Thursday 17 October 2013

Obama health target: 500,000 signups by Oct. 31

WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first month alone, the Obama administration projected that nearly a half million people would sign up for the new health insurance markets, according to an internal memo obtained by The Associated Press. But that was before the markets opened to a cascade of computer problems.


If the glitches persist and frustrated consumers give up trying, that initial goal, described as modest in the memo, could slip out of reach.


The Sept. 5 memo, for Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, lists monthly enrollment targets for each state and Washington, D.C., through March 31, the last day of the initial open enrollment period under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.


The new online insurance markets, called exchanges in some states, are supposed to be the portals to coverage for most of the nation's nearly 50 million uninsured people. Middle-class people without job-based coverage can shop for subsidized private plans, while low-income people are steered to an expanded version of Medicaid in states that have agreed to expand that safety net program.


Although the Oct. 1 launch of the markets was a top priority for the White House, the rollout was quickly overwhelmed by computer problems, and many potential customers still have not been able to enroll. Insurers say signups are coming through, but slowly. The administration has refused to release enrollment numbers.


A surge of interest by consumers going online appeared to trigger the problems, which also seem to involve underlying software flaws and design shortcomings undetected or overlooked in testing. The administration is holding the explanation close, while working feverishly to fix the glitches — with incomplete results so far.


In Cincinnati on Wednesday, Sebelius urged Americans to keep coming back to healthcare.gov if they can't get through. "Prices don't change and the product doesn't run out," she said.


In the memo, officials estimated that 494,620 people would sign up for health insurance under the program by Oct. 31. And that was portrayed as a slow start.


"We expect enrollment in the initial months to be low," said the memo titled "Projected Monthly Enrollment Targets for Health Insurance Marketplaces in 2014."


A big jump was expected after Thanksgiving, since Dec. 15 is the last day people can sign up so their coverage will take effect Jan. 1. Starting in the new year, the health care law requires virtually all Americans to have insurance or face fines. At the same time, insurance companies will be forbidden from turning away people in poor health.


The memo projected enrollment would reach 3.3 million nationally by Dec. 31.


Signups were expected to spike again in March, as procrastinators noticed the approaching end of open enrollment season. "We anticipate a surge of enrollment in December and March," the memo said.


By the end of March, total enrollment through the markets was expected to surpass 7 million, an estimate originally from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and then used by the administration as the foundation for its projections.


"These numbers are one projection of how the CBO's estimate of 7 million enrollees in year one could break down," HHS spokeswoman Joanne Peters said in a statement. "Projections are constantly changing based on experience. We are focused on reaching as many people as possible in each state."


The Obama administration has promised enrollment numbers by the middle of next month for the 36 states where the federal government is taking the lead in running the markets.


The 14 states running their own markets, along with Washington, D.C., have released some data. But it's hard to discern a clear pattern, since the reporting dates are different from state to state.


California reported 16,300 applications processed as of Oct. 5. The memo projects 91,000 people will enroll in the state by the end of the month.


Kentucky reported 18,351 applications processed as of Oct. 9. That would exceed the memo's projection of 15,400 for the month.


Washington state reported 24,949 applications processed as of Monday, a little more than the memo's October projection of 23,800.


Maryland reported 566 applications processed as of Oct. 6, compared with 10,500 projected for the month by the memo.


There are several reasons why enrollment numbers are important for the overall success of the law.


Most people spend relatively modest amounts on medical care each year, and a small proportion of patients accounts for the overwhelming majority of costs. Since older, sicker people are expected to enroll as the law lifts barriers that now keep them from getting insurance, premiums from lots of younger, healthier people are needed to help offset those costs.


Also, state numbers are as important as national totals. That's because each state's insurance market will remain separate under the law. "Obamacare" doesn't create a one-size-fits-all national program — like Medicare — but a bunch of state programs. That means lots of young healthy people signing up in California, for example, cannot cross-subsidize older, sicker people in another state.


"You can bust through these targets, but if it's mostly older and sicker people, then you are not in good shape," said Larry Levitt, a health insurance expert with the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.


___


Associated Press writer Lisa Cornwell in Cincinnati contributed to this report.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-health-target-500-000-signups-oct-31-192353854--politics.html
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Kim Kardashian Doesn't Qualify for Star on the "Hollywood Walk of Fame"

Despite Kanye West's arguments for his girlfriend's importance in Hollywood, "Keeping up with the Kardashians" iconic lady, Kim Kardashian will not receive a star on the "Hollywood Walk of Fame."


During his interview on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," on Wednesday, October 9th, the rapper argued that his reality star girlfriend and baby mama should receive a star on the legendary sidewalk, saying, "I want to shout out to the stars on the Walk of Fame because they said something about they're not going to put my girl on the Walk of Fame because she's a reality star," he said. "People are so so dated and not modern. There's no way Kim Kardashian shouldn't have a star on the Walk of Fame."


However, sticking to their original stance, Ana Martinez, a spokeswoman for the Walk and the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, told Yahoo's omg! "We don't have reality stars on the Walk of Fame. We don't have a category for it. We're happy to consider reality stars once they get nominated for, or win, an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar." She then concluded, "We'll consider them when they're legitimate actors or singers."


Recognizing she has heard Mr. West's argument, Martinez finished, "I know he loves her, and it's all very sweet, but she doesn't qualify. I hate to say it, but a lot of people just don't like her," adding, "No one has ever nominated her."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/kim-kardashian/kim-kardashian-doesnt-qualify-star-hollywood-walk-fame-944097
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Wednesday 16 October 2013

Prominent attorney named as monitor in Apple e-books case


By Joseph Ax


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Michael Bromwich, a high-profile attorney who recently served as the top U.S. offshore drilling watchdog, has been appointed to monitor Apple Inc's antitrust compliance following a court ruling that the world's largest technology company had conspired to fix e-book prices.


Bromwich will oversee Apple's antitrust policies and procedures for two years under the order issued by U.S. District Judge Denise Cote in Manhattan on Wednesday. Bernard Nigro, the chair of the antitrust department at the law firm Fried Frank, was appointed to assist Bromwich in his duties.


Judge Cote ruled on the case in July and in September imposed restrictions on Apple such as requiring an external monitor.


Bromwich's practice at the law firm Goodwin Procter in Washington, D.C., is focused on internal investigations, compliance and monitoring.


Bromwich was one of two candidates proposed by the Justice Department.


A former federal prosecutor in New York, Bromwich was part of the government's trial team against Oliver North, the former Marine Corps lieutenant colonel who was a central figure in the Iran-Contra affair. In the 1990s, Bromwich served as inspector general for the Justice Department.


President Obama appointed Bromwich to head the U.S. offshore drilling regulator in the wake of the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, after the agency came under fire for failing to adequately monitor oil and gas development.


In addition to his work as a litigator, Bromwich also runs his own strategic consulting firm, the Bromwich Group.


"I am deeply honored to have been selected by the court to serve as the monitor in this matter," Bromwich said in a brief statement.


An Apple spokesman said the company had no immediate comment on the appointment.


Cote ruled in July that Apple was liable for conspiring with five publishers to raise e-book prices above those established by the dominant retailer in the market, Amazon.com. The publishers have all settled with regulators.


Her injunction setting limits on the types of agreements Apple could sign with publishers, as well as a compliance monitor, was issued September 6.


Apple is appealing her ruling and has denied that it engaged in price-fixing.


The case is U.S. v. Apple Inc et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-02826.


(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Richard Chang)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prominent-attorney-named-monitor-apple-e-books-case-202657848--finance.html
Category: Helen Lasichanh   Federal government shutdown   parenthood   9 news   Michael Girgenti  

Milk-maker hormone may help liver regenerate

Milk-maker hormone may help liver regenerate


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Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
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Contact: Donna Krupa
dkrupa@the-aps.org
American Physiological Society



Study using animal model is published in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology




Bethesda, Md. (Oct. 15, 2013)The hormone prolactin is probably best known for its role in stimulating milk production in mothers after giving birth. But prolactin also has an important function in the liver. This organ has the highest number of prolactin receptors in the body, ports that allow this hormone to enter liver cells. There, prolactin signals these cells to multiply and new blood vessels to grow to fuel this organ's expansion.


Wondering if these properties might be useful to encourage the liver to regrow after surgery to remove part of itsometimes necessary to treat cancer or other liver diseases, or to donate liver tissue for transplantsCarmen Clapp of the Universidad Nacional Automoma de Mexico and her colleagues worked with animal models on both ends of a prolactin spectrum: rats that overproduced the hormone, and mice specially bred to have no prolactin receptors, the equivalent of a dearth of the hormone since prolactin can't enter these animals' cells.


The researchers found that the animals with extra prolactin had larger livers, regenerated their livers faster after partial removal, and were significantly more likely to survive that liver surgery compared to the animals that couldn't process prolactin.


The article is entitled "Prolactin Promotes Normal Liver Growth, Survival, and Regeneration in Rodents." It appears in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, published by the American Physiological Society. It is available online at http://bit.ly/17SPu23.


Methodology

The researchers made rats overproduce prolactin by implanting two extra anterior pituitary glandsthe gland that produces prolactinin the animals' backs. To make sure the surgery itself wasn't responsible for any effects they saw, they compared these rats to others that had a sham surgery, in which they made incisions but didn't implant extra anterior pituitary glands. To confirm that prolactin itself was responsible for the effects they saw in the overproducers, the researchers injected some of the rats that had the real surgery with a drug that deactivated extra prolactin, bringing the overproducers' prolactin down to baseline levels.


As a contrast to these prolactin overproducers, the researchers also studied mice that were genetically engineered to not have prolactin receptors. Thus, even though these mice made prolactin, their bodies behaved as if they had none of the hormone because their cells couldn't process it.


The researchers measured the ratio of liver to body weight in each of the rats and mice. They tested how readily liver and liver blood vessel cells were dividing in some of the animals from each group. They also removed portions of the animals' livers, comparing how quickly animals from each group regenerated liver tissue. Additionally, they tested the animals' levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), a chemical produced by cells and is kept in check by prolactin. IL-6 can stimulate the liver to repair itself at low levels but can hinder this self-repair at higher levels.


Results

The researchers found that rats that overproduced prolactin had larger livers in proportion to their body weight compared to rats that had normal prolactin levels and those that overproduced prolactin but received the nullifying drug. These overproducers also had significantly larger livers in proportion to their body weight compared to the mice that couldn't process prolactin. Liver cells and liver blood vessel cells were multiplying more readily in the prolactin overproducers than in animals in the other groups.


After the researchers removed portions of the animals' livers, the prolactin overproducers regenerated their livers more quickly than animals from the other groups. Mice that didn't process prolactin not only had smaller livers than the normal mice but were also significantly more likely to die in the days after surgery. Tests showed that these mice had elevated levels of IL-6, a factor that could be partially responsible for their slower healing and increased mortality.


Importance of the Findings

These findings suggest that prolactin is important both for normal liver growth and for regenerating the liver after part of it is removed, with extra prolactin providing a boost for repair mechanisms. Consequently, enhancing prolactin levels could provide a way to improve regeneration when the liver becomes damaged or diseased, or after surgery.


"The use of current medications known to increase prolactinemia (prolactin production) constitute potential therapeutic options in liver diseases, liver injuries, or after liver surgery and warrants further investigation," the study authors write.


###

Study Team

In addition to Carmen Clapp, the study team also includes Bibiana Moreno-Carranza, Maite Goya-Arce, Claudia Vega, Norma Adan, Jakob Triebel, Fernando Lopez-Barrera, and Gonzalo Martinez de la Escalera, of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Andres Quintanar-Stephano of the Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes, and Nadine Binart of Universite Paris-Sud.



Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues, and organs function in health and disease. Established in 1887, the American Physiological Society (APS) was the first US society in the biomedical sciences field. The Society represents more than 11,000 members and publishes 14 peer-reviewed journals with a worldwide readership.



NOTE TO EDITORS: To schedule an interview with Dr. Moreno-Carranza, please contact Donna Krupa at dkrupa@the-aps.org, @Phyziochick, or 301.634.7209. The article is available online at http://bit.ly/17SPu23.




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Milk-maker hormone may help liver regenerate


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Donna Krupa
dkrupa@the-aps.org
American Physiological Society



Study using animal model is published in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology




Bethesda, Md. (Oct. 15, 2013)The hormone prolactin is probably best known for its role in stimulating milk production in mothers after giving birth. But prolactin also has an important function in the liver. This organ has the highest number of prolactin receptors in the body, ports that allow this hormone to enter liver cells. There, prolactin signals these cells to multiply and new blood vessels to grow to fuel this organ's expansion.


Wondering if these properties might be useful to encourage the liver to regrow after surgery to remove part of itsometimes necessary to treat cancer or other liver diseases, or to donate liver tissue for transplantsCarmen Clapp of the Universidad Nacional Automoma de Mexico and her colleagues worked with animal models on both ends of a prolactin spectrum: rats that overproduced the hormone, and mice specially bred to have no prolactin receptors, the equivalent of a dearth of the hormone since prolactin can't enter these animals' cells.


The researchers found that the animals with extra prolactin had larger livers, regenerated their livers faster after partial removal, and were significantly more likely to survive that liver surgery compared to the animals that couldn't process prolactin.


The article is entitled "Prolactin Promotes Normal Liver Growth, Survival, and Regeneration in Rodents." It appears in the American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, published by the American Physiological Society. It is available online at http://bit.ly/17SPu23.


Methodology

The researchers made rats overproduce prolactin by implanting two extra anterior pituitary glandsthe gland that produces prolactinin the animals' backs. To make sure the surgery itself wasn't responsible for any effects they saw, they compared these rats to others that had a sham surgery, in which they made incisions but didn't implant extra anterior pituitary glands. To confirm that prolactin itself was responsible for the effects they saw in the overproducers, the researchers injected some of the rats that had the real surgery with a drug that deactivated extra prolactin, bringing the overproducers' prolactin down to baseline levels.


As a contrast to these prolactin overproducers, the researchers also studied mice that were genetically engineered to not have prolactin receptors. Thus, even though these mice made prolactin, their bodies behaved as if they had none of the hormone because their cells couldn't process it.


The researchers measured the ratio of liver to body weight in each of the rats and mice. They tested how readily liver and liver blood vessel cells were dividing in some of the animals from each group. They also removed portions of the animals' livers, comparing how quickly animals from each group regenerated liver tissue. Additionally, they tested the animals' levels of interleukin-6 (IL-6), a chemical produced by cells and is kept in check by prolactin. IL-6 can stimulate the liver to repair itself at low levels but can hinder this self-repair at higher levels.


Results

The researchers found that rats that overproduced prolactin had larger livers in proportion to their body weight compared to rats that had normal prolactin levels and those that overproduced prolactin but received the nullifying drug. These overproducers also had significantly larger livers in proportion to their body weight compared to the mice that couldn't process prolactin. Liver cells and liver blood vessel cells were multiplying more readily in the prolactin overproducers than in animals in the other groups.


After the researchers removed portions of the animals' livers, the prolactin overproducers regenerated their livers more quickly than animals from the other groups. Mice that didn't process prolactin not only had smaller livers than the normal mice but were also significantly more likely to die in the days after surgery. Tests showed that these mice had elevated levels of IL-6, a factor that could be partially responsible for their slower healing and increased mortality.


Importance of the Findings

These findings suggest that prolactin is important both for normal liver growth and for regenerating the liver after part of it is removed, with extra prolactin providing a boost for repair mechanisms. Consequently, enhancing prolactin levels could provide a way to improve regeneration when the liver becomes damaged or diseased, or after surgery.


"The use of current medications known to increase prolactinemia (prolactin production) constitute potential therapeutic options in liver diseases, liver injuries, or after liver surgery and warrants further investigation," the study authors write.


###

Study Team

In addition to Carmen Clapp, the study team also includes Bibiana Moreno-Carranza, Maite Goya-Arce, Claudia Vega, Norma Adan, Jakob Triebel, Fernando Lopez-Barrera, and Gonzalo Martinez de la Escalera, of the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Andres Quintanar-Stephano of the Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes, and Nadine Binart of Universite Paris-Sud.



Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues, and organs function in health and disease. Established in 1887, the American Physiological Society (APS) was the first US society in the biomedical sciences field. The Society represents more than 11,000 members and publishes 14 peer-reviewed journals with a worldwide readership.



NOTE TO EDITORS: To schedule an interview with Dr. Moreno-Carranza, please contact Donna Krupa at dkrupa@the-aps.org, @Phyziochick, or 301.634.7209. The article is available online at http://bit.ly/17SPu23.




[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

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| E-mail



| Share Share

]

 


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/aps-mhm101513.php
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Justices To Hear Cases On Self-Incrimination, Freezing Assets





The Supreme Court will hear arguments in two cases on Wednesday: Kansas v. Cheever and Kaley v. United States.



Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images


The Supreme Court will hear arguments in two cases on Wednesday: Kansas v. Cheever and Kaley v. United States.


Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images


The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in two cases on Wednesday — one that focuses on the right against self-incrimination and another that looks at when prosecutors can seize defendants' assets.


What Counts As Self-Incrimination?


The first arguments before the court Wednesday come in a murder case that tests whether a court-ordered psychiatric exam can be used to rebut a defendant's claim that he had not formed the necessary intent to kill. The defendant claims that using the examination violated his constitutional right against self-incrimination.


In 2005, Scott Cheever shot and killed a sheriff during the course of an arrest. Cheever, then 24, had been addicted to methamphetamines since he was 17. He claimed that at the time of the killing, he had not slept in nine days, had just injected a near-lethal dose of the drug and was incapable of exercising judgment when the sheriff came to arrest him. In short, he contended that he was incapable of forming the necessary intent to kill — an element that is required to qualify a defendant for the death penalty.


The case took tortuous legal turns, dragging its way through both state and federal court, before Cheever was finally convicted in state court and sentenced to death.


The appeal of that conviction centers on a psychiatric exam that took place at the early stage of the case, prior to trial, and over defense counsel's objection. A federal judge ordered the psychiatric exam when Cheever's lawyer first notified the federal court that the defense intended to argue that Cheever did not have the requisite intent to kill.


For unrelated reasons, the federal prosecution was eventually dropped in favor of a state prosecution. But when the case went to trial in state court, Cheever pressed the same argument. The defense called its own expert witness to testify about the short- and long-term effects of methamphetamine use. That expert testified that Cheever was experiencing paranoid psychosis and could not have exercised any judgment when he killed the sheriff.


In response, the state called the psychiatrist who had conducted the court-ordered examination at the earlier stage of the case. That doctor testified that, while Cheever had antisocial personality disorder and was "impressed and awed" by "outlaws," his mental state at the time was not significantly altered. In short, that the defendant could have intended to kill the sheriff.


The Kansas Supreme Court subsequently voided the conviction. It ruled unanimously that the state had violated Cheever's Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination by calling the state's psychiatrist to testify.


The state then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, where the justices will hear arguments on Wednesday. The state argues that Cheever voluntarily waived his right against self-incrimination by introducing evidence of his mental state. Cheever's attorney counters that presentation of evidence of mental state is not a waiver of the right against self-incrimination.


What Can Prosecutors Seize Before Trial?


The second of the two cases being argued Wednesday tests under what circumstances prosecutors may seize a defendant's assets prior to trial. The defendants in the case claim the seizure of their assets is unconstitutional because it makes it impossible for them to pay their chosen lawyers to conduct a defense.


When the government began investigating Kerri and Brian Kaley for allegedly selling stolen medical supplies, the Kaleys fought back, contending that the medical supplies were not stolen at all. They knew that identical charges in another case had ended in a not-guilty verdict. So, they took out a $500,000 loan on their home and put it into a CD to pay their lawyers for a trial.


Federal prosecutors, however, then sought to freeze all their assets — an action that the Kaleys contend denied them the right to counsel and due process of law.


The couple is asking the Supreme Court to set down rules requiring a pretrial evidentiary hearing prior to allowing the seizure. Prosecutors counter that such a hearing would essentially be a mini-trial, giving defendants two bites at the apple after they are tried.


The case could have a significant impact on both prosecutors and defense lawyers. Groups on the right and the left have filed briefs on behalf of the Kaleys. They say that if the court sides with the Kaleys, it would deprive prosecutors of a heavy weapon used too aggressively and frequently to force guilty pleas on unwilling defendants. On the other hand, prosecutors contend that a decision favoring the Kaleys would encourage white-collar defense lawyers to represent wealthy defendants, regardless of the fact that the lawyers are being paid with their clients' ill-gotten gain.


Isaac Chaput contributed to this report.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/16/234771466/justices-to-hear-cases-on-self-incrimination-freezing-assets?ft=1&f=1014
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Avril Lavigne’s ‘Let Me Go’ Music Video, with Husband Chad Kroeger

Avril Lavigne’s music video for “Let Me Go,” the duet with Chad Kroeger, her husband, has debuted. Visually absorbing, the couple’s performance captures the emotional intensity of the lyrics. The Canadian singer-songwriter Avril Lavigne, 29, and fellow Canadian, Chad Kroeger, 38, singer-songwriter and frontman of Nickelback, got married in July. She was previously married to Sum 41 fronman Deryck Whibley. Musical collaborations were always a part of their courtship. This latest, “Let Me Go,” is the third official single from Lavigne’s forthcoming self-titled fifth studio album. Kroeger produced and co-wrote it with Lavigne. He contributed to several of the tracks, and was among the co-writers of the album’s lead single, “Here’s to Never Growing Up.” The single, “Let Me Go,” was released just a week before the video, which also had sneak peek preview on “Good Morning America” prior to its official release on VEVO. @AvrilLavigne Tweeted her 13+ million followers: “So excited to share my #LetMeGoVideo, featuring my husband Chad Kroeger, with everyone!!!” The music video is highly cinematic with a setting in a mansion interior with regal yet dusty decor that evokes the 18th century and has fallen into disrepair and negligence. Avril Lavigne is attired in a [...]Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/cR4wSaCjUo8/
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Why Accel Is Leading A $40M Round In Vox Media, A Digital Content Company (!)

Screen Shot 2013-10-15 at 4.11.50 PM“At some level, it is still contrarian,” Accel Partners’ Andrew Braccia admits about leading a $40 million fourth round of funding in Vox Media, the publisher of hundreds of major league sports fan blogs as well as tech/culture site The Verge and gaming site Polygon. Coming on top of $30 million in previous rounds, the Washington, DC-based company will have the most venture backing of any high-end content creator when the round is finalized in the coming weeks. There are precious few other examples on this scale. Viral-oriented Buzzfeed has raised nearly $50 million in total. Politically-focused Huffington Post had reached $37 million before Aol (TechCrunch’s parent company) bought it. Silicon Valley investors, at least, are still not very optimistic about startups that put content first. But Braccia has been leading venture rounds in Vox since its first in 2008. What does he like? Vox’s long-term strategy, which it has been building out for a decade. It was founded in 2003 by Markos Moulitsas and others from The Daily Kos, his namesake political commentary blog. That site had grown into a pillar of the progressive blogosphere in that turbulent political era because it focused on big issues and let readers publish their own posts. But instead of expanding into other parts of the political world, the founders stepped back and wondered how the model might apply more broadly. The answer they found was sports. Co-founder and sports writer Tyler Bleszinski decided to focus on a personal passion, Oakland baseball, and launched Athletics Nation. Readers loved it, and from there the company slowly built out a content management system, more sports sites, the start of an ads business, and eventually attracted a former Aol executive, Jim Bankoff, as an advisor. Braccia, who is known in these parts for finding unusual, big-time deals (Braintree, Lynda.com and 99Designs are some fresh examples), first met the company through Bankoff when Vox had around 75 sites. He quickly got the big idea, he tells me today, as he’d already been a long-time reader of two of the sports sites, McCovey Chronicles for the S.F. Giants baseball team and Golden State of Mind for the Golden State Warriors basketball team. “Building a media company is not as well understood in Silicon Valley as building a software company, or building other types of companies that scale differently based on network effects, virality, or whatever it might look like,” he explains. “You haveSource: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/J2JDCrUGARA/
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Uneven enforcement suspected at nuclear plants

FILE - This June 26, 2011 file photo shows the control room of the Cooper nuclear power plant in Brownville, Neb. The number of safety violations at U.S. nuclear power plants varies dramatically from region to region, pointing to inconsistent enforcement in an industry now operating mostly beyond its original 40-year licenses, according to a congressional study awaiting release. For 2000-2012, this facility led all sites in the U.S. in lower-level violations per reactor with 363. (AP Photo/Josh Funk)







FILE - This June 26, 2011 file photo shows the control room of the Cooper nuclear power plant in Brownville, Neb. The number of safety violations at U.S. nuclear power plants varies dramatically from region to region, pointing to inconsistent enforcement in an industry now operating mostly beyond its original 40-year licenses, according to a congressional study awaiting release. For 2000-2012, this facility led all sites in the U.S. in lower-level violations per reactor with 363. (AP Photo/Josh Funk)







Graphic shows regional breakdown of nuclear plant violations in the U.S.; 2c x 2 1/2 inches; 96.3 mm x 63 mm;







FILE - In this May 18, 2011 file photo, a worker drives a tractor at a tree farm in North Perry, Ohio, near the cooling towers of the Perry Nuclear Power Plant. According to an unreleased Government Accountability Office report obtained by The Associated Press, the facility had 8 higher-level violations and 256 lower-level violations between 2000-2012. Lower-level violations are those considered to pose very low risk, such as improper upkeep of an electrical transformer or failure to analyze a problem with no impact on a system's operation, such as the effect of a pipe break. Higher-level violations range from low to high safety significance, such as an improperly maintained electrical system that caused a fire and affected a plant's ability to shut down safely. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta, File)







(AP) — The number of safety violations at U.S. nuclear power plants varies dramatically from region to region, pointing to inconsistent enforcement in an industry now operating mostly beyond its original 40-year licenses, according to a congressional study awaiting release.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission figures cited in the Government Accountability Office report show that while the West has the fewest reactors, it had the most lower-level violations from 2000 to 2012 — more than 2½ times the Southeast's rate per reactor.

The Southeast, with the most reactors of the NRC's four regions, had the fewest such violations, according to the report, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.

The striking variations do not appear to reflect real differences in reactor performance. Instead, the report says, the differences suggest that regulators interpret rules and guidelines differently among regions, perhaps because lower-level violations get limited review.

The study also says that the NRC's West region may enforce the rules more aggressively and that common corporate ownership of multiple plants may help bolster maintenance in the Southeast.

However, the reasons aren't fully understood because the NRC has never fully studied them, the report says. Right now, its authors wrote, the "NRC cannot ensure that oversight efforts are objective and consistent."

Told of the findings, safety critics said enforcement is too arbitrary and regulators may be missing violations. The nuclear industry has also voiced concern about the inconsistencies, the report said.

The analysis was written by the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress, at the request of four senators. Before the government shutdown, the report had been set for public release later this month.

Steven Kerekes, a spokesman for the industry group Nuclear Energy Institute, declined to comment pending release of the report. The NRC's public affairs office had no comment, citing the government shutdown.

The GAO analysis focuses on lower-level safety violations known as "nonescalated." They represent 98 percent of all violations identified by the NRC, which regulates safety at the country's commercial reactors.

Lower-level violations are those considered to pose very low risk, such as improper upkeep of an electrical transformer or failure to analyze a problem with no impact on a system's operation, such as the effect of a pipe break. Higher-level violations range from low to high safety significance, such as an improperly maintained electrical system that caused a fire and affected a plant's ability to shut down safely.

The GAO's analysis shows 3,225 of these violations from 2000 through the end of 2012 across 21 reactors in the West. By contrast, there were 1,885 such violations in the Southeast. Yet that region is home to 33 reactors — 12 more than in the West. The West registered 153.6 violations per reactor, while the Southeast saw just 57.1.

The Midwest, with 24 reactors, had 3,148 violations, for a rate of 131.2 per reactor. The 26-reactor Northeast also fared worse than the Southeast, with 2,518 violations, or 96.8 per reactor.

The Cooper nuclear station in Brownville, Neb., led all sites in lower-level violations per reactor with 363. The next four were Wolf Creek, in Burlington, Kan., with 266; Kewaunee, in Kewaunee, Wis., 256; Perry, in Perry, Ohio, 256; and River Bend, in St. Francisville, La., 240.

The GAO found less regional variation in higher-level safety violations. The six plants with the most higher-level violations per reactor from 2000 to 2012 were Davis-Besse in Oak Harbor, Ohio, with 14; Cooper, 11; Kewaunee, nine; Perry, eight; Palisades, in Covert, Mich., eight; and Fort Calhoun, in Fort Calhoun, Neb., eight.

"I believe the oversight process is totally arbitrary," said Paul Blanch, an engineer who once blew the whistle on problems from within the industry and later returned to work on safety. He also said the NRC isn't providing consistent training to inspectors and regional staff. Blanch was made aware of the GAO findings by the AP.

The report also indicates that some regulators may be missing small problems or giving them short shrift, safety experts said. And they said little violations can pile up and interact with one another to create bigger risks.

"Any time you start tolerating minor problems, you're just setting the stage for major safety problems down the road," said nuclear engineer David Lochbaum of the Union of Concerned Scientists. He once trained NRC staff.

Phillip Musegaas, a lawyer with the environmental group Riverkeeper, said regulators should do more to make sure that lower-level violations are fixed. "NRC's tracking to make sure these violations are resolved is completely ineffectual," he said.

In its official response to the report, the NRC defended the objectivity of its plant assessments. At the same time, it acknowledged the regional differences and promised to look deeper into why they happen.

According to the GAO, the NRC regulatory staff also offered several explanations, including regional variations in reactor ages and time spent on inspections. However, the congressional watchdog said those explanations are not supported by the data.

The agency did offer that regulators may be right when they cite the possible impact of joint ownership of sites, a circumstance most prevalent in the Southeast. Nuclear plants under one owner may benefit from more corporate resources and thus avoid violations, the GAO suggested. The NRC also said higher-level violations are more consistent because they are more deeply reviewed.

On other issues, the report said the NRC needs an easier-to-use internal database to help staff learn of historical safety issues that apply to current problems. It also pressed the agency to improve its public documents website to allow tracking of safety violations. The NRC said it would work to improve both tools.

Senators requested the report in reaction to the Japanese nuclear accident at Fukushima in 2011 and an Associated Press investigative series later that year about aging U.S. nuclear plants. The AP series found that federal regulators had relaxed safety rules to keep plants running beyond their initial licenses. It also reported leaks of radioactive tritium at three-quarters of plants and outdated estimates of evacuation times.

The GAO analyzed data for 104 commercial reactors, but four permanently shut earlier this year: Crystal River in Florida, Kewaunee, and the two units at San Onofre in California.

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate@ap.org

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-15-Nuclear%20Safety/id-45c74be3a6174c97846f5bac33e10f1d
Category: Donatella Versace   kobe bryant   Jesse Jackson Jr   Outside Lands   Eid mubarak  

Tuesday 15 October 2013

How WikiLeaks Beat the Mainstream Media


In the final scene of Sydney Pollack’s 1976 thriller, Three Days of the Condor, the whistleblower-hero played by Robert Redford crows to his nemesis, a high-up CIA rogue plotting to take over Middle Eastern oil fields, that he’s revealed the plot to the New York Times. The CIA man (played by Cliff Robertson) retorts, “How do you know they’ll print it?” The movie ends ambiguously with the suggestion that Redford’s character better not celebrate yet because the CIA just might be able to stop the presses.


It was a decade when whistle-blowers were full of sublime faith that the Times and the Washington Post were the premium channels for big leaks—even (or especially) any that Washington would want plugged. In accord with the consensus, Pollack believed that the news media were “the pipeline” for exposing government wrongdoing, “whether it’s Ellsberg with the Pentagon Papers, or Watergate with Bernstein and Woodward.” But Pollack’s directorial instincts got the better of his faith. His doubt about the inevitability of happy endings was astute cinematically, even if the reality suggested at the end of the film proved several decades premature.


So how did we get to a time when the whistleblower Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning delivers his troves of data not to an established institution of traditional journalism, but to an independent website run by a gifted ex-hacker computer whiz? And Edward Snowden delivers his own to a left-wing Guardian columnist and an independent filmmaker? How come the “47 percent” videotape that sank Mitt Romney’s campaign went not to the Times or the Post—or ABC, CBS, NBC, or CNN—but to Mother Jones?


What Pollack said about the news media of the 1960s and ’70s was right: They were no longer confining themselves, as they had in preceding decades, to the stenography of power. They were willing, even eager, to expose official crimes. To get those stories, they opened unorthodox channels. The slaughter of several hundred South Vietnamese villagers by American troops storming through My Lai in 1968 was a story broken, a year and a half after the fact, by a freelance reporter with radical connections who sold it to a tiny news service, which in turn sold it to major papers. Soon enough, photos of the massacre appeared in one of the leading mass media of the time, Life magazine.



In 1971, when the consummate whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg failed to convince White House and elected officials to release the Pentagon’s official history of the Vietnam war, he turned to a trusted reporter at the New York Times and to other major papers, which proceeded to write them up and publish the documents in bulk. The Times defied the White House all the way to the Supreme Court, and it, the Post and 15 other papers published copious internal evidence of government duplicity and wrongheadedness drawn from thousands of pages, which became known as the Pentagon Papers, entrusted to them by Ellsberg.


The following year saw the uncovering of the Watergate scandals by two Washington Post reporters—neither of them, it should be noted, coming from political beats and therefore neither of them dependent on ingratiating themselves to the usual officials. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein knew where to look for well-informed sources. The plot thickened when the reporters stirred the pot—and with the hearty support of editors and a gutsy publisher, they had sponsors who encouraged them to stir some more.


Seymour Hersh, Neil Sheehan and others at the Times who published the Pentagon Papers, and Woodward and Bernstein were stars of a golden constellation of journalism—not because of the organizations they worked for but because they were smart, dogged, indefatigable, skeptical, and professional in the highest sense. Groundbreaking revelations might be reported by offbeat journalists operating on a shoestring but with keen noses for significant facts. Or they might be disclosed by intrepid reporter-employees backed by wealthy news organizations. It didn’t matter. To them, to be skeptical did not mean affecting a saucy attitude and asking barbed questions at press conferences. It meant starting from dissenting assumptions about how powerful institutions really worked.


A critical bar was set. Other news organizations grew limber, and ready to pounce. The model of exposé through the direct transmission of unsavory facts through mainstream media worked as recently as 2004, when news of torture at Abu Ghraib, originating within the US military itself, went public through CBS’ 60 Minutes and, well, Seymour Hersh again, now writing for The New Yorker.


So why is it that the recent whistleblower-leakers delivered their revelations not to journalism’s mainstream titans but to parajournalists—freelancers and outsiders running independent operations outside?


Edward Snowden has an explicit answer. For his article in The New York Times Magazine, reporter Peter Maass asked Snowden (via encrypted email): “Why did you seek out Laura [Poitras, the independent documentary filmmaker] and Glenn [Greenwald, Guardian writer and longtime Salon columnist], rather than journalists from major American news outlets (N.Y.T., W.P., W.S.J. etc.)?”


Snowden faulted those outlets directly:


After 9/11, many of the most important news outlets in America abdicated their role as a check to power — the journalistic responsibility to challenge the excesses of government — for fear of being seen as unpatriotic and punished in the market during a period of heightened nationalism. From a business perspective, this was the obvious strategy, but what benefited the institutions ended up costing the public dearly. The major outlets are still only beginning to recover from this cold period.


Snowden knew that, in 2004, the Times had delayed publication of a report by two of its top national security reporters, James Risen and Eric Lichtblau, about secret warrantless eavesdropping on Americans undertaken by the National Security Agency. Risen and Lichtblau protested the delay, but to no avail. When the Times did run the article, the reporters noted:


The White House asked The New York Times not to publish this article, arguing that it could jeopardize continuing investigations and alert would-be terrorists that they might be under scrutiny. After meeting with senior administration officials to hear their concerns, the newspaper delayed publication for a year to conduct additional reporting. Some information that administration officials argued could be useful to terrorists has been omitted.


Snowden was in a hurry, and he had reason to be: by leaking the NSA database he was risking his safety and freedom. He did not want to be arrested before his material could get published. He did not want to dangle for a year waiting for the Times to clear the material to its own satisfaction (and, likely, the NSA’s)Snowden told Maass that by contrast, Poitras and Greenwald had revealed themselves to be “fearless…even in the face of withering personal criticism,” Poitras having even been put on a no-fly list for her investigative pains. They were outsiders, but outsiders with both upload and download capacity—outsiders, therefore, with inside connections, who could publish broadly and get Snowden’s story out.



I asked Bill Keller, the Times’ executive editor during the period that included the delayed James Risen-Eric Lichtblau NSA report and the Manning-WikiLeaks disclosures, about Snowden’s explanation. Snowden “somewhat overstates the case,” Keller told me. He acknowledged that after Sept. 11, “there certainly was a national patriotic surge, and I can’t claim journalists were immune.” Notoriously, the Times fell for Bush’s WMD claims. There were also, Keller said, articles that Times editors “held up not from fear of the White House or the reactions of our advertising market, but rather because the White House dangled exclusives [as a quid pro quo]. The Bush people were very clever at this.”


Keller says that “by 2005, when we covered NSA eavesdropping stories…there was a sense that we had something to make up for.” By 2010, when the Manning-WikiLeaks material came up—offered by the Guardian to the Times—“there was never a moment’s hesitation” about the Times running it, he said.


Nevertheless, to Snowden—and by extension to Greenwald and Poitras—any delay would have been unacceptable. In fact, at one point during Snowden’s negotiations with Greenwald and Poitras, while the Guardian was making up its mind what to do, they threatened to take the piece elsewhere. Under pressure, the Guardian made haste.


Manning was even more cagey about offering his trove of documents: when a Washington Post reporter told him she’d have to consult with a senior editor, he was repelled. Manning told his military tribunal that he offered his stash to the Times, albeit weakly—he left a voicemail message and, getting no callback, moved on to WikiLeaks.


Keller notes what Manning gained by proceeding through outside channels:


I’m pretty sure that if we had been the sole recipient we would not have shared Manning’s gift with other news organizations. That is partly for competitive reasons, but also because sharing a treasury of raw intelligence, especially with foreign news media, might have increased the legal jeopardy for The Times and for our source. So our exclusive would have been a coup for The Times, but something would have been lost. By sharing the database widely — including with a range of local news outlets that mined the material for stories of little interest to a global news operation — WikiLeaks got much more mileage out of the secret cables than we would have.


But something might also have been lost when WikiLeaks dumped not only the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs but 251,287 State Department cables into public view: the anonymity of human rights advocates, dissidents and informers whose names were revealed. WikiLeaks’ commitment to keeping those secrets was less than perfect. Belarus dictator Alexander Lukashenko later bragged that unedited WikiLeaks cables concerning activists in that country enabled him to finger them. Assange’s representative in Eastern Europe, a Holocaust-denying anti-Semite weirdly named Israel Shamir, later made the bizarre assertion, on the far-left American website Counterpunch, that in Belarus "the people were happy, fully employed, and satisfied with their government." According to the Guardian, Assange also passed State Department cables to state-supported Russian media, and offered to sell others. Still, the impact of these leaks is unclear: No hard evidence has surfaced of unredacted WikiLeaks revelations leading to the Taliban targeting Afghan informants or activists outed as a result of the cables dump. 



Chelsea Manning endured months of solitary confinement before her trial, and now languishes in an Army brig waiting for the gender-reassignment surgery she will likely never get. Snowden is in exile in Russia, and Assange may be facing a sealed indictment in the United States should he ever try leaving the Ecuadorean embassy in London, where he has lived in a converted powder room for the past 16 months.


Meanwhile, secrecy, leaks, and crackdowns create their own positive feedback loop: Max Frankel, the former executive editor of the New York Times, who was instrumental in the publication of the Pentagon papers, shrewdly observed after the WikiLeaks release of diplomatic cables: “The threat of massive leaks will persist so long as there are massive secrets.”


And the more secrets there are, the bigger the databases that pile up. The bigger those databases become, the more they cry out to be shared among agencies in both the public and private sectors. The agencies require more 22-year-old Army privates (like Manning) and 29-year-old sysadmins (like Snowden) with security clearances. “The government creates its own predicament,” says Keller, “by imposing so much security and then over-sharing secrets.” A system of massive surveillance requires immense expertise to run. To this end, millions of recruits must be vetted and cleared by overworked contractors. The more of these insiders the government manufactures, the more likely that one of them will get out her whistle, blow it, and look for amplification. Reacting clumsily, the government acts, as Keller puts it, “more aggressive and more punitive,” against leaking—and also more secretive, giving another turn to the screw.


So the irregulars will keep coming. The very scale of the developing surveillance state mass-manufactures the desire to leak evidence of outrages. Decades elapsed between Daniel Ellsberg’s leak and Private Manning’s, but only a few years separated Manning’s from Snowden’s.


How will future leaks find their way into the wider world? Could the Times itself open its doors and outdo WikiLeaks and similar or wannabe parajournalists? In 2010, at Columbia’s Journalism School (where I teach), Bill Keller spoke of the Times setting up its own lockbox, à la WikiLeaks, where whistleblowers could deposit raw data, encrypted, without fear of exposure. In the end, the paper decided against it. “There were too many complications,” Keller told me later. “It’s very hard to vet stuff that comes in over the transom. If it’s anonymous, all the more so. And we thought this was not where the future of investigative journalism was. Most investigative reporting results from a relationship of trust [and] piecing things together. What WikiLeaks and Snowden released are great stories, but they’re also unusual. As a general matter, great investigative pieces don’t come in on a thumb drive.”


That may be changing. The dumping of huge troves of data has moved from a cottage industry to a complicated ecology, which makes room for outsiders and for globalized combines of insiders alike. On September 28, Poitras even shared a front-page Times byline with Risen for a story about NSA surveillance. Even as big media selectively open their doors, parajournalism is probably here to stay. From the whistleblowers’ perspective, the mainstream media are too stodgy, too hidebound, too slow, too preoccupied, to rely on. So it’s left to freelance institutions—parajournalists like WikiLeaks—to take up the slack.


The next wave of whistleblowers may end up starting with big data dumps and revelations of law-breaking programs released first to the parajournalists, then passed on to mainstream media that find the story too big too pass up. This route from outsider to insider journalism proves effective for blasting stories around the world now that mainstream papers are willing to overcome their hypercompetitiveness by arranging cross-border collaboration. For a whistleblower, what offers greater reach than a story released more or less simultaneously by the Guardian, the New York Times, Le Monde, Der Spiegel, and El País? Whether they like it or not, then, for the foreseeable future, the outsider WikiLeaks and the insider New York Times, having carved out a division of labor in the same industry, are fated to coexist. The legal risks for whistleblowers have never been greater, but their ability to move their revelations around the world is growing.











Original article from TakePart



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wikileaks-beat-mainstream-media-180614905.html
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Eating Popcorn at the Movies Makes You Immune to the Advertising


TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma






FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 2011, AT 3:07 PM
Obama Gets Firsthand Look at a Tornado Damage






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.






TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2010, AT 6:19 PM
Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long. Tornado Kills at Least Five in Oklahoma. Very long title. Long long long.



Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/video/video/2013/10/eating_and_advertising_popcorn_and_snacks_at_movies_nullify_the_message.html
Category: Marquez vs Bradley   julianne hough   Susan Bennett   big brother   Sydney Leathers  

These Cans Come With Their Own Built-In DAC

These Cans Come With Their Own Built-In DAC
Audio Technica makes a wide range of high-end headphones that plenty of audiophiles subsequently plug directly into a standalone digital-to-analog converter. Perhaps that's why one of their newest sets of cans comes with a DAC built into the ear cup.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/nYOmrHienno/
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Pressure on US as global economy meetings near end

Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso, right, rubs the cheeks of Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew before they gathered for a photo with the Group of 20, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso, right, rubs the cheeks of Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew before they gathered for a photo with the Group of 20, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







The Group of 20 gather for a group photo at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, center, waits to poses with the Group of 20, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Secretary-General Angel Gurría, left, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, center, and South Korean Finance Minister Ali Babacan right, talk before posing for a photo with the Group of 20, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013, at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







Group of 20 (G-20) finance ministers and Central Bank Governors, including World Bank President Jim Yong Kim, front row right, and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, front row, second from right, pose for a group photo at International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters in Washington, Friday, Oct. 11, 2013. Finance ministers and central bank officials from the Group of 20 nations are in Washington ahead of weekend meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







(AP) — World finance officials prepared to wrap up three days of meetings in Washington, where fretting about the risk of an unprecedented U.S. debt default overshadowed myriad worries about a shaky global economic recovery.

Finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of 20 major economies urged the U.S. on Friday to take urgent action to resolve the political impasse that has partially shut down the government and delayed passage of a bill to raise the debt ceiling.

If Congress does not increase the borrowing limit by Thursday, the U.S. could default on its debt payments and cause serious turmoil in world markets and economies.

With the U.S., Europe and Japan all just emerging from long slumps, finance officials have been predicting a modest recovery in the global economy in the coming year, driven in large part by a strengthening U.S. economy.

But the current budget stalemate, coupled with anticipation that the Federal Reserve will soon start scaling back its massive stimulus program for the economy, have officials worried that the fragile global recovery could be derailed.

In prepared remarks to finance officials released late Friday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said the United States understood the role it played as "the anchor of the international financial system." He said the administration was continuing to push Congress to reopen the government and increase the borrowing limit.

"Prior to the government shutdown, all signs pointed to the strengthening recovery of the U.S. economy," Lew said. "If Congress acts quickly, this will continue to be the case."

The G-20 officials issued their plea for a U.S. resolution on the debt ceiling at the end of two days of discussions held in advance of Saturday meetings of the 188-nation International Monetary Fund and its sister lending organization, the World Bank. The Saturday meetings will be the last in three days of high level discussions.

Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, whose country currently holds the rotating chair of the G-20, told a news conference Friday that the budget stalemate between Congress and the Obama administration was discussed at the meeting.

But "no emergency or extraordinary plans" were made during the meeting in case of a U.S. default, he said.

"In the course of today's meeting, no plans were drawn up," he said. "No worst-case scenario was discussed. We trust the U.S. authorities will find a way out of this complex situation."

A number of the leaders attending the meeting said they saw the risk of default as remote.

In one telling comment, Siluanov offered a glimpse of what a tremendous impact a U.S. debt default would have on Russia's economy and many others like it around the world. Most central banks hold a significant portion of their foreign currency reserves in U.S. Treasury securities — considered the safest investment in the world.

Siluanov said about 45 percent of Russian's foreign exchange reserves are invested in U.S. Treasuries. Nevertheless, he said Russia was not considering reducing the size of its Treasury holdings because they are long-term investments while the debt crisis was a short-term issue.

America will run out of borrowing authority for new debt on Thursday. Treasury Secretary Lew has warned there is expected to be only $30 billion in cash on hand at that time and the U.S. will soon fall short of money to meet all of its obligations, including interest payments on the $16.7 trillion federal debt. That would trigger the first U.S. debt default ever.

____

Associated Press reporters Harry Dunphy and Matthew Pennington contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-10-12-US-Global-Economy/id-81305f04b48740d1814686325faf2756
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Aftershocks Continue After Strong Quake Hits Philippines





The church of San Pedro in Loboc, on Bohol Island in the central Philippines, was damaged after a major 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck the region.



Robert Michael Poole/AFP/Getty Images


The church of San Pedro in Loboc, on Bohol Island in the central Philippines, was damaged after a major 7.2 magnitude earthquake struck the region.


Robert Michael Poole/AFP/Getty Images


A 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck in the central Philippines on Tuesday morning, collapsing roofs and buildings, cracking walls and roads and killing at least six people.


The quake was centered 56 kilometers (35 miles) deep below Carmen town on Bohol Island and was felt across the region.


Radio station DZMM quoted civil defense officials as saying that four people died when part of a fish port collapsed in nearby Cebu city, across the strait from Bohol.


Two more people died and 19 were injured when the roof of a market in Mandaue in Cebu province collapsed, according to TV reports. People rushed out of buildings and homes, including hospitals as aftershocks continued.


Photos from Cebu broadcast on TV stations showed a fallen concrete 2-story building, and reports said two people were pulled alive, including an 8-month-old baby.


Bohol Gov. Edgardo Chatto said that a church was reported damaged in the provincial capital of Tagbilaran and a part of the city hall collapsed, injuring one person.


A 17th-century stone church in Loboc town, southwest of Carmen, crumbled to pieces, with nearly half of it reduced to rubble. Other old churches dating from the Spanish colonial period, which are common in the central region, also reported damage.


Tuesday is a national holiday and that may have reduced casualties because schools and offices are closed.


Earthquakes are common in the Philippines, which lies along the Pacific "Ring of Fire."


Cebu province, about 570 kilometers (350 miles) south of Manila, has a population of more than 2.6 million people. Nearby Bohol has 1.2 million people and is popular among foreigners because of its beach and island resorts.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/14/234451547/strong-quake-hits-central-philippines-aftershocks-continue?ft=1&f=1001
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Monday 14 October 2013

Jon Bon Jovi Walks Fan Down the Aisle at Her Las Vegas Wedding




Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images



Australian bride-to-be Branka Delic openly campaigned for her favorite rock star, Jon Bon Jovi, to walk her down the aisle on her big day.



The rocker’s response? “I’ll Be There for You.”


PHOTOS: Til Death Do Us Part: Hollywood's Magazine Cover Weddings


In perhaps the greatest wedding gift ever, Bon Jovi arrived on Delic’s big day and offered his arm in a gallant gesture as he presented her to groom, Gonzalo Cladera, according to Billboard.


Two months ago, the bride had launched an online petition at BonJoviWalkMeDownTheAisle.com, calling for the man himself to perform the honor at the Graceland Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas, the site of the rocker’s wedding in 1989.


As fate would have it, the group had a gig at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Oct. 12, the date of Delic’s nuptials, and he arrived in time-donning a white shirt and a high-wattage smile.


STORY: Jon Bon Jovi's Son Suits Up For Notre Dame


Romance and Bon Jovi often go hand in hand. The singer has allowed multiple fans propose on stage during shows.


Afterward, Bon Jovi took to Twitter offering the couple his wishes for “a lifetime of happiness, love & memories together - ALWAYS!”



Twitter: @MicheleAmabile



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/music/~3/a8PEsby8OQo/story01.htm
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Saturday 12 October 2013

Lithuanian PM: Russia trying to reassert power

VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) — Lithuania's prime minister says Russia's import restrictions on the Baltic country's dairy products are part Moscow's attempts to reassert influence in Eastern Europe.


Lithuania currently holds the European Union's rotating presidency and in November will hold a key summit where the bloc's leaders hope to reach a strategic partnership agreement with Ukraine. Such a deal would harm Moscow's own plans to integrate its economy with the neighboring country.


Algirdas Butkevicius told The Associated Press on Thursday that the dairy ban, which Russia announced Monday, is an attempt to punish his country for playing a role in these talks.


He said the ban was "very serious" and could signal the start of a trade war. He added Lithuania hopes the EU will intervene and help compensate losses incurred by local dairies.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lithuanian-pm-russia-trying-reassert-power-154421763--finance.html
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Thursday 10 October 2013

Better understanding of the HIV epidemic through an evolutionary perspective

Better understanding of the HIV epidemic through an evolutionary perspective


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Public release date: 8-Oct-2013
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Contact: Joe Caspermeyer
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Molecular Biology and Evolution (Oxford University Press)





With the abundance of sequencing data, scientists can use ever more powerful evolutionary biology tools to pinpoint the transmission and death rates for epidemics such as HIV, which has remained elusive to a cure. Reconstructed evolutionary trees, called phylogenies, can trace a family of viral mutations over time. When combined with epidemiology, tree construction can allow for great insight into the dynamics of disease transmission and how a pathogen eludes its host to spread infection.


Professor Gabriel Leventhal, et. al., from the ETH Zurich in Switzerland report on a new method that successfully combines evolutionary tree studies and epidemiology, using viral sequence data from 10 transmission clusters of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. For some clusters, the HIV epidemic appeared saturated, with very few new cases appearing while in others, new infections were still common. Overall, HIV transmission was characterized by initial rapid spread within subpopulations that slows down to only a small number of infections.


"Using a novel methodology, we were able to estimate the the number of individuals that are at risk of becoming infected within transmission clusters of the Swiss HIV epidemic and found that many of these clusters are characterized by initial rapid infection of most at risk individuals within a cluster, followed by a slowdown of new infections within each cluster," said Leventhal.


This allowed the team, for the first time, to estimate not only HIV transmission and death rates, but also the total susceptible population size within certain transmission groups from viral sequence data. Their model can successfully predict how the number of infected and susceptible individuals will vary over time, giving new insight and predictions into how an ongoing epidemic will continue to develop and help guide future public health intervention strategies.



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Better understanding of the HIV epidemic through an evolutionary perspective


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Public release date: 8-Oct-2013
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Contact: Joe Caspermeyer
MBEpress@gmail.com
480-258-8972
Molecular Biology and Evolution (Oxford University Press)





With the abundance of sequencing data, scientists can use ever more powerful evolutionary biology tools to pinpoint the transmission and death rates for epidemics such as HIV, which has remained elusive to a cure. Reconstructed evolutionary trees, called phylogenies, can trace a family of viral mutations over time. When combined with epidemiology, tree construction can allow for great insight into the dynamics of disease transmission and how a pathogen eludes its host to spread infection.


Professor Gabriel Leventhal, et. al., from the ETH Zurich in Switzerland report on a new method that successfully combines evolutionary tree studies and epidemiology, using viral sequence data from 10 transmission clusters of the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. For some clusters, the HIV epidemic appeared saturated, with very few new cases appearing while in others, new infections were still common. Overall, HIV transmission was characterized by initial rapid spread within subpopulations that slows down to only a small number of infections.


"Using a novel methodology, we were able to estimate the the number of individuals that are at risk of becoming infected within transmission clusters of the Swiss HIV epidemic and found that many of these clusters are characterized by initial rapid infection of most at risk individuals within a cluster, followed by a slowdown of new infections within each cluster," said Leventhal.


This allowed the team, for the first time, to estimate not only HIV transmission and death rates, but also the total susceptible population size within certain transmission groups from viral sequence data. Their model can successfully predict how the number of infected and susceptible individuals will vary over time, giving new insight and predictions into how an ongoing epidemic will continue to develop and help guide future public health intervention strategies.



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