Wednesday, November 30, 2011

In Canada, hockey for everyone

? A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

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A hockey player who has been diagnosed as legally blind is rollerblading from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Toronto to raise money to teach blind Canadians how to play hockey. Mark DeMontis, who has limited vision, is in-line skating through Canada with two friends who take turns being his guide. He is raising funds through an organization he started called Courage Canada, and is expected to arrive in Toronto on Oct. 15 ? two months after setting off from Halifax.

Mr. DeMontis says he was inspired by Chris Delaney, a blind Canadian who rode a tandem bike across Canada to raise funds for research.

Blind hockey is a sport that so far exists only in Canada. It involves a puck that is much larger, slower, and noisier than a normal puck ? which makes it easier to spot for visually impaired players, according to Fran?ois Beauregard, a captain of a Montreal-based blind hockey team called Les Hiboux de Montreal, or The Montreal Owls. Canada started having national blind hockey tournaments two years ago, but organizers would like to turn it into an international sport. They?ve received e-mails and phone calls from the United States and Sweden expressing interest.

In addition to hockey, there are also bicycling, snow-shoeing, and cross-country skiing events for blind people in Canada.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/kdlxaqol_fk/In-Canada-hockey-for-everyone

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China artist Ai Weiwei says wife detained, released (Reuters)

BEIJING (Reuters) ? The wife of prominent Chinese artist-activist Ai Weiwei was taken away by police for three hours of questioning on Tuesday, Ai said, adding that he still had not spoken to his wife Lu Qing about the reasons for the renewed scrutiny from authorities.

"She was taken away for questioning, and then she was released about half an hour ago," Ai told Reuters.

"I haven't had a chance to speak to her so I'm not sure about the circumstances."

Ai, whose 81-day secret detention ignited an international uproar, was released in late June. Ai and his supporters said he was the victim of the ruling Communist Party's crackdown on dissent. The government accused him of tax evasion, a charged he denied.

Ai, who had a hand in designing the Bird's Nest stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, paid a bond of 8.45 million yuan ($1.3 million) this month, paving the way to file an appeal against the tax evasion charge.

The money was raised from contributions from his supporters.

Ai has said his wife is the legally-registered representative of the company at the heart of the tax dispute, and therefore could also be targeted in the charges.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Yoko Nishikawa)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111129/wl_nm/us_china_artist

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Jim Boeheim Statement: Bernie Fine Firing Leads Syracuse Basketball Coach To Express Regret

Shortly after his longtime colleague Bernie Fine was fired amid allegations of sexual abuse of two young boys, Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim issued a statement via Facebook:

"The allegations that have come forth today are disturbing and deeply troubling. I am personally very shocked because I have never witnessed any of the activities that have been alleged. I believe the university took the appropriate step tonight. What is most important is that this matter be fully investigated and that anyone with information be supported to come forward so that the truth can be found. I deeply regret any statements I made that might have inhibited that from occurring or been insensitive to victims of abuse."

These latest remarks by Boeheim represent a stark contrast to his strong support for Fine after the allegations initially surfaced. Shortly after ESPN reported that police were investigating allegations of abuse against Fine by two former Syracuse ball boys, Boeheim issued a statement backing Fine.

"This matter was fully investigated by the university in 2005 and it was determined that the allegations were unfounded. I have known Bernie Fine for more than 40 years. I have never seen or witnessed anything to suggest that he would been involved in any of the activities alleged. Had I seen or suspected anything, I would have taken action. Bernie has my full support."

After Boehiem's initial statement, the founder of Road to Recovery -- a non-profit group dedicated to sexual abuse recovery -- railed against the coach's remarks. Rev. Robert M. Hoatson, the Road to Recovery founder, stated that Syracuse should change its mascot's color from orange to yellow to reflect Boeheim's cowardice.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/27/jim-boeheim-statement-bernie-fine-syracuse-basketball_n_1115540.html

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

The top 10 songs and albums on the iTunes Store (AP)

iTunes' Official Music Charts for the week ending Nov. 28, 2011:

Top Songs:

1. "Sexy and I Know It," LMFAO

2. "It Will Rain," Bruno Mars

3. "We Found Love (feat. Calvin Harris)," Rihanna

4. "Good Feeling," Flo Rida

5. "The One That Got Away," Katy Perry

6. "Someone Like You," ADELE

7. "Moves Like Jagger (Studio Recording from "The Voice" Performance) (feat. Christina Aguilera)," Maroon 5

8. "Stereo Hearts (feat. Adam Levine)," Gym Class Heroes

9. "Without You (feat. Usher)", David Guetta

10. "Party Rock Anthem (feat. Lauren Bennett & GoonRock)," LMFAO

___

Top Albums:

1. "Talk That Talk," Rihanna

2. "Take Care," Drake

3. "Here and Now," Nickelback

4. "Mylo Xyloto," Coldplay

5. "Christmas," Michael Buble

6. "21," ADELE

7. "Break the Spell," Daughtry

8. "My Life II...The Journey Continues (Act 1)," Mary J. Blige

9. "A Very Gaga Holiday (Live)," Lady GaGa

10. "Ultimate Hits: Rock and Roll Never Forgets," Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band

___

(copyright) 2011 Apple, Inc.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/digitalmusic/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_en_mu/us_itunes_music_top10

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This week in The Slacktiverse, November 26/27 2011 (slacktivist)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/166805908?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Tony Stewart hires Steve Addington as crew chief

Driver Tony Stewart, left, talks with crew chief Darian Grubb, right, during practice for Sunday's NASCAR Ford 400 Sprint Cup series auto race at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla., Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Terry Renna)

Driver Tony Stewart, left, talks with crew chief Darian Grubb, right, during practice for Sunday's NASCAR Ford 400 Sprint Cup series auto race at Homestead-Miami Speedway in Homestead, Fla., Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Terry Renna)

FILE - This May 28, 2011 file photo shows Tony Stewart, right, and crew chief Darian Grubb during NASCAR Sprint Cup series auto race practice in Concord, N.C. Stewart's crew chief will not speculate on his future with the race team beyond Sunday's season finale. (AP Photo/Jim R. Bounds, File)

(AP) ? Tony Stewart made a decision to fire crew chief Darian Grubb, and winning the NASCAR championship didn't change his mind.

Grubb was officially replaced Monday, eight days after guiding Stewart to the Sprint Cup title. Steve Addington, who quit as Kurt Busch's crew chief last week, takes over immediately ? and begins work as Stewart and Grubb head to Las Vegas to begin the championship celebration.

"I know Steve well and I know how he goes about setting up a race car," said Stewart, who worked with Addington from 2005 through 2008 during his time at Joe Gibbs Racing.

"My comfort level with him is already strong. He balances the technical part of our sport with the real-world experiences we get at the track, and that will allow for a smooth transition as we prepare to defend our title in 2012."

Grubb was told midway through the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship that he was going to be let go at the end of the season. Stewart had gone winless through the first 26 races of the season, but opened the Chase with back-to-back wins to become a sudden title contender.

But the Stewart-Haas Racing team stumbled, and Stewart made the decision to replace Grubb.

Grubb then led Stewart to three more wins, including a powerful drive in the Nov. 20 season finale to give Stewart the title over Carl Edwards. It was Stewart's third championship.

After the race, Grubb acknowledged he'd been told he was not coming back next season, and Stewart declined to discuss his crew chief's status.

"Darian was a very important part of the success we've had at Stewart-Haas Racing," Stewart said Monday. "I'm very proud of everything he helped accomplish, especially this year when we all rallied to win the championship. He's a great person and I know he'll continue to be successful in this sport."

Grubb won't stay off the market long: Rick Hendrick said Monday he's offered Grubb an engineering position with Hendrick Motorsports, where Grubb was before he became Stewart's crew chief in 2009.

Hendrick said he was surprised Grubb was let go.

"I think the dye was cast before the Chase, and then they had the Chase, they had the success and they won it, but it was something they just didn't want to go back on," Hendrick said. "Darian is a very smart guy, and he's entertaining a lot of offers out there.

"I hope Darian ends up with us. I think he would help our organization a lot, but I'm not sure - if he wants to be a crew chief, we don't have that spot."

Addington, meanwhile, becomes just the third crew chief of Stewart's 13-year career. He won his previous two titles with Greg Zipadelli at JGR.

Addington has won 16 races as a crew chief, all with brothers Kyle and Kurt Busch. He led Kyle Busch to 12 wins at JGR, but was let go with three races remaining in the 2009 season. He then moved to Penske Racing to team with Kyle's older brother, Kurt, and led him to four wins and consecutive berths in the Chase.

Addington also spent 15 years as a crew chief in the Nationwide Series, winning 10 races with Jason Keller.

"Tony and I are a lot alike and we're able to push each other," Addington said. "I saw how he worked when we were at Gibbs together and I'm not surprised at all at the success he's created at Stewart-Haas Racing.

"He expects a lot and he knows a lot. His talent behind the wheel is obvious, but his ability to motivate and get everyone to believe that whatever goal they set is attainable is something every crew chief wants, and I plan to make the most of it."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-28-CAR-NASCAR-Stewart-Crew-Chief/id-45947ec0893e4bfa8fc9e9d7a8b454ce

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Black Friday sales up 7 pct; retailers look ahead (AP)

The holiday shopping season got off to a strong start on Black Friday, with retail sales up 7 percent over last year, according to the most recent survey. Now stores just have to keep buyers coming back without the promise of door-buster savings.

Buyers spent $11.4 billion at retail stores and malls, up nearly $1 billion from last year, according to a Saturday report from ShopperTrak. It was the largest amount ever spent on the day that marks the beginning of the holiday shopping season, and the biggest year-over-year increase since 2007. Chicago-based ShopperTrak gathers data from 25,000 outlets across the U.S., including individual stores and shopping centers.

The Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn. broke its Black Friday record for shoppers, thanks to a decision to open at midnight for the first time. Around 210,000 visitors came to the mall on Friday, up from 200,000 last year, according to mall spokeswoman Bridget Jewell.

Online shopping was strong as well, with a 24.3 percent increase in online spending on Black Friday, according to IBM, which tracks sales at 500 online retailers.

Bill Martin, who founded ShopperTrak, said he was surprised by the strong showing. He had expected the weak economy to dent consumer confidence and keep more shoppers out of the stores, or at least from spending much. Instead, he said, they responded to a blanket of promotions, from 60- and 70-percent off deals to door-buster savings on electronics.

"I'm pleased to see it. You can't have a great season without having a good Black Friday," Martin told The Associated Press in an interview.

Sales were also up 4 percent each in the two weeks leading up to Black Friday, as retailers started their promotions earlier than usual or extended their hours.

Still, he suspects things will quiet down this weekend, as promotions end and the buying frenzy subsides. ShopperTrak is expecting holiday sales to be up 3.3 percent this season. Retailers generally rely on sales between Thanksgiving and Christmas to make up 20 percent of their annual take.

There weren't many shoppers at Pioneer Place Mall in Portland, Ore., on Saturday.

"This is great, I'm glad I waited," said MaryJane Danan, who drove two hours from Corvallis, Ore., to go shopping with her teenage daughters. She stayed home on Black Friday because she thought the crowds would be huge. But she was surprised by how few people were out Saturday.

At Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, N.C., Mary Aker was forced to use valet parking Friday because she couldn't find a parking spot. But on Saturday, the pace had let up a little, so she and her husband came back to do some more shopping.

Aker, 58, a retired librarian, said she's spending about as much as she usually does for Christmas. But she's asking people what they want ahead of time to make sure everyone is happy.

At the same mall, sisters Patricia Harrington, Betty Thomas and Laverne Kelly had been shopping all weekend, starting with an all-nighter Thursday after Thanksgiving dinner. The sisters said things calmed down considerably by Friday and Saturday. They suspected a lot of people were shopping online, but they were also underwhelmed by the discounts.

"People are losing their jobs. They should have better deals," said Kelly, 50 and a customer service agent at FedEx.

"There are a lot of people out here but fewer bags," added Thomas, 52 and a health coordinator at a Raleigh hospital.

Thanksgiving weekend, particularly Black Friday, is huge for retailers. Over the past six years, Black Friday was the biggest sales day of the year, and it is expected to keep that crown this year, though shoppers seem to be procrastinating more every year and the fate of the holiday season is increasingly coming down to the last few days before Christmas.

Last year, the Thanksgiving shopping weekend accounted for 12.1 percent of overall holiday sales. Black Friday made up about half of that.

___

AP Business Writer Sarah Skidmore contributed from Portland, Ore. AP Business Writer Christina Rexrode contributed from Raleigh, N.C.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111127/ap_on_bi_ge/us_holiday_shopping

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

USC Upsets Oregon, 38-35: Matt Barkley Leads Trojans Over Ducks

EUGENE, Ore. ? Matt Barkley threw for 323 yards and four touchdowns and No. 18 USC held off No. 4 Oregon 38-35 on Saturday night when Alejandro Maldonado missed a 37-yard field goal to tie the game with five seconds left.

Trailing 24-7 in the third quarter, Oregon mounted a furious comeback and narrowed it to 38-35 with 7:05 left in the fourth quarter. Barkley led his team to the Oregon 15, but Marc Tyler fumbled and the ball was recovered by the Ducks with 2:54 to go.

Oregon marched down the field but Maldondado's kick, which was brought five yards closer because of a USC penalty, went wide left.

The loss snaps a 21-game winning streak for the Ducks (9-2, 7-1 Pac-12) at Autzen Stadium, which was the longest in the nation. It also stopped Oregon's winning streak in conference games at 19.

Robert Woods, who was held out of some practices this week with ankle and shoulder injuries, caught seven passes for 53 yards and two scores. With the victory, USC (9-2, 6-2) kept the Ducks from clinching a spot in the inaugural Pac-12 championship game.

The loss had greater implications for Oregon after No. 2 Oklahoma State lost to Iowa State 37-31on Friday night, which is sure to shake up the BCS standings. The Ducks had jumped to fourth in those rankings after a decisive 53-30 victory over then-No. 3 Stanford last week.

But against USC, they were playing catch up from the start.

The Trojans scored first on Barkley's 59-yard touchdown pass to Marqise Lee in the first quarter, then added Barkley's 12-yard scoring pass to Woods early in the second to go up 14-0.

The Ducks didn't' look like themselves until an efficient scoring drive midway through the second quarter. Darron Thomas hit true freshman Colt Lyerla with a 35-yard pass before striking fellow frosh De'Anthony Thomas with a 29-yarder for the touchdown. The seven-play drive covered 88 yards in just 2:15.

But USC answered with Barkley's 4-yard touchdown pass to Woods. The TD, Barkley's 73rd, moved him past Carson Palmer for second on Southern California's career touchdown list. Matt Leinart had 99 for the Trojans.

The Ducks had a chance to narrow it before the half, but De'Anthony Thomas was out of bounds when he pulled down a Darron Thomas pass to the end zone. On the next play, James fumbled and the ball was recovered by USC.

James, who dislocated his elbow earlier in the season and missed two games, was hit in the arm on the play, and was holding the elbow as he was helped up by trainers.

The Trojans opened the second half with Andre Heidari's 26-yard field goal to make it 24-7, but Oregon again showed a flash of its usual speedy offense with a quick drive capped by Kenjon Barner's 10-yard touchdown run.

The Ducks, known for their second half adjustments, couldn't slow USC's momentum and the Trojans scored on the subsequent series with Marc Tyler's 3-yard run. Barkley added a 5-yard scoring pass to Randall Telfer to make it 38-14.

De'Anthony Thomas narrowed it again for the Ducks with a 96-yard kickoff return for a touchdown, and the Autzen Stadium crowd got back into the game with 3:28 left in the third quarter.

Barner had an 8-yard touchdown run to close the Ducks to within 38-27 with 12:44 left in the game. The Trojans ate a lot of time up with their next series, but Barkley was intercepted by John Boyett, putting the Ducks in business on their own 40. Oregon scored on James' 1-yard run, and the 2-point conversion was ruled good after review to make it 38-35.

Darron Thomas threw for 265 yards and a touchdown for the Ducks. Barner ran for 123 yards and two scores.

But USC still got its first victory in the state of Oregon since 2005.

The Trojans cannot play in the postseason because of NCAA sanctions. The league's southern representative is still up for grabs between Arizona State, Utah and UCLA.

There were cheers before the game started when NBA stars LeBron James, Chris Paul, Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, Carmelo Anthony and several others showed up on the sidelines. James and Anthony even tossed around a football.

The players were have been working out at Nike headquarters in Beaverton, Ore., just outside of Portland.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/20/usc-upsets-oregon-38-35-matt-barkley-football_n_1103549.html

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AP Essay: Stephen King, JFK and lost Boomer dreams (AP)

NEW YORK ? Stories about time travel generally share one trait: They believe, by implication or open statement, that yesterday remains a malleable canvas, if only you could access it. "The past," author William Faulkner once wrote, "is never dead. It's not even past."

In the United States, one of the most obsessed-upon pivot points of our recent past ? the moment when people felt the country took a hard turn down a fraught and unpleasant path ? was the assassination of John F. Kennedy in Dallas. The date is etched forever upon the American psyche: 11/22/63.

Which is exactly the minimalist title of Stephen King's new book. The behemoth "11/22/63" postulates what might have happened if an English teacher named Jake Epping slipped back in time from now to 1958, then lived out five years of his life waiting for Kennedy's appointment with Lee Harvey Oswald's bullet 48 years ago Tuesday ? and possibly preventing it.

In other words: One of the Baby Boomers' most celebrated authors is spending three pounds of bookage examining whether the course of the 1960s and the decades beyond would have changed if a single traumatic event had been averted. It's like a mashup of "Back to the Future" and "In the Line of Fire."

This is a wrenching and subtle book, but that's not what we're here to discuss. More important is this: The 849 pages of "11/22/63" channel the angst and longing that so many Boomers feel about a past that, perhaps, didn't go in the direction they had hoped ? and possibly even about lives that didn't turn out quite as planned.

The cover of "11/22/63" distills this duality. On the front is a newspaper bearing the familiar headline: "JFK Slain in Dallas, LBJ Takes Oath." On the back, though, is a might-have-been banner from another lifetime ? "JFK Escapes Assassination, First Lady Also OK! Americans Breathe Sigh of Relief." It almost hurts to read it, to envision the possibility.

Imagine: giving someone a pen to rewrite the 1960s and beyond ? to make Beatles survive, new presidents emerge, things turn out differently. Imagine how that could play with Americans who watched the Kennedy mystique peter out and dreams of revolution melt into ads that use Janis Joplin tunes to sell cars.

King is able to address questions that have been raised so often in the years since that lunch hour on Dealey Plaza in Dallas: Would we have gone so far into Vietnam? Would so many have died? Would JFK, had he lived, have produced an enduring foundation for peace and prosperity? Would the children of the 1960s have come of age in a different world?

Those are the obvious tensions. But, through the eyes of Jake Epping and his Brave-Old-World road trip through pre-Vietnam-era America, King also burrows into some less frequently articulated national themes, both philosophical and theological. Among them:

_Even if we could put a rewrite guy on the history books, could a single man, even one with foreknowledge, have changed everything? In a culture so based on individualism, this is a central question.

_Is there such a thing as fate? Are some things just destined to happen?

_Was the American past actually better, simpler, kinder, more bursting with possibility? Is the national zest for yesterday justified, or is it just a crutch that we use when we want to escape?

As the 1960s dawned, the future was a central part of the American experience. From "The Jetsons" to Kennedy's New Frontier, we shaped and shared optimistic visions of it, made it part of the political dialogue, elevated it to one of the fundamental expressions of our national optimism.

That has long since faded. Today, visions of the future are generally dystopian and menacing. Instead we look back, using entertainment and shopping and casual dining and home decor to evoke pasts that we never lived, to surf among our yesterdays without having to grapple with the tough questions.

This makes King impatient. At one point in 1963, the woman Jake loves in the past learns of his origin and his intent and snaps at him: "That's what all this is to you, isn't it? Just a living history book." King is gentle about it, but he indicts people who bathe themselves in the aura of nostalgia, who look back rather than forward and blindly glorify what came before.

Yes, Jake Epping allows, in 1958 we hadn't destroyed the environment quite so much yet, independent businesses were still serving great pie a la mode and life didn't move quite so fast. But things were a lot smellier, a lot smokier ? and, most saliently, a lot more unfair to people who weren't white and male. It wasn't, Jake says, "all Andy-n-Opie."

By the book's end, King's constant readers can place "11/22/63" in the context of his previous work and legitimately wonder: After all the rotting corpses and sharp-toothed clowns, after all the ghosts and aliens and possessed cars and possessed dogs, could this, at long last, be the thing that truly haunts Stephen King? Could the master of American horror, he who bravely shepherded us through the unspeakable in the 2000s, the 1990s, the 1980s and the 1970s, be afraid of the 1960s?

And could the sheer capriciousness of history, and how it rearranges all of us like tiny chess pieces, be the most terrifying thing of all?

King actually addresses this. Toward the end of the book he writes, in Jake Epping's voice, one of the most eloquent passages he's ever produced:

"For a moment everything was clear, and when that happens you see that the world is barely there at all. Don't we all secretly know this? It's a perfectly balanced mechanism of shouts and echoes pretending to be wheels and cogs, a dream clock chiming beneath a mystery glass we call life. Behind it? Below it and around it? Chaos, storms. Men with hammers, men with knives, men with guns. Women who twist what they cannot dominate and belittle what they cannot understand. A universe of horror and loss surrounding a single lighted stage where mortals dance in defiance of the dark."

Revealing how "11/22/63" ends would, of course, spoil the book. But it kind of doesn't matter, because the lesson is clarion: Don't mess with yesterday. It may bite. Pulling at the threads of time's tapestry is done at our own peril, and the conventional assumption that changing one thing about the past would make today better is simplistic. Besides, King writes: "The past doesn't want to be changed."

Boomers and Beatles may have believed in yesterday, but salvation doesn't necessarily lie there. No matter how deeply we feel, King seems to say, the answers were never just blowin' in the wind. They weren't even about whether one young president lived or died. They were, and remain, far more complicated.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Ted Anthony writes about American culture for The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/anthonyted

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111121/ap_en_ot/us_the_boomers_and_the_king

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Video: Happy, healthy reunion for twin tots

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45384991#45384991

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Monday, November 21, 2011

China, U.S. grapple with tensions at trade talks (Reuters)

CHENGDU, China (Reuters) ? Chinese and U.S. officials started meeting on Sunday to grapple with trade disputes that have strained ties between the world's two biggest economies, carrying forward concerns exchanged between leaders at back-to-back Asian summits in the past week.

At the annual U.S.-China Joint Commission on Commerce and Trade, or JCCT, in the southwest Chinese city of Chengdu, U.S. Commerce Secretary John Bryson said he would push for "concrete and measurable" steps to boost U.S. exports.

President Barack Obama over the past week met with his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao twice, both times discussing barriers to trade among other issues. Obama said China is now "grown up" and should act that way in international affairs.

China's official reaction has been restrained, with an impending leadership succession preoccupying the Communist Party and leaving it anxious to avoid diplomatic fireworks.

But the conversation is expected to continue at the cabinet and bureaucratic level.

"These are very, very important economic times for both China and the United States, and indeed the world," the U.S. ambassador to Beijing, Gary Locke, said as officials filed in for the first session of the two-day negotiations.

At the heart of the trade friction between is the U.S. trade deficit with China, which in 2010 rose to a record $273.1 billion, up from about $226.9 billion in 2009, in spite of both government's pledges to correct "global imbalances."

The JCCT talks do not grapple with complaints by the United States that the yuan is undervalued to favor Chinese exports, nor with broader political tensions between Beijing and Washington.

But U.S. officials want progress on complaints about lax protection of intellectual property and Beijing's eight-year-old import ban on U.S. beef.

China will press for the United States to "relax restrictions on high-tech (U.S.) exports, and make it easier for China to invest in the United States," said Xinhua.

Beijing complains that those high-tech restrictions, imposed for security reasons, hold back purchases of U.S. goods that could narrow the trade gap, a claim rejected by Washington.

The meeting aims to air disputes and solve them before they require action at the World Trade Organization (WTO).

In addition, some disputes are not covered by WTO rules, so the months of meetings that precede each JCCT provide a valuable opportunity to air concerns, an Obama administration official said earlier.

The two sides are due to announce the outcome of the latest JCCT talks on Monday afternoon local time.

(Reporting by Chris Buckley)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111121/pl_nm/us_china_usa_trade

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Aftermath of Hendo-Rua: Ice packs, blood and a title shot

What does a 41-year-old man look like after going five rounds in a classic MMA bout that you will tell your kids about? This:

Aftermath of Hendo-Rua: Ice packs, blood and a title shot

With the adrenaline of the evening still pumping, it's easy to say that Dan Henderson's tight win over Mauricio "Shogun" Rua was the best fight in UFC history. There's no quantitative way to gauge if this was better than every other fight to grace the Octagon.

But I know that this is a fight I will continue to talk about with friends, family, and complete strangers. ?I know this is a fight that I feel lucky to have watched live. I know that this fight will sit on my DVR until the piece of machinery dies so that I can watch the bout again and again. I know that it covered both the canvas and Henderson's shorts in blood:

Aftermath of Hendo-Rua: Ice packs, blood and a title shot

A fight like that will leave a mark on MMA fans, but it remains to be seen what Henderson's next step is. UFC president Dana White said in the post fight press conference that Henderson has secured a title shot, but timing will dictate if it's at middleweight or light heavyweight.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/Aftermath-of-Hendo-Rua-Ice-packs-blood-and-a-t?urn=mma-wp9770

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Mom-to-Be's Mental State May Affect Child's Development (HealthDay)

THURSDAY, Nov. 17 (HealthDay News) -- A fetus is sensitive to, and can be affected by, the expectant mother's mental state, a new study suggests.

University of California, Irvine, researchers recruited pregnant women and tested them for depression before and after they gave birth. The women's babies were tested after birth to assess how well they were developing.

Consistency in the mother's mental state appeared to be important to a baby's well-being. Development was best in babies with mothers who were either depression-free or had depression before and after giving birth.

Development was slower in babies born to mothers who went from depressed before birth to non-depressed after birth or from non-depressed before birth to depressed after birth, the investigators found.

The researchers said they were surprised by the strength of the finding, which will be published in an upcoming issue of the journal Psychological Science.

Some might incorrectly interpret the results to mean that a mother who is depressed before birth should be left that way after birth for the well-being of her baby, the study authors noted in a journal news release.

"A more reasonable approach would be to treat women who present with prenatal depression," researcher Curt A. Sandman said in the news release. "We know how to deal with depression."

In another study, Sandman and colleagues found differences in the brain structures of older children whose mothers were anxious during pregnancy. Anxiety often occurs together with depression.

"We believe that the human fetus is an active participant in its own development and is collecting information for life after birth," Sandman said. "It's preparing for life based on messages the mom is providing."

More information

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office on Women's Health has more about depression during and after pregnancy at WomensHealth.gov.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111118/hl_hsn/momtobesmentalstatemayaffectchildsdevelopment

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

UN bashing is popular among Republican candidates (AP)

UNITED NATIONS ? Bashing the United Nations seldom fails as an applause line for Republican presidential candidates.

Mitt Romney says the U.N. too often becomes a forum for tyrants when it should promote democracy and human rights. Newt Gingrich pledges to take on the U.N.'s "absurdities." Herman Cain says he would change some of its rules. Rick Perry says he would consider pulling the United States out of the U.N. altogether.

All that U.N. bashing has raised questions about whether a Republican victory could strain the relationship between the United Nations and its host country, the United States.

President Barack Obama's Democratic administration considers the U.N. critical to the country's interests, while Republicans traditionally have been disenchanted with the world body over America's inability to reliably win support for its positions. It doesn't help that U.N. members often criticize American policies, especially as they relate to Israel and the Palestinians.

That was reinforced last month when the U.N. cultural agency voted to approve a Palestinian bid for full membership in that body, and the U.S. responded by cutting off funding.

Yet history shows that any American president learns to get along with the United Nations "simply because there's a lot of stuff the U.N. does that is useful to the United States," said David Bosco, who writes the Multilateralist blog for Foreign Policy magazine.

Case in point: Even the harshest American critics were silent earlier this month when the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog concluded that Iran was probably developing nuclear arms.

Bosco, also an assistant professor at American University's School of International Service, noted that the Republican administration of George W. Bush supported a major expansion in U.N. peacekeeping despite regular sniping about the world body.

But the relationship wasn't a smooth one. Tensions ran high between the U.S. and the world body during the Bush presidency, especially when outspoken John Bolton was the U.S. ambassador.

U.N. officials have declined to comment on the possibility that a Republican win could strain the United Nations' relationship with the U.S.

"The United States is an important state at the United Nations and we would expect that relationship would continue under any administration," said Martin Nesirky, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

The presidential race has been dominated by the economy and other domestic issues, but foreign affairs are taking on greater importance and will be the subject of a debate by the Republican candidates Tuesday, giving them another chance to air their views on the U.N.

Cain says he has read and admires Bolton's foreign policy views, which are highly critical of the United Nations. But the former ambassador to the U.N. said Friday he has not endorsed any of the candidates.

One of the loudest U.N. critics among the candidates is Perry, the Texas governor who has recently slipped in the polls. "I think it's time for us to have a very serious discussion about defunding the United Nations," he declared in October.

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, said in 2007 that U.N. failures were "simply astonishing," but he has been more measured during the current campaign.

U.N. supporters say that when the candidates bash the world organization, they are simply playing to the most conservative Republicans: the primary voters and caucus-goers needed early in the electoral contest.

"My sense is that if any of them were to be elected president, they would quickly realize that the U.N. serves American interests," said Peter Yeo, vice president for public policy of the U.N. Foundation, a nonprofit organization that supports the world body's work.

"They would find a way to constructively work within the U.N. system," Yeo added.

Detractors say that the candidates are just being truthful.

"I wouldn't call it U.N. bashing; I'd call it U.N. realism," said Bolton. "I think the issue for the United States is what to do to make the U.N. more effective, and the answer to that has to lie in how it is funded."

Contributions to the U.N.'s regular budget are assessed on a scale based primarily on a country's ability to pay. Additional contributions to U.N. entities such as the children's agency UNICEF are voluntary.

The U.S. assessment is the highest ? 22 percent of the total U.N. operating budget. By comparison, China pays 3 percent.

In the 2010 budget year, the U.S. provided $7.7 billion to the U.N. for its regular budget, peacekeeping and other programs, up from $6.1 billion the previous year.

House Republicans recently introduced legislation to force the U.N. to adopt a voluntary funding system. The administration opposes it and it is unlikely to become law.

___

Online:

U.N. Foundation: http://www.unfoundation.org

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111119/ap_on_el_pr/un_un_republican_candidates

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#OWS Bat Signal: ?It?s the Beginning of the Beginning? (Balloon Juice)

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Heavy D 'Brought So Much Light,' Mary J. Blige Says

'Every song Heavy D ever put out was something to uplift us,' former labelmate tells MTV News about her fallen friend.
By Rob Markman, with reporting by Vanessa White Wolf


Mary J. Blige
Photo: MTV News

Mary J. Bilge famously sang "Not Gon' Cry" on her 1996 single, but when the topic of her fallen friend and former Uptown Records labelmate Heavy D came up, the emotion was just too much to hold back.

"Heavy D was so beloved because the impact he made on music was that we could have fun: We can do hip-hop without murdering and killing everybody," a tearful MJB told MTV News on Tuesday in Beverly Hills. "And he just brought so much light." Mary, like Heavy, hailed from the outskirts of New York City — him from Mount Vernon, her from Yonkers. It was 1987 when Heavy D & the Boyz released their first album, Living Large, on Uptown Records. Mary was signed years later, and in 1992, dropped her debut album, What's the 411? — but her earliest memories of Heavy pre-date her days in the music industry.

"I just remember being a child and him coming to King school, where they used to have all the performers come, and they came and did 'The Overweight Lover,' " Mary recalled with tears in her eyes. "We always needed something to uplift us, and he brought us so much joy because we were always in a place where we didn't have enough, we couldn't get enough money, but the King school show was free, and every song Heavy D ever put out was something to uplift us."

The exact cause of Heavy D's death November 8 is still unclear, as initial autopsy results came up inconclusive. He was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Beverly Hills after a 911 call was placed from his home. Heavy had difficulty breathing and was pronounced dead after he reached the hospital.

There will be a public viewing for the fallen rapper Thursday (November 17) at Grace Baptist Church in Mount Vernon, New York, and a private funeral service for family and close friends Friday. BET is planning a special tribute to Heavy D during the Soul Train Awards on November 27. Rappers Big Daddy Kane, Doug E. Fresh, Kurtis Blow, Naughty by Nature, Whodini and Stetsasonic's Daddy-O are all expected to take part.

Share your fondest memory of Heavy D in the comments.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1674554/heavy-d-death-mary-j-blige.jhtml

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition


Intel has a long history of releasing the fastest processors on Earth, and it's continuing that tradition with the Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition. Rather than the next stage of the company's much-touted "tick-tock" development model, which alternates new production processes with new microarchitectures every year, this CPU is merely the enthusiast extension of Intel's most recent "tock": its "second-generation Core" (aka "Sandy Bridge") family. Until now, the chips in that line, like the Intel Core i3-2300, Intel Core i5-2500K, and Intel Core i7-2600K, were aimed at mainstream users. With its blistering performance and faint-worthy price ($990 list), the Core i7-3960X is targeted higher, at truly hard-core gamers and bleeding-edge types. Those who consider themselves members of those clubs will want this first chip in the Sandy Bridge?E (for "Extreme," of course) family, and want it soon, and in many ways it's worthy of their lust. But those who can't afford?or don't want to spend?that much money have some reasons to not fret.

The best way to think about the Core i7-3960X and the other members of the Sandy Bridge?E family is as a fusing of Intel's last two milestone releases. It combines the six cores of the company's "Gulftown" 32nm Nehalem-based enthusiast processors, such as the Intel Core i7-980X, Intel Core i7-970, and Intel Core i7-990X, with the microarchitecture and microarchitecture of the Sandy Bridge chips, thus uniting the former's scorching performance profile with the sense-and-sensibility capabilities of the latter.

This means, for example, that when Intel's Hyper-Threading technology is fully engaged, you have 12 processing threads at your disposal; given that the Core i7-3960X's base clock is 3.3GHz, you're looking at some serious performance just from that. Toss in version 2.0 of Intel's Turbo Boost technology from Sandy Bridge, which provides a speed supercharge whenever you're not maxing out your core usage, and you have a quick entr?e to 3.9GHz?no overclocking required. (Though because the multiplier on the Core i7-3960X is unlocked, actual overclocking won't be much of a problem.)

But there are some crucial differences between Sandy Bridge and Sandy Bridge?E as well. Heading up the list of things you don't get on the Core i7-3960X that you did on Sandy Bridge models is built-in video processing. This isn't that much of a surprise; Intel has a habit of leaving it off its high-end chips, undoubtedly assuming?quite correctly, we'd wager?that anyone able and willing to drop a grand on a processor will also have the resources and wherewithal to spring for a discrete video card. One big downside to this is that you automatically lose access to one of the best Sandy Bridge features: Quick Sync Video, which drastically reduces the amount of time you need to spend converting certain video files. Something else even more surprising is missing: Intel has applied that same graphics logic to the CPU cooler and is not bundling one, even a simple air model, with its Sandy Bridge?E chips. This is hardly the end of the world?basic coolers are not expensive?but it's an odd step to take.

As for the things you do get, they're pretty compelling. Chief among them, and likely of paramount interest to gamers, is 40 full lanes of PCI Express (PCIe): That means you can install two discrete PCIe x16 cards in either an SLI or a CrossFireX configuration and have them both running at top speed. That alone will seal the deal for some people. Then there's the native support for 1,600MHz memory, over four channels rather than the three we saw on Intel's previous top-tier X58 Express platform or the two that remain in use for regular Sandy Bridge hardware.

In order to take advantage of that technology, then, you'll need to buy either four or eight DIMMs?an inconvenience, and not necessarily an inconsiderable expense, but picking up two two-DIMM kits is a lot easier than picking and choosing to get the three DIMMs you wanted for X58. Speaking of which, you'll need to buy something else, as well: a new motherboard. As is typical for Intel, the Core i7-3960X and other new Sandy Bridge?E CPUs run on the new X79 Express chipset, and require a motherboard that supports it and is equipped with the necessary new LGA2011 socket. The need for this is apparent, as the Sandy Bridge design moves most functionality onto the CPU itself, and that requires a more robust foundation. But it still demands a major cash outlay.

The question is: Is the Core i7-3960X worth it? On one level, the answer is a resounding yes. Across the board, in every test we could throw at it, the processor walked away the champ. Our simple test system, which mated the chip with 8GB of 1,600MHz memory on an Intel motherboard, finished our Photoshop CS5 image manipulation test in a blazing 2 minutes 47 seconds. It converted a video in Handbrake astonishingly quickly: 1 minute 5 seconds. It blasted through our TrueCrypt benchmark at a rate of 302MBps. It drove the Futuremark 3DMark 11 to confident success by earning 36.5 frames per second (fps) in its daunting physics test. It proved to excel at both single- and multithreaded performance, by garnering superb scores of 1.57 and 10.56 respectively in our two CineBench R11.5 tests.

We weren't surprised that the Core i7-3960X roundly surpassed the Core i7-990X in our tests. But the spoilers proved to be the other Sandy Bridge chips, particularly the Core i5-2500K (far and away the value leader) and the Core i7-2600K (the performance leader). In CineBench, the Core i5-2500K earned 1.49 and the Core i7-2600K 1.54 on the single-threaded test?just the tiniest bit behind the Core i7-3960X. The Core i7-2600K was a reasonable seven seconds behind the Core i7-3960X in Photoshop (2:54) and just a stone's throw in its wake on our Futuremark PCMark 7 full-system benchmark (3,649 versus 3,708). In Handbrake, with Quick Sync Video disabled (because we were using a discrete video card, the AMD Radeon HD 6990), the Core i7-2600K managed a still-reasonable 1 minute 11 seconds.

The Core i7-3960X's gaming performance and features will big pluses to many users, but this chip's power usage shocked us. Idling at its stock clock it used only 99.2 watts?less than the Core i7-2600K (104 watts)?and at full load it only surpassed the Core i7-2600K by a reasonable amount (216.7 watts versus 183.5 watts)?still coming in below its six-core forbears the Core i7-980X (222.6 watts), the Core i7-970 (229 watts), and the Core i7-990X (233.2 watts).

There's no doubt about it: The Intel Core i7-3960X is a formidable chip, even if it requires setting up a new motherboard and stocking it with four DIMMs of DDR3 to make the most of it, and buying a separate cooler just so you can turn the thing on. Gamers and ravenous users of multithreaded apps will definitely get their money's worth, and because Intel is smartly aiming the Core i7-3960X at them, this new flagship CPU is certainly a worthy Editors' Choice. Though we'll be interested in how other Sandy Bridge?E processors fare (the six-core Core i7-3930K and the quad-core Core i7-3820 are in the works, but we haven't seen them yet), the Core i5-2500K and the Core i7-2600K hold their own extremely well?and sell for just a fraction of a cost. If you've already built a system around one of these that you're happy with, and you're not starving for all the additional bells and whistles, there's no reason not to feel good about what you have. But if you absolutely must have the speediest chip on the planet, that crown has now passed to the Core i7-3960X.

More CPU Reviews:
??? Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition
??? AMD FX-8150
??? Intel Core i3-2100
??? AMD A6-3650
??? Gigabyte A75-UD4H
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/4HSuW9NPXwQ/0,2817,2396280,00.asp

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Friday, November 11, 2011

The Pollinator Crisis: What's Best for Bees?

An American bumblebee collects pollen from the non-native dandelion. Image: E. Reschke/Getty

Bees thrum among bright red blossoms on a spring day on Mount Diablo, near San Francisco Bay. Alexandra Harmon-Threatt, a young ecologist just finishing her doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley, lovingly identifies an array of native pollinators. She points out three species of bumblebee, each with a unique pattern of black and yellow stripes. There are bee-flies, members of the fly family covered in soft brown fur, which look and act like bees. Among the native insects are plenty of honeybees (Apis mellifera), the species raised by beekeepers worldwide and introduced to the Americas by English settlers in the seventeenth century. All these insects are drawn to a clump of red vetch (Vicia villosa), an invasive weed. Just down the road is a patch of native lupins, laden with purple blossoms. But the lupins bloom in silence: no bees attend them.

For the past three years, Harmon-Threatt has been studying the ways in which the native yellow-faced bumblebee (Bombus vosnesenskii) uses the plants growing in the area. By capturing bees as they visit plants and then sampling the pollen they carry, she has confirmed in unpublished work that they get much of their food from introduced plants. And by analysing the amino-acid content of pollen, Harmon-Threatt has shown that bee foraging behaviour can be driven by a craving for nutrients rather than an evolved attachment to a specific plant. Although many conservationists assume that introduced plants are always destructive, her work shows that it's not necessarily so from a bee's point of view. What matters to most bee species is the abundance and quality of pollen ? and if an introduced plant, such as the red vetch, offers more protein-rich food than the natives around it, the bees will collect its pollen.

Harmon-Threatt is one of a growing group of scientists studying the evolving relationships between native bees and introduced plants. Their work is critical in a world where human actions have dramatically shifted the distributions of plants and are forcing a pollinator crisis. Most flowering plants need animal pollinators in order to reproduce, and bees serve that role for many important crops ? including fruits, pulses, some vegetables and alfalfa ? many of which were themselves introduced to the United States. Yet stocks of the domesticated honeybee have been declining in the United States and Europe: the number of managed hives in the United States, for example, has dropped from nearly 6 million in the 1940s to 2.3 million in 2008 (see 'Sting in the tale'). Habitat loss, pesticide poisoning, viruses and parasitic mites, any or all of which may be behind the mysterious syndrome called colony collapse disorder, have taken their toll on the domesticated bees, leaving farmers increasingly dependent on native bees. But they, too, are suffering from the effects of pesticides, disease and changes in land use.

What bees need most, the new pollination studies have shown, is a diverse community of flowering plants that bloom throughout the spring and summer. Abundance and diversity matter more than whether species are native or exotic. These findings could inform conservation strategies used by farmers and other land managers. Park managers tend to target invasive weeds such as red vetch with herbicides because they can outcompete native plants. But for bees, "just taking all the vetch out might not be the best idea", says Harmon-Threatt. "It might take ten to fifteen different species of native plants to support this array of pollinators."

Stories of exquisitely specialized pollination systems ? such as those of yuccas, which are pollinated only by coevolved moth species ? can give the impression that pollination is an exclusive, highly choreographed dance. "Until the past five or ten years, people thought that exclusive pollination relationships were more common," says Rachael Winfree, a pollination biologist at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

By studying entire networks of pollinators and plants, however, biologists have learned that most native bees are far less picky than was imagined. Winfree and her colleagues have investigated the ways in which bees use flowers growing in agricultural, urban and natural areas ? ranging from woodland to farm fields and suburban gardens ? in central California and southern New Jersey. The study, led by Neal Williams at the University of California, Davis, and published earlier this year, found that bees collect pollen from both alien and native plants in proportion to a plant's abundance in the landscape. In highly disturbed habitats, bees make greater use of alien plants ? not because the bees prefer them, but simply because introduced plants are more common where people have transformed the landscape. That makes sense to Winfree. "I don't see why bees would know or care whether a plant was native or exotic," she says.

But not all altered landscapes are equal for bees: modern agriculture has taken a severe toll on wild bee numbers. Vast monocultures ? such as the almond orchards of central California and the soybean fields of Argentina ? bloom for only three or four weeks each season, offering no food for bees the rest of the time. "The expansion of these crops destroys habitat for bees," says Marcelo Aizen, a pollination biologist at the National University of Comahue in San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina.

Claire Kremen, a conservation biologist at the University of California, Berkeley (and Harmon-Threatt's mentor), has shown that the diversity of pollinators drops with increasing distance from wild habitat, as does the number of visits by wild bees to flowering crops. This cuts crop yields. A study by Aizen and his colleagues, published in April this year, documented a drop in the yield per acre of pollinator-dependent crops since 1961, even as total global production has increased. Falling yields have prompted farmers to put more land under cultivation, further eroding bee habitat. Modern agriculture seems locked in a vicious circle of pollinator destruction.

Yet Kremen and her colleagues showed in 2004 that crop pollination by native bees increases dramatically when natural habitat exists within 1?2.5 kilometres of farm fields. Farms where just 30% of the surrounding landscape is covered in wild vegetation are completely pollinated by native bees, and flourish without help from domesticated honeybees.

As most crops in California's Central Valley are far from patches of wild habitat, Kremen and Williams have been experimenting by growing hedgerows of diverse flowering plants in orchards and fields. They now have a list of native California plants, such as redbud (Cercis occidentalis) and wild asters, which can be combined to create ideal hedgerows, providing pollen-rich blooms from early spring to late autumn. The results are not yet published, but Kremen says it is already clear that the hedges boost the diversity of native bees, and they are being adopted by farmers. The burning question now, says Kremen, is "how much hedgerows can contribute to long-term population persistence of individual bee species".

Weeds will do
Winfree finds that bees don't even need pristine hedges ? weeds will do. She studies bee communities in parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania where native bees pollinate about 90% of the crops. In one study, she and her team watched 6,187 bee visits to watermelon and tomato crops on 23 farms. Both computer modelling and observation suggest that these crops are fully pollinated by wild bees. That's possible, Winfree explains, because the wet climate encourages the growth of weedy plants that spring up at the field edges, and bees use these scraps of habitat to nest and forage. There's another crucial difference from California: in Winfree's study area most farmers plant a variety of crops rather than monocultures.

In a study of New Jersey pine?oak forest, Winfree was surprised to find that bee populations are more abundant and diverse near sites of human disturbance ? where backyard gardens or farm fields add to the range of blossoms available. But the picture is likely to vary from one area to the next. In a recent review of the literature, Winfree and her colleagues concluded that land-use changes such as urbanization and deforestation can affect native pollinators differently, depending on whether they increase or reduce the numbers and diversity of flowering plants.

There's yet another complication: although some exotic plants can feed native pollinators, such plants can also fuel the growth of alien bee populations. Aizen and his colleagues have analysed webs of plants and pollinators in the southern Andes and on islands in the North Atlantic and the Indian Ocean8. They found that, in some cases, exotic plants and pollinators team up to dominate resources, to the detriment of native bees and native plants. "You cannot generalize and say it is good or bad to have alien plants," says Aizen. Problems arise when the alien plants become so widespread in an ecosystem that they lower the diversity of species. "It takes a diverse assemblage of plants to support a diverse assemblage of bees. That is the lesson," he says.

There are still many lessons to learn. Winfree notes the relatively primitive state of pollination ecology: most research on bee diversity has simply counted the number of species, without tracking their fates over time. Her current work examines which bee species are most vulnerable to human disturbance, and explores in more detail whether both rare native bees and efficient pollination services can be restored by increasing the diversity of flowering plants.

Still, a new awareness of the vital role of native bees is spreading. Bruce Rominger, who farms onions in Yolo County, California, has interlaced his crops with hedgerows of native plants, including buckwheat and willow. Now, strolling through his fields on a spring day, he recognizes a variety of insects visiting the blossoms ? from plump bumblebees to slender, iridescent solitary bees. Hedgerows are becoming common among Yolo County farms. "The more native pollinators we have," says Rominger, "the better off we'll be."

This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on November 9, 2011.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=d25042c30fc3735826bc47e6ab07b45c

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Herman Cain?s Denial Was ?Powerful,? But Scandal Not Over, GOP Strategist Says (ABC News)

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Will Italy's Economic Crisis Mean Endgame for the Euro? (Time.com)

You know the old saying: It ain't over until the fat lady sings. Well, in the case of the euro zone debt crisis, that lady is Italy, she's plump enough to cause quite a bit of trouble, and the orchestra looks to be tuning up.

We're in the middle of yet another global financial rout, with stocks plunging around the globe, the sort of panic we've witnessed with sickening regularity in recent months. And as usual, Europe sits at ground zero. Italian government bonds got hammered on Wednesday, smashing through the important 7% level to a new euro-era high. Once Italy's fellow PIIGS ? Greece, Portugal and Ireland ? broke through the 7% level, their borrowing costs escalated, eventually forcing them to seek European Union bailouts. Italy's plight completely alters the situation in Europe, from a potentially manageable crisis to a potentially unmanageable crisis. Let's put in perspective what's happening here. Italy is not some half-baked emerging market or even a small, developed-world basket case like Greece. Italy is Europe's fourth-largest economy; its bond market is the world's third largest. And in a matter of no time, the liquidity in that market is drying up. And what's scary here is that there may not be any way to rescue Italy if this spiral continues. (See "Silvio Berlusconi and the Politics of Sex.")

This is serious stuff, folks. For two years, grim voices in financial circles have been worried about just this type of scenario ? when the debt crisis in Europe bit into the core of the euro zone, at the big boys that were too big to bailout. Now that worst-case scenario looks more likely to play out in real life. The endgame could be a renewed global financial crisis, a collapse of the monetary union, who knows. Here's what economist Ken Courtis wrote me today:

In a sense Greece, Portugal, Ireland have been side shows. With Italy, we are moving to the main event. There is simply no way that Italy can conduct the massive refundings it has in the coming weeks with this situation?This is like when you see a movie of which you have read the initial scenario before hand. The film is different in places, perhaps even the sequence of scenes is changed, some it has been chopped, but you still recognize it?The scenario no one (except the shorts of course) has wanted to see unfold is now playing itself out before our eyes unfortunately. (See Berlusconi's Worst Gaffes)

So is this the "big one" we've all been dreading? The moment when the euro zone crisis spins out of control, and we all suffer?

Much of the answer to that depends on what happens in Rome in coming days. The debauched Silvio Berlusconi might have announced he will resign, but he hasn't yet, and that effectively leaves Italy without a government. And we don't know when it will have a government, or what sort of government it might have. Will there be an election? Will some sort of coalition be formed? We're all left guessing. And when markets are nervous, they don't like guessing. Without strong leadership, hopes for real reform in Italy are uncertain at best. Until Italy's politicians show they are truly taking the crisis seriously, markets will continue to punish Italian bonds. (Archive: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Silvio Berlusconi)

And where does that take us? Italy can likely handle elevated borrowing costs for a while without too much trouble. The bigger issue is liquidity. Because Italian debt is so large, the government needs to constantly tap financial markets to refinance itself. The big problem hits when Italy can't do that anymore, or not at a cost it can stomach. Can Italy still get the funds it needs? We're about to get an answer to that question in coming days. Italy is selling treasury bills today, and it has a bond auction Monday. Here's what research firm Capital Economics said on that front in a report yesterday:

Wednesday's surge in Italian government bond yields has catapulted the euro-zone crisis into a dangerous new phase. Precedents set by Greece and Ireland suggest the Rubicon have been crossed. If so, Italy's cost of borrowing could now climb much more sharply, effectively locking her out of the capital markets. Even though Italy runs a primary surplus, this outcome could still force her to turn to official creditors to roll over her debt. But while Italy is considered to be too big to fail, she may be too big to save unless there is a major change of attitude towards resolving the crisis. Things could be about to turn very ugly.

And if Italy does require a rescue, is that even possible? The Capital Economics guys estimate Italy could require a bailout as big as 700 billion euros ($950 billion). By comparison, the bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal have so far only added up to $370 billion. And where would the money come from? The euro zone rescue fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, is unlikely to have that cash. What does that mean? Capital continues:

So who would save Italy's bacon if push came to shove? Core euro-zone economies are the obvious choice. But it remains to be seen whether they will put their money where their mouths are. If they don't, a disorderly default by Italy and her eventual exit from EMU could be on the cards.

Ah, here's where things get really interesting. Markets are not just testing Italy's commitment to reform, they are testing the entire euro zone's. The reason why we're here is because the leaders of the euro zone have never backed their strong words with strong action. At every stage of the crisis, they have delayed and obfuscated, and dodged. They have never shown the sense of urgency needed to quell contagion; their "solutions" have always been half-baked and underwhelming. This whole mess could have been avoided if Europe had taken decisive action when the first stages of the Greek debt crisis began almost two years ago. Or if they had implemented measures to shore up the European banking system long ago. Or if they had made greater progress towards fiscal integration. If, If, If. Now we're at another one of those put-up-or-shut-up moments. And what have we heard from the leaders of Europe? The European Central Bank has sat on the sidelines. German Chancellor Angela Merkel again called for reform of the euro and greater European integration. The solution to the crisis, she said, would be found in "more Europe, not less Europe." More words with no action. If Merkel & Co. aren't going to put up, then I'd rather they finally shut up. (See if a panicking economy will bring down Berlusconi.)

Cue the fat lady.

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