Sunday, April 28, 2013

Stocks stall on tepid US economic growth

In this Tuesday, April 16, 2013, photo, Specialist Michael O'Mara, left, and trader Fred Demarco work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. World stock markets fell Friday April 26, 2013 after Japan faced an unwelcome drop in consumer prices. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

In this Tuesday, April 16, 2013, photo, Specialist Michael O'Mara, left, and trader Fred Demarco work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. World stock markets fell Friday April 26, 2013 after Japan faced an unwelcome drop in consumer prices. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK (AP) ? The stock market stalled Friday after the U.S. economy didn't grow as much as hoped and earnings from a handful of big companies failed to rev up investors.

The economy grew at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the first three months of the year, the government said. That was below the 3.1 percent forecast by economists.

The shortfall reinforced the perception that the economy is grinding, rather than charging, ahead. Investors have also been troubled by reports in the last month of weaker hiring, slower manufacturing and a drop in factory orders. Many economists see growth slowing to an annual rate of around 2 percent a year for the rest of the year.

U.S. government bonds, where investors seek safety, rose after the report.

"There are some concerns as we head into the summer," said JJ Kinahan, chief derivatives strategist for TD Ameritrade. "In the last three weeks, we've seen numbers that weren't exactly what you'd love to see."

Corporate earnings this week have also contained worrisome signs. Many companies missed revenue forecasts from financial analysts, even as they reported higher quarterly profits. For example, Goodyear Tire slipped 3.3 percent to $12.51 Friday after revenue fell short of analysts' estimates, hurt by lower global tire sales.

Of the companies that have reported earnings so far, 70 percent have exceeded Wall Street's expectations, compared with a 10-year average of 62 percent, according to S&P Capital IQ. But 43 percent have missed revenue estimates. Just over half of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported quarterly results.

The S&P 500 index dropped 2.92 points, or 0.2 percent, to close at 1,582.24.

The Dow rose 11.75 points, or 0.1 percent, to 14,712.55. The index got a big lift from Chevron. Profit for the U.S. oil company beat expectations of financial analysts in the first quarter, pushing shares up 1.3 percent to $120.04.

Three stocks fell for every two that rose on the New York Stock Exchange.

Both indexes were up for the week and remain slightly below their all-time highs reached April 11. The Dow index rose 1.1 percent this week while the S&P gained 1.7 percent.

The market has been bolstered by the Federal Reserve's easy money policy. The disappointing growth figure for the economy will ensure that the Fed sticks with its stimulus policy, providing support for stocks, said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital.

"The economic data that we've been getting points to no early exit for the Fed's stimulus," Cardillo said.

The Nasdaq composite fell 10.72 points to 3,279.26, a decline of 0.3 percent. The index is 2.3 percent higher this week.

The tech-heavy index has lagged the Dow and the S&P 500 this year, but it led the way higher this week, boosted by Microsoft. The software giant, which makes up 5.3 percent of the Nasdaq, recorded its biggest weekly gain since January of last year ? up 6.8 percent. It reported earnings April 19 that beat Wall Street expectations. The company also began an aggressive push into the computer tablet market.

Apple, the largest stock in the Nasdaq, also had a good week. The stock rose 6.8 percent to $417.20, its best weekly gain since November, despite posting a decline in quarterly profit Tuesday. Apple accounts for 7.6 percent of the Nasdaq composite.

Among other big names investors focused on:

Amazon.com fell 7 percent to $254.81 after the company warned of a possible loss in the current quarter. The online retailer also reported lower income for the first quarter as it continued to spend heavily on rights to digital content.

Expedia fell 10 percent to $58.56 after the online travel company reported a quarterly loss.

Homebuilder D.R. Horton surged 8.7 percent to $26.66 after its income nearly tripled thanks to a continuing recovery the housing market. The results handily beat the forecasts of financial analysts who follow the company.

J.C. Penney jumped 12 percent to $17 after the billionaire financier George Soros disclosed that he had taken a 7.9 percent stake in the struggling company.

In government bond trading, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note slipped to its lowest rate of the year, 1.67 percent, from 1.71 percent the day before. The yield has fallen from 2.06 percent six weeks ago as traders move money into lower-risk investments.

The dollar weakened against the euro.

The European currency bought $1.3029 at the end of day, compared with $1.3002 the day before. The ISE dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against a group of other world currencies including the Japanese yen and the euro, dropped 0.3 percent, to 82.48.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-04-26-Wall%20Street/id-934af8b9474346b08eebcdf7cf9fd194

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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Research aims to settle debate over origin of Yellowstone volcano

Apr. 15, 2013 ? A debate among scientists about the geologic formation of the supervolcano encompassing the region around Yellowstone National Park has taken a major step forward, thanks to new evidence provided by a team of international researchers led by University of Rhode Island Professor Christopher Kincaid.

In a publication appearing in last week's edition of Nature Geoscience, the URI team demonstrated that both sides of the debate may be right.

Using a state-of-the-art plate tectonic laboratory model, they showed that volcanism in the Yellowstone area was caused by severely deformed and defunct pieces of a former mantle plume. They further concluded that the plume was affected by circulation currents driven by the movement of tectonic plates at the Cascades subduction zone.

Mantle plumes are hot buoyant upwellings of magma inside Earth. Subduction zones are regions where dense oceanic tectonic plates dive beneath buoyant continental plates. The origins of the Yellowstone supervolcano have been argued for years, with sides disagreeing about the role of mantle plumes.

According to Kincaid, the simple view of mantle plumes is that they have a head and a tail, where the head rises to the surface, producing immense magma structures and the trailing tail interacts with the drifting surface plates to create a chain of smaller volcanoes of progressively younger age. But Yellowstone doesn't fit this typical mold. Among its oddities, its eastward trail of smaller volcanoes called the Snake River Plain has a mirror-image volcanic chain, the High Lava Plain, that extends to the west. As a result, detractors say the two opposite trails of volcanoes and the curious north-south offset prove the plume model simply cannot work for this area, and that a plates-only model must be at work.

To examine these competing hypotheses, Kincaid, former graduate student Kelsey Druken, and colleagues at the Australian National University built a laboratory model of Earth's interior using corn syrup to simulate fluid-like motion of Earth's mantle. The corn syrup has properties that allow researchers to examine complex time changing, three-dimensional motions caused by the collisions of tectonic plates at subduction zones and their effect on unsuspecting buoyant plumes.

By using the model to simulate a mantle plume in the Yellowstone region, the researchers found that it reproduced the characteristically odd patterns in volcanism that are recorded in the rocks of the Pacific Northwest.

"Our model shows that a simple view of mantle plumes is not appropriate when they rise near subduction zones, and that these features get ripped apart in a way that seems to match the patterns in magma output in the northwestern U.S. over the past 20 million years," said Kincaid, a professor of geological oceanography at the URI Graduate School of Oceanography. "The sinking plate produces a flow field that dominates the interaction with the plume, making the plume passive in many ways and trapping much of the magma producing energy well below the surface. What you see at the surface doesn't look like what you'd expect from the simple models."

The next step in Kincaid's research is to conduct a similar analysis of the geologic formations in the region around the Tonga subduction zone and the Samoan Islands in the South Pacific, another area where some scientists dispute the role of mantle plumes.

According to Kincaid, "A goal of geological oceanography is to understand the relationship between Earth's convecting interior and our oceans over the entire spectrum of geologic time. This feeds directly into the very pressing need for understanding where Earth's ocean-climate system is headed, which clearly hinges on our understanding of how it has worked in past."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Rhode Island, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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Journal Reference:

  1. C. Kincaid, K. A. Druken, R. W. Griffiths & D. R. Stegman. Bifurcation of the Yellowstone plume driven by subduction-induced mantle flow. Nature Geoscience, 07 April 2013 DOI: 10.1038/ngeo1774

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/8-wFygDrUlg/130415151436.htm

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

London School of Economics denounces BBC tactics

(AP) ? The renowned London School of Economics has denounced the BBC for using a student-organized trip to North Korea as "cover" for a reporting trip to the secretive communist country.

The LSE said in a statement Saturday the BBC put students at risk by having at least one of a team of three journalists pretend to be affiliated with the university to gather material for a TV program set to be broadcast Monday.

The university says it has tried and failed to persuade the BBC not to air the program. LSE blamed BBC for not being forthcoming about its reporting plans in North Korea, where foreign reporting crews usually have to operate under strict supervision.

The BBC's John Sweeney, who LSE officials say posed as a post-graduate LSE student, said Sunday it was "entirely wrong" for the university to try to prevent the broadcast from going forward.

LSE student union general secretary Alex Peters-Day said the students were lied to and that at least one of the students on the trip was not told in advance of the journalists' participation.

"This is a student welfare issue," she said. "We don't know what could have happened to those students and, truthfully, neither does the BBC. It's absolutely disgraceful that he (Sweeney) put students in that position. It's incredibly reckless."

BBC News Head of News Programs Ceri Thomas said on a BBC News program Sunday that the students were given the information needed to give informed consent to the increased risk of traveling with journalists who did not have authorization to work in North Korea.

He said, however, that the students were told roughly a month before the trip that there would be "a journalist" traveling with them but were later told, once they were already en route to North Korea, that there would be three journalists who would be conducting undercover filming for TV.

He said the students may have been under the impression that a print journalist, not a three-person TV crew, was going to be involved.

Thomas said BBC would air the documentary despite LSE's concerns because of high public interest in the show.

"It is disappointing for us that LSE has chosen to make this public," he said. "We would have kept them out of this altogether. They could have avoided the publicity and we think that would have lowered the reputational risk."

He said BBC executives felt that if the deception was discovered the students likely would have been deported, but he admitted he could not "categorically" rule out the possibility that their lives might have been at risk.

In an email sent to staff and students, the university complained that the BBC "Panorama" program was "produced using as cover a visit to North Korea which took place from 23-30 March 2013 in the name of the Grimshaw Club, a student society at LSE."

It said the group included Sweeney and journalists Alexander Niakaris and Tomiko Sweeney.

"In advance of the trip, it was not known to the rest of the party that they were three journalists working for or with the BBC," the email said. "Their purpose, posing as tourists, was to film and record covertly during the visit in order to produce the 'Panorama' program."

The BBC has faced intense criticism in the last year for its handling of an investigation into alleged sexual abuses committed by the late Jimmy Saville, one of its star presenters.

A BBC statement released Sunday indicated that the students "were all explicitly warned about the potential risks" of traveling to North Korea with journalists as part of this group. It said they were warned that the might face "arrest and detention."

The statement said BBC recognized it was raising the risks to the students by adding a journalist to the group.

Sweeney also defended the BBC on one of its programs Sunday morning. He said the LSE's version of events is not accurate.

A BBC story about the trip says Sweeney and a two-person crew that included his wife spent "eight days undercover" in North Korea.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-14-Britain-BBC-North%20Korea/id-907f2484de9442819d114dc7917aa994

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Mother of Newtown victim delivers emotional weekly address in Obama's stead (Washington Post)

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Saturday, April 13, 2013

Comedian Jonathan Winters dies at 87

By Anna Chan and Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

Getty Images file

Jonathan Winters at the TV Land Awards in 2008.

Jonathan Winters, who earned laughs playing everyone from an alien baby to a crotchety grandma, and who inspired numerous comedians in the field of improvisational comedy, has died of natural causes at age 87.

Winters' agent told NBC News that the actor died Thursday night at his home in Montecito, Calif., while surrounded by family and friends.

Winters was born in Dayton, Ohio, on Nov. 11, 1925. His career kicked off when his wife, Eileen, encouraged him to enter a talent contest, which he won. That performance led to a DJ job at WING-AM in Dayton in 1946, and he eventually moved to New York and became a performer at Manhattan's Blue Angel nightclub.?

Winters became known for his numerous classic comedy characters and routines, including sharp-tongued Maude Frickert, whom the comic said he based on a large, humorous but bedridden relative.

?I decided, having seen a lot of older people, that many of them even today are shelved,? Winters told the Archive of American Television. ?I decided to get a hip old lady.? Johnny Carson was inspired by Frickert to create his own version, Aunt Blabby, who appeared frequently on Carson's "Tonight Show." His other popular recurring characters included countryish Elwood P. Suggins, wealthy B.B. Bindlestiff, football coach Piggy Bladder and?Princess Leilani-nani, the world's oldest hula dancer.

Winters' improvisational comedy inspired a generation of funny men and women. In a classic 1964 clip from "The Jack Paar Program," host Paar hands Winters a stick and the comic launches into four minutes of off-the-cuff prop humor, switching from an all-American fisherman to an Austrian violinist to a Spanish bullfighter.

Winters worked as an actor in more than 73 movies and television shows, and currently has two projects in post-production: the voice of Papa Smurf in "The Smurfs 2," due to be released in July, and a character named Dayton in "Big Finish," which is scheduled for late next year. His many movies included "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" and "The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming."

Everett Collection

From left, Robin Williams, Jonathan Winters and Pam Dawber on 1980s sitcom "Mork & Mindy."

One of his most popular roles was that of Mearth, Mork (Robin Williams) and Mindy's (Pam Dawber) child, who was hatched -- as a fully grown adult -- from an egg Mork laid. The character was introduced during the show's fourth and final season in the hopes of improving the sci-fi comedy's ratings. Winters had previously made a guest appearance on the show in season three as Mindy's uncle Dave.

Winters won an Emmy in 1991 for his work as the goofy father of Randy Quaid on the short-lived sitcom "Davis Rules." He also won two Grammys and the second-ever Mark Twain Prize for American Humor.

Winters also voiced multiple commercials. Among his most popular ads were the ones he did for Hefty garbage bags, in which he played a garbageman dressed to the nines in a spiffy white suit.

Comedians took to Twitter Friday morning to remember the comic and his body of work.

?

Winters' life wasn't always easy. Before he finished high school, he enlisted in the Marines and served during World War II. In 1959 while performing in San Francisco he suffered a nervous breakdown and eventually stopped touring with his comedy shows. He battled alcoholism and manic-depression, and spent eight months in a mental hospital. But he didn't lean on his experience for sympathy.?

The Associated Press quotes him as saying, "If you make a couple of hundred thousand dollars a year and you're talking to the blue-collar guy who's a farmer 200 miles south of Topeka, he's looking up and saying, 'That bastard makes (all that money) and he's crying about being a manic depressive?'"

On his birthday in 2011, Winters posted on Facebook, "I can't thank you enough for all the birthday wishes. The only thing I can imagine worse than being 86 is being 96."

The actor is survived by his two children and five grandchildren.

How will you remember Jonathan Winters? Tell us on Facebook.

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/04/12/17721920-comedian-jonathan-winters-dies-at-87?lite

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New flu in China reveals its avian origins

H7N9 influenza genes came from three bird viruses

By Tina Hesman Saey

Web edition: April 12, 2013

A new type of bird flu that has killed 10 people in China combines genes from three existing influenza viruses, scientists report April 11 in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Since Chinese officials confirmed March 29 that three people had contracted H7N9 avian influenza, the virus has sickened 38 people. Of those still alive, 19 people have severe illness, while the nine others developed only mild symptoms. So far, the virus does not seem to spread from person to person, but health officials are closely watching the 760 people who have been in contact with sick people for signs of illness.

The virus is a relative of ones found in birds, and some of the sick people had contact with poultry. But so far, health officials haven?t found the source of the infections.

A genetic analysis of the viruses isolated from the first three patients to contract the illness suggests why it has been difficult to find an animal reservoir: The virus probably doesn?t make birds sick. As a result, it spreads stealthily through poultry populations, Rongbao Gao of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention and colleagues report.

By comparing the DNA of the viruses from the patients to other influenza viruses, researchers discovered that this new H7N9 is a mix of three different bird flu viruses.

A protein called hemagglutinin (which gives the virus name its H), helps the virus grab on to cells in the respiratory tract. That protein most closely resembles that from an H7N3 virus isolated from a duck in China?s Zhejiang province, the researchers found.

The virus?s neuraminidase protein (the N in the name), which helps the virus escape from infected cells, is similar to those from an H7N9 virus in a Korean wild bird. Although the Korean bird virus is also an H7N9 virus, its hemagglutinin protein is quite different from the one found in the sick people.

The new virus?s remaining genes probably came from an H9N2 virus similar to one found in Beijing in finchlike birds called bramblings.

The three viruses could have infected a single bird and swapped genes, producing the new strain. Such reassortments are common among influenza viruses and create new versions that host immune systems haven?t learned to fight. Mutations may then allow the bird viruses to infect mammals and to spread more easily.

The virus that infected the first patient, an 87-year-old man from Shanghai, has several mutations not shared by the viruses isolated from seven other people with the new flu. That may mean at least two versions of the virus have infected people.

Particularly worrisome is that the version of the virus infecting all but the first Shanghai man contains a mutation that helped laboratory-created versions of another flu ? the H5N1 virus that kills many people it infects but doesn?t spread person to person ? able to spread through the air among ferrets. (Ferrets are often used as proxies for humans in infectious disease studies.) That mutation, known as Q226L, makes the virus better at grabbing human cells and has been found in naturally occurring pandemic strains. ?The H7N9 virus also has other mutations that allow it to live in mammalian cells and some that render flu viruses more deadly in mice.

Because people have not contracted H7N9 before, most people in the world would probably harbor no immune protection and would be susceptible to the new virus, Timothy Uyeki and Nancy Cox of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention write in an accompanying editorial. No vaccines are available, but the virus is susceptible to some antiviral drugs.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/349613/title/New_flu_in_China_reveals_its_avian_origins

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Reducing waste of food: A key element in feeding billions more people

Apr. 7, 2013 ? Families can be key players in a revolution needed to feed the world, and could save money by helping to cut food losses now occurring from field to fork to trash bin, an expert said in New Orleans on April 7. He described that often-invisible waste in food -- 4 out of every 10 pounds produced in the United States alone -- and the challenges of feeding a global population of 9 billion in a keynote talk at the 245th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific society.

"We will need another 'Green Revolution' to feed the world by 2050," said John Floros, Ph.D., referring to the development of high-yield, disease-resistant breeds of grain and other agricultural innovations that took root in the 1960s. "That will mean scientific innovations, such as new strains of the big three grains -- rice, wheat and corn -- adapted for a changing climate and other conditions. It also will require action to reduce a terrible waste of food that gets too little attention."

Floros cited estimates that in many developing countries up to half of the food harvested from farmers' fields is lost before reaching consumers. He is dean of the College of Agriculture at Kansas State University. That waste can occur due to spoilage from improper storage of grain during transportation or from pests. Rats and mice alone eat or spoil 20 percent of the world's food supply due to contamination with their urine and feces.

"A different kind of waste occurs in the United States and some other developed countries," Floros said. "Developed countries have much more efficient systems for preserving, storing, transporting and protecting food from spoilage and pests. But as a nation -- households, supermarkets, restaurants, other food-service providers -- we throw away about 4 out of every 10 pounds of food produced each year."

Government studies show, for instance, that the average family in the United States throws away 20 pounds of food a month, more than $2,000 worth every year for a family of four. It includes food that has gone uneaten and spoiled in refrigerators and on pantry shelves, as well as food that people throw away after cooking. Uneaten food actually rivals paper, plastic and other refuse as the No. 1 material in some municipal landfills.

Scientists know that food waste in landfills, for instance, releases methane gas as it decomposes. Methane is about 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas that fosters global warming. Floros pointed out that reducing food waste would contribute to solving other great global challenges that society faces in the 21st century, beyond feeding a booming population. Wasting food wastes the freshwater needed to grow it, at a time when 1.2 billion people lack access to clean water. It also wastes energy, fertilizers, pesticides and other resources used in the food supply.

Supplying more food, however, is only part of the challenge, Floros emphasized. "Millions of people in some developing countries are becoming more affluent. In the past, people were satisfied with food that filled them up and sustained life. Increasingly, they will demand food that is convenient to prepare, certified as safe and highly nutritious and tastes good."

He cited the People's Republic of China as an example. The middle class in China is now larger than the U.S. population and is increasing in size year by year. And people in China are now consuming almost 3 times as much meat compared to a few decades ago. Demand for convenience foods also is rising with the growth of the urban population.

Several other food-related challenges lie ahead, Floros pointed out. Water, for instance, is becoming scarcer, as is fertile farmland. Global climate change may stress those resources even further. The demand for sustainable energy may divert more cropland to production of crops for biofuel production. Economic conditions threaten less investment in agricultural research and development. Drought and other extreme weather could impact food production. And consumption of too much food and less nutritious foods underpins epidemics in obesity and type 2 diabetes.

"We're not doing enough to resolve these complex issues that are critical for providing 9-10 billion people with a nutritious diet," said Floros. "Consumers, industry, universities and governments all need to pitch in. The first step is more awareness of these issues and the need for action on multiple levels of society."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society (ACS).

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/YlxbTCcUqSo/130407183539.htm

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Video: Schumer & McCain: Let's have debate on gun control (cbsnews)

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

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The Paleo Diet Is a Paleo Fantasy

Bison steaks on a cutting board. Bison steaks are a popular paleo diet option.

Photo by Larry Crowe/AP

Paleo lifestyle trends are popular at the moment?but they are rooted in evolutionary myths, says evolutionary biologist Marlene Zuk of the University of California?Riverside. Her new book is Paleofantasy: What Evolution Really Tells Us About Sex, Diet, and How We Live.

Your book is about pseudoscientific ideas you call "paleofantasies." What are they?
They stem from the idea that evolution makes minuscule changes over millions of years, so we haven't had enough time to adapt to the modern industrial world?and that we would be healthier and happier if we lived more like our ancient ancestors.

Is there any truth to the idea that we haven't evolved fast enough to cope with modern life?
To some extent it is true. Our bodies are ill-suited for sitting at computers all day, for example. Because humans evolved in an environment where they were not crouched over computers, sitting that way all day is going to have ill effects. But it's more nuanced than that. Being bipedal has a lot of costs on the human skeleton, too. Should we all long to be quadrupeds? It just doesn't make sense.

What is driving the tendency to idealize the way ancient humans lived?
There is this caricature that organisms evolve until they get to a point when they're perfectly adapted to their environment, then heave this big sigh of relief and stop. Anything that happens to them after that is disastrous.

You see this attitude in what can be referred to as "paleo-nostalgia"?the notion that we were all better off before agriculture, or civilization, or the Industrial Revolution. It's not to say life has been unmitigatedly getting better. But it's more helpful and accurate to see that all organisms are constantly evolving. There has been no point in our past when we were perfectly adapted to our environment.

I'm not dismissing the idea that you need to look at our evolutionary heritage to think about what's best for us healthwise. But when you start plucking out pieces in an oddly specific way, you can run into trouble.

Are paleo diets, which usually involve eating lots of meat and avoiding grains or dairy, examples of this type of specific selection?
These are predicated on the idea that there was a certain way humans ate 100,000 or 15,000 years ago?the era people want to hark back to varies. I think everybody agrees that we evolved eating certain things and we're going to be very unhealthy if we subsist on Diet Coke and Cheetos. But it gets more complicated when you look at the details. Should we eat a lot of meat, less meat? Should we eat dairy?

How much do we know about early human diets?
We don't really know what they were eating. It's turning out that they may have eaten more starch and carbohydrates than we had realized. They also ate different things in different parts of the world. So it's hard to come up with this one perfect human diet that everybody was eating. Plus our genes have changed in the last 10,000 years. Lactase persistence?the ability to digest milk as adults?is the poster child for this. Our genes have changed extremely rapidly so that at least some populations of humans can digest milk into adulthood.

And just as with lactose, it turns out that in human populations that consume a lot of starch, there are more copies of genes that allow starch breakdown. All of this suggests that evolution is happening all the time and much more quickly than people think.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=15bd7b37de3954919b77c1994b3ea412

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Chris Brown Probation Violation Hearing Pushed Back Until June

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Big Three Spotlight 'Backlash' Over President Obama's Compliment; Omit First Lady's 'Single Mother' Gaffe

ABC, CBS, and NBC's Friday morning shows all devoted air time to President Obama labeling California Attorney General Kamala Harris "the best-looking attorney general in the country" at a fundraiser on Thursday. Unsurprisingly, a panel on NBC's Today tried to explain away the remark. Willie Geist asserted, "I think he [Obama] was making a joke." CBS This Morning's Norah O'Donnell was tougher on the President: "Maybe, [it] was not the right thing to say."

However, the Big Three newscasts didn't report that Mrs. Obama also got caught in a verbal misstep on Thursday. ABCNews.com's Arlette Saenz devoted a Friday morning item to how Michelle Obama mistakenly referred to herself as a "single mother" during an interview with WCAX, a CBS affiliate in Vermont.

Kamala Harris, California Attorney General; & President Barack Obama; Screen Cap From 5 April 2013 Edition of ABC's Good Morning America | NewsBusters.orgGeist brought up the President's compliment of Harris during a discussion segment with Natalie Morales, Al Roker, and guest Liza Minnelli. The anchor highlighted how the chief executive's comment generated "some outrage, [and] a lot of people thought it was offensive; thought it was objectifying to her, given all her achievements; or objectifying to any woman."

Minelli brushed aside the apparent controversy: "I'm sure she's happy he said it. I'd be happy. I think it was just a normal thing for a man to say....It's amusing, and it's also very nice. I think any woman would like it." Roker? that "it's not like he said, 'she's smokin' hot', or anything."

Morales then pointed out that "some people are saying, you know, we're in a day and age where...women, especially of her position, should be...given credit for what she's accomplished....not how they look." Roker also noted how "folks on the other side of the aisle have said had that been a Republican who made that comment, that people would have jumped all over it. So they say what's good for the goose is good for the gander."

The other panelists all replied by acting as apologists for the President:

NATALIE MORALES: ...I think it's an interesting debate. It certainly sparks a lot of talk and...I kind of feel like if, you know, she has accomplished a lot. I don't think the President meant that in any way except for just saying, "oh" ? he gave her all the praise ahead of time ? and then at the end said, "By the way, she happens to be a very good-looking woman."

MINNELLI: Yes.

GEIST: I think we're all against objectifying women.

MINNELLI: I think all women like that.

GEIST: I think he was making a joke, he was making a joke.

MORALES: He did not mean it in that way.

ROKER: Absolutely.

By contrast, all three CBS This Morning anchors were unwilling to explain away the Democrat's remark. Even open Obama supporter Gayle King didn't run to his defense:

Story Continues Below Ad ?

NORAH O'DONNELL: And some critics have called President Obama's administration a boy's club dominated by men. Well now, the President is getting some flak for something he said in California yesterday. It happened at a Democratic National Committee fundraiser, which was closed to cameras. While he praised California's attorney general, Kamala Harris, the President called her ?? quote, 'By far, the best-looking attorney general in the country'. There was a lot of backlash online ? social media, Twitter.

I think we all know, sometimes, you can't put the toothpaste back in the tube.

GAYLE KING: (laughs) No, you can't.

O'DONNELL: Things just come out of your mouth sometimes. (laughs)

KING: Even when you hit the rewind.

CHARLIE ROSE: And even after he said how great she was and how smart she was ? I mean, come on.

O'DONNELL: Yeah. He was trying to compliment her, but it, maybe, was not the right thing to say ? yeah.

ABC's Good Morning America spent the least amount of time on the issue. News anchor Josh Elliot teased correspondent Jonathan Karl's reporting on the controversy by hyping that President Obama is "feeling the heat...raises eyebrows with surprising comments made at a fundraiser about California's top prosecutor, calling her the best-looking attorney general in the country. His opponents calling him sexist, both sides weighing in all night." Karl merely summarized what had happened:

JONATHAN KARL: Kamala Harris, one of the fastest rising Democratic stars in the country...is even mentioned...as a possible future presidential candidate. But at a fundraiser last night, a closed fundraiser, the President said of Harris ? quote, "She is brilliant and she is dedicated and she is tough. She also happens to be, by far, the best-looking attorney general in the country."

Now, some of the President's own allies have taken offense to that. I talked to a senior White House official this morning who would say only that Harris and the President have been friends for a long time and that he went out of his way last night and on many other occasions to talk about her many qualifications, not just the way she looks.

Source: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/matthew-balan/2013/04/05/big-three-spotlight-backlash-over-president-obamas-compliment-omit-fi

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How the New York Political Scandal Comes Off Like a Cheesy Gangster Movie

The unfolding New York political scandal is the stuff of movies: an alleged attempt to rig the city?s mayoral election that got six politicians?both Republicans and Democrats?arrested. It's complete with tales of bribery and, of course, a land deal.

And if anyone does want to write a movie about it, they can just use the criminal complaint by federal prosecutors. The dialogue therein includes a gold mine of quotable lines from the defendants that sound like they belong in a cheesy gangster flick.

Here?s the gist of what happened, according to prosecutors: Democratic state Sen. Malcolm Smith wanted to run as a Republican in the New York City mayoral race, and he?s accused of bribing GOP leaders with the help of Queens Republican City Councilman Dan Halloran. An undercover agent posing as a real-estate developer provided the money, and Halloran also allegedly accepted money from him in connection with a Spring Valley land deal. The mayor of that town, Noramie Jasmin, is accused of taking bribes to support the project.

Now, on to the most quotable parts of the investigation, according to the criminal complaint:

?That's politics, that's politics, it's all about how much. Not about whether or will, it's about how much, and that's our politicians in New York, they're all like that, all like that. And they get like that because of the drive that the money does for everything else. You can't do anything without the f---ing money." ? Halloran?

A cooperating witness, who taped many conversations, met with Halloran at a Manhattan restaurant in September. Halloran said he needed money for his congressional campaign. The witness offered him money, and Halloran, in turn, said he could help secure money within the city budget for the witness. This line arose in the course of their conversation.

?Money is what greases the wheels?good, bad, or indifferent.? ? Halloran?

Halloran, who allegedly got $7,500 from the witness, capped off their meeting with this line.

?I?d say, ?If I even give you a nickel more, you?d have to stand on the Empire State Building, and drop every person you endorsed, and hold Malcolm up and say he?s the best thing since sliced bread. Matter of fact, he?s better than sliced bread.? ? ? Smith

Smith talked with an undercover agent, posing as a real-estate developer, and a cooperating witness about bribes they made on his behalf to party committee leaders. He wondered if the leaders were delaying providing a certificate that would help Smith get on the GOP ticket because they wanted more money. Smith told the agent not to give any more money to the leaders, adding this bit of advice.

"The one that I like I'm going to pick. So, if I like yours, I pick you.... If I don't like it you can stick [it] where the sun doesn't shine." ? Jasmin

Spring Valley Mayor Jasmin met with the cooperating witness in August 2011 about a parcel of land she wanted to acquire for the town, that would then go to bid among private developers. She dropped this line when discussing how she would she pick a developer.

?Oh, I can assure you, I don?t know you at all.? ? Jasmin

Jasmin allegedly coached undercover agents on how to present themselves at a board of trustees meeting about the land project. She was asked if the main undercover agent, posing as a real-estate developer, should act as if he had met Jasmin before. This is how she answered.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/york-political-scandal-comes-off-cheesy-gangster-movie-140234665--politics.html

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