Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Pope greets pilgrims in St. Peter's for final time

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Benedict XVI is greeting pilgrims in St. Peter's Square for the final time before retiring, waving to tens of thousands of people who have gathered to bid him farewell.

Benedict was driven around the square in an open-sided vehicle, surrounded by bodyguards. At one point he stopped to kiss a baby handed up to him by his secretary.

St. Peter's was overflowing and pilgrims and curiosity-seekers were picking spots along the main boulevard nearby to watch Wednesday's event on giant TV screens. Some 50,000 tickets were requested for Benedict's final master class on the Catholic faith, but Italian media estimated the number of people actually attending could be double that.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-greets-pilgrims-st-peters-final-time-094716701.html

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94% Zero Dark Thirty

All Critics (234) | Top Critics (44) | Fresh (219) | Rotten (15)

What's striking is the absence of triumphalism -- Bigelow doesn't shy away from showing the victims shot down in cold blood in the compound -- and we come away with the overwhelming sense that this has been a grim, dark episode in our history.

Chastain makes Maya as vivid as a bloodshot eye. Her porcelain skin, delicate features and feminine attire belie the steel within.

No doubt Zero Dark Thirty serves a function by airing America's dirty laundry about detainee and torture programs, but in its wake, there's a crying need for a compassionate Coming Home to counter its brutal Deer Hunter.

While "Zero Dark Thirty" may offer political and moral arguing points aplenty, as well as vicarious thrills,as a film it's simply too much of a passable thing.

From the very first scenes of Zero Dark Thirty, director Kathryn Bigelow demonstrates why she is such a formidable filmmaker, as adept with human emotion as with visceral, pulse-quickening action.

A timely and important reminder of the agonizing human price of zealotry.

An exhilarating and compelling historical document worthy of praise.

Bigelow's latest proves a rewarding piece of filmmaking, one that, in its best moments at least, is as gripping and as troubling as anything the director's ever made.

Bigelow and screenwriter Mark Boal shape history -- those breaks, big and small, that led to the killing of Osama bin Laden -- into one of the finest fact-based thrillers since "All the President's Men."

Purely as cinematic exercise, Zero Dark Thirty is an exhilarating piece of work. But, beyond its for-the-times subject matter, the work does not linger whatsoever.

Zero Dark Thirty is interesting as opposed to enjoyable, intriguing as opposed to entertaining, and certainly less memorable than The Hurt Locker.

It's quite remarkable how Bigelow and Boal managed to take 12 years of information (including a conclusion that everyone knows) and packaged it into a coherent, intimate and intense movie.

We know the ending, yet remain mesmerized by familiar details, filmed with a harrowing sense of urgency. It's as close to being in the White House situation room that night, watching a closed-circuit broadcast, as anyone could expect.

The second half of the film IS the film.

Whereas Locker was less about war than what it is to have a death wish, ZDT is less about the suspenseful true-life search for Osama bin Laden than the red tape one woman must wade through to prove that a mean old bastard is living in suburban Pakistan.

Bigelow's great achievement is stripping down the action from the exaggerated theatrics in movies and television shows so the missions feel no less exciting and immediate.

One of the finest movies of the year is a thriller about the tracking and, finally, slaying of Osama bin Laden.

There is no Team America-style, flag-waving bravado behind this story - it is quite the opposite.

Bigelow has created the best film of 2012.

"Zero Dark Thirty" is less a celebration how terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden was found and killed than an engrossing examination of why it took a decade to deal with him.

Following on from the great acclaim of The Hurt Locker, Bigalow's shaky cam and tough talking characters once again take us to the dark side of modern warfare.

In the absence of cinematic grandeur and didacticism, we're left as empty and as lost as Chastain's agent as she boards a symbolically empty plane for an uncertain future. Just what are we to think of the so-called War on Terror?

The viewer needs to stay sharp to stay on top of the details of the labyrinthine search, but Bigelow tackles the complex story with the same muscular urgency and incisive intelligence that won her an Oscar for The Hurt Locker.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/zero_dark_thirty/

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Senate panel likely to vote this week on CIA pick

(AP) ? The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee says she expects the panel to vote later this week on the nomination of John Brennan to be director of the CIA.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said Monday the White House has agreed to provide the committee with information about the Sept. 11, 2012, attack on a U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. Republicans had demanded the records as a condition of moving forward with Brennan's confirmation.

But Feinstein said the Obama administration has not responded to the committee's request for more details about the classified legal opinions that justify using unmanned spy planes to kill al-Qaida suspects overseas, including American citizens.

Feinstein said she anticipates the committee will vote Thursday on Brennan's nomination.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-25-Brennan-CIA/id-5f71235239f84cd0a34d3e0458254ef8

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DLP's IntelliBright tech promises brighter pico projection at no extra power

DLP's IntelliBright tech promises brighter pico projection at no extra power

Most portable projectors are tasked with striking a delicate balance between power consumption and picture quality. With this in mind, Texas Instruments' DLP arm has unveiled a new system at MWC known as IntelliBright, which is intended to improve the brightness of pico projectors without making hardware hungrier. It's no fancy set of circuits, though, but a pair of algorithms which tinker with image brightness and contrast to produce a more radiant picture. What's more, the algorithms can be tweaked separately by hardware manufacturers for any desired result, and can incorporate data from ambient light sensors to increase projector efficiency. DLP recently introduced its new Tilt & Roll Pixel chip architecture at CES, which is also designed to make pictures brighter and batteries happier in the next generation of pico products. All we hope is the developments inspire Samsung to create a Galaxy Beam II, just with more focus on the phone part this time

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Z-SdpLrt_TA/

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Yoga for Thyroid ? Incredible Health Benefits of Yoga - Food Fitness ...

Posted by Jitesh Manaktala on Feb 24, 2013 in Featured, Health & Fitness, YogaGoogle+

Most women across the globe suffer from thyroid disorders. The disorder leads to many problems. Since the butterfly-shaped thyroid gland plays a major role in the endocrine system, any imbalance result in a huge number of health problems. The gland is responsible for producing thyroid hormone. The body converts and distributes the hormone to each cell. These hormones affect metabolic functioning of body system.

Hypothyroidism results in underactive thyroid gland. The condition is more common than hyperthyroidism, a condition in which the thyroid is overactive. Yoga, the ancient art of exercise is a helpful component in the treatment thyroid and managing varied thyroid conditions.

Breathing Techniques

First start with a general yoga movement. You need to follow a breathing routine that encompasses deep abdominal breathing. Lie flat on your back and place one hand on your abdomen. Now take a slow, deep breath. Observe your hand rising as you inhale. Then exhale slowly.

Once you set a foundation with a general yoga movement and breathing technique, it is easy to add thyroid-specific poses and breathing to the routine. Inhaling through your nose is one of the thyroid-benefitting breathing exercises. This helps you emphasise on inhaling on the back of your throat.

Yoga for Hypothyroid

You should be a little cautious while performing these poses. The shoulder stand yoga pose is important for hypothyroidism. Place a yoga mat or blankets under yourself when performing this exercise. First, lie back on a mat with the palms of your hands under your back. Now lift your legs and lower body toward the ceiling. Keep doing this until your shoulders, neck and head are the only body parts that come in contact with the mat. Now support your lower back area with your hands. Look at your toes without turning head.

Fish pose is also beneficial for hypothyroidism. Here, place your legs straight out and use your elbows in order to give support to your torso as you lie down on your back. Inhale while curving your chest and bending the head back. You must move your elbows down the sides of your body, toward your hips. Now gradually curve your back until the crown of your head touches the floor.

Yoga for Hyperthyroid

In case of hyperthyroidism, it is crucial that you do not overexert yourself while performing yoga exercises. The boat pose known to be very helpful for an overactive thyroid. First, you must lie on your abdomen. Now while keeping your feet together, rest your chest and forehead on the floor. Stretch your arms overhead and try to raise your legs, trunk, shoulders, arms, neck and head. Make sure you do not bend your elbows or knees while doing this. It is crucial to maintain an ached back and bend as far as you can.

You may also interested in:

Source: http://www.foodfitnesslifelove.com/yoga/yoga-for-thyroid-incredible-health-benefits-of-yoga/

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Source: http://jerewhitaker39.typepad.com/blog/2013/02/yoga-for-thyroid-incredible-health-benefits-of-yoga-food-fitness.html

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Oscar Ratings Up, Seth MacFarlane Says 'No Way' To Second Go-Round

'Lotta fun to have done it, though,' MacFarlane tweets about Oscars, whose rating were up 11 percent among 18-49 viewers.
By Gil Kaufman


Seth MacFarlane at the 2013 Oscars
Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702623/oscar-ratings-seth-macfarlane.jhtml

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Pain from the brain

Monday, February 25, 2013

Psychogenic diseases, formerly known as 'hysterical' illnesses, can have many severe symptoms such as painful cramps or paralysis but without any physical explanation. However, new research from the University of Cambridge and UCL (University College London) suggests that individuals with psychogenic disease, that is to say physical illness that stems from emotional or mental stresses, do have brains that function differently. The research was published today, 25 February, in the journal Brain.

Psychogenic diseases may look very similar to illnesses caused by damage to nerves, the brain or the muscles, or similar to genetic diseases of the nervous system. However, unlike organic diseases, psychogenic diseases do not have any apparent physical cause, making them difficult to diagnose and even more difficult to treat.

"The processes leading to these disorders are poorly understood, complex and highly variable. As a result, treatments are also complex, often lengthy and in many cases there is poor recovery. In order to improve treatment of these disorders, it is important to first understand the underlying mechanism," said Dr James Rowe from the University of Cambridge.

The study looked at people with either psychogenic or organic dystonia, as well as healthy people with no dystonia. Both types of dystonia caused painful and disabling muscle contractions affecting the leg. The organic patient group had a gene mutation (the DYT1 gene) that caused their dystonia. The psychogenic patients had the symptoms of dystonia but did not have any physical explanation for the disease, even after extensive investigations.

The scientists performed PET brain scans on the volunteers at UCL, to measure the blood flow and brain activity of both of the groups, and healthy volunteers. The participants were scanned with three different foot positions: resting, moving their foot, and holding their leg in a dystonic position. The electrical activity of the leg muscles was measured at the same time to determine which muscles were engaged during the scans.

The researchers found that the brain function of individuals with the psychogenic illness was not normal. The changes were, however, very different from the brains of individuals with the organic (genetic) disease.

Dr Anette Schrag, from UCL, said: "Finding abnormalities of brain function that are very different from those in the organic form of dystonia opens up a way for researchers to learn how psychological factors can, by changing brain function, lead to physical problems."

Dr Rowe added: "What struck me was just how very different the abnormal brain function was in patients with the genetic and the psychogenic dystonia. Even more striking was that the differences were there all the time, whether the patients were resting or trying to move."

Additionally, the researchers found that one part of the brain previously thought to indicate psychogenic disease is unreliable: abnormal activity of the prefrontal cortex was thought to be the hallmark of psychogenic diseases. In this study, the scientists showed that this abnormality is not unique to psychogenic disease, since activity was also present in the patients with the genetic cause of dystonia when they tried to move their foot.

Dr Arpan Mehta, from the University of Cambridge, said: "It is interesting that, despite the differences, both types of patient had one thing in common - a problem at the front of the brain. This area controls attention to our movements and although the abnormality is not unique to psychogenic dystonia, it is part of the problem."

This type of illness is very common. Dr Schrag said: "One in six patients that see a neurologist has a psychogenic illness. They are as ill as someone with organic disease, but with a different cause and different treatment needs. Understanding these disorders, diagnosing them early and finding the right treatment are all clearly very important. We are hopeful that these results might help doctors and patients understand the mechanism leading to this disorder, and guide better treatments."

###

University of Cambridge: http://www.cam.ac.uk

Thanks to University of Cambridge for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 42 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127002/Pain_from_the_brain

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Monday, February 25, 2013

First And Early Oscars Moments For Stars Are Adorable, Endearing (PHOTOS)

Everyone remembers their first time... at the Oscars, that is.

Angelina Jolie stepped onto her first Academy Awards red carpet decked out in a pouffy white lace '80s gown as her dad's date in 1986. Before that, bonafide Hollywood heavyweight Meryl Streep made her Oscars debut as a bright-eyed novice in the '70s. Anne Hathaway doesn't have to think too far back to remember her first time -- the actress presented an award in a glittery Valentino gown in 2007.

Each lady that attends her first Oscars is faced with a daunting task: What does one wear to the film industry's most glam evening of the year? The results are sometimes fashionable, sometimes cringe-worthy and most of the time adorable.

In honor of tonight's big show, we've rounded up stars' first or early appearances at the Oscars. Scroll through, wax nostalgic and get pumped for the 2013 red carpet!

PHOTOS:

  • Angelina Jolia, 1986

  • Meryl Streep, 1979

  • Jennifer Lopez, 1997

  • Drew Barrymore, 1983

  • Sandra Bullock, 1997

  • Charlize Theron, 2000

  • Hilary Swank, 2000

  • Scarlett Johansson, 2004

  • Sarah Jessica Parker, 1989

  • Kate Hudson, 2001

  • Renee Zellweger, 1999

  • Halle Berry, 1998

  • Reese Witherspoon, 2002

  • Julianne Moore, 1998

  • Keira Knightley, 2006

  • Anne Hathaway, 2007

  • Penelope Cruz, 2000

  • Jennifer Aniston, 2000

  • Cameron Diaz, 1998

  • Kate Winslet, 1996

  • Uma Thurman, 1995

  • Cate Blanchett, 1999

  • Salma Hayek, 1996

  • Gwyneth Paltrow, 1994

  • Glenn Close, 1984

  • 2013 Academy Award Nominees: Best Actress

    The nominees for an Academy Award for Best Actress are Jennifer Lawrence for Silver Linings Playbook, Quvenzhane Wallis for Beasts of the Southern Wild, Jessica Chastain for Zero Dark Thirty, Naomi Watts for The Impossible and Emmanuelle Riva for Amour. See all the nominees, film clips and interviews.

Want more? Be sure to check out HuffPost Style on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest and Instagram at @HuffPostStyle.
--
Do you have a style story idea or tip? Email us at stylesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com. (PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/24/first-oscars-angelina-jolie-photos-pictures_n_2753048.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Liz Carmouche?s submission attempt on Ronda Rousey leaves an impression ? literally

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Early in the main event at UFC 157, Liz Carmouche mounted Ronda Rousey's back. With Rousey standing, Carmouche clamped on and cranked Rousey's neck. She squeezed until Rousey finally shook Carmouche off, then finished the fight with an armbar in the final seconds of round one.

It wasn't until after the fight that we found out how tight the neck crank was. When Carmouche had her arm across Rousey's face, it pushed Rousey's mouth guard out of the way. In trying to push Carmouche off, Rousey's teeth pushed into Carmouche's arm, leaving this impression.

It wasn't an illegal move because Rousey wasn't intentionally biting down. Still, Rousey did apologize to Carmouche for leaving the mark on her arm during the postfight press conference.

When stuck in Carmouche's submission attempt, Rousey was doing more than just leaving a mark on her opponent's arm. She was being tested more than she had in any other fight. Though it still ended in the first round, at 4:49 it was the longest fight of Rousey's professional career.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/liz-carmouche-submission-attempt-ronda-rousey-leaves-impression-081442027--mma.html

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Firefox phones coming this summer

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Mozilla, the non-profit foundation behind the popular Firefox Web browser, is getting into phones. But it's not stopping at Web browsers ? it's launching an entire phone operating system.

The Mountain View, Calif.-based foundation said Sunday that phones running Firefox OS will appear this summer, starting in Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Mexico, Montenegro, Poland, Serbia, Spain and Venezuela.

The Firefox OS will land in a crowded environment, where many small operating systems are trying to become the "third eco-system," alongside Apple's iOS and Google's Android. Together, those two account for 91 percent of smartphone sales, according to research firm IDC.

Mozilla Foundation has an ally in phone companies, who are interested in seeing an alternative to Apple and Google, particularly one coming from a non-profit foundation. Thirteen phone companies around the world have committed to supporting Firefox phones, Mozilla said, including Sprint Nextel in the U.S., though it gave no time frame for a release. Other supporters include Telecom Italia, America Movil of Mexico and Deutsche Telekom of Germany. DT is the parent of T-Mobile USA, but plans to sell Firefox phones first in Poland.

Phone makers that plan to make Firefox phones include Huawei and ZTE of China and LG of Korea. The first devices will be inexpensive touchscreen smartphones.

All the phones will run on chips supplied by San Diego-based Qualcomm Inc., whose CEO Paul Jacobs appeared at Mozilla's press event Sunday in Barcelona, Spain, on the eve of the world's largest cellphone trade show.

The industry has seen various attempts to launch "open" smartphone operating systems, with little success. Jay Sullivan, vice president of products at Mozilla, said these failed because they were designed "by committee," with too many constituents to please. While developing and supporting the Firefox browser, Mozilla has learned to develop large-scale "open" projects effectively, he said.

He also said that putting quality third-party applications on Firefox phones will be easy, because they're based on HTML 5, an emerging standard for Web applications.

"Firefox OS has achieved something that no device software platform has previously managed - translating an industry talking shop into a huge commitment from both carriers and hardware vendors at its commercial launch," said Tony Cripps an analyst at research firm Ovum. "Neither Android nor Symbian ? the closest benchmarks in terms of broad industry sponsorship that we've previously seen ? have rallied the level of support that Firefox OS has achieved so early in its development."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/firefox-phones-coming-summer-172308147--finance.html

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Mayor Bloomberg Makes a Small Step Toward a Rational Policy on Marijuana

In his final state of the city address as Mayor of New York, Michael Bloomberg made the welcome announcement that anyone caught in possession of marijuana would no longer have to spend a night in jail. Effective next month, anyone who is arrested for marijuana possession will still be taken to the police station, fingerprinted and so on, but if there are no pending warrants, they will be released with a summons to appear in court. This is a small step in the right direction, but it does not go remotely far enough to undo the damage that has been inflicted upon poor and minority communities who have born the brunt of what activists call a "marijuana arrest crusade" that has flourished during the mayor's reign.

In 2008, the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) compiled a report (pdf) on the unprecedented eleven-fold increase in misdemeanor marijuana arrests in the city that began during Mayor Rudy Guiliani's last term in office and continued with relish under Mayor Bloomberg. Since this "crusade" began, the number of marijuana arrests have increased from approximately 6000 per year in 1995 to nearly 40,000 in 2007.

It will come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the way of things in New York city that the vast majority of those arrested and jailed for smoking pot were blacks and hispanics, despite the fact that studies consistently show that white people use drugs like marijuana at much higher rates. It has been the constant cry of activists that white people enjoy a certain level of immunity from prosecution for minor drug offenses, while black and brown people do not. As Donna Lieberman, the Executive Director of the NYCLU put it: "What this amounts to is a two-tiered system of justice". A democracy for some, a police state for others.

To compound the irony, the mayor admitted in 2002 that he was a pot smoker himself. When asked by the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws Foundation if he had ever tried the drug, he responded: "You bet I did. And I enjoyed it." Needless to say, he regretted making these remarks almost immediately afterwards. But regrets aside, he remained firm in his view that marijuana should not be decriminalized and that the laws that exist should be enforced. It may not have been his intention that it would be poor black and brown people who felt the brunt of this law enforcement zeal rather than rich white people like himself, but that is how things have panned out.

As the NYCLU's report details, between 1997 and 2006, 353,000 New Yorkers were arrested for possession of small amounts of marijuana. All of these people were handcuffed, taken to the police station, fingerprinted and most of them spent a night in jail. Worse still, they have had to deal with the consequences of having a criminal record. A large majority ? 85% ? of those arrested were either black or hispanic. Only 15% were white.

The high rate of marijuana arrests are linked in part to the NYPD's controversial "stop, question and frisk" policy that disproportionately impacts minorities.

- Read the entire article at The Guardian.

Source: http://www.cannabisculture.com/content/2013/02/20/Mayor-Bloomberg-Makes-Small-Step-Toward-Rational-Policy-Marijuana

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Florida fireballs renew calls for early warning system (+video)

Florida fireballs lit up the night sky Sunday. The fireballs (aka meteors) were seen by more than 60 people in Florida. Coming after the huge meteor in Russia, there are new calls for an early warning system to protect the Earth from giant meteors and asteroids.

By Staff,?CSMonitor.com / February 20, 2013

Fireballs (aka meteors) were seen by dozens of people in Florida Sunday.

A fireball, caused by a falling meteor, was seen by spectators from Miami to Jacksonville, Florida, Sunday evening.

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The streaking meteor was small compared to the one that hit Russia last week, but it was a bright light in the Florida sky ? and was captured on video.

?This one wasn?t grain-of-sand size, which what most of them are,? Thomas Webber, director of the Museum of Science and History?s Bryan-Gooding Planetarium told the Florida Times Union in Jacksonville. ?When we get something a little bigger, that maybe has a silicate coating that ablates off as it travels though the atmosphere and takes some of the heat with it, they can appear much brighter and last a lot longer.?

More than 60 people reported seeing the meteor on the American Meteor Society?s ?Fireball Log.?

They posted comments including, "I saw flames coming from it as it was falling and then it burned out. It was very distintive as a flaming, falling ball."

The Florida fireball, coming on the heels of the huge meteor that fell in Russia last week and an asteroid that buzzed past the Earth from a distance of just 17,200 miles, is raising awareness of how many objects fall to Earth each day.

The American Meteor Society notes that hundreds, if not thousands, of meteors fall to Earth daily. Most burn up in the atmosphere. But larger meteors, or asteroids, could pose a threat to life on Earth. Recent events have renewed calls for an early warning system, including a telescope in space dedicated to finding asteroids.?As The Christian Science Monitor reported recently:

"In their hunt to identify such near-Earth objects wider than half a mile across ? potential civilization busters if one were to strike Earth ? astronomers have cataloged about 95 percent of the objects in this size class during the past 15 years.

But they have found less than 1 percent of the objects 100 feet across or larger, a class that includes the asteroid 2012 DA14. This object flitted past Earth Friday afternoon Eastern Standard Time a scant 17,200 miles from Earth ? a record for a known object of its size."

On Friday, Lamar Alexander (R) of Tennessee and chairman of the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee, issued a statement regarding the two events that noted that the committee will hold hearings in the near future to explore ways to improve efforts to detect asteroids as well as to deal with any deemed a potential threat to the planet.

Discussing the recent asteroid flyby and the Russian meteor, Prof. Michio Kaku of City College of New York, told CBS News: "This could be a game changer," in terms of getting government support for better tracking of these objects. "We need an insurance policy. Inevitably, we're going to get hit with a big one. Look at the moon: it's pockmarked ... so we need to have an early warning system."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/DuhvTaMLXRk/Florida-fireballs-renew-calls-for-early-warning-system-video

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Magic F Turkoglu banned 20 games for steroids

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) ? Orlando Magic forward Hedo Turkoglu was suspended 20 games by the NBA on Wednesday after testing positive for steroids.

The NBA said Turkoglu tested positive for methenolone, an anabolic steroid. He began serving the suspension Wednesday night as the Magic hosted the Atlanta Hawks.

Turkoglu took full responsibility for the positive test and apologized to the Magic organization, his fans and fellow teammates. He said he took medication from a trainer in Turkey this past summer to help him recover from a shoulder injury and mistakenly neglected to check it against the NBA's banned list.

"As a player this is the worst situation that you want to be in," Turkoglu said. "I'm just sorry to put the organization in this situation. ... I should have double-checked and researched and shouldn't be in this situation."

He is the eighth player suspended for performance-enhancing drugs under the NBA's drug testing policy. He is the second Magic player to be suspended for PED's under the policy in four years. Former Magic forward Rashard Lewis was suspended for 10 games in 2009 after testing positive for an elevated testosterone level.

Turkoglu said he was tested by the league in December and learned of the suspension Tuesday night. General manager Rob Hennigan said Turkoglu informed the team of the positive test a week ago.

Turkoglu sat out the Magic's past three games for what the team said were flu-like symptoms and a sore back. Hennigan said those ailments were legitimate and unrelated to the positive test.

It is the latest in a string of bad news for Turkoglu during the past year.

He missed 10 games at the end of last year's regular season for a fractured bone above his eye and then missed 28 straight games at the start of this season after breaking a bone in his hand. He's appeared in just 11 games in 2012-13, with only one start.

Turkoglu is in the third year of his second stint with the Magic. He is averaging 2.9 points, 2.1 assists and 2.4 rebounds, all down from his career numbers over the previous 12 seasons.

"It's been really nightmare," Turkoglu said. "It wasn't a really good year for me. Now I'm facing this. As a player, you face a lot of injuries. It just comes and goes. But this kind of situation, you don't want to put yourself in. This is the worst one I'm dealing with now."

Hennigan said he doesn't believe that there are any issues with the NBA's drug testing policy or the culture of the team in light of Lewis' previous test.

"Clearly we need to educate our players on what's safe to take and what not to take," he said. "We'll move forward. We don't support the decision he made, but we support Hedo."

After seeing his rotation disrupted throughout the season because of injuries, Magic coach Jacque Vaughn said there is no choice but to move on.

"There's a great thing called reality and you have to accept it," Vaughn said. "Today was an unfortunate reality and you accept it and move forward."

Turkoglu is making about $11.8 million this season. He has one more year remaining on his current deal, but it is only partially guaranteed. He was picked as the NBA's most improved player in 2008 while with Orlando.

Orlando went into the game with a 15-36 record in its first season of rebuilding following the departure of All-Star center Dwight Howard to the Los Angeles Lakers this past offseason.

Asked about Turkoglu's future, Hennigan said it is yet to be determined.

"I think we're going to get through this step. We'll worry about the summer when the summer comes," Hennigan said. "Contracts are what they are. We have to make decisions about a lot of different things in the summer and certainly the Hedo situation will be one of them. But we're not able to comment now on what the decision will be."

Turkoglu said he is focused on serving his suspension.

"I've had my best years in Orlando and I've tried to play as much as I can here. Certain situations are out of my hands," he said. "So like Rob said, we'll wait for the summer to come and we'll see what happens. Right now I want to deal with this and get it over as quick as I can."

___

Follow Kyle Hightower on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/khightower

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/magic-f-turkoglu-banned-20-games-steroids-212021449--spt.html

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First Wind applauds clean energy vision in state of the union and calls for level playing field with fossil fuels

Thursday, Feb 14, 2013

First Wind, an independent U.S.-based renewable energy company, today commended the clean energy vision outlined by President Obama in the State of the Union, and called for bi-partisan leadership to create a level playing field for clean energy and fossil fuels.

?To realize the clean energy vision outlined in the State of the Union, we need to put in place a predictable policy that allows access to capital for renewable energy in the same manner oil, gas, and coal have operated for decades.?

Immediately following the extension of the federal tax credits for wind energy by Congress last month, First Wind announced it is poised to increase its operating portfolio of wind projects by 50 percent in the coming years, and sees a pathway for more cost-competitive renewable energy if consistent policy can be implemented.

?Although the recent extension of the tax credits was key for the industry, we must now look toward more stable policy for wind energy to avoid the artificial boom and bust cycle for wind project development and construction that occurs as the tax credits expire,? said Paul Gaynor, CEO of First Wind. ?To realize the clean energy vision outlined in the State of the Union, we need to put in place a predictable policy that allows access to capital for renewable energy in the same manner oil, gas, and coal have operated for decades.?

In part because of the race to build before the end of wind?s tax credits, 2012 was the strongest year ever for the U.S. wind energy industry, with 8,380 MW installed during the fourth quarter alone according to the American Wind Energy Association. Wind energy represented 42 percent of all new generating capacity in the U.S., the report stated. But at the same time this record amount of wind power went online, U.S. factories and companies could not plan for continued growth in 2013 without predictable policy in place.

?Looking toward 2013 and beyond, the extension of the wind energy tax credits will allow for the continued growth of cost-competitive wind energy in the United States. However, additional certainty around federal policy will set the stage for long-term growth, especially because stable, predictable policy creates increased efficiencies within the industry,? Gaynor said.

Source: Business Wire

Source: http://www.yourrenewablenews.com/first+wind+applauds+clean+energy+vision+in+state+of+the+union+and+calls+for+level+playing+field+with+fossil+fuels_86960.html

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Volunteers needed to step up for Aurora parade

A giant American flag makes its way down GalenBoulevard during Aurora's Fourth July Parade Wednesday. | Brian Powers~Sun-Times Media

A giant American flag makes its way down Galena Boulevard during Aurora's Fourth of July Parade on Wednesday. | Brian Powers~Sun-Times Media

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Updated: February 13, 2013 10:51AM

AURORA ? The Roosevelt-Aurora American Legion Post 84 and the city are seeking volunteers to work on this year?s Fourth of July festivities.

The first meeting of the parade committee will be 10 a.m. Friday in the fifth floor conference room at City Hall, 44 E. Downer Place. Volunteers are encouraged to attend.

?The success of the Fourth of July Parade depends on the volunteers,? said American Legion Commander Thomas Sampson.

Aurora?s Independence Day celebration will start with a pre-parade ceremony at 9:15 a.m. July 4 outside the Paramount Theatre, followed by the parade at 10 a.m. in downtown Aurora.

The American Legion stepped forward in 2011 and 2012 to help organize the parade. Last year?s event was sponsored by the Legion, the city of Aurora, Hollywood Casino, Waubonsee Community College, Laborers Local 149 and many other organizations and individuals.

For more information about volunteering, call the city?s Special Events Division at 630-256-3370.

Source: http://beaconnews.suntimes.com/18075362-418/volunteers-needed-to-step-up-for-aurora-parade.html

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Weather Kid Goes Viral: Best Forecast Ever!

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

No more free passes to famous men who abuse women (Washington Post)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284320884?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Cope et al ?Technology-Mediated Writing Assessments: Principles ...

This is where we?ll talk about?Bill Cope, Mary Kalantzis, Sarah McCarthey, Colleen Vojak, Sonia Kline, ?Technology-Mediated Writing Assessments: Principles and Processes.??Link?|?PDF?Sorry it took me later than I would have preferred to get this up and running? the results of too busy of a weekend and a completely unnecessary snow day for my son. But I digress.

We?re reading two articles this week that are basically from the same group of researchers at the University of Illinois that were both in the same issue of?Computers and Composition?in 2011. So I think there?s an intentionality of these two essays commenting on each other.

Let me start by just sharing a generality about the idea of ?technology-mediated? assessment and how that tends to play out in the larger composition and rhetoric community. ?Basically, when someone in a conference presentation or during a discussion on an electronic mailing list (the WPA-L immediately comes to mind) raises the idea that grading with computers might??might and in theory? be useful as part of the assessment process, most comp/rhet teachers come after that someone with pitchforks and torches. For many (most?) scholars in the field, it is nearly a non-starter in terms of conversation.

So I very much appreciate what Cope et al are doing here in bringing up the conversation. ?They?re arguing that if we?re going to value writing over things like multiple choice tests as a way to assess learning (and they clearly mean things beyond fycomp), then it just makes sense to take advantage of emerging technologies. Some of the things they suggest are pretty much here already; beides ?natural language analytics? (think of the grammar and spell-checker functions), corpus comparison is used quite a bit to assess predetermined prompts and there?s good evidence that it works quite well. That is, this is a good tool for evaluating a bunch of essays that all respond to the same question (?What was the significance of the Declaration of Independence in the Revolutionary War??) but not so good at the kinds of writing that happens a lot in first year writing (?Write about an event that was important for you in developing your sense of literacy.?)

Some of the ?network-mediated? feedback tools that they mention are also emerging. I know the folks who have developed this software, but check out as an example Eli, which isn?t so much a machine doing the grading as it is a machine?facilitating peer review.

If you don?t get all of the technologies they talk about, that?s okay too. I didn?t either. And actually, I think that?s part of the problem here and part of the slippery nature of agency. I think a lot of people in the comp/rhet world simply do not believe that it would be possible for a computer program to do some of the work they do as readers and evaluators because they (we and I include ?me? in that) don?t understand how it could work. To me, that?s the same agency/thinking machine question that we were pondering last week with blogbjects and with computer-driven cars and the like.

Source: http://engl516.stevendkrause.com/2013/02/11/cope-et-al-technology-mediated-writing-assessments-principles-and-processes/

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Monday, February 11, 2013

A roundup of the best photos of the day

HOUSTON (AP) ? A Texas man has been charged with murder in the fatal shooting at a crash scene of a suspected drunken driver who authorities say plowed into his sons as they helped push their family's broken-down pickup truck along a dark, narrow, rural road.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/photos/photos-of-the-day-1340925511-slideshow/

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Homes wrecked, dozen hurt in Mississippi tornado

HATTIESBURG, Miss. (AP) ? Residents shaken by a tornado that mangled homes in Mississippi were waking up Monday to a day of removing trees, patching roofs and giving thanks for their survival. More than a dozen in the state were injured.

Daylight also offered emergency management officials the chance to get a better handle on the damage that stretched across several counties. Gov. Phil Bryant planned to visit hard-hit Hattiesburg, where a twister moved along one of the city's main streets and damaged buildings at the governor's alma mater, the University of Southern Mississippi. Emergency officials said late Sunday that at least 10 people were injured in surrounding Forrest County and three were hurt to the west in Marion County, but they weren't aware of any deaths.

It was raining at first light Monday and people began trying to salvage what they could in one damaged neighborhood. Some people walked around fallen trees, power lines, smashed cars and other debris to carry belongings away.

Charlotte Walters, 61, and her daughter Heather Walters, 30, were moving buckets and bowls around inside their house trying to catch water pouring through holes in the roof. The women were at home along with Charlotte's husband when a relative called and said a tornado was headed their way.

"It sounded like Katrina," said Charlotte Walters, who lives in a neighborhood also hit by the 2005 hurricane that devastated the Gulf Coast.

Besides holes in the roof of her one-story wood frame house, a falling tree had damaged the side and another one collapsed on her carport, denting and breaking windows in three cars there.

"I'm blessed. At least I don't have one of those in my house," Charlotte said, pointing to a tree that had fallen onto a neighbor's house next door.

Marie Key, 68, was hoping to salvage what she could Monday morning. She was alone in her one-story brick house when the storm hit Sunday. She heard the tornado coming and dove under a kitchen table.

At least three trees hit her house, which she said was also damaged during Hurricane Katrina and another storm in 1998. The fallen trees blocked the front and back doors and a neighbor had to pull the limbs away so she could get out. She had a bruised forehead Monday and some other scratches but was otherwise uninjured.

"I'm luck, I know that," Key said fighting back tears as she spoke. "I'm kind of past the 'poor me' part of it. This is so widespread and it's happening in so many places. I'm going to be all right."

Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Greg Flynn said it appears a single tornado caused the damage in Forrest, Marion and Lamar counties. Hundreds of homes are damaged in Forrest County, along with a couple dozen in the other two.

Flynn said the sheer scope of the damage was slowing officials' assessment.

"The problem is, it was so strong that there's so much debris that there's a lot of areas they haven't been able to get to yet," he said.

On campus, trees were snapped in half around the heavily damaged Alumni House where part of the roof was ripped away. Windows in a nearby building were blown out, and heavy equipment worked to clear streets nearby in a heavy rain after the worst of the weather had passed.

The university released a statement saying no one was hurt but that it was under a state of emergency, and anyone away from campus should stay away until further notice.

East of campus, 47-year-old Cindy Bullock was at home with her husband and dog when she heard the tornado coming. They ran to a hallway and covered their heads. It wasn't long before the windows in the kitchen and bedroom exploded. The storm stripped all the shingles off the roof and left holes in it, while knocking over a large pine tree in the yard.

After dark, the Bullocks were trying to arrange their stuff inside so it wouldn't get wet from the dripping water.

"I just looked out the window and I heard the rumbling. It sounded like a train. We ran to the hall, and the kitchen windows and the windows in the bedroom exploded. It happened pretty fast," she said.

There were large trees blocking the road all through her neighborhood, and several of the houses were hit by falling trees. Her friend was staying with them after the friend's apartment took a direct hit from a falling tree.

Forrest County Sheriff Billy McGee says 10 or 15 people were injured by the tornado that slammed Hattiesburg and other parts of the county ? but none of the injuries was serious.

"Most of our injuries have been walking wounded," he said.

To the west, Marion County emergency director Aaron Greer said three injuries had been reported in the community of Pickwick, about seven miles south of Columbia. Two people were taken to hospitals, but the third didn't have the injury examined, he said.

Greer said one mobile home was destroyed, three other structures have major damage and several have minor damage.

On Sunday night, John and Katherine Adams were cleaning up around their one-story white house where the storm punched holes in the roof, busted windows and completely destroyed the back porch. The couple was at home with their 7- and 3-year-old daughters when the tornado passed next to their house.

All through the neighborhood, houses and vehicles were damaged by falling trees.

"We're safe, and that's all that matters," said Katherine Adams, 46.

John Adams, who's in the building supply business, said he was surprised to see broken boards that appeared to be from new construction in his yard because there are no homes being built nearby.

"We've got stuff around here; I don't even know where it came from," he said.

___

McConnaughey reported from New Orleans.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/homes-wrecked-dozen-hurt-mississippi-tornado-035836403.html

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Solar industry grapples with hazardous wastes (Providence Journal)

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Hubble catches a streak of stars in side-on view of spiral galaxy

Feb. 10, 2013 ? The Hubble Space Telescope captured a thin, glittering streak of stars in a new view of the spiral galaxy ESO 121-6, which lies in the southern constellation of Pictor (The Painter's Easel).

Viewed almost exactly side-on, the intricate structure of the swirling arms is hidden, but the full length of the galaxy can be seen -- including the intense glow from the central bulge, a dense region of tightly packed young stars sitting at the center of the spiral arms.

Tendrils of dark dust can be seen across the frame, partially obscuring the bright center of the galaxy and continuing out towards the smattering of stars at its edges, where the dust lanes and shapes melt into the inky background. Numerous nearby stars and galaxies are visible as small smudges in the surrounding sky, and the brightest stars are dazzlingly prominent towards the bottom left of the image.

ESO 121-6 is a galaxy with patchy, loosely-wound arms and a relatively faint central bulge. It actually belongs to a group of galaxies, a clump of no more than 50 similar structures all loosely bound to one another by gravity. The Milky Way is also a member of a galactic group, known as the Local Group.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/MnX6YH9e2aM/130210085811.htm

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

UAE's automotive sector receives Peugeot Best Middle East - AME Info

The UAE automobile industry is certainly on its way up, with the automotive sector recording a growth of 12 to 18 % in 2012 and 2013 being another promising year.

In light of the growing industry, Omeir Bin Youssef and Sons LLC (OBY), the authorized dealer of Peugeot in Abu Dhabi and Al Ain has recorded an impressive sales growth of 60% in the new car segment and a volume growth of 30% for the spare parts division in 2012 as compared to the previous year.

"We are extremely delighted to have won this award. This is a wonderful acknowledgment of our continuous efforts which are on par the finest in the country. As an organization, we have always delivered beyond expectations, building a strong and sustained relationship with our customers and will continue the momentum in years to come," Said Mr. Khalifa Bin Omeir, Chief Executive Officer, Omeir Bin Youssef & Sons LLC.

"OBY functions on the excellence model and our achievements are a result of the same. Being one of the oldest families in UAE automotive market since 1958, we have been privileged to represent some of best international brands in the country. The award is a testament of our on-going commitment to the nation and in the near future we are looking to expand our business significantly," he added.

The authorised dealers of Peugeot were judged on three main criteria including sales and market share growth in 2012 as compared to 2011, part sales performance v/s targets and consumer satisfaction index (CSI).

In addition to the above, quality of products and service offered; originality in marketing strategies and overall performance were other factors considered for the award. OBY was selected as the winner for having demonstrated its resilience and revenue-generating capacity, as well as outstanding success in expanding the Group's core business activities.

Keeping in line with their century old expertise of offering complete monitoring solutions for new and pre-owned cars, OBY is planning to expand its network base with the opening of a brand new facility in Al Ain and a new service center in Abu Dhabi.

"Citing a growth of 50-60% for the new car segment, the fiscal year 2013 is extremely crucial. A lot of new models targeting key customer segment by Peugeot specifically for the region are due to be launched in 2013 that will accelerate growth of the brand in GCC & ME. Our mission this year is to focus on sales volume growth for Peugeot and expand our operations for the pre-owned and used cars division. With the automotive sector witnessing a robust growth, we are also looking at new acquisitions and mergers with international brands," said Mr. Ashwani Shiv - Divisional Manager, Omeir Bin Youssef & Sons LLC.

Peugeot, the brand synonymous to innovation is a French brand offering luxury, sedan, crossover, and SUV models. The brand witnessed more than 50% growth in GCC sales in 2012 as compared to last year. The sharp growth not only signals the strong automotive market but also reflects the success of Peugeot in the region attracting new business.

The Middle East is a very important market for almost every automobile dealer and with the improving UAE car market; several dealers in the country are looking forward to a year of good sales and profits.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/uaes-automotive-sector-receives-peugeot-middle-328959

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Saturday, February 9, 2013

Write With Spike: Q&A with Amy Friedman, Author of Desperado's Wife


Hey Y?all, My friend Amy Friedman?who wrote a terrific essay that appeared in Stricken, an anthology about grief that I co-edited-- has a new memoir out. Desperado?s Wife, about the time in her life when she was married to a man in prison for murder. You can get the book by visiting AmyFriedman.net, Pages A Bookstore in Manhattan Beach, California and on Amazon. Watch her website for an airdate announcement for her interview with Katie Couric. Below, Amy answers questions about her life and her book.?

SG: Hi Amy. Great to be back in touch. Will you start out by giving us a little background re: your writing career?

AF: I began writing short stories when I was a teenager, inspired at first by a desire to give voice to a grandmother who had stopped speaking and whose story I wanted to know. And then I never stopped, though throughout my teens and 20s and into my 30s I was a devout fiction writer. I received my MFA in creative writing from City College of New York, worked for years as an editor and writer, and in 1985 moved to Kingston, Ontario, Canada where I happened upon a newspaper that was, at the time, a literary wonder. The Kingston Whig Standard had a beautiful Saturday magazine. I sent off a couple stories to the editor who invited me in for a talk and offered me a weekly column. That column is what turned me into a personal essayist and memoirist. Over the eight years I wrote Hard Lines, that column, I also published two memoirs and hundreds of stories and essays. I also began writing Tell Me a Story for The Whig, a newspaper feature of adaptations of myths, legends, folk and fairytales and within a year I was under contract with Universal Press Syndicate?to syndicate the column internationally. Twenty years later, I?m still writing that weekly column. I also teach personal essay and memoir in Los Angeles where I moved in 2002.

SG: Your new book, Desperado's Wife, is a memoir about a time in your life when you met a prisoner who was behind bars for murder, married him, and what ensued. I'm guessing a question you are often asked is, "What were you thinking?" or "How could you marry a murderer?" Is that right? Will you give me a little laundry list of FAQs you get hit with and a couple of answers you perhaps have memorized by now?

AF: Why is definitely the question, and it?s often followed by an eye roll or two. And quickly followed by the question: Did you ever get to sleep together? And how did you get past the fact that he had killed someone, were you afraid? The shortest answer is you have to read the book, which of course leads me to your next question?why I decided to write it. So I?ll take those two together.

Will and I were married for 7 years, 5-1/2 of which he was in prison (I met him during his 7th year inside); when he was paroled (and yes, even those who have been sentenced to murder receive parole?though less and less in the States), and the last 18 months of our marriage we lived together, but the marriage disintegrated when our strongest bond?the fight we were waging together to win his parole?was gone. He also did not cope well with the world when he was first released?he fell apart emotionally and that put a strain on our relationship?a strain that finally broke us apart.

But he did not fall apart in the way most people imagine released prisoners do. The general image of a ?murderer? is someone who does nothing else?who moves through the world seeking to kill. When I was an official visitor (I first visited prison as a columnist so that I could learn about prison), and during the years Will and I were married, I came to know dozens of men serving time for murder. It?s important to understand that each of these people were individuals, each one with a story?bar fights gone awry, drug rivalries, accidents, drunk driving. Most of the stories involved drugs and/or alcohol. I did not meet any serial killers (though it is the women who marry psychopaths and serial killers that seems to me to inspire psychologists to write books about ?those prisoners wives.?)

?But Will and I fell in love the way people do outside?at first I was drawn to him because he was intelligent and when I asked him questions about prison, he was the person who gave me the answers that made most sense. For instance, the very first thing he told me was that if I wanted to understand prison, I ought to talk to prisoners? families because they understand prison and never did anything to hurt anyone. And so I began to talk to families. I also continued to talk to Will (and many other prisoners, guards and administrators) until one day a prison official told me I was welcome to continue visiting, that I was welcome to write stories about prison for the paper, but that I was NOT permitted to talk to one inmate. That inmate was Will.

?I was na?ve enough to think that the official had just given me valuable information?had told me that it was Will who was telling me the truth about prison. I ignored his instruction and continued talking to Will, at which point prison officials wrote a letter to my editor letting him know the prison was expelling me, refusing to allow me in. My editor who had always been my staunch supporter did not support me in my effort to fight for the right to keep visiting. The prison I later learned (by accessing their letter through the Privacy Commission Act) had accused me of inappropriate behavior (which was untrue)?I argued with my editor: This was, I said, Canada, a free country; prison officials could not decide who could and who could not investigate what went on behind those walls, who a writer could or could not talk to. Alas, at just that point in time the paper had been purchased by a large corporate syndicate and my editor, worried about his own job, turned his back on me.

?I?m rebellious by nature, and that literally pushed me into Will?s arms because once I was forbidden to visit prison, the only way I could continue going in was to sign on as a personal visitor. And I did. And soon after that, Will?s mother and children invited me to join them in what were known as Private Family Visits (colloquially conjugal or trailer visits). I applied to do so, but the warden (whom I had interviewed many times and knew well and with whom I had always gotten along) refused my request. He told us we could have a trailer visit in a year?if we ?behaved.? Will asked me to marry him?if we were married, the prison could not refuse us the visit. By that time I was so angry and alienated from those around me who were judging without knowledge and turning their backs on me, and I was so attracted to and engaged by and in love with Will, I quickly agreed. Again, that?s the snapshot.

?What followed were years of great difficulty because overnight after I married Will, I became, in the eyes of the prison system and of many outside, just as suspicious and subject to invasion of privacy as were all prisoners. All prisoners? wives, children, parents, sisters and brothers and friends suffer the humiliation of things like strip searches and long waiting lines and hostility and job loss and every other imaginable indignation. Indeed, the publisher canceled my column, friends turned their backs, for a while so did my family, a board of directors on which I had long served kicked me off its board, and I wound up in combat against prejudice and misunderstanding?the sort that I think inspires those eye rolls, and the question. That?s not to say I don?t understand why or how people ask, but one of the reasons

I knew I had to write the book was to continue what I started out to do when I first visited prison?long before I met Will. That was to paint a picture of the world that is prison, to try to better understand and then describe in writing what happens to those impacted by prison, to write about what it is like trying to have a have a relationship against the odds. When the relationship collapsed, I collapsed for about a year. I knew I would have to write about it to find my way back to making sense of the story, of all the specifics of what happened. ? There?s another important piece to the book and that is that Desperado?s Wife is actually two love stories?the love story between me and Will, but maybe more important, the love story between his daughters and me. They were 14 and 8 when we met, and I helped to raise them for most of those years. And they are still two of the most important loves of my life. One of the reasons I wanted to write the book was to help to lift the mantle of shame from them, a mantle that is the result of others? lack of understanding and prejudice against anyone who loves a prisoner. ?


SG: Has writing it been healing?

AF: Yes, but also painful. The book took ten years to write?because it started out filled with the fury I felt towards those who had turned their backs and full of the despair the divorce left me feeling. After several drafts of writing with an agenda of sorts (to prove prisoners wives are no different from other women who love someone), I realized I had to give up trying to prove anything. I decided to try to write the book as a novel from the point of view of a prisoner?s child?that way readers wouldn?t come to the book with a built-in question (how could you love him?) because everyone understands a child?s love for a parent (no matter how flawed that parent is). And after another three years of working on the novel, I finished it and a good friend and colleague read it and looked me in the eye and said, ?You do realize you have to write this as a memoir.?

At first I wanted to punch him, but I knew he was right. I went back to the drawing board, back to beginning as if I were walking into prison for the first time, open and ready to learn what there was to learn, to find what there was to find. The journey led me to a deep understanding of how this story happened, to my realization that ever since childhood I?d longed to know what prison does to human beings in large measure because I am the daughter of a man who was a Jewish prisoner of War in World War II and granddaughter of a man who was a prisoner of War in Siberia in World War I. That is how I know that prison seeps deep under the skin not only of those who are imprisoned but of their loved ones, and future generations.?

SG: Where is your ex-husband-- does he know about the book?

AF: He was released from prison in 1999, and he has remained out, living and working in Canada. There is no animosity between us, and though I haven?t consulted with him about the book. We did have a conversation a few years ago when an excerpt of the book was published in the NewYork Times Modern Love column,?and he found out about it and read it. I was worried?that?s why I hadn?t told him about it. I thought he would object to my telling this story. But in fact he called me and told me he fully supported me in anything I wrote, that he knew me to be a person of integrity, and he was confident that my writing would always reflect that integrity.

SG: This is probably one of those stupid questions, since I know we should take life on a case-by-case basis, but if I told you that I was going to marry a prisoner, would you counsel me one way or the other, for/against?

AF: Not stupid at all, but the answer has two parts. The first is yes, I would. In fact, a friend of mine has a daughter who is engaged to a man in prison, and I?ve been talking to her for months, trying to convince her to wait until he is released to marry him. But the counsel does not come in the form of ?he?s a loser, why would you do that?? or ?you?re throwing your life away.? Rather it?s that the life of a prisoner?s spouse is full of suspicion and hostility and loneliness and a kind of poverty of the soul. Part two: I know that my counsel and anyone else?s is likely useless. People in love do what they feel they need to do, what they must do. Love is powerful medicine, and I don?t think there?s a verbal antidote, and if you?re anything like me, if I counsel you for or against, you?ll rebel against my counsel.?

SG: What was your publishing process-- agent, NY publisher, etc? Or more DIY? Whichever it was, will you tell us the pitfalls and rewards you encountered?

AF:?Ah publishing! For the last 10 years, ever since I moved back to the States, it?s been more or less the bane of my existence. I have an agent (my second in the last ten years), and both have loved the book and sent it out far and wide. The rejections have come mostly in this form: This is a fascinating story and beautifully written but it would not interest enough people. One editor even wrote, ?But there aren?t enough prisoners? wives to make this saleable.? But my agent convinced me she could keep at it. In the meantime, a producer at the Katie Couric show came to me?she?d read my piece in the New York Times and another excerpt in Salon and a third in your book, Stricken: 5,000 Stages of Grief, and she wanted me to appear on Katie to tell my story and feature the book, and I decided I would not appear on the show without a book. So I went the self-publishing route.

The reward is I have a book between covers, the pitfall?because the book is self-published it is ineligible for all kinds of reviews and awards for which I wish it were eligible and the cost, of course?in terms of money and time invested in doing everything on my own?hiring my own editors, copyeditors, designers, and so on, and working with no publicist or machine behind me. But I?ve reached out for reviews and so far these have been more positive than I could have dreamed?most people have told me that once they picked up the book they couldn?t put it down?and I think it?s opened some eyes, and hearts. That?s my hope. And of course it would be nice to make back the investment ? And meantime my agent has the self-published version out for consideration too. We shall see.

SG: How's the marketing going? My experience is that it's pretty tough out there to get noticed. On the other hand, I really am pleased that, as a self-publisher this time around-- I got to write exactly what I wanted. But the marketing can be a bit exhausting. Agreed?

AF:?Absolutely agreed. I?ve gone this route before with a series of CD Audiobooks I?ve produced from Tell Me a Story, and when I put those out into the world, I developed a schedule which was this: For three years, each day I wrote one letter to someone?to librarians, to reviewers, to bloggers, to schools, to churches, to women?s groups. And now, six years since the release of the first CD, I do nothing and the CDs continue to sell?not gangbusters but it?s always amazing to me, and I sell at least one CD or story each day to someone somewhere.

I thought to do that with this book, but in some ways I?d prefer now to put that energy into writing the next book. That?s why people like you, and interviews like this, are blessings. I?m scheduled to do a radio interview with KPFK (Experience Talks) in early February. But you?re absolutely right. Making this book be and say precisely what I wanted it to be and say is, ultimately, what matters. And that it exists has left me with the energy to begin to put prison behind me.

SG: Working on another big project now??

AF: Slowly, slowly bringing myself back into an old novel I first wrote when I was in graduate school, and ?I have another book recently completed that?s coming out in September. This is with St. Martin?s Press, it?s a co-authored memoir with Anne Willan. In other words, I?m the ?ghost? (I?ve ghosted several books, though for this one I have an author credit). Anne is a well-known cooking teacher and author of 30 books who had a famous cooking school in Paris, and the book?s called One Souffle at a Time, and I love her and the story and the book?and it couldn?t be more different from Desperado?s Wife. Her story is one of travel, adventure, food, life in a chateau in Burgundy?very little darkness, lots of light, and Anne?s amazing recipes, too.

SG: What else would you like to tell me?

AF: Without you and Stricken, I don?t know that I would have ever finished Desperado?s Wife. The writing and the efforts to entice editors was such a slog until the day your co-author, Katherine Tanney, called to tell me you and she had submitted my excerpt to Dan Jones at Modern Love and that he wanted to run a portion of my piece. That opportunity seriously turned everything around for me, first because at the time so many editors were telling me no one cared about the story of a prisoner?s wife, and then because Dan cared so deeply, and afterwards because the feedback was oceanic, and 95% was positive.

So I honestly feel that without you and Katherine on my side, I might not have made the long trek to publication. And this: That 95% of prisoners get out of prison eventually, and families of prisoners are the single best hope that that release will end up being positive and nurturing. And as Will told me on the first day we met, prisoners? families understand prison, and they never did anything wrong. Before I was a prisoner?s wife, I thought all those women (wives, moms, daughters, sisters) standing at the bus stop outside the prison waiting to go home were probably smuggling drugs or knives. Ninety-nine percent of them not only aren?t smuggling knives and guns and drugs, they?re only trying to hold tight to their love, despite the burden of sorrows.

Source: http://writewithspike.blogspot.com/2013/02/q-with-amy-friedman-author-of.html

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