the Reuters/Ipsos survey, 72 percent of voters favored the Obamacare provision that requires companies with more than 50 employees to offer health insurance. Only 28 percent were opposed.

    Despite the ambivalence of his colleagues, Larry Bergen, director of Quality Reporting and Community Health at the hospital, calls Obamacare "a fabulous step in the right direction. More people will have insurance, so they won't put off seeing doctors until they have a crisis."

    Bergen would have preferred a "single payer system" such as Medicare, rather than a law that relies primarily on private insurance companies. "People say the Canadian and British systems have flaws, but those countries have better life expectancy and less infant mortality than we do," he said.

    "We don't have a healthcare system - we have a sick-care system. Fifty percent of health dollars are spent on the sickest 5 percent. If you're sick, we do great things, like an angioplasty in the middle of a heart attack. But people can't get in to see a primary care doctor."

    Proponents of the law expect millions more to get treatment for high blood pressure to avoid a stroke, take cholesterol-lowering drugs to ward off a heart attack or get early diabetes intervention to prevent a gangrenous foot amputation.

    "People can criticize the law, and we'll have a chance over the years to make it better," said Timothy Cullen, a former Blue Cross executive who represents Beloit in the state senate. Presidents have tried for a century to get healthcare for all Americans, he added. "They all failed and Obama succeeded. It's long overdue."

    The Reuters/Ipsos database is now public and searchable here: http://www.tinyurl.com/reuterspoll

    (Reporting by Margot Roosevelt; editing by Lee Aitken and Prudence Crowther)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/badger-state-divided-over-baffled-obamacare-050728267.html

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