Sunday, June 30, 2013

Short-Handed Earthquakes Rally By Galaxy, 3-2

AT&T Park
AT&T Park
AT&T Park, with its breathtaking views and classic design, is home of the World Champion San Francisco Giants.
Oracle Arena
Oracle Arena
Oracle Arena is the home to the Golden State Warriors and is the oldest facility still in use by the NBA.
HP PavilionHP Pavilion
HP Pavilion is also commonly called ?The Shark Tank,? which comes from its primary tenant, the NHL?s San Jose Sharks.
Candlestick ParkCandlestick Park
Candlestick Park, commonly referred to as ?The Stick,? is the current home of the San Francisco 49ers.
O.co ColiseumO.co Coliseum
The O.co Coliseum serves as the home for the Oakland Athletics and Oakland Raiders.

Source: http://sanfrancisco.cbsradio.stats.com/ifb/recap.asp?lg=MLS&g=2013062911

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Fighting Continues Over Somali Port City Kismayo (Voice Of America)

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.

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Health and fitness testing at Syracuse University

SYRACUSE (WSYR-TV) Have you ever wondered exactly how much body fat you have? The ?Bod Pod? at the Syracuse University Human Performance Laboratory can tell you after sitting in the machine for just a few short minutes.

Students in Exercise Physiology are conducting research studies which make this and other fitness tests available to central New Yorkers for free. All you have to do to is sign up for a study.

To find out if you are eligible, contact the Kevin Heffernan, the director of the Human Performance Laboratory. Kevin can be reached at hplcuse@gmail.com?or by phone at 443-4540.

Other tests offered include what you would typically find at your doctors office, like blood tests that analyze your cholesterol and iron levels. A few assessments offered are typically only available to top-tier athletes, like the maximum endurance test, which is scientifically proven to be the best method of determining your level of fitness.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WSYRLocalNews/~3/S5_fVaeVXPs/PNOd92SekU6-z1uOh60A5Q.cspx

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Best horror, baseball mashup, other summer sports reads

We are going to get to sports, pinky swear, but you certainly do not need to read my grade for the Magic draft ("OK, I guess, but what do I know?") and not much else is going on ? so this looks like an opening to talk about:

Books.

You know, the things they used to kill trees to make but now can instantly appear in some machine of yours and practically read themselves for you. What caught my eye was a website ? goodreads.com ? that includes numerous lists of "worst books ever."

And my all-time "worst book ever" is found on the list of "forced to read in school but hated." The book is "Silas Marner" by George Eliot. It comes in a disappointing 23rd, but that's probably because all the English teachers who once demanded it be read have been taken out back to be treated badly.

George (actually a woman) tells the story of Silas, a weaver in Victorian England (or so I remember). It could have been done in five pages but apparently George liked to write. When I had to read this in the 11th grade, I had no desire to learn about weaving.

Give me a break.

Of course this "hated book" list includes "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding at No. 1 and that's a great book. No, that's not my opinion, that's a fact.

But I promised you sports, so what about the best books about sports?

"Sports Illustrated" did a "Top 100 Sports Books" list some time ago that you can find at talkingbooks.dpi.wi.gov ? yes, through the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction. It's top four are: (1) "The Sweet Science" by A.J. Liebling, a love-horror look at boxing; (2) "The Boys of Summer" by Roger Kahn, a book I loved as a teenager because it wrote of the Brooklyn Dodgers before they were stolen by Sodom (ala Los Angeles); (3) "Ball Four" by Jim Bouton, a remarkably honest account of the 1969 Yankees; and (4) "Friday Night Lights" by H.G. Bissinger, depicting how football can consume a small Texas community.

I never read "The Sweet Science" but have read the other three and all are worth your time, especially in this "slow season" for sports (not counting police reports, of course).

And I want to pitch one more book to you that you probably don't know: "Brittle Innings," written in 1994 by Michael Bishop. It was republished in 2012 and when I checked Amazon.com this week, there were three copies available.

Friends, another pinky swear: This is the best account of Southern minor league baseball in the 1940s ever written. Here's the catch: There is a major supernatural element midway in the novel. In fact, the book probably is the only gothic horror/baseball genre mashup ever written. But it's great and you should read it.

After all, this is the slow season, remember?

NFL thoughts: NFC North

Green Bay 11-5 last year, over/under 10

Be afraid, Packer Backers, be very afraid. Somebody doesn't want you in the Super Bowl. The Pack must play San Francisco, the Giants and Baltimore from outside their division -- and all three games are on the road. The 2013 Pack were a statistical mystery: QB Aaron Rodgers led the league with a 108.0 passing rating and 39 TDs but the passing offense was just ninth. A new rushing game will be key. Pack probably are NFC favorite but I'm not so sure.

Chicago 10-6 last year, 8.5 over/under

Intriguing team to watch that could finish 7-9 or 11-5 under new Coach Marc Trestman. What can different coaching and a revamped offensive line do for QB Jay Cutler? This is a cook-or-get-out-of-the-kitchen contract season for him. And don't forget WR Brandon Marshall and his 117 receptions and 11 TDs last season. Like we said, fun to watch.

Minnesota Vikings 10-6 last season, over/under 7.5

Not likely that three teams in this division will total 31 victories again. Most likely to fall are the Vikings, who had second best rushing game and 31st passing attack last year. Starting with Week 7, the schedule is just nasty. Finally, do you really think Adrian Peterson can put up the same rushing numbers? And if he can not, do you really think QB Christian Ponder can make up the difference?

Source: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/sports/os-jerry-greene-cheap-seats-0630-20130629,0,2208.column?track=rss

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Anthem insurance plan with MaineHealth under review ? Health ...

GARDINER, Maine ? A proposed deal between two heavy hitters in Maine?s health care market to offer insurance next year is raising concerns that patients may have to travel further for care and to find new doctors. The deal could affect tens of thousands of residents and greatly shape the rollout of President Barack Obama?s health reform law in Maine.

MaineHealth, the parent organization of Maine Medical Center in Portland, and health insurer Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan to offer a new insurance product on Maine?s health insurance exchange, an online market where consumers and small businesses can shop for coverage beginning in October 2013. The plans would take effect in January 2014. The exchanges are a key component of the reform law, which aims to widen coverage to 30 million people.

A Friday public hearing hosted by the Maine Bureau of Insurance addressed the network of hospitals and doctors that would provide care to customers who buy the Anthem-MaineHealth plans, which would be available to individuals who buy their own insurance, small businesses and the uninsured.

Workers who have health insurance through a large employer aren?t eligible to shop for plans on the exchange and wouldn?t be affected by the Anthem-MaineHealth deal.

The plans include 32 of Maine?s 38 hospitals, but exclude Central Maine Healthcare, which operates Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, Bridgton Hospital and Rumford Hospital, as well as Parkview Adventist Medical Center in Brunswick, York Hospital, and Portland?s Mercy Hospital.

Central Maine Healthcare officials have denounced the plan as a ?backroom deal? that allows MaineHealth to undercut hospitals that compete with its health system, undermining the intent of the reform law to improve access to affordable health care. Central Maine Healthcare filed a lawsuit earlier this month to make Anthem?s application public before the insurance bureau decides whether to approve the plan. It also launched a website dedicated to defeating the deal, stopanthemsbackroomdeal.com.

Brenda Weeks, 54, of Auburn, has held an individual Anthem policy for 29 years. She?s worked hard to assemble a team of CMMC medical providers who treat her for multiple sclerosis, and now fears losing them, she said.

Weeks, who uses a wheelchair and relies on a ventilator to breathe, said she?s overwhelmed by the prospect of having to find new doctors and a different hospital, as well as a new health plan with unknown costs and coverage.

?I?ve been very loyal to them, ? she said of Anthem, which also insured Weeks through her parents when she was young. ?I don?t like the idea that they are going to turn my world upside down, and that?s what will happen if I have to make these changes.?

Chuck Gill, a spokesman for Central Maine Healthcare, said Friday?s hearing has led to further confusion about which doctors are included in the network, after discrepancies in Anthem?s list were discovered.

?It?s got everyone asking more questions that we didn?t expect and not getting lots of answers,? he said by phone, stepping away from the hearing.

Anthem and MaineHealth contend that their collaboration will lead to lower health insurance premiums for consumers. The hospitals included in the network agreed to significantly reduced payments from Anthem in exchange for having more patients funneled to their facilities. Anthem has said those rate reductions are critical in offsetting extra costs associated with the Affordable Care Act, which requires insurers to offer a wider scope of benefits and prohibits them from denying customers with preexisting medical conditions.

MaineHealth serves much of southern and western Maine, with nine member hospitals and affiliate hospitals in Augusta, Brunswick and Lewiston.

Magnifying the effect of the move by Anthem and MaineHealth is the fact that the only other option on Maine?s exchange next year will be plans offered by a small startup nonprofit, Maine Community Health Options. The plans must be reviewed by the insurance bureau by July 31 and win approval from federal regulators.

Additional insurers could potentially join Maine?s exchange and sell policies in 2015.

About 257,000 Mainers are expected to be eligible to shop for insurance on Maine?s exchange, which will be run by the federal government. Yet, the insurance exchange won?t be their only option for health insurance coverage, and companies can still sell policies off the exchange.

Some of the 33,000 individuals who buy their own insurance may stick with another insurer, Mega Life, which will still sell policies in Maine but not through the exchange. Similarly, many of the 91,000 people who have coverage through a small business could continue getting coverage from several insurers that plan to stay in Maine?s market but not sell policies on the exchange. The third group eligible to shop on the exchange, Maine?s 133,000 uninsured, are more likely to do so, but could choose to remain without coverage, become eligible for Medicaid, or find a way to afford an off-exchange plan.

Both Anthem and Maine Community Health Options are interested in offering plans both on and off the exchange. Plans sold off the exchange wouldn?t be eligible for federal subsidies.

The Anthem-MaineHealth plans would affect not only future Anthem customers, but also existing customers. Anthem has requested permission from the insurance bureau to cancel or stop renewing its ?nongrandfathered? individual and small group policies and replace them with the new ?narrow network? policies.

Colin McHugh, who leads Anthem?s contracting efforts with health providers in the region, said the narrow network would still allow policyholders plenty of choice in who they see for care, according to his written testimony. All of the state?s northern hospitals and at least one hospital in every southern Maine county (except Sagadahoc, which doesn?t have a hospital) will be included, he said.

?The more focused network is still broad, offering members significant choices in high-quality hospitals, primary care physicians and specialists,? his testimony read.

Patients could still visit any hospital for emergency care, according to McHugh.

Anthem has stressed that its proposal with MaineHealth remains in the early stages.

Jud Knox, president of York Hospital, said his facility?s exclusion from the network will force Anthem patients to sever ties with their preferred medical providers unless they pay out of pocket.

?Almost all of these Anthem subscribers will not be able to afford that,? he said, according to his written testimony. ?As a result, these patients will have to discontinue treatment with their primary care providers and discontinue treatment with their customary treating specialists. They will have to decide whether they should forego or postpone treatment, or travel a considerable distance to a new hospital, [primary care physician], or specialist.?

Mercy CEO Eileen Skinner raised similar concerns about Portland-area patients covered by Anthem, and questioned whether Maine Medical Center could handle an influx of tens of thousands of Anthem patients who would have to abandon the excluded hospitals and turn to MMC for care.

?It is still unclear to me how the network was developed and what criteria were used by Anthem to select participating network providers,? Skinner said, according to her written testimony. ?Mercy is a longstanding, low-cost, high-quality Anthem participating provider, yet Mercy was never approached by Anthem with a proposal to join the network.?

A number of insurance carriers nationally have turned to narrow network plans, contending that limiting network size allows them to offer plans with better quality or more efficient doctors and hospitals, which could dampen spending or improve care.

The hospitals excluded from the Anthem network complained that the company failed to take into account hospital cost and quality criteria, which insurers in other states have relied on in devising narrow network plans.

Health insurers in Maine aren?t required to contract with every hospital, but must provide ?reasonable access to services.?

Central Maine Healthcare spokesman Gill also previously criticized the move by Anthem and MaineHealth as an affront to taxpayers. The exchanges will offer federal subsidies to qualifying working families to help them afford insurance. Anthem may be a private company, but the products it sells on Maine?s exchange will be partially financed by taxpayers, Gill has said.

While the provider network has garnered the most attention, it?s just one element in determining whether health insurance under Obamacare will lead to better and less expensive coverage in Maine. No information about how much the exchange plans will cost or specifics about the benefits they?ll include has been released yet publicly. That information, which will affect patients beyond western and southern Maine, is expected later this summer.

The insurance bureau will accept written comments from the public about the Anthem-MaineHealth provider network through next Friday.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2013/06/28/health/anthem-insurance-plan-with-mainehealth-under-review/

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Instagram gets hit by spam, and it's fruity, too

instagram

5 hours ago

A photo illustration shows the applications Facebook and Instagram on the screen of an iPhone in Zagreb April 9, 2012. REUTERS/Antonio Bronic

Reuters file

Instagram icon on iPhone.

If you noticed photos of fruit showing up in your Instagram feed Saturday, you might think it was to help you feel cooler, especially if you're in one of the Western states suffering from the heat wave. But it's not. In fact, it may be one of the first major spam attacks to hit the popular photo-sharing service.

Facebook, which owns Instagram, told NBC News that "earlier today, a small portion of our users experienced a spam incident where unwanted photos were posted from their accounts."

The fruit spam is a ploy to get you to click on the photo, and then a link for some kind of "miracle" fruit diet. The concern is how the spammers got into Instagram user accounts to do so.

Om Malik, of GigaOm, wrote that "Spammers are posting the photos to a user?s profile, as well as changing the URL in that person?s bio."

Facebook said that its security and spam team "quickly took actions to secure the accounts involved and the posted photos are being deleted."

Those users whose accounts were spammed have had their passwords re-set by Facebook, which is notifying them about the re-set. Users should take precautions, though, and check their Instagram profiles and security settings.

"General best practices are to use unique password for all of your online accounts, and if you've used the same password in the past, to go ahead and proactively change it to something unique," a Facebook spokeswoman said.

Since Instagram launched in 2010, approximately 16 billion photos have been shared on it. Facebook, which bought Instagram last year, recently added the capability to add video to Instagram.

Check out Technology and TODAY Tech on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2dfa8c79/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cinstagram0Egets0Ehit0Espam0Eits0Efruity0Etoo0E6C10A49350A7/story01.htm

The Bachelor 2013 Time

'Lola' tops 204 mph, breaking electric vehicle land speed record

Autos

June 28, 2013 at 12:08 PM ET

Drayson Racing team members celebrate their land speed record.

Drayson Racing/The Detroit Bureau

Drayson Racing team members celebrate their land speed record.

With all the emphasis on electric propulsion these days, it might seem hard to believe that it?s been 39 years since General Electric ? yes, GE ? set the FIA World Electric Land Speed Record. But that achievement has finally been bested by a sleek, Le Mans Prototype dubbed ?Lola.?

On an RAF airbase in Yorkshire, England, an 850-horsepower battery-electric built by Drayson Racing hit a top speed of 204.185 miles per hour during a pair of runs down a 3-kilometer (nearly 2-mile) track. That was a full 29 mph faster than the 175 mph record set way back in 1974 by the Battery Box General Electric.

?I?m delighted we?ve beaten the record tonight and can show the world EVs can be fast and reliable,? said Lord Paul Drayson, whose firm built the 2,200 battery, and who personally piloted it during the record run. ?It is not the outright speed of 204.185 mph that is most impressive about this record, but the engineering challenge of accelerating a 1000 kilogram electric vehicle on a short runway over a measured mile.?

Officially known as the Drayson B12 69/EV the enclosed racer used ultra-light carbon fiber for its chassis and body to compensate for the heft of a 30 kilowatt-hour battery pack. It also relied on custom-designed Michelin LM P1 tires.

Though most folks likely associate electric propulsion with ? but slow ? vehicles like the Nissan Leaf or Chevrolet Volt, the reality is that battery power can also deliver some impressive performance as an electric motor yields maximum torque the moment it starts spinning.

Drayson?s Lola can launch from 0 to 60 in less than 4 seconds, for example, and keep gaining speed until it?s pushed well past 200 mph. In fact, Lord Drayson is apparently looking to soon beat his own record, tweeting to fans that on an additional run the car was ?very lively at 216 mph.?

While he may be celebrating victory, the claimed record could come under dispute. The Buckeye Bullet, an EV built by students at Ohio State University, actually achieved a 307.7 mph average during two runs at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah in August 2010 ? and was seen as capable of reaching 400 mph. But that effort was not officially sanctioned by the FIA, leaving GE?s Battery Box the certified record-holder for another three years.

To proponents, what matters most is the increasing focus in electric racing and battery propulsion, in general.

There?s clearly a lot more interest, for example, has nudged its ZEOD RC battery race car up to 186 mph, and Top EV Racing claims to have launched its battery dragster from 0 to 100 in a mind-boggling 0.8 seconds.

What could put battery racing square in the public eye is the new Formula E series set to launch in 2015. Not surprisingly, Lord Drayson is looking to participate when that program gets underway.

Copyright ? 2009-2013, The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2defcb70/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Clola0Etops0E20A40Emph0Ebreaking0Eelectric0Evehicle0Eland0Espeed0Erecord0E6C10A464452/story01.htm

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Anil Goswami, 1978 batch IAS officer of Jammu and Kashmir cadre, appointed Union home secretary

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Source: http://timesofindia.feedsportal.com/c/33039/f/533916/s/2df8a12e/l/0Ltimesofindia0Bindiatimes0N0Cindia0CAnil0EGoswami0E19780Ebatch0EIAS0Eofficer0Eof0EJammu0Eand0EKashmir0Ecadre0Eappointed0EUnion0Ehome0Esecretary0Carticleshow0C20A8342360Bcms/story01.ht

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Mitchell 2010 LINCOLN MKT Certified SUV near Sioux Falls, SD Brookings, SD Vern Eide Ford Lincoln for $28,945

  • White Platinum Metallic Tri-Coat
  • Charcoal Black w/Premium Leather Heated/Cooled Fro
  • F4885
  • 3.7L V6
  • 2LMHJ5AR1ABJ20383
  • Automatic 6-Speed
  • 41,557 mi.
  • AWD SUV (4 Door)

?

  • Convenience

    • Interior air filtration
    • Air conditioning with dual zone climate control
    • Rear air conditioning - With separate controls
    • AC power outlet - 1
    • Adjustable pedals - Power
    • Audio controls on steering wheel
    • Center Console - Full with covered storage
    • Exterior Parking Camera - Rear with camera
    • Multi-function remote - Trunk/hatch/door/tailgate, windows
    • Overhead console - Mini with storage
    • Power Activated Trunk/Hatch - Power liftgate
    • Power steering
    • Tilt and telescopic steering wheel
    • Transmission controls on steering wheel - Gear shift controls
    • Universal remote transmitter
    • Clock - In-radio display
    • Compass
    • External temperature display
    • Tachometer
    • Trip computer
    • Power door locks
    • Memory settings for 2 drivers
    • Driver memory seats
    • Auto-dimming mirrors - Electrochromatic, driver only
    • Power heated mirrors
    • Bluetooth
    • Power windows with 4 one-touch
    • Rear defogger
    • Remote window operation
  • Exterior

    • Chrome grill
    • Rear spoiler - Lip
    • 3rd Row Sunroof - Glass
    • Rear sunroof - Glass
    • Intermittent window wipers
    • Rain sensing window wipers
    • Speed sensitive window wipers
    • Privacy/tinted glass
    • Rear wiper
  • Interior

    • Heated drivers seat
    • 8-way power adjustable drivers seat
    • Heated passenger seat
    • 8-way power adjustable passenger seat
    • Climate controlled - Heated
    • Heated Rear Seats
    • Rear heat - With separate controls
    • Reclining rear seats
    • Climate controlled - Driver and passenger heated-cushion, driver and passenger heated-seatback
    • Cooled
    • Front seat type - Bucket
    • Leather seats
    • Third row seats
  • Optional Equipment

    • Premium Leather Heated/Cooled Front Bucket Seats.
    • 3.39 Axle Ratio
    • GVWR: 6.350 lbs
    • Tires: P235/55R19 A/S BSW
    • Transmission: 6-Speed SelectShift (TM) Automatic
    • Wheels: 19" Premium Painted Aluminum
    • Class III Trailer Tow
    • PowerFold (TM) & Tumble 3rd Row Fold Flat Bench
    • Rapid Spec 102A - Includes Elite Package Also Includes Engine: 3.7L V6
    • Woven Metal Appearance Package
  • Safety

    • 4-wheel ABS brakes
    • Head airbags - Curtain 1st, 2nd and 3rd row
    • Passenger Airbag
    • Adaptive headlights
    • Front fog/driving lights
    • Dusk sensing headlights
    • Xenon headlights
    • Signal mirrors - Turn signal in mirrors
    • Stability control - Stability control with anti-roll
    • Traction control - ABS and driveline
  • Technical

    • 4WD Type - Automatic full-time
    • 268 hp horsepower
    • Keyless Ignition - Doors and ignition
    • 3.7 liter V6 DOHC engine
    • 4 Doors
    • All-wheel drive
    • Automatic Transmission
  • Not all issues are reported to CARFAX. The number of owners is estimated. See the full CARFAX Report for additional information and glossary of terms.

Payment $507.50

$28,945

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$28,945

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100 %

8.0 %

0 %

12 %

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Contact Us at (800) 778-0215

EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2010 LINCOLN near Sioux Falls, SD 2010 LINCOLN Brookings, SD

Source: http://www.verneideford.com/2010-LINCOLN-MKT-Mitchell/vd/15274656

Mermaid Body Found Celeste Holm

Concession manager at Natuzzi Italia | Dezeenjobs architecture and ...

Furniture and design brand Natuzzi Italia is looking for a concession manager to work at House of Fraser in Birmingham, UK.

Concession manager
Birmingham, UK

At Natuzzi Italia, beauty is in our DNA. Our store managers use their knowledge and experience to contribute meaningfully to people?s lives. They delight, impress, engage and inspire.

As a store manager you are the essence of a customer?s experience at our Natuzzi Italia stores and you?ll bring Pasquale Natuzzi?s vision to life to all of your customers and to all your team members. You?ll enrich people?s lives through meaningful dialogue about our beautiful products and you will generate excitement with your knowledge and passion for design and creativity.

You will be reference point in the local community and will be the expert for Interiors advice. You?ll have the gravitas to network with trade customers, and through these actions you will you raise the profile of the store within the design community.

Your leadership will ensure that you are respected within the business, and when it comes to coaching, performance management, managing projects, deadlines and ideas; you?ve got it under control.

You will need to show high standards in the following areas to be a successful store manager

Management and leadership

  • sets the store strategy based on the business objectives
  • responsible for meeting all deadlines that are set for the store
  • works in an organised and structured way
  • responsible for training and development of YDbN, product knowledge, customer experience and brand
  • responsible for all operational procedures i.e. health and safety, cash management, security and administration
  • develops the team through succession planning and is responsible for the recruitment of the team

People

  • shows strong leadership by providing direction, guidance and support to your team
  • builds lasting relationships with key contacts to grow the business
  • performance management of the team by setting objectives, expectations and development plans and review regularly
  • manages conflict to avoid disruption to business
  • responsible for the development of your team and uses coaching to develop and grow the capacity
  • empower team members to encourage development and progression

Communication

  • is always looking to improve the customer experience in store by comparing to the market leaders
  • on the job coaching to improve the capacity of the experience for each team member
  • builds rapport with customers and teammates
  • engages and shares knowledge with customers and teammates, delivering a positive shopping experience
  • makes customers feel comfortable in our store with great hospitality
  • able to provide a ?luxury brand? customer experience that enriches their lives and creates loyalty to Natuzzi
  • creates an emotional connection and delivers happiness
  • able to network seamlessly with internal and external customers
  • displays Leadership qualities to guide and support the team
  • is respected and authorised to manage trade business
  • have the negotiation skills that serve both the customer and the business

Attitude and behaviour

  • warm and friendly and love sharing your knowledge with your team and to customers
  • show professionalism and maturity at all times
  • meet the customer at the appropriate level, showing sophistication in your approach
  • a leader that is flexible, cooperative and supportive
  • is excited about the prospect of growing and learning

Brand and knowledge

  • lives and breathes the brand values
  • shares history of the brand with great passion
  • is the store expert for leathers, fabrics, features and benefits of each product item
  • explains the design and production processes expertly
  • is the store specialist for YDbN and is the appointed advanced user
  • has an in depth knowledge of our competitors product and the trends in the UK market

Design skills

  • is the reference point in the community for interior design advice
  • is responsible for all YDbN projects coming in and out of the store
  • is responsible for developing the YDbN competency within the store team
  • competent in managing a home or in store consultation with a customer
  • recommends to the VM manager any merchandising changes
  • understands ?Total Look ? Total Harmony? and demonstrates on every design project
  • has a good knowledge of space and colours and is up to date with interiors trends

Application deadline: 29 July 2013

Please send applications to?Paul McLavy pmclavy@natuzzi.com

www.natuzzi.co.uk

Please mention that you saw this position on Dezeen Jobs

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Source: http://www.dezeenjobs.com/2013/06/28/concession-manager-at-natuzzi-italia/

victoria azarenka Royal Rumble 2013

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Winter Park coach accused of molestation released from jail

12:50 p.m. EDT, June 29, 2013

The Winter Park High School coach arrested on several sex charges, including lewd and lascivious molestation of a girl under the age of 16, was released from jail Friday.

Ashley Sinclair Brown ? who took the girls basketball team from losing nearly every game to an 18-win season last year ? was arrested Thursday.

He posted the $5,600 bail Friday.

Brown, 29, the head coach for the girls team since May 2011, worked for the school district since March 2010. He makes about $18,000 annually as a program assistant.

Brown's job was to work in Winter Park's in-school suspension program. He was also an assistant coach for the football team, said Kathy Marsh, a district spokesman. He is accused of forcing a young girl to send him videos of herself "twerking," a sexually suggestive dance, police said.

The former University of Central Florida football player also asked the young girl to send him videos and photos of herself performing sexual acts.

He threatened to post information about her online if she refused to send the videos and photos.

The girl told her mother about Brown's inappropriate behavior and the mother informed police June 14.

The girl told her mother that she had been getting the messages since June 10.

She also said Brown had touched her inappropriately on school grounds at least twice.

Brown is also facing charges of contributing to the delinquency of a child and transmission harmful material to a child.

Brown was not working over the summer, Marsh said, but has been told that "at this point he is not welcome on the campus."

Further employment action likely will get underway when school district offices reopen Monday.

dstennett@tribune.com or 407-420-5447 or @desi_stennett on Twitter

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/orlandosentinel/news/~3/0U_dRvfUphk/os-coach-sinclair-brown-sex-arrest-20130628,0,4466855.story

March Madness 2013 bracket March Madness 2013

Samsung phone subsidies are even higher than iPhone subsidies

Samsung Phone Subsidies

Despite the fact that the iPhone is the best-selling smartphone line in the world, carriers have historically not been the biggest fans of Apple?s handsets. In fact, some carrier stores have been caught trying to get customers to purchase anything other than the iPhone.?Apple?s iPhone is known to carry huge subsidies, so it makes sense that wireless providers would favor more profitable handsets. It is quite interesting to learn, though, that when it comes to subsidies, Samsung phones actually cost carriers even more than the iPhone.

[More from BGR: Nokia told to adopt Android before it?s too late]

According to a report released this week by market research firm ABI Research, the average implied carrier subsidy for a Samsung smartphone in the United States is 84%. This means that on average, carriers are covering 84% of a Samsung smartphone?s up-front cost, while the rest is recouped in service fees over the course of a 24-month contract with the subscriber who purchases the phone.

[More from BGR: BlackBerry?s risky pricing strategy has backfired]

That compares to an 80% average implied subsidy for HTC smartphones and a 74% subsidy for the iPhone lineup.

?Samsung continues to squeeze its competitors at every turn,? ABI analyst Stuart Carlaw said.??The Samsung [Galaxy S4] is now considered on a par with Apple?s iPhone 5. Coupled with better subsidy, the breadth of its device portfolio, increasingly savvy marketing, and its excellence in channel execution, it is little wonder Samsung is dominating the mobile handset market from top to bottom.?

Carlaw?s colleague?Nick Spencer looked at the news from a different angle. ?The smartphone market in particular is entering a new phase focusing on execution and price, rather than innovation and value,? Spencer said. ?Samsung?s scale and supply chain excellence is allowing it to put its competitors under increasing price pressure and win market share. This is a major concern for the rest of the market, especially for smaller, less efficient vendors, as margins will be squeezed and overall market value reduced.?

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-phone-subsidies-even-higher-iphone-subsidies-204049784.html

John McAfee publix

Windows Store recommendations could one day reflect your usage patterns

Windows Store recommendations could one day reflect your usage patterns

Yesterday was the day Microsoft made Windows 8.1 available as a public download; today's the day we ask "what's next?" Here at the company's annual Build developer conference, we sat down with Ted Dworkin, the man who oversees the Windows Store, to do a deeper dive on the store's latest redesign. In particular, we were curious about that new Bing-powered recommendaton engine, and how it might become smarter over time. What ensued was a Pandora's box of a brainstorming session. Naturally, Dworkin wouldn't make any promises about what we'll see in future updates, but he did offer some compelling ideas about how Microsoft could take people's usage patterns into account when recommending apps. For instance, while Windows already knows which applications you've downloaded, a future version of the store might also be aware of which apps you use most frequently, which ones you've uninstalled, which ones you've shared, which ones you've pinned, which ones you've unpinned, et cetera. On a privacy note, the recommendation engine is already optional, so there's no reason why you couldn't disable this kind of data collection too.

For starters, this an interesting idea for the developers attending Build this week -- there are definitely people out there who download apps because they're testing them (or reviewing them) and not because they plan on using them every day. Even more broadly, though, who among us hasn't gone on a downloading spree, just to see what they liked? With usage patterns taken into account, you might get more useful picks, ones that ignore that random Twitter client or Angry Birds game you installed. Again, Dworkin wouldn't say for sure if Microsoft plans on implementing any of this, but our vote would be "yes" if it leads to more recommendations we'd actually use.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/27/microsoft-could-improve-windows-store-recommendations-usage-patterns/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

Atlanta school shooting Superbowl Kickoff Time 2013

Sony says Dubai dealers sold Iran $12.8 million in equipment

(Reuters) - Sony Corp said some dealers in Dubai resold about $12.8 million worth of its video equipment and medical instruments to Iranian ministries, in a move that could possibly attract U.S. penalties.

The dealers resold some equipment to Iran's broadcasting unit and health ministry, and some also planned to sell equipment to the information technology department of the country's police, the firm said in a filing with the U.S. regulator.

"If the relevant authorities were to impose penalties or sanctions against Sony, the impact of such sanctions could be material," the company said in Thursday's filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Sony said it followed policies and procedures designed to keep transactions with Iran in line with applicable economic sanctions laws, but there could be no assurance such measures would be effective.

It listed four Iran-related transactions, in three of which it made net profit of less than $500,000, while taking a loss in the fourth, but did not say how much.

Washington has been cracking down on companies accused of evading Iran sanctions.

The United States and Europe have imposed sanctions against specific Iranian individuals, state institutions or companies in so far unavailing efforts to persuade Tehran to rein in enrichment of uranium and open up to U.N. inspectors in exchange for phased relief from tightening financial isolation.

Western nations believe the Islamic Republic is attempting to develop the means to build atomic bombs. Iran says the nuclear programme is solely for electricity generation and medical uses.

Sony said it may conduct additional future sales in Iran through third-party owned dealers or distributors, which may require disclosure under U.S. laws.

"Sony intends to conduct any such sales in accordance with applicable law," it added.

(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

(This story is refiled to correct net profit in fifth paragraph to less than $500,000, not $500 million)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sony-says-dubai-dealers-sold-iran-12-8-033435536.html

helicopter crash matt jones

Alaska volcano spews five-mile-high ash plume

Alaska volcano: Located almost 600 miles southwest of Anchorage, Pavlof Volcano let loose its most powerful eruption since becoming active in mid-May.?

By Yereth Rosen,?Reuters / June 26, 2013

Space station astronauts captured this picture of Pavlof Volcano on Saturday.

Courtesy of the ISS Expedition 36 crew / NASA

Enlarge

An Alaska volcano spewing ash and lava for the past six weeks erupted with new intensity early on Tuesday, belching a plume of cinders 5 miles (8 km) into sky and onto a nearby town and disrupting local flights, officials said.

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The eruptions from Pavlof Volcano, on the Alaska Peninsula 590 miles (950 km) southwest of Anchorage, were its most powerful since its current eruptive phase began with low-level rumblings in mid-May, according to scientists at the federal-state Alaska Volcano Observatory.

The latest series of more powerful ash-producing blasts from the crater of the 8,261-foot (2,518-meter) volcano started late on Monday and continued overnight into Tuesday, scientists said.

"For some reason we can't explain, it picked up in intensity and vigor," said Tina Neal, an observatory geologist.

While the ash plume has so far remained too low in the sky to affect jetliner traffic, topping out at an altitude of 28,000 feet, smaller planes had to fly around it, officials said. Anchorage-based PenAir canceled one flight and re-routed others, said Missy Roberts, a company vice president.

Ash has dusted King Cove, a town of about 900 people located 30 miles southwest of Pavlof, the Alaska Volcano Observatory reported.

The National Weather Service issued an ash advisory for the region, warning of breathing problems for people with respiratory ailments and potential damage to exposed electronic equipment.

A second Alaska Peninsula volcano continued a low-intensity eruption, the observatory said. Ash from Veniaminof Volcano, 485 miles (780 km) southwest of Anchorage, has been limited to the area around its 8,225-foot (2,507-meter) summit, the observatory said.

The eruptions at Pavlof and Veniaminof are unrelated, scientists say.

A third, more remote, Alaska volcano remained restless but was not currently spouting lava or ash, the observatory said. Cleveland Volcano, 940 miles (1,512 km) southwest of Anchorage, began an on-and-off eruptive phase in mid-2011 but has not produced an explosive eruption since May 6, according to the observatory.

(Editing by Steve Gorman and David Brunnstrom)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/BcqHONaCNTU/Alaska-volcano-spews-five-mile-high-ash-plume

gary johnson gary johnson

Manager's guide to progressive discipline ? Business Management ...

No state or federal law requires an employer to establish a progressive discipline policy. But if your organization has one, make sure you follow it.

Most discipline cases lost in court or arbitration are the direct result of a manager?s failure to give adequate warning, document properly or enforce rules consistently and fairly.

Here are the steps to keep in mind when doling out discipline under a progressive discipline system:

  • Document verbal warnings and counseling. Then place these notes in employee personnel files. Avoid the practice of removing disciplinary actions from employee files after a year; without these records, you may get stuck at step one of the progressive discipline process even if an employee commits multiple infractions.
  • Remember that discipline cannot be carried out in a vacuum. It must be tied to employees? prior warnings and performance reviews. Document your efforts by using a Discipline Documentation Notice.
  • Allow employees to tell their sides of the story. Be sure to document what they say.
  • Let employees know what is ex??pected of them. Explicitly state: ?I expect that you will ...? Then provide the em?ployees with the tools necessary to reach the goal. The responsibility of shaping up then lies in the hands of the employees.
  • Set deadlines. Employees must be provided a reasonable time period within which to correct the problem. Generally, you want to steer clear of issuing a warning at 9 a.m. and terminating the employee at 3 p.m.
  • Spell out the consequences of in??action. Employees need to know that they will be subject to a specific adverse action if the problem addressed is not remedied.
  • Skip steps only when warranted. It?s not illegal to terminate an employee without running through your gamut of progressive discipline steps. But be sure that such extreme action is clearly deserved.

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john carlson greg smith

Intel 335 Series 180GB SSD


Intel has had a prominent role in the consumer solid-state drive (SSD) market since it launched its 80GB X25-M solid-state drive back in 2009. The chip giant has followed up with refreshed devices at regular intervals, most recently with the SSD 335 Series. The 180GB 335 Series drive we're reviewing today is the second SKU to launch; Intel shipped a larger 240GB model last December. This new drive is a decent performer, but its reliance on older controller technology leave it wedged in the middle of the pack.

There's not much difference between the new SSD 335 Series drives and the 330 Series, which launched a little over a year ago. Both the 330 and 335 families use the SandForce SF-2281 controller. Both offer SATA 6G support, a three-year warranty, and the same base performance specs (500MBps sequential read and 450MBps sequential write). The older drive uses 25nm MLC NAND, while the newer 335 Series is based on Intel's 20nm NAND. SSDs aren't known for drawing much power, but the 335 is specced as having a maximum power draw of 350mW, with idle power consumption of 275mW. That's significantly less than the SSD 330 Series, which was specced for 850mW under load and 600mW in idle.

Save for the reduced power consumption, the shift to 20nm NAND is mostly an advantage for Intel, rather than a direct benefit to consumers. The 20nm NAND is significantly smaller than 25nm NAND, which means Intel can fit more memory chips on a given silicon wafer. The shift to smaller manufacturing geometries (also called nodes) is one reason why the price of SSDs has dropped precipitously in the past few years. The new 20nm NAND chips (shown to scale in the image above), are just 40% the size of the 34nm NAND Intel was using four years ago.

Intel drives tend to carry a fair amount of additional (overprovisioned) Flash. The 180GB SSD 335 actually contains 192GB of RAM; the additional 12GB is rotated into use as blocks of the original 180GB wear out and need to be retired. One of the downsides to using NAND built on a smaller process is that the memory can't handle as many program/erase cycles. Despite this trend, Intel rates the SSD 335 is as robust as the previous SSD 330 family.

We compared the 180GB Intel SSD 335 against the Samsung 840 Pro Series 256GB and the OCZ Vector Series VTR1-25SAT3-256G. Our review unit was tested using an Asus P877V-Deluxe motherboard with 8GB of DDR3-1600 and an Intel Core i7-3770K CPU. The P877-V Deluxe offers multiple SATA controllers from Intel and Marvell; all of the drives were connected to Intel's 6G SATA port.

Of principle interest here is whether the 335's older SandForce controller can keep up with newer options from OCZ and Samsung. The SF-2281 controller has mostly been popping up in budget drives of late, and SandForce is expected to launch a new SF-3000 controller series later this year.

The performance figures for AS-SSD and SiSoft Sandra tests reflect a drive's performance in a particular type of data workload. Sequential read/write tests measure an SSD's capabilities when reading or writing a large block of contiguous data. A single large movie or ISO image will test a drive's sequential performance (assuming that the target drive isn't badly fragmented). In AS-SSD, the Intel 335's sequential read speeds weren't far off the OCZ Vector and Samsung 840 Pro (465MBps compared to 509 MBps and 518 MBps, respectively), but sequential write performance was significantly lower. The Intel 335 managed 252MBps, while the OCZ Vector clocked in at 495MBps and the Samsung 840 Pro scored 481MBps.

The 4K read/write tests ascertain the performance of an SSD or HDD when reading and writing small chunks of data. These small read/writes are vital to the everyday performance of a storage solution. The "64 Threads" test in AS-SSD means that the benchmark program spins off 64 separate 4K read/write tasks. This stretches the controller's ability to manage such workloads, but also provides a more realistic performance metric?an operating system is constantly reading and writing data to multiple services and programs simultaneously. The Intel 335 lagged behind the OCZ and Samsung drives at 203MBps read and 214MBps write. The OCZ Vector logged read/write speeds of 359MBps and 304MBps with the 840 Pro at 381MBps read, 299MBps write.

The random read/write performance data from SiSoft Sandra that we also quote is a measure of a drive's sustained performance when reading and writing a contiguous block of information to a randomly chosen location. These metrics are important because they collectively measure the different types of storage tasks an SSD or HDD performs, even if they don't represent user workloads.

SiSoft Sandra again shows the Intel 335 competing well in read performance (485MBps, while the OCZ Vector and Samsung 840 Pro both tie at 530MBps). Write performance is the drive's weak spot -- the Intel 335's SF-2281 controller turns in 225MBps in random write performance. That's less than half the OCZ Vector's 509MBps random write or the Samsung 840 Pro's 507MBps.

Finally, there's PCMark 7, which is a different type of test. The benchmark uses real storage workloads created by recording traces of hard drive activity when playing games, loading music or video, or copying files. These traces are used to measure the performance of storage products in comprehensive real-world scenarios.

The difference between SSDs in PCMark 7 tends to be much smaller than what we see in other synthetic tests. The Intel 335 scored a 5214, compared to a 5419 for the OCZ Vector and a 5588 for the Samsung 840 Pro. The gap between the Intel SSD 335 and the other drives is roughly ~7%.

Right now, the Intel 335 Series 180GB is selling for about $175, or just under $1 per GB. That compares fairly well to the cost-per-GB of an OCZ Vector ($269 for 256GB at NewEgg) or the Samsung 840 Pro ($249 for 256GB at NewEgg). The OCZ and Samsung options, however, are significantly faster than the Intel 335 Series. The SF-2281 controller has migrated to budget SSDs for a reason; it was cutting edge when it debuted in 2011, but its performance has been surpassed by other products.

That doesn't mean the Intel 335 is devoid of strong points. Intel has over-provisioned the drive by about 6.7%, which is fairly high for consumer hardware. The company has a reputation for high-quality NAND flash, and the included SSD toolbox software interfaces well with Windows and can auto-optimize an OS installation to run on solid state storage as well as manually triggering the TRIM command.

When push comes to shove, however, the Intel 335 Series 180GB SSD is in a bit of a no-man's land. There are budget drives, like Samsung's 840, that offer a lower cost per GB. There are higher-performing drives for the same cost per GB. If you can grab one of the 180GB or 240GB drives on sale, or if you're fond of Intel-branded products, then the Series 335 180GB SSD is a good option. Other buyers will find newer hardware a better deal.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/W90L3LX-5Z4/0,2817,2421132,00.asp

Boston Bomber cnn news

What if Your Mother Had Aborted You?

A pregnant woman holds her stomach June 7, 2006 in Sydney, Australia. If your mother had aborted you, how would you feel?

Photo by Ian Waldie/Getty Images

Texas Gov. Rick Perry is a plainspoken man, but on Thursday he waded into an ageless existential debate. Speaking to the National Right to Life conference, Perry pointed out that state Sen. Wendy Davis?who filibustered at the Texas Capitol for 13 hours on Tuesday to block a draconian abortion bill?was born to a single mother and became a teen mother herself, yet overcame those ?difficult circumstances? to attend Harvard Law School and enter politics. ?It is just unfortunate,? Perry said to his base, ?that she hasn?t learned from her own example that every life must be given a chance to realize its full potential and that every life matters.?

?Every life matters? may scan elsewhere as an uncontroversial sentiment, but at the National Right to Life conference, you can be sure that life is defined as a zygote, embryo, or fetus granted full personhood. Which means that Perry is using a kind of transitive property: Wendy Davis was once a zygote, and Wendy Davis matters; therefore, every zygote matters.

At the heart of this rhetoric is the checkmate question that people opposed to abortion rights often ask of their pro-choice opponents: ?What if your mother had aborted you??

This is a fantastic question! ?What if your mother had aborted you?? (WIYMHAY) has the makings of the pro-life movement?s very own Butterfly Effect, or some morbid parody of Back to the Future wherein time-traveling Marty McFly commits suicide by introducing Lorraine to her friendly local abortionist. WIYMHAY is a neat booby trap, and the trigger is ?you?: To answer the question, the pro-choice respondent risks wrapping herself in Clintonian knots parsing the meaning of ?you? or ?me? or ?I? when actually referring to a former blastocyst. (Frances Kissling, former director of Catholics for a Free Choice, has written about responding to anti-choicers wielding WIYMHAY: ?I?d note that the ?I? that stands before them is not the ?I? that was once a fetus.?)

WIYMHAY is also the launching pad for countless philosophical arguments. Reductionist philosopher Derek Parfit?author of the aptly titled On What Matters?writes that you cannot harm someone by failing to cause them to exist. (The blastocyst reading Parfit in the womb may conclude: ?If my mother doesn?t abort me, I matter, but if she does abort me, I don?t not matter, because there is no ?I? to matter.?) Princeton?s Elizabeth Harman contends that ?early-stage fetuses? can have different moral statuses based on what she calls the Actual Future Principle. (The blastocyst reading Harman may conclude: ?If my mother doesn?t abort me, she grants me an actual future in which I matter, therefore I matter now. If my mother does abort me, I do not matter in the future and thus don?t matter now.?) Then there?s Eric T. Olson, who titled a paper ?Was I Ever a Fetus?? and answered ?No,? because of the fetus?s lack of psychological continuity with the future person known as Eric T. Olson. (The blastocyst reading Olson must accept that, abortion or no abortion, psychology will soon snuff out its existence.)

?I? could go on. Intriguingly, a lot of philosophical arguments in favor of abortion rights have something in common with anti-abortion rhetoric: a tunnel-vision focus on the imagined interests and rights (or lack thereof) of a fascinatingly ambiguous entity, instead of the actual interests and rights of an unambiguous actual woman. WIYMHAY is a brilliant tactical leap because it speeds past all that ambiguity to an unambiguous actual child, then dares us to imagine that child stone-cold murdered, like our mom turned out to be Bruce Willis in Looper or something.

Once we?ve made that leap, we?re no longer dealing in abstruse philosophical quandaries?instead we?re dealing in anecdotes, and pro-lifers will always have better anecdotes than pro-choicers. Pro-lifers will have legitimately heartening and inspirational stories about, as Perry put it, ?children born in the worst of circumstances [who] grow to live successful lives.? Pro-choicers pummeled with WIYMHAY will be left arguing retroactively against their own existence.

But as long as the Rick Perrys of our political landscape are happy to concern-troll feminist heroes like Wendy Davis, I am happy to argue retroactively against my own existence. My husband?s, too. It?s easy to do, because we were both extremely unplanned. My husband?s late mother was 18, rural poor, and unmarried. My mother was 39?this was the 1970s, when pregnant 39-year-olds were rare and, at least in our corner of the Rust Belt, a bit strange?with three increasingly self-sufficient older children, ages 15, 11, and 9. She had two first cousins with Down syndrome, so after a few failed amnios, my mother knew exactly what she didn?t know about me. The first thing her obstetrician did after delivery was make sure she saw the palm of my hand.

In different circumstances, with different women, perhaps neither my husband nor I would be here. And that?s fine, or rather, we wouldn?t be around to declare it fine or not-fine. We are both rabidly pro-choice, and knowing our mothers? stories?and Wendy Davis??only deepens our convictions, just as pro-lifers have anecdotes that deepen theirs. To me, the pro-lifer position is I love my mother, and I?m so grateful she had me. The pro-choice position is I love my mother, and I?m so grateful she had the right to choose what was best for her and her family. Both positions are honorable in their way. But only one of them imagines my mother as more than my mother?as a person autonomous of me, and certainly autonomous of the blastocyst that turned into me.

Before I started writing this piece, I called my mother to ask for her permission. As we were getting off the phone, she said, ?I?m just glad you?re here.? I?m glad I?m here, too. But she was here first.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2013/06/rick_perry_says_wendy_davis_should_be_pro_life_because_her_mother_didn.html

Pumpkin Pie Jack Taylor

On first day in Africa, Obama calls Mandela a 'hero for the world'

The White House is in Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania for a week, to make up for lost ground as China's influence rises. But the status of Mandela looms over visit.?

By Mike Pflanz,?Correspondent / June 27, 2013

President Barack Obama gestures during a news conference with Senegalese President Macky Sall at the Presidential Palace in Dakar, Senegal, Thursday, June 27, 2013.

Evan Vucci/AP

Enlarge

US President Barack Obama jumped into a week-long trip to Africa today as the White House limo tooled through the capital of Senegal past signs reading "Yes, we can!" and a fresh painting of Martin Luther King Jr. Mr. Obama later visited the historic embarkation point of African slaves bound for the New World centuries ago.?

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The White House says the Africa visit is designed to promote trade and civil society. Mr.?Obama today praised his host Senegal as a "great example" of the kind of strengthening democracy his visit aims to support, and the former University of Chicago law professor also visited the Supreme Court of Senegal.?

Yet looming over the trip is the condition of one of Obama's heroes, Nelson Mandela, the first black and first democratically elected president of South Africa, who has been ailing in a Pretoria hospital ??and who today is said to have rallied again, with his health stabilizing according to official accounts.?

In the first public appearance of his trip, Obama told reporters that Mandela is a ?hero for the world? whose ?legacy will linger through the ages.?

Tomorrow, Obama visits South Africa but it is unclear how or whether the White House will actually engage with Mandela; the US leader is set to visit Robben Island where Mandela was imprisoned for more than two decades.?

In the meantime, the White House entourage has an agenda to bring more trade and political influence to Africa than it did in its first four years in office.

That effort is starting in Senegal, whose recent elections were praised by the US government as a model. During the press conference with Senegalese president Macky Sall, Obama said the West African country is an example to others on the continent.

"Senegal is one of the most stable democracies in Africa and one of the strongest partners that we have in the region," Obama said at a media conference in Dakar, the capital.

"It is moving in the right direction, with reforms to deepen democratic institutions. I believe Senegal can be a great example.?

But the president and his advisers are well aware that the Obama administration is ?behind the curve,? in the words of one analyst, and ?playing catch-up? in Africa, according to another.

Ahead of the US president's visit, by three months, was China?s new premier, Xi Jinping, who toured the continent less than a fortnight after becoming president of Africa?s largest trading partner.

Beijing has inked deals on a raft of major infrastructure projects across Africa, the most recent being a $10 billion new port, railway, and economic zone agreed in May for Tanzania.

China?s business with the continent has mushroomed from less than $10 billion in 2000 to $200 billion last year.

?The US under Barack Obama seems only now to be waking up to what others are doing in Africa, and they are having to play catch-up,? says Andrews Atta-Asamoah, senior researcher at South Africa?s Institute for Security Studies.

?It?s clear that his trip is an attempt to engage with Africa in a very different way from his first term, but one wonders if he?s a bit late.?

White House officials admit that?Obama?s first major visit to Africa has been too long coming.

?We have not traveled to Africa in the same way that we've traveled to other regions of the world,? Ben Rhodes, the president?s deputy national security advisor, said in a briefing about the visit.

?Frankly, we have heard a high demand signal from the US private sector for us to play an active role in deepening our trade and investment partnerships in Africa. What we hear from our businesses is that they want to get in the game in Africa.?

US trade with the African continent tripled between 2002 and 2012, to $100 billion a year. But that is still half of China?s trade.

Underscoring the central role economics has in the trip, it has been reported that 600 executives from US businesses are traveling with Obama, on the hunt for fresh investments.

The president will hold talks about easing cross-border trade within Africa, and strengthening contract law to boost businesses' confidence and counteracting fears of corruption.

Tackling that, too, is on the table.

Discussions over good governance and democracy could bring greater rifts between the US and African nations, since newer allies don't always hector African leaders, says Charles Dokubo of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs.

?Africa?s leaders find it very tempting to do business with new partners like China, who do not impose conditions on their assistance, like the West does,? Mr. Dokubo said. ?Obama should perhaps be very careful about how loudly he bangs the drum for good governance. It?s important, it needs to be said. But it?s not always music to the ears of our leaders.?

But Obama is perfectly placed to ?leverage the lashings of soft power he has in Africa? to succeed in both of his trip?s main aims: opening up new trade and cautioning over corruption, says Aly-Khan Satchu, a Kenyan economic analyst.

?He?s arriving behind the curve, but now is the chance for him to inflect that curve for the next few years,? Mr. Satchu says. ?Obama has so much soft power here that he has not yet used. Put that on the table, and you watch the dialogue change immediately about his supposed semi-detached engagement in Africa."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/qIXpasf8yE4/On-first-day-in-Africa-Obama-calls-Mandela-a-hero-for-the-world

mega millions numbers the fray

Retired General Target of Stuxnet Leak Investigation (Voice Of America)

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Conn. man arraigned in Hernandez murder case

Carlos Ortiz is shown during a hearing in court in Bristol, Conn., Friday, June 28, 2013. New Britain State's attorney says investigators arrested the 27-year-old Ortiz in Bristol on Wednesday in connection with the murder case against former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez. A judge ordered Ortiz turned over to Massachusetts authorities during the hearing. (AP Photo/The Bristol Press, Mike Orazzi, Pool)

Carlos Ortiz is shown during a hearing in court in Bristol, Conn., Friday, June 28, 2013. New Britain State's attorney says investigators arrested the 27-year-old Ortiz in Bristol on Wednesday in connection with the murder case against former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez. A judge ordered Ortiz turned over to Massachusetts authorities during the hearing. (AP Photo/The Bristol Press, Mike Orazzi, Pool)

This undated photo provided by the Bristol County, Mass. District Attorney's Office shows Ernest Wallace. Police say Wallace is wanted for accessory after the fact of the murder of semi-pro football player Odin Lloyd last week in North Attleborough, Mass., near the home of New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez. (AP Photo/Bristol County District Attorney's Office)

Former New England Patriots football player Aaron Hernandez stands during a bail hearing in Fall River Superior Court Thursday, June 27, 2013 in Fall River, Mass. Hernandez, charged with murdering Odin Lloyd, a 27-year-old semi-pro football player, was denied bail. (AP Photo/Boston Herald, Ted Fitzgerald, Pool)

Shayanna Jenkins, middle, fiancee of former New England Patriots football player Aaron Hernandez, is escorted by attorney Janice Bassil, left, and an unidentified attorney after a bail hearing in Fall River Superior Court Thursday, June 27, 2013 in Fall River, Mass. Hernandez, charged with murdering Odin Lloyd, a 27-year-old semi-pro football player, was denied bail. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

NORTH ATTLEBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) ? A Connecticut man arrested in connection with the murder case against former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez has pleaded not guilty to a Massachusetts firearms charge.

Twenty-seven-year-old Carlos Ortiz appeared Friday in North Attleborough court. He has been ordered held without bail until a July 9 hearing.

Before the arraignment, Ortiz's attorney, John Connors, said he spoke to his client for the first time Friday when he was returned from Connecticut. Ortiz was arrested Wednesday.

Connors declined to comment when asked whether Ortiz was cooperating with authorities and what he knows about the killing of Boston semi-pro football player Odin Lloyd.

Connors said he doesn't know the details of his client's relationship with Hernandez except that both are from Bristol, Conn.

Hernandez has pleaded not guilty to a murder charge in Lloyd's slaying.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-28-Hernandez-Police/id-012b9a41b53249a69e83497cbd7ddd9f

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