Monday, October 31, 2011

U.S. to require details of fracking on federal land (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The U.S. Interior Department plans to issue a proposal soon forcing companies to reveal the chemicals they use in the so-called fracking drilling process on federal lands, as the Obama administration responds to public safety concerns over the shale exploration boom.

David Hayes, deputy secretary at the Interior Department, told a federal shale gas advisory panel on Monday the department hopes to issue disclosure rules for hydraulic fracturing on federal lands in "a couple of months." It plans to finalize the guidelines about 12 months after that.

Hydraulic fracturing involves injecting a mix of water, sand, and chemicals into shale formations at high pressures to extract oil and gas.

"The high level of concern about the nature of fracking chemicals suggests the complete disclosure of all chemical components and composition of fracking fluids would improve public confidence," Hayes told the Energy Department's shale gas panel.

Calling the current hydraulic fracturing rules that were developed in 1982 "outdated," Hayes said the department is also working to develop rules focused on ensuring well integrity and managing waste water.

Advances in the technique have led to a drilling boom that has prompted a public backlash over concerns about possible water contamination and air pollution.

(Reporting by Ayesha Rascoe; editing by Jim Marshall)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/pl_nm/us_usa_shalegas_regulation

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California Green-Lights Emissions Cap-and-Trade Program (ContributorNetwork)

An outcropping of California's Global Warming Solutions Act, the California Air Resources Board has given the go-ahead to the state's cap-and-trade program. What does it mean for businesses and consumers in the Golden State?

When do the regulations take effect?

Businesses affected by the emissions trading -- and carbon credit regulations -- associated with the cap-and-trade program are expected to comply on Jan. 1, 2013. Officials of these businesses must register them with CARB by Jan. 31, 2012. Fast forward to 2015, and the second tier of the plan takes effect.

Why did California institute this cap-and-trade program?

Golden State politicians intend to turn back the clock and ensure a 2020 California only has an emission rate that is equivalent to the state's emissions in 1990. As CARB points out, the cap of the program refers to greenhouse gasses and it is gradually lowered on an annual basis by about 2 percent.

Who is affected?

Primarily targeted are California's electricity-generating businesses. Other targets are operators of facilities engaged in the generation of electricity and energy import. To gauge applicability, businesses should check their annual emissions reports from 2008 to 2011. If self-reported amounts went above "25,000 metric tons or more of carbon dioxide equivalent per data year," compliance becomes mandatory. In 2015, the rules are expanded to include fuel providers. It is noteworthy that emissions figures do not apply to "biogenic emissions generated by biomass fuel sources."

What are the affected businesses expected to do?

Starting with 2013 emissions data, each business "must surrender one compliance instrument for each metric ton of CO2e." Another term for compliance instrument is carbon credit, CARB offset credit or allowance.

How do companies obtain carbon credits?

A business may participate in two compliance instrument auctions currently scheduled for Aug. 15 and Nov. 14, 2012. Starting in 2013, businesses can expect to participate in these auctions quarterly. CARB also issues allowances to the tune of 90 percent of the businesses' average emissions.

Are there noncompliance penalties?

CARB tracks the amounts of allowances and carbon credits that a business turns in. If the company falls short, the business receives a notice of noncompliance. The business then has 45 days to get current. If the business fails to comply in this time, further violations are added at 45-day intervals.

Sylvia Cochran is a Los Angeles area resident with a firm finger on the pulse of California politics. Talk radio junkie, community volunteer and politically independent, she scrutinizes the good and the bad from both sides of the political aisle.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111028/bs_ac/10288767_california_greenlights_emissions_capandtrade_program

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

An Experiment with an Air Pump: medical ethics staged

Kelley Swain, contributor

experairpump1.jpg(Image: Alexander Ford for Giant Olive Theatre Company)

Physical disfigurement or a genetic misstep resulting in debilitating disease: these uncontrollable factors can alter the shape of a life. Yet, as we look to medicine and science to gain power over such conditions, what methods are ethically acceptable? At what point does the end result of greater knowledge or even the development of a treatment justify the means used to get there? These are the questions explored in Shelagh Stephenson?s An Experiment with an Air Pump.

The play, first performed in 1998 and currently running at Giant Olive Theatre in London, draws its initial tableau from the 1768 painting An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump by the English painter Joseph Wright. Wright depicts a gathering of people watching, with some horror, the demonstration of an air pump as a bird slowly suffocates within. At the opening of the play, that scene is recreated in the home of Joseph Fenwick, on New Year's Eve 1799.

experairpump2.jpg(Image: Alexander Ford for Giant Olive Theatre Company)

Tom Stoppard?s Arcadia is clearly a source of inspiration for Stephenson, though her handling of the material lacks Stoppard's succinct, witty plotting. We are taken back and forth in time, from the present day to the 18th century, where we meet Fenwick's family. The ambitious doctor busies himself with his work at the local Literary & Philosophical Society, while his daughters squabble and his unhappy wife drinks too much and laments his neglect. Their Scottish maid Isobel Bridie, who has a spinal deformity, serves meals while she resists the (apparently) romantic attentions of Tom, one of Fenwick's medical students.

Two hundred years later, the house is again threatened. Unless Ellen, a geneticist, takes a research post involving the use and disposal of human embryos, she and her husband Tom may be forced to sell the home and move away. Yet Tom has serious ethical qualms over his wife's research. As this tension persists, Tom becomes obsessed with a box of human bones that he finds in the house. We return to the 18th century, wondering which unlucky character will end up in the box. Who will be the bird in the air pump?

As this medical detective story unfolds, Stephenson's handling of the ethical issues she raises is too often heavy-handed. This is particularly apparent in the modern scenes, where characters often tell too much and show too little. The 18th-century storyline holds more nuance and interest (though here, too, characters seem to spend too much time sitting around a table, drinking claret and arguing).

The character nearest a villain is Tom, but his fascination with Isobel does not come across as strong enough to cause the resulting tragedy. Ideas of bodysnatching, dissection, and wax anatomies are tossed about, but none are explored in great depth. The closing scene makes a vague reference to the opening tableau, with a toss of white feathers over a dead (human) body. Has this victim, like the bird in the air pump, been reduced to a mere experiment?

The play raises important issues about genetics, disability, experimentation and medical ethics more broadly, but the unwieldy form of the drama itself proves distracting. Too many ideas are brought forward, and too few are given room to develop. As the lights dimmed, I was left wishing that Stephenson had exerted more control over the shape of her play: I felt it needed sharper framing, better dissection, a good chop.

An Experiment with an Air Pump, directed by Liisa Smith, is running at the Giant Olive Theatre in London until 12 November.

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Somalia, Libya, Uganda: US increases Africa focus

FILE - In this Wednesday, April 20, 2011 file photo, U.S. Army soldiers are seen with Uganda People's Defence Force soldiers at the closing ceremony for operation ATLAS DROP 11, an annual joint aerial delivery exercise, in Soroti, about 400 kilometers east of Uganda's capital city Kampala. While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United States is providing intelligence and training to fight militants across the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic Ocean, to Somalia in the east along the Indian Ocean. (AP Photo/Stephen Wandera, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, April 20, 2011 file photo, U.S. Army soldiers are seen with Uganda People's Defence Force soldiers at the closing ceremony for operation ATLAS DROP 11, an annual joint aerial delivery exercise, in Soroti, about 400 kilometers east of Uganda's capital city Kampala. While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United States is providing intelligence and training to fight militants across the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic Ocean, to Somalia in the east along the Indian Ocean. (AP Photo/Stephen Wandera, File)

FILE - In this Monday, May 10, 2010 file photo, Malian special forces listen to instructions from a U.S. Special Forces soldier on counter-ambush tactics in Kita, Mali, during a joint training exercise. While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United States is providing intelligence and training to fight militants across the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic Ocean, to Somalia in the east along the Indian Ocean. (AP Photo/Alfred de Montesquiou, File)

FILE - In this Monday, May 10, 2010 file photo, Malian special forces drill to face off an ambush as a U.S. Special Forces soldier gives instructions from a Malian truck in Kita, Mali, during a joint training exercise. While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United States is providing intelligence and training to fight militants across the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic Ocean, to Somalia in the east along the Indian Ocean. (AP Photo/Alfred de Montesquiou, File)

FILE - In a March 24, 1994 file photo, U.S. soldiers board a C-5 transport plane bound for Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, at Mogadishu, as the U.S. military's presence in Somalia winds down. By the time U.S. military forces left Somalia in 1994 after entering the lawless nation more than a year earlier to stop a famine, 44 Army soldiers, Marines and airmen had been killed and dozens more wounded. But the U.S. has come back, using special forces advisers, drones and tens of millions of dollars in military aid to combat a growing and multifaceted security threat. (AP Photo/John Moore, File)

FILE - In this May 11, 2011 file photo, American-born Islamist militant fighter Omar Hamammi, known as Abu Mansur Al-Amriki, right, and deputy leader of al-Shabab Sheik Mukhtar Abu Mansur Robow, left, sit under a banner which reads "Allah is Great" during a news conference at a farm in southern Mogadishu's Afgoye district. After leaving Somalia in 1994, the United States has come back, this time in a less obtrusive role but focusing once again on Somalia. U.S. and European officials are especially worried that an al-Qaida group known as AQIM is working to establish contacts with Boko Haram and al-Shabab, the Islamist Somali insurgent group that has recruited dozens of Americans. (AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh, File)

(AP) ? While putting few U.S. troops at risk, the United States is playing a growing role in Africa's military battles, using special forces advisers, drones and tens of millions of dollars in military aid to combat a growing and multifaceted security threat.

Once again, the focus is Somalia, the lawless nation that was the site of America's last large-scale military intervention in Africa in the early 1990s. By the time U.S. forces departed, 44 Army soldiers, Marines and airmen had been killed and dozens more wounded.

This time the United States is playing a less visible role, providing intelligence and training to fight militants across the continent, from Mauritania in the west along the Atlantic coast, to Somalia in the east along the Indian Ocean.

The renewed focus on Africa follows a series of recent and dramatic attacks.

In August, a hard-line Islamist group in Nigeria known as Boko Haram bombed the U.N. headquarters in the capital, Abuja, killing 24 people. A year earlier, militants from the Somali group al-Shabab unleashed twin bombings in Kampala, Uganda, that killed 76. And a Nigerian man tried to blow up an airliner over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009 during a flight that originated from Lagos, Nigeria.

Most worrisome to the United States is al-Shabab, an al-Qaida-linked group in Somalia that has recruited dozens of Americans, most of Somali descent.

"If you ask me what keeps me awake at night, it is the thought of an American passport-holding person who transits through a training camp in Somalia and gets some skill and then finds their way back into the United States to attack Americans," Gen. Carter Ham, the commander of the U.S. Africa Command, said in Washington this month. "That's mission failure for us."

U.S. and European officials also worry that AQIM ? an al-Qaida group that operates in the west and north of Africa ? is working to establish links with Boko Haram and al-Shabab, the Somali insurgent group.

"I think the security threats emanating from Africa are being taken more seriously than they have been before, and they're more real," said Jennifer Cooke, the director of the Africa program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The U.S. is conducting counterterrorism training and equipping militaries in countries including Algeria, Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Tunisia to "preclude terrorists from establishing sanctuaries," according to the U.S. Africa Command.

In Somalia, the U.S. helps support 9,000 troops from Uganda and Burundi to fight militants in Mogadishu, the Somali capital. In June, the Pentagon moved to send nearly $45 million in military equipment, including four drones, body armor and night-vision and communications gear, for use in the fight against al-Shabab.

The U.S. also announced this month it is sending 100 advisers, most of them special forces, to help direct the fight against the rebel Lord's Resistance Army in Central Africa and efforts to kill or capture its leader, Joseph Kony, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court. In Libya, U.S. fighter planes helped rebels defeat former dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

In the latest attack against Africa's militants, Kenya deployed troops this month into southern Somalia to fight al-Shabab insurgents. The U.S. says it is not aiding Kenya's incursion, but America has given Kenya $24 million in aid this year "to counter terrorists and participate in peacekeeping operations," the U.S. Embassy said.

The U.S. government "has had a burr under its saddle about Somalia" for years, dating to the 1993 downing of two U.S. helicopters over Mogadishu in a battle that became known as Black Hawk Down, said John Pike of the Globalsecurity.org think tank near Washington. Eighteen U.S. troops were killed.

At that time, Washington had deployed thousands of troops to combat a famine, but the mission escalated into a hunt for warlords.

These days, only a handful of U.S. troops are involved directly in Somalia ? special forces troops who enter on kill missions. In 2009, Navy SEALs targeted and killed al-Qaida operative Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan in a helicopter raid. The Americans jumped out of the helicopters, grabbed Nabhan's body from his bullet-riddled convoy and flew off. The corpse ? like Osama bin Laden's two years later ? was buried at sea.

Pike, who monitors defense issues, said the Pentagon has ramped up operations in Africa tremendously since the time of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who didn't see Africa as being in America's strategic interest.

"The U.S. has really developed an interest in Africa that we just have never seen before," Pike said.

"Between all the goings and comings in the Horn of Africa and all this snake-eater (special forces) Sahara stuff ... it's all over the place," Pike said. "Since I think an awful lot of it is being run out of Special Operations Command and out of (the CIA), I think it probably far larger than anyone imagines."

U.S. drones launched from the Seychelles islands in the Indian Ocean also provide intelligence, and the pilotless planes are capable of being armed.

Al-Shabab counts 31 American citizens among its ranks, a U.S. official in Washington told The Associated Press. They're mostly American-Somalis who left the U.S. to join the group. The U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligence matters, said foreign fighters among al-Shabab's ranks want to attack Western targets.

Intelligence has revealed sophisticated plans by al-Shabab to attack targets in Europe, the official said, but the operations have been disrupted by the recent stepped-up fighting in Somalia.

Ugandan and Burundian troops fighting al-Shabab militants in Mogadishu as part of an African Union force have pushed back the insurgents in recent months and now control most of the capital. The Kenyan incursion has forced al-Shabab to fight on its southern flank as well.

Though the Kenyan invasion appears to further the U.S. goal of pressuring al-Shabab, U.S. officials say the American military is not providing assistance.

"The United States has supported Kenyan efforts to improve its ability to monitor and control often porous land and maritime borders and territory exploited by terrorists and illicit traffickers, particularly along its border with Somalia," said Katya Thomas, a spokeswoman at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi.

But, she added: "The United States did not encourage the Kenyan government to act, nor did Kenya seek our views. We note that Kenya has a right to defend itself against threats to its security and its citizens."

Some aspects of Kenya's military adventure appear poorly thought out. Troops moved in just as seasonal rains began and are now bogged down in the mud ? a literal reminder of the potential quagmire for countries that intervene in Somalia, whose last nationwide leader was overthrown in 1991.

A paper published by the U.S. Army examining the ill-fated U.S. mission in Somalia in the 1990s concluded that "the chaotic political situation of that unhappy land bogged down U.S. and allied forces in what became, in effect, a poorly organized United Nations nation-building operation."

It was a 2006 invasion of Somalia by Ethiopia that gave rise to the militants now known as al-Shabab.

"That's the problem with Somalia, there is just no easy answer," said Cooke, the analyst. "The problem is so huge and multi-faceted that tackling one aspect of it, i.e., beating back al-Shabab, just can't fix it. Part of the problem is that the government we have invested in as our key partner in Somalia is a fiction of a government, and so Kenya can try to create some space, but there is nothing to fill that."

The chairman of the Pentagon's Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, told the House Armed Services Committee this month that the U.S. must remain active in Africa because terrorists are networked globally.

"One of the places they sit is Pakistan. One of the places they sit is Afghanistan. One of the places they sit is the African continent," Dempsey said.

___

Associated Press reporter Lolita Baldor in Washington contributed to this report.

___

Online: http://www.history.army.mil/brochures/somalia/somalia.htm

(This version CORRECTS death toll from Abuja bombing to 24)

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-27-AF-Africa-US-Military/id-c59e5f5b8ce94f4191916156a6af947c

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Anita Perry Blames Obama for Son Quitting His Job (ContributorNetwork)

Apparently, Texas governor and presidential hopeful Rick Perry married someone just as skillful at thinking before speaking as is he. Soul mates, as it were. Anita Perry, campaigning on behalf of her husband in South Carolina Friday, commiserated with a man who spoke of losing his job in the present economy. She noted that her family understood the pain of the unemployed in America, because her son was recently unemployed due to policies of the Obama administration.

"My son had to resign his job because of federal regulations that Washington has put on us," she told the man, who had recently lost his $100,000 job and was now working as a $12 per hour handyman, according to CNN.

"He resigned his job two weeks ago because he can't go out and campaign with his father because of SEC [Securities and Exchange Commission] regulations," she added, referring to her son, Griffin, who until a few weeks ago, worked at Deutsche Bank. "He has a wife... he's trying to start a business. So I can empathize."

"My son lost his job because of this administration," she insisted a few moments later.

This is where sound effects of screeching tires or a visual of someone doing an overly melodramatic double-take -- or both -- occur in a satiric relating of the story. Followed, of course, by the obligatory, "She said what?"

Did Anita Perry, obviously unaware of her gaffe, actually compare her son, who voluntarily resigned (that is, "quit" his job) his position as a well-paid banker to go to work for her husband's campaign (which he is undoubtedly being paid with monies from the campaign), to a man who had lost his job due to economic conditions, a man who has been forced by the lack of jobs to work for far less than he has become accustomed to, a man who did not voluntarily walk away from a position to do something he apparently wanted to do? Did she actually compare her millionaire son to who chose to leave his job -- and who did not "lose" anything -- to a man forced to leave his job, which was most likely his and his family's livelihood?

And then did she just go that illogical presumption one better by attempting to blame it on the Obama administration? Security and Exchange Commission regulations aside, what Griffin Perry did was a choice, although CNN noted that the SEC did enact a regulation last year that was aimed at limiting political activity among its members. Still, one acts within the given rules and policies of one's vocation, industry, and/or company -- or not. Apparently, Anita and Rick's son chose not to and decided to work for his father.

In any event, it was his choice. The economy did not force him to do anything, unlike the gentleman who had shared his story. And it is doubtful that her millionaire son felt the pain of unemployment like the South Carolina handyman, the uncertainty of not knowing what might be coming next, the inability to find a job in his chosen profession, and being forced to move into another vocation due to the economy and the circumstances of providing for himself and his family. No, because unlike the handyman, Griffin Perry knew exactly what he was doing, why he was doing it, what he would soon be doing, and all cushioned by the fact that he had plenty of money to fall back on.

In fact, Griffin Perry was never unemployed at all -- save perhaps a few short hours or days in the transition from banker to daddy's little helper. He resigned his position to take up another position. In layman's terms, it is generally referred to as "switching jobs." That is not unemployed the way the South Carolina handyman and tens of millions of Americans have understood unemployment in the last several years (and throughout history).

But perhaps Mrs. Perry's gaffe can be understood in the stress of her current position -- a wife watching her husband fail. Her once presidential frontrunner husband has seen his national poll numbers plummet in recent weeks, mostly due to exceptionally poor debate performances in September. Where he was commanding a double-digit lead in the 2012 GOP race, he has now slipped to third. Still a contender, it would seem, but fading.

Besides, not 24 hours before her oddly equating her son's switching jobs with forced unemployment, she told reporters that she felt her family had been "brutalized" by the media for their religious beliefs, referring to the controversy brought about by a Perry supporter, a Dallas pastor, who had exhorted fellow Christians to vote for Perry as opposed to Mitt Romney, who he said was a Mormon and member of a "cult."

She said in a speech at North Greenville University (per MSNBC ) that it had been a "rough month." She went on: " We have been brutalized and beaten up and chewed up in the press to where I need this today. We are being brutalized by our opponents, and our own party. So much of that is, I think they look at him, because of his faith. He is the only true conservative - well, there are some true conservatives. And they're there for good reasons. And they may feel like God called them too. But I truly feel like we are here for that purpose."

Her husband is the only true presidential candidate chosen by God and the other candidates only "feel" they were "called" upon to run for president. At the same time she has has a job-jumping son, which makes her family empathic to the plight of America's unemployed.

Mrs. Perry should steel herself for another month of being brutalized...

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111027/bs_ac/10206697_anita_perry_blames_obama_for_son_quitting_his_job

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Jeff Danziger: Merkel, Sarkozy Default

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-danziger/merkelsarkozy-default_b_1033291.html

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

DirecTV's iPad app updated with live TV streaming, as long as you stay at home

DirecTV debuted its iPad app in February with an impressive suite of remote control and content browsing options, but one of the few missing features was the ability to watch TV on it, which has now been added. Like similar apps from Cablevision and Time Warner Cable, v1.3.1 adds the ability to watch 38 channels live on the tablet, provided you're connected to the same home network as your DirecTV Plus HD DVR. That home restriction, plus being limited to only live TV streams and not DVRed programming separates it from Sling's apps, but at least it's still a free add-on. If you want to watch recorded shows or take them on the go you'll still need the Nomad box for that. Check below for a link to one of DBSTalk's usual thorough walkthrough PDFs breaking down the new features, a few screengrabs sent in by a reader, and the complete channel list after the break.

[Thanks, Will & Jon]

Continue reading DirecTV's iPad app updated with live TV streaming, as long as you stay at home

DirecTV's iPad app updated with live TV streaming, as long as you stay at home originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 14:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/26/directvs-ipad-app-updated-with-live-tv-streaming-as-long-as-yo/

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Water's quantum weirdness makes life possible

WATER'S life-giving properties exist on a knife-edge. It turns out that life as we know it relies on a fortuitous, but incredibly delicate, balance of quantum forces.

Water is one of the planet's weirdest liquids, and many of its most bizarre features make it life-giving. For example, its higher density as a liquid than as a solid means ice floats on water, allowing fish to survive under partially frozen rivers and lakes. And unlike many liquids, it takes a lot of heat to warm water up even a little, a quality that allows mammals to regulate their body temperature.

But computer simulations show that quantum mechanics nearly robbed water of these life-giving features. Most of them arise due to weak hydrogen bonds that hold H2O molecules together in a networked structure. For example, it is hydrogen bonds that hold ice molecules in a more open structure than in liquid water, leading to a lower density. By contrast, without hydrogen bonds, liquid molecules move freely and take up more space than in rigid solid structures.

Yet in simulations that include quantum effects, hydrogen bond lengths keep changing thanks to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, which says no molecule can have a definite position with respect to the others. This destabilises the network, removing many of water's special properties. "It breaks down big time," says Philip Salmon of the University of Bath in the UK.

How water continues to exist as a network of hydrogen bonds, in the face of these destabilising quantum effects, was a mystery.

In 2009, theorist Thomas Markland, now at Stanford University in California, and colleagues suggested a reason why water's fragile structure does not break down completely. They calculated that the uncertainty principle should also affect the bond lengths within each water molecule, and proposed that it does so in such a way as to strengthen the attraction between molecules and maintain the hydrogen-bond network. "Water fortuitously has two quantum effects which cancel each other out," Markland says.

Until recently, though, there was no way to discover whether there is any variation in bond length within the water molecule.

Now, Salmon's team has done this. Their trick was to use so-called heavy water, in which the molecule's two hydrogen atoms are replaced with deuterium. This isotope of hydrogen contains a neutron as well as a proton. The extra bulk makes it less vulnerable to quantum uncertainties. "It's like turning the quantum mechanics half off," says Chris Benmore, of the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, who was not involved in the study.

Salmon and colleagues shot beams of neutrons at different versions of water, and studied the way they bounced off the atoms - a precise way to measure bond lengths. They also substituted heavier oxygen atoms into both heavy and normal water, which allowed them to determine which bonds they were measuring.

They found that the hydrogen-oxygen bonds were slightly longer than the deuterium-oxygen ones, which is what you would expect if quantum uncertainty was affecting water's structure (Physical Review Letters, DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.107.145501). "No one has ever really measured that before," says Benmore.

We are used to the idea that the cosmos's physical constants are fine-tuned for life. Now it seems water's quantum forces can be added to this "just right" list.

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Asian shares mixed ahead of Europe plan

(AP) ? Asian shares were mixed Tuesday as investors waited for European leaders to unveil a plan to tackle the continent's ongoing debt crisis.

Markets turned cautious after solid gains in Asia the previous day, unable to extend a Wall Street rally overnight.

European leaders have said they made progress at a weekend summit and plan to unveil comprehensive plans for containing the crisis by Wednesday.

Among measures, the 17-nation eurozone is set to shore up its bailout fund, and German lawmakers said the plan could boost the fund's lending capacity to more than euro1 trillion ($1.39 trillion).

Credit Suisse describes the eurozone as "inching forward" and that "there are as many questions as answers." But for any plan to be effective in the long term, it says, leaders must spur growth in Europe.

"At a minimum, we believe the crisis in the periphery will not end until there are current account surpluses... or clearly cheap currencies," the Credit Suisse report said. "We believe that the (European Central Bank) has to expand its balance sheet to weaken the euro and thereby create growth."

Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average slipped 0.5 percent to 8,800.40, with exporters struggling in the face of a strong yen. The dollar hovered near the 76-yen line, just above a new record low of 75.78 yen hit before the weekend.

Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Japan would take measures to slow the yen's acceleration if necessary, firing a shot at speculators who may be adding to the volatility.

The yen's sharp climb "does not reflect the real economy, and we have to believe that this is a speculative move," Azumi told reporters, according to Kyodo News agency. "If this goes further, then we will take decisive action."

His comments did little to stem selling in export-reliant sectors like high-tech and autos, which are now also struggling with lost production to the flooding in Thailand. Toyota Motor Corp. fell 1.6 percent, and Canon Inc. was down 1.4 percent.

Elsewhere, South Korea's Kospi lost 0.3 percent to 1,892.64, and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.6 percent to 4,230.50.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 0.5 percent to 18,873.10. Benchmarks in India, Taiwan, New Zealand also advanced modestly.

Thailand's SET index was 2 percent higher at 934.58, even though the country is being battered by its worst flood in decades. Ratings agency Moody's says it does not expect the floods ? the worst to hit Thailand in decades ? to affect its creditworthiness.

"The government will have ample fiscal space to absorb flood-related costs without prompting a permanent deterioration in its debt ratios," Moody's said in a report.

Overnight in New York, the Dow Jones industrial average finished with a gain of 104.83 points, or 0.9 percent, at 11,913.62.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose to 1,254.19, marking the highest close for the S&P 500 since Aug. 3, just as Washington was resolving a showdown over raising the country's borrowing limit.

In currencies, the dollar rose slightly to 76.14 yen from 76.07 yen late Monday in New York. The euro stood at $1.3904 from $1.3951.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was up 52 cents at $91.79 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $3.87, or 4.4 percent, to settle at $91.27 in New York on Monday.

Brent crude was down 5 cents at $111.40 a barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange in London.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-25-World-Markets/id-f5f15f97f3e0454890c6aa89ce245fe8

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Complexities of DNA repair discovered

ScienceDaily (Oct. 23, 2011) ? An international team of scientists led by UC Davis researchers has discovered that DNA repair in cancer cells is not a one-way street as previously believed. Their findings show instead that recombination, an important DNA repair process, has a self-correcting mechanism that allows DNA to make a virtual u-turn and start over.

The study's findings, which appear in the Oct. 23 online issue of the journal Nature, not only contribute new understanding to the field of basic cancer biology, but also have important implications for potentially improving the efficacy of cancer treatments.

"What we discovered is that the DNA repair pathway called recombination is able to reverse itself," said Wolf-Dietrich Heyer, UC Davis professor of microbiology and of molecular and cellular biology and co-leader of Molecular Oncology at UC Davis Cancer Center. "That makes it a very robust process, allowing cancer cells to deal with DNA damage in many different ways. This repair mechanism may have something to do with why some cancer cells become resistant to radiation and chemotherapy treatments that work by inducing DNA damage."

Heyer likens this self-correcting ability of the DNA repair system to driving in a modern city where u-turns and two-way streets make it easy to rectify a wrong turn. "How much harder would it be to re-trace your path if you were in a medieval Italian city with only one-way streets," he said.

In the current study, Heyer and his colleagues used yeast as a model system to elucidate the mechanisms of DNA repair. They expect their findings, like most that come out of work on yeast, will be confirmed in humans. "Whether in yeast or humans, the pathways that repair DNA are the same," Heyer said.

The research team used electron microscopy to observe repair proteins in action on strands of DNA. They saw a presynaptic filament called Rad51 regulating the balance between one enzyme (Rad55-Rad57) that favors recombination repair and another (Srs2) that inhibits recombination repair. By controlling the balance between the two enzymes, Rad51 can initiate genetic repair -- or the u-turn -- as needed.

"It is a tug-of-war that has important implications for the cell because, if recombination occurs at the wrong time in the wrong place, the cell may die as a consequence." The ability of the repair system to abort ill-fated repair attempts, gives the cell a second shot, improving cellular survival after its DNA is damaged. This is exactly what is dreaded in cancer treatment.

"There are a lot of hints in the scientific literature suggesting that DNA repair contributes to resistance to treatments that are based on inducing DNA damage such as radiation or certain types of chemotherapy," Heyer said. "The ability of cancer cells to withstand DNA damage directly affects treatment outcome, and understanding the fundamental mechanisms of the DNA repair systems will enable new approaches to overcome treatment resistance."

Heyer said the team's next step is to look at the enzyme system in humans and see whether they find the same principles at work. This work has received funding and has already begun. One application of this work will be to target the self-correcting mechanism in cancer cells as a way of sensitizing them to radiation and/or chemotherapy treatments.

"If we can confirm that these types of mechanisms exist in human cells, then we will have an approach for making cancer cells more sensitive to DNA damage-inducing treatments."

Additional authors include UC Davis postdoctoral fellow and first author Jie Liu; UC Davis postdoctoral fellow Ludovic Renault; UC Davis adjunct professor of molecular and cell biology, Henning Stahlberg, formerly of UC Davis and now with the University Basel, Switzerland; and Xavier Veaute & Francis Fabre of the French Atomic Energy Commission.

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program, the European Community, the French National Centre for Scientific Research, the French Atomic Energy Commission and SystemsX.ch (The Swiss Initiative in Systems Biology).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Davis Health System.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Jie Liu, Ludovic Renault, Xavier Veaute, Francis Fabre, Henning Stahlberg, Wolf-Dietrich Heyer. Rad51 paralogues Rad55?Rad57 balance the antirecombinase Srs2 in Rad51 filament formation. Nature, 2011; DOI: 10.1038/nature10522

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/~3/M2FlANGqdvM/111023135648.htm

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Iraq still seeking U.S. trainers: PM Maliki (Reuters)

BAGHDAD (Reuters) ? Iraq will continue talks with Washington on how U.S. trainers can work with Iraqi forces after a complete withdrawal of American troops at the end of the year, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said on Saturday.

U.S. President Barack Obama announced on Friday that all U.S. troops would leave Iraq as scheduled by the end of this year after the two governments failed to reach an agreement over giving American soldiers legal immunity.

"Now that we have put this behind us, this will let us settle the issue of training," Maliki said. "Iraqis will ask to resume talks over the number of trainers, the duration (of their stay in Iraq) and how those trainers will be used."

More than eight years after the invasion to topple Saddam Hussein, violence has fallen since the sectarian slaughter of 2006-2007. But Iraq still faces a stubborn Sunni Islamist insurgency tied to al Qaeda and rival Shi'ite militias.

U.S. and Iraqi officials say the local armed forces can contain violence but they need trainers to help build up air defense, maritime capabilities, intelligence gathering and moving the military to conventional warfare tactics.

Iraq will get some military training from a U.S. embassy program and from contractors who are part of a package with the U.S.-made military hardware Baghdad is purchasing, such as F-16 fighter jets and tanks.

Military advisers working at the embassy are covered by diplomatic immunity afforded to the State Department.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Saturday that U.S. commitment to the democratic future of Iraq remains strong despite the decision to go ahead with the withdrawal of American troops as scheduled.

"Even as our troops come home, the United States's commitment to Iraq's future as a secure, stable, democratic nation remains as strong as ever," she said at a news conference in the Tajik capital. "This will end the war and it will open a new chapter in our relationship."

Clinton said Washington expected to have a "significant" security training presence at the Baghdad embassy.

Washington had hoped a few thousand troops in Iraq would help buttress its stability and offset the influence of neighboring Iran. U.S. officials initially had sought Baghdad's approval for around 3,400 troops.

Many Iraqis are worried about their country's stability and security without the buffer of U.S. military presence, and fear Iraq may slip back into the sectarian tensions that pushed the country to the brink of civil conflict.

(Writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111022/wl_nm/us_iraq_usa_maliki

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Google Mulls Buying Yahoo [REPORT] (Mashable)

Google is mulling purchasing Yahoo and has contacted at least two venture capital firms to help buy the company's core business, according to a report. Google and prospective partners have held discussions, but haven't put forth a formal proposal to buy the search giant, according to The Wall Street Journal, which cited "a person familiar with the matter."

[More from Mashable: Google Engineer Apologizes for ?Great-Granddaddy of Reply-All Screwups?]

As the story notes, any such deal is likely to raise red flags among antitrust regulators. Google's not the only one rumored to be interested in buying the troubled Yahoo. Microsoft, which has a 10-year search deal with Yahoo, is also said to be interested.

What do you think? Would this be good or bad for the Internet economy? Let us know in the comments.

[More from Mashable: New Version of Gmail Coming Soon [VIDEO]]

Image courtesy of Flickr, eirikref

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111022/tc_mashable/google_mulls_buying_yahoo_report

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Last Call to Help Fight the Forces of Science Ignorance

Well, since I hate the relentless (though entirely necessary) nagging of NPR fund drives so much I have refrained from mentioning the Science Bloggers for Students Fund Drive and the microscope sub-drive I?m running (and if you missed it the first time, go check out the cool videos here) since I first announced it. But the time has come to mention it once more: LAST CALL. And as a stimulus to your generosity, the staff at Donorschoose.org will be matching your donations from now until the drive ends at midnight Eastern Daylight Time on Saturday, the 22nd ? TOMORROW. So if you were waffling, plonk that cash down now! Any amount helps! $1, $5, whatever. I know a lot of us are hurting in this economy, but science has shown that volunteering and giving to charity are not only worthy ends, but help increase your happiness too. It?s win-win!

So far, we?re up to $110 so far here at Amoebas for a Better Science Tomorrow. Thank you SO MUCH if you?ve already given! But if you ever play cards with me, you?ll learn very quickly how competitive I am. Right now we?re in the middle of the pack on the Sci Am leader board. Let?s see if we can make it to #2. (#1 seems out of reach [shakes fist congenially in general direction of Jason Goldman]). Similarly, as a blog network, we?re trailing the Independent Science Bloggers and the Ocean and Geobloggers. I can?t resist the urge to try and chase them down at the finish line. Join me, and help out some deserving kids stiffed by short-sighted budget cuts ? and perhaps even inspire someone who will go on to change the world for the better ? in the process. : )

Click here to go to my donors page, read about some other readers who?ve given, select the microscope project that appeals to you the most, and give. You?ll be glad you did. Promise.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=eaae91b31ed77843ae852b0fdfb18d2e

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

The Least expensive Automotive Insurance For Teenagers ...

We love them even though they are expensive ? a fact that does not change once they get older. They turn out to be additional costly as soon as they turn out to be teens. Their taste in clothing becomes more expensive. Santa no longer brings stuffed animals; he is hauling the most recent Nintendo in his bag. They need money for proms, football camps, cheerleading uniforms, and band instruments.

What happened to the days when peek-a-boo was enough to make them smile?

Teenagers are also notorious for having dearer automobile insurance charges than older drivers. That is mainly as a result of automotive insurance coverage companies view teens as less experienced drivers and more risky to insure. Since age is already working against them, teenagers must take additional care to make different components automobile insurance companies have a look at work for them.

Regardless of the rising prices of raising teenagers, there?s an option to get low cost automotive insurance coverage for teens ? really, it could possibly be an important solution to get low cost automotive insurance for your teen. Buy your teen a sensible, affordable, and safe car.

Teens dream concerning the day they turn into old enough to drive, and plenty of teens get their first automobile when that day comes; nevertheless, if it?s a flashy, expensive, unsafe automobile the automotive insurance firm will see it as prone to be stolen or robbed, pricey to repair in the occasion it turns into broken, and likely to not shield against accidents.

However, if the car is modest in appearance and value, in addition to outfitted with safety options, the automotive insurance firm will likely be more likely to offer a cheap automotive insurance coverage quote for the teen.

By purchasing your teen an affordable, practical car, not solely are you helping to get low cost automobile insurance for your teen, you might be additionally serving to to maintain your teen secure which makes shopping for your teen this type of automotive crucial way to get low cost automotive insurance coverage in your teen.

If you need extra info in relation to cheapest car insurance, stop by Suzman Flourez?s website instantly.

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Source: http://articlesmind.com/2011/10/the-least-expensive-automotive-insurance-for-teenagers-maintain-the-charges-down

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Ron Paul 2012 Campaign Ad Attacks Rick Perry, Mitt Romney & Herman Cain (VIDEO)

By PHILIP ELLIOTT, ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON ? Republican presidential contender Ron Paul is opening his wallet for $2 million of television ads that criticize rivals Mitt Romney, Rick Perry and Herman Cain for supporting federal spending while touting his own proposal for drastically shrinking Washington's bottom line.

Paul on Thursday unveiled a 60-second ad that cast the White House hopefuls as spend-happy politicians who are not true conservatives. A second ad, also set to run for two weeks in the early nominating states of Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, promotes Paul's plan to cut $1 trillion from the budget, eliminate five Cabinet-level agencies and stop spending U.S. tax dollars abroad on wars or aid.

Further seeking to criticize his rivals, Paul's campaign has been mailing voters saying Romney, Perry and Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota are beholden to unions.

"The sad truth is, Dr. Paul's opponents have records that leave much to be desired," the campaign said in an anti-labor mailing in South Carolina.

Paul, a physician who previous sought the Libertarian and Republican nominations for the White House, has tapped his fervent supporters' imaginations and wallets as he attempts to claw his way to the top of the GOP contest. His latest fundraising push brought in more than $2.3 million in recent days. His campaign earlier had announced that he had raised $8 million during the last three months and had banked $3.5 million for the fundraising quarter that started Oct. 1.

That leaves Paul in a position to shape the Republican debate, even if the 76-year-old Air Force veteran seems unlikely to win the nomination. Four years ago, he sought the GOP nomination while talking about economic policy, liberty and the Federal Reserve. Since then, the tea party has risen and seized on those issues, and some regard Paul as one of the movement's godfathers.

His international policy positions ? he opposes all foreign aid, even to U.S. ally Israel, and is indifferent toward Iran ? puts him outside the mainstream of GOP thinking. His antagonism toward the Federal Reserve has made some nervous, and his opposition to a federal ban on same-sex marriages riles social conservatives.


Yet the figure once seen as a fringe candidate and a nuisance to the establishment is energizing the party's libertarian wing, which is looking with disdain at the other candidates' previous support for the Wall Street bailout of 2008 and Democrats' economic stimulus plan of 2009.

Paul is none too pleased with his rivals. He doesn't appear to be staging his criticism as a proxy for a favorite candidate and has shown no willingness to spare any of his rivals for the nomination, including Cain, the former pizza executive who has risen to the top tier of some polls.

"If he's the flavor of the month," said Gary Howard, Paul's spokesman, "he still deserves to be talked about."

In one letter, the campaign said Republicans could not nominate Perry, "the governor of Texas, who gave in-state tuition benefits to illegal immigrants."

Paul's son, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, another tea party favorite, signed the message.

"Supporting more of the status quo's defenders -- whether they are Democrats or Republicans -- will surely deepen our debt crisis and permanently cripple our economy," Rand Paul wrote.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/20/ron-paul-2012-ad_n_1022654.html

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Friday, October 21, 2011

UFC 137 shocker: GSP injured and off the card, Diaz-Penn now three-round main event

Dana White flew across country today to New York, when he landed, he and mixed martial art fans were greeted with some lousy news. The main event next week at UFC 137 has been scrapped because of an injury to UFC welterweight champ Georges St-Pierre.

UFC 137 shocker: GSP injured and off the card, Diaz-Penn now three-round main event

Carlos Condit will go on the shelf and wait for a healthy GSP to retur with Nick Diaz vs. B.J. Penn moving to the main event.

MMAFighting's Ariel Helwani spoke with GSP's trainer Firas Zihabi, who sent mixed signals in these comments:

"He's out for a month," Zahabi said of GSP. "I would say at least a month he can't train. So unfortunately, he's out of the fight, that's for sure. He's not in any condition to fight, that's for sure. No doctor will clear him."

That sounds like a pretty serious injury or does it?

This suddenly changes the tone of the event for Nick Diaz. Diaz freaked out a month ago as his title fight with main event status approached against St-Pierre. Does this change things for Diaz from a mental standpoint?

Other popular stories on Yahoo! Sports:
? Video: Goal of the year? Benn beats four defenders ? and the goalie
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? Cardinals realize Cruz can pull a fast one

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/mma/blog/cagewriter/post/UFC-137-shocker-GSP-injured-and-off-the-card-D?urn=mma-wp8321

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Too much undeserved self-praise can lead to depression

ScienceDaily (Oct. 20, 2011) ? People who try to boost their self-esteem by telling themselves they've done a great job when they haven't could end up feeling dejected instead, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association.

High and low performers felt fine when they assessed themselves accurately, probably because the high performers recognized their strengths and low performers acknowledged their weaknesses and could try to improve their future performance, according to a study in the October issue of the APA journal Emotion?.

"These findings challenge the popular notion that self-enhancement and providing positive performance feedback to low performers is beneficial to emotional health. Instead, our results underscore the emotional benefits of accurate self-assessments and performance feedback," said lead author Young-Hoon Kim, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania. . The study involved experiments with four different groups of young people from the United States and Hong Kong. Three U.S. groups totaled 295 college undergraduates, with 186 women and a mean age of 19, and one Hong Kong group consisted of 2,780 high school students, with 939 girls, from four different schools and across grades 7-12.

In the first two experiments, one of the U.S. groups and the Hong Kong students took academic tests and were asked to rate and compare their own performances with other students at their schools. Following their assessments, all the participants completed another widely used questionnaire to assess symptoms of depression.

In the third and fourth experiments, researchers evaluated the other two sets of U.S. undergraduates with feedback exercises that made high performers think their performance was low and low performers think their performance was high. Control groups participated in both and received their scores with no feedback.

Across all the studies, results showed that those who rated their own performance as much higher than it actually was were significantly more likely to feel dejected. "Distress following excessive self-praise is likely to occur when a person's inadequacy is exposed, and because inaccurate self-assessments can prevent self-improvement," said co-author Chi-Yue Chiu, of Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

The results also revealed cross-cultural differences that support past findings that Asians are more humble than Americans. The U.S. undergraduates had a higher mean response when rating their performance than the Hong Kong students, at 63 percent compared to 49 percent, the researchers found. Still, they found that excessive self-enhancement was related to depression for both cultures.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Young-Hoon Kim, Chi-Yue Chiu. Emotional costs of inaccurate self-assessments: Both self-effacement and self-enhancement can lead to dejection.. Emotion, 2011; 11 (5): 1096 DOI: 10.1037/a0025478

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://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111020024846.htm

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Christopher Plummer, Glenn Close - a year for overdue Oscars? (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? In addition to the usual lines we'll be hearing at the next Academy Awards show -- "I'd like to thank the Academy," "It's an honor just to be nominated," and all the other cliches -- there's a pretty good chance that something else will be heard at the Kodak Theater:

"Well, it's about time."

That's because many of the main acting categories are studded with contenders who've had long, prosperous careers in which they've been largely ignored by the Academy.

Take Christopher Plummer, a prime Supporting Actor contender for his role in "Beginners," and an outside chance at a Best Actor nomination if his one-man show "Barrymore" is released this year.

Plummer has been acting on-screen since 1953 and in films since 1958, including roles in such landmark movies as "The Sound of Music" and "The Man Who Would Be King."

He spent the first five decades of that career completely overlooked by the Academy, then picked up his first nomination at the age of 79 in 2009's "The Last Station."

He has never won.

Max Von Sydow, 82, instantly anointed a strong Supporting Actor contender once people got a look at the gravity he brought to the trailer for "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close," has spent 60-plus years as a film actor and has been in more than 100 movies.

In that time, he has one Oscar nomination (for "Pelle the Conqueror" in 1988) and no wins.

Nick Nolte, with an affecting turn in "Warrior": 60-odd movies, two nominations, no wins.

Gary Oldman, whose lead performance in "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" is a marvel of understatement: 40-plus films, including acclaimed appearances in "Sid and Nancy," "The Contender" and many others, without a single nomination.

Even Glenn Close, a strong Best Actress contender for "Albert Nobbs," is 23 years removed from a remarkable string in which she landed five acting nominations in seven years.

She didn't win any of them, and she hasn't been nominated since.

And while one of her main competitors in the category, Meryl Streep, is Oscar royalty with 16 nominations over the past 32 years, she's also been a model of futility, going 0-for-12 since winning her second Oscar way back in 1982.

In a way, Supporting Actress contender Vanessa Redgrave (for "Coriolanus" and "Anonymous") is in a similar category to Streep: She has won in the past, but not since "Julia" in 1978, and is one-for-six over a 33-year film career that might well have deserved more Academy honors.

Certainly, those overdue actors will be up against a tough field of movie stars (George Clooney, Brad Pit, Leonardo DiCaprio), previous winners (Philip Seymour Hoffman, Tilda Swinton, Charlize Theron) and hot newcomers (Elizabeth Olsen, Michael Fassbender, Jessica Chastain, Octavia Spencer).

And certainly, being overdue doesn't guarantee an Oscar -- just ask Peter O'Toole and Lauren Bacall, who ended up getting their gold statues in the form of Honorary Academy Awards.

O'Toole, in fact, initially considered declining the Honorary Oscar when it was voted to him, telling the board of governors that he was "still in the game and might yet win the lovely bugger outright."

He was nominated for "Venus" three years after reluctantly accepting that honorary award, but lost to Forest Whitaker in "The Last King of Scotland."

Let that be a warning to Plummer, and Von Sydow, and Nolte, and Oldman and Close: At the Oscars, just because it's about time doesn't mean your time as come.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111019/film_nm/us_oscars

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Obama begins campaign-style jobs tour in key states (Reuters)

MILLERS CREEK, North Carolina (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama sought on Monday to turn up the heat on Republicans for blocking his jobs bill as he started a campaign-style bus tour across states vital to his 2012 re-election chances.

Hitting the road again, this time in North Carolina and Virginia, Obama struck a populist tone and argued that Congress should pass at least parts of his $447 billion jobs package that was defeated as a whole last week.

"We're going to give members of Congress another chance to step up to the plate and do the right thing," Obama told a cheering crowd at the airport in Asheville, North Carolina, the starting point for his three-day trek in a black armored bus.

As Senate Democrats prepared to force a vote this week on one of Obama's jobs proposals, which would give states money to employ teachers, the president mocked the Republicans who had blocked his original bill.

"Maybe they just couldn't understand the whole all at once. So we're going to break it up into bite-size pieces so they can take a thoughtful approach to this legislation," he said.

The president's strategy is to force Republicans to accept his proposals or be painted as obstructionists getting in the way of economic recovery as campaigning for the November 2012 presidential and congressional elections heats up.

"I need you to give Congress a piece of your mind," he told about 2,000 supporters packed into a high school gymnasium in Millers Creek, in the foothills of the Blue Ridge mountains.

"Tell them what's at stake here. There are too many of our fellow Americans hurting and you can't stand by and do nothing. Now is the time to act," he said.

Republicans saw Obama's jobs package as laden with wasteful spending and counter-productive tax hikes for wealthier Americans who tend to be entrepreneurs and job creators.

Their disagreement has extended the deadlock that brought the United States to the edge of sovereign default in August when Democrats and Republicans failed to agree on deficit cuts as part of a deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling.

That impasse makes it unlikely that any major steps to spur hiring will be passed before the 2012 election, when Obama will be judged for his economic stewardship.

TOUGH ROAD IN 2012

The White House billed Obama's trip -- his second bus tour through small-town America since he visited the rural Midwest in August -- as a chance to reconnect with ordinary citizens.

His itinerary spans two traditionally conservative states he won in 2008 but which polls show he is in danger of losing in his bid for a second term. North Carolina is also site of the Democratic presidential convention next summer.

But the White House said the bus tour was official business with all costs covered by taxpayers, not from Obama's campaign coffers.

Onlookers lined the streets in front of gas stations, fast-food restaurants and shopping malls as Obama's bus, with dark-tinted windows and red and blue flashing lights, led a long motorcade across the green, rolling hills.

Some cheered and snapped photos with their cellphones but a few turned their thumbs down as the string of vehicles passed, and others held protest signs including one reading: "No more massive government spending programs. They don't work."

The bus tour is taking place well over a year before the election, during a period when incumbent presidents generally are spending their campaign time raising money.

Obama's focus on retail politicking at this stage suggests he realizes he has a tough road in 2012 and has to start early to hammer home his message that Republicans are refusing to join with him in finding ways to fix the U.S. economy.

In Millers Creek, Obama derided the jobs plan Republicans presented last week as an attempt to roll back environmental standards and Wall Street regulations without having the wealthy pay any more taxes to help those struggling.

But Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, said the Republican ideas that would require a balanced budget, promote foreign trade and push offshore energy exploration would have a more meaningful jobs impact than the "sugar high" of Obama's recommended stimulus.

Buck also questioned why Obama was on the road and not working with lawmakers to find compromise. "This bus tour looks a lot like the kind of political game the president has said the American people are tired of," he said.

At a Southern barbecue restaurant where Obama stopped for lunch, diners expressed mixed views of the Democrat's record.

"This isn't 'Obama Country' but I voted for him once and I'll vote for him again," said Howard Ward, 76, a retired textile manager. "He's doing the best he can with jobs. But it's going to be very close in this state in 2012."

An elderly woman sitting nearby shook her head as she ate a barbecue chicken sandwich. "He hasn't done anything to fix the economy. He doesn't deserve a second chance," she said.

(Additional reporting by Laura MacInnis, Thomas Ferraro and Steve Holland; Editing by Will Dunham and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111017/ts_nm/us_obama

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