Thursday, February 28, 2013

Biologists compare new bees to 100-year-old records

Feb. 28, 2013 ? Laura Burkle and her colleagues captured 2,778 bees while retracing the muddy steps of a scientist who studied the interactions between bees and flowering plants more than a century ago.

Occasionally stung, but considering herself lucky to have access to the rich historic records that guided her field work, the Montana State University ecologist and her collaborators have now published their results in the journal Science.

Burkle conducted her bee study in the forests of southern Illinois while she was a postdoctoral researcher at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo. Now at MSU for the past two years and planning a major ecological study between Yellowstone National Park and Glacier National Park, Burkle and her co-authors compared the bees and flowering plants that existed in 2009 and 2010 with those that existed in the late 1800s and early 1900s around Carlinville, Ill.

The researchers discovered that the area has lost many species of bees and flowering plants over the 120 years since professor Charles Robertson first surveyed the area, Burkle said. Also lost were many interactions between the bees and flowers.

Despite the loss, however, the bees and plants have been surprisingly resilient in the face of warmer temperatures and changing land use, Burkle said. The forests that once grew 10 miles outside of Carlinville are fragments of what they were when Robertson drove his horse and buggy to collect specimens. Fields of corn have replaced acres of trees and prairie. Natural areas have been converted to agricultural, commercial or residential uses. Winter and spring temperatures have risen an average of 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit.

"The good news is that these systems and the way they are structured make them really resilient to change," Burkle said. "But there's been so much change that resiliency has been compromised."

Co-author Tiffany Knight, Burkle's faculty adviser for the study, said, "Plants are an important resource for humans, providing food, fiber and the backbone for all other ecosystem services. Most plants rely on animal pollinators for their reproduction. There is concern that human changes to the environment are disrupting plant-pollinator interactions, but our study is the first that has been able to look at this problem using historical data.

"One of our significant findings is that climate change has resulted in mismatches between plants and their historic pollinators, such that insects are active during times when plants are not in bloom," Knight said. "This is likely because plants and insects respond to different environment cues, and thus, we expect that mismatches between plants and their historic pollinators due to climate change is important across the globe."

The scientist who inspired the recent study was a Harvard professor before moving to Illinois to retire. When he discovered the woods around Carlinville, however, he resumed his academic life as a professor at the local Blackburn College. He collected most of his data from 1887 to 1897, but continued into 1917.

"He loved it," Burkle said. "That was his full-time passion."

Burkle learned about Robertson while looking for a research project to pursue as a postdoctoral researcher. Since Carlinville and St. Louis are just 1 ? hours apart, Burkle and Knight decided to follow up Robertson's study with their own.

They spent the springs of 2009 and 2010 doing fieldwork around Carlinville. Generally working in the woods between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. when bees are most likely to fly, the researchers slogged through the forests looking for the first flowering plants of the season. Then they captured the bees that pollinated those flowers and identified them under the microscopes Burkle set up in their Carlinville apartment.

In 477 hours over two years, the researchers collected 3,620 "floral visitors," Burkle said. Of those, 2,778 were bees and the rest were mostly flies and butterflies. The plant that attracted the largest number of bees -- 923 individuals and 33 species -- was Spring Beauty, a small herbaceous plant. Second most popular plant was the Great Waterleaf.

In addition to their and Robertson's specimens, Burkle and Knight compared their findings to those of co-author John Marlin from the University of Illinois. Marlin, who had gathered data from the Carlinville area in the 1970s, provided intermediate-year information that was "incredibly helpful," Burkle said.

Burkle conducted her research with a $75,000 RAPID grant from the National Science Foundation.

Burkle's next study will begin this summer and look at disturbances -- such as from recent and more historic fires -- to see how plant and pollinator communities re-assemble across Montana between Yellowstone and Glacier national parks.

The suite of species that live in Montana and Illinois are entirely different, but some of the same issues apply, Burkle said.

Knight said, "I would expect that the effects of climate change on plant-pollinator interactions are even greater in some locations, such as high elevation sites in the Rocky Mountains that have experienced more dramatic changes in climate than our Midwestern site."

She added that Burkle's expertise on identifying bees and analyzing plant-pollinator networks were crucial to the success of the bee project.

"I miss working with her at Washington University, but I think she is in an excellent location to make new and significant contributions to the field of pollination biology," Knight said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Montana State University. The original article was written by Evelyn Boswell.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Laura A. Burkle, John C. Marlin, and Tiffany M. Knight. Plant-Pollinator Interactions over 120 Years: Loss of Species, Co-Occurrence and Function. Science, 28 February 2013 DOI: 10.1126/science.1232728

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/N3dnTQ_GbVY/130228155628.htm

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Video: Giada cooks up 2 simple seafood dinners



>>> giada today, our contribut contributor is here. let's start with the basics. you're in the supermarket, shopping for fish fillets or whole fish. what are you looking for?

>> when you're buying fish, first of all, make sure it doesn't have any discoloration and that it's nice and moist, especially in the corners. when fish has been sitti for too long that's where you start to see.

>> do you touch the fish? looking for firmness?

>> you can touch it, it should bounce back a little bit. the meat of the fish should all be together. it shouldn't start to separate.

>> when it comes to whole fish?

>> it's a different story but the scales should all be very tight to the skin and the eyes should be nice and bright as you see that one is. you want to make sure, give it a nice smell if you can.

>> if it's a little off --

>> if it's a little off, get away from it.

>> forget about it?

>> exactly.

>> this is incredibly easy?

>> very, very easy. if you like sole, and i think you do.

>> i love sole.

>> my daughter love it is because it doesn't have a fishy --

>> even people who aren't sure if they like fish love sole.

>> put this down. you're going to try to learn something today. salt and pepper everything. pepper, little olive oil . we're going to stick this in the broiler. it cooks in five minutes.

>> there's olive oil on it already. a little more?

>> never hurt anyone. give it a nice tan. put it in the broiler for five minutes. the fish starts to -- the meat starts to flake and it's ready. it ends up looking like that. we'll make a really easy sauce. greek yogurt .

>> whisk?

>> sure. agave.

>> molasses is a little too smoky -- go ahead.

>> mustard?

>> little dijon. lemon juice and chives for color and a little onion flavor. mix it all together. and you see with the agave, you could use honey. it's a more floury flavor that overpowers the fish.

>> you're not going to cook it in this? this is the sauce.

>> no. it goes on top. mix it really well because you want it to emulsify and get thick like a dressing. you got muscle there.

>> muscles, plural.

>> you're only using one muscle in that arm. pour over the fish. that's it.

>> perfect. if you're not a sole fan you'll move on to salmon .

>> that sauce works over any kind of fish or chicken. if you are a salmon fan, this is really good. cut the salmon . again, salt and pepper and olive oil .

>> are you looking for farm raised or wild salmon ? what do you like?

>> obviously, i like wild.

>> right.

>> it depends on what you can find in the grocery store. i wouldn't eat a ton of farm raised if i were anybody. once in a while , no big deal . not all the time. if you can avoid it, even better.

>> great.

>> now make a little topping. you're thinking you're done, you're not. parsley, chives, lemon zest . matt does not like to use his hands.

>> i don't know if i washed my hands before the segment. that's why i didn't do that.

>> sprinkle it?

>> go ahead.

>> more than sprinkle really, we're supposed to pat it down but since you don't want to use your hands.

>> almost a rub you've made?

>> exactly. see how pretty that looks?

>> yes.

>> 375.

>> for how long?

>> ten minutes. sometimes less, depending on the thickness of the salmon ?

>> you wouldn't broil it?

>> no, this we're baking. baked salmon , broiled sole. now we make a topping.

>> hi, guys.

>> we're here to eat.

>> something nice and light. chopped arugala. go ahead. he keeps thinking i'm not going to make him work. capers.

>> lemon juice again?

>> lemon juice .

>> what spices are here?

>> red pepper and a little lemon zest . we're going to do olive oil and salt.

>> sorry, sorry, sorry. go ahead. natalie, do the olive oil there team work , guys.

>> mediterranean diet .

>> it is, it is. and the great thing about these sauces is that they come together really fast and you can use them all -- there we go. you can use them on anything. this can be over steak, chicken, any kind of fish. i hear from a lot of people nobody likes the skin on the salmon .

>> i love the skin.

>> some people do. the problem is that it's hard to get crispy. so you can always have the person -- your fish person anywhere take it off for you if you prefer.

>> like a chimichurra this one.

>> exactly but with arugula.

>> these look great.

>> done.

>> delicious.

>> great steals and deals after your local news and weather. wednesday morning, february 27th , 2013 . it is a soggy day so far here in new york city . luckily, we're inside studio 1a .

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50971280/

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Penn St. upsets No. 4 Michigan 84-78; 1st B10 win

Penn State's Jermaine Marshall (11) is greeted by fans at the end of an NCAA college basketball game against Michigan in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Penn State won 84-78. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Penn State's Jermaine Marshall (11) is greeted by fans at the end of an NCAA college basketball game against Michigan in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Penn State won 84-78. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Penn State's Brandon Taylor (10) looks for a shot past Michigan's Glenn Robinson III (1) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Penn State's Jermaine Marshall (11) drives on Michigan's Mitch McGary (4) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Penn State's Jermaine Marshall, center, pulls down a rebound between teammate Ross Travis, left, and a Michigan defender during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

Michigan's Tim Hardaway (10) looks for a shot over Penn State's Brandon Taylor(10) and as Michigan's Jon Horford (15) watches during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in State College, Pa., Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2013. Penn State won 84-78. (AP Photo/Ralph Wilson)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) ? Jermaine Marshall was trapped, surrounded by giddy fans who rushed the court after witnessing Penn State's unlikely upset of No. 4 Michigan.

It was about the only time that anyone could contain the Nittany Lions' gritty guard down the stretch of the 84-78 win Wednesday night over the Wolverines.

Marshall scored 25 points and hit a key layup with 1:06 left to help Penn State roar back from a 15-point deficit to get its first Big Ten victory in more than a year.

"We have confidence in ourselves," Marshall said. "We believed we were close. It just feels good to earn that win. We definitely earned it."

Penn State (9-18, 1-14) had lost 18 straight regular-season Big Ten games dating to last season. The team's previous conference win came on Feb. 16, 2012, a 69-64 victory over Iowa.

It was Penn State's first win over a top-five team since defeating No. 5 North Carolina 82-74 in the second round of the 2001 NCAA tournament, and the highest-ranked opponent that the Nittany Lions have beaten since moving to the Jordan Center in 1996.

To celebrate, exuberant fans exchanged hugs and high-fives with the Nittany Lions.

Even Michigan coach John Beilein was impressed.

"I think what you saw tonight is why we all love college basketball," he said.

But this loss might hurt Michigan as it jockeys for seeding in the NCAA tournament. Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 19 points for the Wolverines (23-5, 10-5). Trey Burke had 18 points and six assists, but also committed six turnovers.

Michigan was uncharacteristically sloppy with 15 turnovers in the game, six more than its season average.

Penn State pounced on the mistakes.

D.J. Newbill added 17 points for the Nittany Lions, who hit a season-high 10 3-pointers. Marshall scored 19 in the second half, including four 3s that whipped the hometown fans into a frenzy. But it was his twisting drive to the bucket late left that really hurt Michigan.

The ball teetered on the rim before dropping in, causing the Penn State partisans to let out a collective sigh of relief with their team up 81-78.

"It was a chip play that we run. ... Coach put the ball in my hand and he had trust in me," Marshall said. "Fortuantely that layup rode around the rim and went down."

That was not the kind of luck that the Nittany Lions have been used to, ever since leading scorer and point guard Tim Frazier went down with a left Achilles injury four games into the season.

They had to adjust on the fly, with combo guard Newbill sliding over to the point, and Marshall needing to assume more ball-handling duties. Penn State coach Patrick Chambers, a never-say-die cheerleader, convinced his team to keep fighting through the adversity.

"Tonight, it's a relief. All the hard work, practices and shootarounds paid off for us," Newbill said.

Michigan's Glenn Robinson III misfired on a 3 with 17 seconds left. Sasa Borovnjak (nine points) had a memorable Senior Night, hitting two foul shots with 15 seconds left to seal the win.

Ross Travis provided the muscle up front with 15 points and 12 boards as Penn State made the clutch plays down the stretch.

"They beat us fair and square, and the last 10 minutes they really outplayed us," Beilein said.

Just another hard night for the league's top teams in the rough-and-tumble Big Ten.

Top-ranked Indiana lost Tuesday at Minnesota to fall to 12-3 in conference play, so Michigan squandered a chance to move into a three-way tie for second with Michigan State and Wisconsin, a game behind the Hoosiers.

"They really tried to shut down Trey. We had some good shots, but not enough good ones," Beilein said. "They slowed us up with their press a little bit, but we couldn't stop them."

Two foul shots by Marshall gave Penn State its first lead since the first half, 76-74, with 3:55 left. The Jordan Center rocked as if it were a Michigan-Penn State football game across the street at Beaver Stadium.

It was all Penn State from there.

Chambers watched as Michigan fumbled away opportunities, like when Burke had a steal from Newbill but lost control.

"The ball finally bounced our way," Chambers said. "Trey Burke strips D.J. at half court and kicks it out of bounds ... that's usually what we do."

All five of Michigan's losses have come on the road in the Big Ten ? none worse than Wednesday night's defeat. Michigan finished February with a 3-4 record, heading into a showdown Sunday with the ninth-ranked Spartans in Ann Arbor.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-28-BKC-T25-Michigan-Penn-St/id-f44bffcf0f4a417ebf917c9c52efa81a

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Colo. kids stranded at school overnight by snow

DENVER (AP) ? A snowstorm moving across the Midwest forced about 60 students to spend the night at their Colorado school when a state highway was closed due to dangerous conditions that left some drivers stranded in their cars, as winter weather continued to cause problems for a wide swath of the country.

Tens of thousands remained without power in Michigan, while adverse conditions continued to disrupt flights at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. In eastern Wisconsin, hundreds of vehicles were stranded or ended up in crashes as a winter storm made travel dangerous. And in Kansas, the latest snowstorm to hit the state was being blamed for six deaths.

According to the air traffic tracking website FlightAware.com, about 100 flights in and out of Chicago's airports have been canceled for Wednesday. Flights into O'Hare International Airport are being delayed an average of about an hour.

On the plains in the eastern half of Colorado, wind and snow created whiteout conditions Tuesday afternoon just as buses began taking students home from the Miami-Yoder school district school about 40 miles east of Colorado Springs. The buses turned back to the school and about 60 students, ranging from preschoolers to 12th graders, watched movies, played basketball, ate concession-stand pizza and talked to their parents before bedtime.

The older kids slept on wrestling and gym mats covered with coats, while the younger ones curled up on preschool napping mats, Principal Sharon Webb said.

The school is a large version of a one-room schoolhouse. The students all know each other, and many are related, which Webb said gave it the feel of a sleepover. She said parents were understanding.

"When you live out here in this wide-open country, you know they're where it's the safest," she said of the school.

Daylight showed how powerful the wind had been. Outside, there were drifts up to 4 feet high, but the grass was still visible on the football field.

The blowing snow also temporarily closed a 150-mile stretch of Interstate 70 from just outside Denver to the Kansas line, along with other smaller highways in eastern Colorado, including the one leading to the school. Deputies in surrounding El Paso County responded to about 40 calls for help from stranded drivers or reports of vehicles off the road that might still have people inside. No injuries were reported.

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback said Wednesday the latest winter storm to hit his state caused six deaths.

The governor said two people died in traffic crashes, two siblings died from carbon monoxide poisoning in Kansas City, Kan., a woman died in southwest Kansas while shoveling snow, and another Kansas City resident was killed while walking in the snow.

The storms that crossed Kansas last Thursday and again this week dropped more than 2 feet of snow in some places and knocked out power to thousands of customers, mostly in eastern counties.

In Michigan, utilities said Wednesday roughly 50,600 homes and businesses lost electrical service after a storm that hit the state starting Tuesday knocked down power lines and tree branches.

Detroit-based DTE Energy Co. said about 40,000 of its customers were without power in the morning, and that Washtenaw County was the hardest hit.

Consumers Energy reported about 10,600 of its customers were without power in Wednesday afternoon. The subsidiary of Jackson-based CMS Energy Corp. said those outages include about 2,624 customers in Jackson County and 2,086 in Calhoun County.

The utilities said crews would work around the clock to restore power.

The National Weather Service said 9 inches of snow were reported in Muskegon, Mich., as of Wednesday morning. Authorities said weather might be a factor in crashes that killed motorists in Sanilac and Monroe counties.

In Wisconsin, there were more than 340 stranded vehicles and crashes in Milwaukee, Kenosha, Ozaukee and Washington counties after heavy snowfall that started Tuesday and continued into Wednesday.

The storm dumped 14 inches in Sheboygan County, where sheriff's Lt. Mark Rupnik said they've had at least 100 calls for stranded vehicles, vehicles in ditches or accidents. He said the main highways were drivable as of Wednesday afternoon but expected the secondary roads to be a problem for the next day.

Several area school districts canceled classes Wednesday, and there were power outages in the Milwaukee area.

Elsewhere, authorities said no one was injured after a train collided with a car that was stuck in snow on railroad tracks in Woodward, Okla., where at least 15 inches of snow fell.

The car's driver tried to drive over the train tracks Wednesday morning but became trapped on the snow-covered road, Oklahoma City television station KWTV reported.

Authorities say the driver was able to exit the car safely but couldn't push the vehicle from the tracks before the train smashed into it. The car was totaled in the collision.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colo-kids-stranded-school-overnight-snow-162605660.html

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Searching for the Real Harlem Shake Up

Saturday night in Harlem?it?s only 10 p.m., yet few people walk along 125th Street, the neighborhood?s main thoroughfare. Sure it?s the middle of winter, but the lack of nightlife is stunning considering this is Manhattan. There aren?t many entertainment options, and the few bars and restaurants that are open have repressive rules. At Harlem BBQ, an Indian-owned sports bar, you have to be 25 to drink, there?s a minimum purchase required, and patrons cannot stay longer than two hours.

During the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, more than 100 entertainment options, from speakeasies to jazz clubs to staged theater, vied for business along this stretch. Those days are long gone. With rare exceptions, Harlem is now closer to a mini-police state than to a cultural center.

On the streets, groups of men wearing bubble vests and crooked hats stalk corners. NYPD cruiser lights flash in front of housing projects. Almost every young male wears something red, the color of the Bloods street gang. Cars blast Hot 97, the biggest FM station in the city, credited with having invented rap. It?s fitting that the most popular song on the radio right now is Harlem native A$AP Rocky?s ?F**kin? Problems.?

Even though it has long represented the cultural capital of Black America, Harlem still has a lot of problems. It is both the most violent and incarcerated place in New York. East and Central Harlem have the most murders per capita in the city at around 20 per 100,000, war zone numbers . Harlem also has the most ?million dollar blocks??streets where the incarceration rate is so high it costs the public over a million a year to imprison the block?s residents. This culture of murder, drug dealing and prison equals a loss of adult males in the community, and Harlem has a male role model problem.

The Obama-era was supposed to be one of hope and change, with President Barack Obama as the ultimate national male role model for blacks. Yet, to hear the grumbling on the streets of Harlem, black people?s lives have failed to improve under his administration. On Valentine?s Day, a few days after the Obama?s latest State of the Union Address, the Harlem take on Obama had hardened from what it was four years ago. Back in 2008, on the eve of the election, the impending reality of a black president was just sinking in?and Harlem was delirious.

?It?s great that Obama is finally talking about the ghetto, but the kids here have two goals: Make money hustling or get big in the rap game or as an athlete. These are unrealistic goals. But sadly, that?s the only path people can see from within the broken families and horrible schools.?

But Obama?s first-term domestic policy was focused on the economy and health care, and advances in neither of those realms have reached 125th Street in any way that is being remarked upon.

Issues that are central to Harlem?s problems?housing, gun violence, prison-industrial complex?went ignored.

After the mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, things are different, as far as the national debate on gun control goes. Obama visited the gang-infested South Side of Chicago and finally spoke to Harlem and the rest of black America?s problems.

?These guys are no different than me,? the president said, meaning they were growing up black without a male role model.

But male role models are not seen as the primary issue Uptown. Blame for the endless grind of poverty falls on the city, state and federal government.

?It?s like an Egypt before the revolution, with police on every corner, a police state,? says one veteran crime reporter. ?But it?s much more violent than Egypt was?there are more guns.?

The police routinely arrest people for debatable probable cause via the controversial stop-and-frisk policy, with 17,000 stops in one East Harlem precinct last year alone, the most of any part of New York. The justice system punishes minorities at a higher and harsher rate than whites. The housing policy stuffs the poor into public projects, clusters of redbrick towers that pop up every few blocks. And then there?s education. Harlem?s schools are some of the worst in Manhattan.

Harlem people are frustrated with every authority figure, from beat cops all the way up to the White House.

?I mean, it?s great that Obama is finally talking about the ghetto,? says Sean Howard as he exits the subway on 125th in a leather jacket and new Nikes. The 29-year-old Harlem resident is headed home from work. ?But the kids here have two goals: Make money hustling or get big in the rap game or as an athlete. These are unrealistic goals. But sadly, that?s the only path people can see from within the broken families and horrible schools.?

As I spoke with Howard, two NYPD officers approached and grabbed my camera. They made me show them the photos I?d been taking of the 456 train stop, then told me I could be arrested.

?That?s not true,? I protested. ?This is a public street.?

?Put the camera away,? one of the cops said.

?Just chill man,? Sean said?to me, not to the cops.

I lowered the camera, and the cops gave a hard stare and backed off. Sean Howard walked in the other direction and would not talk further. I was angry that the police didn?t allow picture taking on 125th Street, but knew that Sean was right. Getting arrested in New York is not usually worth being right.

Harlem projects: The lights are on because everybody is staying home. (Photo: Ray LeMoine)

To give an idea of what success looks like in Harlem, on a recent Sunday I met Dipset rapper Juelz Santana in the VIP section of a Queens strip club. Juelz started rapping at age 12 and was discovered a few years later at the Apollo Theater during an open mic night. By 18, he had signed with fellow Harlem rapper Cam?ron and formed the Diplomats. Not unusual among rappers, Juelz has been arrested for gun and drug charges. One indictment accused Juelz of being the ringleader of a Bloods faction running a drug and gun market from his studio, though he denies any charges of gangster-ism and hasn?t been convicted.

In the VIP area there were maybe five tables, each held down by a rapper entourage. Juelz was with 20 or so members of his Dipset sub-crew the Skull Gang. Every single person there was smoking a blunt, and the whole room was cloudy. It was oddly peaceful and relaxed?was it the weed? More likely it was the fact that this was a party full of rappers, producers, DJs, managers and other people who carry thousands in cash and drive white BMWs.

?Man this is just the way we hang out,? said Skitzo, a young producer from the Bronx who has worked with Dipset since his teens. ?Dipset got a bad rap, but there?s never any problems with us at the club. This is every kid?s dream man; so we live it up because we?re so damn lucky.?

A few nights later, I saw Juelz Santana again. His convoy had just pulled up to a Soho nightclub. It was 12:30 a.m., and Santana stood on the sidewalk, smiling in a camo t-shirt and sparkling chain with a few crew members watching him.

Once inside, he performed for 20 minutes. Then it was off to another club to make more money, hang out drinking ?the bubbles? and hold court. MC does mean master of ceremonies, and many rappers supplement their recording careers hosting events.

With all the talk of pockets full of cash, awesome cars, guns, gold chains, nice clothes and women, the contrast with Harlem?s reality, where the poverty rate is over 35 percent, is stark. The high unemployment rate among black and Hispanic males is one factor swelling the entourages so many rappers travel with. Some kids make money for beats they produce, or are aspiring rappers under Juelz, or sell weed, or offer security. Every one of them tries to hustle some aspect of a rap game, but some mix it with the hustle game.

The system with Dipset is very tight; they run it like a military school. Yet this generation appears to have given up on politics or activism.

?Why wouldn?t I hang out with friends at the club?? one of Juelz?s associates told me. ?It?s better than standing on the corner and getting arrested for standing on that corner. White people will never care about us. We have a black president, and still nothing changes.?

I thought of how I?d been threatened with arrest for taking pictures on a Harlem corner. If I were black, I would have probably spent 36 hours in Central Booking.

For Harlem?s Rapper Jet Set, the goal is simple: A house across the George Washington Bridge in New Jersey, the regular old American dream, a lawn and white picket fence in the ?burbs.

This option should be within the grasp of a far wider group of Harlemites than its millionaire rappers.

Harlem?s problems are similar to the rest of black America?s.

Obama has yet to take the lead and help black people find a way to offer more opportunity to young black men. Providing a strong education, reforming prison sentencing and addressing gun violence are a start. But it is time to address root causes and conditions: This country needs to wage a new war on poverty, and it should start at the federal level.

Does the federal government have a responsibility to lead a new war on poverty? Stake out your position in COMMENTS.

These are solely the author's opinions and do not represent those of TakePart, LLC or its affiliates.

Related Stories on TakePart:

? $wagg: Life as a Rap Artist During a Plague of Gun Violence

? Hurricane Sandy: One Man?s Journey to the Eye of the Aftermath

? The Patron Saint of Tompkins Square Park


Ray LeMoine was born in Boston and lives in New York. He?s done humanitarian work in Iraq and Pakistan and has written for various media outlets, including the New York Times, New York Magazine and the Awl.

.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/searching-real-harlem-shakeup-165052262.html

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Phillip Leishman Not in Pain as Cancer Stole Spark... | Stuff.co.nz

PHILLIP LEISHMAN

JOHN SELKIRK

PHILLIP LEISHMAN: Was a regular on New Zealand screens since making his first television appearance on Dunedin regional station DNTV2.

TV star Phillip Leishman was ''never really in pain'' as the cancer he was battling stole away his ''spark and strength'', his brother says.

The 61-year-old star of Wheel of Fortune and The Golf Show died on Monday night from a brain tumour. He will be farewelled in a Catholic ceremony in central Auckland on Friday. His funeral will be at St Patrick's Cathedral at 1.30pm.

His brother and fellow broadcaster, Mark Leishman, said Phillip was proud of his 40-year career.

"From 1971 until 2012 he was on TV. He was a great performer, he loved people and people loved him."

It was a year ago on Sunday when Phillip was diagnosed with a brain tumour. It was operated on but returned in October last year.

"He had a very nice summer, he felt healthy and was never really in pain.

"Towards the end of summer he started to lose his spark and strength."

Phillip was surrounded by his three children Harry, India and Lily, wife Michelle, and his siblings when he died at home.

"He was a wonderful family man, he was great with children," Mark said. "He was very loyal and generous, a fun character to be around."

Leishman's colleagues and friends were quick to acknowledge a "great man" who would go out of his way to help a person in need.

Phillip's former business partner Philip Smith, who he worked with on Sky TV's The Golf Show, said his friend's life was cut unfairly short.

"It's difficult to accept that someone so generous and loving who gave to so many people is gone. It's an injustice, a tragedy."

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/auckland/local-news/8357434/Leishman-not-in-pain-as-cancer-stole-spark

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You'll Be Able to Sign In With Google+ Soon, Too

You can sign into sites and apps with Facebook and Twitter, and soon you can do the same with your Google+ account. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/i29xPA2BaUw/youll-be-able-to-sign-in-with-google%252B-soon-too

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Is Britney's "Breakover" a Step in the Right Direction?

Britney Spears has been having a rocky couple of months, but you wouldn't know it to look at her. The "Scream and Shout" singer showed up fashionably late to Elton John's Oscar-viewing party on Sunday, sporting a new brunette 'do, a sophisticated plunging-neckline dress, and natural-looking makeup.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/britneys-breakover-good-sign/1-a-523890?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Abritneys-breakover-good-sign-523890

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Review: 'Lucid Nightmares' aims to keep viewers up at night | The ...




Under a full moon, it could have been Halloween Feb. 25 at the Harold Acting Studio. Cotton cobwebs, a fake skull and a buzzing black and white television decorated the front steps. A hunched Frankenstein-like greeter grasping a three-tier candleholder led each individual or group in and directed them to a seat. This simple introduction confirmed the horror to come later in the play: ?Lucid Nightmares? was not going to be an ordinary scare.

Four female seniors in the current Theatre Studies class ? Sarah Beese, Elizabeth Floyd, Jayme Mantos and Ashley Meeks ? wrote the play for class. It is the first fully developed play the group has ever produced.

The women found inspiration in Edgar Allan Poe?s work as they started writing the play. This deceased writer feasted on gothic horror and wrote some of the most disturbing pieces in American literature.

Monday night was a full house. Audience members walked quickly inside the theater to find a seat in the middle ? a seat on the end of a row would surely mean interacting with the horrors up close and personal. The room was foggy with dim lighting until the start of the play, when it went almost completely black.

Beese, clothed in black and holding a small candle, entered the stage first. Before exiting the stage, she warned the audience to guard their souls.

?Lucid Nightmares? was split into three parts, each performance challenging the insanity of its characters. The title of the play itself questioned the reality of each scene. While some sections appeared realistic, others seemed more dreamlike.

The playwrights seemed to know when the audience would feel calm because as soon as the tension started to die down, something would happen ? a suffocation, a confession or a fantastical change ? and viewers would be gripping their seats again.

The women also knew how to include precise and intriguing details to disturb the audience, such as an old woman?s obsession with a dead youth?s teeth. The playwrights were also aware of how to successfully portray two different scenes at the same time and have their viewers understand what had happened.

The second section of the play started after a somewhat unorganized and lengthy blackout, and the Harold Studio presented other difficulties for the cast and crew. The platforms the performers walked across were exceptionally squeaky, which was sometimes favorable since the effect created additional anxiety. But when it became difficult to hear the performers speak, it was easy to lose track of what was happening.

Aside from minor technical flaws like microphone static and fog machines? sputters, ?Lucid Nightmares? was a remarkably well-done play in an industry where horror is rarely experimented with or attempted at all.


Edgar Allen Poe, Elon, Harold Acting Studio, Lucid Nightmares, Theater

About Stephanie Butzer

Stephanie Butzer is a print journalism major, with two minors in creative writing and art with an emphasis in photography. She loves environmental and entertainment journalism. In her free time, if any, Stephanie likes distance running, outdoor exploration and relaxing with friends. View all posts by Stephanie Butzer ?

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Source: http://www.elonpendulum.com/2013/02/review-lucid-nightmares-aims-to-keep-viewers-up-at-night/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

McCarthy's 'Identity Thief' tops box office again

NEW YORK (AP) ? Hollywood's latest films performed tepidly at the box-office on Oscar weekend, with Melissa McCarthy's "Identity Thief" returning to the top spot in its third week of release.

The Universal comedy earned $14.1 million on the weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday, enough to regain the box-office title after losing it last week to 20th Century Fox's "A Good Day to Die Hard." The Bruce Willis action sequel faded domestically, but not overseas, where it took in $35.7 million.

With a cumulative total of $93.7 million, "Identity Thief" is the biggest hit so far in 2013. Though the film has been badly reviewed by critics, the road trip duo of McCarthy and Jason Bateman has proved popular at the multiplexes, where no other comedy has been around to challenge it.

More than anything, "Identity Thief" has proven the stardom of McCarthy, following her breakout performance in "Bridesmaids."

"The holding power of a film always gives you an idea of the strength of its concept or its star," said Nikki Rocco, Universal head of distribution. "In this case, it's both."

With the industry gathering for the Oscars on Sunday, it's always a weekend where moviegoers' attention goes more to the Academy Awards than the movie theater. For the fifth week in a row, the box office was down as compared to last year's business

One of the two new films in wide release, Lionsgate's Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson action film, "Snitch," opened with $13 million. That was a decent but not strong showing for "Snitch" in a year where action films have largely fared poorly.

Though "A God Day to Die Hard," the fourth film in the franchise, led the box office last week, it slid 60 percent in its second week to $10 million. But it continued to dominate internationally, bringing it to a three-week worldwide total to $184.8 million. (It opened a week earlier in some countries.)

Earlier action films from Arnold Schwarzenegger ("The Last Stand"), Jason Statham ("Parker") and Sylvester Stallone ("Bullet to the Head") performed far worse.

The other new wide release was the Weinstein Co.'s "Dark Skies," a PG-13 horror film starring Keri Russell. It debuted with $8.9 million.

The down weekend was unlikely to dampen the Oscar celebration. The nine best picture nominees have largely fared well at the box office. This weekend, eight of them are in the top 21 films.

For the first time since the category's number of nominees was extended in 2009, six of the nominees grossed more than $100 million domestically: "Argo," ''Lincoln," ''Les Miserables," ''Silver Linings Playbook," ''Django Unchained" and "Life of Pi." ''Zero Dark Thirty" missed narrowly with $91.6 million going into the Oscars.

"It's one of the best performing groups of nominees I've ever seen," said Paul Dergarabedian, an analyst for box-office tracker Hollywood.com. "Great night for Hollywood, tough day at the box office."

A box-office bump could follow for Sunday's big winners, though any benefit might be better found overseas, where some of the films are still expanding. The best picture favorite, Ben Affleck's Iran rescue thriller "Argo," is already out on DVD in North America.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Identity Thief," $14 million, ($170,000 international).

2. "Snitch," $13 million.

3. "Escape From Planet Earth," $11 million.

4. "Safe Haven," $10.6 million, ($1.4 million international).

5. "A Good Day to Die Hard," $10 million, ($35.7 million international).

6. "Dark Skies," $8.9 million.

7. "Silver Linings Playbook," $6.1 million, ($5 million international).

8. "Warm Bodies," $4.8 million, ($2.5 million international).

9. "Side Effects," $3.6 million.

10. "Beautiful Creatures," $3.4 million, ($4 million international).

___

Estimated weekend ticket sales at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada) for films distributed overseas by Hollywood studios, according to Rentrak:

1. "A Good Day to Die Hard," $35.7 million.

2. "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," $18.6 million.

3. "Les Miserables," $9.3 million.

4. "Django Unchained," $8.5 million.

5. "Wreck-It Ralph," $8 million.

6. "New World," $7 million.

7. "Miracles in Cell No. 7," $6.2 million.

8. "Mama," $5.5 million.

9. "Flight," $5.1 million.

10. "Lincoln," $5 million.

(tie) "Silver Linings Playbook," $5 million.

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com

http://www.rentrak.com

___

Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mccarthys-identity-thief-tops-box-office-again-174922022--finance.html

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Video: Jindal, Patrick debate implementing health care reform

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3032608/vp/50927885#50927885

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HP Slate 7 Android tablet rocks Beats, $169 price tag; due out in April

Image

Mobile World Congress isn't just about the phones. Sometimes a company's got a little tablet love to give as well. HP's out in Barcelona talking up the new Slate 7, a Jelly Bean-sporting tablet with a 1.6GHz dual-core ARM processor inside. The tablet's got a (you guessed it) seven-inch display, plus front and rear facing cameras and, as the red backing not-so-subtly suggests, built-in Beats Audio. The device's biggest selling point, however, has to be that $169 starting price. The Slate 7's due out in April. In the meantime, have a read of the press release after the break.

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Source: HP

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/24/hp-slate-7-android-tablet-rocks-beats-169-price-tag-due-out-i/

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HBT: Loria publishes open letter to Marlins fans

Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria took out a full-page ad in the Sunday editions of the?Miami Herald, Palm Beach Post and South Florida Sun-Sentinel?and published a ?Letter To Our Fans.? Here it is in all its glory:

LETTER TO OUR FANS

It?s no secret that last season was not our best ? actually it was one of our worst. In large part, our performance on the field stunk and something needed to be done. As a result of some bold moves, many grabbed hold of our tough yet necessary decision only to unleash a vicious cycle of negativity. As the owner of the ballclub, the buck stops with me and I take my share of the blame where it?s due. However, many of the things being said about us are simply not true. I?ve sat by quietly and allowed this to continue. Now it?s time for me to resond to our most important constituents, the fans who love the game of baseball.

THE ROSTER

Losing is unacceptable to me. It?s incumbant upon us to take swift action and make bold moves when there are glaring problems. The controversial trade we made with the Toronto Blue Jays was approved by Commissioner Bud Selig and has been almost universally celebrated by baseball experts outside of Miami for its value. We hope, with an open mind, our community can reflect on the fact that we had one of the worst records in baseball. Acquiring high-profile players just didn?t work, and nearly everyone on our team underperformed as compared to their career numbers. Our plan for the year ahead is to leverage our young talent and create a homegrown roster of long-term players who can win. In fact, objective experts have credited us with going from the 28th ranked Minor League system in baseball to the 5th best during this period. Of the Top 100 Minor Leagues rated by MLB Network, we have six ? tied for the most of any team in the league. We?ll evaluate this roster and possibly bring in additional talent based on our assessment of what we need. The very same naysayers who are currently skeptical once attacked us for bringing Pudge Rodriguez to the Marlins in 2003. More than any other, that move contributed to our World Series Championship.

THE BALLPARK

The ballpark issue has been repeatedly reported incorrectly and there are some very negative accustations being thrown around. It ain?t true, folks. Those who have attacked us are entitled to their own opinions, but not their own facts. The majority of public funding came from hotel taxes, the burden of which is incurred by tourists who are visiting our city, NOT the resident taxpayers. The Marlins organization also agreed to contribute $161.2 million toward the ballpark, plus the cost of the garage complex. In addition, the Marlins receive no operating subsidy from local government funding. The ballpark required that all debt service is paid by existing revenue. Furthermore, many are attacking the County?s method of financing for its contribution, but the Marlins had nothing at all to do with that. The fact is, with your help, we built Marlins Park, a crown jewel in our beautiful Miami skyline, which has won over twenty design and architecture awards and will help make us a premiere ballclub moving forward.

OUR FINANCES

The simple fact is that we don?t have unlimited funds, nor does any baseball team or business. Fans didn?t turn out last season as much as we?d like, even with the high-profile players the columnists decry us having traded. The main ingredient to a successful ball club is putting together a winning team, including a ncecessary core of young talent. Are we fiscally capable and responsible enough to fill the roster with talented players, invest in the daily demands of running a world-class organization and bring a World Series back to Miami? Absolutely! Is it sound business sense to witness an expensive roster with a terrible record and sit idly by doing nothing? No. I can and will invest in building a winner, but last season wasn?t sustainable and we needed to start from scratch quickly to build this team from the ground up.

COMMUNICATION

An organization is only as good as its connection with the community. We know we can do a better job communicating with our fans. That starts now. From this point forward we can ensure fans and the entire community that we will keep you abreast of our plan, rationale and motivations.

Amidst the current news coverage, it an be easy to forget how far we went together not so long ago. In 2003, I helped bring a second World Series Title to South Florida. We know how to build a winning team, and have every intention of doing so again. I know you share my passion for great Marlins baseball, my love of MIami and my desire to win again. We?re in this together and I humbly ask that we start fresh, watch us mature qjuickly as a ball club, and root for the home team in 2013.

Sincerely,

Jeffrey Loria

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/24/jeffrey-loria-posts-letter-to-our-fans-in-miami-newspapers/related/

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Michelle Obama Busts a Move in 'Evolution of Mom Dancing'

Wiz Khalifa and fianc?e Amber Rose welcomed baby boy Sebastian "The Bash" Taylor Thomaz on Thursday, and now, Amber has shared a photo of the couple's little bundle of joy.Early Friday morning, the model mom Tweeted, "Best daddy ever.... Up with the baby so Muva can go back to sleep :-)," along with a photo of her rapper beau holding a swaddled Sebastian.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-lady-busts-move-evolution-mom-dancing-180330181--abc-news-politics.html

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African leaders sign deal to end eastern Congo conflict

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - A U.N .-mediated peace deal aimed at ending two decades of conflict in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo was signed on Sunday by leaders of Africa's Great Lakes region in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa.

African leaders failed to sign the deal last month after a disagreement over who would command a new regional force that will be deployed in eastern Congo and take on armed groups operating in the region.

The Democratic Republic of Congo's army is fighting the M23 rebels, who have hived off a fiefdom in eastern Congo's North Kivu province in a conflict has dragged Congo's eastern region back into war and displaced an estimated half a million people.

U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and leaders from Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Democratic Republic of Congo, Congo Republic and South Sudan were present at the signing of the Peace, Security and Cooperation Framework for the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Great Lakes.

Rwanda and Uganda had been accused by U.N. experts of supporting the rebels, an accusation they denied.

"It is my hope that the framework will lead to an era of peace and stability for the peoples of the Democratic Republic of Congo and the region," Ban said.

Congo's government and the rebels are holding talks in Uganda aimed reaching an agreement on a range of economic, political and security issues dividing the two sides, including amnesty for "war and insurgency acts", the release of political prisoners and reparation of damages due to the war.

"We ... commit ourselves to respect our obligations of this agreement we signed today, and we wish that all the signatories do the same," Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila said.

The rebels, who launched their offensive after accusing Kabila of reneging on the terms of a March 2009 peace agreement, have broadened their goals to include the removal of Kabila and "liberation" of the entire Congo.

(Reporting by Aaron Maasho; Editing by George Obulutsa)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/african-leaders-sign-u-n-mediated-congo-peace-090726630.html

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Friday, February 22, 2013

E. African nation Djibouti holds parliament polls

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Voters in the tiny East African nation of Djibouti are casting ballots in the nation's parliamentary elections.

Friday's vote is notable because opposition political parties can win seats for the first time.

Djibouti ? a nation of less than 1 million people ? hosts the only permanent U.S. military base in Africa, Camp Lemonnier. The base hosts conventional forces but also special forces and aerial drones believed to be flown over Yemen and Somalia.

President Ismail Omar Guelleh won a third term in 2011 in a vote colored by an opposition boycott and a clampdown on dissent. Guelleh's critics lament changes he made to the constitution in 2010 that scrubbed a two-term limit from the nation's bylaws.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/e-african-nation-djibouti-holds-parliament-polls-124655083.html

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Texas bill would charge police with crime for enforcing federal gun laws

  • A sign for those with concealed handgun licensees (CHL) is seen as people pass through one of four new metal detectors at the Texas Capitol in Austin on June 3, 2010. A shooting incident in January outside the Capitol prompted lawmakers to order metal detectors at public entrances and the creation of a separate lane for CHL holders to get through them. Capitol insiders are now signing up in droves for the course that will get them a license, now known as the "express pass." (AP Photo/American Statesman, Ricardo B. Brazziell)

    Enlarge Photo

    A sign for those with concealed handgun licensees (CHL) is seen as ... more?>

A bill winding through the Texas Legislature would charge local police officers who dare to enforce any new federal gun laws with a Class A misdemeanor.

Rep. Steve Toth, a newly elected Republican, brought forth his Firearm Protection Act to keep police from confiscating assault rifles and ammunition magazines that soon may be outlawed by new federal laws, according to an article from the Associated Press. The bill ? touted by Mr. Toth and several legislative colleagues at a press conference earlier this week ? moved into the House Committee of Federalism on Tuesday, AP reported.


SPECIAL COVERAGE: Second Amendment and Gun Control


A Class A misdemeanor in Texas carries a fine up to $4,000, imprisonment for up to one year, or both, according to the state?s penal code, posted online.

Mr. Toth?s bill would also give the state attorney general the ability to sue anyone caught trying to enforce new federal gun regulations, according to AP.

Mr. Toth said he expected a legal challenge to his bill, should it pass.

?It may end up in the Supreme Court,? he said, according to AP.

? Copyright 2013 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/feb/21/texas-bill-would-charge-police-crime-enforcing-fed/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS

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Pope clears decks with appointments, tweaks

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI is clearing the decks of his pontificate, making last-minute appointments and tweaking the rules of the conclave and religious rites used to launch the next papacy once he has resigned.

The Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano said in its late Friday editions that Benedict had signed a decree earlier in the week making changes to the papal installation Mass, separating out the actual rite of installation from the liturgy itself.

He is also studying the text of a separate document governing the rules of the conclave, though it's not known if it will address the thorny issue of whether the election can begin earlier than March 15, by some interpretations the earliest day stipulated under the current rules.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-clears-decks-appointments-tweaks-174227293.html

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

NBA World Reacts To Lakers Owner's Death

The death of Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss on Monday reverberated throughout the NBA and tributes and condolences came pouring in.

"We not only have lost our cherished father, but a beloved man of our community and a person respected by the world basketball community,? a statement released on behalf of the Buss family said, per the Lakers' official website.

Buss purchased the Los Angeles Lakers from Jack Kent Cooke for $16 million in 1979. He also bought the NHL's Los Angeles Kings, the Forum sports arena in L.A. and Cooke?s California ranch in the same transaction -- for a grand total of $67.5 million, per Steve Springer of Yahoo! Sports. Since he assumed control, the Lakers have won 10 NBA championships while transforming into the city's most beloved franchise.

Late last week after reports came out that Buss had been hospitalized with an undisclosed form of cancer, five-time NBA champion Kobe Bryant reflected on his relationship with him.

"He's meant everything to me in my career in terms of taking a risk on a 17-year-old kid coming out of high school and then believing in me my entire career. And then for the game itself, the brand of basketball that he implemented in Showtime carried the league," Bryant said during All-Star Weekend, via the Los Angeles Times.

Here's how several in the NBA world -- both current and former players and some who had played for Buss -- reacted to the sad news.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/18/jerry-buss-dies-nba-world-lakers-owner-death_n_2712300.html?utm_hp_ref=sports

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Letters: Video Game Vigilance (1 Letter)

[unable to retrieve full-text content]A letter to the Editor.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/19/science/video-game-vigilance-1-letter.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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USDA/Mexican consulates to immigrants: Don't worry, food stamps ...

The United States Department of Agriculture has been working to dispel immigrants? concerns that getting on Food Stamps will harm their chances of becoming U.S. citizens.

The USDA addresses those fears in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamp, brochures it distributes?to Mexican consulates as part of its ?partnership? with the Mexican government ?to help educate eligible Mexican nationals living in the United States about available nutrition assistance.?

In one portion of the brochure, USDA?s text asks, ?If I get on SNAP benefits, will I be a ?public charge??? The brochure then answers: ?No. You and your family can apply for and receive SNAP benefits without hurting your chance of becoming U.S. citizens.?

The brochure further advises immigrants that members of their family?could qualify for food stamps, even if they don?t.

?If you are not eligible due to your immigration status, your legal immigrant or citizen children may still qualify,? the brochure reads.??You do not have to provide immigration information about yourself ?when you apply for your legal immigrant or citizen children.?

Legal immigrants may obtain SNAP benefits after a five-year wait. Children under 18, refugees, asylees, and some disabled and elderly?do not have to wait, as the pamphlet notes.

The brochure, obtained by The Daily Caller, was part of a packet the USDA offered in response to a July inquiry about the USDA/Mexico partnership from Alabama Republican Sen. Jeff Sessions, the ranking member on the Senate Budget Committee. The packet contained materials the agency gives Mexican consulates to distribute to Mexican-Americans, Mexican nationals and migrant communities in America.

The USDA/Mexico partnership started in 2004 under the Bush administration. Since that time, USDA personnel have met more than 150 times with the Mexican government to promote American nutrition-assistance programs. (RELATED: Learn more about the USDA?s partnership with Mexico)

?

?The Mexico-U.S. Partnership for Nutrition Assistance Initiative is just one of a wide range of USDA partnership activities intended to promote awareness of nutrition assistance among those who need benefits and meet all program requirements under current law.? Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack wrote in a response letter to Sessions? inquiries last fall.

An analysis of March 2011 Census Bureau?s Current Population Survey data by Steven Camarota, director of research for the Center for Immigration Studies, revealed that heads of households born in Mexico are the most likely nationality to be on some form of food assistance, with 45.3 percent reporting use of food assistance.

By comparison, 13.9 percent of native-born Americans reported using food assistance, and in general 24.1 percent of all immigrant household heads?report some food assistance use.

Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/02/18/usdamexican-consulates-to-immigrants-dont-worry-food-stamps-wont-affect-citizenship-chances/

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