Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Evernote Food 2.0 for Android offers revamped UI, more ways to document your dietary obsessions

Evernote Food for Android offers more way to

It may seem difficult to believe, but iOS and Android users do share something in common: they both like to eat. But while Evernote Food for iOS has seen a couple of updates in recent months, its Android counterpart has been somewhat neglected. That ends today, though, with a huge 2.0 refresh that finally gives Evernote Food for Android parity with the iOS version, including a new navigation drawer with four main sections.

Breaking those down: Explore is a compiled list of Evernote-suggested recipes, My Cookbook stores clipped recipes from the main Evernote app and around the web, Restaurants lets you discover and bookmark places to eat (you can even make OpenTable reservations) and My Meals is essentially a food journal. As for platform discrepancies, the Android app has a Recently Viewed pane which the iOS version lacks, but the latter offers recipe-sharing while the Android one doesn't. So go ahead, foodie Android fans: download the app and get to sharing your favorite food memories. Remember, you don't have to say how you got that pizza delivered.

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Source: Evernote Food (Google Play)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/29/evernote-food-for-android-update/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Monday, April 29, 2013

F. Scott Fitzgerald's handwritten ledger online

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) ? An intriguing peek into the daily scribbles and life of author F. Scott Fitzgerald is now available online, just weeks before the opening of the movie "The Great Gatsby."

Researchers from the University of South Carolina's Thomas Cooper Library put a digital version of the famed author's handwritten financial ledger on their website last week, making it available for the first time for all readers, students and scholars.

"This is a record of everything Fitzgerald wrote, and what he did with it, in his own hand," said Elizabeth Sudduth, director of the Ernest F. Hollings Library and Rare Books Collection.

During a recent visit to the library's below-ground rare-book vault, Sudduth took the original 200-page book out of its clamshell protective cover. The ledger's yellowed pages ? with Fitzgerald's elegant, measured cursive strokes ? are a throwback to life before computer spreadsheets. The ledger shows Fitzgerald's tally of earnings from his works, the most famous of which is the novel "The Great Gatsby." The ledger lists his many short stories, books, and adaptations for stage and screen.

With the May 10 release of a new "Gatsby" movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Sudduth says library officials expect an upswing in interest in its Fitzgerald collection. The ledger will be on display at the library for about a month starting May 6, Sudduth said.

The library's Fitzgerald collection is considered the world's most comprehensive, with more than 3,000 publications, manuscripts, letters, book editions, screenplays and memorabilia. It also includes Fitzgerald's walking stick, briefcase and an engraved silver flask his wife gave him in 1918.

Some parts of the collection already are online. With the ledger's move to the website and the timing of the movie, Sudduth said, officials hope to call more attention to the collection.

In the ledger, Fitzgerald lists in carefully laid out columns his various pieces of writing, the location they were printed, and the income they produced. Fitzgerald's comments are sprinkled throughout. One describes the year 1919 ? when his first novel was accepted for publication and Zelda Sayre agreed to marry him, as ? "The most important year of life. Every emotion and my life work decided. Miserable and ecstatic but a great success."

By the time Fitzgerald started the ledger, Sudduth said, "he probably knew what he was doing. He left a space for his remarks, and then the final disposition."

With a laugh, she noted: "We know he didn't spell very well. And his arithmetic wasn't much better,"

But the overall document, she said, "shows that he was far more on top of his affairs than people thought," given a reputation in later life as a heavy drinker.

"He was keeping a record of his work for the future," Suddeth said. "He kept it, he updated it."

For the past 30 years, researchers have had to rely on a limited print facsimile of the ledger, which didn't catch the varied inks and scripts in Fitzgerald's hand.

Park Bucker, a USC associate English professor, said he's excited to discuss the new ledger with his students.

"It may be a unique artifact among American authors," Bucker said. "This is going to be an amazing thing for students to pore over and dip into. He created his own database. We do it on computers now, but he did it for himself,"

Bucker also said students are fascinated by seeing something a well-known author penned in his own hand.

"Students always remark how much they love his handwriting," he said. "They think his handwriting is just beautiful, and handwriting isn't valued today."

Bucker pointed out that the ledger shows Fitzgerald made most of his income from short stories and that he was able to earn a living from his literary work. "It was the rarest of things, an author who made a living," Bucker said.

In 1925, the ledger shows Fitzgerald earned less than $2,000 for the "Gatsby" book ? the same amount he received for a single short story published in The Saturday Evening Post.

In later years, Fitzgerald added more earnings from "The Great Gatsby." He sold the foreign motion picture rights for $16,666, as noted in the ledger. In another section, he lists about $5,000 in earnings from "Gatsby" when it ran as a play in New York, Chicago and elsewhere.

USC Professor Matthew Bruccoli began to acquire items for the Fitzgerald collection in the 1950s. He received some, including the ledger, from the author's only child, daughter Frances Scott Fitzgerald, also known as Scottie. Bruccoli wanted the collection to be used as a teaching and research tool, and he gave it to the university in 1994.

Bruccoli has since died, but the collection has continued to grow. It is now is valued at more than $4 million, Sudduth said.

____

The ledger online:

http://library.sc.edu/digital/collections/fitzledger.html

___

Susanne M. Schafer can be reached on Twitter at http://twitter.com/susannemarieap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/f-scott-fitzgeralds-handwritten-ledger-online-145907697.html

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Meatless Monday: Vegan cashew cheese

Try a vegan substitute for cheese by blending cashews, water, and yeast, and adding different flavors such as fruit or herbs. Spread it on crackers for snack, or serve as a condiment with dinner.?

By France Morissette and Joshua Sprague,?Beyond the Peel / April 28, 2013

Drizzle a portobello mushroom with olive oil and bake for a few minutes. Then serve it on toast topped with your cashew cheese.

Beyond the Peel

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Editor's note: Stir It Up! blogger France Morissette is currently living in a remote cabin while she works as a fire lookout in Canada. She's also experimenting with a vegan diet. You can read more about her unusual experience on her blog, BeyondthePeel.net.

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Beyond The Peel

Cookbook author, France Morissette, and her husband Joshua Sprague believe that healthy food should be uncompromising when it comes to flavor. They creatively explore the world of natural, whole foods, leaving no stone unturned in their quest to create mouth watering, flavor packed, whole food meals. Through stories, photos, recipes and their online show Beyond The Peel TV, they're on a mission to help you eat healthy and enjoy every last bite in the process.

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So??I?ve arrived. Day 3 of being at the tower. Good thing they brought in a snow plow to clear the paths to the outhouse, storage sheds, and cabin. It would have been days of?shoveling. Day 1 of the fire season and I?m starting with a base of 36 cm of snow!

And guess what??It?s still snowing. I?ve been in a snow cloud now for a solid 24 hours and there doesn?t seem to be an end in sight. That?s not a bad thing necessarily. It?s giving me lots of time to ?settle? in. Unpack boxes and suitcases. Trying to find things, like where do they keep?batteries, the broom, and mop? This place has been shut up since last October so there?s a bit of cleaning to do. And I have nothing but time.

Lots and lots of time. Especially since the Internet (using an Aircard), isn?t nearly as good as I had hoped for. It doesn?t look like I?ll get as much use out of it as I had planned, except for the necessities (incredibly long loading times), like blog posts. That makes me a little sad. But I am in the middle of nowhere and should be grateful, after all, to have it in the first place. So, no more complaining from me.

I returned to the same tower I was at 4 and 5 years ago. What are the chances?

There are some good memories here and I keep finding evidence of my story, here and there. Antique salt and pepper shakers I brought with me the first year that I?d forgotten about. Small delicate glass shakers. So out of place in this rugged isolated place. A beautiful scented candle my best friend gave me years ago for my birthday (mostly used up, but with a little life left in it yet). The scent is Mediterranean Fig. An old apple basket I used to keep my onions and garlic in. Oh! And best of all, the tackiest clock you ever did see. Dusty blue in color, with a floral brocade background. Hideous, yet still hanging in the exact same spot. There?s a fondness for that hideous thing, for some reason or another.

This is an old cabin with plenty of character. Probably built in the 1970s, judging by the cupboards, wood paneling and the state of the floor. I better get my nostalgia in while I can. This ol? cabin is being ripped out next year and being replaced with a newer, ?better? version. I say ?better? since the new cabins are supposed to have very little storage in the kitchen and the bedroom closet has been replaced with an indoor shower. The shower sounds promising doesn?t it? Don?t get too excited, there?s still no running water, but it does provide a good place for a shower bag and protection from the bugs (priceless!). However, for a girl who loves food, cooking, and clothes, cupboard space and a closet are just as essential. I guess we?ll just have to wait and see.

As for the whole vegan thing, after three days, I feel a little hungry. I won?t lie.

If you?re wondering about a meat lover going vegan, I go into detail about it in?this post. But essentially I?m still a meat eater so if anyone wants to come by with some hunted meat or farm fresh eggs, I?m in. But finding sustainably raised meat around here would be next to impossible unless you were in tight with the locals. So I?m putting my values to the test. Can I do it? Probably, if I can figure the hunger part out.

On Day 1, I just unpacked. On Day 2, I made some soft vegan ?cheese? made of soaked cashews. Something I?ve been meaning to try. Wish I had done it earlier. Boy was I missing out. I actually have to refrain myself from eating it by the spoonful. I?ve also made some sprouted spelt and sesame bread and a couple extremely delicious meals.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/E3lqPxqrcPQ/Meatless-Monday-Vegan-cashew-cheese

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Algeria's Bouteflika 'responding well' after stroke | Morocco World ...

ALGIERS, April 28, 2013 (AFP)

Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is ?responding well? after he suffered a stroke and there was no irreversible damage, a doctor told the national news agency APS on Sunday.

The president, 76, ?did not suffer irreversible damage?, said Rachid Bougherbal, director of Algeria?s National Sports Medicine Centre, explaining that ?no sensory function was impaired?.

Bouteflika, who has been in power since 1999, on Saturday suffered a ?transient ischaemia?, or temporary blockage of blood flow, which ?did not last long?, said Bougherbal, adding that the veteran leader?s condition was ?reversible?.

The stroke ?fortunately? did not lead to any bleeding, he said.

Bouteflika has ?complete? balance and is ?recovering some of the fatigue caused by the ailment,? Bougherbal said.

Soon after the stroke Bouteflika was transferred to Paris for additional tests following recommendation by his doctors.

Bougherbal previously said that ?an initial investigation has already been opened and his excellency the president of the republic must observe a period of rest to undergo exams.?

He insisted there was no cause for ?any anxiety?.

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/04/88824/algerias-bouteflika-responding-well-after-stroke/

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Gone, but not forgotten

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

An international team of neuroscientists has described for the first time in exhaustive detail the underlying neurobiology of an amnesiac who suffered from profound memory loss after damage to key portions of his brain.

Writing in this week's Online Early Edition of PNAS, principal investigator Larry R. Squire, PhD, professor in the departments of Neurosciences, Psychiatry and Psychology at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and Veteran Affairs San Diego Healthcare System (VASDHS) ? with colleagues at UC Davis and the University of Castilla-La Mancha in Spain ? recount the case of EP, a man who suffered radical memory loss and dysfunction following a bout of viral encephalitis.

EP's story is strikingly similar to the more famous case of HM, who also suffered permanent, dramatic memory loss after small portions of his medial temporal lobes were removed by doctors in 1953 to relieve severe epileptic seizures. The surgery was successful, but left HM unable to form new memories or recall people, places or events post-operation.

HM (later identified as Henry Gustav Molaison) was the subject of intense scientific scrutiny and study for the remainder of his life. When he died in 2008 at the age of 82, he was popularized as "the world's most famous amnesiac." His brain was removed and digitally preserved at The Brain Observatory, a UC San Diego-based lab headed by Jacopo Annese, PhD, an assistant adjunct professor in the Department of Radiology and a co-author of the PNAS paper.

Like Molaison, EP was also something of a scientific celebrity, albeit purposefully anonymous. In 1992, at the age of 70, he was diagnosed with viral encephalitis. He recovered, but the illness resulted in devastating neurological loss, both physiologically and psychologically.

Not only did he also lose the ability to form new memories, EP suffered a modest impairment in his semantic knowledge ? the knowledge of things like words and the names of objects. Between 1994, when he moved to San Diego County, and his death 14 years later, EP was a subject of continued study, which included hundreds of different assessments of cognitive function.

"The work was long-term," said Squire, a Career Research Scientist at the VASDHS. "We probably visited his house 200 times. We knew his family." In a 2000 paper, Squire and colleagues described EP as a 6-foot-2, 192-pound affable fellow with a fascination for the computers used in his testing. He was always agreeable and pleasant. "He had a sense of humor," said Squire.

After his death, EP's brain was also processed at The Brain Observatory. The last five years have been spent parsing the data and painting a full picture of what happened to EP and why. Squire said EP's viral encephalitis infection wreaked havoc upon his brain: Large, bilateral, symmetrical lesions were found in the medial temporal lobe, portions of the brain responsible for formation of long-term memory; and whole, crucial structures were eliminated ? the amygdala and hippocampus among them. Additionally, other brain regions had atrophied and white matter ? the support fibers that transmit signals between brain structures ? had become gliotic or scarred.

Though HM is generally considered the "gold standard" of amnesia patients ? "he was the first case and studied so elegantly," said Squire ? EP provides new and surprising twists in understanding how memory functions and fails.

For example, HM's declarative memory was almost nil ? half an hour after lunch, he would have forgotten what he ate or if he had eaten at all ? but in tests, HM showed some small capacity to learn new things. "His ability to learn was nowhere close to zero," Squire said, "so the thinking was that maybe there were other ways that information was getting in, that there was something special about the capacity for learning facts."

EP undermines that notion. Due to the total destruction of specific memory-linked brain structures, EP was utterly unable to learn anything new. "It really was absolutely zero," said Squire. "That suggests there isn't any special mechanism. HM simply retained some ability because he retained some residual tissue."

Squire noted that the massive scope of EP's brain damage also appeared to trigger secondary consequences. "If a lesion gets large enough, it results in other negative changes due to the loss of connectivity," he said. In EP's case, one result was his impaired semantic knowledge, which wouldn't have been harmed by damage to medial temporal lobes, but was the consequence of subsequent atrophy in adjacent tissues.

Finally, EP presents a continuing, confounding mystery. In most patients with retrograde amnesia, memory loss is limited. They can't remember things within a few months or years of the brain impairment. In EP's case, he suffered amnesia extending back 40 to 50 years, affecting memories that theoretically should have been well-established and consolidated, though he could recall his childhood on a central California farm.

Squire said the effect is likely the result of lateral temporal damage caused as a secondary consequence of the initial disease-related brain damage. For researchers and clinicians, he said, EP is a cautionary and troubling tale.

###

University of California - San Diego: http://www.ucsd.edu

Thanks to University of California - San Diego for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127865/Gone__but_not_forgotten

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Teen years may be critical in later stroke risk

Apr. 24, 2013 ? The teenage years may be a key period of vulnerability related to living in the "stroke belt" when it comes to future stroke risk, according to a new study published in the April 24, 2013, online issue of Neurology?, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

More people have strokes and die of strokes in the southeastern area known as the stroke belt than in the rest of the United States. So far, research has shown that only part of the difference can be explained by traditional risk factors such as diabetes and high blood pressure. Previous studies have shown that people who are born in the stroke belt but no longer lived there in adulthood continue to have a higher risk of stroke, along with people who were born outside the stroke belt but lived there in adulthood.

The current study looked at how long people lived in the stroke belt and their ages when they lived there throughout life to see if any age period was most critical in influencing future stroke risk.

Data came from the REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, a national random sample of the general population with more people selected from the stroke belt. The study involved 24,544 people with an average age of 65 who had never had a stroke at the start of the study, with 57 percent currently living in the stroke belt and 43 percent from the rest of the country. The study tracked each person's moves from birth to present, with some people moving into or out of the stroke belt. The participants were then followed for an average of 5.8 years. During that time, 615 people had a first stroke.

After adjusting for stroke risk factors, only living in the stroke belt during the teenage years was associated with a higher risk of stroke. People who spent their teenage years in the stroke belt were 17 percent more likely to have a stroke in later years than people who did not spend their teenage years in the stroke belt. Across all age periods, living in the stroke belt increased the risk about two-fold for African-Americans compared to Caucasians.

"This study suggests that strategies to prevent stroke need to start early in life," said study author Virginia J. Howard, PhD, of the School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham and a member of the American Academy of Neurology. "Many social and behavioral risk factors, such as smoking, are set in place during the teenage years, and teens are more exposed to external influences and gain the knowledge to challenge or reaffirm their childhood habits and lifestyle."

The study was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute on Aging.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Academy of Neurology.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Virginia J. Howard et al. Effect of duration and age at exposure to the Stroke Belt on incident stroke in adulthood. Neurology, 2013 DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182904d59

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/X70Dgq8vmN4/130424161106.htm

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Celestica profit plunges as Blackberry exits

(Reuters) - Contract electronics manufacturer Celestica Inc reported a 76 percent fall in first-quarter profit, hit by the loss of contracts from its once-biggest customer, Blackberry.

The company's net income fell to $10.5 million, or 6 cents per share, from $43.2 million, or 20 cents per share, a year earlier.

Revenue fell 19 percent to $1.37 billion.

Toronto-based Celestica, which makes servers and other products for manufacturers such as IBM and Cisco Systems Inc, said in June it would stop making products for Blackberry as the Canada-based smartphone maker made changes in its supply chain to lower costs.

Blackberry, previously Research in Motion, contributed 19 percent, or $321.3 million, to Celestica's first-quarter revenue last year.

(Reporting by Krithika Krishnamurthy in Bangalore; Editing by Sreejiraj Eluvangal)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/celestica-profit-plunges-blackberry-exits-111454580--finance.html

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Analysis: Sleeping ad giant Amazon finally stirs

By Alistair Barr and Jennifer Saba

SAN FRANCISCO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc is known in the advertising industry as the "sleeping giant" because the world's largest Internet retailer harbors a trove of consumer-spending data that many marketers have called an unrealized opportunity.

Now it's awakening to the potential. After running ads on its own website for years, the company has taken the first steps toward becoming a true Internet advertising network, using the knowledge garnered from its data to place targeted ads for some of the world's biggest advertisers across thousands of other websites.

An Amazon mobile ad network, launched late last year, is now blasting ads via apps on smartphones and tablets, including Apple Inc iPhones and devices powered by Google Inc's Android operating system.

For Amazon, an ad business is a new revenue stream with fatter margins than its retail operations. To Google, Facebook Inc and other online ad leaders, Amazon is a threat because it has data they lack.

Google knows what people are searching for. Facebook knows what people like and who their friends are. Amazon knows you searched last week for running shoes, but also that you bought a pair a year ago. That kind of information has advertisers salivating.

"In today's marketing world, data is gold and Amazon is Fort Knox," said Jeff Lanctot, chief media officer at digital ad agency Razorfish, which counts Mercedes Benz USA, Delta Air Lines and McDonald's among its clients.

Lanctot has worked with Amazon for over a decade and says the company's attitude to advertising used to be "take it or leave it."

"Now it's clearly an area they decided to invest in," he said. "They have made a concerted effort to listen to what advertisers want - the type of data you need, the type of scale you are looking for."

ANOTHER $1 BLN BUSINESS?

Amazon is getting into hotly contested turf. Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, Facebook and AOL command two-thirds of U.S. online advertising, according to eMarketer.

But its consumer data gives it a unique proposition, industry insiders argue. And though the competition will be stiff, it could be worth it.

Online advertising has 20 to 30 percent profit margins versus less than 5 percent for Amazon's retail business, according to Ben Schachter, an analyst at Macquarie.

On Thursday, when Amazon reports results, analysts will be looking for signs of growth in higher-margin businesses, such as advertising and cloud-computing, after years of sacrificing short-term profit to grow those divisions.

Amazon does not disclose ad business results and spokeswoman Kristin Schaefer Mariani declined to comment.

But analysts estimate the ad business already generates at least $500 million a year in revenue. David Selinger, a former Amazon executive who runs e-commerce personalization firm RichRelevance, recently predicted that Amazon's ad business will hit $1 billion in sales this year.

That's a fraction of Amazon's revenue, expected to be $75 billion this year. But longer term, the ad business could become substantial if it can grab a bigger slice of a digital ad market that will be worth over $50 billion by 2015 in the United States alone, according to eMarketer data.

"Could it rival something like Yahoo, Facebook or AOL's ad businesses?" said Macquarie's Schachter. "Sure."

ADS ON OTHER WEBSITES

Display ads on Amazon's own websites have grown fast since 2011 but what really excites Madison Avenue and Wall Street is Amazon's latest push to create and serve ads on other sites.

"The big opportunity is in having a third-party ad network," said Schachter. "There are only a few Amazon sites. Expanding beyond that, they can take advantage of millions of other websites out there."

Amazon quietly started serving ads on other websites in the fourth quarter of 2010. This part of its business remained un-named until about the middle of last year, when the company formally christened it the Amazon Advertising Platform.

It currently serves ads on thousands of websites in the United States, Britain and Germany, according to its website.

Amazon's Mariani declined to name websites. However, she said Amazon buys ad inventory - or online ad space - from content publishers or through exchanges, which are online markets for buying and selling inventory.

The company's in-house technology serves the ads to third-party websites in real time. A campaign Amazon ran for Kimberly-Clark's Huggies diapers, and another for video game designer Ubisoft, included ads served off Amazon websites.

This is where its advantage lies. It has tracked what millions of shoppers browse, search, and buy on Amazon.com for more than 15 years, using that information to recommend related products to customers. Now, it's using that data to buy ad inventory more efficiently and serve ads to the right consumers, on the right websites, at the right time.

A large entertainment company worked with Amazon to promote one of its movies last year, according to a person at the entertainment company. Data on purchases of related DVDs, books and music on Amazon.com helped identify potential customers who were likely to see the movie at the theater and ads were targeted at this audience. Results were above average, based on the number of impressions served and the number of clicks on the ads, the person said. They did not want to be identified as they were not authorized to speak publicly about the company's ad spending.

"Amazon spent a lot of time developing algorithms to make recommendations to consumers shopping on Amazon.com," said an executive who oversees an ad exchange that is a partner of Amazon's.

"Now they can do this outside of the Amazon world for other companies. It's really an extension of one of their core competencies," said the executive, who declined to be identified because Amazon is an important partner.

Armed with consumer information, Amazon can bid more aggressively on exchanges because it is confident that ads created from that inventory will be clicked on more often. The company can also charge advertisers more because its ads are better targeted, according to industry insiders and analysts.

"Amazon is not a retailer anymore, it is the largest behavioral marketing company in the world," said Yaakov Kimelfeld, chief research officer at Kantar Media Compete, which helps global brands improve their online marketing. "Amazon will be the best positioned to predict whether to buy inventory or not and be the most efficient in this market."

Amazon's purchase data helps advertisers spend more efficiently because they only have to buy access to those consumers most likely to respond to their messages, according to Mark Pavia, an executive at media buying firm Starcom USA, which represents clients including Kellogg, Samsung Electronics and Mars.

"I can spend 100 percent of my dollars, if you will, against only the people I want to get because of the purchase data," Pavia said. "That level of targeting is highly interesting."

(Reporting by Alistair Barr and Jennifer Saba; Editing by Martin Howell and Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-sleeping-ad-giant-amazon-finally-stirs-050944925--sector.html

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CSN: Nats still struggling? |? O's walk-off vs. Jays

Want a quick synopsis of the state of the Nationals' lineup 19 games into the season? Adam LaRoche has the condensed version.

"We're not getting the big hits," the veteran first baseman said. "A lot of quick innings. Not a ton of baserunners. And five or six guys that aren't swinging the bat real good. When it rains, it pours."

The rain may not be at cats-and-dogs stages right now, but it's coming down at a steady rate, resulting in more than a few frustrating losses like Monday's 3-2 defeat at the hands of the Cardinals.

Despite getting the closest thing Dan Haren has offered up to a quality start this season and some sparkling work out of their bullpen, the Nationals couldn't exorcise their St. Louis demons from last October because they couldn't produce a clutch hit late despite several opportunities.

Thus, a Nationals club that three weeks ago was everyone's prohibitive favorite to reach the World Series fell to 10-9. Yes, they're still over .500, but there's something unsettling about the way they've played to date, especially at the plate.

As a team, the Nationals are hitting .240. Individually, three regulars own batting averages below that mark: LaRoche (.185), Danny Espinosa (.176) and the third base duo of Ryan Zimmerman and Anthony Rendon (.213 combined). Throw in three key bench players who have been abysmal so far ? Tyler Moore (.158), Chad Tracy (.136) and Roger Bernadina (0-for-15) ? and it's easy to see why they've had such trouble scoring runs in bunches.

"It think that's what we're kind of stumped on," LaRoche said. "It's normal to have a couple of guys that aren't going. But it gets kind of washed away when you've got other guys picking up the slack. Now we just don't have that. And that can turn into guys pressing. When you have a chance to score, to try a little too hard."

LaRoche and Desmond might well have been guilty of that during a critical juncture in Monday night's game. After watching a potential seventh-inning rally snuffed out when Cardinals center fielder Jon Jay made a nifty, sliding catch of Tracy's broken-bat blooper with two on and two out, the Nationals gave themselves another opportunity in the bottom of the eighth.

Denard Span beat out a grounder to third to get things started, then after Jayson Werth struck out, Bryce Harper drew a walk against St. Louis reliever Trevor Rosenthal. To the plate stepped LaRoche with a chance to drive in the tying run.

Instead, the cleanup hitter bounced Rosenthal's first pitch to first base, advancing the runners but recording the second out of the inning in the process.

"That guy can throw 100," LaRoche said of Rosenthal. "The first fastball you see, you want to go after it. And if you miss it, go after the next one."

With two outs and runners on second and third, Desmond stepped up with his own chance to drive in the tying run, and possibly the go-ahead run as well. But the All-Star shortstop was headed back to the bench in short order, taking a fastball for strike one, swinging out of his shoelaces and missing for strike two, then watching a 98 mph fastball from Rosenthal sail right through the heart of the zone for strike three.

"That's the situation I want to be in: Tying run on second, and the game on the line," Desmond said. "I'll take me in that situation any day of the week. He just got me out in that situation today. Hopefully I get that opportunity again."

Davey Johnson didn't sound entirely pleased with his hitters' approach in those situations.

"All he was throwing was fastballs," the manager said. "The umpire was giving him a little bit of the top end of the strike zone, but you've got to make him bring it down and just center on the fastball."

The Nationals went down quietly in the ninth against recently named Cardinals closer Edward Mujica, ending a frustrating night and leaving Haren to suffer his third loss in four starts despite the fact he showed significant signs of improvement in this one.

After getting beat around by the Reds, White Sox and Marlins, Haren was hoping to at least record his first quality start as a National. He was on track to do just that, entering the sixth inning having allowed only two runs with a manageable pitch count of 87. But the veteran right-hander not only couldn't get through the sixth, he couldn't even record an out.

Haren's undoing began when he plunked Matt Holliday with a pitch, then exacerbated itself on back-to-back singles by Carlos Beltran and Yadier Molina and finally a walk to David Freese. Out to the mound strolled Johnson, asking for the ball from his starter, who wasn't interested in finding the positives out of this latest loss.

"Not really," Haren said. "I want more out of myself than five innings, giving up three runs and [reliever Craig] Stammen bailing me out of that jam. I've been around for 10 years. I'm used to throwing seven, eight innings every time. I've thrown 200 innings many times. Going five innings, you're not going to do that."

It took a major escape act from Stammen ? stranding the bases loaded with nobody out ? to keep the deficit at 3-2 and at least give the Nationals lineup a chance to rally late.

But this lineup hasn't been able to rally much so far this season. And that has left this team in a strange position: Still boasting a winning record but not living up to the lofty expectations placed upon it.

"It's a long season," Desmond said. "As an outsider looking in, you see 98 wins last year and you expect to see the same again this year. But in order to win 98 games, you've got to lose a bunch of games, too. It doesn't matter if we lose them in April or September or October or whatever. We've just got to keep on playing and it'll turn for us."

Source: http://www.csnwashington.com/baseball-washington-nationals/talk/lackluster-lineup-leads-another-nats-loss

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DVDs and Blu-ray for April 23 - Montreal Gazette

The Impossible

?Rating: 4 stars out of five

A story so incredible it could only be true, this film based on the real-time experiences of Maria Belon during the Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami pulls you in from the first scene and never lets you go. Part of the suspense is that we know the wave will hit. But in true disaster movie style, we get to know our central characters before terror strikes. Thanks to JA Bayona's sharp direction and star Naomi Watts' riveting mix of survival imperative and compassionate humanity, we're right there in the moment, when the only thing of real value is the one you love, another human life. And yet, when so many lives have been forever altered and scarred, where does one begin to address the trauma? Bayona lets us feel the weight of the burden by simply showing the chaos. In these moments where the suffering seems so overwhelming one can fall into ambivalence, the camera always finds the right focus and reaffirms a little bit of human magic. A stellar and moving piece of cinema that tells a monolithic story in singular detail, The Impossible proves you can still make a disaster movie that doesn't feel plastic. Katherine Monk

Ship of Fools / Lilith (Blu-ray)

Rating: 4 stars / 4 stars

Here's a nice double feature of mid-1960s Hollywood star vehicles. First up is Ship of Fools, a Stanley Kramer pic that's overlong at 150 minutes but fascinating both for the story, adapted by Abby Mann from the bestselling novel by Katherine Anne Porter, and the who's-who of an international cast: Vivien Leigh, Simone Signoret, Oskar Werner, Jos? Ferrer, Lee Marvin, George Segal, even an icon of flamenco, Jos? Greco. The friendships, rivalries and love affairs of passengers and crew - and, indeed, the fate of the world, in microcosm - play out on a transatlantic German liner headed back to newly Nazi Germany in 1933. Next up we have Warren Beatty and Jean Seberg in Lilith, a brooding, moving drama on mental illness. Beatty, in his mid-20s and his fourth feature, plays an occupational therapist at an upscale mental institution and Seberg, her blond hair grown long again after her boyish debut with the French New Wave, is his beguiling (and schizophrenic) patient; Peter Fonda co-stars. Both films are in finely grained black-and-white and are squeezed onto a single Blu-ray disc by U.S. distributor Mill Creek Entertainment. No extras on either, but there are optional subtitles. Jeff Heinrich

Bakumatsu taiy?-den

Rating: 4 stars?

Japanese critics have long adored this 1957 film, a madcap comedy by director Y?z? Kawashima. But on this side of the world it never really got a chance. The title is unwieldy, which doesn't help, and it's no more manageable in English. Here's how it translates: A Sun-Tribe Myth from the Bakumatsu Era, or alternately, The Sun Legend in the Last Days of the Shogunate; I've also seen it translated as The Sun Legend of the End of the Tokugawa Era. Quite a mouthful, no? Well, don't judge a movie by its title; this one's a delight. It's set in the Shinagawa district of Tokyo in 1862, in a brothel, where the whole of society - prostitutes, businessmen, samurai and the like - cross paths, cross swords, and slapstick their way to countless laughs. The movie actually begins in contemporary 1950s Japan, in the same location, and by going back in time reminds the Japanese just how far (or not) they've come. You'll need an all-region player to see this edition of the film distributed by Britain's Eureka! Masters of Cinema; the Blu-ray (also available as a DVD) is region-coded for Europe. There are optional English subtitles, but no extras; there is, however, a nice, 36-page illustrated booklet. JH

Spies of Warsaw

Rating: 3 stars

It's a wonder that Alan Furst's spy novels have taken so long to be dramatized on the screen; set in Europe in the 1930s and '40s, all 12 have a wonderful cinematic quality. The Spies of Warsaw is one of the American writer's newer books, from 2008, and now it's been adapted (without the 'The') into a two-part BBC mini-series. David Tennant, the wiry Scottish actor best known as TV's Doctor Who, plays Jean-Fran?ois Mercier, an aristocratic French army officer in Warsaw in the pre-war years of 1937 and 1938 who uncovers a buildup for invasion by the Germans. The alluring Janet Montgomery plays his main squeeze, a League of Nations lawyer. Fans of the book will be disappointed how so much is telescoped here to make a fast-paced TV movie; a lot of the subtle tension is lost, and, as a Frenchman, Tennant defies credulity. So does Rad Kaim (Eastern Promises), a Pole who plays the pockmarked Gestapo interrogator who tracks Mercier down; he speaks German with a Slavic accent and sounds French when he speaks English. There are English subtitles, but the sole extra on the Blu-ray (also available on DVD), is a 10-minute interview with Tennant intercut with clips from the movie. (Warning to buyers: There was a big problem with the sound on the retail Blu-ray I screened; it was echoey and swung constantly between channels. Wait for a second pressing.) JH

Promised Land

Rating:??2.5 stars

Given the high-profile politics of natural gas extraction and "fracking," not to mention the charisma of stars Matt Damon, Frances McDormand and John Krasinski, Promised Land was met with a lot of anticipation last fall. Yet, this script based on the story by David Eggers and penned by Damon and Krasinski, and brought to the big screen via Gus Van Sant, fails to exploit the resources it claims. The central problem is shifting empathy. We're never given enough real information to figure out who the hero is, and by the time we put it together, the movie has twisted itself into a narrative pretzel to make all the pieces fit into a highly predictable, formulaic place. You can feel the good intentions gurgling beneath the surface. Promised Land feels incredibly preachy. KM

Jurassic Park 3D

Rating: 4 stars

Once upon a time, Steven Spielberg made movies that were undeniable popcorn fun. Scary enough to keep you on the edge of your seat, and fantastic enough to transport the viewer to another, childlike universe, Spielberg's cinematic talents all came together in the first Jurassic Park and now, you can relive the magic at home on this new combo pack containing the new, 3D version that was a year in the making. Opting for a more subtle brand of stereoscopic viewing, technicians don't make things "pop out" as much as they add depth and texture. It's a nice, clean update that takes nothing away from the original, and reminds the masses that once upon a time, Spielberg did what he was good at - not what he believed would cement his star on the walk of fame. KM

A Royal Affair

Rating: 4 stars

"Something is rotten in the state of Denmark," quotes citizen-physician Johann Friedrich Struensee (Mads Mikkelsen) in the opening act of A Royal Affair, essentially foreshadowing the next 90 minutes of screen time in this Oscar-nominated foreign film from director Nikolaj Arcel. Set on the eve of the French Revolution, when all of Europe was about to explode and kindle a bonfire of social change, we enter a highly Shakespearean plot centred on a nutty king Christian (Mikkel Boe Folsgaard) and his pretty young English wife (Alicia Vikander). Hoping a common sense doctor can make the king pliable in the hands of the right people, Struensee essentially usurps the throne and implements sweeping reforms regarding everything from serfdom to censorship. This Danish spring doesn't last long, however, as the Church and conservative bodies preferred the old, unjust ways. A bodice-ripping piece of historical cinema that plays to grown-up sensibilities, A Royal Affair is a timely and altogether enlightening look at relatively recent history. KM

Gangster Squad

Rating: 2 stars

Just about everything is wrong with this movie, with one notable exception: Ryan Gosling. Proving he can keep a hulking tanker afloat with his own compartment-based buoyancy, Gosling brings life to this vulgar, violent and poorly directed mess of a movie through the character of Sgt. Jerry Wooters - an L.A. detective who decided to turn his back on the internal corruption in the department in order to stay alive. However, when a hard-nosed colleague (John Brolin) goes after mob boss Mickey Cohen (Sean Penn), Wooters decides to put it all on the line to back him up. A sloppy attempt at film noir that had to be recut after the shootings in Aurora, Colo., Gangster Squad will no doubt stand as an example of how and where Hollywood lost its way in a bid to wow the masses. Emma Stone also stars as the hooker with a heart of gold. KM

Happy People: A Year in the Taiga

Rating: 3 stars

Werner Herzog teams up with Russian director Dmitry Vasyukov for a year-long look at the people of the Taiga - where life around the polar circle seems pretty bleak, but actually packs endless joy and reward for those who call it home. Another notch in Herzog's non-fiction belt, this co-directed ode to a simpler, if not kinder or gentler, life wears the viewer down to a primal state, where watching a man make his own pair of skis with an axe is better than a James Bond car chase. KM

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/movie-guide/DVDs+April/8278896/story.html

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant has a serious rat problem

April 22 (Reuters) - Pep Guardiola is not the only connection between Bayern Munich and Barcelona, who meet in their Champions League semi-final, first leg at the Allianz Arena on Tuesday. Both teams are dominating their leagues to an almost embarrassing extent, have won the Champions League four times apiece, share an acrimonious rivalry with Real Madrid, and owe part of their success to the flamboyant Dutchman Louis van Gaal. Both have also been in two Champions League finals in the last four years, though the Catalans won both of theirs and the Bavarians came out losers on each occasion. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japans-fukushima-nuclear-plant-serious-rat-problem-134201520.html

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Green spaces may boost well-being for city slickers

Green spaces may boost well-being for city slickers [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Anna Mikulak
amikulak@psychologicalscience.org
202-293-9300
Association for Psychological Science

People who live in urban areas with more green space tend to report greater well-being than city dwellers who don't have parks, gardens, or other green space nearby, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Examining data from a national longitudinal survey of households in the United Kingdom, Mathew White and colleagues at the European Centre for Environment & Human Health at the University of Exeter Medical School found that individuals reported less mental distress and higher life satisfaction when they were living in greener areas. And this association held even after the researchers accounted for changes in participants' income, employment, marital status, physical health, and housing type.

White and colleagues were surprised by the scale of the effects of living in a greener area in comparison to 'big hitting' life events, such as marriage and employment:

"Living in an urban area with relatively high levels of green space compared to one with relatively low levels of green space was associated with a positive impact on well-being equivalent to roughly a third of the impact of being married vs. unmarried and a tenth of the impact of being employed vs. unemployed."

The results show that, even stacked up against other factors that contribute to life satisfaction, living in a greener area had a significant effect.

"These kinds of comparisons are important for policymakers when trying to decide how to invest scarce public resources, e.g. for park development or upkeep, and figuring out what 'bang' they'll get for their buck," says White.

Findings from previous research suggested a correlation between green space and well-being, but those studies weren't able to rule out the possibility that people with higher levels of well-being simply move to greener areas. White and colleagues were able to solve that problem by using longitudinal data from the national survey; that data were collected annually from over 10,000 people between 1991 and 2008.

The new research does not prove that moving to a greener area will necessarily cause increased happiness, but it does fit with findings from experimental studies showing that short bouts of time in a green space can improve people's mood and cognitive functioning.

While the effect for any one person might be small, White points out that the potential positive effects of green space for society at large might be substantial.

"This research could be important for psychologists, public health officials and urban planners who are interested in learning about the effects that urbanization and city planning can have on population health and well-being," White concludes.

###

White describes his research in this brief video from the European Centre for Environment & Human Health: http://www.ecehh.org/publication/would-you-be-happier-living-greener-urban-area

Co-authors on this research include Ian Alcock, Benedict Wheeler, and Michael Depledge of the University of Exeter.

This research was supported by the European Regional Developmental Fund and the European Social Fund Convergence Programme for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.

For more information about this study, please contact: Mathew White at mathew.white@exeter.ac.uk.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "Would You Be Happier Living in a Greener Urban Area? A Fixed-Effects Analysis of Panel Data" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Green spaces may boost well-being for city slickers [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Anna Mikulak
amikulak@psychologicalscience.org
202-293-9300
Association for Psychological Science

People who live in urban areas with more green space tend to report greater well-being than city dwellers who don't have parks, gardens, or other green space nearby, according to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Examining data from a national longitudinal survey of households in the United Kingdom, Mathew White and colleagues at the European Centre for Environment & Human Health at the University of Exeter Medical School found that individuals reported less mental distress and higher life satisfaction when they were living in greener areas. And this association held even after the researchers accounted for changes in participants' income, employment, marital status, physical health, and housing type.

White and colleagues were surprised by the scale of the effects of living in a greener area in comparison to 'big hitting' life events, such as marriage and employment:

"Living in an urban area with relatively high levels of green space compared to one with relatively low levels of green space was associated with a positive impact on well-being equivalent to roughly a third of the impact of being married vs. unmarried and a tenth of the impact of being employed vs. unemployed."

The results show that, even stacked up against other factors that contribute to life satisfaction, living in a greener area had a significant effect.

"These kinds of comparisons are important for policymakers when trying to decide how to invest scarce public resources, e.g. for park development or upkeep, and figuring out what 'bang' they'll get for their buck," says White.

Findings from previous research suggested a correlation between green space and well-being, but those studies weren't able to rule out the possibility that people with higher levels of well-being simply move to greener areas. White and colleagues were able to solve that problem by using longitudinal data from the national survey; that data were collected annually from over 10,000 people between 1991 and 2008.

The new research does not prove that moving to a greener area will necessarily cause increased happiness, but it does fit with findings from experimental studies showing that short bouts of time in a green space can improve people's mood and cognitive functioning.

While the effect for any one person might be small, White points out that the potential positive effects of green space for society at large might be substantial.

"This research could be important for psychologists, public health officials and urban planners who are interested in learning about the effects that urbanization and city planning can have on population health and well-being," White concludes.

###

White describes his research in this brief video from the European Centre for Environment & Human Health: http://www.ecehh.org/publication/would-you-be-happier-living-greener-urban-area

Co-authors on this research include Ian Alcock, Benedict Wheeler, and Michael Depledge of the University of Exeter.

This research was supported by the European Regional Developmental Fund and the European Social Fund Convergence Programme for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly.

For more information about this study, please contact: Mathew White at mathew.white@exeter.ac.uk.

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "Would You Be Happier Living in a Greener Urban Area? A Fixed-Effects Analysis of Panel Data" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/afps-gsm042213.php

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Fallout for states rejecting Medicaid expansion

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Rejecting the Medicaid expansion in the federal health care law could have unexpected consequences for states where Republican lawmakers remain steadfastly opposed to what they scorn as "Obamacare."

It could mean exposing businesses to Internal Revenue Service penalties and leaving low-income citizens unable to afford coverage even as legal immigrants get financial aid for their premiums. For the poorest people, it could virtually guarantee that they will remain uninsured and dependent on the emergency room at local hospitals that already face federal cutbacks.

Concern about such consequences helped forge a deal in Arkansas last week. The Republican-controlled Legislature endorsed a plan by Democratic Gov. Mike Beebe to accept additional Medicaid money under the federal law, but to use the new dollars to buy private insurance for eligible residents.

One of the main arguments for the private option was that it would help businesses avoid tax penalties.

The Obama administration hasn't signed off on the Arkansas deal, and it's unclear how many other states will use it as a model. But it reflects a pragmatic streak in American politics that's still the exception in the polarized health care debate.

"The biggest lesson out of Arkansas is not so much the exact structure of what they are doing," said Alan Weil, executive director of the nonpartisan National Academy for State Health Policy. "Part of it is just a message of creativity, that they can look at it and say, 'How can we do this in a way that works for us?'"

About half the nearly 30 million uninsured people expected to gain coverage under President Barack Obama's health care overhaul would do so through Medicaid. Its expansion would cover low-income people making up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, about $15,860 for an individual.

Middle-class people who don't have coverage at their jobs will be able to purchase private insurance in new state markets, helped by new federal tax credits. The big push to sign up the uninsured starts this fall, and coverage takes effect Jan. 1.

As originally written, the Affordable Care Act required states to accept the Medicaid expansion as a condition of staying in the program. Last summer's Supreme Court decision gave each state the right to decide. While that pleased many governors, it also created complications by opening the door to unintended consequences.

So far, 20 mostly blue states, plus the District of Columbia, have accepted the expansion.

Thirteen GOP-led states have declined. They say Medicaid already is too costly, and they don't trust Washington to keep its promise of generous funding for the expansion, which mainly helps low-income adults with no children at home.

The remaining states are still weighing options. Concerns about the unintended consequences could make the most difference in those states.

A look at some potential side effects:

?The Employer Glitch

States that don't expand Medicaid leave more businesses exposed to tax penalties, according to a recent study by Brian Haile, Jackson Hewitt's senior vice president for tax policy. He estimates the fines could top $1 billion a year in states refusing.

Under the law, employers with 50 or more workers that don't offer coverage face penalties if just one of their workers gets subsidized private insurance through the new state markets. But employers generally do not face fines under the law for workers who enroll in Medicaid.

In states that don't expand Medicaid, some low-income workers who would otherwise have been eligible have a fallback option. They can instead get subsidized private insurance in the law's new markets. But that would trigger a penalty for their employer.

"It highlights how complicated the Affordable Care Act is," said Haile. "We wanted to make sure the business community understood."

?The Immigrant Quirk

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, called attention this year to this politically awkward problem when she proposed that her state accept the Medicaid expansion.

Under the health law, U.S. citizens below the poverty line ? $11,490 for an individual, $23,550 for a family of four ? can only get coverage through the Medicaid expansion. But lawfully present immigrants who are also below the poverty level are eligible for subsidized private insurance.

Congress wrote the legislation that way to avoid the controversy associated with trying to change previous laws that require legal immigrants to wait five years before they can qualify for Medicaid. Instead of dragging immigration politics into the health care debate, lawmakers devised a detour.

Before the Supreme Court ruling, it was a legislative patch.

Now it could turn into an issue in states with lots of immigrants, such as Texas and Florida. It could create the perception that citizens are being disadvantaged versus immigrants.

?The Fairness Argument

Under the law, U.S. citizens below the poverty line can only get taxpayer-subsidized coverage by going into Medicaid. But other low-income people making just enough to put them over the poverty line can get subsidized private insurance through the new state markets.

An individual making $11,700 a year would be able to get a policy. But someone making $300 less would be out of luck, dependent on charity care at the emergency room.

"Americans have very strong feelings about fairness," said Weil. "The notion of 'Gee, that's just not fair' is definitely a factor in the discussion."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fallout-states-rejecting-medicaid-expansion-072613081.html

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

Obama briefed on unfolding bomb investigation

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The White House says President Barack Obama is being briefed on developments in the investigation into the bombings at the Boston Marathon.

It said in a statement that the president's assistant for homeland security and counterterrorism, Lisa Monaco, was briefing Obama overnight about the news unfolding in Boston and the nearby community of Watertown.

One bombing suspect is dead and a second remains at large.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-briefed-unfolding-bomb-investigation-110058888--politics.html

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Russia's Chechnya has seen decades of war, terror

MAKHACHKALA, Russia (AP) ? The two brothers suspected in the Boston Marathon bombings have their ethnic roots in Chechnya, a part of the Caucasus Mountains that has spawned decades of violence ? from separatist wars to suicide attacks, blood feuds and hostage sieges.

Authorities have not linked Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to any insurgent groups, and the Kremlin-backed strongman who now leads Chechnya says the brothers got their inspiration in the U.S., not the troubled region in southern Russia.

"They weren't living here. They were living, studying and growing up in America," Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov said in an interview on Russian television. "They have been educated there, not here."

The families of Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the 26-year-old killed in a gun battle with police in Massachusetts overnight, and his 19-year-old brother, Dzhokhar, left Chechnya long ago and moved to Central Asia, according to the Chechen government.

Before arriving in the United States a decade ago, the brothers lived briefly in Makhachkala, the capital of Dagestan, a neighboring, violence-wracked Russian province where their father still resides.

The conflict in Chechnya began in 1994 as a separatist war, but became an Islamic insurgency dedicated to forming an Islamic state in the Caucasus. Dagestan has since become the epicenter of the insurgency.

Russian troops withdrew from Chechnya in 1996 after the first Chechen war, leaving it de-facto independent and largely lawless, but then rolled back three years later following apartment building explosions in Moscow and other cities blamed on the rebels.

Kadyrov has Moscow's carte blanche to stabilize Chechnya with his feared security services, which are accused of killings, torture and other rampant human rights abuses.

The Tsarnaev brothers lived in the region only briefly as children, but appeared to have maintained a strong Chechen identity. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev's first name is the same as Chechnya's first separatist president, who was killed in a Russian airstrike.

The suspects' uncle, Ruslan Tsarni of Montgomery Village, Md., urged Dzhokar Tsarnaev to turn himself in, saying: "He put a shame on our family, the Tsarnaev family. He put a shame on the entire Chechen ethnicity."

In the interview on Russian TV, Kadyrov offered his condolences to the Boston Marathon victims, but placed the blame squarely on the United States.

He added on Instagram that "the roots of this evil are to be found in America," but offered no explanation. He also criticized U.S. authorities for failing to capture the older brother alive.

Russia has relied on Kadyrov, a ruthless former rebel, to bring a degree of stability to Chechnya in recent years. But the Islamic insurgency has spread to neighboring provinces, with Dagestan ? sandwiched between Chechnya and the Caspian Sea ? now seeing the worst of the violence. Militants launch daily attacks against police and other authorities.

Militants from Chechnya and neighboring provinces have carried out a series of terrorist attacks in Russia, including a 2002 raid on a Moscow theater, in which 129 hostages died, most of them from the effects of narcotics gas that Russian special forces pumped into the building to incapacitate the attackers.

In 2004, militants from Chechnya took more than 1,000 people hostage at a school in Beslan, and the siege ended when gunfire erupted after explosions tore through the gym. More than half of the 330 people who died were children. There also have been numerous bombings in Moscow and other cities.

The Obama administration placed Chechen warlord Doku Umarov on a list of terrorist leaders after he claimed responsibility for 2010 suicide bombings on Moscow's subway that killed 40 people and a 2009 train bombing that claimed 26 lives.

Russia faced strong international criticism for its indiscriminate use of force against civilians and other rights abuses in Chechnya. The two separatist wars killed an estimated 100,000 people, and Russian bombing reduced most of Chechnya's capital, Grozny, and many other towns and villages to rubble, sending tens of thousands fleeing.

The federal forces suffered heavy casualties in the hands of lightly armed rebels, who relied on their centuries-old warrior culture and knowledge of rugged terrain to offset the Russian edge in firepower. The Chechens' successes were reminiscent of their exploits in 19th-century battles against a czarist army that spent decades trying to conquer the Caucasus.

In recent years, militants in Chechnya, Dagestan and neighboring provinces have largely refrained from attacks outside the Caucasus.

Russian officials and experts have claimed that rebels in Chechnya had close links with al-Qaida. They say dozens of fighters from Arab countries trickled into Chechnya during the fighting there, while some Chechen militants have fought in Afghanistan.

President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said Friday that the Russian leader had long warned the West about the dangers posed by the Chechen rebels.

"Back at the time when we had a war raging in the Caucasus, Putin repeatedly said that the terrorists shouldn't be divided into 'ours' and 'theirs,' they mustn't be played with, differentiated into categories," Peskov said, according to Russian news agencies. It was an apparent reference to Western reluctance in the past to agree to the Kremlin branding rebels in Chechnya as terrorists.

The U.S. has long urged Russia's government and separatist elements in Chechnya not aligned with al-Qaida or other terrorist organizations to seek a political settlement.

Washington provided aid to the area during the high points of fighting in the 1990s and in the early 2000s, and has demanded human rights accountability. But the U.S. always backed the territorial integrity of Russia, never endorsing the separatists' desire for an independent state. And it has supported Russia's right to root out terrorism in the region.

Dozens of Chechens have trained in Pakistan's northwest frontier of Waziristan, but most have returned to Russia to fight.

Recently, however, the al-Qaida inspired group Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan has made strides at recruiting European fighters for attacks against the West, according to Noman Benotman, a former jihadist fighter who now works for the London-based Quillium Foundation.

The TTP, which has supported attacks in response to U.S. drone strikes, was linked to the failed 2010 attack in New York City's Times Square.

In recent years, people from Chechnya have faced charges in several European countries.

In 2011, a Danish court sentenced a Chechen-born man to 12 years in prison for preparing a letter bomb that exploded as he was assembling it in a Copenhagen hotel.

Last month, Spain's Interior Ministry said French and Spanish police arrested three suspected Islamic extremists in an operation in and around Paris. A statement said the suspected activists were of Chechen origin and believed linked to a terror cell dismantled in August in southern Spain.

That same month, a Turk and two Russians of Chechen descent were arrested and jailed in Spain on charges of belonging to an unidentified terror organization and possession of explosives. They have since been released while investigations continue.

The U.S. security think tank Stratfor said Friday that if the Tsarnaev brothers had any link to al-Qaida, or one of its franchise groups, it would "likely be ideological rather than operational, although it is possible that the two have attended some type of basic militant training abroad."

Stratfor added that the Boston bombings highlighted the fact that "the jihadist threat now predominantly stems from grassroots operatives who live in the West rather than teams of highly trained operatives sent to the United States from overseas, like the team that executed the 9/11 attacks."

"There will always be plenty of soft targets in a free society, and it is incredibly easy to kill people, even for untrained operatives," it said.

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Isachenkov reported from Moscow. Also contributing to this report were Musa Sadulayev in Grozny, Russia; Bradley Klapper in Washington; Eric Tucker in Montgomery Village, Md.; Angela Charlton in Paris; Paisley Dodds in London; and Harold Heckle in Madrid.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russias-chechnya-seen-decades-war-terror-211657701.html

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