শুক্রবার, ৩১ মে, ২০১৩

Water-rock reaction may provide enough hydrogen 'food' to sustain life in ocean's crust or on Mars

May 30, 2013 ? A chemical reaction between iron-containing minerals and water may produce enough hydrogen "food" to sustain microbial communities living in pores and cracks within the enormous volume of rock below the ocean floor and parts of the continents, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder.

The findings, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, also hint at the possibility that hydrogen-dependent life could have existed where iron-rich igneous rocks on Mars were once in contact with water.

Scientists have thoroughly investigated how rock-water reactions can produce hydrogen in places where the temperatures are far too hot for living things to survive, such as in the rocks that underlie hydrothermal vent systems on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. The hydrogen gases produced in those rocks do eventually feed microbial life, but the communities are located only in small, cooler oases where the vent fluids mix with seawater.

The new study, led by CU-Boulder Research Associate Lisa Mayhew, set out to investigate whether hydrogen-producing reactions also could take place in the much more abundant rocks that are infiltrated with water at temperatures cool enough for life to survive.

"Water-rock reactions that produce hydrogen gas are thought to have been one of the earliest sources of energy for life on Earth," said Mayhew, who worked on the study as a doctoral student in CU-Boulder Associate Professor Alexis Templeton's lab in the Department of Geological Sciences.

"However, we know very little about the possibility that hydrogen will be produced from these reactions when the temperatures are low enough that life can survive. If these reactions could make enough hydrogen at these low temperatures, then microorganisms might be able to live in the rocks where this reaction occurs, which could potentially be a huge subsurface microbial habitat for hydrogen-utilizing life."

When igneous rocks, which form when magma slowly cools deep within Earth, are infiltrated by ocean water, some of the minerals release unstable atoms of iron into the water. At high temperatures -- warmer than 392 degrees Fahrenheit (200 degrees Celsius) -- scientists know that the unstable atoms, known as reduced iron, can rapidly split water molecules and produce hydrogen gas, as well as new minerals containing iron in the more stable, oxidized form.

Mayhew and her co-authors, including Templeton, submerged rocks in water in the absence of oxygen to determine if a similar reaction would take place at much lower temperatures, between 122 and 212 degrees Fahrenheit (50 to 100 degrees Celsius). The researchers found that the rocks did create hydrogen -- potentially enough hydrogen to support life.

To understand in more detail the chemical reactions that produced the hydrogen in the lab experiments, the researchers used "synchrotron radiation" -- which is created by electrons orbiting in a humanmade storage ring -- to determine the type and location of iron in the rocks on a microscale.

The researchers expected to find that the reduced iron in minerals like olivine had converted to the more stable oxidized state, just as occurs at higher temperatures. But when they conducted their analyses at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource at Stanford University, they were surprised to find newly formed oxidized iron on "spinel" minerals found in the rocks. Spinels are minerals with a cubic structure that are highly conductive.

Finding oxidized iron on the spinels led the team to hypothesize that, at low temperatures, the conductive spinels were helping facilitate the exchange of electrons between reduced iron and water, a process that is necessary for the iron to split the water molecules and create the hydrogen gas.

"After observing the formation of oxidized iron on spinels, we realized there was a strong correlation between the amount of hydrogen produced and the volume percent of spinel phases in the reaction materials," Mayhew said. "Generally, the more spinels, the more hydrogen."

Not only is there a potentially large volume of rock on Earth that may undergo these low temperature reactions, but the same types of rocks also are prevalent on Mars, Mayhew said. Minerals that form as a result of the water-rock reactions on Earth have been detected on Mars as well, which means that the process described in the new study may have implications for potential Martian microbial habitats.

Mayhew and Templeton are already building on this study with their co-authors, including Thomas McCollom at CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, to see if the hydrogen-producing reactions can actually sustain microbes in the lab.

This study was funded by the David and Lucille Packard Foundation and with a U.S. Department of Energy Early Career grant to Templeton.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/P_rYgzb5klo/130530132541.htm

Mary Leakey Side Effects bob marley weather the walking dead the walking dead Walking Dead Season 3

Fmr. IRS commish went to more White House Easter Egg Rolls than previously thought (Michellemalkin)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/309447624?client_source=feed&format=rss

kingdom of heaven national enquirer whitney houston arizona republican debate arizona debate enquirer national inquirer knicks vs heat

EU pain: Unemployment at all-time high, inflation non-existent

By Robin Emmott and Martin Santa

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Unemployment has reached a new high in the euro zone and inflation remains well below the European Central Bank's target, underscoring just how severe a challenge EU leaders face to revive the bloc's sickly economy.

Joblessness in the 17-nation currency area rose to 12.2 percent in April, statistics agency Eurostat said on Friday, marking a new record since the data series began in 1995.

With the euro zone also in its longest recession since its creation in 1999, consumer price inflation was far below the ECB's target of just below 2 percent, coming in at 1.4 percent in May, slightly above April's 1.2 percent rate.

That rise may quieten concerns about deflation, but the deepening unemployment crisis is a threat to the social fabric of the euro zone, with almost two-thirds of young Greeks unable to find work exemplifying southern Europe's threat of creating a 'lost generation'.

Economists and policy makers have expressed concern that the greatest threat to the unity of the euro zone is now social breakdown from the crisis, rather than market-driven factors.

In France, Europe's second largest economy, the number of jobless rose to a record in April, while in Italy, the unemployment rate hit its highest level in at least 36 years, with 40 percent of young people out of work.

Some economists expect the ECB, which meets on June 6, to act to revive the economy and go beyond another interest rate cut to consider a U.S.-style money printing program known as quantitative easing.

"We do not expect a strong recovery in the euro zone," said Nick Matthews, a senior economist at Nomura International in London. "It puts pressure on the ECB to deliver even more conventional and non conventional measures."

In the past, the euro zone has needed economic growth of around 1.5 percent to create new jobs, according to Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING. With the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecasting this week that the euro zone economy would contract by 0.6 percent this year, unemployment is set to worsen long before it turns around.

"We do not see a stabilization in unemployment before the middle of next year," said Frederik Ducrozet, an economist at Economist at Credit Agricole in Paris. "The picture in France is still deteriorating."

5.6 MILLION YOUNG JOBLESS

ECB President Mario Draghi, whose bold decision-making helped protect the euro zone from break-up last year with a plan to buy the bonds of governments in trouble, has so far preferred to leave the onus on euro zone governments to reform.

A majority of economists polled by Reuters do not expect the ECB to cut its deposit or main refinancing rates in the coming months, although the OECD this week called for the bank to consider quantitative easing.

The Commission, the EU's executive, told governments this week they must focus on reforms to outdated labor and pension systems to regain Europe's lost business dynamism, a move to shift focus away from debilitating budget cuts towards growth.

EU leaders meeting at the end of June in Brussels are expected to put the problem of joblessness at the forefront of their summit.

European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, who chairs the meetings, said last week youth unemployment was one of the most pressing issues for the 27-nation European Union as a whole.

Ministers from France, Italy and Germany, meeting in Paris this week, called on their counterparts to help tackle youth unemployment, with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble describing it as a "battle for Europe's unity".

In April, 5.6 million people under 25 were unemployed in the European Union, with 3.6 million of those in the euro zone.

Even if governments take on unions and vested interests to enact reforms, they will take time to produce benefits.

The impact of the euro zone's debt and banking crises has been sapping confidence from companies and households.

Private consumption saved Germany from slipping into recession in the first three months of this year, but retail sales still fell unexpectedly in April because of the cold European winter.

Meanwhile, French consumer spending dropped again in February, falling by 0.2 percent after contracting in January. French household purchasing power contracted in 2012 for the first time since 1984.

(Reporting by Robin Emmott and Martin Santa; editing by Luke Baker and Jeremy Gaunt)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/record-joblessness-low-inflation-show-euro-zones-pain-090854893.html

evelyn lozada UFC 150 Caster Semenya Medal Count 2012 Olympics victoria beckham London 2012 rhythmic gymnastics Meteor Shower August 2012

GPS 'Junk' Data Reveals Dangerous Volcanic Plumes

Volcanic ash plume in Iceland

Volcanic ash plume covers the sky outside of Reykjav?k, Iceland after Gr?msv?tn erupted in 2011. Image: Flickr/Kris Olin

  • Showcasing more than fifty of the most provocative, original, and significant online essays from 2011, The Best Science Writing Online 2012 will change the way...

    Read More??

This story was originally published by Inside Science News Service.

(ISNS) ? Scientists may be able to track dangerous ash-filled clouds by using information similar to the bars showing signal strength on a cell phone.

The new technique analyzes the GPS's "signal strength" -- the intensity of a GPS signal ? as it attempts to cut through a volcanic plume. The research was published online in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

The dangerous particles within these plumes can clog an airplane's engines and send it plummeting from the sky.

Two years ago this month, Gr?msv?tn, a volcano in Iceland, erupted, leaving behind a thick column of ash that led to canceled flights all over Europe for days.?

The new research uses GPS data to detect these hazardous clouds as they fill the sky. Such early hazard detection could help pilots to avoid areas loaded with deadly ash.

Signal-strength data is logged in the inner workings of the GPS machines. ?But since it has never been useful to scientists studying how the earth moves during volcanic eruptions, the data has been ignored. In fact, most scientists don't even upload the information to their computers.

"When I learned GPS, you were supposed to use it to measure where you are," said Kristine Larson, professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder and author of the study. ?"These days, I look for weird things to do with GPS."?

Larson was working with colleagues from the University of Alaska Fairbanks, who set up GPS antennae at Alaska's Mount Redoubt to measure how terrain shifted during an eruption. Those measurements come from an array of satellites beaming down signals that indicate the exact position of a GPS antenna on earth.

Equipment on the ground automatically stores GPS data on the strength of the signals coming from those orbiting satellites. But Larson is the first to use the information to measure volcanic plumes.

Think of your cell phone, said Larson. "I always hear people talking about how many bars they have," she said. "That's basically what I'm using."

She found that the plume, which was loaded with bits of volcanic ash, somehow blocked the GPS signal coming from satellites in space.

Knowing this, Larson could then track the plume in real time by observing the strength of the GPS signal in a certain area. Once the plume passed, the signal bumped back up to its normal level.

This once-overlooked information may help track plumes when other methods like radar or pictures taken from satellites fall short.

Images taken from space can monitor plumes but "if it's cloudy you can't see anything," said Larson.

Since the GPS signal strength beamed down from orbiting satellites is largely unaffected by clouds and water vapor, Larson can detect only the dangerous ash within a plume.

Radar can spot plumes but the equipment is expensive. "We have many more volcanoes in the world than we have resources to monitor them," said Larson. "The beauty of GPS is it's so inexpensive."

Many scientists already have GPS antennae dispatched at volcanoes all over the world that automatically collect signal strength data.?

More research is needed to determine how dense a plume must be to cause a drop in signal strength, said Michael Lisowski, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey Cascades Volcano Observatory, in Vancouver, Wash.?

Signal strength can only be measured if satellites are actively sending signals to the antennae on the ground. Since only about a couple of dozen GPS satellites are in orbit over the earth, there may be times when there is no satellite overhead to connect with an antenna on the ground and no data can be collected on signal strength.

But many countries already have plans to send new GPS satellites into space. "As more satellites systems get launched, it will become a better tool," said Lisowski.

Larson's study looked only at two volcanic plumes in Alaska. Plans are in place to test the technique on more volcanoes, she said. "GPS is not the only instrument that is helpful but it's a new thing that we could add to the list of tools we're using to make air travel safer."?

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=gps-junk-data-reveals-dangerous-volcanic-plumes

Dick Trickle the office Granbury Texas CA Lottery madonna madonna Billboard Music Awards 2013

Chula Vista Police Motorcycle Officer Seriously Injured in Three ...

SAN DIEGO, California (May 30, 2013) ? A Chula Vista police motorcycle officer sustained severe injuries Wednesday after he was injured in a three-vehicle crash on an East County road. The accident may have been caused by a newly licensed teenage girl who was texting while driving- but an investigation is still pending and the cause is still unknown.

The teen was driving westbound on SR-78 in Ramona. It was 2:30 p.m. when she rear-ended her Ford Fusion sedan into a 2006 Chevrolet HHR. The 61-year-old male driver of the Chevrolet was hit so hard that his vehicle was pushed into the intersection, right into the path of motorcycle officer Nathaniel Walker. This caused Walker?s CHP motorcycle to tumble over the Chevrolet and then crash through the windshield of the Ford Fusion.

The officer was airlifted to Palomar Medical Center where he is being treated for traumatic injuries. The teen girl and 61-year-old man sustained moderate but serious injuries and each was taken to the hospital.

San Diego Personal Injury Accident Attorney

This article is sponsored by the Seegmiller Law Firm. Our attorneys offer a free consultation for prospective clients who have been injured or who have lost a loved one due to someone else?s negligence. Please call 1-855-ASK-WEST (1-855-275-9378) to speak with an attorney.

?We are a victim?s law firm that helps people who are hurt because of someone else?s negligence,? said Attorney West Seegmiller. ?A personal injury attorney will make sure that evidence is collected and an investigation is conducted to ensure your rights are protected after a car crash.?

For over 30 years, the firm has been a staunch advocate for victim?s rights and has fought to win justice for clients involved in personal injury and wrongful death cases, including premises liability, product liability, auto accidents, dog bites, nursing home negligence, medical malpractice, at-work injuries, police brutality, and more. The firm has offices in Beverly Hills, Newport Beach, Riverside, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino, California and Las Vegas, Nevada.

?

Source: http://theseegmillerlawfirm.com/blog/chula-vista-police-motorcycle-officer-injured-three-vehicle-crash/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=chula-vista-police-motorcycle-officer-injured-three-vehicle-crash

school shooting oscar nominations C7 Corvette tom brady denver post Scandal denver broncos

বুধবার, ২৯ মে, ২০১৩

House Judiciary: Did Eric Holder lie under oath? (cbsnews)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308966016?client_source=feed&format=rss

nicki minaj celebrity apprentice Jodi Arias Trial Live Bay to Breakers Andrea Rebello wfaa prince

Nanomedicines' impact on patients under the microscope

May 29, 2013 ? A pioneering imaging technique to track the effects of next-generation nanomedicines on patients has been harnessed by a University of Strathclyde academic.

Professor Dr M. N. V. Ravi Kumar and Dr Dimitrios Lamprou, of the Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, believe an advanced form of atomic force microscopy, known as PeakForce QNM, could boost developments in the field of nanomedicines, the encapsulation of potent drugs in tiny particles measuring billionths of a meter in diameter. They described how this detailed imaging approach may also help scientists address growing concerns in the medical world around "nanotoxicology," the build-up of microscopic particles in people's tissues.

Professor Kumar, whose team's research article has been published in the journal PLOS ONE, said: "Nanotechnology's role in drug delivery has the power to transform the way patients are given medicines over the next decade or so.

"In the case of traditional medicines, such as tablets and capsules, only a limited amount of drug -- thought to be around five to 15 per cent for the majority of compounds -- makes it through the gut into patients' blood. The good thing about nanomedicines is that -- unlike as is the case with traditional tablets and capsules -- the drugs are not released in the gut. Instead, nanomedicines are absorbed intact and release the encapsulated drugs directly into bodily tissues, including the blood, offering the possibility to reduce the required dose without compromising the therapeutic effects.

"All medicines are combined with what are known as 'excipients' -- inactive substances which give them the desired bulk and consistency and their role is restricted to the gut. However, the excipients such as polymers, used to formulate the nanoparticle-encapsulating drugs may exhibit undesired effects when they are absorbed through the gut wall. Scientists want to know if nanoparticle-based drugs can have any adverse effects on patients -- and, in particular, if they cause more harm than good in some cases.

"Up until now, little has been known about what happens after nanoparticles circulate throughout the body and if they raise any safety issues for the patient. Previously, it was necessary for nanoparticles to be given a fluorescent or radioactive label, in order to allow scientists to be able to identify and track them. However, by using PeakForce QNM atomic force microscopy we can, for the first time, track where these nanoparticles are going throughout the body after oral administration -- without attaching any fluorescent or radioactive labels and by using the real drug loaded nanoparticles. In particular, we can identify if they are accumulating in specific areas, causing what is known as 'tissue stiffness' -- a condition linked to a variety of diseases, including cancer."

Professor Kumar said it is known that tumours are more rigid -- or stiff -- when compared with surrounding healthy tissues. In addition, recent studies using atomic force microscopy have also shown it is possible to distinguish between non-malignant and malignant tumours cells, on the basis of their relative stiffness.

Professor Kumar added: "The ability of atomic force microscopy to study biomechanical profiles will be an asset in efforts to better understand the difference in tissue stiffness between tissues treated with nanoparticles and those not treated with nanoparticles, how long any associated tissue stiffness persists, and if it disappears quickly. Importantly, it will also help to establish whether or not there is a correlation between the number of nanoparticles present in blood and their accumulation in other tissues. By understanding more about blood stiffness, we will be able to learn more about nanotoxicology generally, and how that affects patients.

"By using atomic force microscopy in this way, we may in future be able to analyse patients' blood and tell if, for example, nanomaterials are accumulating in their livers or arterial walls, causing stiffness which -- if it persists long enough -- may increase their chances of developing diseases.

"Another benefit of nanoparticles is that -- if used at an early stage of the research -- they could save pharmaceutical firms money by reducing the number of drugs that fail at the development stage. These cost savings could then be reinvested into the research and development of new drugs to treat patients."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/dSOa2WEv_Jw/130529101517.htm

ufc jones vs evans watergate pregnant man outside lands 2012 lineup beloved ufc results water for elephants

Hubble sees a swirl of star formation

May 28, 2013 ? The Hubble Space Telescope has captured the image of an unusual galaxy -- a beautiful, glittering swirl named, rather un-poetically, J125013.50+073441.5. A glowing haze of material seems to engulf the galaxy, stretching out into space in different directions and forming a fuzzy streak in this image. It is a starburst galaxy -- a name given to galaxies that show unusually high rates of star formation. The regions where new stars are being born are highlighted by sparkling bright blue regions along the galactic arms.

Studying starburst galaxies can tell us a lot about galactic evolution and star formation. These galaxies start off with huge amounts of gas, which is used to form new stars. This period of furious star formation is only a phase; once all the gas is used up, this star birth slows down. Other famous starbursts captured by Hubble include the Antennae Galaxies and Messier 82, the latter of which is forming new stars ten times faster than our galaxy, the Milky Way.

The data for this image were collected using Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 as part of a study named LARS (Lyman Alpha Reference Sample), which is investigating the interaction between radiation and matter in relatively nearby starburst galaxies.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NASA.

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


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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/Kjg5BTL-UN4/130528105104.htm

rising stars challenge star trek 2 kathy ireland brooke mueller all star weekend undercover boss tupelo honey

Panama's Ruben Blades joins cast of Duran biopic

PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) ? Panama's most famous performer is joining the cast of a movie about its most famous boxer.

Filmmaker Jonathan Jakubowicz says singer Ruben Blades will take part in the film "Hands of Stone," which is scheduled for release next year.

The film focuses on the life of Roberto Duran.

The Harvard-educated Blades is one of the biggest stars in Latin music and also has served as Panama's tourism minister. In the film, he will play boxing promoter Carlos Eleta.

The movie also starts Robert De Niro, Usher and Edgar Ramirez.

In Tuesday's news release, Blades refers to Duran as a friend and as "one of the most illustrious Panamanians we have."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/panamas-ruben-blades-joins-cast-duran-biopic-211513028.html

leap year moratorium dwts season 14 cast leap day michigan primary results olympia snowe davey jones dead

Obama: Jersey Shore is back in business

President Barack Obama shakes hands with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie before speaking outside at Asbury Park Convention Hall ,Tuesday, May 28, 2013 in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Obama traveled to New Jersey to join Christie to inspect and tour the Jersey Shore's recovery efforts from Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama shakes hands with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie before speaking outside at Asbury Park Convention Hall ,Tuesday, May 28, 2013 in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Obama traveled to New Jersey to join Christie to inspect and tour the Jersey Shore's recovery efforts from Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama, accompanied by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, plays the 'Touch Down Fever' game on the boardwalk during their visit to Point Pleasant, NJ., Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Obama traveled to New Jersey to join Christie to inspect and tour the Jersey Shore's recovery efforts from Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama speaks outside the Asbury Park Convention Hall ,Tuesday, May 28, 2013 in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Obama traveled to New Jersey to join Gov. Chris Christie to inspect and tour the Jersey Shore's recovery efforts from Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama, accompanied by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, stop to play the 'Touchdown Fever' arcade game on the boardwalk during their visit to Point Pleasant, NJ., Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Obama traveled to New Jersey to join Christie to inspect and tour the Jersey Shore's recovery efforts from Hurricane Sandy. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

First lady Michelle Obama joins school children from Long Beach Island Grade School in Ship Bottom, N.J., left, and second from left, and Union Beach Memorial School in Union Beach, NJ, right, to harvest the summer crop from the White House kitchen garden, Tuesday, May 28, 2013, at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama tried his hand at arcade football and joked Tuesday with Gov. Chris Christie, declaring the Jersey Shore is back seven months after Superstorm Sandy bore down on its famed boardwalks and seaside towns.

The job of repairing the $38 billion in damage inflicted by the storm is not over, Obama said, adding that his return visit to a state he visited in the storm's immediate aftermath was intended to show he's still committed to putting the federal government to work. When all is said and done, Obama said, the Jersey Shore will be better and more resilient than it was before.

"You are stronger than the storm," Obama said, borrowing a line that Christie himself uses in a federally funded advertising campaign touting Jersey Shore tourism. "After you've all you've dealt with, after all you've been through, the Jersey Shore is back and it is open for business."

He said his message to residents in storm-ravaged New Jersey also holds true for those in Oklahoma recovering from the May 20 tornado that killed 24 people and devastated the community of Moore.

"When we make a commitment that we got your back, we mean it," Obama said. Gesturing to his host, Obama praised Christie for the "the great work he's done here" in leading the recovery effort.

A crowd of almost 4,000 gathered in ponchos and raincoats to see the president, who earlier Tuesday joined Christie at an arcade in nearby Point Pleasant Beach, where about half the boardwalk was destroyed in the storm. Christie won a stuffed bear as he and Obama milled about, chatting like old friends in a visit that underscored their status as the odd couple of politics.

"Republicans, Democrats, independents ? we all came together, because New Jersey is more important and our citizens are more important than any kind of politics at all," Christie said later as he introduced Obama.

The trip offered Obama a chance to showcase the widely praised Federal Emergency Management Agency at a time when attention has focused on the Internal Revenue Service and its targeting of conservative groups. The president was also able to draw attention to the kind of bipartisanship that has been harder to find in the nation's capital.

For Christie, the president's appearance was yet another way to showcase his beloved Jersey Shore. The Republican governor has been touting it throughout the Memorial Day weekend as a destination point that is back in business, and he broke a Guinness world record Friday by cutting a 5.5-mile-long ceremonial ribbon that symbolically tied together some of the towns hardest-hit by Sandy. The state has a $25 million marketing campaign to highlight the shore's resurgence in time for the summer season.

Both men reprised the remarkable bipartisan tableau they offered during Sandy's immediate aftermath, when Obama flew to New Jersey just days before the November election to witness the storm's wreckage. Politically, the visit plays well for both men. Christie, seeking re-election this year, was able to stand shoulder to shoulder with a president popular among Democrats in a Democratic-leaning state. And Obama, dueling with congressional Republicans on a number of fronts, got to display common cause with a popular GOP stalwart.

To be sure, New Jersey is still rebuilding. Obama visited those regions that have been among the first to recover ? Christie ranks the recovery of the state's famous boardwalks as an eight on a scale of 10 but concedes that in other parts of the state many homeowners are still rebuilding six months after the devastating superstorm struck. Overall, the storm caused $38 billion in damages in the state, and harmed or wrecked 360,000 homes or apartment units.

In Washington on Tuesday, first lady Michelle Obama welcomed students from two New Jersey schools damaged by the storm to the White House garden, where they gathered fresh vegetables and made flatbread pizza along with students from other states.

"It hasn't been that easy, but you guys have managed to get through the school year way on top of the game, and we're just very proud of you," Mrs. Obama told the students from New Jersey.

But the coastal recovery is a big potential boon for the state, where tourism is a nearly $40 billion industry.

"I could see being a little younger and having some fun on the Jersey Shore," Obama said to laughter. "I can't do that anymore. Maybe after I leave office."

For Obama, coming off a week that had the IRS in the crosshairs of a scandal, the trip also offered an opportunity to demonstrate the work of FEMA, whose response to disasters has been met with bipartisan praise.

Indeed, inside the White House, FEMA is perceived as an example of what's best about government. The agency, panned for its response under President George W. Bush to Hurricane Katrina in 2005, has made a turnaround under administrator Craig Fugate and has been commended for its work in disasters from the Joplin, Mo., tornado in 2011 to Sandy last year.

The visit also comes as Congress is away for a Memorial Day break, a weeklong recess that likely will silence the daily attention lawmakers, particularly Republicans, had been paying to the IRS political upheaval as well as the ongoing debate about the fatal attacks at the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, last year and an investigation of media leaks that has stirred opposition from the media and many lawmakers.

___

Associated Press writers Angela Delli Santi in Asbury Park, N.J., and Josh Lederman and Stacy A. Anderson in Washington contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-28-US-Obama/id-75d88cb262ba4aa7a6bcfef88e609af2

jessie j gillian anderson florida lotto Wade Robson powerball numbers American Idol 2013 mega millions

মঙ্গলবার, ২৮ মে, ২০১৩

Will justices take note of new gay marriage laws?

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Three U.S. states and three countries have approved same-sex unions just in the two months since the Supreme Court heard arguments over gay marriage, raising questions about how the developments might affect the justices' consideration of the issue.

In particular, close observers on both sides of the gay marriage divide are wondering whether Justice Anthony Kennedy's view could be decisive since he often has been the swing vote on the high court.

It is always possible that Justice Kennedy is reading the newspapers and is impressed with the progress," said Michael Klarman, a Harvard University law professor and author of a recent book on the gay marriage fight.

In earlier cases on gay rights and the death penalty, Kennedy has cited the importance of changing practices, both nationally and around the world.

The court is expected to rule by late June in two cases involving same-sex marriage. One is a challenge to California's voter-approved Proposition 8 that defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman. The other seeks to strike down a portion of the federal Defense of Marriage Act that denies to legally married same-sex couples a range of benefits that generally are available to married heterosexuals.

The justices took an initial vote in the days after hearing arguments in the two cases in late March. The senior justice on the winning side and the senior justice in dissent assigned opinions based on those votes. But while that first vote is important, it is not the end of the process; justices' assessments of a case can shift subtly or, in some cases, dramatically.

In 1992, Kennedy initially drew the assignment to write a majority opinion for five justices allowing prayers at public school graduations. In the end, he ended up writing the opinion for a different five-justice majority striking down the graduation prayers. According to several accounts, Kennedy simply changed his mind during the writing process.

Current events also can find their way into opinions. Last year, Justice Antonin Scalia's fiery dissent from a court ruling that watered down Arizona's crackdown on immigration included a reference to comments President Barack Obama made at a news conference that took place between the argument in the case in April and the announcement of the decision in June.

There is no way to know at this point whether anything similar will happen in the gay marriage cases, either of which could be decided on technical legal grounds that would say little about the court's view of the issue. But there has been no shortage of action.

In a 10-day span earlier this month, lawmakers in Delaware, Minnesota and Rhode Island gave final approval to bills to legalize same-sex marriages. Minnesota was the last of the three to act, on May 13, and when Gov. Mark Dayton signed the bill into law the following day, Minnesota became the 12th state, plus the District of Columbia, to approve same-sex unions. The other nine are: Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and Washington.

Internationally, French President Francois Holland signed a law this month making France the 14th country to recognize gay marriages. Uruguay and New Zealand took similar steps in April.

And further change could come soon. The Illinois Senate has approved a gay marriage bill that now is pending in the state House in advance of the May 31 end of the legislative session. Gov. Pat Quinn has said he would sign it.

In Great Britain, a bill to legalize same-sex weddings in England and Wales easily cleared the House of Commons and will be debated in the House of Lords beginning in July.

Both sides in the high court gay marriage debate say the recent events reinforce arguments they made to the court in March.

Defenders of limiting marriage to heterosexuals say the justices need only look at the change in marriage laws to see that there is no reason for them to step in and declare a national rule in favor of gay marriage that would upend constitutional bans in 30 states and laws prohibiting same-sex unions in roughly half a dozen others.

"These developments provide yet further evidence...that the claim that gays and lesbians are politically powerless and that the courts therefore have some special role in subjecting classifications affecting them to strict scrutiny is baseless," said Ed Whelan, an opponent of same-sex marriage who is president of the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

Jim Campbell, a lawyer for Alliance Defending Freedom, said the court should not short-circuit a vigorous national debate.

"The vast majority of the states have decided to retain the traditional view of marriage that has existed throughout Western civilization. This decision belongs to the people and should be decided by the people," Campbell said.

Mary Bonauto, the director of the Civil Rights Project at Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, said the assessment of the political clout of gays and lesbians is misleading. The number of states allowing same-sex weddings has doubled in less than a year and now represents 18 percent of the U.S. population. If Illinois joins in and the court were to affirm a lower court decision that struck down the California ban, just over a third of the population would live in 14 states and the District of Columbia where gay marriage would be legal.

That's not nearly enough, especially in the context of a decades-long struggle by gays and lesbians to win the right to marry, Bonauto said. "These states moving in the direction of marriage is a far cry from all states doing it," she said.

Klarman said gays and lesbians have made huge political strides in "deep blue" Democratic states.

"It is absolutely true that the political process continues to work and it is working with extraordinary rapidity," he said. By some estimates, in roughly 10 years majorities in all but a handful of Southern states will favor gay marriage.

"The only argument against this position is, what about the gay couple in Mississippi?" Klarman said, pointing to a state where the prohibition on same-sex unions is likely to endure.

The same argument could have been made, and was, during the court's deliberations over the Brown v. Board of Education case that outlawed segregation in public schools, he said.

Justice Stanley Reed, a Southerner, suggested that the court "let things play themselves out," although he eventually joined in the unanimous opinion in Brown.

During argument in the California case, Kennedy strongly suggested that he was not about to give gay marriage proponents what they are asking for, a decision that would allow same-sex couples to wed everywhere in the United States.

But Klarman wonders whether Kennedy might consider his legacy and the fact that at 76 years old, he might not be on the court for the next big gay marriage case. "He knows that today, he can write the opinion that would be the Brown of the gay rights movement," Klarman said.

___

Follow Mark Sherman on Twitter at www.twitter.com/shermancourt

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/justices-note-gay-marriage-laws-124418742.html

ricky rubio day light savings time peter paul and mary edgar rice burroughs dallas clark litter marinol

সোমবার, ২৭ মে, ২০১৩

Spark of Celestial Fire: It's the matter of 'Acknowledgement'

Niki had tea every evening in the hostel mess and cribbed about its taste until one day she made an effort of explaining the taste of the tea to the mess worker. From the very next day she was more than excited to have tea that brought back the memories of her home. Most of us like Niki crib and complain about every single action around us that we do not like, but how many of us really care to fix it?

We make sure we tell our friends and family about a bad experience we have had either with an auto driver, shop keeper, customer care or for that matter with any product we have used, but when it comes to letting the person who can fix it, we simply ignore. On my way to office every day, I used to take a bus from my hostel and the fare of which was Rs. 8 for which I paid Rs. 10 for an exchange of Rs. 2 from the conductor. My destination was only three stops away. Most of the times the conductor would return Rs. 5 (out of Rs.10) and would not hand over the ticket. This initially appeared to me that the conductor was forgetful until I realized that this money is going into his pocket and not to the government. Ever since then I asked for a ticket, take a picture of the vehicle number and send it with the story to the chief traffic officer who controlled such activities. I have not stayed for a long in this place to see if there is any change, but the officer acknowledged me that surprise-checks would be arranged to avoid such acts.

Indians have been taught since childhood on compromising and not complaining. If a friend in school does not give you enough space on the bench ? compromise, if a husband ill treats you ? compromise, if the government does not lay proper roads ? compromise, if the new headset gives bad quality music ? compromise. Why don?t we confront the one who can repair them? It has been deep rooted in our minds that being vocal would not yield any results. Japanese car maker Nissan voluntarily called back over 22,000 units of its small car Micra and the sedan Sunny in India due to a faulty braking system. Ironically, the spokesperson said that they have not received any complaint in India due to the faulty part.

We sometimes complain about the products we have purchased that turned out to be faulty for the value of money and often forget that it also applies to relationships. Be it a smile of the security guard every morning while you enter office, a mail from your internet service provider seeking feedback, your beautician in the parlor or a colleague in office ? acknowledge them. This only makes things simpler and more comfortable. I have not known that my rate of speech is high until people told me that they don?t understand me when I speak, this solved the problem ? as simple as that.

In simple words ? Just open your mouth and acknowledge whether or not you like something. ?I don?t have time for this? is merely an excuse.

Let me know of what you did to acknowledge someone!

Source: http://peppyontherocks.blogspot.com/2013/05/its-matter-of-acknowledgement.html

obama fbi Watertown Ma Krystle Campbell Pressure Cooker MIT Shooting NFL schedule 2013

Obama, N.J. governor to reunite Tuesday for storm tour

By Jeff Mason

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will join New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Tuesday for a tour of the Jersey Shore damaged by Superstorm Sandy, replaying a scene from last year that some observers believe helped Obama win re-election.

Christie, a Republican, gave Obama, a Democrat, blunt praise for his response to the devastating storm that hit the U.S. East Coast just days before the November 6 election.

"I cannot thank the president enough for his personal concern and his compassion," Christie said during an October 31 tour together of the damaged areas.

Though Christie supported the Republican presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, in the 2012 race, his compliments to the Democratic incumbent were seen as a boost to Obama.

The president could probably use the help again.

Obama has spent the last two weeks trying to get past a series of controversies over his administration's handling of the attacks in Benghazi, Libya, the targeting of journalists in leak probes, and the response to revelations that the Internal Revenue Service gave extra scrutiny to conservative-leaning groups.

This will be his second tour of a storm-battered area in as many days. On Sunday, Obama traveled to Oklahoma to view the damage from a tornado.

The president has sought to portray his administration as being quick and effective at responding to natural disasters, in contrast to his predecessor, George W. Bush, whose administration was widely criticized for its handling of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans in 2005.

The White House said Obama and Christie would view the recovery efforts from Sandy, including preparations by local businesses ahead of the important summer tourist season.

"The president ... will visit with families and business owners who have shown such resilience in the face of the destructive storm, highlight the extensive rebuilding efforts to date, and underscore his administration's ongoing commitment to stand with the impacted communities as the important work of recovery continues," the White House said.

Christie is a potential Republican candidate for president in 2016. After struggling with obesity for much of his adult life, Christie said earlier this month he underwent lap band surgery to lose weight.

Obama, a lanky exercise fanatic, cannot run for president again.

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-jersey-governor-reunite-tuesday-storm-tour-211954751.html

Redbull Stratos steve mcnair vice presidential debate Martha Raddatz Chris Lighty JJ Watt jerry sandusky

US, China set the stage for Obama-Xi summit

U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, second from right, and Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi, second from left, talk during their meeting at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, Monday, May 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, Pool)

U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, second from right, and Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi, second from left, talk during their meeting at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, Monday, May 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, Pool)

U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, left, and Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi, right, shake hands before their meeting at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, Monday, May 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, Pool)

U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon, left, and Chinese State Councilor Yang Jiechi shake hands before their meeting at Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing, China, Monday, May 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan, Pool)

(AP) ? U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon began discussions with Chinese officials Monday for a summit between their two presidents that will confront divisive security issues while trying to overcome a growing distrust between the governments.

Donilon and State Councilor Yang Jiechi, China's senior foreign policy official, said next month's summit is a chance for the U.S.'s Barack Obama and China's Xi Jinping to work through problems. Though they did not identify those challenges in their public remarks, ties are strained across the board, from longstanding differences over Iran's and North Korea's nuclear programs to new disputes over cyber-attacks and China's more assertive pursuit of territorial claims against U.S. allies Japan and the Philippines.

In a sign that both sides want to stem the drift besetting ties, the summit now scheduled for June 7-8 is taking place months earlier than the two presidents were supposed to meet. It's their first face-to-face meeting since Obama's re-election and Xi's promotion to head of the Communist Party last November. The setting ? at the private estate of the late publishing tycoon Walter Annenberg in southern California ? is supposed to be informal, giving Xi and Obama and chance to build a rapport.

That Xi agreed to an informal summit has been seen by Chinese and U.S. experts as positive. His predecessors always preferred formal state visits, splashing images of White House ceremonies and banquets in the Chinese media to bolster their standing as world statesmen.

Good will aside, distrust has deepened in relations in recent years as the U.S. feels its world leadership challenged and China, its power growing, demands greater deference to its interests and a larger say over global rule-setting. Chinese officials and state media regularly say Washington is thwarting China's rise, strengthening alliances in Asia to hem in Beijing and discouraging Chinese investment in the U.S. on national security issues.

The official Xinhua News Agency reported Monday that late last week battle ships and submarines from the Chinese navy's three fleets staged a war game in the South China Sea. The area is already a flashpoint, with Beijing's aggressive claims to disputed islands having rattled the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei.

On Sunday, Li Keqiang ? on a visit to Germany in his first trip abroad as China's premier ? pressed China's claim to a cluster of East China Sea islands held by Japan. Traveling to Potsdam, where allied powers declared the terms for Japan's surrender 68 years ago in the waning days of World War II, Li told reporters that Japan must not "deny or glorify the history of fascist aggression."

The aggrieved sense emanating from Beijing goes beyond recent flare-ups in old territorial disputes. The website of the People's Daily, the Communist Party's flagship newspaper, is running a recurring column that takes a critical look at Americans and their institutions. First called "Immoral, dishonest Americans," the title of the column was changed to "The Americans you don't know about."

State Councilor Yang in welcoming Donilon said his trip helps "in strengthening the bilateral trust and cooperation." Looking toward the summit, Donilon said, "The meeting will be an important opportunity for our presidents to have in-depth discussions about US-China relations, and a wide range of global and regional challenges facing both our countries."

One item on Donilon's summit agenda is the guest list. Xi will stop in California after formal visits to Trinidad and Tobago and Mexico where he will be accompanied by a large group of senior officials. If that entourage descends in full on the Sunnylands estate, U.S. diplomats said the White House might feel the need to bring similarly large numbers, making the summit less intimate.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-27-China-US/id-fad07b476444485b803211fc2eae5c70

joel ward mock draft north country brian mcknight sbux nfldraft asante samuel

Weight Loss News Headlines - Yahoo! News

By Genevra Pittman NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More babies born via cesarean section grow up to be heavy kids and teens than those delivered vaginally, according to a new study of more than 10,000 UK infants. Eleven-year-olds delivered by C-section, for example, were 83 percent more likely to be overweight or obese than??

Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/weightloss

Ravi Shankar Geminid meteor shower right to work Clackamas Town Center 12 12 12 Anne Hathaway Wardrobe Malfunction Adrienne Maloof

রবিবার, ২৬ মে, ২০১৩

Finding: Collaborative Economy Startups and Social Networks ...

I?m continuing my research on business disruptions, with a honed in focus on the Collaborative Economy, you can read all my posts on how this impacts corporations. One of my thesis that I sought to test is the following: ?Sharing startups in the collaborative economy are using social technologies?. To find out, we conducted research by analyzing 30 of the features on well known collaborative economy startups to find out the differences and similarities.

What did we find? These sharing websites are utilizing a great deal of social technologies, but instead of sharing ideas, they?re sharing products and services. In fact, nearly 3/4 had social profiles and over half already had Facebook Connect, we should expect those rates to only increase as it spurs adoption. Like online social business communities hosted by Jive, Lithium, Bazaarvoice, Adobe, Mzinga, Telligent, GetSatisfaction or Uservoice, nearly 3/4 had reputation features to rate and rank experiences or other members.

Above: See how AirBnb utilizes Facebook connect to find trusted reviews, and hosts who you may know and trust.

Above: We tallied the social features and integration of the collaborative economy startups and found striking similarities

Above: As social data spills over to sharing economy startups, these markets will only further intertwine.

What role do corporations play if customers buy once then share with each other?
This is exactly the question I plan to answer. Last week, I shared on video how these markets are coming together to the Silicon Valley Business Journal, next week I?ll be keynoting LeWeb (after Etsy) and launching a report on this same topic. If you are in a social business career at a corporation, social software startup, or agency, you must pay attention to the sharing movement as this is the next phase in social business, Katie Soo sees it.

If you are in social business, you must pay attention to the sharing movement ?this is the next phase of your career.

Source: http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/2013/05/26/finding-collaborative-economy-startups-and-social-networks-intertwined/

dingo nba all star weekend malin akerman jeff carter chomp national enquirer kate gosselin

Samsung reportedly supplying OLED displays for Google Glass

(Reuters) - A magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck Northern California on Thursday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The epicenter of the quake was 6 miles northwest of the town of Greenville, and near the smaller community of Canyondam, the USGS said. There were no immediate reports of injuries. Allen Shephard, a hunting and fishing guide at Quail Lodge at Lake Almanor in Canyondam, said the quake knocked him "right off the couch and onto the floor." The floor of the lodge was littered with broken dishware, and cabinets were in disarray, said Shephard, 62. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-reportedly-supplying-oled-displays-google-glass-020055007.html

katy perry Rihanna Katy Perry Grammys 2013 Ed Sheeran Fun ll cool j Presidents Day 2013

শনিবার, ২৫ মে, ২০১৩

Hagel: Cadets must stamp out sex assault scourge

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel arrives for a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy, Saturday, May 25, 2013, in West Point, N.Y. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel arrives for a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy, Saturday, May 25, 2013, in West Point, N.Y. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel arrives for a a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy on Saturday, May 25, 2013, in West Point, N.Y. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel speaks during a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. on Saturday, May 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, center left, and Superintendent Lt. Gen. David Huntoon, Jr., center right, stand for the national anthem during a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. on Saturday, May 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel hands diplomas to cadets during a graduation and commissioning ceremony at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, N.Y. on Saturday, May 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Mike Groll)

(AP) ? Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point on Saturday that they must stamp out the scourge of sexual assault in the military.

A day after President Barack Obama delivered a similar edict to U.S. Naval Academy graduates, Hagel's message comes amid a series of widespread incidents of sexual misconduct across the armed services in recent months and a new report showing that the problem is growing. The challenge is particularly poignant for West Point, since an Army sergeant was charged earlier in the week with secretly photographing and videotaping at least a dozen women at the upper New York state academy, including in a bathroom.

"Sexual harassment and sexual assault in the military are a profound betrayal ? a profound betrayal ? of sacred oaths and sacred trusts," Hagel told 1,007 graduating cadets during a cold, rainy outdoor ceremony. "This scourge must be stamped out. We are all accountable and responsible for ensuring that this happens. We cannot fail the Army or America. We cannot fail each other and we cannot fail the men and women that we lead."

Hagel, who served in the Army in Vietnam, took the opportunity to reflect on his own time in uniform and the lessons that he said must resonate as the soldiers take on the job of helping to transform the military. It was his first graduation address as defense chief.

The new second lieutenants, he said, must be the generation of leaders who will stop the debilitating and insidious threats of suicide, sexual assault and drug and alcohol abuse that are hurting the all-volunteer force.

Wounded twice during his roughly one year at war, Hagel has two Purple Hearts and is the first man to become secretary of defense after serving only in the enlisted corps. Reflecting on his military service, Hagel said his time in the Army shaped him forever.

"In Vietnam, I learned that combat is a furnace that can consume you, or it can forge you into something better and stronger than you were before," said Hagel, who took over the job as Pentagon chief at the end of February.

He also told the graduates that they must begin to build the future Army as the service recovers from the strains of more than a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Future conflicts, he said, will take on new and unfamiliar forms, and the military must be ready to face them even as budget cuts force the service to curtail training and trim the number of soldiers from a wartime high of about 570,000 to 490,000.

But he said that readiness will be strained by health and social problems.

Pentagon leaders have been struggling to deal with what they have come to call an epidemic of sexual assaults in the military. A Pentagon report released this month estimated that as many as 26,000 military service members may have been sexually assaulted last year and that thousands of victims are unwilling to come forward despite new oversight and assistance programs. The estimate was based largely on anonymous surveys.

According to the report, the number of sexual assaults actually reported by military service members rose 6 percent to 3,374 in 2012. And nearly 800 of those simply sought help but declined to file complaints against their attackers.

Spurred on by furious Congress members, the Defense Department has ordered the services to come up with ways to curb the problem and better help the victims.

In the latest case, Sgt. 1st Class Michael McClendon is facing charges of dereliction of duty, mistreatment, entering a women's bathroom without notice, and taking and possessing inappropriate photos and videos of at least a dozen women who were naked or in various states of undress.

The women have been notified by the Army about the matter.

Despite the news this week, female cadets interviewed after the ceremony said they felt secure during their four years at the academy on the Hudson River.

"We've had issues here and there that the press really highlights. But overall I know that my classmates, my friends, we all feel very safe and we do think that was the exception," said Abigail Osman, of Hershey Pa.

Jordan Reilly, who lives near Memphis, Tenn., said the academy is doing a good job addressing sexual harassment, especially over the last year.

"The friends that I've made here, I know that they will protect me. A lot of them see themselves as my older brothers and so I feel safe," Reilly said.

Still, some cadets and parents said they were glad Hagel bought up sexual misconduct in his speech. Stacy Davis, of Madison, Wis., said that as a mother with one daughter in the Marines and another who graduated West Point on Saturday, she feels it's important to talk about sexual harassment openly.

"That's the main thing, everyone has to be talking about it," Davis said.

McClendon was charged May 14 with violating four articles of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, but some of the allegations date back to 2009. He has been transferred to Fort Drum. It isn't immediately clear if he has a lawyer.

___

Baldor contributed from Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-25-West%20Point-Hagel/id-d799fd55f23e4e6ab8f5102210b7ec2b

Butterball mashed potatoes Apple Black Friday how to cook a turkey emma stone Frys tryptophan

Pet Talk: Crisis response dogs help humans heal | OregonLive.com

Every other Friday, Damascus resident Julie Burk and her 2-year-old Akita, Zipporah, can be found at the student center at Oregon Health & Science University.

Zipporah, who resembles a dog-like teddy bear, patiently allows students and staff members to pet her, play with her and even brush her teeth.

?She definitely brings a calming attitude in here,? says Beau Fischer, an OHSU pool operator and laborer 2 who looks forward to his Friday ?fix? with Zipporah.

She and Burk are a registered Pet Partners team, but Zipporah is also a crisis response dog - what Burk likes to call an ?extreme therapy dog.?

They volunteer with Eugene-based National Animal Assisted Crisis Response, a nonprofit organization that responds to natural disasters, campus shootings and other crisis situations.

Burk, a certified veterinary technician who also serves on the NAACR board, first learned about the benefits of therapy work while studying exotic animals in college.

She recalls taking a blue and gold macaw into a care center, and a man who hadn?t spoken or communicated in six months burst out laughing. After that, Burk was hooked.

What is crisis response?

Several of the horrific events over the past two decades made it clear that the therapy dogs and their handlers responding to help in those situations weren?t fully equipped, says NAACR president Connie Jantzen.

Both humans and canines who provided comfort to survivors of the 9/11 attacks, the Thurston High School shooting and the Oklahoma City bombing showed signs of post-traumatic stress, such as over-sleeping, over-eating and self-medicating.

?The recognition that we needed to prepare these teams for the environment ? both the physical and the emotional environment ? became obvious at that point,? Jantzen says.

Eugene resident Cindy Ehlers discovered this firsthand after she and her dog responded to the Thurston shooting, so she founded HOPE Animal-Assisted Crisis Response, and then NAACR, to provide more specialized training.

While dogs in both crisis response and standard animal-assisted therapy dogs essentially provide the same service ? fostering a sense of comfort and safety ? the biggest difference is the environment in which they work.

Therapy dogs and their handlers usually arrive on a regular schedule to climate-controlled buildings, and the people they comfort are usually dealing with a routine range of emotions.

?With crisis response work, there?s nothing normal,? Jantzen says. ?You don?t know when you?re going, the dog is working in unfamiliar surroundings and the surroundings may be damaged.?

What?s more, the people they?ve come to comfort may be experiencing intense emotions following a disaster or crisis situation. Survivors or victims may react in a variety of ways, ranging from withdrawing from friends or becoming argumentative and loud.

?The dogs have to be able to understand those intense emotions and bring them back to a feeling of calm,? Jantzen says.

Crisis response training

To be eligible for crisis response work, dogs must already be a registered therapy dog, Burk says.

Training to become a crisis response team involves a slew of courses on CPR and emotional first-aid, self-care techniques and ongoing training sessions.

To get certified, Burk and Zipporah went through an intensive three-day course that involved exposing the dogs to a variety of stimuli: for instance, meeting with firefighters to familiarize them to fire gear and the sounds of a diesel engine.

They went to the airport, where Zipporah passed through a metal detector, rode in an elevator, and boarded a plane.

The training also included a Red Cross-type shelter simulation with people of all ages, from crying toddlers to elderly people with walkers.

The goal was to see how well the dogs respond to new stimuli, while handlers were evaluated on how they address new situations with their dogs.

Teams also conduct ongoing trainings with local emergency response agencies.

Zipporah was certified in crisis response in September and is currently qualified to respond to a local disaster (within driving distance). Once she does a local response, she?s eligible to respond to a national situation.

Burk?s group provides similar work to that provided by the Lutheran Church Charities K-9 Comfort Dogs, which responded to the Newtown massacre and the Boston Marathon bombing.

The main difference is that the National Animal Assisted Crisis Response teams follow FEMA?s Incident Command System, a standardized system that establishes specific protocol for procedures and communications.

They must be invited by an agency before they respond. (Burk had hoped to respond to the Clackamas Town Center shooting in December but was unable to secure a formal invite).

Jantzen emphasizes that situations don?t need to be disasters or crises in order for the dogs to respond. They?ll work with autistic children, at-risk families or crime victims.

The dogs are sometimes able to connect with people in a way that other humans cannot; when someone is traumatized, they may shut down and withdraw from the world.

?It really breaks through the isolation someone might have built around themselves,? she says. ?When you can help a person to restore those relationships, they?re on the road to recovery.?

Burk has seen first-hand just how effective the dogs can be. Her previous crisis response dog, Zadok, went to Virginia Tech and Northern Illinois University to comfort those affected by the campus shootings.

The students would approach them as they cruised around campus or attended basketball games, where lots of students gathered. They were free to pet Zadok, cry or just talk.

While each has its own style, both dogs have a knack for nosing out people who need help the most.

?I do therapy work because I love it,? Burk says, ?and I see the difference the dogs make.?

How to get involved: To become a dog and handler team with National Animal Assisted Crisis Response, you should already have a certified therapy dog and be comfortable working together as a team.

If you?re interested in joining National Animal Assisted Crisis Response, you can e-mail Julie Burk at akitaboy01@comcast.net or contact the national chapter at nationalaacr@gmail.com.

Even if you don?t have a dog, you can still help. The National Animal Assisted Crisis Response is a volunteer-based nonprofit organization, and handlers pay for all traveling expenses out of pocket. You can donate online at nationalaacr.org.

Find more pet news by following Pet Talk on?Facebook?and?Twitter.

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/pets/index.ssf/2013/05/pet_talk_crisis_response_dogs.html

nicki minaj beez in the trap video food network f/a 18 f 18 crash virginia tenebrae the lake house petrino arkansas

5 climbers missing on world's 3rd highest mountain

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) ? A Nepalese official says five climbers are missing and feared dead on the world's third highest mountain.

Bad weather on Mount Kanchenjunga was hampering a search and preventing a rescue helicopter from reaching the base camp.

Mountaineering Department official Dipendra Poudel said Friday the climbers were descending from the summit when they were believed to have slipped at 7,900 meters (25,900 feet) altitude.

Two climbers are Hungarian, two are Nepalese and another is Korean.

Kanchenjunga is 8,586 meters (28,162 feet) high.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/5-climbers-missing-worlds-3rd-highest-mountain-054100177.html

j crew san francisco 49ers san francisco 49ers stan musial Mega 49ers lance armstrong