Wednesday, April 10, 2013

"Iron Lady" Thatcher made Britain great again - Cameron

By Estelle Shirbon and Peter Griffiths

LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister David Cameron led tributes to Margaret Thatcher on Wednesday, remembering a divisive and combative leader who transformed the country and set a political course still followed today.

In a special session of parliament, Cameron said his fellow Conservative "defined and overcame the great challenges of her age" after a remarkable journey from the family grocer's shop to the highest office in the land.

But in death as in life, Britain's first female prime minister sharply divided opinion and was accused by opponents of destroying working class communities with "brutal contempt".

It was the first time parliament had been recalled from holiday for the death of a public figure since Queen Elizabeth's mother died in 2002, underlining the importance of a leader who won three elections and reshaped British politics.

"She drew the lines on a political map that we here are still navigating today," said Cameron, wearing a dark suit and tie. "She made the political weather, she made history and let this be her epitaph ... she made our country great again."

Thatcher, who died at 87 on Monday from a stroke, overturned post-war political consensus, winning battles over union reform, nuclear arms and state ownership of industries, Cameron added.

"She certainly did not shy from the fight and that led to arguments, to conflict, yes even to division," Cameron said. "But what is remarkable, looking back now, is how many of those arguments are no longer arguments at all."

In an emotional session scheduled to last for up to seven hours, members of parliament who are still fiercely divided over Thatcher debated her legacy and traded anecdotes and jokes.

Opposition Labour leader Ed Miliband said she was a "unique and towering figure". However, some in his party went on the attack, condemning her as a heartless free marketeer who unleashed an age of greed that undermined British society.

"Too many industries, too many working class communities in the north were laid waste in those years," said former minister Michael Meacher. "And many of those are still desolated today."

"She was someone who took the fight to her opponents, who deployed a scorched earth policy to destroy them, which polarised the country."

Another Labour lawmaker, David Winnick, said Thatcher's economic policies, such as privatisation, spending cuts and a move away from heavy industry, caused "immense pain and suffering to ordinary people".

The rows of empty benches on Labour's side of the Commons were testimony to antipathy to Thatcher.

A few hours into the debate, barely a dozen Labour members were taking part. Even the Conservative seats were only a little more than half full as it went on into the evening.

Tulips and lilies were placed at the foot of a Thatcher statue outside the parliamentary chamber she dominated for years and which was the scene of a devastating resignation speech by her deputy Geoffrey Howe that precipitated her downfall in 1990.

'TRUE BLUE'

Plans for next Wednesday's funeral have become a security headache.

Parties in several cities to celebrate her death ended in arrests and media reported police may pre-emptively arrest known trouble-makers before they travel to her funeral.

Codenamed "Operation True Blue", the ceremonial funeral with military honours will begin with a procession through London to a service at St Paul's Cathedral.

In a break with protocol, marking Thatcher's stature, the Queen and her husband Prince Philip will attend. The last time the monarch attended a prime minister's funeral was when Winston Churchill died in 1965.

Thatcher's son Mark said she would have been "enormously proud and grateful" that the monarch was going to her funeral.

"My mother would be greatly honoured as well as humbled by her presence," he said. "By any measure, my mother was blessed with a long life and a very full one."

Many opposed to Thatcher's free-market ideology say she was too divisive a figure to be sent off in a style usually reserved for royals like Princess Diana or the Queen Mother.

"Let's privatise her funeral. Put it out to competitive tender and accept the cheapest bid. It's what she'd have wanted," said filmmaker Ken Loach, whose films denounce the impact of Thatcher's policies on the working class.

"THE WITCH IS DEAD"

The Official Charts Company said the song "Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead", from "The Wizard of Oz", had climbed to number 10 in the singles chart after a campaign by Thatcher haters.

Such reactions were condemned by Conservatives as well as by some Labour figures such as former Prime Minister Tony Blair.

In Brixton, a south London area hit during the Thatcher era by riots in 1981, protesters scaled a cinema and replaced movie titles with the words "Margaret Thatchers dead LOL" (sic). They also hung a banner that read "The bitch is dead".

Disturbances took place in Liverpool and Glasgow, two cities ravaged by Thatcher's dismantling of state industries.

Hundreds of police and soldiers will guard the funeral. Security forces will have to watch for protesters and the threat from dissident groups from northern Ireland.

Thatcher escaped assassination in 1984 when the Irish Republican Army (IRA) blew up a hotel where she was staying. The IRA laid down arms as part of a peace deal, but Thatcher remains a hate figure to many on the other side of the Irish Sea.

(Reporting By Jason Webb)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/thatchers-funeral-plans-divisive-iron-lady-herself-135415828.html

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Obama sending long-awaited 2014 budget to Congress

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama on Wednesday is sending Congress his 2014 budget, an effort to achieve an elusive "grand bargain" to tame runaway deficits that have soared above $1 trillion for each of the past four years.

Obama's spending blueprint for the 2014 budget year would accomplish the deficit cuts through a combination of further tax increases, further reductions in the growth of spending and reductions in the growth of the government's biggest benefit programs, Social Security and Medicare.

But instead of moving Congress nearer a grand bargain, the Obama's proposals so far have managed to anger Republicans and Democrats alike.

Obama's Democratic allies have attacked him for pursuing cuts in Social Security and Medicare, while Republicans have rejected the president's efforts to raise taxes further.

The president's spending and tax plan for the budget year that begins Oct. 1 is two months late. The administration blames the delay on the lengthy "fiscal cliff" negotiations at the end of December and then fights over the March 1 automatic spending cuts.

The president's plan tracks an offer he made to House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, during December's budget negotiations, which Boehner ended up walking away from because of his opposition to higher taxes on the wealthy.

The Obama budget proposal will join competing budget outlines already approved by the Republican-controlled House and the Democratic-run Senate.

Congress is unlikely to get down to serious negotiations until this summer, when the government will once again be confronted with the need to raise the government's borrowing limit or face the prospect of a first-ever default on U.S. debt.

As part of the administration's effort to win over Republicans, Obama will have a private dinner at the White House with about a dozen GOP senators Wednesday night. The budget is expected to be a primary topic, along with proposed legislation dealing with gun control and immigration.

Early indications are that the budget negotiations will be intense. Republicans have been adamant in their rejection of higher taxes, arguing that they will not go further than the $600 billion increase on top earners over a decade that was part of the late December agreement to prevent the government from going over the "fiscal cliff."

The administration maintains that Obama's proposal is balanced with the proper mix of spending cuts and tax increases.

"The president's been clear that it's going to take broad and shared sacrifice," Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said in an interview on National Public Radio. "He would not find it acceptable to make only reductions in entitlement programs. That we need also to raise revenues so that we have a fair balance of what the deficit reduction will come from."

The most sweeping proposal in Obama's budget is a switch in the way the government calculates the annual cost-of-living benefits for the millions of recipients of Social Security and certain other benefit programs from the current method tied to changes in the consumer price index.

The new method, known as chain-weighted CPI, takes into account changes that occur when people substitute goods rising in price with less expensive products. It results in a slightly lower annual reading for inflation.

The switch to modified CPI inflation formula would cut spending on government benefit programs by $130 billion over 10 years, although the administration said it planned to protect the most vulnerable. The change would also raise about $100 billion in higher taxes because the current CPI formula is used to adjust tax brackets each year. A lower inflation measure would mean more money taxed at higher rates.

Once the COLA change is fully phased in, it is estimated that it would mean about $560 less in annual benefits for a typical 75-year-old receiving benefits and $984 less for someone 85.

The White House has said it would reduce deficits by a total of $1.8 trillion over a decade, reducing the annual red ink to the $500 billion range by 2016 and down to 1.7 percent of the size of the economy in 10 years. When the deficit program proposed by the president is combined with $2.5 trillion in deficit reductions already approved, it would total $4.3 trillion in deficit cuts over the next decade.

Obama has presided over four straight years of annual deficits totaling more than $1 trillion, reflecting in part the lost revenue during a deep recession and the government's efforts to get the economy going again and stabilize the financial system.

The Obama budget's $1.8 trillion in new budget cuts would take the place of the automatic $1.2 trillion in reductions required by a 2011 budget deal. That provision triggered $85 billion in automatic cuts for the current budget year and those reductions, known as a "sequester," would not be affected by Obama's new budget.

The budget plan already passed by the GOP-controlled House would cut deficits by a total $4.6 trillion over 10 years on top of the $1.2 trillion called for in the 2011 deal. The budget outline approved by the Democratic-controlled Senate tracks more closely to the Obama proposal, although it does not include changes to the cost-of-living formula for Social Security.

___

Associated Press writers Andrew Taylor, Jim Kuhnhenn and Donna Cassata contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-sending-long-awaited-2014-budget-congress-070201216--finance.html

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Iran says 37 killed in earthquake in south

An Iranian woman reacts as she sits among the rubble of buildings after an earthquake struck southern Iran, in Shonbeh, Iran, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 6.1 magnitude earthquake killed dozens of people and injured hundreds more in a sparsely populated area in southern Iran on Tuesday, Iranian officials said, adding that it did not damage a nuclear plant in the region. (AP Photo/Fars News Agency, Mohammad Fatemi)

An Iranian woman reacts as she sits among the rubble of buildings after an earthquake struck southern Iran, in Shonbeh, Iran, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 6.1 magnitude earthquake killed dozens of people and injured hundreds more in a sparsely populated area in southern Iran on Tuesday, Iranian officials said, adding that it did not damage a nuclear plant in the region. (AP Photo/Fars News Agency, Mohammad Fatemi)

An Iranian woman receives medical treatment after an earthquake struck southern Iran, in Shonbeh, Iran, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A 6.1 magnitude earthquake killed dozens and injured hundreds more in a sparsely populated area in southern Iran on Tuesday, Iranian officials said, adding that it did not damage a nuclear plant in the region. (AP Photo/Fars News Agency, Mohammad Fatemi)

Map locates an earthquake which struck Iran

(AP) ? A 6.1 magnitude earthquake killed at least 37 and injured hundreds more in a sparsely populated area in southern Iran on Tuesday, Iranian officials said, adding that it did not damage a nuclear plant in the region.

The report said the earthquake struck the town of Kaki some 96 kilometers (60 miles) southeast of Bushehr, a town on the Persian Gulf that is home of Iran's first nuclear power plant, built with Russian help.

"No damage was done to Bushehr power plant," Bushehr provincial governor Fereidoun Hasanvand told state TV. He said 37 people had died so far and 850 were injured, including 100 who were hospitalized.

The plant's chief, Mahmoud Jafari, confirmed the site's condition to semi-official Mehr news agency, saying that it is resistant to earthquakes of up to magnitude eight.

Water and electricity were cut to many residents, said Ebrahim Darvishi, governor of the worst-hit district Shonbeh.

The UN's nuclear watchdog agency said on its website that it had been informed by Iran that there was no damage to the plant and no radioactive release and, based on its analysis of the earthquake, was not seeking additional information. The International Atomic Energy Agency statement indicated that it was satisfied there was little danger.

Shahpour Rostami, the deputy governor of Bushehr province, told state TV that rescue teams have been deployed to Shonbeh.

Three helicopters were sent to survey the damaged area before sunset, said Mohammad Mozaffar, the head of Iran's Red Crescent rescue department. He said damage was particularly bad in the village of Baghan.

Kaki resident Mondani Hosseini told The Associated Press that people had run out into the streets out of fear.

Dozens of aftershocks have been reported by the official IRNA news agency since the earthquake, which occurred at 16:22 local time, 11:58 GMT.

Iran announced three days of mourning.

The quake was felt across the Gulf in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, where workers were evacuated from high-rise buildings as a precaution.

Earlier on Sunday a lighter earthquake jolted the nearby area. Iran is located on seismic faults and it experiences frequent earthquakes.

In 2003, some 26,000 people were killed by a 6.6 magnitude quake that flattened the historic southeastern city of Bam.

In Russia, the head of the state agency responsible for the Bushehr project said the reactor was not producing fission by chain reaction when the tremor occurred.

"Personnel at the station are continuing to work in a normal regime, the radiation conditions are within the norms of natural background," Igor Mezenin was quoted as saying by the ITAR-Tass news agency.

____

AP writers George Jahn in Vienna and James Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-04-09-ML-Iran-Earthquake/id-d1e31362d15847809431a1920479ba7d

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Lift weights to lower blood sugar? White muscle helps keep blood glucose levels under control

Apr. 7, 2013 ? Researchers in the Life Sciences Institute at the University of Michigan have challenged a long-held belief that whitening of skeletal muscle in diabetes is harmful.

In fact, the white muscle that increases with resistance training, age and diabetes helps keep blood sugar in check, the researchers showed.

In addition, the insights from the molecular pathways involved in this phenomenon and identified in the study may point the way to potential drug targets for obesity and metabolic disease.

"We wanted to figure out the relationship between muscle types and body metabolism, how the muscles were made, and also what kind of influence they have on diseases like type 2 diabetes," said Jiandie Lin, Life Sciences Institute faculty member and associate professor at the U-M Medical School.

Lin's findings are scheduled to be published online April 7 in Nature Medicine.

Much like poultry has light and dark meat, mammals have a range of muscles: red, white and those in between. Red muscle, which gets its color in part from mitochondria, prevails in people who engage in endurance training, such as marathon runners. White muscle dominates in the bodies of weightlifters and sprinters -- people who require short, intense bursts of energy.

"Most people are in the middle and have a mix of red and white," Lin said.

When you exercise, nerves signal your muscles to contract, and the muscle needs energy. In response to a signal to lift a heavy weight, white muscles use glycogen to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP) -- energy the cells can use to complete the task. While this process, called glycolysis, can produce a lot of power for a short time, the glycogen fuel soon depletes.

However, if the brain tells the muscle to run a slow and steady long-distance race, the mitochondria in red muscles primarily use fat oxidation instead of glycogen breakdown to generate ATP. The supply of energy lasts much longer but doesn't provide the burst of strength that comes from glycolysis.

People with diabetes see whitening of the mix of muscle.

"For a long time, the red-to-white shift was thought to make muscle less responsive to insulin, a hormone that lowers blood sugar," Lin said. "But this idea is far from proven. You lose red muscle when you age or develop diabetes, but is that really the culprit?"

To find out, the team set out to find a protein that drives the formation of white muscle. They sifted through microarray data sets from public databases and identified a list of candidate proteins that were prevalent in white muscle but not in red.

Further studies led the team to focus on a protein called BAF60c, a sort of "zip code" mechanism that tells the cells when and how to express certain genes. The Lin team made a transgenic mouse model to increase BAF60c only in the skeletal muscle. One of the first things they noticed was that mice with more BAF60c had muscles that looked paler.

"That was a good hint that we were going in the white-muscle direction," said lead author Zhuo-xian Meng, a research fellow in Lin's lab.

They used electron microscopy to see the abundance of mitochondria within the muscle, and confirmed that muscle from BAF60c transgenic mice had less mitochondria than the normal controls.

"We saw predicted changes in molecular markers, but the ultimate test would be seeing how the mouse could run," Lin said.

If the BAF60c mice could run powerfully for short distances but tired quickly, the scientists would be able to confirm that the BAF60c pathway was a key part of the creation of white muscle.

Using mouse treadmills, they compared the endurance of BAF60c mice to a control group of normal mice, and found that the BAF60c transgenic mice could only run about 60 percent of the time that the control group could before tiring.

"White muscle uses glycogen, and the transgenic mice depleted their muscles' supplies of glycogen very quickly," Lin said.

After some follow-up experiments to figure out exactly which molecules were controlled by BAF60c, Lin and his team were confident that they had identified major players responsible for promoting white muscle formation. Now that they knew how to make more white muscle in animals, they wanted to determine whether white muscle was a deleterious or an adaptive characteristic of diabetes.

The team induced obesity in mice by feeding them the "Super Size Me" diet, Lin said. On a high-fat diet, a mouse will double its body weight in two to three months. They found that obese mice with BAF60c transgene were much better at controlling blood glucose.

"The results are a bit of a surprise to many people," Lin said. "It really points to the complexity in thinking about muscle metabolism and diabetes."

In humans, resistance training promotes the growth of white muscle and helps in lowering blood glucose. If future studies in humans determine that the BAF60c pathway is indeed the way in which cells form white muscle and in turn optimize metabolic function, the finding could lead to researching the pathway as a drug target.

"We know that this molecular pathway also works in human cells. The real challenge is to find a way to target these factors," Lin said.

Lin is a research faculty member of the Life Sciences Institute, where his laboratory is located and all his research is conducted. He is also an associate professor in the Department of Cell and Developmental Biology at the U-M Medical School.

Support for the research was provided by the Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center, Nutrition Obesity Research Center, National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Michigan.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Zhuo-Xian Meng, Siming Li, Lin Wang, Hwi Jin Ko, Yongjin Lee, Dae Young Jung, Mitsuharu Okutsu, Zhen Yan, Jason K Kim, Jiandie D Lin. Baf60c drives glycolytic metabolism in the muscle and improves systemic glucose homeostasis through Deptor-mediated Akt activation. Nature Medicine, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nm.3144

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

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/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/lUjP0ObjLMs/130407132914.htm

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Brain's stress circuits undergo profound learning early in life, scientists find

Apr. 7, 2013 ? Researchers at the University of Calgary's Hotchkiss Brain Institute have discovered that stress circuits in the brain undergo profound learning early in life. Using a number of cutting edge approaches, including optogenetics, Jaideep Bains, PhD, and colleagues have shown stress circuits are capable of self-tuning following a single stress. These findings demonstrate that the brain uses stress experience during early life to prepare and optimize for subsequent challenges.

The team was able to show the existence of unique time windows following brief stress challenges during which learning is either increased or decreased. By manipulating specific cellular pathways, they uncovered the key players responsible for learning in stress circuits in an animal model. These discoveries culminated in the publication of two back-to-back studies in the April 7 online edition of Nature Neuroscience.

"These new findings demonstrate that systems thought to be 'hardwired' in the brain, are in fact flexible, particularly early in life," says Bains, a professor in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology. "Using this information, researchers can now ask questions about the precise cellular and molecular links between early life stress and stress vulnerability or resilience later in life."

Stress vulnerability, or increased sensitivity to stress, has been implicated in numerous health conditions including cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes and depression. Although these studies used animal models, similar mechanisms mediate disease progression in humans.

"Our observations provide an important foundation for designing more effective preventative and therapeutic strategies that mitigate the effects of stress and meet society's health challenges," he says.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Calgary, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal References:

  1. Wataru Inoue, Dinara V Baimoukhametova, Tam?s F?zesi, Jaclyn I Wamsteeker Cusulin, Kathrin Koblinger, Patrick J Whelan, Quentin J Pittman, Jaideep S Bains. Noradrenaline is a stress-associated metaplastic signal at GABA synapses. Nature Neuroscience, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nn.3373
  2. Jaclyn I Wamsteeker Cusulin, Tam?s F?zesi, Wataru Inoue, Jaideep S Bains. Glucocorticoid feedback uncovers retrograde opioid signaling at hypothalamic synapses. Nature Neuroscience, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nn.3374

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

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/top_news/top_science/~3/k7ZzaCJsu0Q/130407133314.htm

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Italian govt speeds state payments to vendors

MILAN (AP) ? The Italian government has approved a decree to pay 40 billion euros ($52 billion) owed by government entities to private businesses over the next 12 months to help relaunch Italy's stagnant economy.

Premier Mario Monti acknowledged Saturday after his caretaker government adopted the decree that overdue payments had become "a bad habit" that put a heavy burden on business owners.

State entities on an average pay their bills six months after services are rendered and some 90 days after the official due date, which Monti said put Italy behind Spain, Portugal and Greece.

Delayed government payments are a major factor behind liquidity shortages faced by many small and medium-sized Italian companies. Reduced turnover in the recession means many businesses, in turn, are having trouble keeping up with even small debts.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italian-govt-speeds-state-payments-vendors-160007775--finance.html

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Friday, April 5, 2013

US futures drop as jobs report comes up short

NEW YORK (AP) ? U.S. stock market futures are plunging after the Labor Department reported that the economy added just 88,000 jobs in March, the lowest gain in nine months.

Dow Jones industrial average futures slid 135 points to 14,396. Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 33 points to 2,752. S&P 500 futures slid 17 points to 1,537.50.

The number of jobs added was well below the 195,000 economists had predicted, and reflects a sharp slowdown in hiring after several months of strength. The slowdown may signal that the economy is heading into a weak spring

The unemployment rate dropped to 7.6 percent, but only because more people stopped looking for work. The percentage of Americans working or looking for jobs fell to 63.3 percent in March, the lowest in nearly 34 years.

The report weighed on world markets as well.

Despite positive news out of Germany, where a report showed industrial orders rebounded in February, a promising sign for first-quarter growth, Germany's DAX fell 1.9 percent to 7,663.

The news from France was not as promising. The French finance minister warned that the country will barely grow this year. The main market index, the CAC all slid 2 percent to 3,651. Britain's FTSE 100 dropped 1.7 percent to 6,234.14.

Earlier Japan's Nikkei hit a four-year high, boosted by enthusiasm for that nation's new central bank policies. But worries about bird flu in China and saber-rattling in North Korea weighed on other Asian markets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-futures-drop-jobs-report-comes-short-125226400--finance.html

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Common Core Practice | Narrative, Argumentative and Informative ...

The 2013 major league baseball season began this week, and Sarah Gross, Jonathan Olsen and their New Jersey students? many among them passionate Yankees or Mets fans ? couldn?t pass up the opportunity to explore America?s pastime for this week?s writing prompts.

Enjoy.


Narrative Writing

Sports: ?Don?t Let Your Signed Memories Turn Into a Plot Twist?
Common Core Standards: RI3, RI4, W3, W4, RH4, WHST4, WHST10

You know the plot: the main character has a valuable signed baseball that he, or she, cherishes. And then something happens. Maybe the dog eats it, maybe a child takes it outside in the mud. But the result is always the same ? a lost piece of memorabilia and a devastated collector.

Your Task: Compose a one- or two-paragraph scene in which a valuable signed baseball is destroyed. Be sure to use precise words and phrases, telling details and sensory language to convey a vivid picture of the events.

Before you do the task, you might?

  • Brainstorm a list of ways that a signed baseball might be lost. Try to think of the most humorous ways it might happen.
  • Make a list of descriptive words about your setting. Be sure to use precise words and sensory details.
  • Find a way to describe why the baseball was so important to its owner. Why was this object cherished?

Extension Activity:

  • Perhaps the most famous baseball comedy routine is Abbott and Costello?s ?Who?s on First?? Originally performed by these comedians in a vaudeville show and on the radio in the 1930s, ?Who?s on First?? went on to become one of the most recognizable sketches in American history. Watch Abbott and Costello reprise their classic comedy routine in this clip from their 1945 movie ?The Naughty Nineties.? What makes this performance so memorable?

Argumentative Writing
Sports: ?Era of Modern Baseball Stats Brings WAR to Booth?
Common Core Standards: RI4, RI5, RI10, W1, W4, RH1, WHST1, WHST4

Statistics like WAR, VORP and B.A.B.I.P. have swept through baseball over the past decade, becoming part of the fabric of the game and an object of growing fascination to its fans, writes the Times sports reporter Steve Eder.

This embrace of cold calculations, known as sabermetrics, is now making its way onto radio broadcasts of baseball games. However, radio broadcasts of games have traditionally featured homespun baseball wisdom and not talk about terms like ?ultimate zone rating.? How will this new emphasis on advanced statistics affect baseball broadcasts?

Your Task: Should baseball announcers include more advanced statistics in their broadcasts or stick to the tried-and-true stories from the clubhouse? Include a quote from the article and one classmate?s opinion in your response.

Check out this response from one of our students, Sean K. (And you can read more of Sean?s writing on his blog.)

Ever since I was introduced to Moneyball and Strat-o-matic, I?ve been enchanted with baseball statistics. In the past two decades, the sabermetrics craze has been introduced into nearly every professional baseball club, cementing the sport?s position as the most statistically advanced game in the world, and turned leisurely hobbies like fantasy baseball into global phenomenons. Even with the recent stat explosions, should this complex data make its way to baseball commentary?

Baseball is known for its radio legends as much as it is for statistics, with immortal names such as John Sterling, the long-time voice of the Yankees. Says Sterling on the subject, ?The more numbers you keep giving to the fans, the more people don?t know what you?re talking about.? Television has readily adopted new sabermetric stats such as WHIP and OPS, and ESPN has a complete love affair with WAR. On the other side, radio has been slower to adopt numbers into play-by-play usually handled by one voice, unlike the multi-commentator crews on national TV. Kyle W., a supporter of tradition, believes that ?Americans prefer simplicity and would prefer clubhouse stories.?

Simple new stats such as WHIP, OPS, and B.A.B.I.P. would no doubt support intuitive fans and front office staff alike, so long as it?s merely sprinkled here and there. However, this is a much better move for television, which can add a devoted statistician to the crew and insert on-screen graphics. Having interactive television broadcasts or classic radio play-by-play would then give fans the best of both worlds, offering a choice between tradition and the future.

Before you do the task, you might?

  • Go through the article to underline the reasons statistics should be included in the broadcast and circle the reasons stories should be the focus of down time in game broadcasts.
  • Using your notes, choose a side and pick one quotation to include in your argument.
  • Interview a classmate for his or her take on the topic.
  • When writing your argument, be sure to identify who the speakers for both quotations are, and remember to put their words in quotation marks.

Extension Activity:

Create your own radio show with your friends. RadioLovers.com is a database with hundreds of old radio shows. Check out some of the classics like ?Buck Rogers,? Flash Gordon? or Gunsmoke.? Note how the shows introduce characters and use sound effects to help tell a story. Then choose a topic, write a script and perform your show. If you have a computer with a microphone, record your show with a program like GarageBand and add as many sound effects as you can.


Informative Writing

Sports: ?With New Move, Jay-Z Enters a Sports Agent State of Mind?

Common Core Standards: RI2, RI10, W2, W4, W5, RH2, WHST2, WHST4

Jay-Z has long been in the inner circle of A-listers like Alex Rodriguez and LeBron James, using their names in his lyrics and their star power to enhance his own. Now he is making a move to turn those relationships into big business in a more formal way.

On Tuesday he announced he was opening his own sports agency, and that he was stealing the Yankees star Robinson Cano from the most powerful agent in baseball. Jay-Z is now poised to become one of the most powerful men in sports and music.

Your Task: In a paragraph, summarize this move by Jay-Z from musician to agent. Be sure to include relevant and sufficient facts from the article.

Before you do the task, you might?

  • Plan your essay before you begin to write by organizing your thoughts and any evidence you intend to use.
  • Analyze the article to determine the key points that are emphasized by the author. Be sure to incorporate these in your writing.

Extension Activity:

Choose either the Yankees? or the Mets? home opener and imagine if the game had had a different outcome. (As New York baseball fans know, the Yankees lost their home opener while the Mets won.)

Be creative and rewrite the article with the opposite result of what is reported in the newspaper, but writing in the same style used by the Times sports reporters David Waldstein and Andrew Keh. Think of creative but plausible ways for your recap to achieve the new alternate outcome. You can use images from this opening day slide show for inspiration.


Working With Any Day?s Times

Any Day?s Times: Using Our Postcards Activity

Common Core Standards: WHST 9, RI 10

Directions: Postcards, one of the exercises from our Any Day?s Times collection, invites students to choose a New York Times article as a jumping-off point, then write and illustrate postcards they imagine could be sent to or from anyone mentioned in the article. What would that person say? Why? What image would he or she choose for the front of the card?

We can?t help but think of how well that exercise would work with a recent article about baseball history, ?Echoes of Ebbets Field as It Turns 100.?

Just a short list of who might write to whom could include:

  • Jackie Robinson writing to a friend or relative about his first game.
  • A Dodgers fan expressing his feelings to the owner, Walter O?Malley, about the team?s move to Los Angeles from Brooklyn.
  • A Dodgers player or fan writing to someone living in the Ebbets Field apartments who doesn?t know or care much about the site?s history.

Whom would you add? What would he or she say? Why? Use evidence from the text to make sure you have the content and tone of your postcard right.

You can do this same exercise with nearly any Times article, of course, but it might work especially well with feature articles like this one that include many characters and points of view.

Source: http://learning.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/05/common-core-practice-narrative-argumentative-and-informative-writing-about-baseball/

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Private 'Jurassic Park' screening? That'll be $35K

Universal Pictures

Laura Dern, Joseph Mazzello, and Sam Neill in "Jurassic Park."

By Pamela McClintock, Carolyn Giardina, The Hollywood Reporter

Care to watch the 3-D re-release of Steven Spielberg's "Jurassic Park" this weekend without going to the theater? For decades, an elite group of Hollywood insiders making up what's known as the Bel Air Circuit have been provided new movies as a courtesy to watch in the privacy of their lavish home theaters.

Now a new outfit called Prima Cinema is offering the unprecedented chance for anyone with enough money -- and a home theater, of course -- ?the same sort of access. The price tag: $35,000 for a special digital box that allows films to be delivered safely over the Internet, then $500 for each title (a movie can only be viewed once over the course of a 24-hour period).

PHOTOS: "Jurassic Park": Then and now

Based in Carlsbad, Ca., Prima is backed by Universal Pictures, Syncom Venture Partners and Best Buy Capital, the investment arm of Best Buy Co. Universal is owned by cable giant Comcast.

Universal, which is releasing "Jurassic Park 3-D" this weekend, so far is the only major Hollywood studio to make its titles available. Those have included "Les Miserables," "Identity Thief," "Admission" and now "Jurassic Park" (in 3-D). The upcoming Tom Cruise sci-fi thriller "Oblivion" also will be made available. Films from Universal's specialty division Focus Features also pop up on Prima.

Universal chairman Adam Fogelson has been a staunch proponent of finding new and creative revenue streams, even if it means shortening, or in this case collapsing, the theatrical window.

In 2011, theater owners were enraged when Universal and several other studios made movies available on?DirecTV 60 days after their theatrical release for $30. The experiment, however, was a bust.

Exhibition insiders tell The Hollywood Reporter that movie exhibitors don't see Prima Cinema as a threat considering the extraordinary cost. However, for the super-rich, the service is a convenient alternative to going to the movies on opening weekend. Sources say the service has found many fans in Hollywood, including Seth MacFarlane and other top stars.

It's not clear if other studios will partner with Prima; sources at several of the majors say they are monitoring the company's progress for now.

PHOTOS: 3-D movie re-releases: The Hits and misses

Prima CEO Jason Pang told THR in a recent interview that the service has attracted sports franchise owners, top Hollywood power brokers, talent and members of the financial community. Some have even inquired about the possibility of installing the system on their yachts.

"This is not Netflix," Pang said. "This is an event."

Prima quietly began testing its service last summer, primarily in Southern California, New York and Florida. The company doesn't advertise and instead relies on those with access -- including Sid Ganis, former president of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences -- to open doors. Ganis sits on Prima's board of advisors, along with filmmaker Peter Farrelly.

The Prima system includes elaborate security technology designed to ensure against piracy, including a remote biometric fingerprint reader that allows only the subscriber to access the box. Nor can a subscriber turn his or home theater into a commercial venture; Prima inspects the home theater to make sure there are no more than 25 seats.

Prima officially launched at the beginning of the year and hopes to soon have 1,000 customers, according to those who have met with the company (no figures are available for how long the client roster is now).

"Prima is what private jets are to aviation," Pang said.

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/05/17615093-watch-jurassic-park-3-d-at-home-this-weekend-for-just-35000?lite

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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Can Modem Lights Warn of Danger?

Your modem and router lights are blinking all the time ? even when you know that no one is using the Internet. Is that a warning that something?s wrong?

Mostly, the lights on your modem or router indicate perfectly normal activity. Even when you aren?t actively browsing the web or downloading a video, your computer busily monitors all its network connections ? to your Internet Service Provider, to your Wi-Fi-connected phones, and to other connected devices, like your cable box, AppleTV, or Xbox. And all of this communication shows up as activity on your modem or router.

Real Threats

While most blinking lights are nothing to worry about, there are some real threats that you should know how to protect yourself from.

Botnets: Botnets are software programs that scan through the Internet looking for unsecured computers they can take over and turn into zombie spam machines. But no need to panic here; any computer that has even a basic firewall or is behind a router is perfectly safe.

Wi-Fi Thieves: Wi-Fi thieves are most likely your neighbors who don?t feel like paying for their own service. This isn?t a big threat, except that it may slow down your own connection ? plus, it isn?t really fair. If you suspect you have a Wi-Fi thief, log into your router and look at the list of devices connected. You should mostly see devices you recognize. If a neighbor is using your network, it?s likely their device will be simply labeled. These Wi-Fi thieves are generally thwarted pretty easily; just change the name of your router and your Wi-Fi password.

Viruses: if you have a virus on your computer, it could be sending traffic through your router too. Or worse, if someone has installed monitoring software, that could be sending out a log of all your Internet activity. To check, first run a virus scan and then try a network traffic monitor like Little Snitch for Mac or the Comodo Firewall for Windows machines.

For more on checking for and removing viruses, please see ?Does Your PC Have a Virus ? or Is it Just Slow?? and ?Computer Virus: How to Remove It.?

[Related: Are You Being Monitored at Work?]

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/upgrade-your-life/can-modem-lights-warn-of-danger--193449330.html

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Dark Matter Found? $2 Billion Orbital Experiment Detects Hints

Unless the responsibility for the discrepancy falls upon incorrect theories / understanding of the observations. In which case dark matter turns out to be an iffy equation. Yes, it still technically exists, but the $2 billion dollar particle detector isn't going to find it.

We can say, with a very high degree of uncertainty, that the discrepancies are not due to bad theories.

If our only line of reasoning for Dark Matter was Newtonian physics (for example, if the only evidence for Dark Matter was from rotation curves of galaxies), your thought would be entirely reasonable. Maybe Newtonian mechanics were just wrong on the scale of galaxies. This is one reason why Modified Newtonian Dynamics theories (MoND) were somewhat popular a while ago.

But the problem is that multiple, *completely independent*, physical theories all show that not only does Dark Matter exist, but all the theories predict consistent amounts of Dark Matter. For example, you can use Einstein's Theory of General Relativity to find out how much Dark Matter there is based on how much light is curved by gravitational effects. Or you can use various areas of Thermodynamics to look at temperatures in galaxy clusters.

These theories are based on completely different principles and laws. Yet they all predict the same thing.

So if you want to claim that we being confused by bad theories, you would have to be able to explain why multiple, completely independent theories are not only all wrong, but all wrong in a way such that they return the same wrong answer. That seems extremely implausible, so Dark Matter is, by far, the best explanation.

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/JhRxCJaQYic/story01.htm

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How the media affects the self esteem and actions of teen boys | Self ...

of all the blessings which to man (Edward Estlin Cummings)

of all the blessings which to man
kind progress doth impart
one stands supreme i mean the an
imal without a heart.

Huge this collective pseudobeast
(sans either pain or joy)
does nothing except preexist
its hoi in its polloi

and if sometimes he's prodded forth
to exercise her vote
(or made by threats of somethings worth
than death to change their coat

-which something as you'll never guess
in fifty thousand years
equals the quote and unquote loss
of liberty my dears-

or even is compelled to fight
itself from tame to teem)
still doth our hero contemplate
in raptures of undream

that strictly(and how)scienti
fic land of supernod
where freedom is compulsory
and only man is god.

Without a heart the animal
is very very kind
so kind it wouldn't like a soul
and couldn't use a mind

Powered by Poems and Poetry

Source: http://self-improvement.roxy-publishing.com/blog/self-esteem/how-the-media-affects-the-self-esteem-and-actions-of-teen-boys

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Ten Fast Facts On The Economics Of Immigration | Zero Hedge

While immigration was pretty far down on the priority list at this time last year, recently the topic has taken a front seat in lawmakers? chambers down in Washington. ConvergEs's Nick Colas notes that policymakers on both sides of ideological spectrum are establishing positions and recommendations for reform, and are familiarizing themselves with some of the lesser-known facts about immigration. In a nutshell, he explains: immigration is not all about border crossings from Mexico and undocumented workers. There are many more figures ? and costs ? associated with immigration, most of which have palpable and measurable impacts on the US economy. From GDP growth to the health of the housing market, immigration?s influences may not be widely known, but should be in order for policymakers and investors to make informed decisions.

Note from Nick:? Immigration is often couched as a social issue, especially in American politics.? And while that may be the ?Red meat? both parties use to energize their respective bases, the truth is that the current debate on the topic has important economic ramifications as well.? Sarah picks it up from here, with data points all the way from the Federal budget to GDP math.

While immigration is back on the docket in Washington, the topic has yet to capture much attention on Wall Street, taking a back seat to European troubles and the Dow rally. The inattention seems warranted, as immigration is typically cast as a simply societal issue ? but I urge you to reconsider its economic importance. The reality is that immigration, and any reform thereto, has real, visible impacts on the US economy at both the micro and macro levels, from GDP to job growth:?

As you can see, the labor market, housing, GDP, and even tax revenues are influenced by immigration ? and, consequently, by changes to immigration law. Ideally, any changes made to the legislation would be favorable to the US economy ? hence the focus on creating an easier path for high-skill labor immigration and paths to citizenship for current illegal residents. But in order to understand the kind of impact any changes may have on the US economy, first we have to look at where things stand now.

With that in mind, we?ve compiled a short list of more economically-oriented facts about immigration, presented below in ?10 Things You May Not Know about US Immigration?.? They aren?t all splashy attention getters; some are pretty deep in the weeds, actually.? But all of them highlight some point we think hasn?t gotten enough attention in this ongoing debate over immigration in America.

1.?????? The Border Patrol?s budget increased 149% from FY 2002 to FY 2012: $1.4 to $3.5 billion. In fact, of all the agencies within the Department of Homeland Security, ?Customs and Border Protection? has the largest budget with $10.4 billion, and it saw the biggest budget increase in 2012. Yep, those are billions? Thanks to the sequester, the budget decreased by about $500 million ? but the DHS is requesting just under $12 billion for FY 2013, $3.6 billion of which will go to Border Patrol.

?

Border Patrol staff has also more than doubled over the past 10 years, growing 113% from FY02 to FY12. What?s most interesting here, though, is that the biggest staff increase has been at Northern points of entry (POEs), which include Buffalo, NY, Spokane, WA, and Grand Forks, ND. Staff here has grown 312%, from 492 to 2,026.

?

Bottom line: Enforcing the current system isn?t cheap.? A billion here and a billion there, and pretty soon you?re talking real money.

?

2.?????? And yet, despite increased budgets and staff, apprehensions are down -62% since FY02, and have fallen -78% since their peak in FY 2000. The FY12 total stood at 364,768: the last time apprehensions were this low was 1972. There are two easy explanations for the slowdown, though neither is particularly optimistic: either Border Patrol is doing a poor job, or no one is trying to cross the border. The latter point is corroborated by Mexican emigration estimates, and as we?ve said in prior notes the slowdown points to a still-moribund job market in the US.

?

Bottom line: Illegal immigration is about economics.? When people don?t particularly want to sneak into your country (or even try) you know you?ve got one weak economy.

?

3.?????? Based on these budget figures, we know that each apprehension at the border cost us $9,680, up from only $1,483 in FY02. A 553% increase in just 10 years. And each BP officer made only about 6 apprehensions in FY12, down from about 95 in FY02. The total cost of arresting, detaining, and deporting each person from the US comes in at $12,500, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), though some estimates put the number as high as $23,482 (including court proceedings, etc.). With fewer crossings, the higher budget and larger staff don?t seem warranted ? but there they are.

?

Bottom line: The system also seems to be inefficient ? as well as expensive. So unless we rethink and reform apprehension, detaining, and deporting, we?re probably going to be stuck with a Border Patrol with what business analysts would call ?Very high per unit costs.?

?

4.?????? The majority of the drug trade comes through the Southwest POEs, though each region appears to have its own drug ?specialty?. Most marijuana comes through the Southwest, with 2.3 million pounds seized in FY12 ? about 160 pounds per seizure. The ?Coastal? border (Miami, New Orleans, etc.) is the primary seizure point for cocaine (5,962 pounds seized in 2012, 23 pounds per seizure), while most ecstasy is funneled through the Northern border (199 pounds in 2012).

?

671 firearms and 128,000 rounds of ammunition were seized at POEs across the country in FY12, along with $7.6 million dollars in cash. The money is not all in USD, though, and it all goes to an ?asset forfeiture? account controlled by the Treasury. Almost 10,000 vehicles (?conveyances?, in CBP terms) were also seized, the majority of them at the Southwest border.

?

Bottom line: Immigration isn?t just about people ? it is about border security as well.

?

5.?????? The largest immigrant groups in the US by country of origin are Mexico, China, Philippines, and the Dominican Republic. But while Mexican nationals make up the majority of immigrants into the US, net migration from the country has fallen to zero ? and has perhaps even gone negative, according to the Pew Hispanic Center. As we?ve explored in prior notes, this trend is a pessimistic sign for the US labor market as it implies declining economic opportunity for lower-skill workers. Immigration from China and the Philippines, though, is up.

?

Bottom line: The stereotypical immigration flow is no longer accurate: immigration into the US has globalized and, consequently, any reforms must address a much more complicated system.

?

6.?????? Less than 1.2% of green card applicants were approved in 2011 (latest data available), with a cap of 140,000 cards to be allotted each year. More than 12.1 million applied in 2011. No single country can receive more than 7% of the green cards available, and some countries ? most of which are major emigration points to the US ? are excluded from the lottery each year. Mexico, for example, is excluded, but the country is also granted special ?border crossing cards?: 1.5 million were issued in 2012.

?

Naturalization ? separate from green cards and visas ? is perhaps an even more rigorous process, as the required US residence period required varies by region. According to the Office for Immigration Statistics, immigrants born in Africa spend the least time in ?legal immigrant status? with only 5 years? waiting period. Immigrants from Asia and South America take 6 years, Europe 7, Oceania 8, and North America 10 years.

?

Bottom line: The US immigration structure is incredibly complicated. A more streamlined approach ? even if it does turn out to be stricter ? would save a lot of time (and, most likely, money).

?

7.?????? The majority of immigrant visas (separate from green cards) were granted to relatives or ?family sponsored? persons in 2012. The State Department tries to keep the number of immigrant visas granted about the same each year, with only 482,300 issued in 2012. According to the State Department?s documentation, 75% of these went to family members (siblings, spouses, and children mostly), while only 4% went to ?Employment-based preference? visas. Making a change here seems to be one of the focal points of immigration reform in Washington; the current proposal cuts down on familial visa grants in favor of high-skill employment visas.

?

Bottom line: The US immigration reform is putting first priorities first. While families will almost definitely remain important in any new legislation, high-skill immigrants ? and their perceived value to the US economy ? will have the priority.

?

8.?????? According to the Census Bureau?s Current Population Survey, the average foreign-born non-citizen in the US has an income of $27,000, is between 25-34 years old, married, lives in California, and did not graduate from high school. The person is also much more likely to rent their home than to own. For comparison?s sake, native families average about $47k in income, while documented immigrants make $48k.

?

But while the majority of immigrant persons are older, an estimated 4.5 million children (citizens) have parents who are unauthorized to live in the US, and 1 million are estimated to be unauthorized themselves. 31,029 juveniles were apprehended at the border in 2012, including 24,481 unaccompanied children.

?

Bottom line: Non-citizens are, on many counts, distinct from native-born US citizens; but foreign-born persons as a whole are more or less ?just like us?. More importantly though, not all immigrants (and particularly illegal immigrants) are young, single men looking for work: women and children are also an important part of the demographic

?

9.?????? The Congressional Budget Office estimates that at least half of undocumented immigrants file income papers each year, and pay local, state, and federal taxes. Based on the Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy, moreover, undocumented immigrants paid about $11.2 billion in taxes in 2010 ? about $1,000 per estimated illegal alien living in the US.

?

Bottom line: Illegal immigration isn?t an absolute drain on tax revenue. Undoubtedly some persons do not pay federal, state, or local taxes, but many do.

?

10.?? Finally, the Center for American Progress estimates that undocumented immigrations could contribute an additional $1.4 trillion to GDP between 2013 and 2022 if they are all granted citizenship by the end of this year. Granted, this is a major ?Progressive? think tank, but in this case the theory is sound.? More people on the books without all the red tape lowers costs and increases tax revenue.? Additionally, the Center says Americans overall would see a $791 billion increase in personal income, and tax revenue would go up $184 billion - $116 at the federal and $68 at the state level.

?

Bottom line: Immigration reform could add an extra couple points to GDP growth over the coming years. And increase tax revenues.

All of these points are worth considering as lawmakers push for immigration reform down in Washington. It will not be easy to come to agreements on paths to citizenship for illegal immigrants, caps on border crossings, and especially, money to spend on the process, for sure, but the change is necessary ? and the benefits could potentially outweigh the costs. While a positive housing market, labor market, and even GDP number are not entirely dependent on immigration reform, some action could definitely push all of these in the right direction: up.

Source: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-04-02/ten-fast-facts-economics-immigration

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