Wednesday, July 31, 2013

1 of 2 northern Indiana teens out of hospital nearly month after Florida parasailing crash


We also have more stories about:
(click the phrases to see a list)

Subjects:

Places:

?

HUNTINGTON, Indiana ? One of the two northern Indiana teenagers badly hurt in a Florida parasailing crash is out of the hospital nearly a month after the accident.

The parents of 17-year-old Alexis Fairchild say she was released Tuesday from an Indianapolis hospital and returned to the family's Huntington home.

Fairchild faces another surgery in a couple months, along with outpatient physical and speech therapy, her parents said in a statement. Her injuries included broken bones in the upper part of her spine, a skull fracture and a brain injury.

"Our daughter still has a long road to recovery," Michael and Angela Fairchild said.

Fairchild and 17-year-old friend Sidney Good of Roanoke were hurt July 1 after a rope tethering them to a boat snapped and strong winds slammed them into a condominium building, a power line and a parked car at Panama City Beach.

The Coast Guard has said severe weather and the boat's proximity to shore were major factors in the accident.

Good was moved to an Indianapolis rehabilitation hospital last week after surgery for facial fractures.

Both girls were hospitalized in critical condition in the days after the accident but recovered enough to be transferred to Indianapolis a couple weeks later.

"Words cannot express the gratitude we feel for all the prayers and support we have received from around the world," the Fairchilds said. "We would like to thank those who have arranged fundraising events and upcoming blood drives and motorcycle rides in our hometown in honor of our daughter and Sidney Good."

Source: http://www.tribtown.com/view/story/806a75d1b4844891b1c89d31a36b63f2/IN--Parasailing-Crash-Indiana

nfl free agents 2012 encyclopedia brittanica nfl free agency jonbenet ramsey jason campbell doobie brothers jennie garth peter facinelli

Increased fluctuation in blood pressure linked to impaired cognitive function in older people

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Higher variability in visit-to-visit blood pressure readings, independent of average blood pressure, could be related to impaired cognitive function in old age in those already at high risk of cardiovascular disease, suggests a new article.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/vU-Z6CHyYp8/130730193528.htm

12/21/12 winter solstice Jabari Parker 2012 australia Brothers Grimm Tate Stevens

The Daytona Cubs minor league team present a movie trailer on the exciting world of pulling tarps over baseball fields...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Jul 29, 2013 @ 10:43pm ET)

9:00 PM: MASN's Dan Kolko has the story of Kent Wilson, a Washington Nationals fan who has been giving away season tickets on Craigslist in honor of his late father who passed away from liver cancer.

8:45 PM: Matt Calkins of the San Diego Union Tribune profiles Gizelle Studevent, a former Penn State women's basketball player & high school bullying victim who began an anti-bullying program for State College schools in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.

8:30 PM: The Chicago Blackhawks say they will be selling limited edition packages of melted United Center ice from this past Stanley Cup championship season.

8:15 PM: About 64 people were stranded for over a hour on a WindSeeker ride above the Carowinds amusement park near Charlotte on Sunday. The 301-foot-tall ride suffered the same malfunction just over a year ago.

8:00 PM: Parts of Pete Rose Way in Cincinnati will be closed this week as a new pedestrian bridge is being constructed between Great American Ball Park & U.S. Bank Arena.

7:45 PM: Over 600 people from 37 countries gathered at the Riviera casino in Las Vegas on Saturday to compete in the Rubik's Cube World Championships.

7:30 PM: Sports Business Daily's Austin Karp reports that Sunday's U.S. vs. Panama Gold Cup final soccer match on Fox earned a 1.7 rating, just ahead of ESPN's Cardinals vs. Braves Sunday Night Baseball telecast.

7:15 PM: Unsatisfied with the team's recent performance, officials for the Red Star Belgrade soccer club has told its players to stop partying at night, stop drinking beer & stop eating meat pies before practice.

7:00 PM: Jacksonville Jaguars QB Blaine Gabbert left Monday's practice after suffering a sprained ankle. The team says Gabbert will be re-evaluated in the next two days.

6:45 PM: WDSU reports former Cleveland Cavaliers player Daniel "Boobie" Gibson is facing battery charges in New Orleans. Gibson was allegedly involved in an incident at the Essence Music Festival earlier this month.

6:30 PM: Alabama freshman defensive end Dee Liner appeared on a photo on Instagram holding a large wad of cash. Liner tweeted about reaction to the photo: "Don't judge me when u have no clue what I have been through!!!"

6:15 PM: Chicago Bears defensive end Turk McBride is out for the season after suffering a ruptured Achilles tendon during Monday's practice.

6:00 PM: KTLA reports at least eight people were arrested after rioting broke out in Huntington Beach, California at the close of the U.S. Open of Surfing on Sunday. Rioters broke windows, looted stores, damaged police cars & pushed over portable toilets.

5:45 PM: The ESPN-created Texas-centric Longhorn Network will televise three UT football games this season: August 31 vs. New Mexico State, September 14 vs. Mississippi & November 3 vs. Kansas.

5:30 PM: Former Ohio State & current Oakland Raiders QB Terrelle Pryor admitted during practice Sunday: "I never really knew how to throw a football before. It's coming along. I'm getting way better."

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=54525

Jaguars new uniforms jenelle evans jenelle evans glenn beck AJ Clemente Thor 2 Trailer Administrative Professionals Day

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Bluetooth LE + Android and why the smart tag revolutions is upon us

On Monday Texas Instruments introduced a new Android 4.3 app that enables anyone to create Bluetooth LE-powered sensor applications. Last week a startup called Tile raised $2.6 million to help people use Bluetooth low energy and the Tile app to find their stuff when it?s lost. Services like Tile, Davies, Fla.-based StickNFind or Proximo are popping up like daisies and the overwhelmed consumers might be wondering why.

The answer can be found back in May, when Google said it would support Bluetooth LE natively in the 4.3 version Jelly Bean of its mobile operating system. To do this, Google had to essentially rebuild its Bluetooth software stack, but it was rapidly becoming untenable to put it off any longer as more and more Bluetooth LE gadgets hit the market.

This upgrade suddenly opened up a world of opportunity for developers building apps for connected devices using Bluetooth LE ? which has become an essential protocol for the internet of things. Apple, which has been supporting Bluetooth LE natively since the iPhone 4S finally will have some real competition from Android when it comes to the internet of things. And perhaps Android users will get first dibs on some cool new apps and services.

This is great news for those of us who are toting Android devices, although we still have to wait for handsets supporting Jelly Bean 4.3 to hit the market. Right now the new Nexus 7 tablet and select Nexus hardware are the only devices out there officially supporting it, but a tablet isn?t the ideal format for those trying to manage connected door locks. Thankfully, more devices are expected to hit the market in the fall. Android-toting internet of things junkies may be wise to rush their upgrade.

What?s most compelling about these new crop of sensor tags whether they are raw silicon or integrated into a product like Tile or StickNFind is how malleable the technology can be. It can go far beyond finding lost keys. In a podcast coming out tomorrow I discuss how people could use Tile?s app and sensor to create a peer-to-peer network that could mimic the functionality of GPS.

Meanwhile, in an article on StickNFind, Mari Silbey writes of other applications made possible when Bluetooth sensors are everywhere ? from geolocation capabilities to enabling context clues to an app. From her story:

The commercial potential is huge, both for the company?s existing tracking application, and for its forthcoming task-launcher feature. The launcher will automate smartphone functions based on proximity to a Bluetooth sticker. Location plus automation means smarter homes, cars, factories and more.

One developer has suggested creating an application that sends out an automatic check-in email when a user gets home. Another wants to prevent texting while driving by setting a lock on smartphone keyboards that activates when a user gets into a car with a Bluetooth sticker in it.

Such interactions occurring behind the scenes will help us take connectivity beyond remote access and control of devices into something closer to the predictive and automated internet we?re hoping to build. And unlike older-generation technologies such as RFID (too proprietary) or NFC (not build into handsets), Bluetooth is ubiquitous enough that some of the sensor-powered dreams of the future could become reality soon.

Updated at 11:30 am to correct Texas Instruments? new offering.

Source: http://gigaom.com/2013/07/29/bluetooth-le-android-and-why-the-smart-tag-revolutions-is-upon-us/

the fray national anthem dallas tornado oikos kentucky wildcats oakland school shooting nike nfl jerseys katie couric

Hoosier Ryan Newman wins Brickyard 400 at Indy

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Ryan Newman fulfilled the childhood dream of so many who grew up in Indiana ? winning at storied Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Newman, from South Bend, ended a 49-race losing streak with Sunday's victory at the Brickyard, and he did it by beating Jimmie Johnson.

Again.

Newman set a NASCAR track record in knocking Johnson off the pole in qualifying, then used a fast final pit stop Sunday to snatch the win from the four-time Indianapolis winner.

The two were the class of the field ? they combined to lead 118 of the 160 laps ? but it was Johnson who dominated the race and appeared to be just a bit better. But Johnson pitted from the lead with 27 laps remaining and it was a slow final stop for the Hendrick Motorsports crew.

Newman pitted after that and took only two tires to move into the lead after the green-flag stops cycled through the field. The closest Johnson would get to him again was when he paid a congratulatory visit to Newman in Victory Lane.

Newman was remarkably composed as he took the checkered flag and in Victory Lane.

"I don't realize it yet. It's a dream come true," he said. "It can't hit you all at once, it's not good enough. It will take a week or so for it to sink in."

The victory comes as Newman is looking for a job.

Stewart-Haas Racing has signed Kevin Harvick to join the team next season, and team co-owner Tony Stewart informed Newman two weeks ago he won't be brought back in 2014. It didn't change the post-race mood, as Stewart hustled to Victory Lane, lifted Newman from behind and the two shared a long embrace.

"He just had an awesome weekend," Stewart said. "I kept looking up the board and watching and I was scared to ask where he was at and how big of a lead he had. I didn't want to jinx him. Just really proud of him ? he's a great teammate and an even better friend."

Johnson, the Sprint Cup Series points leader who was hoping to tie Formula One's Michael Schumacher as the only five-time winners in Indy history, finished 2.657 seconds behind Newman in second.

Kasey Kahne, Johnson's Hendrick Motorsports teammate, was third and Stewart was fourth as Chevrolet swept the top four spots. All four cars were also powered by Hendrick Motorsports.

Matt Kenseth was fifth in a Toyota and followed by Hendrick's Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon, as all four Hendrick entries landed inside the top seven. Earnhardt rallied from a loose wheel on the opening run of the race to grab the top-10 finish.

Joey Logano was eighth in a Ford, and followed by Juan Pablo Montoya and Kyle Busch, who picked up his first career win at the Brickyard in Saturday's Nationwide Series race.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hoosier-ryan-newman-wins-brickyard-400-indy-201230519.html

ashley olsen new apple tv sun flare love hewitt new ipad solar flare joseph kony 2012

Monday, July 29, 2013

Israel OK's prisoner release to clear way for peace talks

Ibraheem Abu Mustafa, Reuters

The mother of Palestinian Ateya Abu Moussa, who has been held prisoner by Israel for 20 years, reacts as she is hugged by her grandson after hearing news on the possible release of her son on July 28, 2013.

By Ori Lewis and Allyn Fisher-Ilan, Reuters

JERUSALEM?? Israel's cabinet on Sunday approved the release of 104 Arab prisoners to help restart peace talks with the Palestinians and end nearly three years of diplomatic stagnation.

Thirteen ministers in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition cabinet voted in favor, seven voted against and two abstained, a government official said.

"The cabinet has authorized the opening of diplomatic talks between Israel and the Palestinians," said a statement issued by the prime minister's office.

Netanyahu had earlier urged divided rightists in his cabinet to back the prisoner release, and postponed the weekly meeting of ministers by an hour to ensure a majority vote in favor.

"This moment is not easy for me, is not easy for the cabinet ministers, and is not easy especially for the bereaved families, whose feelings I understand," Netanyahu said in broadcast remarks at the start of the meeting, referring to families who have lost members in militant attacks.

"But there are moments in which tough decisions must be made for the good of the nation and this is one of those moments."

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has demanded the release of prisoners held since before a 1993 interim peace accord took effect. Israel has jailed thousands more Palestinians since then, many for carrying out deadly attacks.

The prisoner release would allow Netanyahu to sidestep other Palestinian demands, such as a halt to Jewish settlement expansion and a guarantee that negotiations over borders will be based on boundaries from before the 1967 Middle East war, when Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.

In any future deal, Israel wants to keep several settlement blocs and East Jerusalem, which it annexed as part of its capital in a move never recognized internationally.

Protests in Ramallah
Hundreds of protesters from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) group staged a rally against the resumption of peace talks in the West Bank city of Ramallah, the seat of Abbas's Palestinian Authority. They clashed with police and threw rocks.

PFLP activists also demonstrated in Gaza and chanted: "Listen Abbas, our land is not for sale ... The cause will never be resolved except by the rifle."

Ronen Zvulun, EPA

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives for the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on July 28, 2013. During the meeting, Netanyahu's cabinet approved a divisive Israeli decision to release 104 Arab prisoners in order to restart peace talks with the Palestinians.

In an appeal for public support posted on his Facebook page on Saturday night, Netanyahu said the prisoners would be freed in groups only after the negotiations?? set to last at least nine months?? begin.

The 22-member cabinet also discussed legislation that would require a referendum on any statehood deal reached with the Palestinians involving a withdrawal from land Israel captured in the 1967 war. It will be brought to parliament in coming days.

The U.S.-brokered talks, expected to reconvene in Washington as early as Tuesday, broke down in late 2010 in a dispute over Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank, which Palestinians say denies them a viable state.

Before the cabinet meeting, Netanyahu told ministers from his Likud party that Israel would pay a price if peace talks did not resume, according to one official who was there.

The latest diplomatic push follows months of intense shuttle diplomacy by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry who said a week ago the groundwork had been laid for a breakthrough, while setting no specific date for talks to restart.

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663303/s/2f438b33/sc/11/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C280C197352170Eisrael0Eoks0Eprisoner0Erelease0Eto0Eclear0Eway0Efor0Epeace0Etalks0Dlite/story01.htm

robert griffin iii dontari poe space shuttle nyc monkeypox nick perry 30 rock live nfl draft picks 2012

Indianapolis church mourns 3 who died in bus crash

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

Source: http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20130728/NEWS01/307280098/1002/NEWS01

Nicole Murphy Riley Keough Franz Kafka Homer Bailey Being Mary Jane Kate Stoltzfus Sloane Stephens

Hoosier Ryan Newman wins Brickyard 400 at Indy

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? A born and bred Hoosier, Ryan Newman spent his childhood racing everywhere from Anderson to Winchester and every short track he could find in a state mad about racing.

He graduated from Purdue and landed a summer job working in Jeff Gordon's old race shop in Pittsboro. One of the perks? He got to live in the shop and sleep alongside the cars.

And like many Indiana kids, he revered Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the track he first visited in 1986 and later accidentally stumbled upon NASCAR's inaugural 1992 test while out buying tires with his mother.

A win at the famed Brickyard? That would be a dream come true for the South Bend native.

Newman made the boyhood dream a cool reality, taking the checkered flag Sunday to end a 49-race winless streak in front of his home state fans. His parents, who fueled his love of racing and took him to the 500 as a kid, joined him for his biggest win in Indiana.

Newman was as cool and collected in Victory Lane as he was on the track when he held off Jimmie Johnson. There were no tears, no quiver in his voice and no need to collect himself as Newman was strangely stoic.

"I don't show a lot of emotion, I think everybody knows that," said Newman, who likened the victory to his 2008 win at the Daytona 500. "I had the same emotion, the same thankfulness I did when I won the Daytona 500 because I feel everybody that has been a part of my racing career ? from people that bought my racing uniform, bought me a right rear tire, given us a credit card to get to some race track at some point in my career ? those are the people that helped me get to where I am today.

"To me, it's awesome to be here at Indy. It's awesome because it's my home state. I've raced go karts at pretty much every go kart track around here, been kicked out of half of them. Those are the things that make it special. I think about those things more than I carry the emotion on my cheeks."

So the emotion was seen in father Greg, who spotted for Newman on Sunday, and his mother, Diane.

Newman kept it together during his celebratory burnout and the drive to Victory Lane, a hallowed area that he twice had to ask his crew over the radio for directions how to get there. He took the customary ride in a convertible around the track with his wife and two young daughters, and happily bowed again and again to kiss the Yard of Bricks.

Sure, he smiled, and shared some tender hugs with one of his daughters. But that was the most anyone was getting out of Newman, who had admitted to getting emotional after winning the pole on Saturday but seemed almost numb following Sunday's win.

"I'm not sure (how I feel) at this point. I know it's an amazing feeling," he said. "I was more emotional yesterday after winning the pole than I was two laps after doing my donuts and everything else today. I'm not sure why. I took an emotional hit yesterday. Just an awesome day."

Newman beat Johnson twice on this Brickyard weekend, first when he set a NASCAR track record in knocking Johnson off the pole in qualifying, then Sunday with a fast final pit stop to snatch the win from the four-time Indianapolis winner.

The two were the class of the field ? they combined to lead 118 of the 160 laps ? but it was Johnson who dominated the race and appeared to be just a bit better. But Johnson pitted from the lead with 27 laps remaining and it was a slow final stop for the Hendrick Motorsports crew.

Newman pitted after that and took only two tires to move into the lead after the green-flag stops cycled through the field. The closest Johnson would get to him again was when he paid a congratulatory visit to Newman in Victory Lane.

The victory comes as Newman is looking for a job.

Stewart-Haas Racing has signed Kevin Harvick to join the team next season, and team co-owner Tony Stewart informed Newman two weeks ago he won't be brought back in 2014. It didn't change the post-race mood, as Stewart hustled to Victory Lane, lifted Newman from behind and the two shared a long embrace.

"He just had an awesome weekend," Stewart said. "I kept looking up the board and watching and I was scared to ask where he was at and how big of a lead he had. I didn't want to jinx him. Just really proud of him ? he's a great teammate and an even better friend."

Johnson, the Sprint Cup Series points leader who was hoping to tie Formula One's Michael Schumacher as the only five-time winners in Indy history, finished 2.657 seconds behind Newman in second.

"There's definitely disappointment there, but that's racing. It happens," Johnson said. "We win as a team, lose as a team. There's been some late race mistakes on my behalf that have taken race wins away from us. Granted, not a major event like this. We still ended up second.

"We have a lot to be proud of over the course of the weekend. We'll do the best to let it roll off our shoulders by tomorrow afternoon."

Kasey Kahne, Johnson's Hendrick Motorsports teammate, was third and Stewart was fourth as Chevrolet swept the top four spots. All four cars were also powered by Hendrick Motorsports.

"We had pretty good power all day long. There were a lot of scenarios where I noticed how good it was," Stewart said. "That's what you expect out of the Hendrick engine department. That's the standard that they set."

Matt Kenseth was fifth in a Toyota and followed by Hendrick's Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon, as all four Hendrick entries landed inside the top seven. Earnhardt rallied from a loose wheel on the opening run of the race to grab his top-10 finish.

"I knew it was loose," said Earnhardt, adding it was a no-brainer to pit. "You have a wheel falling off, you have something serious happening. Come in, it's dangerous staying out there. You can hit the wall, or wreck something, or wreck some other people. I don't want to do that. It is a long race. We had an early chance to fix that, and that is fine. It gave us an opportunity to try some different strategies, and it worked out for us."

Joey Logano was eighth in a Ford, and followed by Juan Pablo Montoya and Kyle Busch, who picked up his first career win at the Brickyard in Saturday's Nationwide Series race.

NASCAR's 20th running at the historic Brickyard wasn't the most exciting race ? there were three cautions, for stalled cars or debris, and no accidents or spins ? and the field spread out into single-file racing and passing wasn't easy. Montoya complained at one point over his radio that attempting to pass another car only cost him position on track.

"It's just Indy, it's always hard to pass," Kahne shrugged. "The competition's close, so you can get runs and then you can kill your run a little bit if that guy runs a certain part of the race track. So the guys that know where to put their car when a car being them is faster, it's tough to pass them."

The in-race intrigue came via varied strategies among the teams as they all tried different methods to steal a good finish in a race that logged as the fastest Brickyard in history at 2 hours, 36 minutes and 22 seconds.

"Overall I thought it was an exciting race," said Kenseth. "I thought there was a lot of different strategies there at the end and the two fastest cars ended up battling for the win. It wasn't any harder (to pass) than normal. It's just always hard to pass here."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hoosier-ryan-newman-wins-brickyard-400-indy-201230519.html

ozzie guillen fidel castro darvish george zimmerman website edmund fitzgerald uss enterprise white house easter egg roll 2012 andy cohen

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Musician JJ Cale dies; wrote Clapton, Skynyrd hits

If musicians were measured not by the number of records they sold but by the number of peers they influenced, JJ Cale would have been a towering figure in 1970s rock 'n' roll.

His best songs like "After Midnight," ''Cocaine" and "Call Me the Breeze" were towering hits ? for other artists. Eric Clapton took "After Midnight" and "Cocaine" and turned them into the kind of hard-party anthems that defined rock for a long period of time. And Lynyrd Skynyrd took the easy-shuffling "Breeze" and supercharged it with a three-guitar attack that made it a hit.

Cale, the singer-songwriter and producer known as the main architect of the Tulsa Sound, passed away Friday night at Scripps Hospital in La Jolla, Calif. His manager, Mike Kappus, said Cale died of a heart attack. He was 74.

While his best known songs remain in heavy rotation on the radio nearly 40 years later, most folks wouldn't be able to name Cale as their author. That was a role he had no problem with.

"No, it doesn't bother me," Cale said with a laugh in an interview posted on his website. "What's really nice is when you get a check in the mail."

And the checks rolled in for decades. The list of artists who covered his music or cite him as a direct influence reads like a who's who of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame ? Clapton, Neil Young, Tom Petty, Johnny Cash, Mark Knopfler, The Allman Brothers, Carlos Santana, Captain Beefheart and Bryan Ferry among many others.

Young said in Jimmy McDonough's biography "Shakey" that Cale and Jimi Hendrix were the best guitar players he had ever heard. And in his recent memoir "Waging Heavy Peace," Young said Cale's "Crazy Mama" ? his biggest hit, rising to No. 22 on the Billboard singles chart ? was one of the five songs that most influenced him as a songwriter: "The song is true, simple, and direct, and the delivery is very natural. JJ's guitar playing is a huge influence on me. His touch is unspeakable."

It was Clapton who forged the closest relationship with Cale. They were in sync musically and personally. Clapton also recorded Cale songs "Travelin' Light" and "I'll Make Love To You Anytime" and included the Cale composition "Angel" on his most recent album, "Old Sock." Other songs like "Layla" didn't involve Cale, but clearly owe him a debt. The two also collaborated together on "The Road to Escondido," which won the Grammy Award for best contemporary blues album in 2008.

Clapton once told Vanity Fair that Cale was the living person he most admired, and Cale weighed the impact Clapton had on his life in a 2006 interview with The Associated Press: "I'd probably be selling shoes today if it wasn't for Eric."

That quote was typical of the always humble Cale. But while Clapton was already a star when he began mining Cale's catalog, there's no doubt the music they shared cemented his "Clapton is God" status and defined the second half of his career.

"As hard as I've tried I've never really succeeded in getting a record to sound like him and that's what I want," Clapton said in a "Fast Focus" video interview to promote "Escondido." ''Before I go under the ground, I want to make a JJ Cale album with him at the helm."

Clapton described Cale's music as "a strange hybrid. It's not really blues, it's not really folk or country or rock 'n' roll. It's somewhere in the middle."

Cale arrived at that intersection by birth. Born John Weldon Cale in Oklahoma City, he was raised in Tulsa. Buffeted by country and western on one side and the blues on the other, Oklahoma offered a melting pot of styles. Cale leaned on those styles as he spent his formative years in Los Angeles and Nashville, but he also used drum machines and often acted as his own producer, engineer and session player. He'd bury his own whispery vocals in the mix, causing the listener to lean in and focus.

"I think it goes back to me being a recording mixer and engineer," Cale said in a 2009 biography on his website. "Because of all the technology now you can make music yourself and a lot of people are doing that now. I started out doing that a long time ago and I found when I did that I came up with a unique sound."

___

Talbott reported from Nashville, Tenn. AP writer Shaya Tayefe Mohajer in Los Angeles and AP Music Writer Mesfin Fekadu in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/musician-jj-cale-dies-wrote-clapton-skynyrd-hits-160728124.html

san francisco 49ers san francisco 49ers stan musial Mega 49ers lance armstrong Earl Weaver

Social media help track property lost in Holocaust

BERLIN (AP) ? When Cati Holland checked her email a few weeks ago, she was surprised to find a message saying she was eligible for compensation for her grandmother's Berlin store that was seized by the Nazis more than 70 years ago.

It wasn't spam or a phishing attempt or even a legitimate note from a German official working to track down victims and their heirs. Rather, it was from an Israel-based social media genealogy company that is using the Internet to help match property stolen by the Nazis to heirs of the victims.

"My grandmother told me so many stories about the store ? about the beautiful dresses and fancy hats they made, the wealthy customers who wore them," Holland, 75, told The Associated Press by phone from Hadera, Israel.

"But we always thought everything had been lost after my parents fled the Nazis. It never even occurred to us to claim any kind of restitution. I was completely surprised about that email."

Since the collapse of the Third Reich in 1945, Germany has paid around 70 billion euros ($92 billion) in compensation to the victims of the Holocaust. More than two million people have received lump sum payments or an ongoing monthly pension. The state of Israel has received around 1.7 billion euros ($2.2 billion), according to the German finance ministry.

Part of the compensation was earmarked for the Conference on Jewish Material Claims against Germany, a private New York-based organization that works to secure restitution for survivors and their heirs. Descendants can come forward to claim their family's assets until the end of 2014 if they find their original property on a recently released list by the Claims Conference, called the Late Applicants Fund.

Over the years, the search for the heirs has become more complicated because most of the Holocaust survivors have died. Descendants also don't always have detailed knowledge of their family's former assets.

But the rise of social media has offered new opportunities to track heirs and close the books on one of the darkest chapters of German history.

"We are only just seeing the huge impact that social media will have on Holocaust history," said Robert-Jan Smits, the director-general of the European Union's commission for research and design. "We are moving from dusty archives to digitized databases."

One of the driving forces behind the new push has been Gilad Japhet, CEO and founder of Israel-based MyHeritage, a social media website with about 70 million registered users worldwide that lets individuals build their own family trees online.

A few months back, Japhet read a report about the Claims Conference's list of over 40,000 buildings, stores and factories that could not be matched with their original owners. Japhet matched some names on the list to the millions of names that users had posted on MyHeritage's family trees online.

"I thought my chances of finding any of the names on the website of MyHeritage were not looking good since experts have been searching for them for decades. But I still wanted to give it a chance," Japhet said. "I chose some very rare names from the list and to my surprise the second name I put in was already a match."

Japhet put together a team of five employees and had them write a computer program that automatically matches the names on the Claims Conference's list with those on the virtual family trees. So far, they have been able to match about 150 names on the list with names on the family trees. They expect to continue working on this project for several more months.

In the case of Cati Holland, MyHeritage initially contacted her son-in-law Eran Karoly. He had posted a family tree which included Recha Cohn, Holland's grandmother and the owner of the Berlin store, which was located on the fashionable Kurfuerstendamm boulevard in the western part of the city. Holland's grandparents escaped to South America shortly after the Nazis took over in the early 1930s and ended up in Israel many years later.

Holland filed an application for restitution to the Claims Conference and is now waiting for a response. The level of compensation depends on various factors, such as the value of the property and how many people will apply until 2014.

"I filled out the forms and sent in birth certificates and several photos," Holland said.

The Claims Conference itself says it has "received hundreds of applications" for the Late Applicants Fund but can't say for sure how many of them were due to MyHeritage.

Applicants who qualify for restitution will have to wait until the program's deadline on December 31, 2014, the Claims Conference's chairman Reuven Merhav wrote in an email.

As for Japhet and his team, they have made clear to the claimants that they don't want any money in return for their efforts.

"In my emails to the users, I always write that we don't want any money for doing this, nor part of any restitution they will get," said Japhet. "We do this as a mitzvah ? which in Judaism is a good deed."

____

AP investigative researcher Randy Herschaft contributed reporting from New York.

Online:

www.myheritage.com

Claims Conference's list of names:

http://forms.claimscon.org/LAF/LAF-Liste.pdf

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/social-media-help-track-property-lost-holocaust-092159321.html

dj am bully bohemian rhapsody bohemian rhapsody spike lee carson daly heejun han

San Diego mayor's therapy plan flops with critics

Mayor Bob Filner's announcement that he will undergo two weeks of full-time therapy defies leaders of his own political party who demanded he resign over allegations of sexual harassment.

The mayor's plans failed to appease many who called for San Diego's first Democratic leader in 20 years to step down less than eight months into his four-year term. Seven women identified themselves as targets of Filner's unwanted advances that include touching.

"Two weeks of therapy may help Bob Filner with his personal problems, but it does not help to address the needs of San Diego," said Laura Fink, a political consultant who alleges that Filner patted her buttocks at a 2005 fundraiser when she was deputy campaign manager for the then-congressman. She is one of seven women who have publicly identified themselves as targets of Filner's advances.

Scott Peters, a first-term Democratic congressman from San Diego, said the mayor would be unable to accomplish anything with controversy swirling around him.

"I understand the mayor feels like he wants help, and I think that's great," Peters said. "I just don't think it's appropriate for him to do it as mayor. It's pretty clear to me that he's not going to be in a position to lead the city."

Lucas Powell, who works at a coffee house in the upscale Point Loma area and voted for Filner, said he was unimpressed by Filner's announcement and believes the former 10-term congressman should step down as mayor.

"Two weeks isn't going change deep-seated opinions and behaviors," Powell, 30, said during a lull in business Friday night.

Julaine Rich, 45, called the two-week treatment plan "laughable" as she bought groceries nearby but was ambivalent about whether Filner should step down, partly because she was puzzled why it took years for some of the women to go public with detailed allegations.

Filner's problems began less than three weeks ago when a former councilwoman and onetime Filner supporter called for the mayor to step down, saying she had received credible evidence that he had harassed women.

On Monday, Filner's former communications director, Irene McCormack Jackson, became the first woman to publicly identify herself as target of Filner. McCormack, who took a $50,000 annual pay cut to join Filner's inner circle in January, filed a lawsuit claiming that the mayor asked her to work without panties, demanded kisses, told her he wanted to see her naked and dragged her in a headlock while whispering in her ear.

The other six women, who described their experiences to KPBS News, include Morgan Rose, a psychologist for the San Diego Unified School District who said the then-congressman repeatedly tried to kiss her during a 2009 meeting to discuss child welfare.

Veronica "Ronne" Froman, a retired rear admiral, said Filner once blocked a doorway after others left a meeting, ran his finger up her cheek and asked if she had a man in her life. Froman, who is known in San Diego as the "Navy Mayor" and has led the American Red Cross local chapter, said the incident occurred a couple years ago at Filner's congressional office.

Patti Roscoe, a businesswoman in the tourism and hospitality industry who knew Filner before he was elected to Congress in 1992, said Filner placed her in a "headlock" numerous times and tried to kiss her on the lips.

"I'd have to squirm to get away. And just as recently as a few months ago this happened. I turned and he just slobbered down my chin," Roscoe said.

Filner, who is 70 and divorced, apologized earlier this month by releasing a video statement in which he acknowledged disrespecting and sometimes intimidating women and said he was seeking professional help, but Friday's statement went further.

"The behavior I have engaged in over many years is wrong," he said at a nationally televised news conference. "My failure to respect women and the intimidating conduct I engaged in at times is inexcusable.

Filner said he will receive twice-a-day briefings about city operations while participating full-time in what he described as "intensive therapy" beginning Aug. 5. He said he would return on Aug. 19 and focus on "doing right by the city in terms of being the best mayor I can be, and the best person I must be."

"Words alone are not enough," he said. "I am responsible for my conduct and I must take responsibility for my conduct so that such conduct does not ever happen again."

Filner did not take any questions and his office did not say where he would be treated and whether the city would be asked to pay. City Attorney Jan Goldsmith said Filner, not the city, will pay for treatment..

Filner disclosed his plans hours after Debbie Wasserman Schultz, chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, urged him to resign and called his alleged behavior "reprehensible and indefensible." The San Diego County Democratic Party Central Committee voted 34-6 Thursday night to ask Filner to step down, and county party Chairwoman Francine Busby said Filner's two weeks of therapy didn't change that position.

Filner was served with a subpoena Friday to appear Aug. 9 to address allegations in the lawsuit filed against him and the city by his former communications director. He was served as he left a regional planning agency meeting.

"We have a bunch of questions," said Goldsmith, the city attorney. "Our goal is to get to the heart of it as quickly as possible."

Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.wral.com/san-diego-mayor-s-therapy-plan-flops-with-critics/12709864/

pittsburgh steelers seattle seahawks space shuttle new york courtney upshaw catch me if you can delmon young arrested the raven

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Ruth Ginsburg: Push for voter ID laws predictable

Ruth?Ginsburg?said in an interview with The Associated Press that Texas' decision to implement its voter ID law hours after the court struck down a key provision of the Voting Rights Act last month was powerful evidence of an ongoing need to keep states with a history of voting discrimination from making changes in the way they hold elections.

By Mark Sherman,?Associated Press / July 26, 2013

Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg poses for a photo in her chambers at the Supreme Court in Washington, July 24, before an interview with the Associated Press. Ginsburg said during the interview that it was easy to foresee that Southern states would push ahead with tougher voter identification laws and other measures once the Supreme Court freed them from strict federal oversight of their elections.

Charles Dharapak/AP

Enlarge

Justice?Ruth?Bader?Ginsburg?says she's not surprised that Southern states have pushed ahead with tough voter identification laws and other measures since the Supreme Court freed them from strict federal oversight of their elections.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Ginsburg?said in an interview with The Associated Press that Texas' decision to implement its voter ID law hours after the court struck down a key provision of the Voting Rights Act last month was powerful evidence of an ongoing need to keep states with a history of voting discrimination from making changes in the way they hold elections without getting advance approval from Washington.

The Justice Department said Thursday it would try to bring Texas and other places back under the advance approval requirement through a part of the law that was not challenged.

"The notion that because the Voting Rights Act had been so tremendously effective we had to stop it didn't make any sense to me,"?Ginsburg?said in a wide-ranging interview late Wednesday in her office at the court. "And one really could have predicted what was going to happen."

The 80-year-old justice dissented from the 5-4 decision on the voting law.?Ginsburg?said in her dissent that discarding the law was "like throwing away your umbrella in a rainstorm because you are not getting wet."

Just a month removed from the decision, she said, "I didn't want to be right, but sadly I am."

She spoke a day before Attorney General Eric Holder said the Obama administration will open a new front in the battle for voter protections in response to the court's decision.

Holder said the first move would be to ask a federal court in San Antonio to require Texas to obtain advance approval before putting in place future political redistricting or other voting changes.

"Even as Congress considers updates to the Voting Rights Act in light of the court's ruling, we plan, in the meantime, to fully utilize the law's remaining sections to ensure that the voting rights of all American citizens are protected," Holder said in a speech to the National Urban League in Philadelphia.

Ginsburg?and the administration were on the losing side of the June 25 ruling in which the court effectively gutted what civil rights advocates have called the law's crown jewel, the advance approval requirement. It applied to 15 mainly Southern states.

The decision, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, said it was no longer fair to subject those jurisdictions to strict federal monitoring based on data that is at least 40 years old. The extraordinary intrusion on state power to conduct elections could only be justified by current conditions, Roberts said.

"There is no denying, however, that the conditions that originally justified these measures no longer characterize voting in the covered jurisdictions," he said.

Roberts relied heavily on another decision from 2009 in which the justices essentially left the law alone while warning Congress about serious problems with the data and urging lawmakers to do something about it. They didn't.

In that case,?Ginsburg?joined Roberts and every justice but Clarence Thomas to leave prior approval in place.

Ginsburg?said she probably shouldn't have done that. "I think in the first voting rights case, there was a strong impetus to come down with a unanimous decision with the thought that maybe Congress would do something about it before we had to deal with it again," she said. "But I suppose with the benefit of hindsight, I might have taken a different view."

Notably, when the court in late June ruled narrowly in a challenge to the University of Texas' race-conscious admissions program,?Ginsburg?was the lone dissenter. Two other liberal justices joined with the conservatives in a decision that left in place affirmative action in college admissions but also called on federal judges to examine those plans more closely.

"Time will tell," she said, whether affirmative action will meet a fate similar to that of the Voting Rights Act. Justice Lewis Powell's opinion in the Bakke case in 1978 has been the blueprint for affirmative action plans ever since, she said. "And now it remains to be seen. We'll have to wait for the next case."

She also spoke about the court's 5-4 ruling, in which she was in the majority, to strike down part of the federal anti-gay marriage law that Congress passed in 1996.?Ginsburg?couldn't resist taking a dig at her good friend and ideological opposite Antonin Scalia, who voted to uphold that law and strike down the voting rights law.

"Scalia, who really takes after the court for taking over legislative turf in same-sex marriage, doesn't make a whimper in voting rights, which passed 98 to nothing in the Senate and 330 to something in the House. I didn't put that to him, but surely he's going to be asked the question, 'How do you distinguish the two?'" she said.

As the court's oldest justice and with an early surgery for pancreatic cancer in 2009,?Ginsburg?is accustomed to questions about her health. She has broken a pair of ribs in consecutive springs but has not missed any time on the job. She exercises regularly and is traveling extensively this summer, including to Cooperstown, N.Y., in pursuit of her favorite pastime, opera.

She also did not shy from discussing, in her words, "when is she going to retire?"

"My answer is, as long as I can do the job full steam, I will,"?Ginsburg?said. "At my age, you can't say, you have to go year by year."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/R4GkQu9BkiM/Ruth-Ginsburg-Push-for-voter-ID-laws-predictable

Sloane Stephens Ubisoft Pierce Brosnan canada day nnamdi asomugha nnamdi asomugha Zimmerman trial

U.S. appeals court rejects states' challenge over climate rules

By Lawrence Hurley

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A federal appeals court on Friday rejected a legal challenge by Texas and Wyoming to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, in a 2-1 vote, said the states and various industry groups did not have standing to sue because they could not show that they had suffered an injury or that a ruling throwing out the EPA plan would benefit them.

The decision comes after the same court upheld the EPA's first wave of greenhouse gas regulations in 2012, and is another win for the EPA, which has a strong track record in the courts in challenges to its rules, particularly those targeting greenhouse gas emissions.

"The states and industry groups trying to block EPA from curbing carbon pollution under the Clean Air Act are on a long losing streak," said David Doniger, climate policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Friday's decision concerned a challenge to the EPA's efforts to make states include carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases when they issue permits to industrial facilities setting limits on various types of pollution they emit.

Under the Clean Air Act, states have a cooperative relationship with the EPA in regulating air pollution.

Texas and Wyoming objected in part to the tight deadlines the EPA imposed on them for coming up with new regulations to include greenhouse gases. The agency said in December 2010 that it would have to intervene, effectively taking over the issuing of greenhouse gas permits in the affected states, because the states had failed to act.

Texas in particular regularly fights the EPA over regulatory actions. Greg Abbott, the Republican attorney general now running for governor, has been an outspoken critic of the Obama administration and the EPA.

In Friday's decision, Judge Judith Rogers said the states had failed to show how voiding the rules in question would "redress their purported injuries."

Without the states updating their permitting programs, "construction of a major emitting facility could not proceed," Rogers said, adding that the Clean Air Act is clear that states have to issue permits "for each pollutant subject to regulation under the act."

STATES COULD DRAG HEELS

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality called the ruling "disappointing" and said it will consider future action.

"The EPA has effectively re-written the Clean Air Act to impose its new standards, imposed severely restrictive timelines on the states to implement its new requirements, and then twisted the Act to immediately impose its agenda on Texas," TCEQ Chairman Bryan Shaw said in an emailed statement.

In a landmark 2007 ruling, the Supreme Court said carbon dioxide was a pollutant that could be regulated under the Clean Air Act.

Judge Brett Kavanaugh wrote a dissenting opinion to the latest case, saying states should have been able to use their old regulatory schemes, which do not take into account greenhouse gases, until they had time to update them.

In other notable rulings in recent years, the Supreme Court has upheld the EPA's authority to use the Clean Air Act to regulate greenhouse gas emissions in two high-profile cases, while the D.C. Circuit has turned away at least four challenges.

Frank O'Donnell, president of the non-profit group Clean Air Watch, said Friday's ruling strengthens the hand of the EPA as it starts to implement President Barack Obama's climate action plan. Obama in June directed the agency to write rules to curb carbon emissions from the country's fleet of existing power plants.

But O'Donnell said Texas and other states opposed to federal environmental regulations are likely to drag their heels when forced to comply with EPA timelines.

"I predict they will be late filing their plans, due in 2016 under the scenario the president set forth, and will dare the federal government to intervene," O'Donnell said.

Texas has sued the EPA many times, most recently in a bid to challenge a practice in which environmental groups sue the agency to force it to issue or speed up regulations.

(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Ros Krasny, Vicki Allen, Bill Trott and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-appeals-court-rejects-states-challenge-over-climate-143707755.html

Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 2 celiac disease san francisco giants Medal of Honor Warfighter Richard Mourdock d t

AG opens new front on voting rights protection (The Arizona Republic)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/321746223?client_source=feed&format=rss

uc berkeley harrison barnes brett ratner stevie nicks anchorman capybara duggars

Deal of the Day ? Dell XPS 8700 Core i7 ?Haswell? Quad-core desktop

The LogicBUY Deal for Friday is the?configurable Dell XPS 8700 “Haswell” desktop for $699.99, the lowest price ever. ?Features: 4th-gen Intel Core i7 “Haswell” CPU,?Intel Z87 Express chipset 8GB RAM 1TB hard drive, DVD burner, 19-in-1 card reader 1GB Radeon HD 7570 graphics 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0 Six USB 3.0 ports, HDMI, DisplayPort, four USB [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/07/26/deal-of-the-day-dell-xps-8700-core-i7-haswell-quad-core-desktop-2/

austin rivers austin rivers sweet home alabama etch a sketch the host hoodie hoosiers

Friday, July 26, 2013

Facebook's Mobile Surge: Ad Revenues Double

facebook-f-2013How important is mobile to Facebook? Consider this: mobile ads represented about 41 percent of the company's advertising revenue and mobile usage accounted for 71 percent of monthly active users (MAUs) during its latest quarter.

"When it comes to mobile I'm very pleased with the results," said Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg as he kicked off the earnings call. "Nearly half a billion people use Facebook on their phones everyday and soon we?ll have more revenue on mobile than on desktop as well,? he adds.

Facebook closed the final quarter of its first year as publicly traded company with a 51 percent increase in mobile MAUs and a 21 percent overall increase in MAUs from the comparable year-ago period. The overall share of revenue contributed by mobile grew from 30 percent in the previous quarter.

The company banked $333 million in net income on a 61 percent year-over-year increase in revenue of $1.81 billion. Total advertising revenue hit $1.6 billion, capturing 88 percent of all revenue and jumping 61 percent from the year-ago quarter. The US and Canada accounted for $721 million, or 45 percent of all ad revenue, followed by Europe with $451 million, Asia with $225 million and the rest of the world driving $202 million in revenue from ads.

"We now have more than a million active advertisers," says Zuckerberg, adding that Facebook's group of advertisers has more than doubled in the past year. With more brands using the platform, users are taking notice as the overall number of ads increases in kind. "Right now ads on average make up 5 percent, or one in 20 stories in the news feed," he says.

?In recent studies, people have told us that they noticed the ads more, so we're going to invest more in improving the quality. Our top priority is to expand the number of marketers and overall demand in our system rather than just increasing the number of ads that we show,? notes Zuckerberg. ?We believe that this will help us improve the quality of the ads that we show by creating a more competitive auction and this will create the best experience for people who use our products, the best returns for more marketers and the best results for us,? he adds.

The importance of news feed ads on Facebook?s bottom line could not be understated. Indeed, chief financial officer, David Ebersman, indicates that Facebook expects news feed ads to be the main driver of revenue throughout the remainder of the year.

Facebook?s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, says marketers are increasingly recognizing the ?big brand opportunity? that Facebook is building. ?We offer discovery and we have a unique opportunity to take people all the way through the funnel,? she said.

?T-Mobile did an ad campaign with us to attract people to sell new phones. They used our offer ads to do it and 9 percent of the people who claimed the offer converted to T-Mobile within 10 days. They had over 20 times return on their ad spend which is just incredibly strong in the industry and I think that shows the power of what we can do with impressions, taking people all the way through the funnel,? Sandberg added.

Facebook?s ad products are delivering ?impressive ROI? for marketers, according to Sandberg, leading to growth across all four of the site?s key segments ? brand, direct response, local businesses and developers. In addition, direct-response marketers are taking advantage of the social media giant?s high click-through rates and competitive click-to-calls to grow their business.

?These marketers are typically very measurement-focused and they quickly increase their budgets as we deliver compelling ROI,? says Sandberg.

Finally, Facebook says time spent per person on the site continues to increase, exceeding 20 billion aggregate minutes per day last month.

This article was originally published on ClickZ.


SES San Francisco Bringing Together Paid, Owned and Earned Media
Sept. 10-13, 2013: With a newly announced, completely renovated agenda,
SES San Francisco could be the most valuable online marketing conference you attend this year. Register today and save up to $400!
*Early Bird rates expire August 15.

Source: http://feeds.searchenginewatch.com/~r/sewblog/~3/tHz6KjHD_Bs/Facebooks-Mobile-Surge-Ad-Revenues-Double

lottery tickets mega lottery sag aftra mega mill power ball livan hernandez soledad o brien

U.S. HPV vaccination rates far from goal, officials say

By Yasmeen Abutaleb

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Only slightly more than half of U.S. girls aged 13 to 17 had been vaccinated against a virus that can cause cervical and other cancers last year, and a top U.S. health official said on Thursday that more must be done to bring the rate up to the long-term goal of 80 percent.

The vaccination rate to protect against human papillomavirus (HPV) was 53.8 percent last year for teen-age girls, just marginally higher than the 53 percent rate a year earlier, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Thursday.

The rate reflected girls who had received at least one dose of the vaccine. Full vaccination requires a three-dose series.

HPV is responsible for an estimated 26,000 cancers in the United States each year. About 79 million people in the country have the sexually transmitted virus, and 14 million are newly infected each year.

"We're dropping the ball," Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said on a conference call with reporters. "We're missing opportunities to give HPV vaccines and that needs to change."

The CDC collected data from the National Immunization Survey-Teen, which collects vaccination data for 13-17-year-olds.

The CDC recommends routine HPV vaccination for boys and girls at age 11-12, before they are sexually active.

The CDC noted that among unvaccinated girls, 84 percent had missed the opportunity to get an HPV shot when they visited a healthcare provider for another immunization. Had they also received an HPV vaccine at that time, the percentage of girls who had received at least one dose could be as high as 93 percent.

Each year the vaccination rate remains at its current 33 percent for girls who have received all three doses, an additional 4,400 women will be diagnosed with cervical cancer, according to the CDC.

HPV, which most often does not show symptoms for several years, can also cause vaginal and vulvar cancer in women and can lead to penile cancer in men. It may also lead to anal and throat cancers among men and women as well as genital warts.

HPV vaccines are sold by Merck & Co, under the name Gardasil, and by GlaxoSmithKline, under the name Cervarix.

The vaccination rate for adolescent girls who received the recommended three-dose series decreased slightly in 2012 to 33.4 percent from 34.8 percent a year before.

Health officials hope to achieve an 80 percent vaccination rate within seven years, according to goals laid out in 2020's Healthy People, a set of 10-year objectives aimed at improving health in the United States.

President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law, which requires almost all Americans obtain health insurance or pay a penalty beginning in 2014, could help increase the vaccination rate as uninsured families gain coverage for the shots, health officials said.

Health officials said many parents do not believe their daughters need to be vaccinated because they are not sexually active, or are afraid that receiving the vaccine will open the door to sex.

But Frieden and Thomas McInerny, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said like other vaccines, the HPV vaccine needs to be administered well before exposure to potential diseases.

For example, health officials have seen high success rates with a three-dose vaccine series for hepatitis B, a contagious liver disease. The doses for hepatitis B vaccine are typically given at birth and through the first few months of a child's life.

"We don't wait for exposure for any other vaccine," McInerny said on the call. "We recognize that the conversation about HPV can take extra time in practice."

(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Leslie Adler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-hpv-vaccination-rates-far-goal-officials-184453837.html

Rebecca Liddicoat julianne hough Sfgate Plane Crash San Francisco anderson silva Marion Bartoli Wimbledon 2013

HP LaserJet Enterprise color flow MFP M575c


As an HP "flow" multifunction printer (MFP), the HP LaserJet Enterprise color flow MFP M575c adds a sheaf of workflow-friendly features over the standard versions in its line: a pull-out keyboard and a 100-sheet single-pass duplexing scanner chief among them. It's worth considering by deep-pocketed businesses seeking a formidable workhorse color MFP to help boost productivity.

The M575c is the high-end model in the series that includes the HP LaserJet Enterprise 500 Color MFP M575dn and the HP LaserJet Enterprise 500 Color MFP M575f ($2,699). The M575f adds fax capabilities and a stapler to the M575dn, while the M575c adds the workflow features I discuss in this review.

The flow M575c can print, scan, copy, and fax; it can scan to e-mail, a network folder, USB thumb drive, or an FTP server, and print from a USB key. It has an 8-inch color touch screen interface, offers secure, password-protected printing, and has a built-in 320GB encrypted hard drive.

It measures 23 by 21.6 by 21.8 inches (HWD), much too large to share a desk with, and weighs 105 pounds. Its 100-sheet document feeder (ADF) scans both sides of a document simultaneously, saving time over scanners like the one in the M525dn (with a smaller, 50-sheet ADF), which flips the document over to scan the other side. The M575c's scanner also incorporates some features lacking in the M575dn and M575f, including ultrasonic misfeed detection, auto orientation, auto page crop, and other image correction features, send to SharePoint, and embedded OCR.

The M575c has a standard paper capacity of 350 sheets, split between a 250-sheet main tray and a 100-sheet multipurpose tray. You can add an optional 500-sheet tray as well. An automatic duplexer lets you print on both sides of a sheet of paper. On the side of the printer is a built-in "convenience" stapler for manually stapling documents of up to about 25 pages.

The M575c can connect via USB or Ethernet (including Gigabit Ethernet), and an optional Wi-Fi adapter is available ($269 direct). It's compatible with HP ePrint and Apple's AirPrint. I tested the printer on a wired network with its drivers installed on a PC running Windows Vista.

HP LaserJet Enterprise color flow MFP M575c

Printing Speed
I timed the flow M575c on our business applications test suite, using QualityLogic's hardware and software for testing, at an effective 8.0 pages per minute (ppm), a good speed for its rated speed of 31 pages per minute. (Rated speeds are based on text-only printing, while our business suite combines text pages, graphics pages, and pages with both text and graphics.) It would have been faster yet, but its average time was slowed by a long "calibration" period while printing a PowerPoint file in one of our test runs. The Editors' Choice Dell C3765dnf Multifunction Laser Printer tested at 8.3 ppm in our official test in its default duplex mode and 10.1 ppm when I switched to simplex. I timed the HP M575dn at 8.5 ppm, and the Editors' Choice Lexmark X548dte at 7.0 ppm.

Output Quality
Output quality for the M575c was pretty typical across the board, with average text quality, average graphics quality, and average photos. Text quality is good enough for any typical business use, except perhaps desktop publishing applications using very small fonts.

With graphics, some fine lines were lost, and black backgrounds looked faded. Graphics quality was good enough for PowerPoint handouts, though I might hesitate to give them to a potential client I was seeking to impress.

Several photos showed slight tints, and there was a loss of detail in some bright and dark areas in several prints. Photo quality is good enough to print out recognizable images from Web pages, and perhaps for company newsletters, depending on how picky you are.

Running Costs
At 1.8 cents per monochrome page and 13 cents per color page, the M525c's running costs are a bit on the high side. The Editors' Choice Dell C3765dnf has a lower per-page cost (1.5 cents for monochrome and 10 cents for color), as does the Lexmark X548dte (1.6 and 11 cents).

The HP LaserJet Enterprise color flow MFP M575c is a massive and impressively full-featured color MFP. Its added workflow features include a 100-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF) that scans both sides of a document at a single pass, saving time over the likes of the Dell C3765dnf, which has an ADF that flips a two-sided document over to scan the back. Other goodies include the pull-out keyboard, automatic image correction features, and embedded OCR. It has good but not exceptional speed, and its output quality is solid across the board.

It's a product that brings to mind the adage "you get what you pay for." It provides a slew of workflow-friendly features at a steep premium (nearly 3 times the price of the Editors' Choice Dell C3765dnf, which has a comparable maximum duty cycle). Generally, the higher sticker price of a printer, the lower its running costs will be, but the flow MFP M575c's color costs are higher than many much less expensive models, including the Dell C3765dnf and Lexmark X548dte.

Its standard 350-sheet paper capacity is also much lower than the Dell C3765's 700 sheets and the Lexmark X548dte's 900 sheets. Yet although there are faster MFPs, and ones with better output quality, the HP LaserJet Enterprise color flow MFP M575c provides some exceptional features such as the single-pass two-sided scanner with 100-sheet ADF, and is definitely worth considering by businesses willing to pay a premium for them.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/l18gGxgeLrg/0,2817,2422280,00.asp

Daytime Emmy Awards 2013 Danielle Bradbery kate spade danny green danny green Magna Carta Holy Grail true blood

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Pope wants to be with people; clergy want him safe

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) ? Pope Francis' decision to shun a major security detail for his visit to Brazil exemplifies his view of what the Roman Catholic Church should be doing: Go out into the streets. Spread the faith. Recapture the dynamism that other denominations have been using to snap up souls.

Upon his arrival in Rio de Janeiro this week, that philosophy helped produce a defining vignette of his young papacy: The pope rolling down the window to touch the adoring crowds who surrounded his Fiat as his driver and bodyguards struggled to get him on his way.

His call for a more missionary church, seeking out the faithful in the most marginal of places, will get even more traction Thursday when he visits one of Rio's shantytowns, or favelas, and meets a family inside their home. But while his subordinates may appreciate that message, many are uneasy about the lengths he seems willing to go to deliver it.

"He's used that phrase that we have to get out to the streets, we can't stay locked up in our sacristies, we can't be navel-gazing all the time," U.S. Cardinal Timothy Dolan said in interview Tuesday in Rio de Janeiro.

Dolan, however, expressed concern over Monday's swarm and said security might need to be tightened for Francis' own good.

"I love him and I don't want another conclave. We just finished one so we don't need him to be hurt at all," Dolan said.

Francis' car was mobbed after the lead car in his motorcade made a wrong turn and got blocked by buses and taxis, enabling tens of thousands of frenzied Brazilians to surround him. But even along the planned route, there were few fences and no uniformed police or armed forces, as would be expected for a visiting head of state. Just a few dozen plainclothes Vatican and Brazilian security officers trotted alongside Francis' car, at times unable to keep the crowds at bay.

Top Vatican officials met Tuesday with senior Brazilian officials to go over the pope's security and made some changes: On Wednesday, Francis will use only the closed car when he travels in Rio to a hospital to meet with patients, rather than switch to the open-air car midway through as had been planned.

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, insisted the change was taken merely to "simplify" the pope's travel and was not a reflection of increased concern about his safety.

Brazilian security officials defended their handling of the pope's tour through Rio, saying Tuesday that an evaluation of his arrival by federal police, the mayor's office and highway police was "positive, since there was no incident involving the pope or with any of the faithful."

Authorities in Brazil said earlier that about 10,000 police officers and more than 14,000 soldiers would take part in the overall papal security plan, but on Monday virtually no uniformed officers were seen.

Andreas Widmer, a former Swiss Guard who protected Pope John Paul II from 1986 to 1988, said the scenes from Rio were reminiscent of some of the more hair-raising trips John Paul took, even after he was wounded in a 1981 assassination attempt in St. Peter's Square. He sees it as part of the pontiff's job.

"Fundamentally one has to see that the pope is not like a president," Widmer said Tuesday in a telephone interview from Boston. "You can shut the president in a house and he never sees any normal people. The pope's office is a ministry, and a ministry cannot be impeded by security."

"You cannot be pope and not see people," Widmer said.

Sao Paulo Cardinal Odilo Scherer said that "nothing happened when the pope was stuck in traffic" and that "we shouldn't exaggerate the psychosis of security" when it comes to protecting the pope.

It is Francis' wish that his security not be "militarized," Lombardi said.

Francis stopped to kiss babies and shake hands thrust into the window of his car, and once he reached Rio's center, he switched to his open-air vehicle and drove right back into the crowds.

The moment was particularly unnerving in light of sometimes violent anti-government protests that have been going on across Brazil for a month. It also was embarrassing for security officials who are charged with keeping order during next year's World Cup and the 2016 Olympics.

"I was so surprised!" said the Rev. Joseph Tan, a priest from the Philippines who echoed the reaction of many in Rio for the papal visit.

"In the Philippines, people would have gathered to get a glimpse, but nothing like what we saw," Tan said. "But that's the pope's personality. He was just being himself."

Francis was dubbed the "slum pope" in his native Argentina for the amount of time he spent in dangerous areas while he was archbishop there. And in a speech that some say helped get him elected pope, then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio told colleagues that the church must "move toward the peripheries, not only geographic but also existential."

Francis is in Brazil for World Youth Day, a church event that takes place about every three years and brings together young Catholics from around the world.

A cold rain Tuesday night didn't stop upward of 500,000 faithful from gathering on Rio's Copacabana beach to mark the event. Clergy celebrated the opening Mass on a huge white stage covered with a bright red carpet as the crowd held aloft flags from dozens of nations.

But Rio's woes didn't stop: The city's main subway lines ground to a halt for two hours, just before the Mass. Officials said an energy cable snapped in a main station.

The pope had no public events Tuesday. On Wednesday, he travels to Aparecida, where the governor said 1,800 police will provide security. Plans are for Francis to use his open-air popemobile for the one-kilometer (half-mile) trip from a helipad to the Aparecida basilica, where he'll celebrate Mass.

He's traveling to the town to venerate the Virgin of Aparecida, Brazil's patron saint. About 200,000 faithful are expected to pack into the normally sleepy hamlet, where Francis is expected to greet crowds from a balcony.

Francis normally uses the open-air vehicle in St. Peter's Square, which is ringed with Vatican and Italian police, and where the faithful are fenced into pens as bodyguards trail him. And despite the change to a closed car for the pope's Wednesday drive in Rio, church officials gave no indication of any shift away from his plan to use the open popemobile in substantially less controlled conditions this week: at a welcome speech on Copacabana beach Thursday, a Way of the Cross procession Friday, and a weekend vigil and Mass in a rural part of Rio.

Lombardi said the pontiff decided not to use his bulletproof popemobile at those events so he could be closer to people and interact with them.

Security experts said the scene on Rio's streets Monday show how challenging it is to strike the right balance in protecting the outgoing pope.

"From the point of view of a head of state, and the pope is a head of state, it's unacceptable what happened," said Paulo Storani, a Rio-based security consultant who spent nearly 30 years on the city's police force and was a captain in an elite unit used to clear out slums. "On the other hand, in the case of a head of a church and having a charismatic figure like this pope, the situation is different because he wants to be close to the people."

Ignacio Cano, a researcher at the Violence Analysis Center at Rio de Janeiro State University, said that although authorities would like to surround the pope with protection, that "goes against the message he wants to impart, which is one of simplicity, openness and approximation."

___

Associated Press writers Marco Sibaja and Vivian Sequera in Rio de Janeiro and Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

___

Bradley Brooks on Twitter: www.twitter.com/bradleybrooks

Nicole Winfield on Twitter: www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-wants-people-clergy-want-him-safe-002022088.html

brian wilson storm chasers david blaine gotye divine mercy cabin in the woods the legend of korra