Friday, March 29, 2013

Verlander, Tigers agree to $180M, 7-year deal

FILE - In this Feb. 15, 2013 file photo, Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Justin Verlander throws the ball during a baseball spring training workout in Lakeland, Fla. Verlander has agreed to a five-year contract covering 2015-19. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 15, 2013 file photo, Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Justin Verlander throws the ball during a baseball spring training workout in Lakeland, Fla. Verlander has agreed to a five-year contract covering 2015-19. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 11, 2012 file photo,?Detroit Tigers' Justin Verlander (35) is drenched with sparkling wine by teammates at the end of Game 5 of the American League division baseball series in Oakland, Calif. Verlander has agreed to a five-year contract covering 2015-19. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, File)

FILE - This is a 2013 file photo showing pitcher Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers baseball team. Verlander, the 2011 AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner, has agreed to a five-year contract covering 2015-19. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)

Detroit Tigers pitcher Justin Verlander poses with Rocky, a 4-week-old Bengal tiger from the Dade City Wild Things Zoo, before an exhibition spring training baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays, Friday, March 29, 2013 in Lakeland, Fla. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

(AP) ? Detroit Tigers ace Justin Verlander agreed Friday to a $180 million, seven-year contract, topping Felix Hernandez for the richest deal for a pitcher in baseball history.

"I love this city & the fans," Verlander tweeted. "Couldn't be more excited to spend my career here! We're going to bring a World Series to Detroit!!!"

The 2011 AL MVP and Cy Young Award winner had been signed through 2014 under an $80 million, five-year contract paying him $20 million in each of the next two seasons.

The new deal keeps those salaries and adds $140 million in guaranteed money: $28 million each season from 2015-19. It includes a $22 million option for 2020 that would become guaranteed if he finishes among the top five in 2019 Cy Young voting. The deal could be worth $202 million over eight seasons.

Verlander's agreement topped the record for pitchers set when Hernandez and Seattle agreed in February to a $175 million, seven-year contract.

Considered an elite pitcher since winning the 2006 AL Rookie of the Year award, the 30-year-old right-hander is 124-65 with a 3.40 ERA in eight major league seasons with two no-hitters. He was 24-5 two years ago, becoming the first starting pitcher to sweep Cy Young and MVP since Boston's Roger Clemens in 1986.

Verlander also has compiled a 19-win season and two each of 18 and 17. He led the big leagues in strikeouts and innings in 2009, 2011 and 2012.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-29-BBA-Tigers-Verlander/id-999e7c23741f40478f56ba8484b4b82f

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Climate Change Endgame In Sight? (Powerlineblog)

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Let's Talk About Whatever Your Want For the Next Hour

Hi there. It's the end of the week, and we're sure you're sick of working, so we're going to help make the rest of your day bearable. For the next hour, the entire Giz staff will be hovering around this thread, willing to shoot the shit about whatever your little hearts desire. What do you all want to talk about? More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Tl4CJpeTzbA/lets-talk-about-whatever-your-want-for-the-next-hour

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

AutNo Cuts Down Your Commute, Finds You An Apartment Close to Mass Transit

AutNo Cuts Down Your Commute, Finds You An Apartment Close to Mass Transit Most of you said that you commute at least an hour to work every day. If you're tired of the long commute, AutNo is an apartment hunting service that will help you find a place to live near transit or major roads, and even estimates how long your commute would be from the apartment you're looking at.

AutNo is pretty easy to use. Just type in the zip code or city name near your ideal neighborhood, and then type in where you commute every day. You'll get a top-down Google Map with available rental listings grouped together and color coded based on whether they're close to bus stops, train lines, or subway stations. Drag the map around to explore options close to your office, or click on any group to zoom in, see specific listings (and their details, like rental price, number of bedrooms, and photos), and an estimate of how long your commute would take if you chose to live there.

You can narrow your search by how much you're willing to spend on an apartment and how many rooms you'd like, view listings directly to read more, and save favorites to come back to later. Plus, while the service is aimed to help you get out of the car-commuting rat race, you can select "driving" as an option and find apartments that'll make your drive to the office a little easier too. Hit the link below to try it out.

AutNo

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/3Dt3mUv3rx0/autno-cuts-down-your-commute-finds-you-an-apartment-close-to-mass-transit

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Heat start to move on after streak ends

Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade reacts as he watches a free throw by Chicago Bulls forward Luol Deng during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Chicago on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The Bulls won 101-97, ending the Heat's 27-game winning streak. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade reacts as he watches a free throw by Chicago Bulls forward Luol Deng during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Chicago on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The Bulls won 101-97, ending the Heat's 27-game winning streak. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Miami Heat forward Shane Battier grimaces after he was called for a foul during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls in Chicago on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The Bulls won 101-97, ending the Heat's 27-game winning streak. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Miami Heat forward LeBron James, center, and guard Mario Chalmers, right, listen to guard Ray Allen during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Chicago Bulls in Chicago on Wednesday, March 27, 2013. The Bulls won 101-97, ending the Heat's 27-game winning streak. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Take heart, Heat. Look out, NBA.

When the Los Angeles Lakers' 33-game winning streak ended, they hit a bit of a lull before rolling through the playoffs and winning the NBA title.

That scenario likely would suit Miami just fine since the defending champions have said all along they were focused on repeating more than breaking a record.

Dwyane Wade even sounded relieved Miami's run stopped at 27, courtesy of the Chicago Bulls.

"Now that it's over, I'm glad it's over," he said after the 101-97 loss Wednesday night, his team's first defeat in nearly two months.

"It really didn't matter to us," Wade said. "If you get it, it's awesome. If you don't, we still won 27 games in a row. That's pretty awesome. So we really weren't like, 'We've got to get that record.' Not at all."

So, with their name firmly attached to the second-longest streak in NBA history, the Heat did what they would have done if it had still been going strong. They took Thursday off in New Orleans, where they'll face the Hornets on Friday night.

While the circus atmosphere around the team slows down ? until the playoffs, anyway ? the Heat can turn to the business of wrapping up the final 11 games of the regular season without what some may call a "distraction." Clinching the Eastern Conference's No. 1 seed is a foregone conclusion, and the Heat leads San Antonio by two games in the race for home-court advantage throughout the playoffs.

Still, Lakers star Kobe Bryant urged LeBron James and his teammates to savor the moment.

"I think just as a student of the game, as a fan of the game, you appreciate those kind of streaks and you realize how difficult it is to put together that big of a streak," he said. "Obviously, the Lakers winning 33 in a row was phenomenal, but the Heat's one was just as impressive."

After their streak ended, those '71-72 Lakers lost four of their next six games. But they went 15-2 to close the regular season, then lost only three of 15 playoff games on the way to the title.

That's the only measure of success for the Heat.

"At the end of the day, a win is a win in our league," said James, the reigning MVP who averaged exactly 27 points per game during the 27-game streak. "We've gotten better throughout the season. Each and every month we've improved. We've started from behind some games, but for the most part we've played some great basketball."

They blew out some teams and rallied in the final minutes to beat others, erasing double-digit deficits and pulling off 11 fourth-quarter comebacks in their 7?-week run of dominance.

Entering Thursday, 10 NBA teams hadn't won 27 games all season.

"Really proud of the grind of the last few weeks from my guys," Miami forward Shane Battier wrote on Twitter early Thursday. "The focus and effort (and luck) was phenomenal."

They were must-see television, with ESPN and NBA TV scrambling to pick up Heat games as the streak rolled along. ESPN said the overnight rating for Heat-Bulls was the fifth-best of any regular-season game ever shown on the network.

For those who still need streaks to follow, there are plenty of options.

Women's basketball is full of them right now, with Baylor (32), Notre Dame (28) and Delaware (27) all streaking into NCAA regional games this weekend. In men's college basketball, Louisville takes a 12-game winning streak into its Midwest Regional semifinal against Oregon on Friday night. And in the NHL, the Pittsburgh Penguins were trying for a 14th straight win against Winnipeg on Thursday night.

To put it in perspective, Heat's streak not only is the second-longest in NBA history, but the second-longest among any of the four major professional sports.

The longest current NBA streak now belongs to the New York Knicks ? six games.

On Friday, the Heat begin anew.

Miami would need to win every game left on its schedule and sweep all four playoff series to end the year with another 27-game winning streak. Meantime, Wade offered this:

"Now that it's over, let's look back on it as something that was great."

___

AP Basketball Writer Jon Krawczynski in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-28-BKN-Heat-Streak-Over/id-e78994b121c9497389307b87b669c40e

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Those Angry Days

Today we think of it as 'The Good War.' But Lynne Olson's excellent new book reminds us that, once upon a time, the question of US involvement in World War II was at least as contentious as Vietnam.?

By Danny Heitman,?Correspondent / March 27, 2013

Those Angry Days: Roosevelt, Lindbergh, and America?s Fight Over World War II, 1939-1941 by Lynne Olson Random House, 520 pp.

Enlarge

Lynne Olson is best known for ?Citizens of London,? her 2010 bestseller about Americans who lived in London during the early days of World War II ? and their valor and ingenuity in advancing a US role in England?s success against the Nazis. She is also the author of ?Troublesome Young Men,? a 2007 chronicle of the upstart Tories who propelled Winston Churchill to the leadership of wartime Britain.

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In Those Angry Days: Roosevelt, Lindbergh, and America?s Fight Over World War II, 1939-1941, as in her earlier projects, Olsen focuses on a handful of key figures to plumb the broader historical currents sweeping events toward a dramatic milestone. ?Those Angry Days? also invites comparison to Olsen?s other work in revisiting one of her abiding preoccupations: the intersection between politics and war.

?Those Angry Days? takes its title from Arthur Schlesinger Jr., a New Deal Democrat and aide to John F. Kennedy who noted that the intensity of feeling regarding early US involvement in World War II has been largely forgotten. In the days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, when American interests in the widening global conflagration seemed less clear, the rift between isolationists and interventionists in the United States was wide and deep, said Schlesinger, who called the division ?the most savage?political debate of my lifetime.? He added this observation: ?There have been a number of fierce national quarrels ? over communism in the later Forties, over McCarthyism in the Fifties, over Vietnam in the Sixties ? but none so tore apart families and friendships as this fight.?

As Olsen notes in this absorbing chronicle, the bitterness of that debate has been obscured in postwar histories that focus on American unity and resolve after Dec. 7, 1941. In ?Those Angry Days,? she assigns herself the task of recreating the splintered political climate of 1939-1941, when American policy toward the war was very much in a state of flux.

?Those Angry Days? promises to benefit from some good timing, coming as it does on the heels of ?Lincoln,? the widely discussed Steven Spielberg film in which a compelling moral ideal ? in this case, racial equality ? operates against a backdrop of political expedience and sordid compromises. In Olsen?s story, the evolution of America?s role in World War II, a conflict now remembered as "The Good War" fought by "The Greatest Generation," reveals equally imperfect political realities.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/4xPK40iVUvk/Those-Angry-Days

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Ky. lawmakers override religious freedom veto

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ky-lawmakers-override-religious-freedom-veto-032259759.html

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Golden age for pension lawyers? Public keen to ... - Financial Post

It is suddenly cool to be a pension lawyer.

?When you told someone you were a pension lawyer, you were the most popular person in the room for people over 50 and people under 50 would try to dodge you,? said Mitch Frazer, chair of the pensions and employment practice at Torys LLP.

?Suddenly it?s a topic of interest for a much wider group of people,? added Mr. Frazer, who is listed at Band 2 for pensions in the Chambers Global 2013 guide. ?If you would?ve said pre-2008 that you would have seen a federal election campaign where the word ?pensions? was uttered in the context of the top list of people?s promises, it would have been incredibly shocking.?

Ten years ago, pension lawyers were dealing with surplus disputes rather than deficits. After the global economic crisis and with an aging population, the public is keen to protect public pension plans. With the spotlight shining on pension law, could this be a golden age for pension lawyers?

Band 2-ranked practitioner Elizabeth Brown of Hicks Morley Hamilton Stewart Storie LLP believes so.

?I?ve been doing this since 1990 and over the course of my career, I?ve seen the role and profile of a pension lawyer go from backroom techie to centre stage,? she said. ?People are very concerned about aging and living longer. There?s a concern that retirement money will run out. People are very concerned about how much money is available and have promises been kept.?

Defined-benefit (DB) pension plans are being replaced by defined-contribution (DC) pension plans as employers try to reduce their risk in volatile economies.

?It?s a time of transition and the transition is taking place over a long period of time,? said Ian McSweeney, a Band 1 ranked pension lawyer with Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP.

?We?ve gone from an era of surplus, what to do with excess money, to how to plan and maintain affordable and sustainable pensions. Sponsors are looking at their current DB plans and wondering whether they?re sustainable. You add on top of that general austerity measures that are affecting both private and public plan sponsors and it?s a difficult time.?

On the plus side, the word ?pension? is on the front of newspapers and is top of mind; on the minus side, the publicity and legal changes stem from pension plans being in dire straits, said Andrew Harrison, a Band 3 practitioner with Borden Ladner Gervais LLP.

?The interest in [pensions] is the result of people not getting what had been promised or what they had hoped for through the pension system. As much as it?s interesting to be asked these questions and to be involved in trying to solve them, it?s within a constrained economic environment. There?s not [enough] money to do what needs to happen.?

Meanwhile, provinces are updating their laws and a recent court ruling has pension lawyers analyzing the implications. Last month, the Supreme Court of Canada released its long-awaited decision in Sun Indalex Finance LLC vs. United Steeworkers et al., a case that pitted the claims of pensioners against those of secured creditors in a corporate bankruptcy or restructuring. The decision reversed a lower-court ruling from Ontario that had ranked pension plans ahead of interim lenders during a supervised sale of the company under a federal law called the Companies? Creditors Arrangement Act or CCAA.

?This is the greatest time of challenge because so much is happening and there is so much change. Our pension funds are global players ? how do we deal with the regulatory hurdles in Canada? How do we deal with all of the changes that are coming through in legislation?? Mr. Frazer said.

?My hope is that in five years from now, we?re going to see much more consistency and a much more effective use of pensions. Hopefully, there will be more people who have pensions, or are more conscious about retirement.?

Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2013/03/25/golden-age-for-pension-lawyers-public-keen-to-protect-plans-after-economic-crisis/

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Palestinian activists frustrated by lack of US action as Obama ends visit

Mussa Qawasma / Reuters

A Palestinian woman argues with policemen during a demonstration against President Barack Obama's visit to the Church of the Nativity, revered as the site of Jesus' birth, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem on Friday.

By Atia Abawi, Correspondent, NBC News

RAMALLAH, West Bank -- Hundreds of Palestinians used President Barack Obama's visits to the West Bank during his trip to Israel to protest what they say is unfair treatment not just by the Israelis but by the American government.

"Obama came to reaffirm his absolute support to Israeli repression and occupation of Palestinians," said Abir Kopty, an activist and spokeswoman for the group Palestinian Popular Resistance Committee.

Despite Obama's appeals for ordinary Israelis to put pressure on their leaders to make a peace deal with the Palestinians, and urging them to put themselves in Palestinians' shoes, Kopty said Obama was part of the problem, not the solution.

"He is the most pro-Israel president in U.S. history, and I see him complicit in our repression," Kopty said.

President Barack Obama on Thursday urged the Israeli people to put themselves in the shoes of Palestinians and recognize their "right to self-determination, their right to justice." NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

On his trip, Obama would have caught a glimpse of what some Palestinians call a wall to peace: a nearly 30-foot-high concrete barrier constructed through much of the 440-mile border between the West Bank and Israel. He would have also been able to see the Israeli settlements peppered throughout the land the Palestinians hope will one day be a part of a sovereign Palestine.

Kopty and other activists erected more than a dozen tents in Bab al Shams, a village in the so-called E1 area of the occupied West Bank where Israelis plan to build thousands of new homes for settlers. ?Palestinians feel the area is crucial to a contiguous Palestinian state.

"They are illegal under international law," Kopty said. "They are part of an apartheid system implemented in the occupied territories since 1967, and with them, Israel has killed the so-called two-state solution."

Obama and past U.S. presidents have perpetuated the problems in the region,?Kopty said.

"The negotiations for two-decades have been a great cover-up for continuous Israeli violation, settlement expansion, displacement and home demolitions," she said. "His trip was full of words about promised peace, but he fails to tell us what actions he will take to stop, for example, Israeli settlements."

But for their part, Palestinian government leaders in the West Bank welcomed Obama's call for a Palestinian state to live side-by-side in peace with Israel.

"It is a path to a better future for all the peoples of the region," Palestinian Liberation Organization executive committee member Saeb Erekat was quoted as saying in Palestinian papers.

But Mustafa Barghouti, the head of the Palestinian National Initiative and member of the Palestinian parliament, said Obama needed to deliver more than appeasing words ? that he needs to make decisions and be more decisive when it comes to his Israeli partners.

"This is our very last opportunity for a two-state solution," he says. "If he doesn't stop the settlement activity, the only solution will be a one-state solution and it will mean a long way of suffering through an apartheid system."

Related:

'Amazing': Obama turns tourist in ancient city of Petra

Obama urges justice for Palestinians

Israel becomes a fortress nation, walls off Arab Spring

Palestinians, Israelis lukewarm over Obama visit

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/29e86946/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C230C174162360Epalestinian0Eactivists0Efrustrated0Eby0Elack0Eof0Eus0Eaction0Eas0Eobama0Eends0Evisit0Dlite/story01.htm

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Ruth Riley: Lessons From My Mom

This post is part of the Global Mom Relay. Every time you share this blog, $5 will go to women and girls around the world. Scroll to the bottom to find out more.

2013-03-23-RuthRileyMali.jpg
WNBA Chicago Sky star Ruth Riley traveled to Mali with Nothing But Nets


Growing up in rural Indiana in a single-parent family with little money, I was lucky to have a strong mom. She taught us to work hard, appreciate what we have, and help others. Those lessons put me on the path to becoming who I am today.

I am so grateful to my mom for challenging me to embrace the opportunities of gaining an education and playing sports, that she did not have. She taught me that dreams should never be limited by social-economic status or one's environment, and that history does not always have to be repeated... sometimes it needs to be written!

As a professional basketball player, I have had amazing opportunities to use my talents, to play with the best players in the world, and even to represent my country in the Olympics. All of those opportunities began at home.

Basketball has always been more than a job, more than a sport. It has given me a platform to help others by getting involved with causes that give back. I have been privileged to work with the United Nations Foundation to help families and children around the world. My experiences with the UN Foundation have built on what I learned growing up in Indiana -- appreciate what we have, and help other people.


That's why I am proud to be able to honor my mom as part of the Global Mom Relay. Every time this post is shared, $5 will be donated to help women and girls around the world. That path to a better world often starts with women like my mom. Please take a moment to watch this video and then share with your friends to unlock a donation that will help women and girls around the world. Then check back each day through May 8 -- each share helps!

Each time you share this Global Mom Relay piece on Facebook, Twitter, or Email, or donate $5 or more through clicking on the above graphic, a $5 donation (up to $62,500 per week or $125,000 every two weeks) will be donated by Johnson & Johnson and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to Girl Up. Join us by sharing it forward and unlock the potential for women and children around the globe. For more information, visit www.unfoundation.org/globalmomrelay. The United Nations Foundation, Johnson & Johnson, BabyCenter, The Huffington Post, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation created the Global Mom Relay, a first-of-its-kind virtual relay with a goal of improving the lives of women and children around the globe.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ruth-riley/ruth-riley-global-mom-relay_b_2940286.html

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Senate shows support for states taxing online sales

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Senate on Friday approved a mostly symbolic measure on Internet sales taxes and showed that legislation allowing states to tax businesses beyond their borders has strong bipartisan support in an often politically fractured Congress.

Senators from both parties, including Republican Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and Democrat Dick Durbin of Illinois, approved an amendment to the Senate's budget resolution that would clear the way for states to collect the so-called "Amazon tax."

The budget resolution, though, is non-binding and the tax could have to be addressed again in other legislation.

Still, the approval should reassure states and "bricks and mortar" retailers that Congress will come together to pass a bill soon.

There was some opposition. Before the vote, Senator Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, a Republican, and Senators Max Baucus of Montana and Ron Wyden of Oregon, Democrats, spoke out against it, saying it would hurt businesses in states without sales taxes.

In 1992 the Supreme Court decided the patchwork of state tax laws made it too difficult for online retailers to collect and remit sales taxes. Currently, states can only tax Internet sales made by companies with a physical presence within their borders. In practice, that means online retailers such as Amazon.com Inc charge sales tax in some states and not in others.

Large Internet retailers are worried the tax could drive up the cost of doing business. They would also have to create new systems and software to collect the surcharges, adding to their costs. Amazon said in July it prefers having the tax issue resolved at the federal level.

When the 2007-09 recession caused states' revenues to collapse, both Republican and Democratic governors advocated for the tax as a financial solution that would not require the federal government to provide direct aid.

Last month both chambers took up identical bills on the tax.

(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senate-shows-support-states-taxing-online-sales-234835531--business.html

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Syria rebels seize southern base, border area

By Erika Solomon

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Rebels seized an air defense base near Syria's strategic southern international highway on Saturday, activists said, bolstering access to supply routes to the capital Damascus.

The rebels on Saturday also seized several military sites along the Jordanian-Syrian border, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has a network of informants across the country.

The developments give fighters control of about 25 km (15.5 miles) of frontier adjacent to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, the Observatory said, and could fuel tensions in the sensitive military zone.

Syria's southern provinces bordering Jordan and Israel have become an increasingly significant battleground as the capital comes into play, with President Bashar al-Assad's forces and his loyalist militias hitting back hard to prevent rebel advances.

At the air base in Deraa province, which borders Jordan, the Observatory said the brigade's commander was among those killed.

"Fighters from the Nusra Front, Yarmouk Martyrs Brigade, and other battalions seized control of the 38th division air defense base, near the town of Saida on the Damascus-Amman highway, after 16 days of fierce clashes," the Observatory said.

The Nusra Front is an Islamist militant group suspected of links to al Qaeda and blacklisted by the United States as a "terrorist group". Its forces, which include foreign fighters, have come to increasing prominence in the revolt.

Videos published by opposition activists showed cheering fighters driving tanks around the base and loading boxes of ammunition onto flatbed trucks. The rebels also said in the videos they had freed dozens of prisoners held at the base.

A video uploaded by the Observatory showed what it said was the body of base commander General Mahmoud Darwish lying in a pool of blood in a bathroom.

Other activist videos showed the corpses of soldiers in camouflage fatigues scattered in the grass outside the base, shot in the head.

It was not immediately possible to verify the pictures or opposition reports. The Syrian government has severely restricted access to Syria for foreign journalists and international aid groups.

CLASHES NEAR ISRAEL BORDER

Fighting also raged near the ceasefire line with Israel, which increasingly is concerned Islamist rebels may be emboldened to end the quiet on the Golan front maintained by Assad, and his father before him, during their four-decade rule.

Israel captured the Golan plateau from Syria in the 1967 Middle East war.

Rebels seized at least four military checkpoints near the Golan in southwestern Deraa province on Saturday, the Observatory said, and captured a large amount of weapons, ammunition and vehicles.

The armed struggle between rebels and forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has posed increasing difficulties for the 1,000-strong U.N. Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF).

U.N. peacekeepers monitoring the line halted patrols this month after rebels held 21 Filipino observers for three days.

On Wednesday, rebels overran at least three towns near the Israeli-Syrian disengagement line but then suffered a fierce attack by militias loyal to Assad.

Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Observatory, said he recorded one of the heaviest single death tolls for rebels in the fighting near the Israeli border.

"We have 35 fighters recorded by name and at least 20 more missing, this is a huge number to be lost in a single battle and shows how hard they (Assad's forces) are fighting for these areas," Abdelrahman told Reuters.

He said the pro-government militias involved were made up of fighters from Syria's Druze minority, a sect which for some time had stayed on the sidelines of the conflict but now increasingly appears to be throwing its weight behind Assad.

Their involvement could increase sectarian bloodshed in Syria, already wracked by tensions between the Sunni Muslim majority that has led the uprising and the Alawite minority to which Assad belongs.

Tit-for-tat kidnappings and killings between the sects have become common as the uprising spiraled into a bloody civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people.

Alawite opposition campaigners, increasingly concerned for the fate of their community as fighting continues, will meet this weekend to discuss options for supporting a democratic alternative to Assad's rule and try to distance themselves from security forces attempts to crush the revolt.

(Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-rebels-seize-embattled-southern-province-111154873.html

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Pelling - Jewel Of The North East

Pelling is a town in Sikkim. It is located a10 km from district headquarters of Geyzing. It is a picturesque town, mainly due to the unobstructed and beautiful views of the snowcapped mountains of Kanchenjunga and its ranges. It is situated at an altitude of 1900 m. It is in the district of west Sikkim. It is emerging as the second biggest tourist destination. Pelling is 133 km away from Siliguri and 125 km from Gangtok.

Due to its high altitude, one can view mountains like Koktang, Kumbhakarna, Rathong, Kabru, Dom, Kanchenjunga, Pandim, Zopuno, Shimbho, Narsing, and Siniyalchu. It was once capital of Sikkim. It is the base camp for trekking in West Sikkim.

People from many tribes reside here; they are Bhutias, Lepchas, Tamangs, Limboos, and Marwaris. They contribute to the diversity in food and culture of the place. Agriculture, small shops, cattle farming is done by them here. Many Buddhist monasteries are located here. Most of the people here are Buddhists. They speak Sikkimese, Nepali, Hindi and English. Many restaurants and street stalls provide the usual food delight thukpa and steaming moms. Another major buy is the handicrafts made by local tribes, tribal jewellery, woolen garments, and bamboo products.

Major sightseeing that can be done from here are local monastery, rock garden, water fall, double pronged Kanchenjunga falls, Singshore bridge, Changey waterfalls, Kecheopalri lakes. Kecheopalri lake is considered as sacred lake, and it is hidden in forest, it is believed that birds here prevent leafs from falling to the lake. The Pemayanste monastery is one of the oldest and important monasteries in Sikkim. The word Pemayangste means perfect sublime lotus. A religious dance called Cham is performed every year. Sangachoeling monastery is another monastery. Rabdengste ruins is another attraction here. Other activities like white water rafting, ringgit, kayaking, promotional trekking, mountain biking, sightseeing, transport sports and bird watching can be enjoyed very well here.

Kanchenjunga festival is celebrated every year. Festivals also include flower exhibitions, traditional crafts, ethnic food, costume stalls,

To travel within Pelling, the best way would be by foot. Tourists can hike or trek to discover local monasteries.

Pelling can be visited any time except during the rainy season. During monsoons, heavy rains lead to landslides and bad roads. During winter the temperature drops down to -5 degrees. There are a number of hotels in Pelling, belonging to all the categories like budget hotels, home stays and boutique ones. It is best to book for a tourist package.

Pelling has good road transport. From Gangtok and Siliguri one can easily reach Pelling. Pelling does not have an airport, but a helipad is available which connects to Gangtok by helicopters. The nearest railway station is in New Jaipalguri.

Most of the Pelling hotels also offers facilities for sightseeing expedition and jungle safaris, apart from pick-up and drop facilities from the various transit points.

About the Author:
Holiday IQ offers you online booking of Hotels in Pelling at best possible rates. For more information on please visit our site www.holidayiq.com.

Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com/Article/Pelling---Jewel-Of-The-North-East/4498432

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Record crop insurance payout stirs subsidy debate

FILE - This Aug. 16, 2012 file photo shows a damaged ear of corn near Nickerson, Neb. Farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

FILE - This Aug. 16, 2012 file photo shows a damaged ear of corn near Nickerson, Neb. Farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 19, 2012 file photo, corn plants weakened by the drought lie on the ground after being knocked over by rain in Bennington, Neb. Farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

FILE - Corn is seen at a grain elevator in this Oct. 10, 2012 file photo, in Fremont, Neb. Farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 12, 2013 file photo, farmer Steve Henry looks at a patch of corn in Arapahoe, Neb., that failed due to drought, and will not be harvested. Nationwide, farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

(AP) ? Farmers will be paid a record $16 billion in crop insurance claims for 2012 because of the widespread drought, a staggering amount that has critics calling for changes to what they say is an inefficient taxpayer subsidy the government cannot afford.

While farmers buy crop insurance from private companies, the federal government subsidizes their premiums and picks up the tab for losses over a certain amount. One analyst estimates the federal tab for 2012 will come to about $11 billion.

It is the second year in a row that U.S. farmers have received record crop insurance payments as flooding and drought in 2011 was followed by an even worse drought last year. The $16 billion in payments also comes as lawmakers working on a new farm bill have been considering a shift from disaster relief to crop insurance as a more predicable way of protecting farmers from natural disasters.

Farmers say they must have some kind of protection or a year like the past two could put them out of business.

Ben Steffen, who has crops and livestock near Humboldt, Neb., said he had insurance to cover three-fourths of his losses last year when drought took about a third of his corn and soybeans and two-fifths of his hay. Farmers can buy insurance that covers from 50 percent to 85 percent of the revenue they would have earned and pay premiums based on their coverage.

"It's not a money-making proposition," Steffen said. "It's a way to keep you from getting buried by a disaster."

The most recent report from the Federal Crop Insurance Corp., released Monday, put the total payout so far at $15.91 billion, but some claims for 2012 are still pending. Even so, last year's loss represents at least a 47 percent increase from the $10.8 billion record loss in 2011.

Taxpayers will pick up most of the cost. The program run by the Risk Management Agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture is a three-way venture in which insurance companies sell farmers policies to cover crop losses. The government subsidizes the program by paying about 62 percent of the cost of insurance premiums and farmers pay about 38 percent.

When losses exceed premiums, the government ends up picking up most of that cost too, said Bruce Babcock, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University. He estimated that between premium subsidies, crop loss payments and administrative costs, U.S. taxpayers will end up paying about $11 billion for 2012. That's too much, he said.

"I believe farmers need the opportunities to have all the tools they could possibly use to manage their risks," Babcock said. "I just don't think they need to be bribed to do so with such high degree of subsidies."

Some agriculture economists think the federal government should set up an emergency fund that sets aside a certain amount of money, perhaps $3 billion a year, to cover unusual disasters.

But crop insurers still say their program is a better bet because approval of emergency aid isn't always certain and crop insurance pays faster. That "stabilizes the supply chain quite a bit" because banks and other companies know farmers will be able to make loan payments and pay their bills even in bad years, said Tom Zacharias, president of National Crop Insurance Services, the nonprofit trade group for insurers that sell policies to farmers.

A similar debate is being heard in Congress, where Republican Sens. Jeff Flake, of Arizona, and John Duncan, of Tennessee, introduced bills early this month bills to reduce the premium subsidy to pre-2000 levels. Flake said the proposals will save about $40.1 billion over 10 years by cutting the government's portion of insurance premiums to 37 percent from the current 62 percent.

Congress had increased the subsidy to boost participation in the program ? a move that was successful in raising the number of insured acres from 215 million acres in 2002 to 282 million acres last year.

"The current U.S. fiscal crisis makes a strong argument for a common sense roll back of crop insurance subsidies," Flake said in a statement.

But Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, another Republican, said it's better for farmers to buy crop insurance than to go to the federal government for disaster aid every time there's a significant drought or flood.

"It's either going to be disaster assistance or its going to be crop insurance," he said. "Isn't it better for the government to promote risk management and have the farmer plan ahead and probably pay out a lot less taxpayer dollars than you have with disaster assistance?"

In central Illinois near Auburn, Mark Reichert was grateful for crop insurance after his 520 acres of corn produced only one-half to two-thirds of their normal yield during the drought. Reichert, 52, had enough insurance to cover 90 percent of his losses.

He paid $46 to $50 an acre in premiums last year and expects to buy the same amount of protection at about the same cost this year. He said it essentially allows farmers to go on to farm another year and assures banks holding farm loans that there's consistent revenue to make payments.

"It's not meant to be a cash cow," he said of the insurance. "It has performed exactly the way it was meant to perform."

___

Associated Press writer Jim Suhr in St. Louis, Mo., contributed to this report.

___

Follow David Pitt at http://twitter.com/davepitt .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-22-Food%20And%20Farm-Crop%20Insurance/id-706346440f0c4cc7aaa19e57772e2d57

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modthink | When a client wears the same glasses as you?

Making a positive?lifestyle change is not easy, but with someone to give you direction and confidence it makes the change less daunting. What I mean is someone holding your hand up the mountain, someone giving you confidence that you can change, someone who genuinely?wants to see you succeed, much like we do with our?clients as we build a relationships of trust and understanding.

Trestle Tree LogoWe couldn?t be more excited, then, to welcome modthink?s?newest client,?TrestleTree, a health transformation organization?that believes long-term, sustained behavior change is achievable for everyone, regardless of their level of motivation or readiness to change.?Building relationships is in TrestleTree?s DNA as they work with each participant to help them understand who they are and how to make positive changes in their lives that lead to long term indoctrinated behaviors.

In our first meeting with TrestleTree?we both used terms like DNA, culture and relationship building; it was obvious that we saw the world through the same kind of glasses. But what solidified our desire to work together was a little bit of serendipity. We often use the word ?sherpa? when describing our style of social coaching?we?re here to guide you through social media?and when we said it the TrestleTree team looked at each other wondrously until they told us that they?d considered changing their lifestyle ?coaches? to lifestyle ?sherpas.?

Sweet!

When two groups with such genuine intentions meet, really exciting things can happen. So we?re excited about what?s in store for our relationship with Trestletree!

Welcome to the modthink family!

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Source: http://modthink.com/when-a-client-wears-the-same-glasses-as-you/

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Obama ending Israel visit with symbolic stops

U.S. President Barack Obama lays a wreath during his visit to the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

U.S. President Barack Obama lays a wreath during his visit to the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama, left, listens to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during their visit to the Children's Memorial at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

U.S. President Barack Obama walks out of the Hall of Remembrance at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, reignites the flame during his visit to the the Hall of Remembrance at the Vad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. Standing behind Obama are Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, left, and Israeli President Shimon Peres. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

U.S. President Barack Obama, right, walks out with Rabbi Meir Lau, left, after visiting the Hall of Remembrance at the Vad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Jerusalem, Israel, Friday, March 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP) ? Wrapping up a three day visit to Israel, President Barack Obama paid respects to the nation's heroes and to victims of the Holocaust, solemnly reaffirming the Jewish state's right to exist.

Accompanied by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Shimon Peres, Obama laid wreaths at the graves of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism who died in 1904 before realizing his dream of a Jewish homeland, and former Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was assassinated in 1995.

He also toured the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, declaring after that the memorial illustrates the depravity to which man can sink but also serves as a reminder of the "righteous among the nations who refused to be bystanders."

Friday's stop at Herzl's grave, together with Thursday's visit to see the Dead Sea Scrolls, the ancient Hebrew texts, were symbolic stops for Obama that acknowledged that the rationale for Israel's existence rests with its historical ties to the region and with a vision that predated the Holocaust. Obama was criticized in Israel for his 2009 Cairo speech in which he gave only the example of the Holocaust as reason for justifying Israel's existence.

"Here on your ancient land, let it be said for all the world to hear," Obama said at Yad Vashem Friday, in a clear response to that criticism. "The state of Israel does not exist because of the Holocaust, but with the survival of a strong Jewish state of Israel, such a holocaust will never happen again."

Later in the day, Obama was traveling to Jordan where he planned to meet with King Abdullah II. Among the topics is Jordan's struggle with the influx of a half-million refugees from the Syrian civil war. Abdullah has voiced fears that extremists and terrorists could create a regional base in Jordan.

Before leaving for Jordan, Obama had lunch with Netanyahu and then took his motorcade to Bethlehem in the West Bank to visit the Church of the Nativity.

Obama had been scheduled to take a helicopter to Bethlehem but had to change plans due to unusually high winds. The route gave Obama a clear look at Israel's separation barrier with the West Bank, which runs south of Jerusalem and is the subject of weekly protests by Palestinians.

About 300 Palestinians and international pilgrims gathered near the Nativity Church, awaiting Obama's arrival. But a knot of protestors along the route held up signs stating: "Gringo, return to your colony" and "US supports Israeli injustice."

At a nearby mosque, Mohammed Ayesh, a Muslim religious official in Bethlehem, issued a plea to Obama in a speech to worshippers: "America, where are your values? Where are the human rights? Isn't it time that you interfere to make it stop?"

Amid high security, Obama toured the church with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. They stopped at the Grotto of the Nativity, which is said to stand where Jesus Christ was born. About 20 children waving U.S. and Palestinian flags greeted Obama in a courtyard outside the sanctuary. He posed for photographs with Abbas and Bethlehem's mayor, Vera Baboun.

Earlier in Jerusalem, Obama and his Israeli hosts arrived at the somber Herzl grave site under cloudless skies. Obama approached Herzl's resting place alone and bowed his head in silence. He turned briefly to ask Netanyahu where to place a small stone in the Jewish custom, then laid the stone atop the grave.

"It is humbling and inspiring to visit and remember the visionary who began the remarkable establishment of the State of Israel," Obama wrote in the Mt. Herzl guestbook. "May our two countries possess the same vision and will to secure peace and prosperity for future generations."

At Rabin's grave a short walk away, Obama was greeted by members of Rabin's family. He initially placed a stone on Rabin's wife's side of the grave, then returned to place one atop Rabin's side. In a gesture linking the U.S. and Israel, the stone placed on Rabin's grave was from the grounds of the Martin Luther King memorial in Washington, the White House said.

Rabin, Obama told family members, was "a great man."

Chatting with the family, Obama joked that "Bibi arranged for perfect weather," using Netanyahu's familiar name. He then added that "Shimon plied me with wine" at the official state dinner Thursday evening. At one point the talk turned to the singer who performed at the dinner, and Obama pointed out that he was known to sing, too. "They had me on YouTube," he said with a laugh. "Check it out -- Obama singing Al Green."

At Yad Vashem, Obama donned a skull cap and was accompanied by Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, a survivor of the Buchenwald Concentration camp who lost both parents in the Holocaust. Among his stops was Yad Vashem's Hall of Names, a circular chamber that contains original testimony documenting every Holocaust victim ever identified.

"Nothing could be more powerful," Obama said.

----

Associated Press writers Dalia Nammari in Bethlehem and Daniel Estrin contributed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-22-Obama/id-db020eabf4d54a72ad288f4f9dbfac72

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Time to help college professors be better teachers

Right after I gave my opening lecture on Oedipus the King to the 30 employees of Los Angeles?s criminal justice system, I handed out a few pages of notes I would have taken if I were sitting in their seats listening to the likes of me.

They were taking my course, Introduction to Humanities, as part a special program leading to a college degree, and I knew from a survey I gave them that many hadn?t been in a classroom in a long time ? and some didn?t get such great educations when they were. So we spent the last half hour of the class comparing my notes with the ones they had just taken, talking about the way I signaled that something was important, how they could separate out a big idea from specific facts, how to ask a question without looking like a dummy.

I taught that humanities course more than 30 years ago, but I was thinking about it as I read the new report from the National Commission on Higher Education Attainment, ?College Completion Must Be Our Priority.? The report is a call to leaders in higher education to increase graduation rates by scheduling courses and services to accommodate working adults, developing more on-line learning, easing the ability of students to transfer, and implementing a host of other sensible solutions to the many barriers that are contributing to America?s stagnating college graduation rates.

OPINION: Five vital tips to succeed in college

But if we want more students to succeed in college, then colleges have to turn full attention to teaching.

To their credit, the authors of the college completion report call for better professional development for college faculty; however, most reports of this type have little to say about teaching, focusing instead on structural and administrative reforms outside the classroom. It is a glaring omission.

Perhaps the authors of these reports believe that teaching is such an individual activity that not much can be done to affect it.

Another reason has to do with the way college teaching gets defined in practice. Faculty become experts in a field, and then they pass on their knowledge to others through college courses. Some teachers get very good at this delivery ? compelling lectures, creative demonstrations, engaging discussions, and useful assignments. But professors don?t always think beyond their subjects to the general intellectual development of the undergraduates before them, to enhancing the way they learn and make sense of the world.

Finally, I don?t see much evidence at the policy level of a deep understanding of college-level teaching or a respect for its craft.

The problem starts in the graduate programs where college instructors are minted. Students learn a great deal about, let?s say, astrophysics or political science, but not how to teach it. They might assist in courses and pay attention to how their professors teach, but none of this is systematic or a focus of study or mentoring.

And there is rarely a place in the curriculum to consider the difficulties students might have as they learn how to think like an astrophysicist or political scientist. And then there are the reading and writing difficulties that can emerge when encountering a discipline for the first time.

The majority of new college faculty wants to teach well ? and many do. But they won?t find on most college campuses an institutional culture that fosters teaching. To be sure, there are rewards for good teaching ? awards, the esteem of students ? and most institutions, even research universities, consider exemplary teaching as a factor in promotion. And some campuses have programs that provide resources for instruction, but they tend to be low-status and under-utilized operations.

Teaching has special meaning now, as the authors of the report on student success point out, because close to half of American undergraduates are a bit more like those students in my humanities class than our image of the traditional college student fresh out of high school.

Particularly in the community colleges and state colleges where the majority of Americans receive their higher education, students are older, they work, and many have children. A significant percentage are the first in their families to go to college; somewhere between 40 to 50 percent need to take one or more remedial courses in English or mathematics.

To do right by these students, we need to rethink how to teach them. This does not mean rushing to electronic technology ? a common move these days. On-line instruction of any variety will only be as good as the understanding of teaching and learning that underlies it.

We can begin by elevating the value of teaching and creating more opportunities to get better at it. For those students who need help with writing, mathematics, and study skills, there are tutoring centers and other campus resources. Faculty should forge connections with these resources but realize that they, too, can provide guidance and tricks of the trade ? like taking good notes ? as well as an orientation to their field.

In my experience, students at flagship universities and elite colleges could also benefit from this approach to instruction. Just ask them.

Doing such things does not mean abandoning our subject area but rather enhancing it and opening a door to it.

Working with those humanities students on their notes helped them develop better note-taking techniques. But as we studied technique, we also thought hard about how to determine what?s important ? and how to make someone else?s information your own. All this involved talking further about Greek tragedy, about literary interpretation, and about what the humanities can provide for us.

OPINION: Harvard cheating scandal? It could be bad teaching.

What?s at stake is not only increasing graduation rates but also providing a quality education for those who, a generation or two ago, might not have seen college as possible.

Mike Rose is a professor in the UCLA Graduate School of Education & Information Studies and author of ?Back to School: Why Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Education.?

ALSO BY THIS WRITER: Character education is not enough to help poor kids

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/time-help-college-professors-better-teachers-155457859--politics.html

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Microsoft posts its first Law Enforcement Requests Report, shows US-centric scrutiny

Microsoft posts its first Law Enforcement Requests Report, shows US-centric scrutiny

Civil liberty advocates have had access to Google's Transparency Report and a handful of equivalents to understand just how frequently governments want our data. But what if we spend most of our time in Outlook.com, Skype or Xbox Live? Microsoft wants to show that it's equally concerned, and it's accordingly publishing its first-ever Law Enforcement Requests Report to reveal just how much attention the police gave to our information in 2012. The gist? While there were 75,378 international requests, 99 percent of the 1,558 actual content disclosures went straight to American agencies -- thankfully, with court warrants. Microsoft did get its fair share of FBI National Security Letter requests, although those may be short-lived. Different Microsoft services also received different levels of attention: Skype handed over certain account details but no actual content, while enterprise users were virtually untouched from Microsoft's position. The company plans to keep publishing these reports in the future, which should give us a better long-term sense of just how we're put under the microscope.

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Via: Official Microsoft Blog

Source: Microsoft

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/21/microsoft-posts-its-first-law-enforcement-requests-report/

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Immune system can delay healing of bone fractures

Mar. 21, 2013 ? Researchers at Charit? -- Universit?tsmedizin Berlin have succeeded in demonstrating an association between delayed bone fracture healing and increased concentration of specific immune cells in the blood of the patient. Results of the study show that the adaptive immune system responds to the fracture in a similar way as to an infection and attempts to fight against it.

The study appears in the current issue of the journal Science Translational Medicine.

In their study, the team of researchers led by Prof. Georg Duda and Prof. Hans-Dieter Volk, directors of the Berlin-Brandenburg Center for Regenerative Therapies (BCRT) at Charit?, examined the role of the acquired immune system in the process of fracture healing. Their study focused on so called CD8+ T-cells, which recognize pathogens (e.g. a bacteria or viruses) through specific receptors and eliminate them by releasing certain proteins (cytokines). The researchers found an association between delayed bone healing and elevated concentrations of a sub-group of CD8+ T-cells -- known as TEMRA cells -- in the patient's blood. These cells indicate an aged immune system.

They do not require a direct pathogen contact to become activated, but instead, respond directly to inflammatory signals. "Our study suggests that TEMRA cells misinterpret the fracture as a pathogen infection. In case of a fracture, they migrate to the side of injury and locally release specific cytokines, which compromises the function of pro-regenerative cells, resulting in a delayed healing," says Dr. Simon Reinke, one of the two lead authors of the study. The researcher then took these studies into mice and found that depletion of CD8+ T cells by a specific antibody therapy significantly improved the healing, whereas adding CD8+ T cells impaired fracture regeneration.

"Our study establishes a mechanistic link between the individual immune profile and the fracture healing outcome," states the other lead author of the study, Dr. Sven Gei?ler. In the future, this knowledge could be used for the early prediction of the healing outcome and for the targeted intervention. Thus, it opens the opportunity for the development of new therapies to improve and accelerate the healing of bone fractures or potentially other tissue injuries.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Charit? - Universit?tsmedizin Berlin.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. S. Reinke, S. Geissler, W. R. Taylor, K. Schmidt-Bleek, K. Juelke, V. Schwachmeyer, M. Dahne, T. Hartwig, L. Akyuz, C. Meisel, N. Unterwalder, N. B. Singh, P. Reinke, N. P. Haas, H.-D. Volk, G. N. Duda. Terminally Differentiated CD8 T Cells Negatively Affect Bone Regeneration in Humans. Science Translational Medicine, 2013; 5 (177): 177ra36 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3004754

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/VghhZ0JpYEM/130321092945.htm

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Colo. Corrections Dept. chief shot, killed at home

Searchers use a dog Wednesday, March 20, 2013 to search the area around the Monument, Colo. home of Colorado Department of Corrections Executive Director Tom Clements. Clements was shot and killed Tuesday evening when he answered the front door of his house, and police are searching for the gunman. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Mark Reis) MAGS OUT

Searchers use a dog Wednesday, March 20, 2013 to search the area around the Monument, Colo. home of Colorado Department of Corrections Executive Director Tom Clements. Clements was shot and killed Tuesday evening when he answered the front door of his house, and police are searching for the gunman. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Mark Reis) MAGS OUT

Searchers use a dog Wednesday, March 20, 2013 to search the area around the Monument, Colo. home of Colorado Department of Corrections Executive Director Tom Clements. Clements was shot and killed Tuesday evening when he answered the front door of his house, and police are searching for the gunman. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Mark Reis) MAGS OUT

This undated image provided by the Colorado Department of Corrections shows its director, Tom Clements. Sheriff's Lt. Jeff Kramer says Clements was shot to death around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday night, March 19, 2013 when he answered his front door in Monument, Colo., north of Colorado Springs. Police are searching for the shooter. (AP Photo/Colorado Department of Corrections)

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper speaks at a news conference at the Capitol in Denver on Wednesday, March 20, 2013, where he talks about the shooting death of Tom Clements, the executive director of the Department of Corrections, who was shot and killed when he answered the front door of his house Tuesday night, in Monument, Colo. Police are searching for the gunman and trying to figure out if the attack had anything to do with his position. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper stops at the office of the Department of Corrections Executive Director Tom Clements in Colorado Springs, Colo. to give support to Clements' staff on Wednesday, March 20, 2013. Clements was shot and killed at his home in Monument on Tuesday night. The flags on the buildings were flying at half staff as the governor addressed the media on his way out. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Jerilee Bennett)

(AP) ? In the weeks before Colorado's top prisons official was fatally shot after answering his front door, he carried out a variety of functions including requesting execution chemicals and speaking to legislators about security issues.

It's unknown what role Tom Clements' position as executive director of the Colorado Department of Corrections might have played in the shooting Tuesday, but investigators said they aren't ruling out any possible motives, including whether it was random or a work-related attack.

Colorado corrections spokeswoman Adrienne Jacobson would not comment on whether Clements had security at his home. Security was stepped up for other state officials, including Gov. John Hickenlooper, who was ashen-faced as he addressed reporters at the Capitol before signing bills placing new restrictions on firearms.

"Tom Clements dedicated his life to being a public servant, to making our state a better place and he is going to be deeply, deeply missed," Hickenlooper said Wednesday.

Authorities are looking for a late-model car, possibly a Lincoln or a Cadillac, that a neighbor spotted outside Clements' home around the time of the shooting Tuesday, El Paso County Sheriff's spokesman Lt. Jeff Kramer said in a report carried by the Denver Post.

Kramer also said investigators want to speak with a woman seen speed-walking near Clements' home not long before the shooting because she may have seen the suspect. The woman was wearing light pants, a dark windbreaker and possibly a hat.

While small in numbers, similar attacks on officials have been increasing in the U.S. in recent years, said Glenn McGovern, an investigator with the Santa Clara County District Attorney's office in California who tracks such incidents worldwide. He said there have been roughly as many in the past three years ? at least 35 ? as the entire prior decade. Revenge is usually the motive, he added.

"It's often taking place away from the office, which makes sense, because everyone's hardening up their facilities," he said, adding that he advises prosecutors to constantly assess the safety of their residences.

On Jan. 31, Texas prosecutor Mark Hasse was gunned down as he left his car in the parking lot to the county courthouse. McGovern also counts the rampage by an ex-Los Angeles police officer who killed the daughter of a retired city police officer as part of a plot to avenge his firing.

In Colorado, a prosecutor was fatally shot in 2008 as he returned to his Denver home. In 2001, federal prosecutor Thomas Wales was fatally shot by a rifleman while he worked on a computer at night in his Seattle home. Both cases remain unsolved.

Attacks on legal officials are still extremely rare, said Scott Burns of the National District Attorneys Association, which counts 11 prosecutors as having been slain in the last 50 years. But he acknowledged that legal officials are vulnerable outside of protected offices and courthouses.

"If someone wants to truly harm or kill them, it's very difficult, frankly. There's not a lot we can do," he said.

Mike McLelland, the district attorney in rural Kaufman county east of Dallas, is a 23-year military veteran. Since his prosecutor, Hasse, was killed on his way into the office, McLelland has warned his staff to be vigilant about their surroundings and possible danger.

"The people in my line of work are going to have to get a lot better at it, because they're going to need it more in the future," McLelland said, adding that he carries a gun everywhere he goes.

Clements came to Colorado in 2011 after working three decades in the Missouri prison system. He began a review of Colorado's solitary confinement system and closed a new prison built specifically to hold prisoners being held in solitary ? Colorado State Penitentiary II.

He lived in a wooded neighborhood of large, two-story houses on 2-acre lots dotted with evergreen trees in an area known as the Black Forest. Long driveways connect the homes to narrow, winding roads that thread the hills. After word of the shooting spread Tuesday night, some residents slept with shotguns at the ready, fearful the shooter would return.

It would have been simple to find Clements' house. It took two clicks to get his street address through a publicly available Internet locator service Wednesday morning. The listing also included his previous address in Missouri.

McGovern said he tells his prosecutors to assume that any possible assailants can find their home addresses online and to check for areas they may be especially vulnerable such as neighboring alleys and poorly lit porches.

There is no central database of attacks on legal officials and senior law enforcement executives like Clements.

McGovern has documented 133 of them in the U.S. since 1950 by searching news accounts and court cases. The total includes 41 killings of judges, prosecutors and other justice and police officials. The assaults usually come with little warning, he said.

Steven K. Swensen, a former U.S. Marshal who runs a business consulting on security for court officials, said attacks on legal staff used to occur in courtrooms. As security has been expanded to protect those rooms, then courthouses, the attacks have spilled out further and further.

"Now we're having more violence off-site, in judges' houses, on their way to and from work," Swensen said.

Clements' survivors include two daughters and his wife, who is director of the state Office of Behavioral Health.

While Clements generally kept a low profile, his killing comes a week after he denied a request by a Saudi national to serve out the remainder of a Colorado prison sentence in Saudi Arabia.

Clements also recently requested chemicals to execute Nathan Dunlap, who was convicted of killing four people in a 1993 shooting rampage at a Chuck E. Cheese restaurant and is scheduled to become the second person executed in Colorado since the death penalty was reinstated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976.

Clements' father-in-law, Carroll Smith, told The Denver Post (http://bit.ly/YX6lLN) that Clements opposed the death penalty.

Earlier this week, Clements spoke to legislators about the need for more security staff in the department's food service areas, Department of Corrections spokeswoman Alison Morgan said. Last year, a kitchen worker at a state prison was killed and another was injured in an assault involving an inmate.

Clements is at least the second state prisons chief killed in office. Michael Francke, director of the Oregon corrections department, was stabbed to death outside his office in 1989 in what prosecutors described as a bungled car burglary. A former Oregon prison inmate was found guilty of aggravated murder in 1991 and sentenced to life in prison.

Hickenlooper ordered flags lowered to half-staff at public buildings until the day after Clements' funeral.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas Peipert in Monument, Colo.; Steven K. Paulson, Dan Elliott, Nicholas Riccardi, Alexandra Tilsley, and Colleen Slevin in Denver; and Maria Sudekum in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-21-Corrections%20Director%20Killed/id-e83b28919fee4699917507d43296379b

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