Thursday, April 25, 2013

Earth Day, 1970: How President Nixon spied on Earth Day

President Nixon spied on the very first Earth Day in 1970.?Despite Nixon's fears of an anti-war uprising, the FBI found that Earth Day was 'very benign.'

By Becky Oskin,?Our Amazing Planet / April 22, 2013

Amy Laura Hall hoola-hoops while holding her parasol during Durham's Earth Day Festival, in Durham Central Park, Durham N.C., April 21, 2013.

Bernard Thomas / The Herald-Sun / AP

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The launch of Earth Day in 1970 raised suspicions in Washington, D.C., according to former Representative Pete McCloskey, one of the organizers of the first Earth Day.

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The annual event was launched as a national teach-in on April 22, 1970, by former Senator Gaylord Nelson, McCloskey and others. Earth Day galvanized a political movement that led to some of the country's most significant environmental legislation, including the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act.

At a panel discussion on the Endangered Species Act and its future, held Jan. 31 at the Western Section of The Wildlife Society's annual meeting in Sacramento, Calif., McCloskey recalled the FBI's scrutiny of the event. According to McCloskey, President Richard Nixon ordered the FBI to observe college students across the country.

"I was friends with John Ehrlichman at that time, who was an environmental lawyer, incidentally, before he went to jail for Watergate," McCloskey said, referring to Nixon's domestic policy chief, who approved the Watergate break-in.

"And he called me after Earth Day ? he was laughing as hard as I'd ever heard, and he said, 'Pete, I've got this report from [FBI Director] J. Edgar Hoover to deliver to the president tomorrow,' because the president was so paranoid that Earth Day was going to be a bunch of anti-war kids gathered that he had put them under surveillance by the FBI," McCloskey said.

"He read me part of the report: ?There's a bunch of girls with flowers in their hair, and they're wearing only three garments, no bras,? " McCloskey said. ?And it was very benign. They were a little drunk, [there was] a little pot, maybe a little love out under in the bushes, but these girls sat in the grass patting their dogs, and it was a very benign affair."

"He was laughing about having to give this report to Nixon," he said.

Though the report was benign, its effects were not. On April 14, 1971, Nelson and former Senator Edmund Muskie, both Earth Day organizers, released copies of the FBI reports, revealing the surveillance. The reports were the latest in a series of stolen or released documents detailing FBI surveillance of U.S. citizens through a program called COINTELPRO. After the resulting Senate hearings, Hoover said he would severely curtail such FBI surveillance.

Email Becky Oskin?or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us?@OAPlanet, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.

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

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/zawwlKab3KY/Earth-Day-1970-How-President-Nixon-spied-on-Earth-Day

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Thailand bans film about Thai-Cambodian border row

BANGKOK (AP) ? Thailand's film censors have banned a documentary about the country's long-running border dispute with neighboring Cambodia as a threat to national security, the filmmaker said Wednesday.

"Boundary" tells the story of the Thai-Cambodian conflict through accounts of an ex-soldier who lives near the border, as well as villagers from the two countries. It also touches on other conflicts in Thailand, including the 9-year-old insurgency in the south and the political divisiveness that led to a deadly military crackdown on protesters in 2010.

Director Nontawat Numbenchapol said the Culture Ministry's film screening office informed him that the movie's content "is a threat to national security and international relations." He said he will appeal the ban.

The border dispute has its roots in a 1962 International Court of Justice ruling that the 1,000-year-old Preah Vihear temple stands in Cambodia. Thailand's government argues that definitive boundaries have never been drawn in the area around the World Heritage-listed site.

The dispute has become a rallying point for many Thai nationalists, who don't recognize the court's ruling and say the area, including the temple, belongs to Thailand and they have pressured politicians to keep pressing the issue.

The Thai and Cambodian armies have repeatedly clashed in the disputed area in recent years, including in April 2011, when 17 soldiers and a civilian were killed and thousands near the temple were displaced.

In 2011, the court in The Hague created a demilitarized zone around the temple but troops were not withdrawn until a year later.

The court is currently hearing testimony from both sides after they asked it to clarify its original ruling.

According to Nontawat, the film and video screening sub-committee said some of the claims in the documentary, including accounts from the Cambodian side, were "groundless."

The censors also said some information presented in the film was still being deliberated by the court and had yet to be formally resolved.

"I made this movie to create the space for people living near the border to speak their mind," Nontawat said, adding that he was stunned by the decision. "Now I have to work harder not only to let people know about the border issue, but also about freedom of expression."

Thailand's censors target a wide range of political and social issues. They blur out cigarettes and alcohol on television and crack down on any perceived criticism of the monarchy.

Last year, the film board banned a Thai adaptation of Shakespeare's "Macbeth," saying it has content that causes divisiveness among the people. In 2011, the board also banned a movie, called "Insects in the Backyard," about a transgender father struggling to raise two children, citing scenes they deemed immoral and pornographic.

"In the U.S., a movie like 'Bowling for Columbine,' which boldly criticized the president, can still be shown. It sparked constructive arguments and made the country more developed," Nontawat said. "In Thailand, the more you censor things, the more you make the country more outdated."

"Boundary" premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival in February and received financial support from international movie funds.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thailand-bans-film-thai-cambodian-border-row-040350874.html

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Scientists cage dead zebras in Africa to understand the spread of anthrax

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Scavengers might not play as key a role in spreading anthrax through wildlife populations as previously assumed, according to findings from a small study conducted in Etosha National Park in northern Namibia.

Wildlife managers currently spend large amounts of money and time to control anthrax outbreaks by preventing scavengers from feeding on infected carcasses.

The effort might be ill spent, according to results published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology by an international consortium of researchers led by Steven Bellan, an ecologist at The University of Texas at Austin.

Carrion produced by anthrax deaths feeds many scavengers, including jackals, hyena, vultures, marabou storks and occasionally even lions. These scavengers have evolved to be able to digest infected carrion without contracting the infection. Herbivorous animals more vulnerable to anthrax include zebra, springboks, elephants and wildebeest.

It has been thought that scavengers change the environment in which the anthrax bacteria are living by opening herbivores' carcasses, enabling more production of spores ? the infectious life stage of the anthrax bacteria.

"The hypothesis is that when a carcass is intact, the anthrax bacteria are forced into a kind of death match with putrefying bacteria from the gastrointestinal tract," said Bellan, a postdoctoral researcher in the lab of biologist Lauren Ancel Meyers. "But when the body is opened to the air, either by a scavenger or the hemorrhaging from all bodily orifices that occurs at death, the anthrax bacteria can escape that competition and more successfully produce spores."

According to this hypothesis, the scavenging also allows the carcasses' bodily fluids to leak into the soil, leading to more spores contaminating the soil. Combined, this might increase the likelihood of spread to vulnerable herbivores as they move and eat among the grasses.

In order to test the hypothesis, the researchers found seven zebra and one wildebeest that had just died in the wild from anthrax infection. All of the carcasses were left where they fell, but four were protected from scavengers by electrified cage exclosures. The other four were left completely open to the elements.

"The goal was to allow the carcasses to exist in as natural a state as possible, while preventing scavenging," Bellan said.

Samples were then taken at regular intervals to see whether there was greater anthrax spore production in the scavenged carcasses and in the nearby soil.

The researchers found that anthrax sporulation and contamination happened to a similar degree at both the scavenged and unscavenged carcasses.

"It appears that the anthrax bacteria can survive for some time in the carcass even though it may be competing with other bacteria," said Bellan. "It also appears that fluids can escape from the carcass into the soil via mechanisms other than scavenging or through hemorrhages occurring at the time of death. It looks like bloating caused by gases produced during putrefaction and maggot feeding activity are capable of independently rupturing carcass skin."

Bellan cautions that the experiment was a limited one, conducted on a small number of samples. But he said it does suggest a need for some re-evaluation of practices aimed at keeping scavengers away from anthrax carcasses.

###

University of Texas at Austin: http://www.utexas.edu

Thanks to University of Texas at Austin for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127862/Scientists_cage_dead_zebras_in_Africa_to_understand_the_spread_of_anthrax

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Monday in politics: Senate hearing on immigration, and more

By Gregory Blachier MONTE CARLO, April 21 (Reuters) - Rafael Nadal admitted he is still trying to recapture his best form but remained optimistic for the French Open after losing his Monte Carlo crown to Novak Djokovic on Sunday. Nadal, who returned to action in March after seven months out with injury, went down 6-2 7-6 to the Serbian world number one, ending his eight-year reign on the principality's clay. "I need to put in a little bit more physical performance," the Spaniard told a news conference. "That's the real thing - to play all the points with the same intensity. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/monday-politics-senate-hearing-immigration-more-100343868--election.html

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Barry Takes Full-Length Webpage Screenshots on iOS

iOS: Sometimes you want to take a screenshot of a webpage on your iPhone or iPad's browser, but the content doesn't quite fit. Barry solves this problem by generating a screenshot of the entire page.

All you have to do is open up a webpage in Barry's built-in browser and hit Capture. It'll save a full-length screenshot to an in-app camera roll where you can export it to your main camera roll, Dropbox, an email, a Tweet, or your clipboard. The developers also included a useful Safari bookmarklet that sends your current page straight to the app so you won't have to copy the URL and dig around your home screen to find it.

Barry is a simple app that solves a relatively niche problem. Still, it's one of those utility apps that's worth having on your device for the unexpected moment that you might need it. If you're looking to do something similar on your desktop, be sure to check out previously-mentioned Awesome Screenshot for Chrome.

Barry ($.99) | App Store via MacStories

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/XS9kq1Y_zUs/barry-takes-full-length-webpage-screenshots-on-your-ios-476384994

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Samsung Galaxy S4 kernel source released

Galaxy S4

Kernel source code is now available for the GT-I9500, GT-I9505, and SGH-I337M

GPL compliance is a wonderful thing -- Samsung has just posted the kernel source code for three Galaxy S4 models: GT-I9500, GT-I9505, and SGH-I337M. All three sources are currently available for download through the Samsung open source repository. While this doesn't help the average user (plus nobody actually has the phone yet), it will allow kernel developers to begin tweaking Samsung's kernel in order to get flashable zips ready for root users once the phone launches.

The Galaxy S family has been huge with the aftermarket developer community in the past, and despite some initial bad news, there is no reason that the Galaxy S4 can't reach the same level of support and popularity among ROM and kernel devs. It will be interesting to see how far this powerhouse of a phone will be pushed. The links to the source code can be found below.

Source: Samsung; via Android Police

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/8hu2PWET1R4/story01.htm

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Paul Schrader, Writer of Taxi Driver, is Coming to The Royal ...

The king is dead, long live the king. Though this readily adaptable idiom is often used to illustrate the absurdity of a situation, it stems from the purely practical. Once a monarch passes away, immediately there is another who takes his or her place. It?s not meant to highlight a contradiction then, but rather a natural progression, a continuation, even a means of survival. Thus: The cinema is dead, long live the cinema. With laments over the end of 35mm film, the struggles of repertory cinemas, and complaints over a culture of remakes, it?s easy to buy into the belief that there?s nothing new left to be done. There are some, however, who are actively working to ensure that the reign of cinema continues.

Video magazine The Seventh Art was founded about a year ago, and has been curating video essays and doing long-form interviews with directors ever since. A three-person show run by Chris Heron, Pavan Moondi, and Brian Robertson, the digital publication is a labour of love, but one that benefits the whole city?or at least its cinephiles. Last December, the trio brought Whit Stillman to The Royal as part of their Live Directors Series of screenings and Q&A sessions. This time around, screenwriter and director Paul Schrader will be in attendance, screening his seminal film, Taxi Driver (1976). Directed by Martin Scorsese and written by Schrader (who was only 26 at the time), it?s the story of Travis Bickle (Robert De Niro), a damaged Vietnam vet who works as a taxi driver in New York. The film won the Palme d?Or at Cannes and went on to become a cornerstone of American cinema.

Schrader?s directorial efforts have never been as successful as his scripts, though some of the films he?s helmed have become cult favourites?particularly American Gigolo (1980), Cat People (1982), and Adam Resurrected (2011). Heron, who will moderate the Q&A, said of the programming choice: ?We wanted to be able to draw attention to his films by screening a well-loved film as an entry-point into a conversation about his entire career.? Following Taxi Driver, Schrader will introduce a new clip from his forthcoming feature, The Canyons. Written by Bret Easton Ellis and starring Lindsay Lohan and porn star James Deen, it?s a film whose lore was established before it even wrapped: there were firings, fights, and creative differences, among other things. Rejected by Sundance, it was picked up by IFC and should be released?fingers crossed?later this year.

Schrader, from his home in New York, talked to us during a phone interview about the future of film culture, why ?event cinema??like this upcoming screening?matters, and how The Canyons could be the next American Gigolo. Long live cinema.

Do you consider yourself a cinephile?

I began as a film critic, have written a book on film aesthetics. As we speak I?m writing an article for Film Comment. So I guess, if it walks like a duck, talks like a duck, maybe it is.

Glad you brought up your time as a critic. You were mentored by Pauline Kael, and you wrote during the ?golden age? of film criticism. With the recent passing of Roger Ebert this question has really come to bear: Where do you think film criticism stands?

That?s the entr?e into a much bigger subject. The entire mechanism of film history and [film]making is a 20th-century phenomenon and we are reinventing it now. If you are in the process of reinventing movies I don?t know how you could not reinvent the question of film criticism at the same time.

By reinvention do you mean the move to digital?

I think movies as we know them are a 20th-century concept. The idea of a two-hour film in a dark room in front of an audience projected on a wall?that?s really old hat. That?s going away. What?s taking its place, we?re not sure. And I don?t know when we?ll ever be sure. We may be entering a world of constant audio-visual entertainment, where from one year to another it keeps redefining itself. This idea of a stasis period for 60 years where movies were relatively unchanged, that?s over.

How do you see contemporary film culture, then?

Films don?t have the importance they had when I was younger. They don?t have the importance in society. They don?t have the importance to young people. My kids and my students, they don?t love movies the way I did. Movies don?t mean that much. I don?t know if that?s better or worse. We live in a different perceptual world because of our media, which rewires our brains. I don?t have a lot of nostalgia. I love the old movies, but the idea of keeping that world alive? No, I think that world is over.

The fact that The Seventh Art would bring you in for a screening suggests that screenings are now events.

Oh, and that is simply great. And that is part of the future. What?s really dying is the concept of the multiplex. There?s no reason for them to exist. There?s a reason for event cinema, and personal appearances are part of event cinema?like a film club, or IMAX. But even in this screening I had an argument with the people setting it up because they wanted to show it on 35mm. I said: ?Why are you bothering with a 35mm print? Who cares anymore?? [Laughs] I?ve seen a number of my 35 prints and they don?t look so good anymore. They?re all beat up. The video ones look much better.

This raises the issue of preservation, which is a hot topic in film circles now.

The problem with preservation is that 35 is still the best means of preservation, but not many films are being made on 35 anymore. Now there?s a huge amount of material being put out that we don?t know how to preserve. Every day as much material gets put on YouTube as had existed in the history of television. All of that is in digital form and all of it unpredictable as to whether is can be saved in the future. And a lot of is of huge historical importance.

Taxi Driver is nearly forty years old. You?ve seen it introduced to different generations. Have you noticed a difference in how its been received?

You know, not really. I?m kind of surprised. It holds its own, it has become a piece of film history. It?s clearly a film that was made in the ?70s, but it has an immediacy. I can only attribute that to the fact that it was pretty close to the real deal. Which is that Scorsese, De Niro, and I all knew this kid [Travis Bickle]. We all knew who this kid was. And somehow we tapped into that, us three young men who happened to be at the right place at the right time. We caught something.

This is a hypothetical, but we?re in a climate of remakes these days, so: how would you feel if it was ever remade? Or do you feel that was already done with 1999?s Bringing Out the Dead?

Some people have tried and we?ve been able to block them. De Niro wanted to remake it at one point and Marty and I talked him out of that. I think it was a singular moment in film history, I think it would be crazy to do a sequel or remake it. Those remakes never work anyway. Taxi Driver is of a genre?the isolated loner?and there are a lot of films like that. But I see no reason to remake this one.

Your last film, Adam Resurrected, was financed in part by Germany and Israel. The Canyons was funded in part by Kickstarter?

Well that one was really paid for by Bret Easton Ellis, myself, the producers, and Lindsay Lohan.

Right. So are international co-productions and self-financing the way things are going when it comes to making movies in America?

It?s not only the way things are going, but it?s getting pretty close to being the present. The tradition dramas, those still get made, but not as much as they used to. Most of the movies that are made for theatres are made for non-English-speaking audiences anyway?they?re made for overseas. If you are making a serious drama, you are either looking at Lincoln, low-budget, or long-form television.

You?ll be showing new clips from The Canyons following the screening. Can you talk about the coastal contrast of these two films, especially given that Taxi Driver is the quintessential New York movie while The Canyons, is seems, is pure LA?

It?s much more like American Gigolo. But the difference [between New York and LA] is like the one between the sun and the shadow. The Canyons is this sunbathed movie, a lot takes places in the canyons in Malibu. As I was directing it I found myself slipping back into the American Gigolo groove?the tone, the camera style, the kind of music, the beat, the rhythm. It?s very laid back, a little hip, but always moving forward. It?s not too broody.

And you are working on an adaptation of The Devil?s Right Hand?

No, that was a bit of Berlin Film Festival misinformation. That was something I was interested in about a year ago and suddenly they announced it without telling me. [Laughs]

Are you working on anything currently?

I should be in front of the camera by the end of the year on a more conventional film. Although it will be a personal and serious film, it won?t be a DIY film.

What else is happening:

Today In Film at The Royal Cinema

Source: http://torontoist.com/events/event/paul-schrader-writer-of-taxi-driver-is-coming-to-the-royal/

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Celtics try to give Boston a lift against Knicks

Boston Celtics head coach Doc Rivers smiles during fourth-half NBA basketball game action against the Toronto Raptors in Toronto, Wednesday April 17, 2013. (AP photo/The Canadian Press, Frank Gunn)

Boston Celtics head coach Doc Rivers smiles during fourth-half NBA basketball game action against the Toronto Raptors in Toronto, Wednesday April 17, 2013. (AP photo/The Canadian Press, Frank Gunn)

Boston Celtics' Paul Pierce (34) drives around Orlando Magic's Maurice Harkless (21) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Saturday, April 13, 2013, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

Boston Celtics' Kevin Garnett (5) makes a move to get around Orlando Magic's Kyle O'Quinn, left, during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Saturday, April 13, 2013, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)

New York Knicks' Chris Copeland shoots Atlanta Hawks' Dahntay Jones (30), Johan Petro (10) and Mike Scott (32) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Wednesday, April 17, 2013, at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Knicks won 98-92. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

New York Knicks' Iman Shumpert (21) drives to the basket against Charlotte Bobcats' Bismack Biyombo (0) during the second half of an NBA basketball game in Charlotte, N.C., Monday, April 15, 2013. The Bobcats 106-95. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Doc Rivers' phone rang sometime around 6 a.m. Friday, a concerned Boston Celtics owner calling to check on his coach and team.

The Celtics were already safely in New York, but forgive Steve Pagliuca for forgetting. This is a sad, confusing and chaotic time in Boston, and nobody is thinking about basketball first.

But the Celtics have a game to play Saturday, the opener of their playoff series against the Knicks, and if they can provide a boost to their struggling city with some postseason success, that gives them even more motivation in their rare role as an underdog.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-19-BKN-Celtics-Knicks/id-b6d5daf0d1e14fe9b73cfaf4ecfab29c

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Friday, April 19, 2013

Hagel, Dempsey Detail US-Jordan Contingency Planning on Syria's Chemical Weapons

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey both warned Congress on Wednesday about the unintended consequences of a U.S. military intervention in Syria. Hagel also provided the first details of the Pentagon's efforts in assisting Jordan's military for the possibility of having to secure Syria's chemical weapons stockpile, including $70 million worth of training and equipment.

Appearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee both Hagel and Dempsey cautioned that a U.S. military intervention in Syria could have unintended consequences and should be reserved as a "last resort."

Two years of fighting to bring down the regime of Syrian President Basher al Assad have killed an estimated 70,000 Syrians and created a million refugees. Both Democratic and Republican senators on the committee have advocated the Obama administration consider some form of U.S. military assistance to assist the Syrian opposition in the form of a no-fly zone or the establishment of a humanitarian aid corridor.

"We have an obligation and responsibility to think through the consequences of direct U.S. military action in Syria," said Hagel. He added that "military intervention at this point could hinder humanitarian relief operations. It could embroil the United States in a significant, lengthy, and uncertain military commitment."

More importantly he warned that it could have "the unintended consequence of bringing the United States into a broader regional conflict or proxy war. " He stressed that "the best outcome for Syria - and the region - is a negotiated, political transition to a post-Assad Syria."

He later used blunter language in describing how all factors should be weighed in considering a U.S. military option in Syria. "You better be damn sure, as sure as you can be, before you get into something, because once you're into it, there isn't any backing out, whether it's a no-fly zone, safe zone, protect these - whatever it is. Once you're in, you can't unwind it. You can't just say, well, it's not going as well as I thought it would go, so we're going to get out.

Gen. Dempsey also told the committee that " before we take action, we have to be prepared for what comes next." He noted that the use of force in an area like Syria where the ethnic and religious divisions "dominate" is "unlikely to produce predictable outcomes." He explained that such a scenario "is not a reason to avoid intervention in conflict, rather, to emphasize that unintended consequences are the rule with military interventions of this sort."

In his opening remarks Hagel presented the most detailed outline yet of American efforts in helping Jordan prepare for the possibility of having to secure the Assad regime's large chemical weapons stockpile should the regime collapse. For much of the past year Pentagon officials have declined to provide details about such efforts, instead making vague references about contingency planning with regional partners for such a scenario.

Hagel told the committee that the Pentagon "has plans in place to respond to the full range of chemical weapons scenarios." He disclosed that the U.S. has provided $70 million in funding to Jordan "for training and equipment to detect and stop any chemical weapons transfers along its border with Syria, and developing Jordanian capacity to identify and secure chemical weapons assets."

However, when Sen. John McCain asked Gen. Dempsey if he was confident that American troops would be able to secure Syria's chemical weapons, Dempsey said, "Not as I sit here today, simply because they've been moving it and the number of sites is quite numerous."

According to Hagel, the U.S. military has also prepared for other contingencies such as " the potential spillover of violence across Syria's borders that could threaten Allies and partners." Furthermore, he said, the Pentagon had "been developing options and planning for a post-Assad Syria," though he said he was not able to provide details in public.

Hagel also announced that last week he ordered the deployment to Jordan of a headquarters element from the 1 st Armored Division based at Fort Bliss, Texas.

They will replace the several hundred American military members from various units who have been in Jordan since last summer working with the Jordanian military in contingency planning related to Syria's chemical weapons, humanitarian efforts and preventing a spillover of violence from Syria into Jordan.

A Defense official said the headquarters will provide "a cohesive command and control element with our Jordanian counterparts." The official also said that if needed its structure would enable it to "be capable of establishing a Joint Task Force headquarters that would provide command and control for Chemical Weapons response, humanitarian assistance efforts and stability operations."

Hagel also referred to the other forms of assistance the U.S. is providing to Syrian refugees and opposition groups. That includes $385 million in assistance to help ease the humanitarian and refugee crisis in Syria, as well as $117 million in non-lethal assistance to the Syrian opposition in the form of communications and medical equipment.

The Defense secretary told the committee that he would be visiting Jordan next week as part of a Middle East tour that will see him making stops in Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hagel-dempsey-detail-us-jordan-contingency-planning-syrias-001434491--abc-news-politics.html

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Thursday, April 18, 2013

Moga Pro controller review - a must-have for gamers

Moga Pro controller.

Ever wanted to use an Xbox controller for your Android games?

The Moga Pro hits stores today for $49.99, and in addition to playing around a bit with it at PAX East, we got some time to try out with the Bluetooth controller before it arrived at retail. There are a few things you get in the box besides the controller itself: a tiny instruction manual, a micro USB cable, and a foldable tablet stand. I'm a huge fan of this stand since it's highly portable and can support fairly large tablets at a reasonable viewing angle. 

 

Those who are familiar with the Moga Pocket controller will already know that these guys make controller accessories for mobile games, and offer developers hooks so they can optimize for the hardware. Like the first model, the Pro also includes the retractable brace to hold your Android device in landscape while you play. The Moga Pro expands on the original by more than just adding two shoulder buttons, clickable joysticks, a backlight toggle, and filling out to be more comfortable in the hand. Arguably the biggest new feature in the Moga Pro is the ability to support HID Bluetooth profiles thanks to a little switch in the middle of the controller.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ptlTlsW57u0/story01.htm

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Rockies-Mets game delayed due to snow on field

DENVER (AP) ? Dick Monfort was quite formidable on the mound ? of snow, that is.

Shovel in hand, the Colorado Rockies owner joined a crew of team employees helping to dig out snow-covered Coors Field, clearing the way for the Rockies and New York Mets to finally play ball.

This is one assignment that didn't give him cold feet, just a sore back.

Well worth it, though, to try and squeeze in a doubleheader against the New York Mets on Tuesday. Although the game was scheduled to start at 5:10 p.m. EDT, first pitch had been pushed back two hours to finish clearing the field. At the scheduled game time, there were still piles of snow in front of the Rockies dugout and along the right-field line.

Now, there's hardly a trace of snow around.

Monfort had plenty of company removing the snow, as vice president Bill Geivett ? wearing a heavy Montreal Expos jacket ? and chief baseball officer Dan O'Dowd also scooped snow off the turf as well.

Even Sandy Alderson, the GM for the Mets, pitched in on a bank of snow near the team's dugout.

"It looks like they want to see a game today," Monfort said.

Especially the Mets, who haven't played since Saturday after having two straight games wiped out by weather. Wintry conditions in Minneapolis on Sunday forced the game against the Twins to be called off. The game Monday also was postponed due to a heavy spring snow storm passing through the area.

"We're pretty tired of sitting at the hotel," Mets manager Terry Collins said. "Everybody wants to get going. This is what they're here for ? to go out and play. To have two days in a row off is unheard of."

Not that the players are overly thrilled about playing in chilly conditions.

And it definitely will be frigid.

The temperature for the afternoon game will be around 44 degrees. The second game of the doubleheader ? still tentatively scheduled to start at 8:40 p.m. ? will see the temperature dip into the 30s. The record game-time temp at Coors Field is 28 degrees on April 12, 1997, against Montreal.

"In general terms, the game wasn't made to be played in conditions like this," Rockies manager Walt Weiss said. "It's such a game of feel. It's tough to execute certain aspects of the game in cold weather. That will be a challenge."

Justin Turner has a plan to stay warm ? keep near the heaters in the dugout. Being from Long Beach, Calif., he's not used to this weather.

Although, he has the shaggy beard for it.

"I intentionally didn't shave all spring training because I knew this first road trip was going to be pretty cold," Turner said, laughing. "I don't mind the cold. I just don't like playing baseball in it."

He still painfully remembers playing in the snow during a Single-A game in 2007.

"I got hit in the elbow and felt like it was shattered into a million pieces," Turner said. "You just layer up and use hot packs, put them in your back pocket. The worst part is coming in and sitting in the dugout where the heaters are and then having to go back out where it's freezing. You've just got to keep moving."

The weather on Wednesday could be worse, with more snow expected.

Not that the starter that day, Jon Garland, minds too much.

"I'll pitch anywhere if I'm getting outs," said Garland, who's finding his form after missing all of last year following shoulder surgery. "This weather is not comfortable by any means. For the most part, you're out there miserable. It's not fun at all."

Simply wear more clothing?

"You don't want to go out of the norm to where it's comfortable for you to get that range of motion, get that fluid pitching," Garland said. "But yeah, you try to layer up as much as you can."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rockies-mets-game-delayed-due-snow-field-185554560--mlb.html

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Valet, Finder Codes, Ninja Jamms, and More

This week's collection of apps went all over the place in terms of content. If you're someone prone to bouts of amnesia during daily activities, there's plenty to cure what ails you down below. Aspiring musicians and video chat-junkies won't be disappointed either. Everyone else: maybe next week. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/p0KR7SUt6XE/valet-finder-codes-ninja-jamms-and-more

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Friday, April 12, 2013

South Korea, U.S. remain on missile watch as North lauds Kims

By Christine Kim and Narae Kim

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea and the United States remained on high alert for any North Korean missile launch on Thursday as the hermit kingdom turned its attention to celebrating its ruling Kim dynasty and appeared to dial down rhetoric of impending war.

Despite North Korea's threats it will attack U.S. bases and the South in response to any hostile acts against it, Pyongyang started to welcome a stream of visitors for Monday's birthday celebrations of its founding father Kim Il-sung.

North Korea has stationed as many as five medium-range missiles on its east coast, according to defense assessments made by Washington and Seoul, possibly in readiness for a test launch that would demonstrate its ability to hit U.S. bases on Guam.

Officials in Seoul said there were no signs that additional steps had been taken on Thursday that would indicate the North had moved closer to a launch.

Pyongyang issued a statement that appeared to be tinged with regret over the closure of the joint Kaesong industrial zone that was shuttered when it ordered its workers out this week, terming the North-South Korean venture "the pinnacle of General Kim Jong-il's limitless love for his people and brothers".

The statement on the country's KCNA news agency blamed South Korean President Park Geun-hye for bringing the money-spinning venture to "the brink of shutting down".

Kim Jong-il, Kim Il-sung's son, ruled North Korea until his death in December 2011. He was succeeded by Kim Jong-un, the third of his line to preside over one of the world's poorest and most heavily militarized countries.

Since taking office, the 30-year old has staged two long- range rocket launches and a nuclear weapons test. The nuclear test in February triggered United Nations sanctions that Pyongyang has termed a hostile act and a precursor to invasion.

For over a month, Pyongyang has issued an almost daily series of threats to the United States and South Korea, most recently warning foreigners to leave the South due to an impending "thermonuclear" war.

Apart from the swipe at South Korea's new president, verbal threats appeared to fall off as KCNA listed arrivals for the upcoming birthday celebrations, naming an eclectic mix ranging from Chinese businessmen to Cold War-era enthusiasts of its socialist monarchy and official ideology of "Juche", or self-reliance.

Ramon Jimenez Lopez, listed as the chairman of the Latin American Institute of the Juche Idea, and Jie Wenjiang, who it said was in charge of Hantong International freight company in Dandong, China, were among the arrivals, KCNA said.

KEY TENET

Reinforcing the rule of the Kim dynasty and the legitimacy of the latest Kim to hold power in Pyongyang is a key tenet of North Korea's ideology.

Party newspaper Rodong Sinmun said Kim Jong-un had "lifted the North Korean people out of the sea of bloody tears that has been their world in the past year" after the death of his father.

It was the first anniversary on Thursday of Kim's official ascent to power, although he became de-facto leader immediately after his father's death.

Despite the heady rhetoric from North Korea and its closure of the Kaesong economic zone that generated $2 billion a year in trade, Pyongyang does not appear to have placed its 1.2 million strong armed forces on high alert.

Most observers say Pyongyang has no intention of igniting a conflict that could bring its own destruction but warn of the risks of miscalculation on the highly-militarized Korean peninsula.

The North's rhetoric has pushed the United States, the guarantor of South Korea's security, to move more military assets into the region in response to the rising threat levels.

In Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned on Wednesday that the North was "skating very close to a dangerous line" with its threats and provocations, and warned the United States was prepared to respond to any moves by Pyongyang.

"We have every capacity to deal with any action that North Korea would take, to protect this country and the interests of this country and our allies," Hagel told reporters at the Pentagon.

China, the North's only major diplomatic ally, has watched the situation evolving on its doorstep with concern.

"China respects North Korea, but it also holds the responsibility of preserving peace in Northeast Asia," the Global Times, a tabloid published by the ruling Communist Party's People's Daily, said in an editorial.

"Pyongyang should drop its illusions that it can make the world stay silent over its desire for nuclear arms through its hard-line stance and deceptions. We believe the North still has a chance and we regret that it has become mired in this crisis. We hope the crisis is only temporary."

Financial markets which have fluctuated with the rise in tensions appeared to have stabilized and the head of South Korea's central bank on Thursday announced that there was no imminent threat to Asia's fourth-largest economy.

"We will take appropriate action if the economy is affected by North Korea risks," Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong-soo said after it left interest rates unchanged on Thursday.

(Additional reporting by Jack Kim and Daum Kim in SEOUL; and John Ruwitch in SHANGHAI; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-korea-u-remain-missile-watch-north-lauds-033019709.html

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NKorea fury at joint war games goes back decades

OSAN AIR BASE, South Korea (AP) ? The names of U.S.-South Korean war games staged over the years don't sound all that threatening: Team Spirit, Ulchi Focus Lens, Key Resolve ... Foal Eagle. But whatever they're called, the annual show of force is guaranteed to get a rise out of North Korea.

Two decades ago, Kim Il Sung, the late founder of the still-ruling Kim dynasty, reportedly shook with rage while talking about the drills with a visiting U.S. congressman. This year's drills, however, are unusual in the level of fury they've inspired from the North ? Pyongyang has threatened nuclear war ? and in the tougher-than-usual U.S. response that some call a case of Washington overplaying its hand.

In late March, two nuclear-capable B-2 stealth bombers ? among the war-fighting wonders of the world ? took off from their Missouri base and flew more than 6,500 miles (10,400 kilometers) to drop dummy munitions on an uninhabited South Korean island before returning home.

"Heinous nuclear war rehearsal," the North's propaganda screamed.

If that reaction sounds over the top, consider the view from Pyongyang.

The Korean War ended in 1953 in a tenuous cease-fire, leaving the peninsula technically in a state of war that continues today. For a poor, inward-looking, fiercely proud, authoritarian nation that has long been spooked by its bloody history with the world's premier nuclear superpower, these weekslong springtime assemblies of thousands of allied troops and their gleaming jets, ships and submarines are clear proof that Washington and Seoul have Pyongyang in its crosshairs.

At Osan Air Base, south of Seoul, evidence of America's firepower was on display this week as a procession of its finest military machines barreled down a long runway separated from a sun-sparkling stream by a razor wire-topped fence. F-16 and A-10 jets, helicopters, a C-130 cargo plane powered up into the sky, banking over brown dirt fields, one-story Korean-style houses, dingy squat apartment buildings and long rows of crops covered with plastic to protect from a strong, cold early-spring wind.

Year after year, the allies call the exercises defensive and routine. And year after year, Pyongyang predicts they're preparations for an invasion aimed at overthrowing its leadership. This year's current Foal Eagle exercises, however, have seen the animosity spike.

The United States in March made a calculated decision to show North Korea that a wave of threatening rhetoric ? feverish even by Pyongyang's standards, and linked to the drills and to U.N. sanctions in early March aimed at punishing North Korea for its latest nuclear test ? would be met with strength.

Washington made the unusual announcement that the drills would include appearances by both the B-2s and B-52s, the nuclear-capable bombers that have a long and ? from the North Korean perspective ? menacing history on the Korean Peninsula.

"Clearly, it was intended to send a message," Gen. Herbert "Hawk" Carlisle, the top U.S. Air Force commander in the Pacific, said in an interview, referring to the B-2s.

North Korea has since issued a string of threats notable for both their violence and specificity, including intensified warnings of missile attacks on U.S. targets in the Pacific, the U.S. mainland and South Korea.

And while North Korea's nuclear and missile capabilities are still thought to be inadequate to back up its threats to nuke the United States or even to send missiles to the U.S. mainland, there is growing worry that a localized skirmish of the kind that happens with some frequency between the Koreas could escalate into something worse. There's also suspicion among officials in Seoul that North Korea is gearing up for a missile test.

A quieter U.S. approach to the joint military drills would have sent the deterrence message Washington wanted "to warn the North Koreans to not walk too close to the edge of chaos. Instead, in the desire to impress the ally (South Korea) that we had their back covered, we decided to escalate the threat symbolism" with the B-2 and B-52 bomber flights, said Peter Hayes, who heads the Nautilus Institute, an Asia-focused think tank.

This escalation has set back by many years previous "hard work to devalue nuclear weapons and to get rid of nuclear fantasies as a solution to insecurity on the part of either Korea," Hayes said in an email.

The United States is now back-peddling ? although the drills will continue until the end of the month. Reporters have been kept from exercises, and Washington delayed an intercontinental ballistic missile test amid the growing tensions.

Both sides conduct military drills because they're the best way to prepare for war, short of actual fighting. The U.S.-South Korean drills are meant to deter North Korea from an attack like the one that started the Korean War in 1950.

But there's also a strong political element.

Skillfully done drills "can serve as a show of force to extract concessions from adversaries without having to resort to direct military intervention," former U.S. Air Force officer John Farrell wrote in a 2009 case study of the exercises.

The biggest of the drills, Team Spirit, ran from 1976 to 1993, reaching a peak in the late '80s, with more than 200,000 people participating, according to Farrell. North Korea hated the drills, and they may have stoked tensions before an encounter in 1976 between Americans and North Koreans that still resonates today.

That August, North Koreans used axes to beat to death two Americans pruning a poplar tree in the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea. A furious United States responded with a massive show of force, sending B-52 bombers barreling up the southern half of the peninsula toward the DMZ, only to veer off at the last moment, according to Hayes.

North Korean officials in the 1980s began ordering their soldiers and citizens to assume a "war footing" when Team Spirit took place, Farrell writes. This proved expensive as the impoverished North spent precious resources to move equipment and troops to respond to the drills.

Reading North Korean intentions has proven more difficult than usual under Kim Jong Un, a young leader who has only been on the job since his father, Kim Jong Il, died in late 2011. The current rhetoric, however, does seem to fit a cyclical pattern in which North Korea raises fears among its adversaries before turning to diplomacy meant to win aid.

North Korea knows that its threats won't make the allies end their drills, said Andrei Lankov, a professor at Kookmin University in Seoul. Instead, it's largely an excuse to build tensions, mostly for "an aid-maximizing strategy" aimed at scaring donors into providing food and money.

Still, the combination of massive, stirred-up North Korean military and artillery forces poised along the border, only an hour's drive from Seoul, and thousands of U.S. and South Korean troops conducting nearby drills has raised worries that a miscalculation could escalate into a broader conflict.

"The desire to show strength, the fear of looking weak and the presence of tons of hardware provides more than enough tinder that a spark could start a peninsula-wide conflagration," Patrick Cronin, a former official in the George W. Bush administration now with the Center for a New American Security think tank, wrote on Foreign Policy's website. A stray missile or a shooting in disputed waters "could trigger an action-reaction cycle that could spiral out of control if Pyongyang, running out of threats or low-level provocations, were to gamble on a more daring move."

___

Associated Press writer Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu, Hawaii, contributed to this report.

___

Follow Foster Klug on Twitter at twitter.com/APKlug

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nkorea-fury-joint-war-games-goes-back-decades-072828714.html

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

OnePageCRM Raises $749K For Its ?Zero Admin? CRM For SMEs

Screen Shot 2013-04-08 at 13.22.02OnePageCRM, the cloud-based CRM targeting small businesses or SMEs, has raised ?575,000 (~$749k) from unnamed private investors and supported by Enterprise Ireland. The Irish Galway-based startup says it will use the new funds to staff up in engineering, specifically web and mobile developers, along with marketing and customer support -- creating a total of 12 new jobs.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/5vRFATIg_HQ/

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Monday, April 8, 2013

These crazy, gorgeous seats are an 'allegorical interpretation' of the BMWi line

These crazy, gorgeous seats are an 'allegorical interpretation' of the BMWi line

You may not look at the trio of concentric seats above and think "expensive electronic car," but French designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec are nonetheless calling their "Quiet Motion" exhibit at this year's Solone del Mobile an "allegorical interpretation" of just that. Beyond simply looking pretty, the exhibit is intended to represent BMW's history of working with "designers spanning a wide range of industries" -- BMW's long-running Art Car project, for instance -- as well as employ the sustainable materials used in the BMWi line. They're calling the slowly rotating platforms a version of a carousel, and you'll be able to get your gluteus maximus on the installation starting tomorrow through April 14th. Whether it inspires you to buy a BMWi vehicle ... well, that's another question; at very least, it's a rather unique photo opp (if you're in Milan, that is).

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/08/bmwi-quiet-motion/

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'AGT' judge Stern taking Klum 'under my wing'

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

"America's Got Talent" may not be back on the NBC airwaves until this summer, but the roundup of talent has already begun -- and judges Howard Stern, Heidi Klum, Mel B and Howie Mandel (along with host Nick Cannon) are already hard at work. They took a break from sifting through the talent on Monday morning to join TODAY's Matt Lauer on the plaza to talk about the newly-configured judging panel, whether last year's winners were the right ones, and what kind of bikini top to wear during a water rescue.

Fortunately, the group seems to be getting along famously. "The female energy is there!" crowed Mel B.

"Literally from this television show I'm getting 10 new wrinkles," said Klum, who also sits in judgement on Lifetime's "Project Runway," because I'm laughing all day, because they're all so funny."

"I've taken Heidi under my wing, Matt, and I'm teaching her about judging -- that's why she'll be excellent," declared Stern.?

There is tension, admitted Mandel, but it's a "respectful tension. I don't agree a lot with some of the other judges." He also doesn't always agree with America, saying that last season's winners (the Olate Dogs) were not the best act. "I would have picked another act to win," he said. "But America chose them. ... America is buying the tickets."

As for that water rescue -- ?Klum raced into the ocean while vacationing in Hawaii when her son and one of his nannies were caught in a riptide at the end of March, and she talked about it during the visit. "It just shows you in your life you never know what's going to happen," she said. "In one second, everything and then all of a sudden the next second your son is smooshed by a wave in the ocean." But her kids have been swimming since they were 2 years old, she added, so her son was able to help save himself.

Stern, naturally, learned a different lesson than to teach your children how to swim. "And your top fell off," he noted. "In a rescue, make sure to wear a tight top."

"America's Got Talent" returns this summer on NBC.

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Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2013/04/08/17653449-howard-stern-taking-fellow-americas-got-talent-judge-heidi-klum-under-my-wing?lite

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WrestleMania 29 results

All WWE programming, talent names, images, likenesses, slogans, wrestling moves, trademarks, logos and copyrights are the exclusive property of WWE, Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are the property of their respective owners. ? 2013 WWE, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This website is based in the United States. By submitting personal information to this website you consent to your information being maintained in the U.S., subject to applicable U.S. laws. U.S. law may be different than the law of your home country. WrestleMania XXIX (NY/NJ) logo TM & ? 2013 WWE. All Rights Reserved. The Empire State Building design is a registered trademark and used with permission by ESBC.

Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/wrestlemania/29/wrestlemania-29-results

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Obama proposes $100M for brain mapping project

President Barack Obama speaks about the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative, Tuesday, April 2, 2013, in the East Room at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama speaks about the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative, Tuesday, April 2, 2013, in the East Room at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama listens as National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Francis S. Collins speaks about the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative, Tuesday, April 2, 2013, in the East Room at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama leaves the stage in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, April 2, 2013, after he spoke about the BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

President Barack Obama announces the BRIAN, Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies proposal, Tuesday, April 2, 2013, East Room of the White House in Washington. The president is asking Congress to spend $100 million next year to start a new project to map the human brain in hopes of eventually finding cures for diseases like Alzheimer's. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama on Tuesday proposed an effort to map the brain's activity in unprecedented detail, as a step toward finding better ways to treat such conditions as Alzheimer's, autism, stroke and traumatic brain injuries.

He asked Congress to spend $100 million next year to start a project that will explore details of the brain, which contains 100 billion cells and trillions of connections.

That's a relatively small investment for the federal government ? less than a fifth of what NASA spends every year just to study the sun ? but it's too early to determine how Congress will react.

Obama said the so-called BRAIN Initiative could create jobs, and told scientists gathered in the White House's East Room that the research has the potential to improve the lives of billions of people worldwide.

"As humans we can identify galaxies light-years away," Obama said. "We can study particles smaller than an atom, but we still haven't unlocked the mystery of the three pounds of matter that sits between our ears."

Scientists unconnected to the project praised the idea.

BRAIN stands for Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies. The idea, which Obama first proposed in his State of the Union address, would require the development of new technology that can record the electrical activity of individual cells and complex neural circuits in the brain "at the speed of thought," the White House said.

Obama wants the initial $100 million investment to support research at the National Institutes of Health, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the National Science Foundation. He also wants private companies, universities and philanthropists to partner with the federal agencies in support of the research. And he wants a study of the ethical, legal and societal implications of the research.

The goals of the work are unclear at this point. A working group at NIH, co-chaired by Cornelia "Cori" Bargmann of The Rockefeller University and William Newsome of Stanford University, would work on defining the goals and develop a multi-year plan to achieve them that included cost estimates.

The $100 million request is "a pretty good start for getting this project off the ground," Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health told reporters in a conference call. While the ultimate goal applies to the human brain, some work will be done in simpler systems of the brains of animals like worms, flies and mice, he said.

Collins said new understandings about how the brain works may also provide leads for developing better computers.

Brain scientists unconnected with the project were enthusiastic.

"This is spectacular," said David Fitzpatrick, scientific director and CEO of the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience in Jupiter, Fla., which focuses on studying neural circuits and structures.

While current brain-scanning technologies can reveal the average activity of large populations of brain cells, the new project is aimed at tracking activity down to the individual cell and the tiny details of cell connections, he said. It's "an entirely different scale," he said, and one that can pay off someday in treatments for a long list of neurological and psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia, Parkinson's, depression, epilepsy and autism.

"Ultimately, you can't fix it if you don't know how it works," he said. "We need this fundamental understanding of neuronal circuits, their structure, their function and their development in order to make progress on these disorders."

"This investment in fundamental brain science is going to pay off immensely in the future," Fitzpatrick said.

Richard Frackowiak, a co-director of Europe's Human Brain Project, which is funded by the European Commission, said he was delighted by the announcement.

"From our point of view as scientists we can only applaud and say we will collaborate as much as possible," he said. "The opportunities for a massive worldwide collaborative effort to solve the problem of neurodegeneration and psychiatric disease will ... really become absolutely feasible," he said. "We need that."

___

Ritter reported from New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-04-02-Obama-Human%20Brain/id-3860d8bc458141b8b94545337485107c

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Obama: Budget not 'ideal' but has 'tough reforms'

President Barack Obama speaks at the Denver Police Academy in Denver, Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Ratcheting up pressure for Congress to limit access to guns, Obama said that steps taken recently by Colorado to tighten its gun laws show "there doesn't have to be a conflict" between keeping citizens safe and protecting Second Amendment rights to gun ownership. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

President Barack Obama speaks at the Denver Police Academy in Denver, Wednesday, April 3, 2013. Ratcheting up pressure for Congress to limit access to guns, Obama said that steps taken recently by Colorado to tighten its gun laws show "there doesn't have to be a conflict" between keeping citizens safe and protecting Second Amendment rights to gun ownership. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

FILE - In this March 6, 2011 file photo, Denis McDonough speaks in Sterling, Va. President Barack Obama?s budget proposal will include an additional $2.5 billion to attack a growing backlog of veterans disability claims, a problem officials said is likely to worsen in coming months. White House chief of staff Denis McDonough told reporters Friday that more money for the VA in tight budgetary times reflects Obama's commitment to veterans. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 20, 2013 file photo, Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius speaks in Philadelphia. President Barack Obama?s budget next week will steer clear of major cuts to Medicaid, including tens of billions the administration proposed only last year. The White House is holding harmless the federal-state health care program for low-income people while wooing financially skittish states to expand Medicaid coverage to millions now uninsured. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama says his soon-to-be released budget, already criticized by friends and foes, is not his "ideal plan" but offers "tough reforms" for benefit programs and scuttles some tax breaks for the wealthy.

That's a mix, he contends, that will provide long-term deficit reduction without harming the economy.

In his first comments about the 2014 spending blueprint he's set to release Wednesday, Obama said he intends to reduce deficits and provide new money for public works projects, early education and job training.

"We don't have to choose between these goals ? we can do both," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, broadcast Saturday.

Obama's plan for the budget year that begins Oct. 1 calls for slower growth in government benefits programs for the poor, veterans and the elderly, as well as higher taxes, primarily from the wealthy.

Some details, made public Friday, drew a fierce response from liberals, labor unions and advocates for older Americans. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, was not impressed, either.

"It's a compromise I'm willing to accept in order to move beyond a cycle of short-term, crisis-driven decision-making, and focus on growing our economy and our middle class for the long run," Obama said.

Obama proposes spending cuts and revenue increases that would result in $1.8 trillion in deficit reductions over 10 years, replacing $1.2 trillion in automatic spending cuts that are otherwise poised to take effect over the next 10 years.

Counting reductions and higher taxes that Congress and Obama have approved since 2011, the 2014 budget would contribute $4.3 trillion to total deficit reduction by 2023.

The main deficit reduction elements of the plan incorporate an offer Obama made to Boehner in December when both sought to avoid automatic, across-the-board spending cuts and broad tax increases

Obama's plan includes $580 billion in new taxes that Republicans oppose. There's also a new inflation formula, rejected by many liberals, that would reduce the annual cost of living adjustments for a range of government programs, including Social Security and benefits for veterans.

In his address, Obama said he would achieve deficit reduction by making "tough reforms" to Medicare and enacting "common-sense tax reform that includes closing wasteful tax loopholes for the wealthy and well-connected."

Obama made no mention of the effect his budget would have on Social Security and other social safety net programs. That idea drew a hostile reaction from some of his most ardent political backers.

An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted late last year found that 49 percent of those asked were opposed to changing the way Social Security benefits are calculated to produce smaller annual increases and reduce the federal budget deficit.

The poll found 30 percent supported the idea and 15 percent were neutral. Of those opposed to a recalculation, 32 percent said they "strongly opposed" the change, compared with just 11 percent who strongly support it.

Obama rejected a House Republican plan that aims to balance the budget in 10 years with steep cuts in domestic spending.

His remarks reflected the White House's argument that Obama's blend of tax increases and spending cuts have widespread public support and will ultimately change the terms of the fiscal debate in Washington.

"My budget will reduce our deficits not with aimless, reckless spending cuts that hurt students and seniors and middle-class families, but through the balanced approach that the American people prefer, and the investments that a growing economy demands," he said.

Still, Obama has been unable to move House Republicans from their opposition to higher taxes, and his proposed reduction in the growth of benefits drew swift objections from allies.

"The president should drop these misguided cuts in benefits and focus instead on building support in Congress for investing in jobs," AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said in a statement Friday.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback delivered the Republican radio and Internet address, arguing that "the ideas on how to fix the federal government are now percolating in the states."

"You see, you don't change America by changing Washington ? you change America by changing the states," he said. "And that's exactly what Republican governors are doing across the country ? taking a different approach to grow their states' economies and fix their governments with ideas that work.

Brownback, a former House member and senator, called for a "taxing structure that encourages growth, an education system that produces measurable results, and a renewed focus on the incredible dignity of each and every person, no matter who they are."

___

AP Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta contributed to this report.

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Online:

http://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/weekly-address

http://www.youtube.com/gopweeklyaddress

___

Follow Jim Kuhnhenn on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jkuhnhenn

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-06-Obama/id-7aeebdd5053846708efce09e678659c9

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