Thursday, August 1, 2013

As San Diego mayor heads for therapy, city faces big mess (+video)

Confusion is mounting about correct city procedures as San Diego Mayor Bob Filner is about to undergo counseling after accusations of inappropriate behavior toward women.

By Daniel B. Wood,?Staff writer / July 31, 2013

San Diego Mayor Bob Filner speaks during a news conference at City Hall, July 26, 2013, in San Diego.

Gregory Bull/AP

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San Diego Mayor Bob Filner ? faced with a sexual harassment lawsuit filed by his former communications director ? is not only embarrassing his city, but is also presenting it with confusing legal choices, political and legal analysts say.

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He has agreed to undergo two weeks of counseling as seven other women have come forward to accuse him of inappropriate behavior. The therapy is to take place Aug. 5-19, during which the mayor has said he will receive twice-a-day briefings about city operations.

But seven of the nine city council members say he should resign. California Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D), House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, and Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz have also indicated as much.

In addition, two potential recall efforts are afoot. One recall group filed an affidavit Monday indicating its plans, and another published an ad over the weekend indicating similar intentions.

It?s all adding up to a confusing situation, and questions are multiplying by the moment. Among the questions:

? Who is in control of the city while the mayor is in rehab?

? Can two recalls go on at the same time?

? Are the city?s recall measures at odds with those of California?

? Who will pay Filner?s legal fees?

?The City Council and other civic leaders throughout the city are responding to the politics of the situation and the outrage that stretches far beyond the region's borders,? says David McCuan, a political scientist at Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park, Calif., in an e-mail. ?Citizens, comedians, state and national leaders ? everyone has the same message for the Mayor: get out and get help. Yet, the Mayor is hunkering down and preserving all his legal options. This sets up a monumental battle through a recall effort and if there is more than one effort, the Mayor could potentially survive.?

Filner declared Monday that he thinks the city should pay his legal fees, and the city council rejected that in a late Tuesday vote. The council also voted unanimously to indemnify itself against all damages and legal fees it might incur as a result of the lawsuit.

?If Bob Filner engaged in unlawful conduct and the city is held liable, he will have to reimburse us every penny the city pays and its attorney fees,? City Attorney Jan Goldsmith said.

In a statement, Councilmember Kevin Faulconer said: ?Bob Filner can?t pay back San Diegans for the damage he?s done to our city?s reputation.?

Another figure who says Filner should resign is city council president Todd Gloria, who would become acting mayor in the event of a resignation.

?I applaud his action to seek help, but it only underscores what a lot of us are saying, which is you cannot seek help and run the city at the same time,? Mr. Gloria said in an interview with KPBS TV. ?That?s why myself and so many others have said, Mayor, you need to resign.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/politics/~3/L4LvymihqVc/As-San-Diego-mayor-heads-for-therapy-city-faces-big-mess-video

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The Trouble With ESPN's Big Johnny Football Story

The most interesting passage in Wright Thompson's new and much-discussed profile of minor league football player Johnny Manziel comes about three-quarters of the way into the story, which is long and rich with detail, so that you could forgive a reader whose eye ran past it. At this point in the piece, Manziel's parents, Michelle and Paul, are worried because their son, whose every whim they have apparently always indulged, has just been in Toronto visiting with Drake, the sort of thing on which Michelle feels the need to pray.

"They're concerned," Thompson writes. "Paul thinks Johnny drinks to deal with the stress. After his arrest, Johnny's parents and Sumlin mandated he visit an alcohol counselor; Johnny saw him six or seven weeks during the season."

This is given little more weight than any number of other details. (The writerly details here pile up like dandruff on a shoulder). If you go by word count, it gets less emphasis than the one about how Michelle was upset that her son got a tattoo. It's strange. A 20-year-old who drinks to deal with stress, who has been arrested in a booze-related incident, who has repeatedly found himself in embarrassing scenarios at least in part due to his drinking, and who has been forced by his employer and parents to see an alcohol counselor is pretty plainly a 20-year-old with a serious drinking problem. And yet at no point during a 6,000-word meditation on the meaning of Johnny Football does ESPN's premier longform writer, who can put you on the scene as his subject quaffs in an alarming variety of places, and who will name you the precise drinks his man prefers (Crown and Sprite, Stella), write anything like this plain English sentence: Johnny Manziel is a drunk.

It's an important omission, especially when you consider the second-most interesting passage in the piece, which has to do with Johnny Football and his father, here presented as a rich failure living vicariously through a son who hates him:

Not long ago, backstage at a country music concert, the two Manziels hung out with some of Johnny's friends. There was Uncle Nate, a high school teammate named Bryan and Johnny's buddy Colton from College Station. Everyone stood around, the band warming up. Without so much as a nod, the Crotch Shot Ninjas struck: Paul punched Nate in the nuts, and, simultaneously, Johnny kicked Bryan and hit Colton, both in the balls, both at the same time, and as the three dudes doubled over and the band howled in laughter, Johnny and Paul gave each other a fist bump. Mission accomplished.

In that anecdote you can see the future of America: a rich douchebag and his jackass son kicking their flunkeys in the balls, forever. It's a nice bit of reporting that buttresses some of the other nice reporting here. A man who would do this, and raise a son who would do this, is exactly the sort who would buy all the drinks for a son who's giving every sign of having a serious drinking problem. It kind of explains Johnny Football.

This story isn't really about alcoholism or horrific one-percenter stage parenting, though, even if its subject's life is, and if those riffs had been cut, their loss wouldn't much have affected the profile's thrust. The compelling parts of this #longread, in other words, are incidental, because it is a story principally about its own studious neutrality. To say straightforwardly that Johnny Football is a drunk who was raised by an asshole would be to compromise that pose of perfect objectivity. That's why the above nutpunching episode appears as a cute anecdote about the bond between father and son. As is, some people will come away from it saying, If they don't get that kid under control, it's going to cost him in the draft, and others will say, These damn moralists won't even let a kid be a kid. Debate will have been embraced, and the piece will have done its work.

The problem with this sort of scrupulous agnosticism, though, isn't just that you end up with a narrative that doesn't quite align with its details. It's that holding up ambiguity as inherently virtuous is essentially a rejection of journalism. It puts the hardest work?the work not just of saying, I saw this, but of saying, This is what it meant?on the reader. It's a confidence trick derived from modernist fiction.

Interestingly, there's a very different story tucked away in this one's pocket. Early on, for instance, we get a scene of Johnny Football watching himself being mythologized on a screen:

All day, he watched television as people ripped or defended him. They showed the montage of his jet-set offseason: courtside seats, beaches in Cabo, rounds at Pebble Beach. The montage led inexorably back to his arrest before last season, and he got to relive that too.

This is where a certain sort of reporter might note his own piece's complicity in the mythmaking it purports to critique. He might remind us that the television station paying for the piece we're reading, one with serious financial interests in minor league football narratives, routinely shows montages of its subject's jet-set lifestyle. This same reporter likely wouldn't call Manziel the "most important student" at Texas A&M (who's third?) or, after describing a young man's life as a sequence of binary questions, suggest that "This season will bring the answer." Of course, this reporter probably wouldn't have been assigned the story in the first place.

It is, of course, possible that Manziel is the very most important of the 50,000 unique souls who attend his school, and that what he does over the course of a few football games during the months before he turns 21 will prove to be what decides whether he'll spend his life as a boy or become a man. (Thinking of things this way will certainly keep us tuning in to ESPN to see how the story plays out.) It's also possible that he's just another kid with a drinking problem and an awful family who will take a long time to figure things out, getting fussed over because there is good money to be made fussing over young men who throw footballs well. Who can say? It's all very ambiguous.

What you can say is that there really are two stories here. One is about an unfairly put-upon celebrity on the verge of a crack-up and the flawed but loving family trying their best to protect him. It's a story about good people, people worth apologizing to when their words end up on the television, trapped in the gears of the machinery of fame. The other is about the construction of that machinery, and the engineers who make it so artfully that you can fail to see it working right in front of you, and how they never question their purpose.

Photo credit: Getty

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/deadspin/excerpts/~3/KPbS-5sjG70/the-trouble-with-espns-big-johnny-football-story-968777922

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President Obama: NSA Surveillance Was Necessary To Make Sure Boston Bombings Weren't Part Of Bigger Plot

Huffington Post has an article about how President Obama is meeting with many of the biggest Congressional critics of the NSA surveillance programs to discuss their concerns. However, on Wednesday he also met with larger groups in the House and Senate, where he continued to stand behind the programs. At the very bottom of the article is this stunning tidbit:
Obama reiterated his call for a "balance" between privacy and national security, but also invoked the Boston Marathon bombings as an example of where data collected by the NSA helped "identify whether there was a great plot."
Right. So, after there was a bombing which no intelligence agency spotted beforehand, he's now claiming that the NSA got to jump into action to find out that there wouldn't be any more bombings because there was no bigger plot. We're not even in the silly debunked realm of "preventing terrorist events" anymore. Now we're at "Great work everyone! We found out that there's no larger plot to worry about -- sorry about the explosions and related mess." Using the discovery of a lack of further threats after a bombing happened undetected to justify spying on all Americans? That's crazy.

When that's the best you can do to defend this program, something is clearly wrong. The program didn't prevent the bombing. It may have allowed law enforcement to be more confident that there wasn't a larger plot behind it slightly faster than regular police work did, but that's not exactly a reason to violate everyone's privacy, now is it?

Source: http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130731/18005724032/president-obama-claims-boston-bombings-reinforce-need-nsa-surveillance.shtml

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Birmingham native, Georgia State University freshman founds 'White Student Union' at school

ATLANTA, Georgia -- A Georgia State University freshman from Birmingham created an informal White Student Union at the school, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The White Student Union already has about a half dozen members, founder Patrick Sharp told the Journal-Constitution, but it's also stirred up plenty of controversy before the school year even begins.

Sharp said the goal of the group is for students of European descent to get together and discuss culture and issues that affect the group.

"All we want to do is celebrate white identity," he told the Journal-Constitution. "This is about being in touch with who you are as a white person and being proud of that."

Sharp declined an interview with AL.com/The Birmingham News Wednesday.

In a pair of opinion columns published last week in Georgia State's student newspaper, The Signal, two students expressed opposite views of the new organization. Both writers focused heavily on the racial tension surrounding the killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida and the recent acquittal of George Zimmerman in the case.

"With the induction of a White Student Union, I think it will not only be a very interesting social experiment, but it will bring to the surface a multitude of uncomfortable racial arguments that we as students will have to address," student Mitchell Oliver wrote in support of the group.

"Do white students need a unified voice? Are there needs that are not being met?" wrote Terry Harlin, who opposed the group. "Why not a European cultural club, if the emphasis is indeed on heritage?"

The White Student Union is not an official group, Doug Covey, the university's vice president for student affairs, told the Journal-Constitution. In order to become an official group, it would need a faculty or staff adviser, and Sharp said he doubted the group could find one. As an informal group, the union can meet in common areas on campus but cannot reserve meeting space or receive funding from student fees.

According to Creative Loafing Atlanta, the idea came from a similar student group formed at Towson University that was the subject of a short Vice documentary.

Source: http://blog.al.com/wire/2013/07/birmingham_native_georgia_stat.html

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Fixing Egypt?s Economy: No More Military Macaroni

Since July 3, General Abdul-Fattah al-Sisi has made it clear who runs Egypt: He does. He faces two great challenges. One is the Islamist element, spoiling for a fight to take back the power it so recently lost. The other, my focus here, is the economy.

The country once famous as the ?breadbasket of the Nile? now imports something like 70 percent of its food. To make matters worse, a depressed economy could mean that the money will just not be there ??other than gifts from Saudi Arabia and other governments ??to fend off starvation. Plus, the prospect looms of severe cuts in the country?s Nile water allotment. What to do?

There is only one choice if Egypt is to break the bonds of poverty: Pull the military out of the economy. As detailed by Shana Marshall and Joshua Stacher for MERIP and Nimrod Raphaeli for MEMRI, what?s sometimes known as ?Military, Inc.? controls somewhere between 25 and 40 percent of the economy. Its products

range from consumer goods such as laptops, flat-screen televisions, sewing machines, refrigerators, pots and pans, plastic table covers, butane gas bottles, olive oil, and bottled water to medical equipment, tourism, real estate, and gas and energy. The military owns and operates no fewer than nine factories for macaroni.

The military has grown so large because of preferential tax treatment, subsidized labor, an extra-legal status, old-boy networks, and many other privileges. As can be imagined, its enterprises run along socialistic lines and are steeped in nepotism and baroque forms of corruption.

Egypt?s economy can only take off if Sisi has the courage to tell his colleagues that the gig is up, that the armed forces are getting out of the pasta business so that Egyptians can build a proper economy. I can?t imagine he will do this of his own accord, for officers have become accustomed to the good life, with plenty of money and an abundance of free servants.

Hammering at this message is one of the more important actions that foreign governments can take when meeting with Sisi and the military leadership.?

Source: https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/354811/fixing-egypts-economy-no-more-military-macaroni-daniel-pipes

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Apple touts tax holiday savings for customers in 10 states

AppleInsider writes, Ten states in the Union will soon let their residents buy various products with no tax added for a limited time, and Apple is taking advantage of the tax holidays by informing customers in those areas how to save hundreds on their next Apple Store purchase. ????

Continue reading Apple touts tax holiday savings for customers in 10 states at AppleInsider

Source: http://machash.com/appleinsider/77396/apple-touts-tax-holiday-savings-for-customers-in-10-states/

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ERM Value: Building the Business Case - Manage Tomorrow's ...

ERM CommunicationThe role of the enterprise risk manager has finally become clear: close the gap between strategic level risks and the operational risks faced at the activity level. Despite being a relatively new corporate discipline, expectations for ERM value are already very high. A recent poll shows us why corporations are desperate for?ERM managers to be successful.

The poll, conducted by Harris Interactive of 23,000 corporate full-time employees within key industries and in key functional areas1?highlights some the challenges ERM is up against, namely, the inability of corporations to focus on and execute their highest priorities. Consider a few of their most stunning findings:

  • - Only 37% have a clear understanding of what their organization is trying to achieve and why.
  • - Only one in five was enthusiastic about their team's and organization's goals.
  • - Only one in five said they have a clear "line of sight" between their tasks and their team's and organization's goals.
  • - Only 15% felt that their organization fully enables them to execute key goals.?
  • - Only 20% fully trusted the organization they work for.

If, say, a soccer team had these same scores, only four of the 11 players on the field would know which goal is theirs. Only two of the 11 would care. Only two of the 11 would know what position they play and know exactly what they are supposed to do. And all but two players would, in some way, be competing against their own team members rather than the opponent.

Getting an accurate pulse on strategic objectives is challenging, as these goals are cross-functional and effect oriented in nature, and as such are extremely useful for the board and senior executives, but are impossible to take action on without first breaking them down into root-cause, actionable, silo specific activities within an operational processes. This is where risk management plays a pivotal role.

To create value through ERM, organizations need to build a robust?risk taxonomy, which provides a holistic view of all information and relationships across the organization. The risk manager is responsible for setting the standards, practices and procedures for effective risk management and embedding them in all existing business processes. Formalized risk assessments allow risk managers to leverage existing activities in an objective, quantifiable, repeatable manner to show how risks and activities at the business process level are impacting business goals, along with the priority and importance of these risks, activities, and goals.

A formalized risk taxonomy framework is a mechanism to collect risk information at the activity level, where most operational risks materialize, and aggregate this risk information to a level and format senior management cares about. Watch our complimentary on-demand webinar, "Presenting ERM to the Board," to learn more about the value ERM can provide to your organization by aligning activity level risks to strategic goals.

1?8th Habit?by Stephen R. Covey, Harris Interactive poll of 23,000 U.S. residents employed full-time within key industries and in key functional areas.

Source: http://www.ebizq.net/blogs/chief_risk_officer/2013/07/erm_value_building_the_busines.php

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Netflix introducing personalized profiles to Apple TV

With the wide range of selections available on, and suggested by, Netflix, we've all had that embarrassing moment where you fire up the family account and your family discovers the Slumber Party Massacre marathon you had last night. Or Monk. Or whatever embarrasses you. Here's some good news, fellow viewers; Netflix is rolling out personalized user profiles and they're starting with Apple TV.

According to a report from MacRumors, and confirmed on Twitter, users who have previously set up profiles with the former DVD-delivery service can now see those profiles on their Apple TV's. The debut comes with some caveats. Profiles cannot be altered and new users cannot be currently added. This is a sort of a beta test for the company, which told MacRumors it has plans to roll out the feature for other devices later this summer.

Individual profiles come with a user specific content recommendations, your own queue, individualized viewing histories, and parental controls. Sorry teens -- your mom is still the final authority on Netflix watching.


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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2013/07/30/netflix-introducing-personalized-profiles-to-apple-tv/

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Energy City Qatar will be mixed-use facility

Energy City Qatar is scheduled for completion in 2018

RELATED STORIES:?Case Study: Energy City Qatar?|?Cooling services for Energy City Qatar?|?Energy City set to invite bids for second phase

The Energy City Qatar (ECQ) project will be a mixed-use facility, after original plans were changed.

According to The Peninsula, some of the target companies reported lack of interest in dividing the corporate offices from their headquarters has forced ECQ to revise their vision.

There was also ?huge demand? from firms not active in the energy markets.

Talking to the paper, ECQ chief execuitive officer, Hesham Al Emadi said: ?We are investors and we look for the value of projects and investments. We saw a huge demand from the construction sector and we reconsidered our decision to go for both business and energy sectors rather than solely going for the latter.?

?However, we will be hosting a few energy companies too.?

ECQ had wanted to establish the first energy business centre in the Middle East.

Reports now suggest that the occupants will be organisations primarily connected to the energy business, although it is likely that companies in a secondary or tertiary role will also have a presence at ECQ.

Al Emadi said that 15 real estate organisations will be headquartered at the project, alongside four leading information technology firms, while a number of leading bank branches and insurance firms will take up residence.

Despite the changes, work is still on track, with the project set to open on schedule.

?We have now finished the infrastructure phase and are focusing on the project development stage,? commented Al Emadi.

?We see a lot of development in the coming years. We have a target to complete the project in next five years and be operational by 2018.?


Source: http://www.constructionweekonline.com/article-23608-energy-city-qatar-will-be-mixed-use-facility/

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Monogamy evolved as a mating strategy: New research indicates that social monogamy evolved as a result of competition

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Social monogamy, where one breeding female and one breeding male are closely associated with each other over several breeding seasons, appears to have evolved as a mating strategy, new research reveals. It was previously suspected that social monogamy resulted from a need for extra parental care by the father.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/iP24iiHSiiQ/130729172244.htm

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13.07.29 00:00 Tickets on sale now for our Golf Tournament! - Monday July 29, 2013

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Source: www.calendarwiz.com --- Monday, July 29, 2013
Tickets on sale now for our Golf Tournament Saturday September 28th 8-1pm! Wood Creek Golf Course $225/4 person team includes lunch and cart Individual play $60/person includes lunch and cart Hosp... ...

Source: http://www.calendarwiz.com/calendars/popup.php?op=view&id=65719559&crd=wmdt

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SAfrica: Theron pledges help in AIDS fight

South African President Jacob Zuma, right, meets South African-born Hollywood actress Charlize Theron, left, at his Union Building office in Pretoria, South Africa, Monday, 29 July 2013, ahead of their meeting, to discuss the fight against HIV and Aids, and "how collaboration can assist mitigate the pandemic's negative impact on young girls". (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

South African President Jacob Zuma, right, meets South African-born Hollywood actress Charlize Theron, left, at his Union Building office in Pretoria, South Africa, Monday, 29 July 2013, ahead of their meeting, to discuss the fight against HIV and Aids, and "how collaboration can assist mitigate the pandemic's negative impact on young girls". (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

South African President Jacob Zuma, left, meets South African actress Charlize Theron, right, at his Union Building office in Pretoria, South Africa, Monday, 29 July 2013, ahead of their meeting, to discuss the fight against HIV and Aids, and "how collaboration can assist mitigate the pandemic's negative impact on young girls". (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

South African-born Hollywood actress Charlize Theron speaks during her joint media conference with South African President Jacob Zuma, unseen, after their meeting at his Union Building office in Pretoria, South Africa, Monday, 29 July 2013. They discussed the fight against HIV and Aids, and "how collaboration can assist mitigate the pandemic's negative impact on young girls". (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? Actress Charlize Theron has pledged her support in the campaign against AIDS during a meeting with South African President Jacob Zuma.

Theron, an ambassador for the United Nations program on AIDS, met Zuma in Pretoria on Monday to discuss the fight against AIDS in South Africa and across the continent.

The South Africa-born actress says the world has the ability to usher in "an AIDS-free generation." She says that the goal can become a reality with strong leadership like that displayed by Zuma.

According to UNAIDS, South Africa has reduced the number of new HIV infections by 12 percent in the last two years. Last year, more than 8 million HIV tests were done. However, South Africa wants citizens to get tested at least once a year.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-29-AF-South-Africa-Charlize-Theron/id-0933679605724c93901e883db0d917a7

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott urges NCAA changes

Southern California coach Lane Kiffin's Trojans are projected by Pac-12 media to finish third in the South Division this season, behind UCLA and Arizona State. (Jae C. Hong, The Associated Press)

CULVER CITY, Calif. ? Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott joined other commissioners Friday in pushing major conferences to shape the future of college athletics but disagreed with breaking away from the NCAA.

In addressing the media at the Pac-12 football preview at Sony Studios, Scott fell in line with commissioners from the Big 12, Southeastern, Big Ten and Atlantic Coast who claim major conferences aren't getting enough say.

"It's time for a new vision," Scott said. "I believe there is a responsibility of the major conferences to provide thoughtful leadership and articulate a future vision for college athletics. If we fail to do so, we forfeit the right to complain about the status quo."

The major conferences have shown frustration in smaller conferences and voters in Division II and III blocking legislation that would benefit major schools. That legislation includes an annual cost-of-attendance stipend for scholarship athletes and fewer recruiting regulations.

Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby and the SEC's Mike Slive have hinted at possibly forming a new association. The five major conferences consist of 62 of the 124 FBS schools.

"The answer, from my perspective, is to not break away but to evolve into something better," Scott said. "It's been too narrow in that it's solely focused on the NCAA and the governance process.

"Our discussions shouldn't be merely about the institution but broader, focusing on the future shape of college athletics, what it means to fans and to our student-athletes."

Scott said change should be made in four areas: student-athlete welfare, governance, enforcement and one-and-dones in basketball.

Scott is fully behind the cost-of-attendance stipend most of the smaller schools can't afford. A figure of $2,000 per scholarship athlete for a school year has been mentioned. It remains in the discussion stages.

"This must be addressed," Scott said.

The major conferences' bigger beef is smaller schools blocking legislation favored by the minority that makes most of the money.

"It's time to acknowledge that one size does not fit all and that we need more flexibility in the system," Scott said. "We must design a structure that allows for appropriate differences based on priorities and resources throughout the NCAA."

Scott displayed his most vehement opposition to the NCAA's enforcement policies. College athletics' governing body has taken heavy criticism for the little action it took in penalizing Miami and Oregon after leveling Southern California and Penn State.

"It's fair to say confidence in the enforcement process is at an all-time low," Scott said. "The fairness, speed, consistency and

The Denver Post's sports reporters contribute analysis, notes and minutiae on this blog focusing on CU athletics.

thoroughness of NCAA investigations must be reviewed as well as the impact these investigations and decisions have on our universities as a whole."

Unlike other commissioners, Scott said the issue of basketball players attending only one year of college before jumping to the NBA must be examined.

"The trend threatens our credibility and the goal of balancing academics and athletics," he said. "It's time to reconsider a system that currently allows student-athletes to be on our campuses for less than 12 months."

NCAA president Mark Emmert has called for a summit Jan. 8, when Scott said he expects "probable change" in the system.

John Henderson: 303-954-1299, jhenderson@denverpost.com or twitter.com/johnhendersondp

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/colleges/ci_23742152/pac-12-commissioner-larry-scott-urges-ncaa-changes?source=rss

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Apple's developer site partially restored after cyber attack

July 27, 2013 at 9:40 AM ET

An Apple logo is seen at the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2013 in San Francisco, California June 10, 2013. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

Stephen Lam / Reuters

Apple has partially restored its main website for developers, eight days after shuttering it in response to a cyber attack that prompted a harried upgrade to prevent future breaches.

Apple's developer site, which the company uses to communicate with its community of close to 6 million software developers, was back online on Friday, though some sections, including the forums and the member center, were still offline.

The company had blocked access to the site after an intrusion last week and it is still not clear what data, if any, was compromised by the attack.

An Apple spokesperson confirmed that the company had sent an email to its developer community informing them about the incident.

"Certificates, Identifiers & Profiles, software downloads, and other developer services are now available," Apple said in the email and on a developer update page on the site.

Seven of the 15 services on the website, including the iOS, Mac and Safari developer centers, were online at 8:15 p.m. ET on Friday.

News of the developer site being restored was earlier reported by technology blog AllThingsD.

(Reporting by Aman Shah in Bangalore; Editing by Eric Beech)

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f3ac3f5/sc/21/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Capples0Edeveloper0Esite0Epartially0Erestored0Eafter0Ecyber0Eattack0E6C10A765770A/story01.htm

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Making Mobile Marketing Work For Your Home Business

Do you know anything about mobile marketing? Do you have a marketing plan? Do you know if there are improvements you could make to it? Is what you?re using working with your business or against it? Are you certain that you are focusing on applying your marketing plan properly? If you?re admittedly new to mobile marketing, then read on for some valuable tips.

Don?t send random messages to your customers. Every message you send them should be relevant and useful. A mobile marketing campaign can fail if you waste your customer?s time by texting them random, useless information. Customers can get all the funny, cute messages they want from their friends; what they expect from marketers is useful information.

Mobile Marketing

TIP! You must have a proper database built to start a mobile marketing campaign. Use ethical techniques when adding numbers to your database.

You need to have a home base if you are developing a mobile platform that will stand alone. Your mobile marketing efforts should be directed at pushing people toward your home base, or helping them keep in touch with those already familiar with your home base. Do not focus your business on your mobile marketing endeavors solely.

No customer base every really changes unless the entire market dictates the change, but remember that mobile customers can come or go due to influences outside of your market. Changes in technology can have a dramatic effect on your business, so stay up to date on all of the latest advances in technology.

If you want to see your profits skyrocket, mobile marketing can be one of the easiest ways to achieve this. There are more and more consumers who are using their cell phones to surf the web, shop online, download apps and access social sites. These are both excellent places that you could be marketing your business. Take your marketing closer to where your customers are located.

TIP! Never randomly message your customers. When you message your customers, be sure that you have something important to tell them.

Make sure that your existing mobile marketing campaign is doing well before trying to formulate a new one. You should measure your campaign success by its effectiveness over a long period of time, rather by the sales it generates. When you design a new mobile campaign, make it suitable for long-term operation from the ground up.

If you want maximum effect from your ads, try and make them go viral. They will probably tell a friend or two, which will greatly increase the effect of your mobile marketing campaign.

Take advantage of dedicated short code. It will cost more but go a long way in securing your brand. This can provide you with legal coverage as well.

TIP! Focus on understanding your customers. Mobile marketing is based around knowledge of what your customers need and want.

Social Media

Make sure to place links on your site that are associated to social networking sites and are geared towards your business. Customers typically won?t search for your company?s social media profiles, but if they are aware you have a profile on one of their social media sites, they will likely take a look to see what you have to say.

If you make it a simple process to send a mobile marketing ad, customers will! Ease of forwarding as well as incentives for doing so are great ways to ensure that your ad is packing all of the punch that it is capable of.

TIP! Craft a mission statement more for your purpose than anything if you want to stay on track in social mobile marketing. Having the mission statement around will help you stay ethical.

Keep in mind that the people who use mobile equipment to look at your site will navigate with some difficultly. By checking how your ad looks on a mobile device, you can ensure it will be more effective. Simpler pages translate better to mobile devices and may show up as a more simple page on a regular computer. This is okay as long as it is accessible to both types of users.

Just like your regular business website, your mobile site should be search engine optimized. Since most mobile searches are done through Google, you will want to SEO your mobile marketing materials using Google?s preferences.

A/B testing can be a great starting place when developing a mobile friendly website. Mobile pages need to be tested for usability, just as much as any other web page. The better of the two trial pages you create, as deemed by its success, should be your final choice, no matter how emotionally invested you may be in the other. You then can progress with your mobile campaign with the one that works best.

TIP! Changes in your market will dictate changes in your customer base. You can gain or lose customers based on outside influences that you cannot control.

Add maps and directions to your website that are mobile friendly. Navigation is one of the most common things that people use mobile devices for. Create an easy way for your customers to reach you. Make sure your content is able to be viewed on a mobile device. Create a link on your mobile site that has a link to Google maps making it easier for your visitors to find your exact location.

Are you more informed when it comes to mobile marketing? Do you have a new plan or a better plan now? Can you now use things that work with your business? Do you know how to properly apply your plan? With any luck, the tips above should have created better answers.

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Egypt: 2 killed in clashes in rival protests

CAIRO (AP) ? An Egyptian health ministry official says two protesters were killed in clashes between supporters and opponents of the country's ousted president in the coastal city of Alexandria.

The clashes broke out Friday, a day when rival rallies are held across Egypt. The country's army chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi called for rallies to give him a mandate to stop "violence and terrorism." The supporters of Mohammed Morsi, the first democratically elected president removed by el-Sissi early this month, also held rallies Friday.

Friction started outside a major mosque in Alexandria, as the two sides exchanged stones and fired birdshot. Police and army tried to break up the fighting, lobbing tear gas and deploying soldiers. Health official Mohammed Abu Suleiman said two were killed and two dozen injured.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

Prosecutors opened an investigation of ousted President Mohammed Morsi on charges including murder and conspiracy with the Palestinian militant group Hamas, fueling tensions amid a showdown in the streets, as tens of thousands of backers of the military and supporters of Morsi held rival mass rallies Friday across Egypt.

The announcement, which is likely to pave the way to a formal indictment, was the first word on Morsi's legal status since the military deposed him on July 3. For more than three weeks, the Islamist leader has been held by the military in a secret location, incommunicado.

The accusations are connected to a prison break during the 2011 uprising against autocrat Hosni Mubarak in which gunmen attacked a prison northwest of Cairo, freeing prisoners including Morsi and around 30 other figures from his Muslim Brotherhood. The prosecutors allege Morsi and the Brotherhood worked with Hamas to carry out the break, in which 14 guards were killed.

The Brotherhood has denied the charges, calling them politically motivated. On Friday, a spokesman for Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood said the move to prosecute Morsi showed "the complete bankruptcy of the leaders of the bloody coup."

Egyptians "reject the return of the dictatorial police state and all the repression, tyranny and theft it entails," Ahmed Aref said in a statement.

The announcement came as massive crowds poured into main squares in Cairo and other cities in support of the military after the army chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi called for rallies. El-Sissi said days earlier he hoped for a giant public turnout to give him a mandate to stop "violence and terrorism," raising speculation he may be planning a crackdown on pro-Morsi protests.

At the same time, crowds of Islamist backers of Morsi massed at their own rallies, part of what the Brotherhood and its allies had previously said would be their biggest protests to date to demand the reinstatement of the president. El-Sissi's call days earlier may have been in part aimed to overwhelm the Islamist numbers in Friday's rallies, as each side tries to show the depth of its public support.

The rival shows of strength only deepen the country's divisions since Morsi's fall ? and dramatically hike fears of violence. By mid-afternoon Friday, clashes and fistfights broke out between military supporters and Morsi backers in the Mediterranean coastal cities of Alexandria and Damietta and in a Cairo neighborhood, leaving at least 18 injured, according to Health Ministry spokesman Khaled el-Khateeb.

El-Sissi deposed Morsi after four days of giant protests by millions of Egyptians demanding the removal of the country's first freely elected president. Since then, Islamists have been holding sit-ins and rallies daily.

State media and pro-military private TV stations have been fiercely promoting the el-Sissi rallies, pumping up a nationalist fervor.

El-Sissi's portrait pervaded the crowds of tens of thousands in Cairo's central Tahrir Square: the smiling general in sunglasses on posters proclaiming "the love of the people," a combination photo of the general and a lion on lanyards hanging from people's necks, a picture of his face photoshopped into a 1-pound note of currency.

"The people, the source of all power, mandate the army and police to purge terrorism," read a giant banner stretched across one entrance to Tahrir. Three tanks guarded another street leading into the square, and helicopters swooped overhead.

Security was heavy after el-Sissi vowed to protect the rallies from attacks by rivals. Tanks guarded one entrance to Tahrir and police were stationed at other parts. "The people give their mandate," read signs touted by many in the crowd.

"The army are here to protect the people, they don't lie," said Ezzat Fahmi, a 38-year-old in the crowd. He said el-Sissi had to call Friday's rallies "so the entire world can see that the Egyptian people don't want the Brotherhood anymore."

It remains unclear what steps the military is planning after Friday's show of public strength. The most explosive step would be if it were to try to break up sit-ins by Islamists who have been camped out at locations in Cairo and other cities for weeks.

The military also could move to arrest more than a dozen Brotherhood figures who have arrest warrants against them. Or it could take firmer action to stop any sign of violence by Islamist protesters ? though the Morsi camp says it is the one targeted by attacks.

Clashes have repeatedly erupted the past three weeks pitting Morsi supporters against his opponents or security forces. Each side blames the other for sparking violence, and people in both camps have been seen carrying weapons.

At the same time, Islamic militants have stepped up attacks on the army and police in the Sinai Peninsula. Nearly 200 people have been killed since Morsi's fall.

The prosecutors' announcement on Morsi could signal a greater move to go after the Brotherhood in courts. Besides Morsi, five other senior figures from the group have been detained.

The MENA news agency said Morsi has now been formally detained for 15 days pending the completion of the investigation into the accusations. It did not say, however, whether he would now be moved now to a regular detention facility where he could receive family visits. His detention can be extended as the inquiry continues. The news agency indicated that Morsi has already been interrogated.

MENA said Morsi was being investigated over allegations of collaborating with Hamas "to carry out anti-state acts, attacking police stations and army officers and storming prisons, setting fire to one prison and enabling inmates to flee, including himself, as well as premeditated killing of officers, soldiers and prisoners."

The case is rooted in the mass jailbreak of more than 30 Muslim Brotherhood leaders, including Morsi, from a prison northwest of Cairo during the 2011 popular uprising that toppled Morsi's predecessor, autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Over recent months, a court in the Suez Canal city of Ismailia has heard testimonies from prison officials and intelligence officers indicating that Morsi and his Brotherhood colleagues were freed when gunmen led by Hamas operatives stormed the Wadi el-Natroun prison. At least 14 members of the security forces were killed and the jail's documents and archives destroyed.

Muslim Brotherhood officials have said they got out when local residents broke into the prison to free their relatives and that they had no knowledge ahead of time of the prison break.

Hamas has consistently denied any involvement. On Friday a spokesman for the militant group, Sami Abu Zuhri, condemned Morsi's detention order.

"The Egyptian decision is an attempt to drag Hamas into the Egyptian conflict," he said. "We call on the Arab League to bear its responsibility in confronting the incitement against Hamas."

Morsi's only account of his jailbreak came in a frantic phone call he made to Al-Jazeera Mubasher TV moments after being freed. "From the noises we heard ... It seemed to us there were (prisoners) attempting to get out of their cells and break out into the prison yard, and the prison authorities were trying to regain control and fired tear gas," Morsi said in the call.

By the time they got out, the prison was empty, and there was no sign of a major battle, he said.

Senior Brotherhood official Essam el-Erian rejected the detention order, saying Morsi continues to enjoy immunity as the nation's "legitimate" president, and he can stand trial only as part of a constitutional process that allows that.

The detention order, he wrote on his official Facebook page, "lays bare the fascist nature of military rule ... our response will be with millions in peaceful rallies in the squares."

___

Associated Press writers Tony G. Gabriel and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo and Mohammed Daraghmeh in Gaza City, Gaza Strip contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-2-killed-clashes-rival-protests-165848674.html

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Kelly Clarkson Wears Princess-Like Wedding Gown in Engagement Portrait

Kelly Clarkson is ready to get hitched! The 31-year-old singer gave her fans a sneak peek when she revealed a gorgeous picture from her engagement photo shoot via Twitter on Thursday, July 25.

PHOTOS: Kelly Clarkson's body through the years

"Ok, just saw my engagement shoot pics & I have to share one!!! :) @kobyb & @TerilynBrown! Ready to #TieItUp!" the "People Like Us" singer tweeted. The photograph showed a stunning Clarkson wearing a white wedding gown sitting in front of a a bookshelf. With bare feet, the former American Idol winner had her blonde hair pulled up while reading.?

PHOTOS: Love lives of American Idol contestants

On June 10, Clarkson asked her followers to send in their own fun wedding photos for the chance to be a part of the lyric video for her latest single, "Tie It Up."

Since announcing her engagement to Brandon Blackstock in December, the "Catch My Breath" singer has been sharing her excitement with the world. "I'm engaged!" she tweeted at the time. "I wanted y'all to know! Happiest night of my life last night! I am so lucky and am with the greatest man ever."

PHOTOS: Kelly Clarkson's most stylish moments

"Brandon's totally The One," Clarkson later told Cosmopolitan in its February 2013 issue. "I've never been so happy." She added, "We've known each other for years, but we didn't start talking until the Super Bowl last February."

Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-style/news/kelly-clarkson-wears-princess-like-wedding-gown-in-engagement-portrait--2013277

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Myanmar President U Thein Sein has effected his second cabinet reshuffle, reassi...

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Where are you grinding from today? A beach in Mexico or a city in Canada, perhap...

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Thursday, July 25, 2013

Obama administration officials: No coup in Egypt

A supporter of Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in front pictures of President Mohammed Morsi at Nasr City, where protesters have installed their camp and hold their daily rally, in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, July 25, 2013. The Muslim Brotherhood's leader on Thursday made an unusually harsh attack on Egypt's military chief, saying his ouster of President Mohammed Morsi was a worse crime than even destroying the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

A supporter of Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi in front pictures of President Mohammed Morsi at Nasr City, where protesters have installed their camp and hold their daily rally, in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, July 25, 2013. The Muslim Brotherhood's leader on Thursday made an unusually harsh attack on Egypt's military chief, saying his ouster of President Mohammed Morsi was a worse crime than even destroying the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

(AP) ? The Obama administration told lawmakers Thursday that it won't declare Egypt's government overthrow a coup, U.S. officials said, allowing the United States to continue providing $1.5 billion in annual military and economic aid to the Arab world's most populous country.

William Burns, the State Department's No. 2 official, held a closed-doors meeting with House members just a day after Washington delayed delivery of four F-16 fighter jets to Egypt. It was the first U.S. action since the military ousted Mohammed Morsi as president, imprisoned him and other Muslim Brotherhood members and suspended the constitution earlier this month.

Burns was to brief senators later Thursday.

The administration has been forced into difficult contortions to justify not declaring a coup d'etat, which would prompt the automatic suspension of American assistance programs under U.S. law. Washington fears that halting such funding could imperil programs that help to secure Israel's border and fight weapons smuggling into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, among other things seen as critical to U.S. national security.

It's unclear what specific arguments Burns presented Thursday, but officials said the administration isn't declaring the power change a coup and doesn't plan to in future as Egypt moves to restore civilian governance and holds new democratic elections. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss the private meetings.

Many from both parties in Congress sympathize with the administration's view and the need to back a military that has safeguarded Egypt's peace with Israel for three decades. Still, some across the political spectrum disagree. Republicans from libertarian Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky to hawkish Sen. John McCain of Arizona, and Democrats such as Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, have demanded the coup law be enforced.

The law stipulates, however, that it's President Barack Obama and his administration's decision on how to characterize Morsi's July 3 overthrow.

White House and State Department officials pointed shortly afterward to the large anti-Morsi protests that preceded the military's action and said Morsi's Islamist-led government, while democratically elected, was taking Egypt down an increasingly undemocratic path.

Since then, the president and his national security team have tried to balance support for the military's proposed return to constitutional rule and democratic elections alongside concern over the crackdown on key Morsi allies. The delay of the fighter jets, scheduled for delivery this month, was the first direct action the U.S. took since the upheaval.

However, the Pentagon said this week the U.S. was proceeding as planned with this year's joint military exercises. The biennial maneuvers were canceled in 2011 following the revolution that ousted President Hosni Mubarak. During Mubarak's three decades in power, Egypt was the United States' premier ally in the Arab world and at the heart of its efforts to fight Islamic terrorism, roll back Iranian influence across the Middle East and promote peace among Israel and its Muslim neighbors.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-07-25-US-US-Egypt/id-53a5426f895f478796bf8c0b01eedf5e

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Vice President Joe Biden will spend some time in Hawaii this weekend. He's sched...

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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

This research is worse than bad. It's basic.

It?s not every day that you turn away the opportunity to promote a scientific finding that was published in Nature. Usually, an email notification from the prestigious journal sends communications departments such as mine into hyperdrive: press releases, media calls ? this stuff is gold. And yet, this particular paper simply wasn?t newsworthy, not even for section C page 17 in the bottom corner.

It?s not that the research was bad; it was basic. And the sad fact is that nobody (outside of science) cares about basic research.

As I see it, we have more than one problem here. The first is a perceived disconnect between basic and applied research, in which the two are viewed and treated as separate entities. The second relates to a failure to communicate research in a way that helps people understand its value.

Here?s an example: The Experimental Lakes Area in northwestern Ontario is comprised of 58 natural lakes and a research station that has been operating since 1968 and whose budget was axed by the Canadian federal government in 2012, despite the fact that the facility had a stellar international reputation for delivering important, basic research findings. Public outcry against the closure led to a commitment from the Ontario provincial government to keep the facility open until a deal can be made this year to transfer the support to another entity. But its future is by no means certain.

Like many people (including, I?m guessing, the majority of Canadians), I knew nothing about the ELA until its funding was cancelled, when an outcry suddenly raised the public profile of this quiet little research facility. While there was a great deal of conjecture about underlying reasons for the closure of this facility, the official line from the Canadian government was budget cuts.

This problem isn?t?entirely new, nor is it a particularly Canadian phenomenon. While there are parts of the globe that have managed to keep science funding relatively steady, a number of nations (i.e. U.S., Australia, Canada, Italy) have cut science budgets to some degree. Scientists may not like it, but it?s the reality of the current economic climate, where austerity trumps inquiry ? with Spain as the most dramatic example of this.

Applied research built the iron lung. Basic science made it obsolete.

Applied research built the iron lung. Basic science made it obsolete.

The issue, as many have pointed out, is that many of the cuts to science funding have been at the expense of basic research. It?s a snake that has a rather long tail, the end of which can be traced back a decade or more, with the establishment of research grants and networks focused on translational work. During this time, and particularly in the last 5-7 years, we?ve seen a shift in the public scientific lexicon, in which words like discovery, understanding, theory, learning and inquiry have been replaced by others, such as innovation, job-creation, commercialization, and applied. The rise of more translational or applied research is not a bad thing: without it there exists an equally unbalanced scenario ? or ?science for science?s sake? that has also dominated publicly-funded research in the past. Neither end of the pendulum?s swing is particularly beneficial for society. But while the aforementioned snake was a relatively benign (possibly a beneficial) creature initially, it grew teeth and those teeth are currently very deeply embedded in basic research.

For the record, I work for a government-funded research network that was created 12 years ago with mandate to bridge the gap between basic and clinical studies: in other words, to fund translational research. Over the years, I?ve had more than a few conversations with researchers about translational versus basic research. Some have found it hard to adapt to a new reality that requires applied outputs and all have had to come to terms with shrinking budgets to do their basic work.

The question I?ve often asked them, in very simple terms, is what difference does it make if their funding is for basic or applied research?

The answer is that you can?t have applied research without basic research.

Consider that the Internet was once a basic research pursuit, built on packet switching methodology and queuing theory. Modern sanitation practices are based on germ theory as studied by Pasteur and others. And an example my network?s Scientific Director, Michael Rudnicki, gave me: ?Applied research would have developed the best iron lung imaginable, but it was basic research that led to the discovery of the Polio vaccine and made the iron lung obsolete.?

Without basic research, there would be no innovation. If we stop funding basic research, how long before we lose the ability to innovate? Where will we go then?

For now, let?s go back to the Experimental Lakes Area. In the aftermath of the ELA?s initial demise, amid the shock, anger and blame levied at the government, one of the more salient points made was that the government?s decision could be related to an inability of researchers at the facility to communicate the value of their work, something that should have been front and centre on the facility?s website and communications (it is now readily available and digestible on the Save ELA website, the coalition assembled to advocate on behalf the facility).

I point this out not as a criticism of the ELA or the people who worked there, but to highlight the second problem I identified. I think, in all the focus on slashed budgets, the importance of communications has largely been overlooked. In today?s funding culture, if you want to obtain/retain funds you need to be out in front of it, in a big way. You need to demonstrate impact at every opportunity, not merely as a reaction after the funding dries up.

Which brings me back to that Nature paper. A share of the blame rests with me. Part of my job is to translate science into something the public finds interesting and if I had pushed a bit harder, I could have come up with the right way to tell the story. Maybe not for the front page, but at least for section C.

Scientists also need to tell their story, and I don?t mean in the abstract or at a science conference or in the next grant application. They need to tell it the public. Yes, I am well aware of the many pressures faced by scientists, but maintain that in today?s reality of shrinking science budgets, they can?t afford not to communicate. Because even if the public doesn?t care about the intricacies of research, they do care about where money is being spent and they?re willing to get behind it if they understand why it?s important.

Photo: Marquette University

Related:

Behind the Greatest Experiments: Basic Research
There Should Be Grandeur: Basic Science in the Shadow of the Sequester
Scientists in Serbia Protest against Dire Financial Situation

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/~r/sciam/basic-science/~3/gFpmERV1Nx8/post.cfm

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Gunmen shoot dead nine policemen in northern Iraq

MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - Militants riding on pick-up trucks opened fire on a checkpoint in northern Iraq on Wednesday, killing nine policemen, police said.

The attack took place in Shura, 50 km (35 miles) south of Mosul, Iraq's third largest city and capital of the Sunni-dominated Nineveh province, where al Qaeda has been regrouping.

The gunmen showered the checkpoint with a hail of bullets from several directions. An ambulance that rushed to the scene was hit by a bomb that had been planted on the road beforehand, wounding the driver and a nurse, police said.

Sunni Islamist militants have been regaining momentum in their insurgency against the Shi'ite-led government in recent months, striking on an almost daily basis.

Iraq's steadily deteriorating security was highlighted by a mass jailbreak near the capital on Sunday when around 500 convicts, including senior al Qaeda operatives, escaped after militants attacked two prisons.

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which was formed through a merger between al Qaeda's Syrian and Iraqi branches, claimed responsibility for the raids and said it had freed its jailed comrades after months of preparation.

One security official told Reuters on Tuesday that some of the escaped inmates were heading to Syria to join the ranks of the mainly Sunni rebels fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, whose Alawite sect derives from Shi'ite Islam.

Sectarian tensions across the region have been inflamed by the Syrian civil war, which has also drawn in Shi'ite fighters from Iraq.

More than 720 people have been killed in militant attacks in Iraq so far in July, according to violence monitoring group Iraq Body Count.

(Reporting by Ziad al-Sinjary; Writing by Isabel Coles; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gunmen-shoot-dead-nine-policemen-northern-iraq-095219580.html

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Trayvon Martin's father to speak on Capitol Hill (Providence Journal)

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Lawmakers (again) propose replacing $1 bills with coins

coins

3 hours ago

This undated photo provided by the U.S. Mint shows the front, right, and back of the President John Adams presidential $1 coin. The second dollar coin...

US Mint via AP

This undated photo provided by the U.S. Mint shows the John Adams presidential $1 coin. Sen John McCain has reintroduced legislation to phase out dollar bills and replace them with dollar coins.

Hey America, want to save $13.8 billion over the next 30 years? Get rid of your dollars.

The greenbacks, that is. Let's use dollar coins instead.

That's the message from a consumer advocacy group and former presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, who has re-introduced legislation to phase out dollar bills.

Eliminating the dollar bill in favor of the coin would save $13.8 billion over 30 years, says the consumer group Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW). At a Capitol Hill briefing on Monday, the group said printing dollar bills may be cheaper than minting coins, but they last only about four years compared with 30 years for a coin.

The savings would nearly triple other recent estimates of the $1 coin?s impact, said Aaron Klein, former chief economist for the Senate Banking Committee and Deputy Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury, who conducted CCAGW's analysis on the savings potential.

"The federal government should always be looking for ways to save money, and as the national debt approaches $17 trillion, the implications of Mr. Klein?s study amount to much more than pocket change,? said Bill Christian, CCAGW's director of government affairs.

The Government Accountability Office, a bipartisan congressional watchdog, has produced five reports in the past 20 years to support the transition to $1 coins. Its last report, in 2011, said the government could save $5.5 billion, a conservative estimate according to advocates.

"It seems to me this one common-sense remedy certainly won't change the equation entirely. But even in this town, $5.5 billion or $13.8 billion is not chump change," said McCain, a Republican of Arizona.

McCain has been joined in his legislative push for the coins by fellow Republican senators Tom Coburn, of Oklahoma and Mike Enzi of Wyoming, as well as Democrats Mark Udall of Colorado and Tom Harkin of Iowa.

But they will have a hard sell. Even though most other countries, such as Canada, Britain and Japan, have replaced smaller currency denominations with coins, Americans love their greenbacks and have never warmed to dollar coins.

Maybe it's because many of us are in the habit of chucking coins in a jar or a piggy-bank. Maybe we don't like their bulkiness in the pocket, or perhaps that vending machine won't accept them. The reasons may not always be clear, but we just don't like them.

It began with the original gold dollar in circulation from 1849 to 1889, which was tiny, making it difficult to grasp and easy to lose, a serious problem when a dollar was almost a day's wage.

So the Mint made them bigger, but many people didn't like the idea of heavy coins filling up their purses or making holes in their pants pockets. Then there was the Susan B. Anthony dollar, which was introduced in 1979. It was often confused with the quarter, because it was roughly the same color, size, and design.

That coin was never popular and was quickly discontinued in 1981, but resurrected in 1999 when Treasury reserves were low. It still never caught on. Neither did the later Sacagawea dollar coin, which was used mostly as change in vending machines, most often in transit systems and post offices.

This dislike of coins by Americans contrasts with currencies of most other developed countries, where denominations of similar value exist only in coin. These coins have largely succeeded because of a removal of their corresponding paper issues. But the U.S. government has taken no action to remove the one-dollar bill, due to intensive lobbying.

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Big 12 commissioner suggests new 'federation' within NCAA

Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby speaks to the media Monday at the Omni Dallas Hotel. Bowlsby called for a reconfiguration of NCAA governance to better group schools of like resources.(Photo: Kevin Jairaj, USA TODAY Sports)

SHAREMORE

Secession from the NCAA isn't on the way ? but a so-called "super division" might be.

Suggesting a special convention might need to be called to achieve "transformational change" in the NCAA, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby suggested Monday it's time to consider a new "federation" of schools with like resources ? and perhaps separation by sport.

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"It's probably unrealistic to think that we can manage football and field hockey by the same set of rules," Bowlsby said. "I think some kind of reconfiguration of how we govern is in order."

His remarks, made Monday morning during an annual state of the Big 12 address, followed strong comments last week from SEC commissioner Mike Slive, who said of the NCAA: "Moving forward, there are important questions that must be answered." Also Monday, ACC commissioner John Swofford told USA TODAY Sports significant structural and governance changes could come in January. Swofford suggested a separate division for the five power conferences (ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC).

Bowlsby went further than Slive did last week. But Bowlsby said commissioners of the five power conferences have "unanimity" on the subject, and said, "I don't think anything I said was inconsistent with what (Slive) said."

"When I think about John Swofford and (Pac-12 commissioner) Larry Scott and beyond that as well, I think we all have a sense that transformative change is going to have to happen," Bowlsby added. "This is not a time when trimming around the edges is going to make very much difference."

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The gap in resources within college athletics has never been greater, and it's growing. An analysis by USA TODAY shows the average SEC public school's operational expenses in 2011-12 were $88.5 million, according to the most recently available information reported by the schools to the NCAA. The average Mountain West school spent $41.3 million. The divide is expected to grow dramatically with the advent of the College Football Playoff.

"Northern Iowa and Texas aren't much alike," said Bowlsby, formerly the athletic director at Northern Iowa, Iowa and Stanford before moving to the Big 12 a year ago.

Bowlsby said he did not see a complete separation from the NCAA as a viable option, but said the threat of secession must be retained as leverage "as a last resort."

"I really think that leadership and the rank and file believe that there's a solution within the NCAA, and it's been along those lines that we've had the conversations," he said. "Could that change to something that's a little more harsh down the road? Possibly could, sure."

The problem, as Bowlsby and his peers see it, is two-pronged. Initiatives proposed by larger schools ? the easiest example, he noted, is the idea of a stipend, or full cost-of-attendance scholarships ? have no chance of passing because schools with fewer resources vote them down.

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"It's virtually impossible right now to configure legislative proposals that have any chance of getting through the system intact that would accomplish anything in the way of meaningful change," Bowlsby said. "I think all of us are feeling that."

At the same time, the NCAA's governance structure, with its emphasis on presidential control, is seen as out of touch. The people who work daily in college athletics "feel like they're on the outside looking in," Bowlsby said. Bowlsby said he wasn't directing criticism specifically at NCAA president Mark Emmert, but said "we need to reconfigure the leadership of the organization," with athletic directors and commissioners as voting members of the NCAA's board of directors, which is currently populated by presidents.

"We need to reengage the practitioners," Bowlsby said. "The athletic directors, commissioners, people that work in athletics every day. I think it's unrealistic to think that people that spend hours a month on athletics can come up with the right agenda and have the time to move it through the system."

George Schroeder, a national college football reporter for USA TODAY Sports, is on Twitter @GeorgeSchroeder.

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