Thursday, February 28, 2013

Backlash against civilian drones begins

Hide from them, shoot them down or just have them banned? Privacy fears are sparking widespread rejection of civilian drones by the US public

"THE first guy who uses a weapon to bring down a drone that's hovering over his house is going to become a folk hero in this country." So said commentator Charles Krauthammer on Fox News in May last year, after the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said that drones will soon be licensed for law enforcement and commercial surveillance work.

Krauthammer's words seem to have captured the mood of a nation. Privacy fears are sparking a backlash against the use of drones in civilian airspace.

Seattle's police force was forced to abandon its drone programme last month, following anger from residents. Meanwhile, Virginia has imposed a two-year moratorium on the use of drones by police and at least 13 other states are now deliberating similar anti-drone legislation.

But some privacy advocates have gone beyond lobbying their local councillor. Online discussion groups have sprung up about what kind of drone countermeasures could prevent privacy invasion from the air. Their ideas range from the absurd ? wearing drone-camera-proof clothing or using stunt kites to tangle their rotors ? to the more plausible ? jamming radio-control frequencies or shooting the drones out of the sky.

The FAA's announcement on 14 February that it is pressing ahead with the opening of six test centres for civilian drones will only have reinforced such sentiments. After Krauthammer's comments, pro-gun shock jock Alex Jones ran a video on his website, Infowars.com, which shows him visiting a sprawling Texas ranch to practise shooting down the coming wave of drones with assault rifles.

Steve Hindi of Geneva, Illinois, who runs an animal rights charity, has first-hand experience of what happens when those being watched by a drone decide to do something about it. He uses eight-rotor drones, which cost about $8000 each, to expose a controversial type of pigeon shoot in which birds are ejected from a box on the ground and shot with a shotgun. "We've had drones shot down... losing one permanently, and twice more they were hit but made it back," Hindi says. He flies his drones beyond shotgun range but says the shooters are switching to rifles to down his drones. "Mister Krauthammer is completely wrong. The shooters are like the people who wanted to ban the internet in case people learned something," he says. "They are not folk heroes. They are cowards."

So what happens next? A shake-up of the law is needed, says Peter van Blyenburgh, head of drone trade body Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, based in Paris, France. He says small drones, like the $300 Parrot AR Drone, sold as a toy, could become a real neighbourhood nuisance, provoking risky shoot-downs. "Big Texas landowners now talk of firing shoulder-fired rockets at drones," he says. "They are in cloud cuckoo land."

In May, the European Commission's Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems panel, on which van Blyenburgh sits, will investigate if the rules that govern radio-controlled model aircraft can be enforced on users of "toy" drones. This could go some way towards addressing the concerns of privacy advocates, van Blyenburgh believes. "Model planes cannot take a camera anywhere near to a house or garden," he says. "If they do, the operator can't get public liability insurance. That could apply to these toys, too."

This article appeared in print under the headline "Drone backlash begins"

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Moving Part of Legal Education to the Undergraduate Level

Legal education, and higher education more generally, is facing a cost crisis.? As I will explain in subsequent posts, I?m not sure that the legal industry is facing a long-term shift in employment patterns.? Regardless of patterns in employment outcomes, however, law schools (and other higher education programs) cannot continue to increase real tuition costs at above the rate of inflation.? More broadly, we need to take a hard look at how we can reduce the costs of legal education.

One way of reducing costs would be to move part of legal education to the undergraduate level.? In our current system, students have to pay in full for both their undergraduate and law degrees.? If we could move some of legal to the undergraduate level, we could make graduate legal education less expensive.

In this post, I want to propose a mechanism for moving part of legal education to the undergraduate level.? The heart of the proposal is a set of competency exams that students could take before going to law school.? If a student received a sufficiently high score, the student would get law school credit and would place out of a required law school class.? Think Advanced Placement for law schools.??

The rest of this post is a slightly modified version of a post that I made in 2009 at the PropertyProf blog.? That post had a fairly extensive comment thread that might be of interest to readers of this one.? The ABA appears to be have some interest in considering radical ideas, so it seems like it may be a good time to revisit this issue.

Legal education faces a quandary.? On the one hand, law school costs a lot of money and takes a lot of time.? The tuition that can easily leave students with over $100,000 in debt is the most obvious cost of law school, but the opportunity costs of lost income over three years are also substantial.? On the other hand, a reasonable case can be made that three years is not enough to provide students with a full legal education.? Surprising as this may sound to students grousing about the purported uselessness of the third year of law school, the ABA Out of the Box Committee recently [in 2009] suggested that law school should be four years for regular division students.? As its name suggests, the Out of the Box Committee is designed to make provocative suggestions.? The Committee was cognizant of the problem of cost, but argued that three years is not sufficient time to fully prepare law students for the practice of law.? What you think of the idea probably turns on what you think the purpose of law school should be.? To be clear, an additional year of law school does not necessarily mean another year of doctrinal coursework.? It could be argued that four years are needed to provide law students with both the doctrinal knowledge and the skills training necessary to thrive as a practicing lawyer.? Think medical school, and you get the basic idea.

Even if you buy the Out of the Box Committee?s basic premise, concerns about cost make an additional year of graduate-level law school untenable.? If some component of legal education could be pushed to the undergraduate level, though, we might be able to have the best of both worlds.? Students already have to pay for undergraduate tuition, and if they came to graduate-level law school with some specified quantity of legal knowledge, then graduate-level law school could be devoted to more advanced topics.? If a sufficient amount of legal education was achieved at the undergraduate stage, then graduate-level law school might be shortened to two years while the overall amount of legal education received by students might actually increase.

What we teach in law school can be roughly divided into two components:? stuff and skills.? In its current incarnation, legal education is largely focused on teaching stuff ? the basic doctrinal rules, and related policy issues, of various areas of law.? There is a reasonable amount of legal analytic skill that is taught in your typical casebook course, especially in the first year.? But most of what we teach is stuff ? basic knowledge of one sort or another.? Some types of stuff are more complex than others, but most of the basics really aren?t that hard.? I?m pretty confident that undergraduates would be able to handle most of the basics of property law, and of any other legal area.

If students came into graduate-level law school with a decent introduction to the law of property, then we could do so much more with them.? What this more might be might vary ? it could be more practice oriented, more theory oriented, or remain doctrinal, but on a deeper level.? Students wouldn?t need to enter with the same knowledge base that we expect them to have at the end of the first-year course.? Just a basic understanding of the fundamental areas of property law would suffice.

Presuming that it is desirable to shift some legal education to the undergraduate level, how do we get there?? My proposal is to create an advanced placement system for law school.? High school students can take advanced placement tests in a wide range of subject areas.? If they score well enough, they are given college credit and can place out of some introductory college courses.? The same thing could be done with legal education.? Exams could be offered in a number of doctrinal areas.? If students score well enough, they would be given law school credit and could place out of the introductory course in that subject (or could take an abbreviated version of that course).

One advantage of using placement exams as a vehicle is that it would let the market decide how best to promote undergraduate legal education.? If the ABA approves the tests, and allows accredited law schools to give placement credit for them, then it wouldn?t matter how students are prepared for the tests.? All that will matter is student performance.? Most of the basics of legal subjects could be taught well on-line, or through distance learning.? Kaplan, the Princeton Review, etc. might offer prep tests.? So long as students display a basic level of competency, it shouldn?t matter how that competency is achieved.? I would imagine (and hope) that undergraduate institutions would start to offer law majors, but students could prepare for the tests any way they like.? Initially, the tests would allow some students to gain some law school credit before starting law school, making it easier for them to get a J.D. in two years.? Over time, the tests might morph into law boards that all students are expected to take before admission to graduate-level law school.?

Moving to this system would have advantages for everyone involved.? For students, it would allow them to get the J.D. in two years.? If enough material was moved to the undergraduate level, then students might end up with the equivalent of four years of graduate legal education for less money and overall time.? If a lot of the basics were moved to the undergraduate level, graduate-level law school could focus on more complex and creative course offerings, better preparing students for practice.? Having a part of legal education done at the undergraduate level would also lead to more people getting some legal education.? Not everyone who studied law at the undergraduate level would go on to graduate law school to become a practicing lawyer.? Students with some undergraduate legal education would hopefully be able to make better-informed decisions about whether to get a graduate education in law or to pursue another career.? Students who decide that they want to go school late could take intensive programs like those designed for people who want to go to medical school but who have not completed the prerequisites.? Or, law schools could continue to offer full programs for those students who don't have an undergraduate legal education.

An objection, which is sometimes raised about European systems that have an undergraduate component to legal education, is that students end up knowing law but nothing else.? This could be called the liberal arts objection.? I'm a huge fan of liberal arts education, so this objection has a lot of resonance with me.? My initial response to it has a few parts.? First, an undergraduate legal education doesn't have to be as doctrine-focused as current law school programs.? If I was designing an undergraduate law program, I would require basic courses in logic and economics, and would highly recommend other courses in history, philosophy, and political science.? Second, students can and should take courses as undergraduates outside of their major.? Third, if someone was to object that it is a problem for lawyers to only know law, a logical response would be to ask what, exactly, lawyers should know in addition to law.? Students come to law school with such a wide range of undergraduate (and graduate) backgrounds that most have little exposure to any given subject area.

Shifting some legal education to the undergraduate level would change existing law schools, but would not hurt them.? So long as the graduate law degree ? the J.D. ? is the one required for practice, law schools are secure.? The placement exams would give graduate law schools a much-improved data set to use for admissions decisions ? performance on actual law-related standardized exams would seem to me to be the best possible predictor of law school success.? (The LSAC folks shouldn?t be threatened ? they?d be good candidates to administer the exams, and the LSAT wouldn't go away in any event.? US News would have a new data point for rankings, and this one (unlike many of their current ones) would actually be relevant and hard to game.).? Law schools might expand, becoming legal education centers providing both graduate and undergraduate offerings (alone or in joint ventures with undergraduate institutions) in law.? If the J.D. program was only two years, it might become common for students to do a specialized LL.M.? Law schools could compete in LL.M. specialization.? If you?re thinking about going to graduate school in philosophy, you would pick Pitt over NYU if you were interested in philosophy of science, but would pick NYU over Pitt if you wanted to study moral philosophy.? So, too, you might pick NYU over George Washington for an LL.M. in tax, but George Washington over NYU for an LL.M. in intellectual property.

The shift would also be good for law professors.? To begin with, there would be a lot more of them if undergraduate institutions started offering programs in law.? Those teaching at graduate law schools would have more freedom to be creative with their courses, and would be able to spend more time on complex issues rather than the basics.? I personally would love to try teaching Property to undergraduates.? I would also love the opportunity to teach more advanced Property issues to my law school students.? Even with six credits to teach Property, I can only scratch the surface of most issues.? If students had a basic background in, say, the law of servitudes, then I could spend more time on some important issues that I currently don't have time to cover.

It seems to me that moving to an advanced placement system for law school would be a win for everyone.? It would, however, involve change.? Academics and the regulators of legal education are typically adverse to change.? I am interested to see whether in the current environment people are willing to move outside of their comfort level.

Source: http://www.thefacultylounge.org/2013/02/moving-part-of-legal-education-to-the-undergraduate-level-advanced-placement-for-law-schools.html

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Man who killed two California police officers was accused of sex crime

SANTA CRUZ, California (Reuters) - A gunman who killed two police officers in Northern California had been under investigation for sexual assault and shot the officers and stripped them of their firearms after they arrived at his home to question him, authorities said on Wednesday.

Police said they later shot and killed the assailant, Jeremy Goulet, who had a criminal history, near the scene of the Tuesday afternoon exchange of gunfire with the two officers in Santa Cruz, California.

Goulet, 35, had taken the detective car of one of the two officers he killed and had also been wearing body armor, Santa Cruz County Sheriff Phil Wowak told reporters.

The violence followed the killings of three law enforcement officers in Southern California this month by fired Los Angeles policeman Christopher Dorner during what police have described as a revenge-fueled rampage.

Dorner, who was also accused of killing the daughter of a retired police captain, later died in a fiery mountain standoff.

In the Santa Cruz incident, Sergeant Loran Baker and Detective Elizabeth Butler had gone to Goulet's home in a residential neighborhood of the city, 60 miles south of San Francisco, to investigate the sexual assault of a woman, the Santa Cruz Sheriff's Office said in a statement

Goulet, who was a suspect in the assault, opened fire on the two officers and killed them, the sheriff's office said. The pair were the first Santa Cruz police officers killed in the line of duty.

"It's been devastating," Santa Cruz Police Chief Kevin Vogel told reporters. "There are absolutely no words for me to adequately describe what my department's been going through since yesterday afternoon."

Goulet had been arrested on Friday for disorderly conduct involving alcohol, according to an online police log of cases. The Santa Cruz Sentinel reported that Goulet listed his occupation on jail records as a barista.

The sheriff's office said Goulet's criminal history included a conviction in Oregon for invasion of privacy and unlawful possession of a firearm, for which he served two years in prison. In that case, which dates from 2008, Goulet peeped on a woman in a shower and fired off several rounds of gunfire during a confrontation with her boyfriend, the Sentinel reported.

He was also arrested in California for peeping, prowling and being drunk in public, the sheriff's office said. Wowak told reporters Goulet had moved to Santa Cruz only months before the shooting and that acquaintances described him as "despondent" and likely "suicidal or homicidal."

Wowak said it remained unclear whether Goulet took the body armor from the police car he commandeered after the shooting, or had already been in possession of it.

After killing the two officers, Goulet circled back to the scene of the killings, which is where other officers saw him, pursued him on foot, and shot and killed him after he opened fire on them, the sheriff's office said.

(Writing by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/man-killed-two-california-police-officers-accused-sex-022854509.html

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Video: Defending the Bernanke Bounce

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50970989/

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Imperial County betting its future on renewable energy

Situated in the southeastern corner of California, bordering Arizona and Mexico, Imperial County has long depended on agriculture and cash crops that grew from the good earth.

But lately the region ? which carries the dubious distinction of having the state's highest unemployment rate at 25.5% ? is betting its future on a different kind of farm: green energy.

Spurred by a state mandate that requires utilities to get a third of their electricity from green sources by 2020, renewable energy companies are leasing or buying thousands of acres in Imperial County to convert to energy farms providing power for coastal cities ? bringing an estimated 6,000 building jobs and billions in construction activity to the county.

Although renewable energy projects are sprouting up across the Golden State, no county needs them as much as Imperial, which has consistently ranked as the worst-performing region of California even in boom times.

The prospect of a construction boom has excited residents hungry for work. But some farmers and Native American tribes are crying foul, angry that the new projects are encroaching on land that they claim has cultural value or should be devoted to crops.

Solar, wind and geothermal projects are popping up on farms that once grew wheat, alfalfa and sugar beets. County officials say the normally hardscrabble region is benefiting from vast tracts of affordable land and lots of sunshine, the one resource the region can almost always count on.

"It's sunny 365 days of the year, damn near," boasted Mike Kelley, chairman of the county's Board of Supervisors. "Renewable energy is going to give Imperial County a shot in the arm."

Local advocates are betting that a "green rush" will lift a county that has struggled with economic upheaval. The Bureau of Labor Statistics just ranked El Centro as the second-worst metro area for job hunters, after Yuma, Ariz. Its unemployment rate fluctuated between 25% and 33% from 2010 and 2012.

Two of the county's top five employers are the Calipatria and Centinela state prisons. The agriculture sector shed jobs as farmers moved to automation and switched to less labor-intensive crops. Construction work vanished when El Centro, the county's biggest city, was hit hard by the housing crisis. Long-standing businesses such as a food processing plant moved elsewhere, taking away hundreds of jobs.

But with green energy companies scrambling to build solar installations and wind farms throughout the county, some residents are convinced that Imperial's fortunes will soon be looking up.

Tenaska Solar Ventures plans to break ground this year on its second project in the county after nearing completion on its first site, known as the Imperial Solar Energy Center South, on nearly 1,000 acres near El Centro.

The company came to the region both for its "abundant sunshine" and also proximity to the Sunrise Powerlink, a power transmission line completed last year that connects Imperial and San Diego counties, said Bob Ramaekers, Tenaska's vice president of development.

More than 500 construction workers have been hired to work on Tenaska Imperial South, with 70% coming from the local community, he said. A job fair held last year drew about 1,200 applicants. The second project will generate as many as 300 construction jobs, with priority given to local hires.

"One of the advantages of solar projects is they are not really high-tech. Anyone who has worked at all in the construction business can work in a solar facility," said Andy Horne, deputy executive officer of the county's natural resources department. "It's like a big erector set ? you bolt these things together and ba-da-bing, you have a solar project."

The lure of a steady, well-paid job is what persuaded Victor Santana, 27, to start training as a journeyman electrician two years ago. He had studied film in college and hoped to make movies, but ended up working a series of odd jobs after the economic downturn ? driving tractors, operating hay presses, selling vacuum cleaners. Even a video-editing gig he eventually found paid minimum wage,

"Things had dried up. There was only field work, or fast food, or working at the local mall," the El Centro resident said.

Santana finally decided to switch careers after hearing the pitch from green energy companies trickling into town. Now he earns about $21 an hour with regular raises every six months, and the prospect of steady work for another seven to 10 years just from the stream of solar and wind projects. "I feel a lot more secure than I did," he said.

Green energy may help Imperial hold onto its young people, who often try to land a government job or leave the county altogether in search of better-paying jobs elsewhere. Calipatria Unified School District is launching a vocational program this fall to prepare high school graduates for jobs in renewable energy. San Diego State is building a power plant simulator at its Brawley campus.

"With the advent of renewable energy, we are seeing a different kind of industrial base," said Mike Sabath, associate dean of academic affairs at San Diego State's Imperial Valley campus. "Hopefully that will provide opportunities to develop more job stability in the region than what we have enjoyed."

But construction has raised the hackles of some locals. There are farmers wringing their hands over fertile land snapped up by energy companies; they worry that a way of life is being edged out by corporations eager to cash in on the modern gold rush.

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/_yPeH4Dv-2I/la-fi-imperial-energy-20130227,0,7905808.story

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

First lady's anti-obesity campaign prompts change

(AP) ? Wal-Mart is putting special labels on some store-brand products to help shoppers quickly spot healthier items. Millions of schoolchildren are helping themselves to vegetables from salad bars in their lunchrooms, while kids' meals at Olive Garden and Red Lobster restaurants automatically come with a side of fruit or vegetables and a glass of low-fat milk.

The changes put in place by the food industry are in response to the campaign against childhood obesity that Michelle Obama began waging three years ago. More changes are in store.

Influencing policy posed more of a challenge for the first lady, and not everyone welcomed her effort, criticizing it as a case of unwanted government intrusion.

Still, nutrition advocates and others give her credit for using her clout to help bring a range of interests to the table. They hope the increased awareness she has generated through speeches, her garden and her physical exploits will translate into further reductions in childhood obesity rates long after she leaves the White House.

About one-third of U.S. children are overweight or obese, which puts them at increased risk for any number of life-threatening illnesses, including diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease.

While there is evidence of modest declines in childhood obesity rates in some parts of the country, the changes are due largely to steps taken before the first lady launched "Let's Move" in February 2010.

With the program entering its fourth year, Mrs. Obama heads out Wednesday on a two-day promotional tour with stops in Mississippi, Illinois and Missouri. She has been talking up the program on daytime and late-night TV shows, on the radio and in public service announcements with Big Bird. She also plans discussions next week on Google and Twitter.

"We're starting to see some shifts in the trend lines and the data where we're starting to show some improvement," the first lady told SiriusXM host B. Smith in an interview broadcast Tuesday. "We've been spending a lot of time educating and re-educating families and kids on how to eat, what to eat, how much exercise to get and how to do it in a way that doesn't completely disrupt someone's life."

Larry Soler, president and chief executive of the Partnership for a Healthier America, said Mrs. Obama has "been the leader in making the case for the time is now in childhood obesity and everyone has a role to play in overcoming the problem." The nonpartisan, nonprofit partnership was created as part of "Let's Move" to work with the private sector and to hold companies accountable for changes they promised to make.

Conservatives accused Mrs. Obama of going too far and dictating what people should ? and shouldn't ? eat after she played a major behind-the-scenes role in the passage in 2010 of a child nutrition law that required schools to make foods healthier. Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican Party's vice presidential nominee in 2008, once brought cookies to a school and called the first lady's efforts a "nanny state run amok."

Other leaders in the effort, such as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, have felt the backlash, too. Last fall, Bloomberg helped enact the nation's first rule barring restaurants, cafeterias and concession stands from selling soda and other high-calorie drinks in containers larger than 16 ounces.

Despite the criticism, broad public support exists for some of the changes the first lady and the mayor are advocating, according to a recent Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll.

More than eight in 10 of those surveyed, 84 percent, support requiring more physical activity in schools, and 83 percent favor government providing people with nutritional guidelines and information about diet and exercise. Seventy percent favor having restaurants put calorie counts on menus, and 75 percent consider overweightness and obesity a serious problem in this country, according to the Nov. 21-Dec. 14 survey by telephone of 1,011 adults.

Food industry representatives say Mrs. Obama has influenced their own efforts.

Mary Sophos of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, which represents the country's largest food companies, including General Mills and Kellogg's, said an industry effort to label the fronts of food packages with nutritional content gained momentum after Mrs. Obama, a mother of two, attended one of their meetings in 2010 and encouraged them to do more.

"She's not trying to point fingers," Sophos said. "She's trying to get people to focus on solutions."

A move by the companies signaling willingness to work with Mrs. Obama appears to have paid off as the Obama administration eased off some of the fights it appeared ready to pick four years ago.

The Food and Drug Administration has stalled its push to mandate labeling on the front of food packages, saying it is monitoring the industry's own effort. A rule that would require calorie counts on menus has been delayed as the FDA tries to figure out whom to apply it to. Supermarkets, movie theaters and other retailers have been lobbying to be exempted.

The industry also appears to have successfully warded off a move by the Federal Trade Commission to put in place voluntary guidelines for advertising junk food to kids. Directed by Congress, the guidelines would have discouraged the marketing of certain foods that didn't meet government-devised nutritional requirements. The administration released draft guidelines in 2011 but didn't follow up after the industry said they went too far and angry House Republicans summoned an agency official to Capitol Hill to defend them.

Besides labeling its store brands, Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, also pledged to cut sodium and added sugars by 25 percent and 10 percent, respectively, by 2015, and remove industrially produced trans fats.

Leslie Dach, an executive vice president, said sodium in packaged bread has been cut by 13 percent, and added sugar in refrigerated flavored milk, popular among kids, has been cut by more than 17 percent. He said Wal-Mart shoppers have told the company that eating healthier is important to them. Giving customers what they want is also good for business.

New York reported a 5.5 percent decline in obesity rates in kindergarteners through eighth-graders between the 2006-07 and 2010-11 school years, according a report last fall by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which studies health policy. In Philadelphia, the decline was 4.7 percent among students in grades K-12 between the 2006-07 and 2009-10 school years, the foundation said.

Declines also were reported in California and in Mississippi, where Mrs. Obama stops Wednesday.

In Philadelphia, an organization called the Food Trust has worked since 1992 to help corner stores offer fresh foods, connect schools with local farms, bring supermarkets to underserved areas and ensure that farmers' markets accept food stamps, according to Robert Wood Johnson.

New York City requires chain restaurants to post calorie information on menus. Licensed day care centers also must offer daily physical activity, limit the amount of time children spend in front of TV and computer screens, and set nutrition standards.

Both cities also made changes to improve the quality of foods and beverages available to students in public schools.

___

Online:

Let's Move: http://www.letsmove.gov

___

Follow Darlene Superville and Mary Clare Jalonick on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dsupervilleap and http://www.twitter.com/mcjalonick

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-27-Michelle%20Obama/id-f458882bef7147f78987cb585db37037

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SUBWAY? Restaurants And Young & Successful ... - Franchising.com

People from All Over the Globe Playing for the Opportunity to Be Part of One of the Most Successful Brands in the World!

MILFORD, Conn. - Feb. 26, 2013 // PRNewswire // - The Build Your Own Virtual SUBWAY? Challenge, a business simulation game that enables players to learn about business and compete globally, has been extended through March 31, 2013. A result of a partnership between the SUBWAY? restaurant chain and Young & Successful Media, the Build Your Own Virtual SUBWAY? Challenge was created as a way to inspire young, would-be entrepreneurs from around the world and will provide the top winners with potential job, career and networking opportunities within the SUBWAY? chain. The challenge also teaches young people about the business of franchising.

The Subway Global Challenge is also the first 100-plus country online competition. Anyone can register for the Build Your Own Virtual SUBWAY? Challenge at: http://www.ysn.com/subway .

"This important initiative is a great example of how Subway and Young & Successful Media are taking a proactive leadership role in bringing the next generation of entrepreneurs into the world of franchising," said Steve Caldeira , President and CEO of the International Franchise Association, which supports the project. "The Subway Global Challenge is a fun concept that complements our mission to promote and enhance the franchising industry."

The Build Your Own Virtual SUBWAY? Challenge coincides with the release of an educational documentary, "SUBWAY? Restaurants: How a 17-year-old Built the #1 Restaurant Chain in the World through Franchising" by Young & Successful Media. The SUBWAY? story, which started at a backyard picnic in 1965 when Dr. Peter Buck gave 17-year-old Fred DeLuca a check for $1,000 to open a submarine sandwich shop, is being shared with students through 10,000 business and entrepreneurship professors located at colleges and universities in 100 countries throughout the world as well as through a very active social media campaign reaching across Facebook http://facebook.com/SubwayGlobalChallenge and Twitter. To see a preview of the documentary, please go to http://bit.ly/SubwayStory .

The SUBWAY? brand has a history of attracting young entrepreneurs with diverse backgrounds, many of whom have started as Sandwich Artists? or managers and become franchisees at a very early age, even multi-unit owners in an increasing number of cases.

"The Subway Franchisee has been part of my life ever since I was 12 years old," said Bob Grewal , multi-unit franchise owner and SUBWAY? development agent from Southern California. "I can remember my parents working hard in their first store and as a kid I would help do small tasks. It wasn't until later in life, 12 years later, where I would get the opportunity to own my own franchise. I wanted to work for myself and control my financial future. Subway gave me the ability to become successful at my own pace. I love to wake up every morning and go to work, but honestly I don't even consider it work. Each day is filled with new challenges and I love to see our guests smile. It's been about 24 years since I stepped into our first store, and I never looked back."

The five top winners will win a VIP, all-expense paid trip to visit the SUBWAY? chain's world headquarters, meet with SUBWAY? co-founder and President Fred DeLuca and the senior management team and attend a special training session. From there, they'll visit New York City and Washington DC.

Fred DeLuca , Co-Founder and President of the SUBWAY? chain, said he was looking forward to meeting the top winners of the Challenge. Jennifer Kushell , Founder and President of Young & Successful Media and author of the New York Times best-seller, Secrets of the Young & Successful, said she was particularly excited to be involved in the Challenge because it is all about providing opportunities ? not just winning prizes.

100 semi- finalists, one from each country where SUBWAY? restaurants are located, along with the 5 winners, will be promoted to the global management team for the brand as high potential talent. The SUBWAY? management team is committed to working with the top performers from the online challenge and to introduce them to opportunities to be part of the global team. Possible opportunities for qualified individuals could range from supporting restaurants, working with a regional development team to help grow the brand, joining the corporate management team, working with multi-unit franchisees, store level employment or even get the chance to own a SUBWAY? franchise.

As part of the online Virtual Build Your Own SUBWAY? Challenge, players will set up their own store, choose their location, learn the business, answer quiz questions, and drive traffic to their restaurant via social media, as part of a series of six challenges. Participants gain points as customers visit their virtual restaurants, as they articulate their vision for their virtual store by creating a promotional video to pitch themselves and their restaurant and test their knowledge about the brand. The winners will be notified from April 15 through April 19.

About SUBWAY? Restaurants

Headquartered in Milford, Connecticut, and with regional offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Brisbane, Miami and Singapore, the SUBWAY? brand was co-founded by Fred DeLuca and Dr. Peter Buck in 1965. Their partnership, which continues today, marked the beginning of a remarkable journey ? one that has made it possible for thousands of individuals to build and succeed in their own business. With more than 38,000 locations in 100 countries, the SUBWAY? brand ? mostly through its franchisees ? provides more than 400,000 job opportunities worldwide.

For more information about the SUBWAY? chain, visit http://www.subway.com . Find us on Facebook: Facebook.com/subway. Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/subway. SUBWAY? is a registered trademark of Doctor's Associates Inc.

About Young & Successful Media

Specializing in the next generation workforce, with an emphasis on youth empowerment, engagement, employment and entrepreneurship, Young & Successful Media is a media/education company that works with a wide range of organizations in launching programs, content and campaigns that inspire individuals to shake up their status quo and spring into action. Aside from its strategic consulting practice, the company's flagship digital platform and website http://YSN.com attracts and supports young leaders, entrepreneurs and students from over 160 countries. YSN.com is constructing the first Global Opportunity Marketplace to offer ambitious young people everywhere unprecedented access to create and build their careers anywhere in the world. The Marketplace is collaboration among corporate, philanthropic, public sector, and academic organizations eager to make an impact on the billion young people entering the global workforce.

SOURCE SUBWAY Restaurants

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Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20130226_subwayreg_restaurants_and_young_amp_successful_med.html

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Babies born by C-section at risk of developing allergies

Feb. 24, 2013 ? For expectant moms who may contemplate the pros and cons of natural child birth or Caesarian section, a Henry Ford Hospital study suggests that C-section babies are susceptible to developing allergies by age two.

Researchers found that babies born by C-section are five times more likely to develop allergies than babies born naturally when exposed to high levels of common allergens in the home such as those from dogs, cats and dust mites.

The study was presented February 24 at the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology annual meeting in San Antonio.

"This further advances the hygiene hypothesis that early childhood exposure to microorganisms affects the immune system's development and onset of allergies," says Christine Cole Johnson, Ph.D., MPH, chair of Henry Ford Department of Health Sciences and the study's lead author. "We believe a baby's exposure to bacteria in the birth canal is a major influencer on their immune system."

Dr. Johnson says C-section babies have a pattern of "at risk" microorganisms in their gastrointestinal tract that may make them more susceptible to developing the antibody Immunoglobulin E, or IgE, when exposed to allergens. IgE is linked to the development of allergies and asthma.

For its study Henry Ford researchers sought to evaluate the role of early exposure to allergens and how this exposure affects the association between C-section and the development of IgE.

Researchers enrolled 1,258 newborns from 2003-2007, and evaluated them at four age intervals -- one month, six months, one year and two years. Data was collected from the baby's umbilical cord and stool, blood samples from the baby's mother and father, breast milk and household dust, as well as family history of allergy or asthma, pregnancy variables, household pets, tobacco smoke exposure, baby illnesses and medication use.

The study was funded by Henry Ford Hospital and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Henry Ford Health System, via Newswise.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/J2GAFz-RZ-c/130225091904.htm

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

2 Everest climbs put Nepalese woman in record book

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) ? Nepalese mountaineer Chhurim entered the record book by scaling Mount Everest twice in the same climbing season. In fact, she did so a week apart.

Guinness World Records said she is the first woman to climb the world's highest mountain twice in the same season ? the brief window of good weather each year that allows climbers to reach the summit.

Nepal's Tourism Minister Posta Bahadur Bogati handed over the Guinness World Records certificate issued to 29-year-old Chhurim on Monday.

She scaled the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) summit on May 12, 2012, descended to the base camp for a couple of days' rest and then scaled the peak again a week later on May 19.

Chhurim, who uses only one name like most Sherpas, said she is not ready to quit.

"Everest is the first of the highest mountains that I have climbed, but I will continue mountaineering and hope to scale more peaks," she said.

Chhurim said there are not many women mountaineers and only a few of them have records.

"The male mountaineers have set many records but women have fallen behind. It can be difficult for women because they are considered not as strong as men and face many problems like finding toilets," she said.

The Nepal Mountaineering Association said Everest has been climbed by nearly 4,000 people since New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal did so in 1953. Women are a small number of them.

The extremely harsh weather conditions that batter the highest Himalayan peaks limit the climbing season to just a few weeks every year. Spring is the most popular season on Everest when hundreds of mountaineers attempt every year. The climbers generally reach the mountain in March or April, acclimatize to the higher elevation and low oxygen and train for climbing the snowy trail to the peak. The weather usually improves for a few days in May when they line up to the summit.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-everest-climbs-put-nepalese-woman-record-book-024537065.html

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Lawmaker wears blackface costume to Jewish party

A state assemblyman from Brooklyn, N.Y., wore blackface paint and an Afro wig to a costume party over the weekend, and says he "can't imagine anyone getting offended." ?

The party was for the Jewish holiday Purim, a festive celebration often commemorated by dressing up. ?

According to?Politicker, Assemblyman Dov Hikind?hosted a Purim party at his home over the weekend. ?

A photo posted on Facebook by Hikind's 32-year-old son, Yoni Hikind, shows the lawmaker with a darkened face, wearing a black wig, sunglasses and what appears to be an orange jersey over a white t-shirt. The assemblyman's wife wore a devil costume.

The caption reads: "How cool are my folks... Lol"?

See the controversial photo at NBCNewYork.com

Dov Hikind told Politicker that he was "trying to emulate, you know, maybe some of these basketball players."

"Someone gave me a uniform, someone gave me the hair of the actual, you know, sort of a black basketball player,? Hikind said. ?It was just a lot of fun. Everybody just had a very, very good time and every year I do something else. ? The fun for me is when people come in and don?t recognize me.? ?

Hikind said he couldn't imagine the costume bothering anyone.

?Purim, you know, everything goes and it?s all done with respect. No one is laughing, no one is mocking. No one walked in today and said, ?Oh my God.? ? It?s all just in good fun with respect always, whatever anyone does it?s done with tremendous amounts of respect and with dignity, of course.?

By NBCNewYork.com staff

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/25/17088742-new-york-lawmaker-in-hot-water-for-blackface-costume-at-party?lite

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Jelly Bean update for Sprint Galaxy Victory 4G leaks out

Sprint Galaxy Victory 4G LTEFrequent firmware leaker Samsung-Updates has just put up a preliminary leak of the Jelly Bean OTA for the Galaxy Victory 4G on Sprint. The device launched back in September of last year, disappointingly so when we saw just Ice Cream Sandwich on board. What we're looking at here though is software version L300VPALJ9, based on Android 4.1.1, which is a complete OTA package. We don't have a proper changelog associated with this update, which weighs in at a hefty 370MB, but that tends to be the case with leaks.

There's no indication as to whether this is what the software will look like when it officially hits, but for now it's all we've got. Sprint and Samsung have yet to publish any support documents confirming the update. If you've got a Galaxy Victory 4G and are interested in giving the latest firmware a shot, hit the source link below.

Source: Samsung-Updates; Via: Android Police



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ICkrT9swNzg/story01.htm

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NEC's Medias W global prototype spotted: 4.3-inch Android phone or 5.6-inch tablet? (hands-on)

NEC will launch its dual-screened Medias W in Japan in April, but now the company is working to get the phone landing in shores beyond Nihon. We saw glimpses of the red-finish global prototype that's on show here at MWC, although the company wasn't able to confirm any prices or destinations for the worldwide versions just yet. We also managed to get to grips with the Japanese iteration. Fortunately the only difference between the two models is NTT DoCoMo's baked-in proprietary apps and menus. So that's less bloatware? Count us in. We've got more impressions the on the dual 4.3-inch phone (and our hands-on video) right after the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/nec-medias-m-hands-on/

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Ara?t?rma : Windows Azure testlere g?re en iyi performans veren bulut depolama hizmeti

Son d?nemlerde ?nemi giderek artan ve bireysel kullan?c?lar?n yan?nda kurumsal kullan?c?lar i?in de ?nemli ??z?mler sunan bulut altyap?s? hizmetlerinde teknoloji devleri aras?nda rekabet ya?an?yor. Bulut altyap?lar?nda okuma, yazma, silme h?zlar?, tepki s?releri, eri?ilebilir olma oranlar? gibi performans? etkileyen pek ?ok fakt?r bulunuyor. Ba??ms?z test merkezlerinden Nasuni, sekt?r?n en ?nemli 5 bulut depolama hizmetini masaya yat?rd?.

Teste al?nan hizmetler Windows Azure, Amazon S3, Google Cloud, HP Cloud ve Rackspace Cloud ?eklinde s?ralan?yor. Hizmetler farkl? testlerde en iyi performans? sergilese de Windows Azure 23 testin 14'?n? ba?ar? ile tamamlayarak genel anlamda lider oldu. Ge?en y?l ayn? testte Amazon S3 liderli?i g???slemi?ti.

Baz? ?nemli testlere bak?ld???nda t?m dosya boyutlar? i?in yazma h?zlar?nda Windows Azure y?zde 100 performans sergilerken, Amazon S3 y?zde 64, HP Cloud y?zde 62, Rackspace y?zde 34, Google Cloud y?zde 22 performans sergiliyor. T?m dosya boyutlar? i?in okuma h?zlar?nda ise Windows Azure yine y?zde 100 performans sergilerken, HP Cloud y?zde 72, Amazon S3 y?zde 58, Rackspace y?zde 53, Google Cloud y?zde 48 performans oran?nda bulunuyor.

Dosya silme h?zlar?nda ise Windows Azure yine y?zde 100 performans sergiliyor. Amazon S3 y?zde 46, HP Cloud y?zde 42, Google Cloud y?zde 12, Rackspace y?zde 7 olarak performans g?steriyor.

Sunucular?n eri?im tepki s?relerine bak?ld???nda Windows Azure 0.48 saniye ile liderken, Amazon S3 0.64 saniye, Rackspace 0.97 saniye ile onu takip ediyor. HP 1.49 saniye, Google Cloud ise 1.87 saniye ile olduk?a ge? tepki s?relerine sahip.

Hem kendi altyap?s? i?in hem de kiralama yoluyla firmalara depolama alan? sa?layan Amazon'un S3 servisi 1.5 trilyon nesne bar?nd?r?yor ve ge?en y?l d?nyan?n en h?zl? 42. s?per bilgisayar?na sahipti. Ancak bulut altyap?s?na ?nemli yat?r?mlar yapan Microsoft'un bunun meyvelerini toplamaya ba?lad??? g?r?l?yor.?

?

Source: http://www.donanimhaber.com/Arastirma__Windows_Azure_testlere_gore_en_iyi_performans_veren_bulut_depolama_hizmeti-40229.htm

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Sony unveils PS4, but not what it will look like

DERRIK J. LANG

NEW YORK -- Sony showed off what the PlayStation 4 can do, but not what it will look like.

The Japanese electronics giant talked about its upcoming game console for the first time and said it will go on sale this holiday season.

But Sony didn't reveal the device itself. Presenters played games that were projected on screens in a converted opera house, but the PlayStations themselves were hidden backstage throughout Wednesday evening's two-hour event.

"I don't know that the box is going to be something that's going to have a dramatic impact on people's feelings about the game. It will be a color and a size fairly comparable to previous consoles," said Jack Tretton, CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment of America, the U.S.-based arm of the PlayStation business.

"There's a big story to tell here, and it's going to take between now and the holiday season to get all the details out there," Tretton said in an interview.

No price yet: Tretton said the price of the PS4 hasn't been decided yet, but hinted that it wouldn't be as high as the PlayStation 3 was initially. The PS3 debuted in 2006 with two models for $500 and $600. It now sells for about $300.

The PS4 will be jostling for attention this holiday season with Microsoft's successor to the Xbox. Details on that device are expected in June. Xbox 360 came out a year before PS3 and has been more popular, largely because of its robust online service, Xbox Live, which allows people to play games with others online. Having an event this early allows Sony to grab the spotlight for a few months, though the lack of an actual device was noted by many people on Twitter and elsewhere.

Sony did reveal that the insides of the PS4 will essentially be a "supercharged PC," much like an Xbox. That's a big departure from the old and idiosyncratic PlayStation design and should make it easier for developers to create games. Sony Corp. is using processing chips made by Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

"One of the big challenges we faced in the past was that we created great technology that we handed over to the development community, and they had to go through a learning curve before they could harness it. And when they did, we saw some phenomenal games," Tretton said. "We wanted to lower that barrier of entry and really give them the ability to create tremendous gaming experiences from Day One."

Old games are out: The adoption of PC chips also means that the new console won't be able to play games created for any of the three previous PlayStations, even though the PS4 will have a Blu-ray disc drive, just like the PS3. Instead, Sony said gamers will have to stream older games to the PS4 through the Internet.

Other new features revolve around social networking and remote access. With one button, you can broadcast video of your game play so friends can "look over your shoulder virtually," said David Perry, co-founder of the Sony-owned Internet game company Gaikai. With remote play, you can run a game on the PS4 to stream over the Internet to Sony's mobile gaming device, the PlayStation Vita, which debuted last year.

The goal is to make the PS4 so good at figuring out what games and other content you want that it can download it without being asked, so that it's available when you realize you do want it, Sony said.

"Our long-term vision is to reduce download times of digital titles to zero," said Mark

Cerny, Sony's lead system architect on the PS4.

The PS4 is arriving amid declines in video game hardware, software and accessory sales. Research firm NPD Group said game sales fell 22 percent to $13.3 billion in 2012. With the launch of the PS4, Sony is looking to attract people who may have shifted their attention to games on Facebook, tablet computers and mobile phones.

Forrester analyst James McQuivey said Sony is missing the point by building what amounts to an upgraded PS3.

"Sony believes the future will be like the past and has built the game console to prove it," he said. "Tablets and smartphones now engage more people in more minutes of gaming than consoles will ever achieve."

Sony showed an updated controller that adds a touchpad and a "share" button. The controller also features a light bar, which means a new PlayStation camera can more easily track the device for motion control.

Dennis Fong, CEO of the gaming-centric social networking site Raptr, thinks Sony's focus on sharing with the PS4 will be good for both gamers and business.

"The ability to capture an image, video or instantly broadcast what's on players' screen to their friends is transformational for the new generation of consoles," said Fong. "Providing them with community tools to create videos and live broadcasts is a cool feature for gamers, and also great for business. User-generated content keeps players engaged with the game even while they aren't playing it and also attracts new users from the buzz generated around this content."

The bulk of Wednesday's event was devoted to demos of games for the PS4, including a realistic team racing simulator, "Drive Club," super-powered action sequel "Infamous: Second Son," artsy puzzler "The Witness" and several first-person shooter games, including "Killzone: Shadow Fall." Beyond games, the PS4 will let people create animation in 3-D using a Move motion controller -- all in real time.

Last fall, Nintendo launched the next generation of gaming consoles with the Wii U, which comes with a tablet-like controller called the GamePad. The controller allows two people playing the same game to have different experiences depending on whether they use the GamePad or a traditional Wii remote, which itself was revolutionary when it came out because of its motion-control features.

Judging by Wednesday's event, Sony seeks to improve but not revolutionize game play. The games were updates to existing ones, with improved graphics.

"At the end of the day, this is a device by gamers for gamers," Tretton said. "The games that people go out and spend billions of dollars on are your traditional shooters."

The original Wii has sold more units since its launch than both its rivals, but it has lost momentum in recent years as the novelty of its motion controller faded. Nintendo said it sold 3.1 million Wii Us by the end of 2012. It was a disappointing start for the first of a new generation of gaming systems.

In some ways, notably its ability to display high-definition games, the Wii U was just catching up to the PS3 and the Xbox 360, the preferred consoles to play popular games such as "Call of Duty."

All three console makers are trying to position their devices as entertainment hubs that can deliver movies, music and social networking as they try to stay relevant in the age of smartphones and tablets. The PlayStation online network will have access to Sony's video and music services, as well as Netflix, Hulu and Amazon, with paid subscriptions to those services. People will also be able to access Facebook.

Source: http://www.yorkdispatch.com/ci_22645376/sony-unveils-ps4-but-not-what-it-will?source=rss_viewed

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6 leaking tanks are Hanford nuke site's latest woe

FILE -- In this March 23, 2004 file photo, workers at the tank farms on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation near Richland, Wash., measure for radiation and the presence of toxic vapors. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/Jackie Johnston, File)

FILE -- In this March 23, 2004 file photo, workers at the tank farms on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation near Richland, Wash., measure for radiation and the presence of toxic vapors. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/Jackie Johnston, File)

FILE - In this July 14, 2010 photo, workers at the Hanford nuclear reservation work around a a tank farm where highly radioactive waste is stored underground near Richland, Wash. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/Shannon Dininny, File)

FILE -- In this Feb. 19, 2013 file photo, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., right, tours a facility to treat contaminated groundwater with Energy Department manager Matt McCormick on the Hanford nuclear reservation near Richland, Wash. The facility is a key to cleaning up the highly contaminated site. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/Shannon Dininny, File)

FILE -- This photo provided by the U.S. Dept. of Energy, shows the construction of a "tank farm" to store nuclear waste in 1944 on the Hanford nuclear reservation near Richland, Wash. It is one of collection of photos documenting life in and around the reservation from 1943-1967. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/U.S. Department of Energy, File)

FILE -- In this Sept. 18, 2012 file photo, then-Gov. Chris Gregoire makes her way down a set of stairs at the Hanford Vitrification Plant in Richland, Wash. Six underground radioactive waste tanks at the nation's most contaminated nuclear site are leaking, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. Inslee made the announcement after meeting with federal officials in Washington, D.C. Last week it was revealed that one of the 177 tanks at south-central Washington's Hanford Nuclear Reservation was leaking liquids. Inslee called the latest news "disturbing." (AP Photo/The Tri-City Herald, Richard Dickin, File) LOCAL TV OUT; LOCAL RADIO OUT KONA

(AP) ? Federal and state officials say six underground tanks holding a brew of radioactive and toxic waste are leaking at the country's most contaminated nuclear site in south-central Washington, raising concerns about delays for emptying the aging tanks.

The leaking materials at Hanford Nuclear Reservation pose no immediate risk to public safety or the environment because it would take perhaps years for the chemicals to reach groundwater, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday.

But the news has renewed discussion over delays for emptying the tanks, which were installed decades ago and are long past their intended 20-year life span.

"None of these tanks would be acceptable for use today. They are all beyond their design life. None of them should be in service," said Tom Carpenter of Hanford Challenge, a Hanford watchdog group. "And yet, they're holding two-thirds of the nation's high-level nuclear waste."

Just last week, state officials announced that one of Hanford's 177 tanks was leaking 150 to 300 gallons a year, posing a risk to groundwater and rivers. So far, nearby monitoring wells haven't detected higher radioactivity levels.

Inslee then traveled to Washington, D.C., to discuss the problem with federal officials, learning in meetings Friday that six tanks are leaking.

The declining waste levels in the six tanks were missed because only a narrow band of measurements was evaluated, rather than a wider band that would have shown the levels changing over time, Inslee said.

"It's like if you're trying to determine if climate change is happening, only looking at the data for today," he said. "Perhaps human error, the protocol did not call for it. But that's not the most important thing at the moment. The important thing now is to find and address the leakers."

Department of Energy spokeswoman Lindsey Geisler said there was no immediate health risk and that federal officials would work with Washington state to address the matter.

Regardless, Sen. Ron Wyden, the new chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, will ask the Government Accountability Office to investigate Hanford's tank monitoring and maintenance program, said his spokesman, Tom Towslee.

The federal government built the Hanford facility at the height of World War II as part of the Manhattan Project to build the atomic bomb. The remote site produced plutonium for the bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, and continued supporting the nation's nuclear weapons arsenal for years.

Today, it is the most contaminated nuclear site in the country, still surrounded by sagebrush but with Washington's Tri-Cities of Richland, Kennewick and Pasco several miles downriver.

Several years ago, workers at Hanford completed two of three projects deemed urgent risks to the public and the environment, removing all weapons-grade plutonium from the site and emptying leaky pools that held spent nuclear fuel just 400 yards from the river.

But successes at the site often are overshadowed by delays, budget overruns and technological challenges. Nowhere have those challenges been more apparent than in Hanford's central plateau, home to the site's third most urgent project: emptying the tanks.

Hanford's tanks hold some 53 million gallons of highly radioactive waste ? enough to fill dozens of Olympic-size swimming pools ? and many of those tanks are known to have leaked in the past. An estimated 1 million gallons of radioactive liquid has already leaked there.

The cornerstone of emptying the tanks is a treatment plant that will convert the waste into glasslike logs for safe, secure storage. The plant, last estimated to cost more than $12.3 billion, is billions of dollars over budget and behind schedule. It isn't expected to being operating until at least 2019.

Washington state is imposing a "zero-tolerance" policy on radioactive waste leaking into the soil, Inslee said. So given those delays and the apparent deterioration of some of the tanks, the federal government will have to show that there is adequate storage for the waste in the meantime, he said.

"We are not convinced of this," he said. "There will be a robust exchange of information in the coming weeks to get to the bottom of this."

Inslee and Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber, both Democrats, have championed building additional tanks to ensure safe storage of the waste until the plant is completed.

Wyden, D-Ore., toured the site earlier this week. He said he shares the governors' concerns about the integrity of the tanks but he wants more scientific information to determine it's the correct way to spend scarce money.

Wyden noted the nation's most contaminated nuclear site ? and the challenges associated with ridding it of its toxic legacy ? will be a subject of upcoming hearings and a higher priority in Washington, D.C.

The federal government already spends $2 billion each year on Hanford cleanup ? one-third of its entire budget for nuclear cleanup nationally. The Energy Department has said it expects funding levels to remain the same for the foreseeable future, but a new Energy Department report released this week calls for annual budgets of as much as $3.5 billion during some years of the cleanup effort.

There are legal, moral and ethical considerations to cleaning up the Hanford site at the national level, Inslee said, adding that he will continue to insist that the Energy Department completely clean up the site.

___

Associated Press writer Dina Cappiello in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-23-Hanford%20Leak/id-d3b18c32133d40a6aa1c4d6468992fd4

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"NCIS: LA" cameraman injured shooting spinoff episode

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - A cameraman for "NCIS: LA" was hospitalized with serious injuries after he was pinned while shooting an episode.

Production was shut down immediately after the accident Thursday night but was to resume Friday. The cameraman's name was not released.

The accident comes two years after the death of a guard who was struck and killed by an out-of-control van during filming of an episode of "NCIS." Police said the van's 60-year-old driver suffered a medical condition and hit the security guard, who was 52.

The new episode being shot will serve as a backdoor pilot to a potential spinoff of "NCIS: LA," which itself is a spinoff of "NCIS."

The spinoff episode, produced by "NCIS" and "NCIS: LA" producer Shane Brennan, stars John Corbett and Kim Raver.

The accident is the third this year during production on a TV show. Two people were injured last month on the set of "Castle," and three people were killed in a helicopter crash two weeks ago while shooting a reality show.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ncis-la-cameraman-injured-shooting-spinoff-episode-010824347.html

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Israeli Oscar contenders force citizens to confront uncomfortable questions

Two Israeli documentary films nominated for Oscars, 'The Gatekeepers' and '5 Broken Cameras,' raise difficult questions about the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian?territories.

By Chelsea Sheasley,?Correspondent / February 23, 2013

A poster for the Oscar-nominated documentary '5 Broken Cameras' is displayed at a theatre in the West Bank city of Ramallah, last month.

Mohamad Torokman/Reuters

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A former spy chief is making gripping statements about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but at Jerusalem?s chic Cinamatheque, two university students can?t keep their eyes on the screen. One sends text messages and checks Facebook; the other shifts uneasily.

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?I felt uncomfortable in my chair,? says one of them, Shay Amiran, a former combat soldier, after the screening of Oscar-nominated ?The Gatekeepers.? He especially bristled at a comparison between Israel and Nazi Germany during World War II.

?The Gatekeepers,? which interviews six former heads of Israel?s Shin Bet intelligence agency, along with ?5 Broken Cameras,? which captures a Palestinian family?s life amid protests against construction of Israel?s separation wall, are the first Israeli-funded films to receive Academy Award nominations for best documentary since 1975. While winning international acclaim, the movies are riling people on both sides of the political aisle in Israel ? from those who see them as government-funded ?self-flagellation? to those who see the movies as raising crucial issues that the Israeli public and government are unwilling to address.

?It?s an incredible achievement for the Israeli film industry,? says Amy Kronish, an Israeli film critic. ?Both of these films deal with issues that are not being grappled or tackled by the Israelis at this time.?

While the movies were initially pigeonholed as boutique films that would draw only a fraction of Israelis, ?The Gatekeepers? recently became the first documentary to be shown in commercial theaters in Israel and is the second-highest grossing Israeli film of the year.

The overriding message of the films, which both received indirect government funding through subsidies to the Israeli film industry, is that the status quo in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is unsustainable. What sets them apart from the many other films on the topic is the rarity of the voices that share the message: Israelis from the heart of the defense establishment in ?The Gatekeepers? and a young Palestinian boy in ?5 Broken Cameras.?

In the opening scene of ?5 Broken Cameras,? Palestinian Emad Burnat, who shot the footage and co-directed the movie, describes the birth of his children as symbolizing different phases of the conflict. His first son was born, he says, ?in the optimism of Oslo,? his second at the start of the second intifada. His third son, Gibreel, was born in 2005 at the same time his village began protests against construction of the Israeli separation barrier through their farmland.

The movie captures Gibreel?s first words: ?wall? and ?soldiers.?

In ?The Gatekeepers? all six former heads of Shin Bet call, in varying degrees, for collaboration with Palestinians. Sitting calmly in suspenders or polo shirts, the former chiefs reflect on the moral dilemmas they faced, such as deciding whether to drop a one-ton bomb on a Gaza militant if it meant others in the neighborhood would be killed.

The movie portrays the ex-chiefs as questioning whether they succeeded at a tactical level, but lacked a broader strategy to bring lasting peace.

?We?re winning all the battles,? says Ami Ayalon, Shin Bet chief from 1996 to 2000, in the movie. ?And we?re losing the war.?

'Occupation' should end

The directors and their supporters say that Israel?s policies toward the Palestinian territories are ultimately undermining the longevity of the Jewish state.

Dror Moreh, director of ?The Gatekeepers,? says he intended his film for Israelis plus an international audience that would exert pressure on the Israeli government.

?I wanted this movie to change things, to stir up debate, to stir up beliefs and to challenge people who believe in one thing,? he says. ?The message [is] that the occupation of the West Bank is bad for the safety and security of Israel.?

Guy Davidi, the Israeli co-director of ?5 Broken Cameras,? also believes pressure should come from Israeli society and abroad if government policies are to change.

?I don?t believe that change comes from just inside, or just outside,? he says. ?It?s natural to want pressure from other countries to stop occupation because from my point of view stopping occupation is something good for Israel.?

For some Israelis, however, the films present an incomplete portrait of a complex conflict. Some see them as part of a broader asymmetry, in which the international community focuses disproportionately on Israeli missteps without regard to transgressions by Palestinians ? like in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign, which seeks to penalize Israel financially and isolate it internationally for its policies toward the Palestinian territories.

?While the films are well-made, we can suspect that their nomination does not stem from international recognition of the Jewish state?s filmmaking abilities, but from an international obsession with shaming it,? wrote opinion columnist Hagai Segal in Israel?s YNet News.

There?s also a sense that those abroad are overly critical of Israel without understanding the security concerns of its citizens, many of whom have had to contend with violence in their daily lives ? whether through army service, suicide bombings, or rocket attacks.

Indeed, security is of top concern for Mr. Amiran and his friend Hila, who went to the Jerusalem Cinamatheque screening of ?The Gatekeepers? out of curiosity from the Oscar buzz. Their view is shaped by personal loss and a distrust of Palestinian desire for peace, which they believe was discredited by the outbreak of the second intifada after a peace offer by former Prime Minister Ehud Barak.

?If you want to talk about morality, you have no justification for killing kids, teenagers,? says Hila, whose friend was killed in 2001 in an attack on a cafe when she was 15.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/z89NX0nPRg4/Israeli-Oscar-contenders-force-citizens-to-confront-uncomfortable-questions

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