Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Mayor Jones shifting perspective to building the "best" Richmond

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) -

The state of Richmond is strong and growing stronger -??that's the message from Mayor Dwight Jones in his annual "State of the City" address Tuesday night.

Jones spoke to about a hundred people downtown at CenterStage. No huge groundbreaking proposals were announced, but Jones is shifting his perspective from "building a better Richmond," as we've heard him say over the last four years, to "building the best Richmond," in the year to come.

"We are building the best Richmond, because that is what you deserve, that is what I deserve, that is what our children deserve," said Jones.

How to get to that "best" Richmond is the focus,?building on the successes Mayor?Jones believes he's accomplished in the last four years. He is the first mayor under this form of government to have a second term in office, and he's set some lofty goals.

"It's time for us to redefine what 'possible' means. I want you to join me tonight in reinventing 'possible,'" said Jones.

Jones says the city can't reinvent "possible" without addressing the needs of its poorest citizens. He discussed poverty mitigation efforts, like improving transportation, revamping city housing projects, revitalizing neighborhoods, bringing more companies and jobs to the city and closing a funding gap for education.

"Richmond schools need to receive funding based on the city's poverty level. It compromises the very future of our city when we are measured as though we are as affluent as Chesterfield and Henrico," said Jones.

One topic that was not widely covered, despite the presence of the city's police chief and officers, is a decrease in crime statistics for the city.

"I think it's always important to point those things out," said City Council President Charles Samuels.?"I'm not a speech writer, so I can't really say what he should or shouldn't have touched on more, but I'll tell you what, it is on the minds of all of us on City Council."

The mayor hit on another hot button topic: baseball. He said the city is committed to building a new ballpark and keeping the Squirrels in the city. He did not, however, commit to a location, saying that decision will be based on financial analysis.

Copyright 2013 WWBT NBC12.? All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.nbc12.com/story/20792394/mayor-jones-to-deliver-state-of-the-city-address-tuesday-night

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Early menopause may occur in women with BRCA gene

Jan. 29, 2013 ? Women with harmful mutations in the BRCA gene, which put them at higher risk of developing breast and ovarian cancer, tend to undergo menopause significantly sooner than other women, allowing them an even briefer reproductive window and possibly a higher risk of infertility, according to a study led by researchers at UC San Francisco.

Moreover, the study showed that carriers of the mutation who are heavy smokers enter menopause at an even earlier age than non-smoking women with the mutation.

While the authors note that further research is needed, given the size and demographics of the study, women with the abnormal gene mutation should consider earlier childbearing, and their doctors should encourage them to initiate fertility counseling along with other medical treatments, the scientists said.

The study will be published online in Cancer on January 29, 2013.

This is the first controlled study to explore the association between BRCA1 and BRCA 2 and the age at onset of menopause, the authors said.

"Our findings show that mutation of these genes has been linked to early menopause, which may lead to a higher incidence of infertility,'' said senior author Mitchell Rosen, MD, director of the UCSF Fertility Preservation Center and associate professor in the UCSF Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences. "This can add to the significant psychological implications of being a BRCA1/2 carrier, and will likely have an impact on reproductive decision-making,'' Rosen said.

Mutations in either of the genes BRCA 1 or BRCA 2 can produce a hereditary, lifetime risk of developing breast cancer and ovarian cancer. Some women decide to reduce their risk by undergoing prophylactic surgery to remove at-risk tissue, including their breasts and ovaries. The abnormal genes are the most identified inherited cause of breast cancer -- carriers are five times more likely to develop breast cancer than those without the mutations, according to the National Cancer Institute.

The new study was designed to determine whether women with the BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutation have an earlier onset of menopause compared with unaffected women.

The researchers looked at nearly 400 female carriers of mutations in the BRCA gene in northern California and compared their onset of menopause to that of 765 women in the same geographic area without the mutation. Most of the women in the study were white because almost all of the BRCA1/2 carriers within the UCSF cancer risk registry are white.

The scientists found that women with the harmful mutation experienced menopause at a significantly younger age -- 50 years -- compared to age 53 for the other midlife women.

Heavy smokers (more than 20 cigarettes a day) with the abnormal gene had an even earlier onset of menopause -- 46 years. By comparison, only seven percent of white women in northern California had undergone menopause by that age, said the authors. Smoking has been shown to alter menstrual cycles and estrogen status, among other impacts.

The authors point out that while their study shows a possible increased risk of infertility for the mutation carriers, further study is needed. They also said that data regarding the age of natural menopause is limited because most women with the mutation are recommended to undergo risk-reducing surgery after they complete childbearing.

"Women with the mutation are faced with challenges in reproductive choices,'' said study co-author Lee-may Chen, MD, a professor in the UCSF Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Services. "These data may help women understand that their childbearing years may be even more limited by earlier menopause, so that they can make decisions about their reproductive choices and cancer risk-reducing surgery.''

The first author of the study is Wayne T. Lin, MD, MPH, who at the time of the research was a resident at UCSF and is now a fellow at the Brigham and Women's Hospital at Harvard Medical School. Other authors include Marcelle Cedars, MD, a UCSF professor and director of the Division of Reproductive Endocrinology in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Services ; and Mary Beattie, MD, clinical professor in the UCSF Department of Medicine. Study data was collected from the Cancer Risk Program at UCSF and the northern California site of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, a project of the University of California Davis and Kaiser Permanente.

Funding for the study was provided by National Institutes of Health grants NR004061, AG012505, AG012535, AG012531, AG012539, AG012546, AG012553, AG012554, and AG012495. Support was also provided by the UCSF Cancer Risk Program Patient Registry, which is supported by the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center. The Study of Women's Health Across the Nation has grant support from the NIH, Department of Health and Human Services through the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Nursing Research, and the NIH Office of Research on Women's Health.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), via Newswise.

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


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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/FMeGW0Mbx00/130129074429.htm

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One Year After Costa Concordia, Has Anything Changed?

The wreck of the Costa Concordia still lists in the waters off Giglio, more than a year after the crash. Commercial pilots flying overhead are known to point it out to passengers. It?s been photographed from space. Recently the doomed vessel demanded a second rescue after a group of thrill-seeking tourists got too close to the wreck and their dinghy nearly overturned in the frigid waters.

It was an unfortunate reminder of how little of substance has been accomplished since the tragedy last January, which killed 32 of the 4200 people aboard and ranks among the worst cruise ship disasters in memory. The next 12 months will determine how long the Costa Concordia remains a disaster tourism spectacle, and whether the ship itself, and the questions about what caused it to sink, are finally put to rest.

The salvage operation, said to be the largest such project in maritime history, is turning out to be more complex than expected. Foul weather and some technical difficulties have pushed back the plan to refloat the vessel, first planned for this spring, to September. The two companies handling the $400 million job, Florida?s Titan and its Italian partner Micoperi, plan to tow the wreck to a shipyard where it will be dismantled.

As for the investigation, the legal process in Italy moves at a notoriously creep. Capt. Francesco Schettino, who infamously left the ship after having run it into the rocks, might go on trial later this year, along with seven others, and this week the Italian authorities said they would also charge the cruise ship?s owner, Costa Crociere, with gross negligence. The U.S. Coast Guard is joining the investigation of the accident along with the National Transportation Safety Board. But the full evidence, including the black box recordings, won?t be fully analyzed or released until the probe is further along, and the criminal proceeding will trump the civil investigation into what caused the accident.

In the meantime, a consortium of 26 major cruise lines, the Cruise Lines International Assn., has voluntarily adopted a series of 10 reforms, and the International Maritime Organization is considering whether to make them mandatory for all cruise ships. Most of the 10 stem from the confusion that followed the Concordia?s grounding on the reef, when passengers couldn?t get to lifeboats and received little direction from the crew.

Key changes include briefing of all passengers before or right after departure, not within 24 hours as before (or in some cases, days after sailing; designating that passage planning, like filing a flight plan, must not only be done in advance but must be adhered to by the crew; and that the ship must carry excess lifejackets.

Perhaps the biggest change in culture would be to severely restrict access to the bridge during maneuvers or times of increased vigilance. But enforcement largely would rely on an honor system, which might not stop a rogue captain (right before the Concordia crashed her captain was entertaining a guest and talking on his cell phone). What this rule proposes would be akin to the "sterile cockpit" protocols aboard airliners under 10,000 feet. In aviation, though, it's an official policy that's enforced by a government entity.

The new rules also grow out of an increasing recognition that communication among the crew is critical during an emergency. Similar to the airlines "crew resource management," the shipping industry is moving to change the idea that the captain calls the shots and can?t be challenged. As one Coast Guard veteran told me: "I have had unlicensed seamen save my butt," recalling that "early on as a captain I was going too fast in a channel, and my second mate told me 'Hey, aren?t you going too fast?' I quickly changed course. I always tell me crew: If you see something, tell me."

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/outdoors/survival/stories/one-year-after-costa-concordia-has-anything-changed-15037754?src=rss

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

SAG Awards 2013: Justin Timberlake And More Best Dressed!

Jennifer Lawrence and Claire Danes also look modern and chic on the red carpet.
By Maud Deitch


Justin Timberlake arrives at 2013 SAG Awards
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1700863/sag-awards-2013-fashion.jhtml

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Sixty-five found executed in Syria's Aleppo: activists

BEIRUT (Reuters) - At least 65 people were found shot dead with their hands bound in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Tuesday in a "new massacre" in the near two-year revolt against President Bashar al-Assad, activists said.

Opposition campaigners blamed the government but it was impossible to confirm who was responsible. Assad's forces and rebels have been battling in Syria's commercial hub since July and both have been accused of carrying out summary executions.

More than 60,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the Syrian war, the longest and deadliest of the revolts that began throughout the Arab world two years ago.

The U.N. refugee agency said on Tuesday the fighting had forced more than 700,000 people to flee. World powers fear the conflict could increasingly envelop Syria's neighbors including Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey, further destabilizing an already explosive region.

Opposition activists posted a video of a man filming at least 51 muddied male bodies alongside what they said was the Queiq River in Aleppo's rebel-held Bustan al-Qasr neighborhood.

The bodies had bullet wounds in their heads and some of the victims appeared to be young, possibly teenagers, dressed in jeans, shirts and trainers.

Aleppo-based opposition activists who asked not to be named for security reasons blamed pro-Assad militia fighters.

They said the men had been executed and dumped in the river before floating downstream into the rebel area. State media did not mention the incident.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which says it provides objective information about casualties on both sides of Syria's war from a network of monitors, said the footage was evidence of a new massacre and the death toll could rise as high as 80.

"They were killed only because they are Muslims," said a bearded man in another video said to have been filmed in central Bustan al-Qasr after the bodies were removed from the river. A pickup truck with a pile of corpses was parked behind him.

STALEMATE

It is hard for Reuters to verify such reports from inside Syria because of restrictions on independent media.

Rebels are stuck in a stalemate with government forces in Aleppo - Syria's most populous city which is divided roughly in half between the two sides.

The revolt started as a peaceful protest movement against more than four decades of rule by Assad and his family, but turned into an armed rebellion after a government crackdown.

About 712,000 Syrian refugees have registered in other countries in the region or are awaiting processing as of Tuesday, the U.N. refugee agency Said on Tuesday.

"We have seen an unrelenting flow of refugees across all borders. We are running double shifts to register people," Sybella Wilkes, spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), told Reuters in Geneva.

On Monday, the United Nations warned it would not be able to help millions of Syrians affected by the fighting without more money and appealed for donations at an aid conference this week in Kuwait to meet its $1.5 billion target.

Speaking ahead of that conference, Kuwait's foreign minister Sheikh Sabah al-Khaled al-Sabah said on Tuesday there was concern Syria could turn into a failed state and put the entire region at risk.

Aid group M?decins Sans Fronti?res said the bulk of the current aid was going to government-controlled areas and called on donors in Kuwait to make sure they were even-handed.

MISSILES

In the eastern city of Deir al-Zor, insurgents including al Qaeda-linked Islamist fighters captured a security agency after days of heavy fighting, according to an activist video issued on Tuesday.

Some of the fighters were shown carrying a black flag with the Islamic declaration of faith and the name of the al-Nusra Front, which has ties to al Qaeda in neighboring Iraq.

The war has become heavily sectarian, with rebels who mostly come from the Sunni Muslim majority fighting an army whose top generals are mostly from Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. Assad has framed the revolt as a foreign-backed conspiracy and blames the West and Sunni Gulf states.

Fighting also took place in the northern town of Ras al-Ain, on the border with Turkey, between rebels and Kurdish militants, the Observatory said.

In Turkey, a second pair of Patriot missile batteries being sent by NATO countries are now operational, a German security official said on Tuesday.

The United States, Germany and the Netherlands each committed to sending two batteries and up to 400 soldiers to operate them after Ankara asked for help to bolster its air defenses against possible missile attack from Syria.

(Additional reporting by Sylvia Westall in Kuwait, Sabine Siebold in Berlin and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rebels-storm-security-agency-eastern-syria-sources-121900998.html

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The #Bachelor Sean Lowe Recap ? January 28, 2013 (ABC) - Your ...

Time to watch some thirsty hoes! #bachelorlor

So how about a gameshow, but instead of money, the prize is a rose and a rocky six week relationship? ? #Bachelor pitch meeting

?I hate drama? ? things people who LOVE drama say #Bachelor

I hate Tierra #Bachelor

?I hope Tierra wins the bachelor!? Said no one ever. #bachelor #sorryimnotsorry

Tierra has her eyes on the prize. She is here to win. #bachelor #golddigger

#Bachelor oh Tierra- I?m looking forward to your upcoming drama lol

?The #Bachelor ? giving false dating hope to guys with RVs since 2002.?

Sean is in his underwear

So far this episode of #Bachelor is going well #ShirtlessSean #PantlessSean

Just because Sean takes his shirt off, it doesn?t make him any less boring. #BoringSean #Bachelor

Dear ladies who say, ?girls don?t like me.? Repeat after me, ?it?s because you?re a bitch.? I would know. #Bachelor

Oh c?mon, Selma is not 110 lbs. One boob is probably 60 lbs. #Bachelor

I thought I liked Selma. But now ? not so sure. She?s not just a pretty face but she?s immediately bragging about her 110 pounds? #Bachelor

Not a big fan of Selma, but not cuz she?s born in Iraq? #bachelor

That girl?s an 8head. Two times bigger than a forehead. #Bachelor

Selma was born in Baghdad, Iraq. A city not much different than Bagdad, Florida. #Bachelor

Why does someone from Iraq pronounce it the same way Sarah Palin does?? #Bachelor #eyeRACK

If you?re gonna take the iraqi girl the desert, you might as well keep it real and launch a drone strike. #Bachelor

Never take me on a sweaty date #Bachelor

I gotta be honest. This date is boring and I?m just staring at Selma?s titties the whole time. #Bachelor

Selma claims she can?t kiss Sean bc her mom will be upset. I think it?s bc she watched Emily?s season and knows what she?s in for. #BachelorTONGUE

Wait, so someone who?s NOT ALLOWED TO KISS is on a TV show where you compete for a fake husband? #Bachelor #Selma

Roller Derby? chicks fall on their asses, over and over. God I love stupid tv! #Bachelor

Uh oh? An athletic date for the one arm girl. Bet we never hear the end of this? #bachelor

?I don?t think having one arm is gonna hold me back today!? *roller derby* ?oh fuck?? #bachelor

The one-armed girl just said she?s gonna show Sean she can roll with the punches. Yep. As long as they all come from one side. #Bachelor

*cough* sympathy rose?

Takes a big man to make a one-armed girl do a roller derby. That?s a metaphor for Ty Corbin making the #Jazz play the Rockets. #bachelor

This is just mean. #bachelor

Oh and Tierra is just another Courtney. #bachelor

The other ladies are calling Tierra ?Tierra-ble.? That is kind of awesome. #bachelor

This girl is crazy #bachelor

tierra, is that weird dimple on your forehead natural, or is it from your fall down the stairs to get sean?s attention? #bachelor

I want to fill Tierra?s forehead dent with onion dip. #bachelor #hungry

Eww, tierra snorts when she cries? #bachelor

Fun fact: Tierra was the last color left out of Crayola?s 1024 ct. box. #Bachelor

Tiera.. would you accept this rose, to keep up our ratings? #bachelor

?Who gets diamond earrings on their first date?!? The random girl the show picked to model the product placement item! #Bachelor

Sorry Leslie?. But ALL of those dresses were on the fugly list?. #bachelor

Leslie H literally has the biggest mouth I have ever seen ever? #bachelor

?Holy Moly!??. ?Super Duper!??.. OH, Leslie. Where did you come from? #Bachelor #CleverBachelor

?holy moly batman!??.. is that a thing? #stufflesliesays #bachelor #thisdateisnotreal

Oh honey, please. Take the diamonds and run. #bachelor

I?m kinda worried that someone is going to kill Leslie for that $500,000 necklace. But also vaguely excited to watch an attempt?#bachelor

It?s the Pretty Woman date ? for every chick who?s ever wanted to be treated like a hooker

?Sean is definitely a young, blond, blue-eyed Richard Gere.? In other words, nothing like Richard Gere. #Bachelor

Leslie has decided that she?s only going to get married once. That?s great. #bachelor

Poor Leslie is already in the friend zone and has no clue #bachelor

He holds the rose in her face? and then doesn?t give it to her. Why didn?t he just kick her chair out from under her? #Bachelor

Is he going to pick up the rose but not give it??? Ack! Then she has to take the necklace off! Ack. Ack. Ack. #bachelor

Gimmee back my diamonds loser. #Bachelor

I have to pick up the check now too? HOLY MOLY! #bachelor

The awkward moment where your boyfriend dumps you & then asks for the jewelry back. #bachelor #leslie

I hope that sofa gets a rose. It?s stunning. #bachelor


Every time I look at the room for the rose ceremony, all I can see is Aladdin and Jasmine having their honeymoon sex. #Bachelor #TackySet

It?s down to the final rose ? will it be the blond girl I don?t know or the girl with the unfortunate make up? #Bachelor

It seems like some of these girls have professional makeup artists and some, y?know? don?t. #Bachelor

Did Amanda make out with a jelly jar just before the rose ceremony? #Bachelor

Bye bye Amanda ? now we?ll never know what a ?Fit Model? is

That?s what you get for wearing black lipstick medusa #BACHELOR

If I were on the #Bachelor I?d throw a rose off the roof of a building & see which one jumps off after it! #TrueLove

Roses are Red, Violets are Blue, the #Bachelor is dumb, and now so am I for watching it?

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Source: http://tvfoodanddrink.com/2013/01/bachelor-sean-lowe-recap-january-28-2013-abc/

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Researchers break million-core supercomputer barrier

Jan. 28, 2013 ? Stanford Engineering's Center for Turbulence Research (CTR) has set a new record in computational science by successfully using a supercomputer with more than one million computing cores to solve a complex fluid dynamics problem -- the prediction of noise generated by a supersonic jet engine.

Joseph Nichols, a research associate in the center, worked on the newly installed Sequoia IBM Bluegene/Q system at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories (LLNL) funded by the Advanced Simulation and Computing (ASC) Program of the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA). Sequoia once topped list of the world's most powerful supercomputers, boasting 1,572,864 compute cores (processors) and 1.6 petabytes of memory connected by a high-speed five-dimensional torus interconnect.

Because of Sequoia's impressive numbers of cores, Nichols was able to show for the first time that million-core fluid dynamics simulations are possible -- and also to contribute to research aimed at designing quieter aircraft engines.

The physics of noise

The exhausts of high-performance aircraft at takeoff and landing are among the most powerful human-made sources of noise. For ground crews, even for those wearing the most advanced hearing protection available, this creates an acoustically hazardous environment. To the communities surrounding airports, such noise is a major annoyance and a drag on property values.

Understandably, engineers are keen to design new and better aircraft engines that are quieter than their predecessors. New nozzle shapes, for instance, can reduce jet noise at its source, resulting in quieter aircraft.

Predictive simulations -- advanced computer models -- aid in such designs. These complex simulations allow scientists to peer inside and measure processes occurring within the harsh exhaust environment that is otherwise inaccessible to experimental equipment. The data gleaned from these simulations are driving computation-based scientific discovery as researchers uncover the physics of noise.

More cores, more challenges

"Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, like the one Nichols solved, are incredibly complex. Only recently, with the advent of massive supercomputers boasting hundreds of thousands of computing cores, have engineers been able to model jet engines and the noise they produce with accuracy and speed," said Parviz Moin, the Franklin M. and Caroline P. Johnson Professor in the School of Engineering and Director of CTR.

CFD simulations test all aspects of a supercomputer. The waves propagating throughout the simulation require a carefully orchestrated balance between computation, memory and communication. Supercomputers like Sequoia divvy up the complex math into smaller parts so they can be computed simultaneously. The more cores you have, the faster and more complex the calculations can be.

And yet, despite the additional computing horsepower, the difficulty of the calculations only becomes more challenging with more cores. At the one-million-core level, previously innocuous parts of the computer code can suddenly become bottlenecks.

Ironing out the wrinkles

Over the past few weeks, Stanford researchers and LLNL computing staff have been working closely to iron out these last few wrinkles. This week, they were glued to their terminals during the first "full-system scaling" to see whether initial runs would achieve stable run-time performance. They watched eagerly as the first CFD simulation passed through initialization then thrilled as the code performance continued to scale up to and beyond the all-important one-million-core threshold, and as the time-to-solution declined dramatically.

"These runs represent at least an order-of-magnitude increase in computational power over the largest simulations performed at the Center for Turbulence Research previously," said Nichols "The implications for predictive science are mind-boggling."

A homecoming

The current simulations were a homecoming of sorts for Nichols. He was inspired to pursue a career in supercomputing as a high-school student when he attended a two-week summer program at Lawrence Livermore computing facility in 1994 sponsored by the Department of Energy. Back then he worked on the Cray Y-MP, one of the fastest supercomputers of its time.

"Sequoia is approximately 10 million times more powerful than that machine," Nichols noted.

The Stanford ties go deeper still. The computer code used in this study is named CharLES and was developed by former Stanford senior research associate, Frank Ham. This code utilizes unstructured meshes to simulate turbulent flow in the presence of complicated geometry.

In addition to jet noise simulations, Stanford researchers in the Predictive Science Academic Alliance Program (PSAAP), sponsored by the Department of Energy, are using the CharLES code to investigate advanced-concept scramjet propulsion systems used in hypersonic flight (with video) -- flight at many times the speed of sound -- and to simulate the turbulent flow over an entire airplane wing.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Stanford School of Engineering. The original article was written by Andrew Myers.

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


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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ms7cX5a1IAs/130128104628.htm

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Boy Scouts close to ending ban on gays

NBC's Pete Williams reports on the major policy shift being considered by the Boy Scouts of America.

By Pete Williams, Justice Correspondent, NBC News

The Boy Scouts of America, one of the nation?s largest private youth organizations, is actively considering an end to its decades-long policy of banning gay scouts or scout leaders, according to scouting officials and outsiders familiar with internal discussions.

If adopted by the organization?s board of directors, it would represent a profound change on an issue that has been highly controversial -- one that even went to the US Supreme Court. The new policy, now under discussion, would eliminate the ban from the national organization?s rules, leaving local sponsoring organizations free to decide for themselves whether to admit gay scouts.

?The chartered organizations that oversee and deliver scouting would accept membership and select leaders consistent with their organization?s mission, principles or religious beliefs,? according to Deron Smith, a spokesman for the Boy Scouts? national organization.

Individual sponsors and parents ?would be able to choose a local unit which best meets the needs of their families,? Smith said.

The discussion of a potential change in policy is nearing its final stages, according to outside scouting supporters. If approved, the change could be announced as early as next week, after the BSA's national board holds a regularly scheduled meeting.

Only seven months ago, the Boy Scouts affirmed a policy of banning gay members, after a nearly two-year examination of the issue by a committee of volunteers convened by national leaders of the Boy Scouts of America, known as the BSA.

In a statement last July affirming the ban, its national executive board called it ?the best policy for the organization.?

But since then, a scouting official said, local chapters have been urging a reconsideration. "We're a grassroots organization. This is a response to what's happening at the local level," the official said.

Two corporate CEOs on BSA?s national board, Randall Stephenson of AT&T and James Turley of Ernst & Young, have also said they would work to end the ban. Stephenson is next in line to be the BSA?s national chairman. During the 2012 presidential campaign, both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney said the BSA should admit gay scouts and scout leaders.

Jennifer Tyrrell, who was ousted as a den mother for her son's Cub Scout troop because of her sexual orientation, is fighting back. Tyrrell talks to msnbc's Thomas Roberts about her petition to change the Boy Scouts of America's long-standing policy on banning gays and lesbians.

About 50 local United Way groups and several corporations and charities have concluded that the ban violates their non-discrimination requirements and have ceased providing financial aid to the Boy Scouts. An official of The Human Rights Campaign, an advocate for gay rights, said HRC planned to downgrade its non-discrimination ratings for corporations that continue to give the BSA financial support.

?It?s an extremely complex issue,? said one Boy Scouts of America official, who explained that other organizations have threatened to withdraw their financial support if the BSA drops the ban.

While the national scouting organization sets broad policies, more than 290 local councils nationwide govern the day-to-day conduct of the more than 116,000 local organizations. Individual scouting troops are sponsored by religious and civic organizations that represent a diversity of views on the issue of allowing gay scouts and leaders.

?The beliefs of the sponsoring organizations are highly diverse,? the official said.

The policy change now under discussion ?would allow the religious, civic or educational organizations that oversee and deliver Scouting to determine how to address this issue,? said the BSA's Smith.

?The Boy Scouts would not, under any circumstances, dictate a position to units, members or parents. Under this proposed policy, the BSA would not require any chartered organization to act in ways inconsistent with that organization?s mission, principles or religious beliefs,? he said.

In 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that the Boy Scouts had a First Amendment right of free expression when it came to the organization?s belief that homosexual conduct is inconsistent with values stated in the scout oath, requiring scouts to be ?morally straight.?

The Scouts have won similar legal battles, with courts finding that the BSA?s right of free association permits it, as a private organization, to reject those it believes do not conform to is values.?

Related:?
Eagle Scouts return badges to protest policy banning gays?
Gay mom upset after dismissal by Boy Scouts?

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/28/16739587-boy-scouts-close-to-ending-ban-on-gay-members-leaders?lite

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Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA 31088, December 2012

Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA 31088While the foreclosure market in?the rest of Houston County GA was experiencing a lag, the number of?Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA 31088?increased considerably in December 2012 as the banks released their inventory.

Currently, there are 47 Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA on the market, up 28% from November. These Warner Robins foreclosures range in price from $19,900 to $355,000 and square footage from 884 to 3,750.

In?December 19 new Warner Robins Foreclosures hit the market. The details for these new properties is as follows (address, price, heated sq feet, subdivision, year built):

  • 112 Wallace, $19,900, 884, Evergreen Park, 1953
  • 407 Alabama Avenue, $29,900, 1659, United Estates, 1965
  • 110 Shawnee Avenue, $39,900, 1168, Cherokee Hills, 1965
  • 107 Dewey Street, $40,000, 1760, Azalea Park, 1955
  • 602 Oakview Square, $43,600, 1129, Walker Park, 1955
  • 112 Oklahoma Avenue, $47,750, 1056, United Estates, 1969
  • 107 Oakdale Drive, $49,500, 2050, Hill & Dale Estates, 1964
  • 307 Somerset Drive, $52,900, 1110, Villa at Village Walk, 1988
  • 114 Highland Drive, $69,900, 1683, Highland Estates, 1969
  • 102 Juniper Road, $74,000, 1404, Laurel Hills, 1964
  • 516 Arrowhead Trail, $79,900, 1376, Shirley Hills, 1963
  • 122 Wiley Way, $80,500, 1337, Autumn Woods, 1995
  • 208 Meriwood Court, $82,900, 1459, Meriwood Square, 1987
  • 112 Deer Track Court, $91,500, 1266, Deerfield, 2005
  • 403 Heritage Drive, $94,000, 2261, Heritage, 1977
  • 604 Hidden Creek Circle, $94,900, 1502,?Harvest Pointe, 2008
  • 201 Williamsburg Avenue, $109,000, 2114, Williamsburg, 1988
  • 111 Quail Run Road, $176,000, 2323, Quail Run, 1976
  • 410 Tharpe Road, $181,700, 2703, Quail Run, 1985

For a complete list of available Warner Robins real estate, visit Homes for Sale in Warner Robins.

Call me at (478) 960-8055 (C) / (478) 953-8595 x227 (O) so we can discuss your Warner Robins real estate needs.


Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA 31088,?December 2012


View Foreclosures in Warner Robins GA 31088, December 2012 in a larger map

Statistics represent ONLY foreclosure single family homes, condos, and townhouses in Warner Robins GA for the month listed. (Source: CGMLS). Information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.

?

About Anita Clark Realtor

Anita Clark has written 919 posts on this blog.

Anita Clark Realtor sells Warner Robins Real Estate and provides community information as a service to the public. You can contact her at (478) 960-8055 or via email at anita@cbssk.com.

Source: http://sellingwarnerrobins.com/2013/01/foreclosures-in-warner-robins-ga-31088-december-2012/

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

New music review: Elephant Stone (Hidden Pony) | Montreal Gazette

Photo courtesy of Mauvaise Influence

With its self-titled sophomore release, Montreal?s Elephant Stone neatly sidestep the ?difficult second album? syndrome and deliver instead what is more like a mission statement.

Not that the group?s debut, The Seven Seas, released in 2009, was tentative. Stylistically varied, smartly arranged and melodically arresting, it grabbed enough acclaim to become a Polaris Prize nominee.

By comparison, the new disc is darker and denser, inviting attentive listens at serious volume to crack the surface. and once you really hear the harsh beauty at this album?s heart, it becomes clear that this is a stone-cold psychedelic marvel.

Elephant Stone album cover

As usual, the group?s leader and songwriter, Rishi Dhir, walks the parallel paths of jangly pop and lava-lamp anarchy ? aided, in no small way, by guitarist Gabriel Lambert, who sometimes goes all Jorma Kaukonen with howling solos and peals of sonic texture, notably on the assertive opener Setting Sun, which could fit on a neo-psych Nuggets anthology.

Lambert?s greatest moment, and the album?s, comes on the almost nine-minute explosion The Sea of Your Mind, which tosses in everything but the kitchen sink: phased vocals, a sitar break by Dhir, a no-nonsense riff and swelling walls of roaring guitar. In your imagination, you can see the liquid lightshow projections behind the band asthey keep it going live past the half-hour mark.

A Silent Moment is the disc?s other standout track, with the vocals of classical singer Pandit Vinay Bhide sharing space with Dhir?s bass line time-traveling from somewhere around Revolver.

When psychedelic music first became part of the rock landscape, artists generally tempered their experimental ambitions with a nod to the Top 40 charts, and this album follows that time-worn pattern. The Be My Baby backbeat in Hold Onto Your Soul and the chiming catchiness of Love the Sinner, Hate the Sin are as representative of this strobe-light voyage as the backwards guitar that creates Heavy Moon?s hypnotic drone.

The spirit of `67 lives on in these tracks. But then, it never really went away, did it?

Rating: **** and 1/2

Podworthy: The Sea of Your Mind

Elephant Stone will be available Feb. 5. Elephant Stone performs Feb. 15 at 9:30 p.m. at Divan Orange, 4234 St. Laurent Blvd. Tickets cost $10, plus a $2 charge if purchased in advance. Go to http://indiemontreal.ca/elephant-stone-w-guests.

Here?s the video for Heavy Moon:

For something on the poppier side of the band?s repertoire, this is Love the Sinner, Hate the Sin:

Click here to check out the band?s Web site.

Elephant Stone performs Feb. 15 at 9:30 p.m. at Divan Orange, 4234 St. Laurent Blvd. Tickets cost $10, plus a $2 charge if purchased in advance. Go to http://indiemontreal.ca/elephant-stone-w-guests.

And last, but far from least, watch for our feature interview with Rishi Dhir on Jan. 29 in the Gazette?s print edition and at montrealgazette.com.

Bernard Perusse

Twitter: @bernieperusse

Source: http://blogs.montrealgazette.com/2013/01/26/new-music-review-elephant-stone-hidden-pony/

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22 killed, 200 injured in clashes over Egypt verdict

Mohammed Nouhan / AP

Families and supporters of those accused of soccer violence from the Port Said soccer club react to the announcement of death sentences for 21 fans.

By Yusri Mohamed and Yasmine Saleh, Reuters

PORT SAID/CAIRO - Twenty-two people were killed in Egypt Saturday in violence that erupted after protesters took to the streets, angry that a court had?sentenced 21 people to death?over?a soccer disaster, state television said.?

More than 200 people were also injured in the clashes in Port Said, northeast of Egypt's capital, state television reported, citing the Health Ministry.?

Earlier Saturday a court sentenced 21 men, most of them from Port Said, to death for involvement in the disaster in the city's soccer stadium on February 1, 2012. Many spectators were crushed and witnesses saw some thrown off balconies after the match between Cairo's Al Ahly and local team al-Masri. Many of those killed were from the visiting team's supporters.

Armored vehicles and military police were deployed on the streets of the Mediterranean city Saturday.

The state news agency quoted a general as saying the military was sent to "establish calm and stability in Port Said and to protect public institutions."

And an official from the authority that controls Egypt's Suez Canal said it was not affected.

"Shipping movement through the Suez Canal is regular and is going ahead positively," canal spokesman Tarek Hassanein told Reuters, adding 44 ships had entered the canal so far on Saturday.

Amr Abdallah Dalsh / Reuters

Al Ahly fans, also known as "Ultras,

However, witnesses reported that operations at Port Said's port were halted when staff said they would suspend work due to the clashes. Other factories and workplaces closed for the day.

One witness reported that the army, which was deployed to Port Said, at the northern end of the canal, had sent troops to surround the branch office of the canal authority in the city.

The army deployed Friday at the southern end of the canal after violence there.

Security sources said the latest deaths brought to 20 the number killed in three days of violence, and hundreds have been injured.

The unrest began with rallies to mark the second anniversary of the overthrow of autocrat Hosni Mubarak in a revolution which the protesters accuse current President Mohammed Morsi and his Islamist allies of betraying.

The schism is hindering efforts by Morsi, elected in June, to revive an economy in crisis and reverse a plunge in Egypt's currency by enticing back investors and tourists.

In Port Said Saturday, residents rampaged through the streets in anger that people from their city had been blamed for the stadium disaster.

Gunshots were reported near the prison where most of the convicted men are being held.

One security source reported 11 killed in the violence, while two other sources put Saturday's toll at 12. At least two of the dead were policemen.

A witness said some men stormed a police station.

'Bread, freedom and social justice'
Meanwhile, thousands took to the streets of Cairo, Alexandria and other cities on Friday to protest against what they call the authoritarianism of Morsi's rule.

"We want to change the president and the government. We are tired of this regime. Nothing has changed," said Mahmoud Suleiman, 22, in Cairo's Tahrir Square, the cauldron of the 2011 revolt. Nearby, youths hurled stones at police early on Saturday.

"The protests will continue until we realize all the demands of the revolution - bread, freedom and social justice," said Ahmed Salama, 28, a protester camped out with dozens of others in Tahrir.

Morsi's supporters say their critics are ignoring democratic principles, after elections swept the Islamists to office.

The president was due to meet later on Saturday with the National Defence Council, which includes senior ministers and security officials, to discuss the violence.

Unrest has been stoked by Morsi's decision to fast-track an Islamist-tinged constitution rejected by his opponents.

Inspired by the popular uprising in Tunisia, Egypt's revolution spurred further revolts across the Arab world. But the sense of common purpose that united Egyptians two years ago has given way to internal strife that triggered bloody street battles last month.

Related:

Egypt court sentences 21 to death for stadium disaster

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/26/16705250-22-killed-200-injured-in-clashes-over-egypt-soccer-disaster-verdict?lite

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Quantum communication: Each photon counts

Jan. 25, 2013 ? Ultrafast, efficient, and reliable single-photon detectors are among the most sought-after components in photonics and quantum communication, which have not yet reached maturity for practical application. Physicist Dr. Wolfram Pernice of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), in cooperation with colleagues at Yale University, Boston University, and Moscow State Pedagogical University, achieved the decisive breakthrough by integrating single-photon detectors with nanophotonic chips. The detector combines near-unity detection efficiency with high timing resolution and has a very low error rate.

The results have been published by Nature Communications.

Without reliable detection of single photons, it is impossible to make real use of the latest advances in optical data transmission or quantum computation; it is like having no analog-digital converter in a conventional computer to determine whether the applied voltage stands for 0 or 1. Although a number of different single-photon detector models have been developed over the past few years, thus far, none have provided satisfactory performance.

Several new ideas and advanced developments went into the prototype developed within the "Integrated Quantum Photonics" project at the DFG Center of Functional Nanostructures (CFN). The new single-photon detector, tested in the telecommunications wavelength range, achieves a previously unattained detection efficiency of 91%.

The detector was realized by fabricating superconducting nanowires directly on top of a nanophotonic waveguide. This geometry can be compared to a tube that conducts light, around which a wire in a superconducting state is wound and, as such, has no electric resistivity. The nanometer-sized wire made of niobium nitride absorbs photons that propagate along the waveguide. When a photon is absorbed, superconductivity is lost, which is detected as an electric signal. The longer the tube, the higher is the detection probability. The lengths involved are in the micrometer range.

A special feature of the detector is its direct installation on the chip, which allows for it to be replicated at random. The single-photon detectors built thus far were stand-alone units, which were connected to chips with optical fibers. Arrangements of that type suffer from photons being lost in the fiber connection or being absorbed in other ways. These loss channels do not exist in the detector that is now fully embedded in a silicon photonic circuit. In addition to high detection efficiency, this gives rise to a remarkably low dark count rate. Dark counts arise when a photon is detected erroneously: for instance, because of a spontaneous emission, an alpha particle, or a spurious field. The new design also provides ultrashort timing jitter of 18 picoseconds, which is 18 times 10-12 seconds.

The novel solution also makes it possible to integrate several hundreds of these detectors on a single chip. This is a basic precondition for future use in optical quantum computers.

The detector demonstrated in this study was designed to work at wavelengths in the Telekom bandwidth. The same detector architecture can also be used for wavelengths in the range of visible light. This would allow the principle to be employed in analyses of all structures that emit little light, i.e., photons, such as single molecules or bacteria. ?

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Karlsruhe Institute of Technology.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. W.H.P. Pernice, C. Schuck, O. Minaeva, M. Li, G.N. Goltsman, A.V. Sergienko, H.X. Tang. High-speed and high-efficiency travelling wave single-photon detectors embedded in nanophotonic circuits. Nature Communications, 2012; 3: 1325 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2307

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/computers_math/information_technology/~3/ow-KbzYPjFA/130125104056.htm

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Stocks gain, boosted by P&G, Starbucks earnings

NEW YORK (AP) ? Stocks rose on Wall Street in afternoon trading Friday after Procter & Gamble and Starbucks posted strong earnings reports, putting the Standard & Poor's 500 index on track for its longest winning streak since 2004.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 53 points to 13,878 as of 2:21 p.m. Friday. The Standard & Poor's 500 advanced seven points to 1,502. The Nasdaq gained 20 points to 3,151.

The S&P 500 broke through 1,500 Thursday for the first time since December 2007, following a drop in claims for unemployment benefits that added to evidence that the labor market is healing. The index is headed for an eighth consecutive gain, which would be the longest winning streak since November 2004.

Procter & Gamble, world's largest consumer products maker, gained $2.49 to $72.91 after reporting that its quarterly income more than doubled. P&G also raised its profit forecast for its full fiscal year. Starbucks rose $2.40 to $56.97 after reporting a 13 percent increase in profits.

"Earnings are growing," said Joe Tanious, a global market strategist at JPMorgan. "The bottom line is that corporate America is doing exceptionally well."

Tanious expects corporate earnings to grow at about 5 percent over the "next year or two," and stock valuations to rise. Currently, the S&P 500 is trading at an average price-to-earnings ratio of 14, below an average of 15.1 for the last decade, according to FactSet data.

Apple continued to decline, allowing Exxon Mobil to once again surpass the electronics giant as the world's most valuable publicly traded company. Apple fell 1 percent to $444.26, following a 12 percent drop on Thursday, the biggest one-day percentage drop for the company since 2008, after Apple forecast slower sales. The stock is now $257.84, or 37 percent, below the record high of $702.10 it reached Sept. 19.

Apple first surpassed Exxon in market value in the summer of 2011, grabbing a title Exxon had held since 2005. The two traded places through that fall, until Apple surpassed Exxon in early 2012.

Stocks have surged this month, with the S&P 500 advancing 5.4 percent this month. It jumped at the start of the year when lawmakers reached a last-minute deal to avoid the "fiscal cliff." Stocks built on those gains on optimism that the housing market is recovering and the labor market is healing. The Dow Jones is up 6 percent on the year.

Deutsche Bank analysts raised their year-end target for the index to 1,600 from 1,575.

Companies will be able to maintain their earnings even if lawmakers in Washington decide to implement wide-ranging spending cuts to narrow the budget deficit, the analysts said in a note sent to clients late Thursday.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which moves inversely to its price, climbed 5 basis points to 1.91 percent.

Among other stocks making big moves.

? Halliburton gained $1.87 to $39.69 after posting a loss that was smaller than analysts had expected. The oilfield services company said fourth-quarter profits declined 26 percent to $669 million on increasing pricing pressure in the North American market and one-time charges from the Deepwater Horizon disaster. Wall Street had expected worse.

?Hasbro fell $1.45 to $37 after the toy maker said its fourth-quarter revenue failed to meet expectations because of poor demand over the holidays. The company plans to cut about 10 percent of its workforce and consolidate facilities to cut expenses.

? Green Mountain Coffee Roasters rose $1.10 to $44.88 after an analyst noted that sales of a competing coffee brewer introduced by Starbucks were getting off to a weak start.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stocks-gain-boosted-p-g-starbucks-earnings-153530667--finance.html

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Video: Tech Sector Up More Than 30% Since 2007

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

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50588761/

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Chicken wing prices soar ahead of Super Bowl

FeaturePics stock

Those chicken wings could be pricier this Super Bowl weekend.

By Allison Linn, TODAY

Last summer?s drought has come home to roost in the price you?ll be paying for those Super Bowl party chicken wings.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Thursday that chicken prices were up 6 percent in December, versus a year earlier. That's more than triple how much overall food prices have risen over?the same time.

Food economists had been warning that the price of foods such as meats and dairy would likely rise because of the summer?s severe drought.

In the case of poultry, the drought led to a rise in prices for the grains that are typically used to feed animals such as chickens and turkeys. That, in turn, has pushed up the price of the chickens.

There are other factors that also are making chicken wings in particular?more expensive this year, said Ryan Koory, an economist with IHS Global Insights who specializes in agriculture.

Last year, Koory said there was a glut in supply for chickens that led some farmers to decrease the number of chickens they produced. That in turn started to push prices up.

In addition, he said, in the past year and a half or so consumers have increasingly been turning to cheaper types of chicken, such as dark meat and wings, over pricier parts of the chicken such as chicken breasts.?

All that will likely translate into higher prices when you go to buy your chicken wings for next Sunday's matchup between the Baltimore Ravens and the San Francisco 49ers.

The National Chicken Council also said the rise in corn prices resulted in slightly fewer chickens being produced. The trade group is expecting 1.23 billion chicken wings to be consumed on Super Bowl weekend, a 1 percent decline from last year, because of the lower supply.

Despite the higher prices, Koory said chicken remains a better deal than other protein options.

?It?s still the cheapest meat, in comparison to a pork or beef,? Koory said.

Chicken wing lovers who are on a budget could have something to look forward to next year. If the weather cooperates and farmers don?t have to deal with a drought this summer, Koory said chicken prices should start to go down toward the end of 2013.

That means your chicken wings could be cheaper when you host that Super Bowl Sunday party in 2014.

Related: Fingerlickin' good! Best chicken wings in America

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2013/01/25/16697406-downright-un-american-chicken-wing-prices-up-ahead-of-super-bowl?lite

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Creative expression at Georgetown still fiction - The Georgetown Voice

In preparation for its imminent arrival at Georgetown, last year?s incoming freshman class was required to read the novel How to Read the Air for the Marino Family International Writer?s Workshop. Grounded in the author?s Ethiopian heritage, the book is linguistically elegant and uses a melancholy, poetic lyricism to tell the tale of a young man struggling to overcome his family?s troubled past.

For many students, this is the extent of formal contact with the language arts and creative writing they will encounter at Georgetown during their four years of matriculation. All of this despite the fact that the novel?s author, English professor Dinaw Mengestu (COL ?00), is a highly acclaimed writer who was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2012. The MacArthur Foundation awards its fellows a ?Genius Grant? of $500,000 for the purpose of freeing them to pursue their creative interests uninhibited by financial restrictions.

Mengestu has devoted his life to the craft of writing. ?I show up to my writing every day, and I show up in the same way that most people show up to their jobs,? he said. ?Most times I?m sitting at my desk by 9:30 in the morning and I?m working until the end of the day.?

Although creative writing remains his main focus, Mengestu has had to balance myriad responsibilities as his work has gained exposure. ?You grow into a public role that you learn to fulfill. It becomes an extension of your writing career,? he said. ?There?s the very private side that involves you sitting in a room with your books and your computer day after day, and there?s the very professional side that involves being able to speak about your work and actually reach out to your readers.?

Another new responsibility Mengestu shoulders is teaching creative writing on the Hilltop, which has given him new insight into the student body at Georgetown and how it has changed since he graduated. In particular, the openness to creative writing he sees on campus today was nowhere to be found during his undergraduate career.

?There weren?t really that many students trying to write fiction or poetry or whatever the case might have been ? It?s something that I think has changed dramatically from when I was an undergraduate,? Mengestu said. ?I?m thinking of two classes that I?m teaching now, I think that my students are incredibly talented, not that they all want to be writers, but they seem to really be serious about the act of writing.?

Despite Mengestu?s praise, Georgetown remains a relative unknown in creative writing. Despite the many acclaimed alumni in the University community?such as Jonathan Nolan (COL ?99) who co-wrote The Dark Knight and Robert Baer (SFS ?76) whose books inspired the film Syriana?and its location in a city with a burgeoning poetry scene, the Hoya of Letters is not a figure we often idolise. Creative writing events on campus are few and far between, rarely receiving the fanfare of sports or academic competitions, and on-campus events like Saxa Slam and the Corp?s occasional creative writing contests have a tendency to relegate creative writing to the status of a hobby, rather than a bona fide academic pursuit.

?It?s not like some universities that actually have creative writing programs and concentrations, if not majors,? said Mengestu. ?[Other schools] have a large number of students that are interested in writing professionally for their careers, they have literary journals that are very ? engaged with a very long tradition and history behind them.?

***

Despite the obscurity of the creative writing community, there are many student writers at Georgetown who share Mengestu?s love of language and say their cohort is growing, if only in fits and starts.

?In high school I wrote poetry all the time?terrible poetry,? said Kasia Clarke (COL ?13), an editor at The Anthem, a student literary magazine. ?During my 11th grade class when my grandfather was dying, and I read ?Funeral Blues? by Auden, and it really spoke to me, and I thought, that?s how my grandmother must feel. ?

?[Poetry] ? spoke to me in a way that other art forms didn?t, and poetry has rosary words and lines that you can just take,? said Madeline Collins (COL ?13) a senior English major. ?On some very immediate level, [I write] because I love reading and I love language, and you could say that language is something vital and sacred. It?s kind of a privilege to be able to use language and to spend time on it and see what it does.?

Collins says that she has built a strong network of friends and peers to talk about creative writing, swap books, and critique each other?s writing. ?People that I share my writing with and talk about writing with tend to be people who I?ve met through classes ? specifically the Lannan Seminar,? she said.

The Lannan Poetry Seminar, a course taught through the Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice, is an intensive study of poetry and its intersections with contemporary culture through lectures, readings, and informal dinners with poets. The Lannan Center, which is affiliated with the Folger Shakespeare Library and the O.B. Hardison Poetry Series, as well as several other literary organizations in the D.C. area, organizes lectures and readings throughout the year along the theme of social involvement. It has brought such writers and figures such as Margaret Atwood, Charles Simic, and Dr. Cornel West to campus, and organizes an annual symposium to expose students to professional writers?the 2011 edition featured Pulitzer Prize winner Junot D?az.

Mengestu reflected on a similar experience during his years as a student, saying most of the people invested in creative writing were ?able to all intersect at some point over those four years that we were here, and the Lannan? ? ? ? Seminar was probably the biggest and most important part of that ? we were spread across the University, people who were not necessarily English majors who had some sort of serious creative intent behind their studies.?

These comments are striking in light of the statements that were part of his speech for the Marino Workshop during the fall of 2011, where he remarked how initially unhappy he was with Georgetown. He claims the Lannan Seminar ?was probably the most critical ? time while in the department and being an English major that actually felt like I was being fostered as a writer.?

Mengestu does credit Georgetown with developing his writing skills. ?I think I knew I wanted to be a writer before I came here,? he said, ?[but] what I found here was a really great department, a lot of really great professors ? who, when I was young and trying to figure out which path I was going to take, were really willing to help and encourage me and read my writing.?

Nonetheless, the support Mengestu received as a student remains a relatively weak force compared to the culture of competition and corporatist achievement on the Hilltop. David Ebenbach, a Georgetown English? professor who specializes in creative writing and has published three books within the past year, acknowledged several subtle social dangers of the Georgetown academic culture.

?If you are in a highly competitive and judgmental atmosphere, you probably won?t allow yourself to do things that are risky because then you might make mistakes,? he said. The intense pressure here to devote time only to r?sum?-worthy pursuits is one reason Ebenbach feels cultivating a safe, creative, and collaborative space on campus is essential. ?The community is so important [because] there?s a prevailing wind we?re pushing back against.?

Kelley Kidd (SFS ?13), an avid poet and student in Professor Ebenbach?s Introduction to Creative Writing class, agreed. ?I think an environment that is so driven and perfectionist is a danger [to] creativity, and I think that is something that needs a space and an opportunity to flourish here.

Kidd thinks the academic culture at Georgetown sucks in students who would not usually be predisposed to such areas of study.

?There are a lot of people who go to this school and say, ?I really don?t want to be the traditional Georgetown major. I don?t want to be a Government major, I don?t want to be in International Politics, or maybe I do, but it?s not enough,?? she said. ?And everyone thinks that they don?t belong here because they like beautiful things and they like art.? This sentiment has been echoed by students who believe, like Kidd, that their career-driven education is not enough.

In editing The Anthem, Georgetown?s only literary magazine, Clarke has been frustrated by how seemingly small and isolated the writing community is. She has submitted work to several other Georgetown artistic competitions and groups, and received a stifling response. ?I asked them what they thought and they said, ?that?s too weird for Georgetown.??

She agrees, however, with the consensus that it is important to create a community. She?s found hers online, maintaining a daily poetry blog that now has over 2,500 regular subscribers. ?Once I had people reading it,? she said, ?I had to keep it up, and now I can?t just abandon these people who want poetry in their lives!?

English professor David Gewanter says there have been small but significant changes in the University?s approach to creative writing. ?The Lannan program actively cultivates a student community,? he said. ?The [English] Department will soon be considering whether to propose a creative writing minor.? Georgetown, he argues, fosters an environment conducive to creativity. ?GU, in developing social sensitivity and responsiveness, actively supports and encourages students to explore creative forms both as personal expression and as active social tools,? he said. ?To find your voice in a creative form is to articulate your engagement with the world.?

Gewanter added that creative writing provides a necessary counterpoint to today?s weary bloviating. ?Washington is fairly sagging under rhetoric, underfed amidst the sound-bites and pie-charts, the recycled catch-phrases and slogans that substitute for fresh approaches to the world and our role in it,? he said. ?Creative writing looks outward and inward, puts the writer on the line even as she invents new worlds.?

***

Despite the negative perception of the creative culture here and its apparent tendency to get lost in the chaos and competition of Georgetown academia, students recognize there is a strong creative energy in the student body?one that just needs to be tapped into. ?[The creative writing community] is thriving and supportive, and it?s there if you seek it,? said Adam Greenberg (COL ?13), a senior English major whose thesis focuses on poetry.

Many students still see a need for more systematic changes in the attitude of the University toward artistic pursuits. While Collins feels her ?professors foster creativity,? she says Georgetown needs ?a general encouragement of creativity, which would entail larger institutional changes.?

Mengestu echoed Collins?s sentiments. ?It?s not that there aren?t a lot of students who are very creative and committed to art, it?s that there?s not such a history of it here,? he said.

Students and teachers alike recognize that creative writing and attentive reading are both skills worth fostering, ones that are essential to learning how to engage in and shape our culture. ?When you?re looking at a bookshelf you?re looking at a conversation, and part of being a writer means joining the conversation, which means not just writing and talking, but also listening,? Ebenbach said.

Collins agrees a community is important for a writer?s growth. ?I don?t think writing is a solitary pursuit,? she said. ?Language isn?t a solitary thing. It?s inherently the opposite, so writing can?t be solitary ? I know that there is so much to be gained from sharing it with people and getting feedback and taking responsibility for something by putting it out there.? Clarke added, ?If you don?t discuss and you don?t read poetry, [then] you can?t write good poetry.?

Mengestu said that while his writing is done in solitude, he agrees with Collins that investing in a writing community is incredibly important for the University as a whole, regardless of one?s department or major.

?If you have a large concentration of students who are seriously engaged with the act of writing, you probably have a large concentration of students who are seriously engaged readers, and that continues to make this sort of vibrancy,? he said. ?So, writing is very solitary, but I think when you?re in an undergraduate environment and you find like-minded people you begin to spark a debate and a dialogue across a broad range of literature that doesn?t end with the bell when people pass out into the halls.?

***

To Mengestu, interdisciplinary study and dialogue happens naturally, and those who write and read are engaging in a wider, holistic conversation that permeates nearly every discipline. In general, conversations about writing are very important to him. ?I?ve had really wonderful experiences talking to people about my work, some of the best experiences I?ve had and those experience were also equally draining, quite exhausting, because you?re talking about something that?s incredibly private,? he said. ?You?re also having this exchange and it?s wonderful to see your readers, and it?s wonderful to realize that this private endeavor actually has a dynamic element to it.?

Mengestu also acknowledges there are difficulties inherent in the pursuit of a career in writing, regardless of institutional encouragement. ?I would probably try to dissuade [aspiring writers] as actively as I can,? he said. ?It?s not that I don?t love writing ? but you have to be able to see all the obstacles and still want to do it. I think you have to be very honest and clear-sighted about the challenges that come with it. So if you don?t care about it to the degree where it feels passionately necessary, it?s not going to compel you enough to make you really want to do it.?

?[Writing is] quite frustrating on a day-to-day basis,? he said. ?At the same time you do have those wonderful moments when a book is actually starting to take off, or you just feel like you?ve made moments of real progress in something that?s been taking two, three years out of your life. Those are really great, beautiful moments.?

Mengestu is hopeful about the future of creative writing at Georgetown, and anticipates that intelligent, motivated students will continue to change their culture and make their own connections. He sees a future for English majors, and this network of dogged and determined writers who feel a passion for what they do, even if their job prospects seem slim. ?I think part of being an English major is being engaged with the experience of being human,? he said. ?You?re engaging literary texts as a way of trying to understand what you?re doing here on this Earth, and I can?t think of any more inherently natural pursuit.?

Source: http://georgetownvoice.com/2013/01/24/creative-expression-at-georgetown-still-fiction/

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AT&T to buy $1.9 billion worth of 700MHz spectrum from Verizon

Verizon has made a number of deals with smaller carriers lately to unload its 700MHz spectrum, and it's now struck a deal with a big one. AT&T announced today that it's buying a large swath of spectrum in the 700 MHz B band from Verizon for $1.9 billion in cash and AWS spectrum licenses. That spectrum covers some 42 million people across 18 states, including some areas that aren't currently covered by AT&T. Expectedly, the switchover won't happen overnight -- AT&T expects the deal to close sometime in the second half of 2013, assuming it gains the necessary regulatory approval. You can find the full list of states covered by the spectrum in the press release after the break.

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AT&T Agrees to Acquire 700 MHz Spectrum from Verizon Wireless

Dallas, Texas, January 25, 2013

AT&T* announced in an 8-K filing today that it has agreed to acquire spectrum in the 700 MHz B band from Verizon Wireless for $1.9 billion in cash and Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) spectrum licenses in several markets, including Phoenix, Ariz., Los Angeles and Fresno, Calif. and Portland, Ore.

The 700 MHz licenses to be acquired by AT&T cover 42 million people in 18 states - California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington and Wyoming.

This acquisition complements AT&T's existing holdings in the 700 MHz B band and will allow AT&T to continue to quickly deploy 4G LTE services to meet demand for mobile Internet services on a wide array of smartphones, tablets and other devices. The company announced in November 2012 that it plans to reach 300 million people in the U.S. with its 4G LTE network by the end of 2014.

In conjunction with this transaction, AT&T will sell to Grain Management a single AWS license and will lease 700 MHz spectrum from Grain Management in three markets.

The transaction is subject to regulatory approval. AT&T anticipates closing the transaction in the second half of 2013.

*AT&T products and services are provided or offered by subsidiaries and affiliates of AT&T Inc. under the AT&T brand and not by AT&T Inc.

About AT&T

AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T) is a premier communications holding company and one of the most honored companies in the world. Its subsidiaries and affiliates - AT&T operating companies - are the providers of AT&T services in the United States and internationally. With a powerful array of network resources that includes the nation's largest 4G network, AT&T is a leading provider of wireless, Wi-Fi, high speed Internet, voice and cloud-based services. A leader in mobile Internet, AT&T also offers the best wireless coverage worldwide of any U.S. carrier, offering the most wireless phones that work in the most countries. It also offers advanced TV services under the AT&T U-verse(R) and AT&T |DIRECTV brands. The company's suite of IP-based business communications services is one of the most advanced in the world.

Additional information about AT&T Inc. and the products and services provided by AT&T subsidiaries and affiliates is available at http://www.att.com/aboutus or follow our news on @ATT, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/att and YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/att.

(C) 2013 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. 4G not available everywhere. AT&T, the AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

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