Sunday, June 30, 2013

Time is of the essence for reducing the long-term effects of iron deficiency

June 28, 2013 ? Iron deficiency is a worldwide problem, especially in developing countries and among infants and pregnant women. In infancy, iron deficiency is associated with poorer cognitive, motor, and social-emotional outcomes. In a new study scheduled for publication in The Journal of Pediatrics, researchers report on a 25-year follow-up of infants studied in Costa Rica for iron deficiency.

Betsy Lozoff, MD, and colleagues from the University of Michigan, Oakland University, and Instituto de Atenci?n Pedi?trica, Costa Rica, completed a 25-year follow-up of 191 infants (12-23 months old) from an urban community near San Jose, Costa Rica. The original analysis compared those with chronic, severe iron deficiency in infancy with those who were iron-sufficient before and/or after iron therapy. All infants with iron deficiency received iron therapy for 3 months. Because iron deficiency likely had lasted for months before it was identified and treated, some infants still had reduced iron status even after iron-deficiency anemia had been corrected.

122 subjects participated in the adult follow-up assessment. On average, the 33 adults who had chronic iron deficiency as infants completed one less year of schooling and were less likely to complete secondary school or pursue further education or training, or get married. Additionally, the chronically iron-deficient group rated their emotional health worse and reported more negative emotions and detachment/dissociation.

Although outcomes were better in those individuals who became iron-sufficient after 3 months of iron therapy, this long-term follow-up shows that individuals with chronic iron deficiency in infancy had poorer adult functions in all domains except for physical health and employment. According to Dr. Lozoff, "This observation suggests that poor long-term outcome, at least for overall functioning, may be prevented if iron treatment is given before iron deficiency becomes chronic and severe." Therefore it is important to prevent iron deficiency, monitor iron status, and initiate treatment as soon as a deficiency is detected.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Elsevier, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Betsy Lozoff, Julia B. Smith, Niko Kaciroti, Katy M. Clark, Silvia Guevara, Elias Jimenez. Functional Significance of Early-Life Iron Deficiency: Outcomes at 25 Years. The Journal of Pediatrics, 2013; DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2013.05.015

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/HaI6-WGgIHk/130628092145.htm

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US military will spend $23 billion on cyber defense, create its own secure 4G network

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The US Department of Defense told a Washington thinktank yesterday that it would spend $23 billion in the next four years to kick its cyber defenses up a gear. That'll include building out a "secure 4G wireless network that will get iPads, iPhones and Android devices online by mid-2014," according to Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Martin Dempsey. The DoD recently approved Blackberry 10, iOS and Samsung Galaxy devices with Knox, and General Dempsey himself was packing a smartphone he said would "make Batman and James Bond jealous." While there were no details about how such a mobile network would be locked down, he did say that all 15,000 of the Department's computer networks would be consolidated into an enterprise cloud system to increase security. All that is to combat a "17-fold" cyber warfare increase in just over two years -- no doubt including recent Chinese hacking that the White House took the rare step of recently highlighting.

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Via: The Verge

Source: US Department of Defense, The Brookings Institution

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/28/us-military-spend-23-billion-create-secure-4g-network/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Major changes needed for coral reef survival

June 28, 2013 ? To prevent coral reefs around the world from dying off, deep cuts in carbon dioxide emissions are required, says a new study from Carnegie's Katharine Ricke and Ken Caldeira. They find that all existing coral reefs will be engulfed in inhospitable ocean chemistry conditions by the end of the century if civilization continues along its current emissions trajectory.

Their work will be published July 3 by Environmental Research Letters.

Coral reefs are havens for marine biodiversity and underpin the economies of many coastal communities. But they are very sensitive to changes in ocean chemistry resulting from greenhouse gas emissions, as well as to coastal pollution, warming waters, overdevelopment, and overfishing.

Ricke and Caldeira, along with colleagues from Institut Pierre Simon Laplace and Stanford University, focused on the acidification of open ocean water surrounding coral reefs and how it affects a reef's ability to survive.

Coral reefs use a mineral called aragonite to make their skeletons. It is a naturally occurring form of calcium carbonate, CaCO3. When carbon dioxide, CO2, from the atmosphere is absorbed by the ocean, it forms carbonic acid (the same thing that makes soda fizz), making the ocean more acidic and decreasing the ocean's pH. This increase in acidity makes it more difficult for many marine organisms to grow their shells and skeletons, and threatens coral reefs the world over.

Using results from simulations conducted using an ensemble of sophisticated models, Ricke, Caldeira, and their co-authors calculated ocean chemical conditions that would occur under different future scenarios and determined whether these chemical conditions could sustain coral reef growth.

Ricke said: "Our results show that if we continue on our current emissions path, by the end of the century there will be no water left in the ocean with the chemical properties that have supported coral reef growth in the past. We can't say with 100% certainty that all shallow-water coral reefs will die, but it is a pretty good bet."

Deep cuts in emissions are necessary in order to save even a fraction of existing reefs, according to the team's results. Chemical conditions that can support coral reef growth can be sustained only with very aggressive cuts in carbon dioxide emissions.

"To save coral reefs, we need to transform our energy system into one that does not use the atmosphere and oceans as waste dumps for carbon dioxide pollution. The decisions we make in the next years and decades are likely to determine whether or not coral reefs survive the rest of this century," Caldeira said.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/vYe4Rj2O_NE/130628131023.htm

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PFT: Ex-Brown Walcott pleads not guilty

Falcons Stadium ChurchesAP

The Atlanta Falcons? plans for building a $1 billion replacement for the Georgia Dome are running into a bit of a roadblock.

According to WXIA-TV in Atlanta, negotiations to purchase the land necessary for the new building have reached a standstill. The city has been in talks with Friendship Baptist Church over the price of the land occupied by the church just south of the Georgia Dome that is needed for the new stadium. However, disagreements over the price to be paid have ended progress toward a solution.

Per the report, the city offered $13.5 million for the land and later raised their offer to $15.5 million. However, the church is asking for $24.5 million to agree to move. The end result is a stalemate devoid of progress.

Lloyd Hawk, Friendship Baptist Church?s board of trustees chairman, said the church needs to be compensated fairly for the price of land and the costs of relocating.

?We?re not going to incur new debt to do that and we?re not going to diminish our savings to do that,? Hawk said.

The church has asked for a mediator or in-person meeting with the mayor to attempt to find a suitable deal for both sides but the city currently seems unwilling to do so. In the meantime, the church?s focus is on serving their patrons first and not the wants of the Falcons.

?If they feel five or six million dollars makes a difference in a billion dollar project, that?s their prerogative,? Hawk said.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/27/ausar-walcott-pleads-not-guilty-to-attempted-murder/related/

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Friday, June 28, 2013

2nd man held in slaying probe as Hernandez challenges bail ruling

Former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez will remain in jail after Superior Court Judge Renee Dupuis denied his bail appeal.

By Richard Esposito and Erin McClam, NBC News

Authorities are investigating whether Aaron Hernandez, the NFL star accused of murder in the recent shooting death of a friend, was involved in the drive-by killings of two men last year, sources told NBC News on Thursday.

The men, Daniel Abreu and Safiro Furtado, were shot to death from an SUV on July 16, 2012, after leaving a Boston nightclub.

Police put out a description of the SUV but never made an arrest. Abreu was driving in a BMW, and Furtado was in the passenger seat. One of three people in the backseat was also shot and survived.

Hernandez was charged Wednesday with first-degree murder in the execution-style killing earlier this month of Odin Lloyd, whose body was discovered in an industrial park not far from Hernandez?s home. Hernandez, an All-Pro tight end, was released by the New England Patriots after his arrest.

Prosecutors said he had summoned two friends from out of state before driving to pick up Lloyd and carry out the killing.

On Thursday, Hernandez was denied bail for a second time. Superior Court Judge Renee Dupuis said that the state?s case appeared ?circumstantial but very, very strong.? Hernandez was appealing a denial of bail by another judge the day before.

Prosecutors said they had uncovered four new pieces of evidence in less than 24 hours after searching a condo leased by Hernandez. They said they had found ammunition, a clip and a picture of Hernandez with a Glock handgun.

William McCauley, an assistant district attorney, also said that Hernandez had interfered with the investigation by home surveillance-camera video and instructing his girlfriend not to talk to investigators.

?The evidence of his guilt is overwhelming,? prosecutor William McCauley said.

Hernandez?s lawyers argued that he deserved bail because of his upstanding character and clean record, and because he was not a risk to flee. They noted that he stayed put last week, when rumors circulated in the media that Hernandez was about to be arrested. The judge was unmoved.

Considering the details of the case, ?The idea that I could release him on a bracelet and he would comply with court rules is not something that I am willing to accept,? Dupuis said. ?A bracelet just wouldn?t keep him here. Nor would $250,000.?

Hernandez watched from along one wall of the courtroom, standing behind a partition and shackled at the wrists. He has pleaded not guilty to the first-degree murder charge and five gun charges.

Meanwhile, authorities in Connecticut announced they had charged a second man in connection with Lloyd?s killing ? Carlos Ortiz of Bristol, the city where Hernandez grew up. Ortiz was charged as a fugitive from justice, appeared in court and agreed to return to Massachusetts, said Brian Preleski, the state?s attorney for New Britain.

Ortiz?s connection to the investigation was unclear, and the prosecutor gave no other details.

Prosecutors in Massachusetts laid out a detailed account of Lloyd?s killing on Wednesday but did not say who fired the fatal shot. They said that Hernandez was apparently upset that Lloyd, three nights earlier at a nightclub, was talking to people Hernandez had problems with.

Hernandez, 23, was being held at Bristol County Jail in Dartmouth, Mass., where the sheriff said he would be treated like any other inmate ? no workout equipment, no TV, no Internet access and, on the first night, spaghetti for dinner.

Mike George / Sun Chronicle / Pool / EPA

Former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez and lawyer Michael Fee in Attleboro District Court on Wednesday.

Prosecutors say Hernandez was still fuming from the nightclub dispute three days earlier when he orchestrated the killing June 17.

They said Hernandez and the two friends picked Lloyd up at his house at 2:30 a.m. Surveillance footage from Hernandez?s house shows him leaving earlier in the night with a weapon, they said.

They said Lloyd got into the car and texted his sister, ?Did you see who I am with,? and later added, ?NFL? and ?Just so you know.? Prosecutors said Thursday that they believe Lloyd sent the texts because he was concerned for his safety.

Later that morning, between 3:23 a.m. and 3:27 a.m., workers on the overnight shift at the industrial park reported hearing gunshots, authorities said. It was not clear who investigators believe fired the shots.

Prosecutors say security videos from Hernandez?s house show him with firearms after Lloyd was murdered and show a Nissan Altima ? the same type of car Hernandez had rented ? coming and going at the industrial park.

Surveillance footage captured Hernandez getting out of the car at his house at 3:29 a.m. with a gun, prosecutors say.

The Patriots cut him within hours after he was led from his home in handcuffs. The team had given Hernandez a five-year, $40 million contract last summer, including a $12.5 million signing bonus. The investigation also cost Hernandez his endorsement deal with CytoSport, the maker of the Muscle Milk supplement drink.

Former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez is charged in a Massachusetts court with murder and several counts of unlawful possession of firearms.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2de1ad17/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C270C19170A3210E2nd0Eman0Eheld0Ein0Eslaying0Eprobe0Eas0Ehernandez0Echallenges0Ebail0Eruling0Dlite/story01.htm

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70 vote goal vanishes as Senate nears immigration reform vote

The Senate will vote on a sweeping immigration reform bill Thursday morning, and a recently hashed out compromise on border security is expected to win over some conservative support for the measure.

Early Thursday afternoon, the Senate voted 68 to 32 to begin debate on the bill. A full vote on the bill will take place at 4:00 p.m. ET.

The gang of eight, a bipartisan group of senators who drafted the bill, hoped to get 70 out of 100 senators to vote to pass the bill, to send a strong signal to the Republican-controlled house that the legislation is bipartisan. But on Wednesday, test votes only drew about 67 votes each, suggesting the bill may fall short of that goal.

The reform will implement a mandatory, national employment verification system, allow for more legal immigration of low and high-skilled workers, beef up border security and eventually give green cards to most of the nation's 11 million unauthorized immigrants.

The bill has moved to the right in the Senate on border security, thanks to an amendment adopted last week that will double the number of Border Patrol officers and increase fencing on the Southern border by hundreds of miles before any unauthorized immigrants are offered permanent legal immigration status. But House members working on their own version of immigration reform told The Hill this is not enough: They would prefer that no unauthorized immigrant be offered even temporary legal status until all the border security measures of the bill are fully implemented.

Union leaders representing both Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers say they oppose the bill, and groups that seek lower immigration levels have tried to rally members to call and write senators asking them to kill the bill. But so far, the critics of the bill have been outnumbered. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) has worked as a conservative ambassador for the legislation. Rubio will deliver a "closing argument" for immigration reform, highlighting his parents' journey to the United States.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/news/senate-takes-immigration-vote-supporters-back-off-70-143951088.html

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Samsung lures former BlackBerry UK chief for EU business unit

Samsung lures former BlackBerry UK chief for EU business unit

When Rob Orr left his role as BlackBerry's UK and Ireland chief earlier this month, we knew it wouldn't be long before another company sought out his skills. Turns out, his final destination has been Samsung, where the seven-year RIM veteran will take up a vice presidential role in the Korean giant's business-to-business telecoms operation. There's an official release from Samsung after the break, but we'd have preferred it if Orr had posted something amusing to his Linkedin.

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Via: Mobile Today

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/P_H4sxtEDD8/

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Human activities threaten Sumatran tiger population

June 26, 2013 ? Sumatran tigers, found exclusively on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, are on the brink of extinction. By optimistic estimates, perhaps 400 individuals survive. But the exact the number and locations of the island's dwindling tiger population has been up for debate.

Virginia Tech and World Wildlife Fund researchers have found that tigers in central Sumatra live at very low densities, lower than previously believed, according to a study in the April 2013 issue of Oryx -- The International Journal of Conservation.

The findings by Sunarto, who earned his doctorate from Virginia Tech in 2011, and co-researchers Marcella Kelly, an associate professor of wildlife in the College of Natural Resources and Environment, and Erin Poor of East Lansing, Mich., a doctoral student studying wildlife science and geospatial environmental analysis in the college, suggest that high levels of human activity limit the tiger population.

Researchers studied areas and habitat types not previously surveyed, which could inform interventions needed to save the tiger.

"Tigers are not only threatened by habitat loss from deforestation and poaching; they are also very sensitive to human disturbance," said Sunarto, a native of Indonesia, where people typically have one name. "They cannot survive in areas without adequate understory, but they are also threatened in seemingly suitable forests when there is too much human activity."

The smallest surviving tiger subspecies, Sumatran tigers are extremely elusive and may live at densities as low as one cat per 40 square miles. This is the first study to compare the density of Sumatran tigers across various forest types, including the previously unstudied peat land. The research applied spatial estimation techniques to provide better accuracy of tiger density than previous studies.

Sunarto, a tiger and elephant specialist with World Wildlife Fund-Indonesia, collaborated on the paper with Kelly, Professor Emeritus Michael Vaughan, and Sybille Klenzendorf, managing director of WWF's Species Conservation Program, who earned her master's and doctoral degrees in wildlife science from Virginia Tech. The WWF field team collected data in partnership with the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry staff.

"Getting evidence of the tigers' presence was difficult," Kelly said. "It took an average of 590 days for camera traps to get an image of each individual tiger recorded."

"We believe the low detection of tigers in the study area of central Sumatra was a result of the high level of human activity -- farming, hunting, trapping, and gathering of forest products," Sunarto said. "We found a low population of tigers in these areas, even when there was an abundance of prey animals."

Legal protection of an area, followed by intensive management, can reduce the level of human disturbance and facilitate the recovery of the habitat and as well as tiger numbers. The researchers documented a potentially stable tiger population in the study region's Tesso Nilo Park, where legal efforts are in place to discourage destructive human activities.

The study -- "Threatened predator on the equator: Multi-point abundance estimates of the tiger Panthera tigris in central Sumatra" -- indicates that more intensive monitoring and proactive management of tiger populations and their habitats are crucial or this tiger subspecies will soon follow the fate of its extinct Javan and Balinese relatives.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/pMoeP_94iJk/130626183925.htm

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Inadco Raises $11M As It Brings Its Lead Generation-Focused Ads To Search And Social

inadco logoAdvertising startup Inadco is announcing that it has raised $11 million in Series B funding. The company has developed an advertising product called Form Ads, which are basically cost-per-lead ads that allow consumers to provide their basic information to an advertiser without having to leave the website or app that they're visiting. When the company emerged from stealth two years ago, it was focused on display advertising. Founder and CEO James Walker told me that it has added search ads as well, with social coming soon.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/b6B4cIKofZg/

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'Independence Day' sequel: Would Will Smith return?

An 'Independence Day' sequel will reportedly take place 20 years after the first film. The film is scheduled to hit theaters in 2015.

By Sandy Schaefer,?Screen Rant / June 25, 2013

Would an 'Independence Day' sequel feature Will Smith?

Misha Japaridze/AP

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It?s taken 17 years, but Fox has at last dated Independence Day 2 to hit theaters during (when else?) the Fourth of July holiday frame in 2015. The sequel will pick up in real-time, some twenty years after the first movie. However, co-writers Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich (the latter is returning to direct) have revealed that ID4-2 takes place in an alternate present-day reality, where humanity has spent the last two decades harvesting the alien technology featured in the first movie.

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Cast-wise, Independence Day 2 is expected to bring back characters from the first film ? like former U.S. president Thomas J. Whitmore (Bill Pullman) and MIT graduate-turned cable repairman Dave Levinson (Jeff Goldblum) ? but Captain Steven Hiller (Will Smith) won?t be among them. Similarly, the cast will be half new characters, some of whom may become more prominently featured in a third installment (assuming the first sequel is a satisfactory box office hit).

Devlin and Emmerich had mapped out the?ID4 sequel as a two-part narrative arch, under the working title ID Forever Part I & II. The latter has informed Collider that ?I think [Fox]?decided to only do one first? for the time being, and has set?James Vanderbilt (the writer for Emmerich?s?White House Down) to polish off the script.

That?s understandable, given that Emmerich?s disaster blockbuster formula isn?t so fresh nowadays (following ID4,?The Day After Tomorrow and 2012), and the self-contained nature of?ID4 gives all the more reason to wonder if demand for a sequel is so high after many years. Not to mention,?the number of alien films?released in recent years ? a handful of which proved to be mediocre or worse ? make it harder to get enthused about yet another blockbuster that feature extraterrestrials in an apocalyptic scenario (the end-of-the-world sub-genre is, likewise, starting to feel over-saturated at this point).

As for Smith?s lack of involvement, Emmerich told the NY Daily News:

?Will Smith can not come back because he?s too expensive, but he?d also be too much of a marquee name. It would be too much.?We have like maybe half of the people that you know would know from the first film (in the script) and the other half people who are new.?

What?s funny is that Smith has made it known that he doesn?t want to turn into ?the sequel guy,? and yet many of his oft-rumored upcoming projects are followups to his previous tentpole successes (Bad Boys 3, Hancock 2, I Am Legend 2, etc.). While M. Night Shyamalan?s After Earth ? which stars Will and his son Jaden ? has performed below expectations, the sci-fi film has still managed to take in $172 million worldwide; meaning, the ex-Fresh Prince?s ability to get projects green-lit probably won?t take that big a hit (and it won?t change his mind about not becoming the go-to guy for sequels).

Sandy Schaefer blogs at Screen Rant.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of music, film, and television bloggers. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by The Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own and they are responsible for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.

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Drew Houston And Bryan Schreier On Dropbox's Early Days and Stealth Code Name

screen-shot-2013-06-25-at-11-01-29-amAs we mentioned earlier this week, Dropbox founder and CEO Drew Houston and Sequoia Capital partner Bryan Schreier joined us in the TechCrunch TV studio for a special three-part series on how Houston and Schreier work together on recruiting, growing as a CEO, and building the company.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/fkXBuQxBr3o/

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Obama outlines broad plan to curb climate change

President Obama laid out an ambitious campaign to address climate change Tuesday, mapping a course that would bypass Congress to cut emissions from hundreds of coal-fired electric power plants and setting the stage for a possible rejection of the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline.

The effort could shape Obama's presidential legacy and fulfill a key promise of his 2008 campaign. It also could plunge him into a bruising and potentially costly political battle.

His plan, which relies heavily on actions the executive branch can take on its own, would put the U.S. on track to significantly cut its greenhouse gas output by the end of the decade. It also would devote billions of dollars to preparing the country for the higher seas, harsher weather and more frequent flooding that experts predict climate change will bring.

Obama directed the Environmental Protection Agency to develop by next June the first U.S. regulations designed to cut carbon dioxide emissions from existing power plants, which are responsible for about a third of U.S. greenhouse gases. The new rules would be expected to hasten the closing of some coal-fired plants, sharply cutting the amount of greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere, but probably raising electrical bills for some consumers.

He also pledged that he would approve the Keystone XL project, which would bring oil from Canada's tar sands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast, only if the pipeline resulted in no "significant" increase in greenhouse gases ? a benchmark interpreted in sharply different ways by the project's backers and opponents.

"As a president, as a father, as an American, I am here to say, we need to act," Obama told a crowd gathered in the 92-degree heat of a sunny courtyard at Georgetown University. "I refuse to condemn your generation and future generations to a planet that's beyond fixing.

"Americans across the country are already paying the price of inaction," he said.

Given the lengthy path that major rules require and the likelihood that the power industry will challenge them in court, the effort Obama is starting might not take full effect until after his term ends.

The speech, his most detailed statement on global warming since his election in 2008, showed a president who has become chastened ? at least rhetorically ? by the practical and political difficulties of combating climate change.

As a candidate five years ago, Obama called on supporters to see his campaign as "the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal" ? a line that Republicans have frequently mocked for its hubris.

On Tuesday, Obama gave a more subdued look ahead, saying that even if the U.S. begins to adopt new policies against climate change, "the seas will slowly keep rising and storms will get more severe."

"It's like tapping the brakes of a car before you come to a complete stop and then can shift into reverse," he said. "It's going to take time for carbon emissions to stabilize."

The timing of the speech reflected the conflicting pressures the administration faces on the issue. It took place during a news-filled period in Washington ? the final week of the Supreme Court's term and in the midst of a Senate debate on immigration ? and the day before the president was scheduled to leave on a trip to Africa. It drew rapt attention from many environmentalists, but much less television coverage than the typical high-profile presidential address.

That may have pleased White House strategists who face tricky politics on climate issues. On one side, liberal Democrats who form a large part of Obama's core support, particularly on the West Coast and in the Northeast, have made global warming a top-priority issue. Many have grown restless with the lack of action on the subject. Some of the Democratic Party's biggest financial backers, particularly in California, have pressed Obama to move more aggressively on climate issues.

Away from the coasts and liberal enclaves, however, Americans typically rate climate change as a low priority, polls have shown. Regulations that would cut the use of coal to generate electricity would probably have their biggest effect in the South and Midwest, where coal-generated power is most common.

Republicans, some members of industry and conservative Democrats quickly attacked Obama's plan.

"The regulations the president wants to force on coal are not feasible. And if it's not feasible, it's not reasonable," said Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin III from the coal-producing state of West Virginia, who in his 2010 campaign aired an ad showing him shooting a gun at the text of a Democratic climate change bill.

"It's clear now that the president has declared a war on coal," he said.

At the same time, environmental activists hailed Obama's statements.

"The president's speech offered exactly what many of us have been waiting to hear from him," said Lisa Heinzerling, a professor at Georgetown Law and former top EPA official under Obama. "In particular, by extending emissions limits to existing power plants, he's taking dead aim at the most severe environmental problem facing the planet."

The announcement on the Keystone XL project would give Obama a reason to block the Alberta-to-Texas pipeline should he decide to do so, but does not necessarily commit him. He left undetermined how big an increase in emissions he would consider significant and whose calculations of the effects he would most heed.

"It was a shock for people who've been watching this; it was like a thunderclap," said Van Jones, founder of Rebuild the Dream, a liberal think tank, and a former White House advisor on green jobs under Obama.

The company proposing Keystone XL, TransCanada, welcomed the focus on greenhouse gases, as did the project's backers.

"Today President Obama stated Keystone XL can be approved only if it does not significantly exacerbate the problem of carbon pollution," the company said in a statement. "The almost five-year review of the project has already repeatedly found that these criteria are satisfied."

The State Department's most recent environmental assessment of Keystone XL said that the tar-like oil the pipeline would transport emits 17% more greenhouse gases than conventional crude oil from the moment a barrel is extracted to the time it is burned in a car engine. The EPA said the State Department's analysis badly underestimated the emissions.

Opponents of the pipeline said they were hopeful.

"The president has heard the Keystone critics," said Tom Steyer, a Bay Area billionaire and clean-energy philanthropist who is spearheading a campaign to block approval of the pipeline. "We will keep the pressure on."

neela.banerjee@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/4us5eiiVTGY/la-na-obama-climate-change-20130626,0,4878435.story

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PHOTO:Justin Bieber Posts Shirtless Pic!

The singer reveals backstage photo after his performance! Check out other cute and candid moments from the stars

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-twitter-pictures/1-b-229669?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-twitter-pictures-229669

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Sony Xperia Z Ultra official with 6.4-inch 1080p screen and 2.2GHz Snapdragon 800 chip, global launch in Q3 2013

Sony's unveiled its latest addition to its Xperia Z series, a new smartphone that blurs the line between smartphone and tablet once more -- the appropriately named Xperia Z Ultra. Packing a 6.4-inch display that runs at 1080p resolution, it bests other similarly gigantic superphones that all currently hover around 720p. This new screen is paired with Qualcomm's latest and greatest mobile processor, the impressively potent 2.2GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800, 2GB of RAM and 4G LTE connectivity too.

It all weighs in at 212 grams (over 50 grams more than the Xperia Z) but the body has been slimmed down to a mere 6.5mm uniform thickness, jostling with the barely announced Ascend P6 for title of thinnest phone despite those high-end specifications (and screen dimensions). There's 16GB of built-in storage, 11GB of which is user-accessible, while a microSD slot will add an additional 64GB if needed. To power that screen, Sony has also cranked the battery pack up to 3,000mAh and we're hoping that will be enough for all those high-end components it'll be powering. There's no specifics on LTE bands just yet, but the phone also packs a pentaband HSPA radio, ensuring the global model will play nice on AT&T's 3G service, at least, when it launches later this year. We've got more details (especially on that display) after the break.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ElSyjSeOSQk/

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Key vote on immigration set in Senate

FILE - In this April 18, 2013 file photo, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. At the start of a crucial week for far-reaching immigration legislation backed by the White House, the Senate headed Monday for the first test vote on the measure offering the prize of U.S. citizenship to millions and pouring new technology and manpower into the border. (AP Photo/Molly Riley, File)

FILE - In this April 18, 2013 file photo, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. At the start of a crucial week for far-reaching immigration legislation backed by the White House, the Senate headed Monday for the first test vote on the measure offering the prize of U.S. citizenship to millions and pouring new technology and manpower into the border. (AP Photo/Molly Riley, File)

FILE - In this June 21, 2013 file photo, Sen. John Hoeven, N.D., leaves the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington. At the start of a crucial week for far-reaching immigration legislation backed by the White House, the Senate headed Monday for the first test vote on the measure offering the prize of U.S. citizenship to millions and pouring new technology and manpower into the border. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

(AP) ? The Senate headed Monday for a crucial test vote on White House-backed immigration legislation offering the prize of U.S. citizenship to millions and pouring new technology and manpower into the border.

Ahead of the vote set for early evening, around a dozen Republican lawmakers had indicated support, setting up a solid bipartisan margin of victory within reach of the 70 votes supporters are hoping for when the bill comes to a final vote at the end of this week. No defections have been suggested so far among the 54 votes controlled by Democrats.

The measure includes changes to the original border security provisions in the bill that would double the size of the U.S. Border Patrol at a cost of around $30 billion and complete 700 miles of fencing. At the same time it sets out a pathway to citizenship for some 11 million immigrants living in the United States illegally, who would be permitted to get permanent resident green cards only once all the border changes had been put in place, about a decade after enactment of the legislation.

"It's my hope that this evening Republicans will join me in putting in place the toughest border security measures we've ever had in this nation," Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., an author of the new border security requirements, said Monday as senators debated the measure on the Senate floor in the hours ahead of the vote.

Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., a leading opponent, insisted that the promised border security never would materialize.

"The amnesty occurs first, and just like so often in the past, the promises never occur," Sessions said.

But Corker and other supporters pointed to comments from Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican immigration hardliner, who touted the proposed border changes in an interview on Fox News Channel Monday as a "victory for Arizona."

The developments came at the start of a crucial week for the immigration bill, a signature issue for the Obama administration, Capitol Hill Democrats, and even some Republicans.

Monday's vote is the key procedural hurdle that would clear the way for a vote later in the week on revisions to the bill including the border security changes and a range of other new provisions aimed at locking down support from wavering senators. These include limits to what newly legalized immigrants can claim in Social Security benefits, added at the behest of Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and provisions designed to aid Alaska seafood processers and attract support from Alaska's two senators.

Final passage of the underlying bill should come by Friday.

At the White House, President Barack Obama was to meet at mid-afternoon Monday with business leaders supporting the legislation. And the U.S. Chamber of Commerce announced it was launching a new seven-figure ad buy Monday in support of the bill.

Victory in the Senate would be no guarantee of success in the Republican-controlled House, where many conservatives oppose citizenship for people in this country illegally. The House Judiciary Committee has been passing narrowly focused, single-issue immigration bills ? in contrast to the Senate's comprehensive approach ? and Speaker House Boehner, R-Ohio, has not indicated how he'll proceed.

Negotiations between the two chambers are not expected until the fall at earliest, and opponents of the legislation are predicting it will be stopped in the House.

"It will pass the Senate, but it's dead on arrival in the House," Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said on CNN on Sunday. "The House is much closer to me, and I think they think border security has to come first before you get immigration reform."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-24-US-Immigration/id-c50528cb2d934e0fb69e83a5d0a575b5

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Director George Lucas Marries Mellody Hobson: May The Force Be With Him!

Director George Lucas Marries Mellody Hobson: May The Force Be With Him!

George Lucas & Mellody married!“Star Wars” creator George Lucas has married his girlfriend of seven years, Mellody Hobson. The 69-year-old director and producer married Mellody, 44, on Saturday night in Marin County, California. Director Ron Howard, who attended their wedding ceremony, congratulated the newlyweds on Twitter. Actor Samuel L Jackson, who played Jedi Mace Windu in “The Phantom Menace”, ...

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Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/06/director-george-lucas-marries-mellody-hobson-may-the-force-be-with-him/

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Jennifer Garner Joins Up With Warner Bros. TV for Overall Deal

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Jennifer Garner is in business with Warner Bros. Television.

The "Valentine's Day" actress' production company, Vandalia Films, has entered a two-year overall deal with WBTV, an individual with knowledge of the agreement told TheWrap on Wednesday.

Per the agreement, Garner will receive executive producer credit on projects that are developed and produced under the deal.

Vandalia has previously produced the 2011 comedy "Butter," which starred Garner and "Modern Family" star Ty Burrell.

On the other side of the camera, Garner costars alongside Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto in the upcoming big-screen offering "Dallas Buyers Club," and in "Imagine," which will also star Al Pacino and Michael Caine.

Deadline first reported the news of Garner's deal with Warner Bros. Television.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jennifer-garner-joins-warner-bros-tv-overall-deal-192956713.html

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