Sunday, June 30, 2013

Coulter: Immigration push gives Democrats '30 million unskilled, law ...

By Arturo Garcia
Saturday, June 29, 2013 20:58 EDT

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In a far-ranging interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity, conservative columnist Ann Coulter said that the immigration bill recently passed by the Senate was not only akin to the death of the entire Supreme Court, but that it signaled the end of the Republican party.

?All the Democrats care about here is the votes,? Coulter said on Hannity?s radio show on Friday. ?They don?t care that they?re legalizing law-breakers, they don?t care that they are going to massively harm African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans who dominate the low-wage professions by bringing in 30 million unskilled, law-breaking voters for the Democratic Party.?

The bill, which was approved by the Senate in a 68-32 vote on Thursday, establishes a 13-year path to citizenship for the country?s 11 million undocumented immigrants, and won Republican support by also adding border security benchmarks.

Regardless, Coulter continued to refer to it as an ?amnesty bill,? while fretting that most of these potential new citizens skewed heavily toward voting for Democrats, accurately pointing out Pew Research Center data showing increased support for marriage equality and far-ranging support for President Barack Obama?s re-election bid in 2012.

Coulter also said that Latinos reported ?more negative associations? with capitalism than socialism than members of the Occupy Wall Street movement, but the Pew center noted that most Latino respondents replied negatively to both terms. She also alluded to research indicating heavy Latino support for both the Affordable Care Act and reproductive choice for women.

?Any politician who claims to be pro-life but supports amnesty is a liar,? she continued. ?If you bring in 30 million voters who overwhelmingly support socialism, gay marriage, abortion, Obamacare, then you don?t believe in any of those things. This is changing the electorate so that the entire country becomes California and Republicans never win another election.?

As the Senate bill makes its way to the House of Representatives for consideration, Colter said the passage of new legislation would be like a plane crash killing the entire Supreme Court and Obama replacing the justices with ?9 Ruth Bader Ginsburgs.?

?Do not tell me, Republicans, that voting to confirm nine Ruth Bader Ginsburgs is just another vote,? she argued. ?Amnesty is not just another vote. It is the end of the pro-life movement. It?s the end of the marriage movement. It?s the end of trying to repeal Obamacare. It is the end of everything.?

?I?ve actually come around to your way of thinking on the House,? Hannity answered. ?I think the House should leave it alone.?

Hannity told Coulter that ?sources? told him that Republican members of the House of Representatives supported a five-year ?temporary legal status? clause for undocumented immigrants, which would be rescinded if border security guidelines went unmet.

?That?s not even a believable fig leaf,? Coulter responded. ?They really think we?re stupid. The Democrats must be sitting back thinking, ?I can?t believe Republicans are falling for this.??

Listen to Coulter?s interview with Hannity, as posted by Media Matters on Friday, below.

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Source: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/06/29/coulter-immigration-push-gives-democrats-30-million-unskilled-law-breaking-voters/

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NBA: Lakers waive point guard Duhon

The Los Angeles Lakers released guard Chris Duhon on Saturday (Sunday, PHL time), the team announced.

The move allows the Lakers to save $2 million before his $3.5 million contract for next season would have become fully guaranteed on Monday. The team is still responsible for paying him $1.5 million.

Duhon, 30, averaged 2.9 points, 1.5 rebounds and 2.9 assists in 46 games for the Lakers this past season.

The former Duke point guard also has played for the Chicago Bulls, New York Knicks and Orlando Magic. - Reuters

Source: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/315275/sports/basketball/nba-lakers-waive-point-guard-duhon

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Amped Wireless TAN1 High Power Wi-Fi Adapter for Windows 8 review

The TAN1 High Power Wi-Fi Adapter for Windows 8 from Amped Wireless is a USB 2.0 2.4GHz 802.11n Wi-Fi adapter that uses high-power transmission amplifiers and high-gain antennas to boost wireless range of Windows 8 devices. I tested it out on my aging Acer Netbook to see how it stacked up against typical low-end, built-in [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/06/29/amped-wireless-tan1-high-power-wi-fi-adapter-for-windows-8-review/

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Two blasts kill 10 people in western Iraq: police

RAMADI, IRAQ (Reuters) - Two bombs planted inside a senior Iraqi police officer's car killed at least 10 people on Friday in the western city of Ramadi, police said.

The first explosion killed the police officer and the second bomb went off five minutes later as police and bystanders gathered around the wreckage in Iraq's Sunni heartland of Anbar, which shares a border with Syria.

"We were on duty at a nearby checkpoint when the car exploded. We ran to work out what was going on, but before we reached the car it exploded again," said a policeman at the scene. "Many people and policemen were killed."

At the height of Iraq's insurgency in 2006-07, Anbar was in the grip of al Qaeda's local affiliate, the Islamic State of Iraq, which has been regaining strength in the Sunni heartland in recent months.

More than 1,000 people died in militant attacks across Iraq in May alone, making it the deadliest month since the worst of the sectarian bloodletting more than six years ago.

Iraq's Sunni minority has felt sidelined since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein and empowered the majority Shi'ites.

Sunni Muslim insurgents regularly target members of the security forces, heads of tribes and officials they see as supporters of the Shi'ite-led government.

Sectarian tensions in Iraq have been amplified by the conflict in neighboring Syria, where mostly Sunni rebels are fighting to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad, who is backed by Shi'ite Iran.

Late on Thursday, bombs exploded in busy coffee shops and at other targets across Iraq, killing at least 22 people, police and medics said.

(Reporting by Kamal Naama, Writing by Suadad al-Salhy; Editing by Gareth Jones)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/two-blasts-kill-10-people-western-iraq-police-125648789.html

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Steve Carell: I Can?t Protect My Daughter From Heartbreak

"You know they're going to have their hearts broken at some point, and you can't ultimately protect them against having that happen."

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/JYkU_R_wOy4/

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Beneath NYC's ground zero, a museum takes shape

NEW YORK (AP) ? Gray dust blankets everything in the subterranean halls of the unfinished National September 11 Memorial & Museum. But while the powder may look ominously like the ash that covered lower Manhattan after the terrorist attacks, this time it is a product of rebirth, not destruction.

After a yearlong construction shutdown because of a funding dispute, and additional months of cleanup following a shocking flood caused by Superstorm Sandy, work has been racing ahead again at the museum, which sits in a cavernous space below the World Trade Center memorial plaza that opened in 2011.

About 130 workers are at the site each day and there is much left to be done, but officials with the museum said the project is on track to open to the public in the spring of 2014.

Some of the museum's most emotion-inspiring artifacts already are anchored in place.

Tears rolled down Anthoula Katsimatides' cheeks Thursday as she toured halls holding a mangled fire truck, strangely beautiful tangles of rebar and the pieces of intersecting steel known as the Ground Zero Cross.

"It makes me sad," said Katsimatides, whose brother John died at the trade center. But it's also inspiring, said Katsimatides, who sits on the museum's board. "Seeing it come to fruition is pretty intense."

Work on the museum was halted for nearly a year, starting in the fall of 2011, because of a money fight between the memorial foundation and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the trade center site.

In retrospect, that slowdown was a blessing. Shortly after the two sides worked out their differences, Superstorm Sandy sent the Hudson River thundering through lower Manhattan and filled the museum cavern with 7? feet of water.

The flood destroyed interior walls and electrical circuits, but the construction delay meant that hundreds of artifacts and exhibits that might have been in the museum still hadn't been fabricated or were sitting safely in storage. There was minor flash rusting to one of the fire trucks that had already been lowered into the space, but the damage was repaired by conservators and isn't noticeable today, said National September 11 Memorial & Museum President Joseph Daniels.

Today there is no sign that there was ever a flood. Daniels said there has been "almost indescribable" progress on construction since the storm.

Structural work appears mostly complete on the glass pavilion and wide staircase and ramp visitors will use to descend into the museum, past two towering "tridents" that once helped form the distinctive base of the twin towers. Once silvery, the columns were stripped bare by the fires on 9/11 and are now the color of rusted, raw steel.

From a mezzanine, patrons will be able to peer into a deep, nave-like hallway nicknamed the South Canyon. The hall's high western wall will eventually be covered with a multitude of notes and letters of support that people around the world sent to New York after the attacks.

"They continue to send things. It's amazing," Katsimatides said. "That outpouring of support is one of the things that got the 9/11 families through."

Further down the ramp, visitors come to a platform overlooking an even more massive cavern bordered by the slurry wall, a 70-foot-tall, steel-studded concrete slab originally built to keep the Hudson River from flooding the trade center construction site.

In the hall's center stands the last steel column removed from ground zero during the cleanup operation. Recovery workers covered the pillar with their signatures before it was carried away, and visitors will get a chance to leave their own mark on another big piece of steel near the museum's exit ? though their autographs will be captured by a computerized touch screen and projected on the slurry wall, rather than left in ink on metal.

Throughout the museum, curators have hung pieces of steel that were bent and twisted into striking shapes, including one sheet of metal that now appears to ripple like a flag and a huge girder bent by the impact of the aircraft hitting the towers.

Many of them look like sculptures.

"In a strange way, they are like pieces of art," Katsimatides said. But Daniels added that they weren't chosen for their beauty, but to explain what happened at the site on 9/11.

A few design elements of the museum are still under discussion.

When visitors descend to the very bottom of the museum ? where, in some places, they will be able to view the very bedrock that the towers once rested upon ? they will enter a hall with a large wall bearing an inscription from Virgil. "No day shall erase you from the memory of time."

Behind that wall will sit a special mausoleum, off limits to the general public, containing the unidentified remains of hundreds of 9/11 victims. Most of the interior walls of the museum have the look of bare concrete, as a constant reminder of the site's location within the old trade center foundation. But Daniels said the museum's designers are talking about possibly cladding this wall in a different material, or a different color, to separate it from the rest.

"It's a special place. Do we need something to distinguish it?" he said.

The bulk of the work remaining to be completed will revolve around installing the museum's exhibits, which will include many artifacts, including a wall made up of portraits of all 2,983 victims and a room where visitors will be able to call up video presentations that tell a story about each of them.

"The idea is to learn about the lives that they lived, not just the deaths that they died," Daniels said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beneath-nycs-ground-zero-museum-takes-shape-072748254.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Video: Top Stock Pickers' 2012 Report Card

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52327531/

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Scientists discover thriving colonies of microbes in ocean 'plastisphere'

June 27, 2013 ? Scientists have discovered a diverse multitude of microbes colonizing and thriving on flecks of plastic that have polluted the oceans -- a vast new human-made flotilla of microbial communities that they have dubbed the "plastisphere."

In a study recently published online in Environmental Science & Technology, the scientists say the plastisphere represents a novel ecological habitat in the ocean and raises a host of questions: How will it change environmental conditions for marine microbes, favoring some that compete with others? How will it change the overall ocean ecosystem and affect larger organisms? How will it change where microbes, including pathogens, will be transported in the ocean?

The collaborative team of scientists -- Erik Zettler from Sea Education Association (SEA), Tracy Mincer from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), and Linda Amaral-Zettler from the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), all in Woods Hole, Mass. -- analyzed marine plastic debris that was skimmed with fine-scale nets from the sea surface at several locations in the North Atlantic Ocean during SEA research cruises. Most were millimeter-sized fragments.

"We're not just interested in who's there. We're interested in their function, how they're functioning in this ecosystem, how they're altering this ecosystem, and what's the ultimate fate of these particles in the ocean," says Amaral-Zettler. "Are they sinking to the bottom of the ocean? Are they being ingested? If they're being ingested, what impact does that have?"

Using scanning electron microscopy and gene sequencing techniques, they found at least 1000 different types of bacterial cells on the plastic samples, including many individual species yet to be identified. They included plants, algae, and bacteria that manufacture their own food (autotrophs), animals and bacteria that feed on them (heterotrophs), predators that feed on these, and other organisms that establish synergistic relationships (symbionts). These complex communities exist on plastic bits hardly bigger than the head of a pin, and they have arisen with the explosion of plastics in the oceans in the last 60 years.

"The organisms inhabiting the plastisphere were different from those in surrounding seawater, indicating that plastic debris acts as artificial 'microbial reefs," says Mincer. "They supply a place that selects for and supports distinct microbes to settle and succeed."

These communities are likely different from those that settle on naturally occurring floating material such as feathers, wood, and microalgae, because plastics offer different conditions, including the capacity to last much longer without degrading.

On the other hand, the scientists also found evidence that microbes may play a role in degrading plastics. They saw microscopic cracks and pits in the plastic surfaces that they suspect were made by microbes embedded in them, as well as microbes possibly capable of degrading hydrocarbons.

"When we first saw the 'pit formers' we were very excited, especially when they showed up on multiple pieces of plastic of different types of resins," said Zettler, who added that undergraduate students participating in SEA Semester cruises collected and processed the samples. "Now we have to figure out what they are by [genetically] sequencing them and hopefully getting them into culture so we can do experiments."

The plastic debris also represents a new mode of transportation, acting as rafts that can convey harmful microbes, including disease-causing pathogens and harmful algal species. One plastic sampled they analyzed was dominated by members of the genus Vibrio, which includes bacteria that cause cholera and gastrointestinal maladies.

The project was funded by a National Science Foundation Collaborative grant, a NSF TUES grant, and a Woods Hole Center for Oceans and Human Health Pilot award.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/EvM7_1uPFzw/130627142549.htm

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The Fourth of July Can Be a Dangerous Time For Pets

HUMMELSTOWN, Pa., June 27, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Independence Day is one of the most celebrated times of the year and is fun for the whole family. Barbecues, parades, and fireworks are just a few of the ways many people like to celebrate with family and friends, but if your family includes pets, some of the most common sources of fun can be frightening or even dangerous.

Backyard barbecues can potentially pose significant threats to pets. Never leave alcoholic drinks unattended or within reach of pets. Depending on the size of the pet, poisoning can occur quickly and can cause intoxication, weakness, depression, respiratory failure, and even coma. Also beware of all the picnic food. Many human foods ? even some fruits and vegetables ? can be toxic. Not only do you need to keep your pet out away from the buffet table, but make sure friends and neighbors aren't feeding them from their plates.

Fireworks ? whether in the yard or at a community display ? can cause panic in pets, especially in a crowd. Even if you're just lighting a few in the backyard, make sure your pet is safely inside and not in an area where they can escape or run away. Likewise, keep matches and lighter fluid out of reach. Some matches contain damaging chlorates and lighter fluid is irritating to the skin and if swallowed.

For more tips on Fourth of July safety, download our fact sheet at www.pavma.org.

The Pennsylvania Veterinary Medical Association (PVMA) is the only statewide professional organization of over 2,200 veterinarians from across the Commonwealth. The association, which was established in 1883, strives to advance animal welfare and human health while ensuring the vitality of the veterinary profession. PVMA's website is available at www.pavma.org .

SOURCE Pennsylvania Veterinary Medical Association (PVMA)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fourth-july-dangerous-time-pets-192900086.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

States promise quick action after court ruling

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, a voter holds their voting permit and ID card at the Washington Mill Elementary School near Mount Vernon, Va. Across the South, Republicans are working to take advantage of a new political landscape after a divided U.S. Supreme Court freed all or part of 15 states, many of them in the old Confederacy, from having to ask Washington's permission before changing election procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2012 file photo, a voter holds their voting permit and ID card at the Washington Mill Elementary School near Mount Vernon, Va. Across the South, Republicans are working to take advantage of a new political landscape after a divided U.S. Supreme Court freed all or part of 15 states, many of them in the old Confederacy, from having to ask Washington's permission before changing election procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 7, 2012 file photo, a Madison, Miss., poll worker, right, returns to a voter her driver's license at a precinct in Madison. Across the South, Republicans are working to take advantage of a new political landscape after a divided U.S. Supreme Court freed all or part of 15 states, many of them in the old Confederacy, from having to ask Washington's permission before changing election procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, File)

(AP) ? Across the South, Republicans are working to take advantage of a new political landscape after a divided U.S. Supreme Court freed all or part of 15 states, many of them in the old Confederacy, from having to ask Washington's permission before changing election procedures in jurisdictions with histories of discrimination.

After the high court announced its momentous ruling Tuesday, officials in Texas and Mississippi pledged to immediately implement laws requiring voters to show photo identification before getting a ballot. North Carolina Republicans promised they would quickly try to adopt a similar law. Florida now appears free to set its early voting hours however Gov. Rick Scott and the GOP Legislature please. And Georgia's most populous county likely will use county commission districts that Republican state legislators drew over the objections of local Democrats.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the 5-4 opinion that struck down as outdated a key provision of the landmark 1965 law credited with ensuring ballot access to millions of black Americans, American Indians and other minorities. Roberts' opinion gives Congress an opportunity to retool the law's so-called preclearance sections that give the U.S. Justice Department veto power over local elections. But the prospects of a quick fix seem uncertain, at best, given stark ideological divides on Capitol Hill on a host of matters.

Southern Republicans largely hailed Roberts' opinion as recognition of racial progress since President Lyndon Johnson signed the law at the apex of the civil rights movement.

"Over the last half-century, Georgia has reformed, and our state is a proud symbol of progress," Gov. Nathan Deal said. "Today's decision guarantees that Georgia will be treated like every other state ? a right we have earned." In neighboring Alabama, where the case originated, Gov. Robert Bentley said, "We have long lived up to what happened" in the Jim Crow era, "and we have made sure it's not going to happen again."

Democrats and civil rights attorneys lambasted the ruling as a setback for the very advancement Republicans highlighted, and the dissenters predicted a proliferation of laws designed to curtail minority participation in elections.

Rep. John Lewis, an Atlanta Democrat and civil rights activist who was beaten as he advocated for voting rights in the 1960s, called the ruling a "dagger."

President Barack Obama said he was "deeply disappointed" in the court overturning "well-established practices that help make sure voting is fair."

At Obama's Justice Department, officials opted for caution. They said the agency, which enforces federal voting laws, has in hand 276 submissions from state and local governments seeking preclearance. The department will issue guidance on those pending laws and procedures in the next few days, they said.

For five decades, the law required that certain states and localities with a history of discrimination submit all of their election laws ? from new congressional district maps to the precinct locations and voting hours ? to Justice Department lawyers for approval. Congress reauthorized the law multiple times, the latest in 2006 with overwhelming bipartisanship capped by a 98-0 Senate vote.

Election officials in Alabama's Shelby County, a suburban enclave nestled between civil rights hot spots Birmingham and Selma, brought suit asking the courts to invalidate Sections 4 and 5, which set preclearance parameters.

The Roberts majority, which included conservatives Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, sidestepped whether the advance approval requirement is constitutional, ostensibly leaving Section 5 on the books. But the justices, all appointed by Republican presidents, threw out the Section 4 formula that determined what jurisdictions must have the advance federal oversight. Roberts reasoned that the original formula ? extended through reauthorizations ? is obsolete because Congress based it on 1960s voter registration and turnout data. The chief justice emphasized, however, that Congress can rewrite the formula to reflect "current conditions," though he didn't offer recommendations or acknowledge the inherent political challenges involved.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dissented on behalf of the court's liberal bloc, all of them Democratic appointees. Ginsburg argued that continued discrimination, which Roberts himself noted in the majority opinion, demands continued federal oversight.

Critics of the majority also chided court conservatives for striking down congressional action, given that the 14th and 15th amendments authorize Congress to enact laws enforcing the amendments' protections against discrimination.

Before the ruling, the formula required reviews for all of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia; and parts of California, Florida, Michigan, New York, North Carolina and South Dakota.

Justice Department attorneys have used Section 5 in multiple cases to block voter identification laws, saying they discriminate against minority and poor voters who are less likely to have the required government-issued documents. Over the law's existence, many Southern states have ended up watching courts drawing legislative and congressional district lines after federal authorities used Section 5 to invalidate what state lawmakers did.

South Carolina has successfully implemented a voter identification law, but only after revising its preferred policy after Gov. Nikki Haley and other Republicans negotiated with the Obama administration. Under the court's ruling, no negotiations would've been necessary.

Within hours of Tuesday's decision, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott declared on Twitter, "(U.S. Attorney General) Eric Holder can no longer deny VoterID in Texas." The Texas Department of Public Safety announced later in the day that on Thursday it would begin distributing photo IDs under a 2011 law that Holder's lawyers had blocked under Section 5.

In Mississippi, the secretary of state said her office would begin enforcing a pending voter ID law for primaries in June 2014. North Carolina Republicans said they plan swift action on a pending voter ID bill.

Laughlin McDonald, who heads the American Civil Liberties Union's voting rights office, said he agrees that pending submissions to the Justice Department are now moot. It's less clear what happens to scores of laws that the feds have already denied since the 2006 reauthorization. McDonald said he believes a state or other covered jurisdiction would have a strong case to argue that it could implement any affected law it has passed since the reauthorization.

That could be an issue in some disputes over at-large voting districts. The Justice Department denied some proposals where the population of an entire county or city would elect all representatives of a governing body, potentially diluting the influence of a minority that would otherwise be able to influence outcomes within single districts.

The case does not affect the act's Section 2 prohibition against voter discrimination based on race, color or other minority status. Still, the burden shifts to a citizen who must prove discrimination, whereas the preclearance process required state and local governments to prove in advance that a policy wouldn't harm minority voters. Also untouched is Section 3, which allows the government to require preclearance based on more recent discrimination. The Justice Department has used that provision to extend oversight in Arkansas and New Mexico.

Georgia Secretary of State Brian Kemp, a Republican who supports the court's finding, said Section 2 gives citizens a legal recourse, while Section 3 gives the government a tool to police wayward local officials. He noted that Holder used Section 2 to go after Pennsylvania's voter ID law in a state not covered by preclearance.

"Look," he said, "this is already happening in other states and nobody is screaming and hollering about it."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-26-Voting%20Rights-The%20South/id-66217bfa2f8c4505a2e50803f3b074fd

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Scientists find neighbor star with 3 planets in life-friendly orbits

By Irene Klotz

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - A neighbour star has at least six planets in orbit, including three circling at the right distance for water to exist, a condition believed to be necessary for life, scientists said on Tuesday.

Previously, the star known as Gliese 667C was found to be hosting three planets, one of which was located in its so-called "habitable zone" where temperatures could support liquid surface water. That planet and two newly found sibling worlds are bigger than Earth, but smaller than Neptune.

"This is the first time that three such planets have been spotted orbiting in this zone in the same system," astronomer Paul Butler, with the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., said in a statement.

Scientists say the discovery of three planets in a star's habitable zone raises the odds of finding Earth-like worlds where conditions might have been suitable for life to evolve.

"Instead of looking at 10 stars to look for a single potentially habitable planet, we now know we can look at just one star and have a high chance of finding several of them," astronomer Rory Barnes, with the University of Washington, said in a statement.

Additional observations of Gliese 667C and a reanalysis of existing data showed it hosts at least six, and possibly, seven planets.

The star is located relatively close to Earth, just 22 light years (129 trillion miles/207 trillion km) away. It is about one-third the size of the sun and the faintest star of a triple star system.

In addition to the three well-positioned "super-Earths," two more planets may orbit on the fringe of the star's habitable zone and also could possibly support life.

The research will be published this week in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. (Editing by Kevin Gray and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scientists-neighbor-star-3-planets-life-friendly-orbits-012150800.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Was first curveball thrown 2 million years ago?

FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 7, 2012 file photo made with a multiple exposure, Boston Red Sox's Jon Lester pitches in the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Boston. A new study suggests the ability to throw hard and accurately first appeared in a human ancestor 2 million years ago. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 7, 2012 file photo made with a multiple exposure, Boston Red Sox's Jon Lester pitches in the third inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Boston. A new study suggests the ability to throw hard and accurately first appeared in a human ancestor 2 million years ago. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

(AP) ? It's a big year for throwing. The greatest closer in baseball history, Mariano Rivera of the Yankees, is retiring. Aroldis Chapman, the overpowering Cincinnati Reds reliever, continues to fire fastballs beyond 100 mph.

And now some scientists say they've figured out when our human ancestors first started throwing with accuracy and fire power, as only people can: Nearly 2 million years ago.

That's what researchers conclude in a study released Wednesday by the journal Nature. There's plenty of skepticism about their conclusion. But the new paper contends that this throwing ability probably helped our ancient ancestor Homo erectus hunt, allowing him to toss weapons ? probably rocks and sharpened wooden spears.

The human throwing ability is unique. Not even a chimp, our closest living relative and a creature noted for strength, can throw nearly as fast as a 12-year-old Little Leaguer, says lead study author Neil Roach of George Washington University.

To find out how humans developed this ability, Roach and co-authors analyzed the throwing motions of 20 collegiate baseball players. Sometimes the players wore braces to mimic the anatomy of human ancestors, to see how anatomical changes affected throwing ability.

The human secret to throwing, the researchers propose, is that when the arm is cocked, it stores energy by stretching tendons, ligaments and muscles crossing the shoulder. It's like pulling back on a slingshot. Releasing that "elastic energy" makes the arm whip forward to make the throw.

That trick, in turn, was made possible by three anatomical changes in human evolution that affected the waist, shoulders and arms, the researchers concluded. And Homo erectus, which appeared about 2 million years ago, is the first ancient relative to combine those three changes, they said.

But others think the throwing ability must have appeared sometime later in human evolution.

Susan Larson, an anatomist at Stony Brook University in New York who didn't participate in the study, said the paper is the first to claim that elastic energy storage occurs in arms, rather than just in legs. The bouncing gait of a kangaroo is due to that phenomenon, she said, and the human Achilles tendon stores energy to help people walk.

The new analysis offers good evidence that the shoulder is storing elastic energy, even though the shoulder doesn't have the long tendons that do that job in legs, she said. So maybe other tissues can do it too, she said.

But Larson, an expert on evolution of the human shoulder, said she does not think Homo erectus could throw like a modern human. She said she believes its shoulders were too narrow and that the orientation of the shoulder joint on the body would make overhand throwing "more or less impossible."

Rick Potts, director of the human origins program at the Smithsonian Institution, said he is "not at all convinced" by the paper's argument about when and why throwing appeared.

The authors did not present any data to counter Larson's published work that indicates the erectus shoulder was ill-suited for throwing, he said.

And it is "a stretch" to say that throwing would give erectus an advantage in hunting, Potts said. Large animals have to be pierced in specific spots for a kill, which would seem to require more accuracy than one could expect erectus to achieve from a distance, he said.

Potts noted that the earliest known spears, which date from about 400,000 years ago, were used for thrusting rather than throwing.

___ Online:

Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature

___

Malcolm Ritter can be followed at http://www.twitter.com/malcolmritter

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-06-26-Throwing%20Arm/id-7a703efec63540ec941b295e44c70252

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Army to cut brigades at 10 US bases (The Arizona Republic)

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Storms, floods threaten vast swath of US

Scott Eisen - AP

A thunderstorm with heavy rains approaches downtown Chicago on Monday.

By Henry Austin, NBC News contributor

Flash flood and wildfire warnings were issued on Tuesday, as severe thunderstorms and torrential rainfall were again expected to hit the Midwest and Northeast.

"Once again, thunderstorms are expected to fire in parts of the northern Plains to Lower Great Lakes on Tuesday," the National Weather Service said.

"A separate area of severe weather is possible in the Northeast. Large hail and damaging winds will be the primary threats. In addition, rainfall could be heavy enough to cause flash flooding and river flooding in the Midwest and Lower Great Lakes," it added.

In Chicago, there were at least 200,000 power outages on Monday as severe weather lashed the area.

The storms forced the temporary closure of O?Hare International Airport, NBC Chicago reported.

Fearing injury or worse at the city's Midway International Airport, officials cleared the ground and ordered people away from the windows.

Felled trees also led to traffic chaos across the city.

In Belmont, N.H., 23 scouts were hospitalized after being struck by lightning as they hid out from a storm.

Meanwhile, in Wisconsin there was almost a foot of rain over the weekend.

An area from the eastern Dakotas to northeast Iowa saw two to five inches of rain in the past week alone, according to weather.com.

The water-logged soil means additional rainfall is more prone to run off and cause rapid flooding of low-lying areas, officials warned.

Lightning strikes could also spark wildfires on the northern Plains, experts warned.

Embattled firefighters across the country have already tackled a number of huge blazes this year in Colorado, California and New Mexico. ?

The massive West Fork Fire in Colorado is expected to burn for some time to come.

But after more than a week the raging blaze in Doce, Ariz., was expected to be fully contained tomorrow. ?

More than 500 personnel and three helicopters have battled to bring in it under control.?

Related:

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Aerospace Merger Means Big Savings for U.S. Government, Company Says

PARIS ? Executives with Aerojet Rocketdyne, in its first week since forming from the merger of two rocket propulsion companies, said Tuesday (June 18) the new firm would save the U.S. government $1 billion over a decade and be responsive to the demands of customers, despite its dominance in the market for liquid-fueled rocket engines in the United States.

Warren Boley, president and CEO of Aerojet Rocketdyne, said here at the 2013 Paris Air Show that the combined company promised the U.S. government $100 million in acquisitions savings per year in order to help achieve the endorsement of the Pentagon as officials sought approval for the merger, which was finalized on June 14..

GenCorp Inc., the parent company of Aerojet, purchased Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne from United Technologies Corp. in a deal valued at $550 million. [The World's Tallest Rockets: How They Stack Up]

The savings are vital to the sustainment of U.S. military and NASA satellite programs, which have been hamstrung by rising launch costs over the last few years.

Boley said the company's commitment to $1 billion in cost savings over the next 10 years is being reviewed by two Defense Department contracting agencies.

"We're willing to stand up and be counted on that [promise]," Boley said.

Aerojet Rocketdyne officials also promised innovation and responsiveness to customer needs, despite concerns that competition would suffer with the merger of the two primary liquid-fueled rocket engine manufacturers in the United States.

"Going forward, I want to have the ability to have a complete technology suite that satisfies all customers affordably," Boley said. "There are immediate affordability opportunites in our launch business in future technology. That's what is very exciting when you look at the launch portion of the Aerojet Rocketdyne business."

Products competing with each other

One immediate test of Aerojet Rocketdyne's promise involves a dispute over the engines used on the first stage of the Orbital Sciences Corp. Antares rocket, which successfully launched for the first time in April.

Once RD AMROSS ? a joint venture of Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne and engine-builder NPO Energomash of Russia ? is incorporated into Aerojet Rocketdyne, the propulsion firm will find its products in competition with each other in many markets, including for the first stage of Antares and advanced boosters for NASA's Space Launch System. [NASA's SLS Rocket for Deep-Space Flights (Images)]

Antares is under contract to NASA for eight commercial cargo resupply missions to the International Space Station, plus an additional test flight later this year. Orbital hopes to win additional Antares launch orders from NASA, military and commercial customers.

The Antares first stage is powered by two kerosene-fueled AJ26 engines supplied by Aerojet, which acquired the engines from Russia in the 1990s. The engines ? known as NK-33s in Russia ? were built in the 1960s and 1970s for the Soviet Union's N1 moon rocket.

Aerojet imported the engines to support the company's U.S. propulsion business and modified each unit to gimbal, allowing the engines to steer rockets ascending from the launch pad into orbit. The upgraded engines under Aerojet's control are renamed the AJ26.

But the NK-33 engine is not in production in Russia anymore. Aerojet Rocketdyne has an inventory of 43 AJ26 engines available for Orbital's Antares rocket ? enough for 21 flights. Between 12 and 18 more NK-33 engines are stockpiled in Russia.

"Orbital is currently pursuing a long-term first stage propulsion system for its new medium-class Antares launch vehicle," Orbital spokesman Barry Beneski said in a statement. "Orbital currently uses the Aerojet AJ26, which is derived from the Russian NK-33, and has a sufficient supply of AJ26 engines available to meet commitments to NASA for commercial cargo supply to the International Space Station."

Finite engine supply

Aware of the finite supply of AJ26 engines, Orbital Sciences began inquiring about the purchase of RD-180 engines ? then controlled by Aerojet rival Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne ? to support the company's long-term strategy of expanding the Antares market into medium-lift satellite launches and further cargo missions to the space station.

RD AMROSS is responsible for U.S. sales of the RD-180 engine for United Launch Alliance's Atlas 5 rocket.

Lockheed Martin Corp., a ULA stakeholder along with Boeing Co., invested in the development of the RD-180 engine for the Atlas 5 rocket in the 1990s. ULA still maintains intellectual property rights to the engine, giving the Atlas 5 rocket exclusive access to RD-180 engines in the U.S. market.

The Federal Trade Commission launched an investigation into the matter after complaints of "anti-competitive" practices made by Orbital against ULA and RD AMROSS.

"Today, the only engine in active production that is technically suitable for the Antares and available for use in the U.S. is the RD-180 engine from Russia," Beneski said. "Orbital continues to investigate all potentially available engine options, one of which is the continued use of AJ26 engines, based on new production NK-33 engines."

Aerojet Rocketdyne plans to close the acquisition of Pratt & Whitney subsidiary RD AMROSS later this year, after securing approvals from the Russian government.

Boley said Tuesday that Aerojet Rocketdyne has a written agreement with the NK-33 engine's manufacturer, the Kuznetsov Design Bureau in Russia, to start production of the engine. If Orbital places places an order for more AJ26 engines by the end of 2013, Boley said new NK-33s could arrive in the United States for Aerojet upgrades by late 2016.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook?or Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/aerospace-merger-means-big-savings-u-government-company-114146224.html

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Witness recalls efforts to save wounded Trayvon Martin

LIVE VIDEO ? George Zimmerman faces charges of second-degree murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.

By James Novogrod, Tom Winter and Tracy Connor, NBC News

The jury in the George Zimmerman trial was shown photos Tuesday of Trayvon Martin?s body and a closeup of a chest wound as a police sergeant testified about his attempts to save the teenager?s life.

Sgt. Anthony Raimondo of the Sanford, Fla., police department told jurors how he arrived at the shooting scene, in the evening drizzle, on Feb. 26, 2012, to find Zimmerman handcuffed by another officer.

Martin?s body was on the grass, facedown with his hands under him, Raimondo said.

He said he checked the 17-year-old for a pulse and found none and then turned him over to perform CPR.?

?I breathed for Mr. Martin -- or I tried to,? Raimondo said, adding that the other officer performed the chest compressions.

Editor's note: Photos from the crime scene, which some readers might find disturbing, are included below.

Raimondo said there was a bubbling noise ? the sound of air escaping from the chest wound -- and he asked for plastic wrap and Vaseline so he could create an airtight seal around it. A passerby brought him a plastic bag.

The sergeant testified that he sat the body upright to feel for an exit wound and felt a cold can in Martin?s hooded sweatshirt pocket ? the Arizona brand fruit drink he had purchased at a 7-Eleven where he also bought Skittles for a his father?s girlfriend?s young son.

Raimondo laid the body back down to continue CPR, but could not revive Martin. After a rescue crew arrived and pronounced Martin dead, Raimondo put an emergency blanket over the body, he testified.

While the 14-year veteran was on the stand, prosecutors displayed pictures of Martin?s body facedown on the grass, face-up after the CPR attempt, and under the emergency blanket. There was also a photo of what appeared to be a coin-sized chest wound. Martin?s father left the courtroom as the pictures were shown.

It was the most graphic evidence to date in the trial, which began in earnest Monday with opening statements. Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder, claiming he shot Martin in self-defense.

Earlier testimony on Tuesday focused on Zimmerman?s experience with a neighborhood watch program, with a ?civilian employee for the Sanford, Fla., police department saying he struck her as ?meek? but civic-minded and ?professional.?

Wendy Dorival said that as part of her job, she assisted neighborhood watch programs, which enlist residents to be the ?eyes and ears? of the police department and alert authorities to suspicious activity.

Dorival met with Zimmerman in September 2011 to help him launch a neighborhood watch, and later tried to recruit him for the Citizens on Patrol program -- a more intensive volunteer squad that offers training, uniforms, and a vehicle to participants. He declined, she said.

?He seemed a little meek,? Dorival testified under cross-examination on the second day of testimony in the second-degree murder trial. ?He seemed like he really wanted to make changes in his community to make it better.?

Sanford Police Dept.

This crime scene photo presented by prosecutors for the State of Florida shows Trayvon Martin's body from the night of the shooting in February 2012. The photo was entered as evidence during George Zimmerman's trial in Seminole circuit court June 25, 2013 in Sanford, Fla.

Dorival was put on the stand by prosecutors, who contend Zimmerman ?profiled? Martin as the unarmed teen walked through a gated community on Feb. 26, 2012, then shot him through the heart during a confrontation.

The defense says Martin, 17, was the aggressor and ?viciously? attacked Zimmerman, 29, forcing him to shoot in self-defense.

Dorival said she tells neighborhood watch volunteers like Zimmerman they are observers who alert police to possible problems and don?t take action themselves.

Asked what watch volunteers are told about following and confronting people, Dorival said, ?We tell them don?t do that. That?s the job of law enforcement.?

A handbook that Dorival gave to watch groups, which was shown to her on the stand, contained a page that read: "Neighborhood watch is not the vigilante police."

When she was questioned by the defense, Dorival had mainly positive things to say about her contacts with Zimmerman, calling him professional. She also said he wrote a complimentary letter about her to the police chief and that she thanked him for it.

Prosecutors want to play for the jury five calls that Zimmerman made to a non-emergency police dispatcher between August 2011 and Feb. 2, 2012 to report people or activity he found suspicious.

They said the prior calls would give the jury insight into Zimmerman?s state of mind when he encountered Martin, which is important since Florida law requires proof of a so-called "depraved mind? for a second-degree murder conviction.

The defense contends that the prior calls have no bearing on Zimmerman?s fatal confrontation with Martin.

The judge has not yet ruled on whether the jury can hear the calls.

Editor?s note: George Zimmerman has sued NBC Universal for defamation. The company has strongly denied the allegations.

Seminole Circuit Court

This crime scene photo presented by prosecutors for the State of Florida shows Trayvon Martin's body from the night of the shooting in February 2012.

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Buyers are more willing to buy at Auction. Four things to do if you're ...

auction41. Be firm and be clear on your limit beforehand. It?s not a great time to pull out the calculator & trying to work out your last few bids when the auction pressure is at its peak.

2. Arrive early; find a car park feel comfortable. The stress of auction is enough on the day.

3. Take a friend or adviser. Don?t go it alone. Everyone needs moral support & an experienced hand can go a long way.

4. Bid like you?re never going to stop (within your limits ? see Tip #1!). If you look like you?ll never stop, others may drop off thinking the same.

If you are interested in more information about selling your property at auction please contact our office on 3367 34 11

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Source: http://www.calibrerealestate.com.au/buyers-are-more-willing-to-buy-at-auction-four-things-to-do-if-youre-bidding/

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'Kick Ass' Writer to Jim Carrey -- Relax, It's Just a Movie | TMZ.com

'Kick Ass' Writer
Jim Carrey Needs to Relax
It's Just a Movie

Breaking News

0624_mark_millar_jim_carrey
"Kick Ass 2" star Jim Carrey is confusing real-life violence with make-believe violence ... so says the film's writer, who's now firing back against Carrey for criticizing the movie's blood and guts.

As we reported, Carrey has officially withdrawn his support for the movie, claiming he can't advocate such a relentlessly violent film in the wake of the Sandy Hook Massacre.

But "Kick Ass 2" writer Mark Millar says Carrey's criticism is misplaced, writing, "Like Jim, I'm horrified by real-life violence (even though I'm Scottish), but Kick-Ass 2 isn't a documentary. No actors were harmed in the making of this production! This is fiction."

He posted the statement on his website, and hammered home his message to Jim by pointing out "Superman just snapped a guy's f***ing neck."

But still ... no hard feelings between Millar and Carrey -- the writer says, "Jim, I love ya and I hope you reconsider."

Get TMZ Breaking News alerts to your inbox

Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/06/24/kick-ass-writer-mark-millar-jim-carrey-violence/

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Hong Kong lets Snowden leave to Moscow, with Cuba among possible destinations

By James Pomfret

HONG KONG (Reuters) - A former contractor for the U.S. National Security Agency, charged by the United States with espionage, was allowed to leave Hong Kong on Sunday, his final destination as yet unknown, because a U.S. request to have him arrested did not comply with the law, the Hong Kong government said.

Edward Snowden left for Moscow on Sunday and his final destination may be Cuba, Ecuador, Iceland or Venezuela, according to various reports. The move is bound to infuriate Washington, wherever he ends up.

"It's a shocker," said Simon Young, a law professor with Hong Kong University. "I thought he was going to stay and fight it out. The U.S. government will be irate."

Russia's Interfax news agency quoted a source at the Aeroflot airline as saying there was a ticket in Snowden's name for a Moscow-Cuba flight. Itar-Tass news agency cited a source as saying Snowden would fly from Havana to Caracas, the Venezuelan capital.

The South China Morning Post said his final destination might be Ecuador or Iceland.

A spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said he was unaware of Snowden's whereabouts or travel plans.

The WikiLeaks anti-secrecy website said it helped Snowden find "political asylum in a democratic country". It did not elaborate, other than to say Snowden was "currently over Russian airspace" with WikiLeaks legal advisers.

The White House had no comment on the WikiLeaks posting.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said last week he would not leave the sanctuary of the Ecuadorean Embassy in London even if Sweden stopped pursuing sexual assault claims against him because he feared arrest on the orders of the United States.

U.S. authorities have charged Snowden with theft of U.S. government property, unauthorized communication of national defense information and wilful communication of classified communications intelligence to an unauthorized person, with the latter two charges falling under the U.S. Espionage Act.

The United States had asked Hong Kong, a special administrative region (SAR) of China, to send Snowden home.

"The U.S. government earlier on made a request to the HKSAR government for the issue of a provisional warrant of arrest against Mr Snowden," the Hong Kong government said in a statement.

"Since the documents provided by the U.S. government did not fully comply with the legal requirements under Hong Kong law, the HKSAR government has requested the U.S. government to provide additional information ... As the HKSAR government has yet to have sufficient information to process the request for provisional warrant of arrest, there is no legal basis to restrict Mr Snowden from leaving Hong Kong."

It did not say what further information it needed, but said Snowden left Hong Kong "on his own accord for a third country through a lawful and normal channel".

CHINA SAYS U.S. "BIGGEST VILLAIN"

Hong Kong, a former British colony, reverted to Chinese rule in 1997 and although it retains an independent legal system, and its own extradition laws, Beijing has control over Hong Kong's foreign affairs. Some observers see Beijing's hand in Snowden's sudden departure.

Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said earlier this month that Russia would consider granting Snowden asylum if he were to ask for it and pro-Kremlin lawmakers supported the idea, but there has been no indication he has done so.

Iceland refused on Friday to say whether it would grant asylum to Snowden, a former employee of contractor Booz Allen Hamilton who worked at an NSA facility in Hawaii.

The South China Morning Post earlier quoted Snowden offering new details about the United States' spy activities, including accusations of U.S. hacking of Chinese mobile telephone companies and targeting China's Tsinghua University.

Documents previously leaked by Snowden revealed that the NSA has access to vast amounts of internet data such as emails, chat rooms and video from large companies, including Facebook and Google, under a government program known as Prism.

In its statement, the Hong Kong government said it had written to the United States "requesting clarification" of earlier reports about the hacking of computer systems in Hong Kong by U.S. government agencies.

"The HKSAR Government will continue to follow up on the matter, so as to protect the legal rights of the people of Hong Kong," it said.

China's Xinhua news agency, referring to Snowden's accusations about the hacking of Chinese targets, said they were "clearly troubling signs".

It added: "They demonstrate that the United States, which has long been trying to play innocent as a victim of cyber attacks, has turned out to be the biggest villain in our age."

(Additional reporting by Fayen Wong in Shanghai; Nishant Kumar in Hong Kong; Alexei Anishchuk and Steve Gutterman in Moscow, and Tabassum Zakaria in Washington; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-nsa-contractor-snowden-leaves-hong-kong-moscow-080843121.html

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Supreme Court 2013: The Year in Review

The U.S. Supreme Court building seen in Washington May 20, 2009. Does today?s ruling mean that schools should keep doing what they?re doing?

Photo by Molly Riley/Reuters

Well, we have the kind of anticlimactic ruling from the Supreme Court, on affirmative action that leaves the big question for another day. In a 7-1 ruling (Justice Elena Kagan sat this one out), the court sent back to the lower courts Abigail Fisher?s challenge to the admissions policy of the University of Texas, Austin. Fisher is the white plaintiff who says she didn?t get admitted as an undergraduate because UT Austin considers race, as one factor among many, in admitting part of each entering class. She didn?t win, but neither did UT. Instead, the court made it somewhat harder for schools to defend race-based preferences in admission?but not impossible. Now schools have to show that ?no workable race-neutral alternatives would produce the educational benefits of diversity.? In other words, that the use of race in admissions is a last resort. So, affirmative action is still allowed, and the basis for that hasn?t changed?the goal remains diversity. But lower courts shouldn?t ?accept a school?s assertion that its admissions process uses race in a permissible way.? Instead, courts should give ?close analysis to the evidence of how the process works in practice.?

The key is that Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion, and as usual, Justice Kennedy made clear that he has some doubts about the race-based preference in front of him, but he?s not ready to shut the door entirely on the whole enterprise of increasing diversity. Justice Clarence Thomas, on the other hand, is ready to slam that door once and for all. That?s what his separate opinion is about. No one signed on to it, though, because Abigail Fisher and her lawyers didn?t ask the court to reconsider whether affirmative action is at odds with the Constitution?s guarantee of equal protection?in other words, to find that white university applicants have a constitutional right against reverse discrimination. So Justice Kennedy just says, ?there is disagreement? about whether the court?s 2003 ruling, about the University of Michigan, allowing affirmative action to continue ?was consistent with the principles of equal protection in approving this compelling interest in diversity,? and leaves it at that.

I?m going to post more on this later today, but for now, a few questions. Does today?s ruling, which is kind of a punt, mean that schools should keep doing what they?re doing? Or should they read the writing on the wall, assume that the court will soon take the next step and ban the use of race in admissions, and begin to shift, for diversity?s sake, to an admissions policy that concentrates on admitting more low-income students? The court has already decided to hear a case next term about whether it was constitutional for Michigan to bar racial preferences?a case that?s a mirror of Abigail Fisher?s. Michigan?s ballot initiative, passed in 2006, says that the state?s public universities?"shall not discriminate against, or grant preferential treatment to, any individual or group on the basis of race, sex, color, ethnicity, or national origin in the operation of public employment, public education, or public contracting." The appeals court in the Michigan case?the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit?has twice struck down Michigan?s law, saying it?s unfair to minorities. Both rulings were split, though, 2-1 and 8-7. What, if anything, does today?s ruling from the Supreme Court suggest about the outcome of this new case next year? I would say nothing directly, but I bet the court?s conservatives plus Justice Kennedy uphold Michigan?s law. And with 10 states now banning affirmative action, that will matter a great deal in the long run for how colleges do admissions.

And what did you make of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg?s interesting and lone dissent? Ginsburg is the only justice who would have approved UT Austin?s admissions policy. She likes it, she said, because it?s transparent: The university ?is candid about what it is endeavoring to do: It seeks to achieve student-body diversity,? she writes. Take away overt consideration of race as a factor in admissions, she warns, and you will just drive this practice underground. That?s an implicit critique of some class-based affirmative action programs, which arguably use class as a proxy for race. But is this kind of substitution?admitting more African-American and Hispanic students through preferences for low-income students?actually a bad thing?

More soon, once I digest Justice Clarence Thomas? concurring opinion calling for an end to affirmative action entirely.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/the_breakfast_table/features/2013/supreme_court_2013/fisher_v_university_of_texas_why_did_the_supreme_court_punt_the_affirmative.html

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Why Immigration Reform Is The Panama Canal Treaty Redux (Powerlineblog)

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

How to Use Google Voice

Google Voice is a powerful platform, and a great way to streamline your digital life. Voice is a convenient voicemail service that also creates a catchall phone number to ring multiple devices. It provides features you didn't even know you wanted, such as a way to send text messages from your computer or make a phone call from Gchat.

Getting Started

The service has existed in its current format since 2009, and users sign up through their existing Google accounts. If you don't already have a Google account, set one up. You can do it right on the Google Voice website. Once inside, you'll need to accept the terms of service, and choose to either create a new number or use an existing number.

Existing numbers: You can choose to import your old phone number to Google Voice or make an online-retrievable voicemail that also enables outbound calls. This will replace the voicemail system of your service provider, but be aware that it might not be available to all service providers. When you put in your voicemail number, Google Voice will let you know whether or not it supports your provider.

Create a new number: Choosing to create a new number will give you one number that can ring up to six phones at the same time. It's ideal for setting up an emergency number where you can be reached on your mobile, at home, or at the office. New numbers can be set up by area or zip code and depend on availability. For each number you add, Google provides a security access code to ensure the phone being added indeed belongs to you.

How to Use Google Voice

Now the fun begins. For every voicemail it receives, Google attempts a transcription. Depending on the clarity of the speaker, these transcriptions can range from frighteningly accurate to laughably wrong. Voice will forward the transcription to your email address and store it in your Google Voice inbox.

From the online platform, you can return the call by phone call or text. There are buttons for each under the message in the Google Voice interface. When returning by phone call, you choose which phone you want to ring. For example, if you set up both your office and your cellphone through Voice, a drop-down menu will appear allowing you to choose which number you're nearest?Google will place the call through that phone.

When using Google Voice to place calls, the number shows up on caller IDs as your Google Voice number. You can also block callers, forward voicemails, edit the transcription, or download messages in MP3 format. The option to record phone calls can be turned on (with a courtesy message letting those you're calling know, so that you comply with applicable laws).

All domestic calls are free, while international calls cost money depending on the country.

Texting

There are multiple ways to text via Google Voice. Any number marked "mobile" in your Google Voice forwarding can receive text messages to your Google Voice number. When you send back messages, they appear to the receiver as coming from your Google Voice number. Additionally, you can choose to respond via the Google Voice homepage and Gmail. For the former, simply click the Text button in the interface. For the latter, simply reply to the email in Gmail.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/how-to/tips/how-to-use-google-voice-15613988?src=rss

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