Sunday, 31 March 2013

Central African Republic leader takes five ministries in caretaker government

Attention, unemployed copyeditors: Macy's may soon have a job opening for you. The department store giant mailed a catalog to customers earlier this month which mistakenly offered a $1,500 sterling silver and 14-karat gold necklace for just $47. The heading: "SUPER BUY." The actual sale price was supposed to be $479, but Macy's printed the [...]

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/central-african-republic-leader-takes-five-ministries-caretaker-191216514.html

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NYC to resume search for remains from September 11 attacks

NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York City plans to start sifting through earth and debris recovered from the World Trade Center site on Monday to look for the remains of victims from the attacks of September 11, 2001, officials said on Friday.

The city's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner on Friday advised families of the dead about the new sifting operation, the first since 2010, a spokeswoman said in a statement.

The Medical Examiner's office has identified remains of 1,634 people out of 2,752 killed when suicide hijackers crashed into the twin towers, leaving more than 1,000 families without any physical remains of those who died.

After the initial cleanup of the site, the city scaled back operations to search for remains, drawing criticism from families of the dead, who said they could not properly grieve. The city widened its search again in 2006.

The next search will comb through 590 cubic yards (451 cubic meters) of excavated material taken from and near the World Trade Center site, said Caswell Halloway, deputy mayor for operations, in a memo to Mayor Michael Bloomberg made public by the Medical Examiner's office.

Much of the site known as Ground Zero is a construction zone for new skyscrapers and a memorial where the twin towers once stood.

The building under construction known as One World Trade Center has surpassed the Empire State Building as the tallest in New York and, when completed, would be the tallest in the Western Hemisphere at 1,776 feet.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta, Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/york-resume-search-remains-september-11-attacks-191149082.html

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Rapper Lil Wayne says he's an epileptic

NEW YORK (AP) ? Lil Wayne says he's an epileptic and has had seizures for years.

In an interview with Los Angeles-based radio station Power 106 on Thursday, the 30-year-old rapper said epilepsy caused his most recent health scare earlier this month when he was rushed to a hospital. Wayne said he had three back-to-back seizures.

The Grammy winner says: "I've had a bunch of seizures, y'all just never hear about them."

Wayne says he "could've died" and that the recent seizures were a result of "just plain stress, no rest, overworking myself."

He released his 10th album, "I Am Not a Human Being II," this week. He'll embark on a 40-city tour in July with rappers T.I. and Future.

The New Orleans native, whose given name is Dwayne Michael Carter Jr., is one of the biggest stars not only of his genre but in all music.

___

Online:

http://www.youngmoney.com/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rapper-lil-wayne-says-hes-epileptic-141915760.html

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Saturday, 30 March 2013

Why impact investing goes beyond venture capital | GreenBiz.com

I used to think that being an impact investor pretty much meant taking the skills and processes of venture capital and applying them for "good." Deal sourcing, due diligence, valuation -- all the basic steps seemed the same.

When I joined the University of Michigan's student-run impact investing fund Social Venture Fund, I expected to learn about investing while thinking about issues I care about. I think other people feel the same way. However, recent news coverage, like this Harvard Business Review article with tips on pitching to an impact investor, reflects a growing discussion about the differences between impact investing and traditional venture capital.

As a current MBA candidate, I've been thinking lately not about the "what," but the "how" -- the skills that will set an impact investor apart. Two years on the Social Venture Fund, including a year serving as its co-director, have taught me that impact investing does not require you to just do what a venture capitalist does; it requires you to do what a venture capitalist does, but better.? ?

A better salesman

All VCs have to go out on the road to raise money from investors. They sell their expertise, connections, industry knowledge, past success. Impact investors add on the challenge of selling the social value proposition, the fact that social results will really be achieved and the promise that financial and social returns can actually go hand in hand. Like most new impact funds, the three-year-old Social Venture Fund has exciting investments, including food company Jack and Jakes and education technology company LearnZillion, but it doesn't have an exit to its name. Impact investors must sell the business, plus more, all without the luxury of past results to point to.

Content with uncertainty

If a VC has to be comfortable taking risks by betting on yet unproven companies, an impact investor has to be even more so. On top of betting on often-unproven products and markets, impact investors operate in a fast-evolving and ambiguous field that has a broad range of goals. Everyone agrees on how to measure dollar-based ROI. Despite efforts on common metrics by the Global Impact Investing Network, the field is a long way from consensus on what "impact" is, let alone how to measure it.

Next page: A closer relationship with portfolio companies

Source: http://www.greenbiz.com/blog/2013/03/29/why-impact-investing-beyond-venture-capital

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Apple patents iPhone with wraparound display

(AP) ? Apple is seeking a patent for an iPhone that has a display that wraps around the edges of the device, expanding the viewable area and eliminating all physical buttons.

The patent application reveals that Apple has put some thought into a device that takes advantage of a new generation of displays, which don't have to be flat and rigid like today's liquid-crystal displays, or LCDs. At a trade show in January, chief competitor Samsung Electronics Co. showed off a prototype phone with a display that is bent around the edges, presenting "virtual buttons" for the user's touch.

Apple Inc.'s patent filing shows a phone similar to a flattened tube of glass, inside of which a display envelops the chips and circuit board. This allows "functionality to extend to more than one surface of the device," the filing said. The design also means there's no frame or bezel surrounding the display, meaning it can take up more of the device's surface area.

The company filed for the patent in September 2011, though the application became public only Thursday. Like others, Apple often files for patents on designs that never come to fruition. It also doesn't comment about future products until it's ready to launch.

The Patently Apple blog wrote about the filing earlier.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-29-Apple-Wraparound%20iPhone/id-b26e1c4838a14aa08dc09c8c5e27bea6

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Friday, 29 March 2013

Eyeballs found in KC gas station trash not human

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) ? Police say a pair of eyeballs found in a medical box in a Kansas City gas station's trash bin aren't human.

Police spokesman Steve Young said Thursday that the police lab examined the eyeballs and determined they likely came from a pig.

Young says a worker at a Conoco gas station in northern Kanas City called police after finding the cardboard box late Wednesday. The box was labeled, "Keep refrigerated."

Surveillance video shows two men in a blue Toyota leaving the package on the trash bin.

Young says police aren't investigating further because no crime appears to have been committed. Earlier, police had said that no eye banks or hospitals in the area were awaiting delivery of any eyeballs.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eyeballs-found-kc-gas-station-trash-not-human-193700873.html

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Thursday, 28 March 2013

Chief Justice is a victim of credit card fraud

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Chief Justice John Roberts, who spent the last two days presiding over high-profile oral arguments on gay marriage, has been a victim of credit card fraud, a Supreme Court spokeswoman said on Thursday.

Roberts' credit card problem was first reported by the Washington Post in a story that said the chief justice was heard talking about it in a suburban Maryland Starbucks on Tuesday morning. That was the day the court weighed the validity of Proposition 8, a California ban on gay marriage.

Roberts was again in the spotlight on Wednesday when the court weighed the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which restricts the definition of marriage to opposite-sex couples for the purposes of federal benefits.

Kathy Arberg, the court spokeswoman, said Roberts had no comment on the incident.

(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Howard Goller and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chief-justice-roberts-victim-credit-card-fraud-214804410.html

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The Duggars, Large Families, and Adoption ? My Life in God's Garden

I watched the Duggar?s visit to China tonight along with most of the Chinese adoption community.

I have also read many of the negative comments virally exploding on Facebook about such a large family considering growing their family even more by adoption.

I even read one very critical comment suggesting the Duggars should have thought about adopting fifteen children ago.

Really?

As a mom of quite a few biological children and two adopted teens from China, I have much to say on this topic.

There is a basic truth that we have somehow lost sight of in this country that was once so rooted and grounded on the principles of God.

God is all about life and creating, about growing and expanding.

He gives life.

He is not limited by our finite, tiny minds and narrow scopes of how many children we think we can handle.

As a mother of many who never did anything to avoid having children, I strongly disagree with the mindset that we must limit the number of biological children we have in order to care for orphans. God is bigger than all of that. He can bless families with huge numbers of biological children AND BRING THE ORPHANS HOME.

We do not need to limit God or to prevent life in one fashion to welcome it in another.

God has all the power in the world to bring the children home and bless us abundantly, if He so chooses, with many biological children.

Furthermore, it?s not the huge families who have learned to trust God for their family size that are perpetuating the orphan crisis. It is the mindset of the small family, the mindset that says no to God, that doesn?t have room for more in their lives that keeps the orphans from coming home.

And it is not God who is so busy creating new life that allows the orphans to suffer and remain alone.

It is His body, the church that has taken their eyes off the suffering Savior, and instead come to value comfort and ease and amusement, that fails to bring the orphans home.

Of course large families are adopting the children.

Large families have had to learn to go against society and even the church to grow their family beyond their own comprehension.

20130327-003756.jpg

Merely having a big family grows one?s faith immensely.

Large families have come to understand that resources don?t divide and diminish with each child. They grow and multiply.

Those who give to the poor will lack nothing, but those who close their eyes to them receive many curses. Proverbs 28:27

Large families know that God provides.

20130327-003419.jpg

Large families know that God grows their resources just as He grew the loaves and the fishes.

Large families have learned to step out of the rat race and busyness of life and to spend time at home working with and tending to their children.

Large families have already learned by necessity to structure and manage more in their lives.

Large families typically homeschool their children which can be the perfect environment for an older child who has grown up in an orphanage and is not developmentally ready for traditional schooling.

Large families view children as God sees children, as blessings from His very own hand.

20130327-003258.jpg

Parents of large families have already laid their desires and dreams at the feet of Jesus and know that their fulfillment will come in serving their Savior and welcoming His gifts into their lives.

Parents of large families know that there is no greater joy than following God?s will.

Parents of large families know they can parent another. They have done it over and over again.

20130327-003130.jpg

Parents of large families have parented many children with various personalities. They have years of life experience and wisdom.

Not only are the parents of large families overwhelmingly prepared and willing to welcome another, but the children are as well.

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Children from large families are blessed to understand that they are a part of something bigger than themselves. They learn to give and to share.

Children from large families know the world does not revolve around them.

20130327-002854.jpg

Children of large families value the friendships they have with their siblings.

Children from large families are happy, fulfilled and deeply loved.

A large family provides a fertile, welcoming, stimulating, loving community for an adopted child to immediately become a part of.

Large families welcome more children with an adeptness and skill that no brand new parent could rival.

Sometimes it is an established family that is prepared to care for the children with bigger challenges and needs.

Of course large families are adopting the children.

Of course large biological families are extremely well prepared to care for orphaned children.

May God use the Duggars to bless many orphans through their voice and may He use us to do the same.

And may God grow the faith of His people and bring the children home!

Blessings!

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Source: http://mylifeingodsgarden.com/2013/03/27/the-duggars-large-families-and-adoption/

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'The Wolverine' Unleashes Its Latest Trailer

Hugh Jackman is back in the first full preview of his 'X-Men' spin-off.
By Kevin P. Sullivan


Hugh Jackman in "The Wolverine"
Photo: 20th Century FOX

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1704409/the-wolverine-trailer.jhtml

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Internet Marketing Needed- List building | Internet Marketing

Tax Type Tax Rate Tax ID or Company no.

eg. VAT, GST ? Registration no.

Source: http://www.freelancer.com/projects/Internet-Marketing/Internet-Marketing-Needed-List-building.html

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Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Ad Industry Attacks Against Mozilla Reveal Poor Choice of ...

The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and Association of National Advertisers (ANA) have launched a coordinated campaign against Mozilla in retaliation for the browser developer's Firefox?patch?that block cookies from any site that a user has not visited by default?("third party cookies"). But rather than mounting a campaign that attacks Mozilla directly,?IAB/ANA strategy is focused on scaring users by threatening more?advertisements.?

The rhetoric flowing from IAB and ANA is reminiscent of the 2012 presidential campaign - or the blather we now expect to hear following any ?given session of either branch of the US Congress; in fact, the sound bites from Computerworld's quotes from ANA's Dan Jaffe?and IAB's Randall Rothenberg are all too familiar:

"This is damaging to consumer interest and will undermine the Internet" - ANA

"It will cost jobs, and it will destabilize the ad-supported internet economy" -??IAB

"thousands of small businesses that make up the diversity of content and services online will be forced to close their doors" - IAB

"All users, no matter the browser they?re using, will lose access to independent websites produced by small businesses"?-?IAB

"Without third-party cookies, they [users] will see an increase in the irrelevant spam advertising served to them" -?IAB

Let's look at what the fear facts don't reveal.?

Third party cookies do afford users what Rothenberg describes as "robust, personalized experiences" but hardly with the "uncompromised sense of trust" he assures is present. Advertisers do not share information about how they are tracked with users or what parties are obtaining their behavior data, so there is hardly a basis for a user to assert trust or feel uncompromised.

Rothenberg claims that users "enjoy" personalized experiences. Mozilla claims that "users frequently express concerns about web tracking". ?In Suicide by Cookies, it's "stealing user data that can be monetized directly to ad buyers, or even resold in bulk data transactions via various exchanges."?Curiously, Rothenberg quotes a gamer site operator who claims that "30-45% of our readers use an ad blocker". This statistic is surely sufficent to at least suggest that users do not unilaterally trust third parties.?

Mozilla's Firefox patch will require that the user "must directly interact with a site or company for a cookie to be installed on their machine".?IAB/ANA claim users will see more advertising "spam" as a consequence. IAB/ANA really don't mean "spam" but "advertisements that are not based on prior user web behavior". This seems to be an admission that, like the MPAA and RIAA, online advertisers are more willing to defend a legacy business model than innovate.

?

Jaffe claims that Mozilla's patch will damage consumer interests. I'll generously assume he means that Mozilla is infringing on a user's right to choose what ads are displayed, but generosity aside, please go read the post or look at the privacy tab, Dan. Mozilla is changing the default and not preventing the user from choosing to see ads for all eternity. Yours is another case where opt-in triumphs over opt-out, with the predictable cry of foul from those whose businesses are based on intrusive rather than invited opportunity.?

John Boehner would be hard pressed to produce more dire - or less credible -predictions than the IAB/ANA. Mozilla cookie policies - or browser cookie policies, generally - are hardly all that separates small businesses from bankruptcy. People do and will search?for small businesses online. And they will not cease to consider advertising.?

Thousands of people in the soon-to-be destabilized ad-supported Internet economy won't lose jobs unless online advertisers choose to follow the course MPAA/RIAA have set. But even a long-time defender of cookie-setting and tracking like George Simpson observes, ?"I appreciate the economics of this industry, and know that it is imperative to wring every last CPM out of every impression -- but after a while, folks not in our business simply don't care anymore, and will move to kill any kind of tracking that users don't explicitly opt in to."

Source: http://securityskeptic.typepad.com/the-security-skeptic/2013/03/ad-industry-attacks-against-mozilla-poor-choice-of-campaign-role-models-.html

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Hope for Galapagos wildlife threatened by marine invaders

Mar. 26, 2013 ? Increasing tourism and the spread of marine invasive non-native species is threatening the unique plant and marine life around the Galapagos Islands.

UK scientists from the Universities of Southampton and Dundee are currently investigating the extent of the problem following a grant from the UK Government's Darwin Initiative, which aims to protect biodiversity and promote sustainability around the world.

UK Environment Minister Richard Benyon said: "The UK has played a major role in supporting the establishment of the Galapagos Marine Reserve and our Darwin Initiative has funded a range of important projects protecting and enhancing both marine and terrestrial wildlife.

"Invasive non-native species can cause huge damage to local ecosystems and I am delighted that action is being taken to monitor this threat."

Project leader Dr Ken Collins, Ocean and Earth Science of University of Southampton based at the National Oceanography Centre said: "Tourism is partly to blame for the influx of invasive non-native species, due to the huge rise in ships and planes from mainland Ecuador bringing in pests. In recent years, it was realised that cargo ships were carrying disease-infected mosquitoes, which were attracted to the ship's bright white deck lights. Simply changing from conventional filament bulbs to yellow sodium lamps, along with fumigation in the hold has substantially reduced the threat.

"We are trying to protect marine biodiversity by identifying newly arrived species to the Galapagos, assessing if they have the potential to compete for space and overcome other species of algae and native corals."

White coral, which has already been reported off the mainland Ecuador coast (600 miles away), is also causing anxiety. It could easily hitch a lift on the frequent vessels supplying Galapagos tourists and residents. Already, two new algae species have been found in the Galapagos Marine Reserve, a World Heritage Site.

Another species causing concern and which has the potential to overwhelm natural populations is the Indian Ocean lionfish. This fish colonised the Caribbean through accidental release from an aquarium and has spread through the entire Caribbean in the last decade. Its rapacious appetite has led to the decimation of coral reef fish populations in the southern Caribbean. Lionfish can consume prey up to two thirds of their own length and data shows that they can eat 20 small wrasses in 30 minutes. Their stomachs can expand by up to 30 times in volume when consuming a large catch. The Panama Canal could provide a short cut to Ecuador's Pacific coast and then the Galapagos.

One of Ken Collin's PhD students is Fadilah Ali, who is at the University of Southampton studying how the lionfish is eating its way through coral reef fish populations in the southern Caribbean. For over a hundred years Southampton, one the UK's busiest ports has been receiving marine hitchhikers from around the world, changing the entire balance of its underwater marine plants and animals. One example is the Pacific Oyster, which is being studied in the Solent region by another of Ken's PhD students Steff Deane.

Prof Terry Dawson, SAGES Chair in Global Environmental Change at Dundee, added, "Invasive species are becoming one of the greatest threats to biodiversity on a global scale. The Galapagos islands are particularly vulnerable due to the fact that much of the indigenous wildlife have evolved over millions of years in the absence of predators, competition, pests and diseases, which makes them very susceptible to the negative impacts of aggressive non-native species.

"We are very pleased to have Inti Keith, one of the staff of the Charles Darwin Research Station, registered with the University of Dundee to study for her PhD on this important topic. Her extensive local knowledge of the marine environment of the Galapagos Islands gives us a head start in developing the research to tackle the issue.

The team have recently returned from the Galapagos, where they met the Ecuadorian Navy and DIRNEA, the national maritime authority, to discuss control measures and helped take part in the first underwater survey of the Galapagos capital port.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/x3Tk7129LPw/130326112048.htm

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Tuesday, 26 March 2013

recognition stereotyping: good, bad, and with just one sock

personalities

I was an observant kid. I remember being picked up by my mother from a birthday party and asking, ?Mom, why is there always one sweaty kid at every party who loses a sock?? She laughed. Then asked me to explain. And although I?didn?t?realize it then, I had started what we all now consider a terrible practice: stereotyping.

Managers stereotype during the interview process. They stereotype again during delegation. But we all stereotype in some way. And it?s a bad thing, right?

When we were kids, stereotyping might have been labeling the kid with one sock at birthday parties. In high school, it might have been the nerds, the jocks, and preps. And as adults, it might be the slackers, the yes-men, the naysayers, and the overachievers.

Here?s the ugly truth: Stereotyping is the practice of recognizing people for their perceived negative traits.

But what if we could change all that? What if we could pick apart our stereotypes and focus on the positive aspects of being lumped into a group of people?

What can we learn from ?slackers?? Well, that?s easy?slackers are masters at work/life balance.

What can we learn from the ?yes-men?? Commitment to a cause. These are the people who take on tasks, even if they don?t want to, because they realize the organization needs them.

Naysayers teach us about boundaries and can often show us ?good enough? is never enough. The naysayers force us back to the drawing board.

Overachievers can teach us all about tenacity. To an overachiever, meeting an expectation is not good enough. These are the people who dream to the next level and pull the rest of the organization up with them.

Stereotyping is typically an ugly practice?until we all stop long enough to realize what we can learn from the process of labeling. This is something I?didn?t?understand as child. I judged the sweaty kid with only one sock negatively?never considering he found the quickest way to cool down.

Source: http://www.octanner.com/blog/2013/03/recognition-stereotyping-good-bad-and-with-just-one-sock/

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Bachmann?s presidential campaign probed

ORLANDO, Florida, March 25 (Reuters) - Tiger Woods won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill on Monday to reclaim the world number one ranking for the first time since 2010. Woods, who collected his 77th career PGA Tour win and third in five starts this season, shot a final-round two-under 70 for a 13-under 275 total that left him two shots clear of runner-up Justin Rose (70). (Reporting by Steve Keating; Editing by Frank Pingue)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/report-ethics-panel-investigates-michelle-bachmann-presidential-campaign-175159553--election.html

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AP interview: Couple reflects on gay marriage

This photo taken Feb. 8, 2013, shows Sandy Stier, left, and Kris Perry, the couple at the center of the Supreme Court's consideration of gay marriage, at their home in Berkeley, Calif. Whatever the outcome of their momentous case, Perry and Stier, who have been together 13 years, will be empty-nesters as the last of their children will heads off to college. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

This photo taken Feb. 8, 2013, shows Sandy Stier, left, and Kris Perry, the couple at the center of the Supreme Court's consideration of gay marriage, at their home in Berkeley, Calif. Whatever the outcome of their momentous case, Perry and Stier, who have been together 13 years, will be empty-nesters as the last of their children will heads off to college. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

In this photo taken Saturday, March 23, 2013, Jessica Skrebes of Washington reads while waiting in line with others outside of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington in anticipation of Tuesday's Supreme Court hearing on California's Proposition 8 ban on same-sex marriage, and Wednesday's Supreme Court hearing on the federal Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? Big change is coming to the lives of the lesbian couple at the center of the fight for same-sex marriage in California no matter how the Supreme Court decides their case.

After 13 years of raising four boys together, Kris Perry and Sandy Stier are about to be empty nesters. Their youngest two children, 18-year-old twins, will graduate from high school in June and head off to college a couple of months later.

"We'll see all the movies, get theater season tickets because you can actually go," Stier said in the living room of their bungalow in Berkeley. Life will not revolve quite so much around food, and the challenge of putting enough of it on the table to feed teenagers.

They might also get married, if the high court case goes their way.

Perry, 48, and Stier, 50, set aside their lunch hour on a recent busy Friday to talk to The Associated Press about their Supreme Court case, the evolution of their activism for gay rights and family life.

On Tuesday, they plan to be in the courtroom when their lawyer, Theodore Olson, tries to persuade the justices to strike down California's voter-approved ban on same-sex marriages and to declare that gay couples can marry nationwide. Supporters of California's Proposition 8, represented by lawyer Charles Cooper, argue that the court should not override the democratic process and impose a judicial solution that would redefine marriage in the 40 states that do not allow same-sex couples to wed.

A second case, set for Wednesday, involves the part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act that prevents same-sex couples who are legally married from receiving a range of federal tax, pension and other benefits that otherwise are available to married people.

The Supreme Court hearing is the moment Perry and Stier, along with Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo of Burbank, have been waiting for since they agreed four years ago to be the named plaintiffs and public faces of a well-funded, high-profile effort to challenge Proposition 8 in the courts.

"For the past four years, we've lived our lives in this hurry-up-and-wait, pins-and-needles way," Perry said, recalling the crush of court deadlines and the seemingly endless wait for rulings from a federal district judge, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, also based there, and the California Supreme Court.

Stier said Olson told them the case could take several years to resolve. "I thought, years?" she said.

But the couple has been riding a marriage rollercoaster since 2003, when Perry first asked Stier to marry her. They were planning a symbolic, but not legally recognized, wedding when San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom ordered city officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples in 2004. So they were married, but only briefly. Six months later, the state Supreme Court invalidated the same-sex unions.

They went ahead with their plans anyway, but "it was one of the sadder points of our wedding," Perry said.

Less than four years later, however, the same state court overturned California's prohibition on same-sex unions. Then, on the same day Perry and Stier rejoiced in President Barack Obama's election, voters approved Proposition 8, undoing the court ruling and defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman. Their lawsuit was filed six months later, after they went to the Alameda County courthouse for a marriage license and were predictably refused.

"It's such a weird road we've been on," Perry said.

All the more so because neither woman defined herself as a gay rights activist before the marriage fight.

Perry, a native Californian from Bakersfield, and Stier, who grew up in rural Iowa, moved in together in 2000, with Stier's two children from a heterosexual marriage and Perry's from a previous relationship. Utterly conventional school meetings, soccer games and band practice ? not the court case ? have defined their lives together.

As if to highlight this point, their son, Elliott, briefly interrupted the interview to ask for a pair of headphones. Perry said the boys find her useful for two basic reasons these days. "Do I have any headphones and do I have any money?" she said with a smile.

Perry has spent her professional life advocating on behalf of early childhood education. Stier works for the county government's public health department.

"When you've been out as long as I have been, 30 years, in order to feel OK every day and be optimistic and productive, you can't dwell as much on what's not working as maybe people think you do," Perry said.

Even with Proposition 8's passage, Perry and Stier said they were more focused on Obama's election.

"I was all about health care reform and Kris is all about education reform and that was everything. Gay rights, that would be great, but it's a way off," Stier said.

They don't take the issue so lightly anymore. Of course, they could not imagine a U.S. president would endorse gay marriage along with voters in three states just last November.

When Obama talked about equal rights for gay Americans in his inaugural speech in January, Perry said she felt as if "we've arrived at the adults' table. We're no longer at the kids' table."

They will watch the argument in their case and then return home to wait for the decision, worried that it could come the same day as the boys' high school graduations in mid-June.

They know the court could uphold Proposition 8, which would almost certainly lead to an effort to repeal it by California voters. Recent polls show support for repeal.

Any other outcome will allow them to get married. But Perry said they are hoping the court strikes "a tone of more inclusion" and issues the broadest possible ruling.

They will get married quickly, in a small, private ceremony. "We did the big celebration a long time ago," Perry said. "I hope this will be something a lot bigger than the two of us."

___

Follow Mark Sherman at http://twitter.com/shermancourt

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-03-25-US-Supreme-Court-Gay-Marriage/id-a3ff930d228a4eb9927cc190b29758af

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Monday, 25 March 2013

Bloomberg, mayor group tout big gun control push (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/294173074?client_source=feed&format=rss

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NCAA Tournament LIVE SCORES, UPDATES: Gonzaga vs. Wichita State; Syracuse vs. Cal On Saturday

No. 4 Michigan beats No. 5 VCU 78-53

No. 3 Michigan State beats No. 6 Memphis 70-48

No. 1 Louisville beats No. 8 Colorado State 82-56

No. 6 Arizona beats No. 14 Harvard 74-51

No. 12 Oregon beats No. 4 Saint Louis 74-57

No. 3 Marquette beats No. 6 Butler 74-72

No. 9 Wichita State beats No. 1 Gonzaga 76-70

No. 4 Syracuse beats No. 12 Cal 66-60

Syracuse wins 66-60. C.J. Fair scored 18 on 6/14 shooting. Southerland had 14 points and 9 rebounds.

Solomon gets a layup to go and now Cal is down 6 with 6.9 seconds left. Timeout.

Solomon gets an offensive rebound on an airball and makes a layup PLUS the foul. 22.9 seconds left. Southerland has fouled out. Solomon misses the free throw and Fair gets the rebound.

Crabbe makes a running jumper a few feet inside the 3-point line to cut the lead to 64-56 with 29.1 seconds left.

First, Syracuse fails to get a good inbounds pass in and fumbles the ball out of bounds. Then Cal's inbounds pass flies out of bounds. Just terrible turnovers. 62-54 Syracuse. 36.5 seconds left.

Baye Keita was left wide open down low and threw down a two-handed dunk. 62-53 Syracuse with 40.1 seconds left. Baye Keita commits a foul on the other end.

Carter-Williams goes 1/2 from the line to make it 60-53, Cobbs is called for a charge but it looked like Carter-Williams was moving the entire time.

Triche ges fouled and only makes 1/2. Cal respondes with an easy layup from Cobbs to make it 59-53.

Syracuse threw it away but Cal recovered and stepped out of bounds.

Cal goes right to Wallace on the right side and he swishes a 3 to cut the lead to seven. We have a game! 58-51 Syracuse.

Crabbe knocks down a long 3 from the left wing to cut the lead to 10. Now Fair goes to the line for Syracuse and misses BOTH.

Baye Keita went up for a dunk and got fouled. Only made 1/2. 57-44 Syracuse.

Southerland makes both. 56-44 with 3:23 left and Cal turns it over again.

Carter-Williams drives to his right and stretches out to get the layup. Then Cal turns it over and commits a foul. 54-44 Cuse and Southerland going to the line with 3:38 left.

Cobbs got fouled on a layup and made 1/2. 52-44 Syracuse.

Robert Thurman working hard on the offensive rebounds and got a put-back to go to cut the lead to seven. But Southerland somehow got a one-handed runner from the baseline to go. 52-43 CUSE with 4:29 left.

Both teams traded baskets and then Cal's Richard Solomon made a layup to cut it to 8. 49-41 CUSE with 5:28 left.

A moving screen is called on Syracuse's Baye Keita and Cal gets the stop they needed. Cal down 10 and now David Kravish will go to the line after getting fouled on a dunk attempt.

Cobbs gets his first bucket of the second half and now Syracuse leads 45-33 with 8:24 left.

Cal hasn't made a field goal in approximately 7 minutes. Cuse leads 44-31 with 10:45 left.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/23/ncaa-tournament-live-scores-gonzaga-wichita-cuse_n_2941493.html

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Buddhist-Muslim violence spreads in Myanmar

A Myanmar police officer rides a motorbike past debris of buildings and a truck destroyed during ethnic unrest between Buddhists and Muslim, as he provides security in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy, and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

A Myanmar police officer rides a motorbike past debris of buildings and a truck destroyed during ethnic unrest between Buddhists and Muslim, as he provides security in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy, and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

Three Buddhist monks walk on a road near a mosque in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

A man walks among debris of buildings destroyed during ethnic unrest between Buddhists and Muslim in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Meikhtila spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy, and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

Myanmar soldiers take a break as they remove debris from destroyed buildings and others provide security, following the ethnic unrest between Buddhists and Muslim, in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Meikhtila spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

Myanmar soldiers take a break as they remove debris of buildings destroyed during ethnic unrest between Buddhists and Muslim in Meikhtila, about 550 kilometers (340 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, March 25, 2013. Sectarian clashes between Buddhists and Muslims in Myanmar spread to at least two other towns in the country's heartland over the weekend, undermining government efforts to quash an eruption of violence that has killed dozens of people and displaced 10,000 more. On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila, where soldiers were able to impose order after several days of anarchy, and called on the government to punish those responsible. (AP Photo/Khin Maung Win)

(AP) ? Anti-Muslim mobs rampaged through three more towns in Myanmar's predominantly Buddhist heartland over the weekend, destroying mosques and burning dozens of homes despite government efforts to stop the nation's latest outbreak of sectarian violence from spreading.

President Thein Sein declared a state of emergency in central Myanmar on Friday and deployed army troops to the worst hit city, Meikhtila, where 32 people were killed and 10,000 mostly Muslim residents were displaced. But even as soldiers imposed order there after several days of anarchy that saw armed Buddhists torch the city's Muslim quarters, anti-Muslim unrest has spread south toward the capital, Naypyitaw.

A Muslim resident of Tatkone, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) from Meikhtila, said by telephone that a group of about 20 men ransacked a one-story brick mosque there late Sunday night, pelting it with stones and smashing windows before soldiers fired shots to drive them away. Speaking on condition of anonymity because of security concerns, he said he believed the perpetrators were not from Tatkone.

A day earlier, another mob burned down a mosque and 50 homes in the nearby town of Yamethin, state television reported. Another mosque and several buildings were also destroyed the same day in Lewei, farther south. It was not immediately clear who was behind the violence, and no clashes or casualties were reported in the three towns.

The upsurge in sectarian unrest is casting a shadow over Thein Sein's administration as it struggles to bring democratic reform the Southeast Asian country after half a century of army rule officially ended two years ago this month.

Two similar episodes rocked western Rakhine state last year, pitting ethnic Rakhine Buddhists against Rohingya Muslims in bloodshed that killed hundreds and drove 100,000 from their homes.

The Rohingya are widely denigrated as illegal migrants from Bangladesh and most are denied passports as a result. The Muslim population of central Myanmar, by contrast, is mostly of Indian origin and does not face the same questions over nationality.

The emergence of sectarian conflict beyond Rakhine state is an ominous development, one that indicates anti-Muslim sentiment has intensified nationwide since last year and, if left unchecked, could spread.

Sectarian and ethnic tensions are not new in Myanmar.

Muslims account for about four percent of the nation's roughly 60 million people, and during the long era of authoritarian rule, military governments twice drove out hundreds of thousands of Rohingya, while smaller clashes had occurred elsewhere. About one third of the population is comprised of ethnic minorities that practice Christianity or animism, and most have waged wars against the government for autonomy.

Analysts say racism has also played a role. Unlike the ethnic Burman majority, most Muslims in Myanmar are of South Asian descent, populations with darker skin that migrated to Myanmar centuries ago from what are now parts of India and Bangladesh.

The latest bloodshed "shows that inter-communal tensions in Myanmar are not just limited to the Rakhine and Rohingya in northern Rakhine state," said Jim Della-Giacoma of the International Crisis Group. "Myanmar is a country with dozens of localized fault lines and grievances that were papered over during the authoritarian years that we are just beginning to see and understand. It is a paradox of transitions that greater freedom does allow these local conflicts to resurface."

"If a democratic state is the nation's goal, they need to find a place for all its people as equal citizens," Della-Giacoma said. "Given the country's history, it won't be easy."

The government has put the total death toll in Meikhtila at 32, and authorities say they have detained at least 35 people allegedly involved in arson and violence in the region.

On Sunday, Vijay Nambiar, the U.N. secretary-general's special adviser on Myanmar, toured Meikhtila and called on the government to punish those responsible.

He also visited some of the nearly 10,000 people driven from their homes in the unrest. Most of the displaced are minority Muslims, who appeared to have suffered the brunt of the violence as armed Buddhist mobs roamed city.

Nambiar said he was encouraged to learn that some individuals in both communities had helped each other and that religious leaders were now advocating peace. He said the people he spoke to believe the violence "was the work of outsiders," but he gave no details.

"There is a certain degree of fear and anxiety among the people, but there is no hatred," Nambiar said after visiting both groups on Sunday and promising the United Nations would provide as much help as it can to get the city back on its feet. "They feel a sense of community and that it is a very good thing because they have worked together and lived together."

But he added: "It is important to catch the perpetrators. It is important that they be caught and punished."

In Meikthila, at least five mosques were set ablaze from Wednesday to Friday. The majority of homes and shops burned in the city also belonged to Muslims, and most of the displaced are Muslim. Dozens of corpses were piled in the streets, some of them charred beyond recognition.

"The city is calm and some shops have reopened, but many still live in fear. Some still dare not return to their homes," said Win Htein, an opposition lawmaker from the city.

Myanma Ahlin, a state-run newspaper, carried a statement from Buddhist, Muslim, Christian and Hindu leaders expressing sorrow for the loss of life and property and calling on Buddhist monks to help ease tensions.

"We would like to call upon the government to provide sufficient security and to protect the displaced people and to investigate and take legal measures as urgently as possible," the statement from the Interfaith Friendship Organization said.

Muslims, who make up about 30 percent of Meikhtila's 100,000 inhabitants, have stayed off the streets since their shops and homes were burned and Buddhist mobs armed with machetes and swords began roaming the city.

Little appeared to be left of some palm tree-lined neighborhoods, where the legs of victims could be seen poking out from smoldering masses of twisted debris and ash. Broken glass, charred cars and motorcycles and overturned tables littered roads beside rows of burned-out homes and shops, evidence of the widespread chaos that swept the town.

Chaos began Wednesday after an argument broke out between a Muslim gold shop owner and his Buddhist customers. Once news spread that a Muslim man had killed a Buddhist monk, Buddhist mobs rampaged through a Muslim neighborhood and the situation quickly spiraled out of control.

Residents and activists said the police did little to stop the rioters or reacted too slowly, allowing the violence to escalate.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Pitman and Grant Peck contributed to this report from Bangkok.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-25-Myanmar-Riot/id-27a2ded7a63a4ceb8f73cde9faf94046

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Sunday, 24 March 2013

White supremacist killed in Texas investigated in Colorado slayings

By Corrie MacLaggan

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A white supremacist ex-convict who died in a roadside gun battle with Texas police was being investigated for possible links to the deaths of a Colorado prisons chief and a pizza delivery man, law enforcement officials said on Friday.

Police said that Evan Spencer Ebel, a 28-year-old parolee from Denver killed by police on Thursday after a high-speed car chase through Decatur, Texas, was being investigated in connection with the death of Tom Clements, executive director of the Colorado Department of Corrections.

Clements, 58, was shot dead on Tuesday when he answered the door at his home near the community of Monument, in El Paso County about 45 miles south of Denver.

Denver police have named Ebel as a suspect in the killing of pizza delivery man Nathan Leon in Denver two days earlier.

Ebel was a member of a white supremacist prison gang, the 211 Crew, and had been paroled in the Denver area, a law enforcement official said.

The Hornady 9-mm bullets Ebel fired at Texas police were the same brand as those used in the killing of Clements, Denver television station KCNC-TV reported on Friday, citing a search warrant affidavit filed in Texas for police to search Ebel's Cadillac.

In the car's trunk, there was a pizza deliverer's shirt or jacket, the station reported, citing court documents.

The El Paso County (Colorado) Sheriff's Office said in a statement late on Friday that bullet casings collected at the scene in Texas would be sent to the state crime lab to determine if the same weapon was used to kill Clements.

Authorities were also looking for ties between the death of Clements and the January killing of Mark Hasse, a prosecutor in the Kaufman County District Attorney's Office. Kaufman County is east of Dallas.

The January 31 killing of Hasse occurred the same day the U.S. Department of Justice revealed that the Kaufman County District Attorney's Office was among the agencies involved in a racketeering case against the Aryan Brotherhood white supremacist group.

"The Dallas and Denver offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation are comparing the homicides of Mark Hasse and Tom Clements to determine if there is any evidence linking the two crimes," Kaufman Police Chief Chris Aulbaugh said in a statement.

LENGTHY CRIMINAL HISTORY

In Texas, Ebel shot and wounded a Montague County sheriff's deputy during a traffic stop and fled. He led police on a car chase that ended when his car, with Colorado plates, collided with an 18-wheeler truck.

Ebel died at a Fort Worth hospital of a single gunshot wound to the forehead, the Tarrant County Medical Examiner's Office said.

"I do know that he has a lengthy criminal history," said Sheriff David Walker of Wise County in Texas, whose deputies were involved in the car chase.

Investigators looking into the death of Clements went to Decatur, Texas, to examine Ebel's Cadillac, said Jeff Kramer, spokesman for the El Paso County sheriff in Colorado.

According to Colorado court records, Ebel was arrested at least seven times between 2003 and 2010 for crimes including burglary, weapons possession, assault, menacing and robbery.

"He clearly was a troubled young man, but there was nothing that would have suggested he was capable of these types of incidents," Denver-based attorney Scott Robinson, who represented Ebel in four cases in 2004, told Reuters.

Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper confirmed news reports that he was a friend of the parolee's father, Jack Ebel, who he said he met while working for an oil company soon after moving to the state about 30 years ago.

"Although Jack loved his son, he never asked me to intervene on his behalf and I never asked for any special treatment for his son," Hickenlooper said in a statement released on Friday.

Hickenlooper said that Evan Ebel had served every day of his original sentence and was released on "mandatory parole at the end of the time he was ordered to be incarcerated."

Mark Potok, senior fellow with the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups, said the 211 Crew, also known as the Aryan Alliance, was founded in 1995 by Colorado prison inmate Benjamin Davis.

Davis is serving a 108-year sentence after his conviction for racketeering, conspiracy and other charges under the state's Organized Crime Control Act.

"The group started out as a protective group, but quickly morphed into a criminal enterprise," Potok said, adding that the 211s are known for the "harshness" of their discipline, he said.

He said the 211s were a "blood in, blood out" gang, meaning a prospective member must commit a violent act at the direction of one of the gang's higher-ups, or "shot callers."

Once paroled 211 members are on the street they are expected to start earning money, usually through criminal activity, and forward the proceeds to incarcerated gang leaders, Potok said.

(Reporting by Jim Forsyth, Robin Respaut, Alex Dobuzinskis, Dan Whitcomb and Keith Coffman; Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis.; Editing by Paul Thomasch, Andre Grenon, Christopher Wilson, Eric Walsh and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/white-supremacist-killed-texas-investigated-colorado-murders-003952231.html

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U.S. Senate Approves Proposed Internet Sales Tax

us-senate-logoAn Internet Sales Tax is inching its way closer to being the law of the land: The U.S. Senate supported a non-binding vote of approval, 75-to-24, for a law that would allow cities in some circumstances to collect taxes from Internet retailers. If enacted as is, it would allow states to levy taxes on some online retail purchases from businesses with over $1 million in gross receipts.

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

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ICANN clears 27 non-English domain name suffixes

NEW YORK (AP) ? The agency in charge of Internet addresses says it's given preliminary approval for 27 new suffixes ? all in Chinese, Arabic and other languages besides English.

They are the first approved out of nearly 2,000 bids submitted last year. The Internet Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers previously said it was reviewing the non-English bids first. ICANN expects additional approvals in the coming weeks.

Winning bidders must now work out contractual and other details. The new suffixes could be available for use as early as the middle of the year.

Proponents of the new suffixes hope the expansion will lead to online neighborhoods of businesses and groups around specific geographic areas or industries and help non-English speakers avoid typing English domain names like ".com."

___

Online:

http://gtldresult.icann.org

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-03-22-Beyond%20Dot-Com/id-87c96ab8681a467caf64fc523ae55841

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Google Rumored To Be Making A Smartwatch, Too

Screen Shot 2013-03-22 at 9.20.39 AMAmidst Apple iWatch rumors and Google Glass sightings, it would appear that Google is actually working on its own smartwatch to be paired alongside connected Android devices. According to the Financial Times, Google’s Android arm will be the team working on the device, as opposed to the X Lab division, which handled Google Glass development. The wearable computer market is heating up quite rapidly. Alongside Google’s Glass project, a number of smaller OEMs have launched Bluetooth-connected smart watches to work as a companion to the smartphone. Fossil has a well-crafted MetaWatch, InPulse has the hot-selling Pebble smartwatch, and there are even a handful of quantified self devices that measure your daily activity. There’s the Nike FuelBand, the Jawbone UP, and the Basis to name a few. Add to that an Apple competitor in the iWatch, and a Samsung smartwatch to boot, and it only makes sense that Google has a watch in the works. Google Glass takes wearable computing a step beyond the basic wrist watch. However, the rate of adoption will almost certainly be lower than that of a watch or a smartphone since the experience is such a huge change in the way we interact with digital content and our world. A smart watch, on the other hand, would feel a lot more like using a really small smartphone, and that familiarity makes the watch a great bridge between smartphones and computational headsets. Google didn’t comment on the speculation. However, there’s a patent owned by Google and filed in 2011 for a “smart watch” with a “flip-up display.” It would appear that the patent also provides for a touchscreen experience. The question isn’t really if Google will build a smart watch. As small OEMs and big competitors around it flood the market with wearable smartwatches, Google will likely need to join the fight. However, it’s unclear what exactly that will look like? Does a flip-up display look like a flip phone? From the patent filing, the “flip-up display” seems to work like a digital pocket watch, showing two displays when open and a single display on top when closed. However, just because Google filed this patent, it doesn’t mean that Google’s Android smartwatch will look anything like it. On the software side, Google has already proven that it can develop for new forms of computing, such as Google Glass. Even some of its already-released apps like Google Now

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

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Saturday, 23 March 2013

From homeless to med school - The Orange County Register

He lived for part of his youth with his elderly grandmother in a shack behind a house. Ivy crept through the windows. There was no heating system. Mice flourished in the shack's chill.

And Friday, Peolia Kansas Fonsworth III (the most aristocratic name a poor kid has ever endured) participated in "Match Day," in which graduating medical students at UC Irvine found out which university hospitals had accepted them to begin their residencies.

PK Fonsworth grew up poor in the Philippines and Northern California with a loving, adoptive grandmother who took him in as a baby. "I'm your mother, I'm your father, I'm your everything," she told him. "The two of us were an island," Fonsworth said.

MINDY SCHAUER, ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Fonsworth, now 31 and a brilliant student who will finish his educational career with degrees in molecular biology, Spanish literature, psychiatry and business, has dreamed about being a doctor since the days he and his grandmother couldn't afford groceries.

"Education was the mechanism for me to get out of poverty," he said.

Long ago, he set a goal for Match Day: He would be accepted at the Yale University Hospital. He would move to Connecticut. He would become an East Coast guy and get comfortable with the snow.

He has a Yale banner in his bedroom and a Yale magnet on his refrigerator. He wore a Yale wristband Friday as he walked to the podium and opened the envelope to learn where he was matched.

But what would life be, especially PK Fonsworth's life, if everything went as planned?

Let's just say snow is not in his immediate future.

???

His grandmother wasn't really his grandmother. PK Fonsworth was born in San Fernando, Philippines in 1982. But his mother (too poor) and his father (a disinterested American soldier), couldn't care for him.

As an infant, Fonsworth was handed off to a neighbor, Ethel Watanabe, a Japanese woman in her 60s.

"She was the first person who threw me a lifeline," Fonsworth said. "She said, 'You're going to college, no matter what it takes.' She taught me about values and dreams."

Watanabe worked in a beauty salon and did seamstress work on the side. She earned enough to enroll Fonsworth in a private school. But Watanabe wanted more opportunity for her unofficially adopted son.

At 10, they move to Martinez, California, a suburban community in the East Bay near San Francisco. At 14, his birth father, Peolia Kansas Fonsworth II, became part of his life. The elder Fonsworth helped pay rent for his son and Watanabe in a nice apartment.

He was flourishing in school, showing a particular knack for biology.

Then, eight months after it started, his father's support ended. He now has very little contact with his father.

"I don't know why it stopped, but I know we couldn't afford rent or food," Fonsworth said.

In high school, Fonsworth got a job at a pizza parlor, then in a Walgreens photo department. He said he and Watanabe, then in her 70s, lived on his small income and her social security check.

"When I started high school, it was a question of survival."

???

One rainy day, when their lives were at their lowest point, Fonsworth and Watanabe bought groceries at Safeway. At checkout, they asked that their paper shopping bags also be wrapped in plastic so they wouldn't be damaged by the rain.

Cashier Sandi Flocken Ashton watched them carry the bags to the bus stop. The next time they came in, she asked them if they needed a ride home.

"I took them home, and they lived in a shack," she said. "It was absolutely horrible. I couldn't believe it had ivy growing through the windows."

Before long, Flocken Ashton was buying their groceries. She was at the Match Day ceremony last week.

"His life could have gone either way," she said. "I attribute it all to his grandmother. I am so proud of PK. He calls me faithfully. He never forgets to tell me, "I love you, Sandi.'"

As a senior in high school, he found out he would be receiving a scholarship ? from the IDEAL Scholars Fund, given by the Level Playing Field Institute which was founded by his friend Freada Kapor Klein ? to the University of California at Berkeley. Klein was also at the Match Day ceremony last week.

"While many people graduate from top medical schools and pursue prestigious residencies, painfully few have PK's lived experience," Klein said. "The barriers he faced are numerous and range from significant visible hardship to subtle unseen barriers ... From the day I met PK as a high school senior he has had a five-year plan. While a few details have been modified, he has kept his eye on the prize and pursued his dream.

"It's been an honor and a privilege to know and support PK all these years. The world is a richer place for having PK in it."

Before he got to Berkeley, Ethel Watanabe died of cancer.

???

"She was my mother, my father, my everything," Fonsworth said. "I will always remember my grandmother's mantra: Opportunity is education."

He set out to cure cancer. But his educational career took twists and turns along the way. He graduated from Berkeley with honors. Then he came to Orange County for UCI's Prime LC program (medical school focusing on the Latino community).

He has settled on psychiatry. He wants to help impoverished communities.

"At UCI, converting to mental health was a slow seduction," Fonsworth said. "I always admired people who worked with the brain and the mind. Psychiatry can bring marginalized people back into society."

For so long, he felt marginalized.

One of these days, when his schooling is over, he wants to open a network of mental health centers to serve the poor.

"I know there are incredible challenges ... in the under served community," Fonsworth said.

Challenges are what make him tick.

???

He won't be meeting those challenges at Yale.

If you haven't seen the Match Day ceremonies at UCI, you have missed screaming, crying, fist-pumping drama in front of about 500 friends, relatives and professors. One by one, 99 students walked to the podium and opened letters that would reveal their future. Some went to the University of Hawaii. Some went to the University of Toronto. They cheered when they were accepted by hospitals at Stanford or USC.

Fonsworth sat coolly behind his aviator sunglasses awaiting his name to be called. He knew he would be going to some prestigious mental health center in the United States. He had 12 choices. Yale and Harvard were his No. s 1 and 2 choices.

Finally, he walked to the podium, took off his glasses and opened the letter.

"Harbor UCLA," he read, prompting a wild cheer from the crowd. They didn't know Harbor UCLA, which is up the 405 Freeway in Torrance, was his fourth choice.

"I'm going to be local," he said. "It's a win. Harbor UCLA serves some of the most under served communities in Southern California."

He immediately put a good spin on his placement.

"Now it's sunny Southern California until the end of my days," he said.

Contact the writer: ksharon@ocregister.com or 714 796 7898


Source: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/fonsworth-500866-school-day.html

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