Friday, May 31, 2013

Sending humans to Mars holds radiation risk, study shows

A radiation-monitoring device carried by NASA's Mars rover Curiosity took measurements during the trip to the red planet. A resulting study appears in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / May 30, 2013

This July 2007 image provided by NASA shows astronaut Clay Anderson waving during a spacewalk outside the International Space Station. A trip to and from the red planet could expose travelers to an accumulated dose of radiation that would approach ? and in some cases exceed ? the maximum allowable career limits for a NASA astronaut.

NASA/AP/File

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For any astronaut tapped for a trip to Mars, a journey today would be a once-in-a-lifetime experience ? in more ways than one.

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With shielding comparable to the level built into NASA's new crew-exploration vehicle (CEV), just the trip to and from the red planet could expose travelers to an accumulated dose of radiation that would approach ? and in some cases exceed ? the maximum allowable career limits for a NASA astronaut.

The Europeans, Russians, and Canadians accept a somewhat more liberal exposure limit than the National Aeronautics and Space Administration does. Even at that limit, Mars would probably represent a memorable but one-and-done spaceflight career for any prospective astronaut.

Those are among the implications of measurements taken by a radiation-monitoring device that NASA's Mars rover Curiosity carries. The measurements were taken during Curiosity's 253-day, 347-million-mile trip to the red planet. The data were unveiled Thursday in a study set to appear in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

"NASA is very excited to get this new cruise data," said Eddie Semones, radiation health officer at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston during a briefing Thursday to discuss the results. The data also will help shape human-exploration missions other than to Mars, he adds, noting that missions to retrieve asteroids or even missions to the moon will benefit from the information the new results provide.

Scientists and engineers long have recognized radiation in space as perhaps the most significant challenge to exploration beyond low-Earth orbit, where Earth's magnetic field acts as a natural deflector shield.

The hazard has spawned a range of studies on how to deal with the risk, ranging from concepts for spacecraft that can generate protective magnetic fields to individual body armor for astronauts.

To date, researchers had gathered "outdoor" radiation measurements on a wide variety of robotic spacecraft visiting comets, asteroids, and other planets. The detectors on these missions were exposed to space by design, so they could measure radiation levels around a planet or in interplanetary space.

Curiosity's device, the Radiation Assessment Detector, is bolted to the rover's deck to measure surface radiation on Mars. So, like the rover, RAD was cocooned within the Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft during its trip. Thus, its en route measurements provide the first data from within an interplanetary spacecraft and with a level of shielding that the first Mars explorers might receive from their craft.

The study comes at a time when two private groups are aiming to send humans to Mars long before any NASA astronauts are sent ? a prospect the Obama administration and the agency envision taking place after 2030.

In March, a group headed by Dennis Tito, the first space tourist to visit the International Space Station, announced the goal of sending two people on a 501-day fly-around mission to Mars, launching in 2018. The mission, Inspiration Mars, is a one-off attempt at inspiring a new generation of space explorers as well as providing NASA with information on technological, physiological, and psychological issues that no Earth-bound Mars analog station can deliver.

Earlier, a nonprofit group based in the Netherlands announced an effort to set up the first permanent human settlement on Mars in 2023.

The radiation that the new study examines ? actually speedy, electrically charged particles such as protons and ions ? comes from two sources.

The sun sends out a constant stream of protons in a feature called the solar wind. The wind is punctuated by solar storms, ranging from flares to enormous coronal-mass ejections ? the most powerful eruptions the sun delivers. The protons from these storms travel with higher energies than the solar wind and so represent the biggest particle-radiation risk from the sun, the RAD researchers say.

The second source is the galaxy itself, which bathes a spacecraft in low but persistent levels of energetic particles known as galactic cosmic rays. These are generated when massive stars explode as supernovae or in other high-energy cosmic events. About 85 percent of the cosmic rays are protons, another 14 percent are helium ions, and the remaining 1 percent consists of heavier ions.

Heavy-ion collisions can have an influence larger than their small proportion would suggest because when these smack into a spaceship, they create a shower of secondary particles that can inflict biological damage. However, estimates of the level of damage carry large uncertainties.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Cs31vMzhnfI/Sending-humans-to-Mars-holds-radiation-risk-study-shows

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5 things learned from The Wanted's TODAY visit

Music

14 hours ago

British/Irish boy band The Wanted dropped by the TODAY plaza Thursday morning to chat with the show's hosts -- and thoroughly charmed everyone present. But for those older than, say, 18, who might be wondering just who the handsome lads are and why they're so, well, wanted these days -- here's 5 things we learned about them during their visit:

1. The band is made up of Max George, Nathan Sykes, Tom Parker, Siva Kaneswaran and Jay McGuiness -- but youngest member Sykes couldn't be on the Plaza, due to throat surgery. "He's doing all right," Parker told Matt Lauer. "Probably won't know for a month or two what the outcome is, but he's in good spirits."

2. Their new show on E!, "The Wanted Life," is an inside look at what it's like for the five of them to live the bachelor life in a shared household. "There is a bit of nudity," noted George -- something that Savannah Guthrie noted may be a "selling point" for many of their millions of fans.

3. Ryan Seacrest, who executive produces the TV show, tweeted about them: "when I walked into @thewanted's living room, there was women's underwear hanging from the chandelier, no joke #wantedlife" -- and the boys confirmed that indeed, things have gotten a little wild in the house (even with girlfriends around).

4. Around since 2009, they're aware that they're part of a long tradition of boy bands wowing the masses with sweet pop tunes; McGuiness waved to the camera and said that bands like Boyz II Men, 98 Degrees and New Kids on the Block -- who will play on TODAY Friday -- are "inspirational and wondrous fellows."

5. Despite all the hinting at wild behavior, however, there's nothing they wouldn't let their mums watch. "They've seen it all before," said McGuiness.

"The Wanted Life" premieres on Sunday at 10 p.m. on E!

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/five-things-we-learned-wanteds-today-visit-6C10128164

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Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So ExpensiveThere are two terms in digital photography that signify two very different kinds of cameras. The terms are compact, and full-frame. The former defines those cheap, pocketable point-and-shoots, while the latter is a feature only found on the most professional DSLRs. With the RX1, Sony fused these two polar opposites in a collision of photo-epic proportions.

What Is It?

A compact camera with a full-frame 24 megapixel CMOS sensor and non-removable 35mm f/2.0 Carl Zeiss lens. It costs?get ready?$2800.

Who's It For?

People with a ton of money.

Design

It's hard to find fault in the RX1's design. Sony didn't try to break any molds here, it just stuck to what works best. Simple geometry, familiar and direct control layout, and high-quality materials. Perhaps what is most satisfying is the attention to detail. Every button and dial has a wonderful tactile action.

The internal design is something to note as well. Part of the reason the 35mm Zeiss lens cannot be switched out with other lenses is because the optics extend into the body of the camera, interfacing perfectly with the sensor.

Using It

Walking around with the RX1 provides a unique satisfaction. There's something comforting in knowing that this tiny camera doesn't compromise image quality whatsoever. Sharpness & low light performance are downright amazing, with the specially designed Zeiss lens capturing awesome levels of detail. The lens can also focus extremely close (14 cm) to objects?an underrated feature?expanding the versatility of the camera.

click bottom-right corner to expand

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

The controls are intuitive for the manual-inclined shooters out there, with tons of customization options at hand. Manual focusing is assisted by peaking and image magnification which work great.

The only other quibble we have with how the camera works is the below-par auto-focus system. Sony's more recent hybrid auto-focus system found on the newer NEX cams was probably developed too late to be implemented on the RX1. But that's no excuse. It doesn't feel good to have such an outstanding and expensive device with so-so auto-focus capability.

The Best Part

The wondrous feeling of capturing such unabashedly great looking images with such a tiny camera. It makes you think of the future. Though, at the same time, it makes you realize that camera manufacturers are willingly not perpetuating this type of product simply to protect their markets.

Tragic Flaw

It is too expensive for absolutely anyone?save the vastly wealthy?to consider.

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

Sony RX1 Review: A Camera So Bold, So Beautiful... and So Expensive

This Is Weird

It seems that even a camera like the RX1, built with manual operations in mind, can't get manual focusing completely right with regards to ring sensitivity. As in most cameras, it takes way too many turns to make focus adjustments, and slows down the process considerably.

Test Notes

  • A separate lens ring is used to switch into macro-focus mode. It takes some getting used to, and is the only part of the control scheme we weren't crazy about.
  • Sony sells an electronic viewfinder for the RX1. It too is really expensive?$450
  • One detail we absolutely adore about the RX1 is that the shutter is almost completely silent.
  • Video quality doesn't impress, which is a darn shame. This could have been a killer B-camera for DSLR video shooters.

Should You Buy It?

If you're swimming in money and love photography, definitely buy the Sony RX1. Is there any argument for it as a practical purchase? It would be a stretch. The cheapest new full-frame DSLR (currently the Canon 6D on Amazon) paired with a high-quality 35mm lens will run you around $3000. So technically, the RX1 is a slightly cheaper option. But without the ability to change lenses, you are severely limiting your photographic options, and there is no getting around that.

It will be interesting to see if Sony goes forward in developing future iterations of the RX1. There are many rumors swirling of Sony developing a full-frame interchangeable lens camera slated for 2014, and if that happens, the RX1 might live on only as the wonderful experiment it is.

Sony Cybershot RX1
? Sensor: 24 MP Exmor CMOS
? Processor: Sony BIONZ
? ISO Range: 100-25600
? Lent: Carl Zeiss 35mm f/2
? Display: 1.2 million-dot fixed LCD
? Video: 1920 x 1080 (60, 50, 25, 24 fps), 1440 x 1080 (30, 25 fps), 1280 x 720 (30 fps), 640 x 480 (30, 25 fps)
? Price: $2799

That 360 degree view comes compliments of our very own Gizmodoscope. Check out more of its handiwork here

Source: http://gizmodo.com/sony-rx1-review-a-camera-so-bold-so-beautiful-and-5993303

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Apes are emotional about choices

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Apes are emotional about choices
Chimpanzees and bonobos react emotionally - sometimes appearing to throw "tantrums" - when they take risks that fail to pay off, say scientists.

Source: BBC News
Posted on: Thursday, May 30, 2013, 7:37am
Views: 14

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128418/Apes_are_emotional_about_choices

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Brain activity in sleep may impact emotional disturbances in children with ADHD

May 29, 2013 ? Sleep consolidates emotional memories in healthy children but not in children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to research published May 29 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Alexander Prehn-Kristensen and colleagues from University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein. The study suggests these deficits in sleep-related emotional processing may exacerbate emotional problems experienced in the daytime by children with ADHD.

For the study, healthy adults, healthy children and children with ADHD were shown pictures that had emotional relevance, such as a scary animal, or neutral pictures showing an umbrella or lamp. Participants were shown pictures in the evening, their brain activity was monitored as they slept, and recollections were tested the following morning. The researchers found that during sleep, regions of the brain thought to support consolidation of emotional memories were most active in healthy children, less so in healthy adults and least active in children with ADHD.

The study states, "While several studies reported a benefit from sleep with respect to emotional memory in healthy individuals, our results showed for the first time that healthy children outperform healthy adults." However, the authors add that this may be, in part, attributable to the child-oriented pictures used as stimuli.

Their results support the idea that frontal brain activity is critically to the consolidation of emotional memory in sleep, and this brain region is also implicated in the emotional symptoms seen in children suffering from ADHD. The authors add that further studies are needed to confirm whether this function of sleep in forming emotional memories develops with time in adults with ADHD, or whether the dysfunction persists in ADHD sufferers of all ages.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Public Library of Science.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Alexander Prehn-Kristensen, Manuel Munz, Ina Molzow, Ines Wilhelm, Christian D. Wiesner, Lioba Baving. Sleep Promotes Consolidation of Emotional Memory in Healthy Children but Not in Children with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (5): e65098 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065098

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/dyTk1O3NvYQ/130529190938.htm

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Methods To Create A Business By Selling Uv Air Purifier On The ...

Internet businesses can earn a lot of money. To avoid the issues of losing money in any business, online owners should consider certain things. Read the following suggestions to learn to raise your profit.

Overdoing in connection to the volume of the site would do you no good. Similarly, low volume site has its own disadvantages. Therefore, you need to maintain a perfect balance in connection to the volume of your site.

Don?t waste your time trying to find clients locally. You?re running an internet store and have an international audience. Use marketing efforts that give you global exposure. If you do this, you?ll gain the kind of profits earned by international conglomerates. You really need to get in front of a lot of people to make a lot of money.

Put spaces between paragraphs. It draws the eye down the page and encourages the reader to continue. A good balance between text and whitespace is important, especially with large amounts of text.

Selling online has become secure, but still the risk of hacking and fraud is there for the taking. You need to provide full online security to your clients to ensure they buy online from your site without any hassle.

Want to really increase your sales to men? Show them how the uv air purifier you sell will help them attract members of the opposite sex. For men, it?s all about getting women. Even if they?re married, they want to know that they?re impressing the women. If you can show them how your uv air purifier do this through your sales copy then you?re going to score big.

Create promotion and bargain blog. People appreciate finding high quality services and uv air purifier at low prices. Look for top deals on the web and pass them on to your readers, in an exciting, interesting and unique way. Approach local merchants and retailers too and get them to run specials which you promote. As you build up a following, the tables will turn and the merchants will approach you to write about their specials. Leverage that demand to make money.

If you?re only selling one product, such as a furniture piece or an old pc, sell it on an auction site. Posting the product on eBay will permit others to post bids while you sit back and wait to see who places the highest bid. It doesn?t get easier.

Offer your handmade, vintage, craft, antique and art in marketplaces on the web. If you sell uv air purifier ranging from paintings to jewelry to clothing to furniture, use well-known and popular marketplaces like Etsy, ShopHandmade.com, Ruby Lane, and Tias.com. An antique and fine art marketplace you can find on ArtFire and MySoti.

You can just go to any popular search engine and enter uv air purifier if you need help with coming up with more helpful ideas about air purifier facts.

Source: http://hotarticledepot.com/methods-to-create-a-business-by-selling-uv-air-purifier-on-the-web/

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Wall Street rally underpins Asian shares

By Chikako Mogi

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares were steady and the dollar remained firm on Wednesday as U.S. stocks rallied to record highs overnight on signs of resilience in the U.S. economy and expectations of continued monetary policy support.

The Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> hit another record high on Tuesday as data showed U.S. home prices accelerated by the most in nearly seven years in March while consumer confidence picked up in May to its highest in more than five years.

The stock rally lifted benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield to a 13-month peak around 2.17 percent. A strong rebound in Japanese stocks after last week's hammering also fed to speculation about reduced incentives to hold safe-haven U.S. government debt.

"The bullish tone at the start of the week would seem to indicate that investors are not yet convinced that evidence surrounding the economy is firm enough to corner the Fed chairman and force him into leading a retreat from the current pace of bond purchases," Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co in New York, said in a note to clients.

The rally seems to be "little other than a sense that last week's setback for U.S. and then Japanese stocks was justifiable in the big scheme of things. Pullbacks occur," he said, adding that for now, investors seem to still want to test recent highs.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> was steady, staying above Friday's five-week low of 464.99.

Australian shares <.axjo> were up 0.2 percent while South Korean shares <.ks11> opened 0.4 percent higher.

"The main board is likely to start up as overseas markets rallied on the previous day. However, autos could weigh due to the weak yen and cap gains later in the session," said Shawn Oh, an analyst at Daishin Securities, of Seoul shares.

The dollar inched up 0.1 percent against the yen to 102.48, recovering from a two-week low of 100.66 yen hit on Friday. The dollar scaled a 4-1/2 year peak of 103.74 yen on May 22.

The dollar index <.dxy> measured against a basket of six key currencies was up 0.3 percent to hover near its highest since July 2010 of 84.498 reached on May 23.

The Nikkei stock average <.n225> opened up 1.3 percent after closing up 1.2 percent the day before. <.t/>

"The Nikkei is in oversold territory, so buying should emerge," said Hiroichi Nishi, equity general manager at SMBC Nikko Securities. "Exporter shares will be in focus again as the yen resumes weakening, but we have to watch interest-rate related issues."

The Nikkei slumped 7.3 percent on Thursday, its largest single-day loss since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, as global financial markets were shaken by weak industrial production in China and concerns the U.S. Federal Reserve could scale back its current aggressive monetary stimulus sooner than previously thought. <.t/>

Speculation about the Fed's policy has weighed on the Australian dollar, which has skidded nearly 8 percent in May, the largest monthly drop since September 2011. The Aussie plumbed its lowest in 19 months on Wednesday after key support around $0.9581 finally gave way.

U.S. crude futures were off 0.3 percent at $94.74 a barrel.

U.S. home prices: http://link.reuters.com/rem34t

U.S. consumer confidence: http://link.reuters.com/pum34t

(Additional reporting by Dominic Lau and Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo and Joyce Lee and Daum Kim in Seoul)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wall-street-rally-underpins-asian-shares-001926600.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Ghostly Ship Graveyards from Around the World

Where do boats go when they die? Sometimes they end up in vast ship graveyards, sometimes craggy, foggy places where ships have met their doom, and sometimes spots where ships are deliberately left to rust. There's a quiet beauty to many of these graveyards and their resting inhabitants.

The port of Nouadhibou, Mauritania

More than 300 ships are resting in the world's largest ship graveyard. The practice of abandoning ships here started in the 1980s after the country's fishing industry was nationalized.

(via Geolocation/crodenas, Filippo Minelli/Flickr, j-b.d/Flickr - 1, 2, Sebasti?n Losada/Flickr and Crazytopics)

Mo'ynoq (Muynak/Moynaq), Western Uzbekistan

The former sea port city has lots of rusting ships, abandoned since the 1980s due to the recession of the Aral Sea, which is now at least 95 miles (150 km) away from the former harbor.

(via United Nations Development Programme/Flickr and Martijn Munneke/Flickr)

Skeleton Coast, Namibia

The area was named after the whale and seal bones that littered the shore because of the whaling industry, but there are more than a thousand ships caught by rocks and fog.

(via Wikimedia Commons, by Anagoria, Patrick Giraud, Bel Adone and Joachim Huber/Flickr)

Staten Island Boat Graveyard or the Witte Marine Scrap Yard, NY

A dumping ground for disused and decommissioned ships in New York.

(via Bob Jagendorf/Flickr)

Military graveyard near Land?vennec, France

The graveyard for (mainly naval) vessels is a bend on the Aulne River, used by the French Navy.

(via Vincent Maurin/Flickr - 1 - 2)

Grytviken, South Georgia, South Atlantic

The settlement was established in 1904 by a Norwegian sea captain as a whaling station for his fishing company. It was closed in December 1966, but the church is still used occasionally for marriages, and the whaling ships are still in the harbour.

(via Wikimedia Commons, by Liam Quinn, Serge Ouach?e and Aah-Yeah/Flickr)

Gadani ship-breaking yard, Gadani, Pakistan

The world's third largest ship breaking yard has a capacity of 125 ships of all sizes, including supertankers. In the 2009-2010 fiscal year, 107 ships were on the yard.

During the 1970s and 1980s, the ship breaking industry was on top, and Gadani was the largest breaking yard in the world.

(via Michael Foley/Flickr 1 - 2, Dawn and NGO Shipbreaking Platform/photos by Tom?s Halda, 2010)

Bonus: Cemit?rio das ?ncoras or The Anchor Graveyard, Tavira Island, Portugal

A portion of the beach is littered with hundreds of rusted anchors.

(via StartTheDay and Ricardo Santos)

Double bonus: Japanese Midget Submarines, 1945-1947

?At the end of World War II, Allied Occupation forces found hundreds of midget submarines built and building in Japan, including large numbers of the ?Koryu? type. Many of these boats were in massed groups at shipyards and naval bases.?

(via Department of the Navy/Naval Historical Center)

Source: http://io9.com/ghostly-ship-graveyards-from-around-the-world-509929824

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

State Department posts feedback on Keystone pipeline

By Valerie Volcovici

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The State Department says it is taking the unusual step of releasing publicly the feedback it has received about a controversial pipeline project after an "unprecedented" response to its draft environmental report.

The department said it had received more than 1.2 million comments on TransCanada Corp's proposed Keystone XL pipeline that would run from oil sands in Alberta, Canada to refineries and ports along the U.S. Gulf Coast.

The State Department posted about 100,000 comments late on Thursday and plans to release sets of a similar number each week, a process that will take about three months. The comments can be viewed at http://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=DOS-2013-0011

"This marks the first time the Department has made all individual comments on a Presidential permit application available to the public," a State Department release said.

The northern leg of the pipeline running from Alberta to Nebraska needs the approval of President Barack Obama because it crosses a national border. Work is well under way on the southern leg, from Texas to Oklahoma.

The State Department said the decision to release the comments was part of an effort to be as transparent as possible about the elements that will go into the decision on whether to approve the project.

The first batch of comments reflected a variety of interests, from lawmakers to local citizens.

Echoing a fractious public hearing held by the State Department in Grand Island, Nebraska last month, they reflected the polarizing nature of the project. Respondents differed widely over the environmental and economic assessments.

The State Department released its 2,000-page environmental impact report on Keystone in March, more than four years after the project was first floated. On balance, the report seemed to lean toward approving the proposed 830,000 barrel per day pipeline.

However, in April, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rated the draft review "insufficient," signaling that unless the State Department addressed those concerns there could be new roadblocks to the project, which has an estimated cost of at least $5.3 billion.

A U.S. official said this month that a decision on whether to give the go-ahead to the pipeline may not be made until November, December or even early 2014, given the need to painstakingly weigh the impact on the environment against the benefits to energy security.

Among the first batch of comments on the State Department site, two senators - one a Democrat and one a Republican - from states through which the pipeline will pass called for "expeditious approval" of the project, saying it would help the economies of their states and have minimal environmental impact.

"The draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) affirmed what states along the pipeline route determined in their own environmental reviews - this project is environmentally sound and should move forward," wrote Senators Deb Fischer, a Nebraska Republican, and Heidi Heidkamp, a Democrat from North Dakota.

(Editing by Ros Krasny and David Brunnstrom)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/state-department-posts-feedback-keystone-pipeline-183026564.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

An informal business networking opportunity offered Thursdays ...

For the Reporter

3 No Networking ? a weekly social opportunity organized by the Urban Center for Innovative Partnerships (IPZ No. 15 Auburn) to cultivate interaction and networking opportunities for Auburn businesses and organizations ??will be offered on Thursdays in Auburn.

"It's a wide-open forum that has no agenda, no set purpose and no cost to the attendees," said Doug Lein, IPZ administrator. "That's why we gave it the whimsical name of 3 No Networking."

3 No Networking will be held each Thursday from 5-7 p.m. rotating among four Auburn establishments ??Oddfellas Pub & Eatery on the first Thursday, Auburn Wine and Caviar Company on the second Thursday, The Station Bistro on the third Thursday and Zola's Caf? on the fourth Thursday.

"Although it is an informal weekly gathering, it's a powerful platform that can help form non-traditional business partnerships," said Mayor Pete Lewis. "You'd be amazed how much business you can do in an informal setting. We hope it will grow organically to be a valuable networking opportunity for all Auburn business sectors."

The summer schedule:

June 6 - Oddfellas Pub & Eatery, 102 W. Main St.

June 13 - Auburn Wine and Caviar Company, 2402 A St. SE

June 20 - The Station Bistro, 110 2nd St. SW, Suite 125

June 27 - Zola's Caf?, 402 E. Main St., Suite 120

July 4 - Holiday

July 11 - Auburn Wine and Caviar Company

July 18 - The Station Bistro

July 25 - Zola's Caf?

Aug. 1 - Oddfellas Pub & Eatery

Aug. 8 - Auburn Wine and Caviar Company

Aug. 15 - The Station Bistro

Aug. 22 - Zola's Caf?

Aug. 29 - Special event, TBD

"If there is a fifth Thursday in the month, we'll hold a special event planned by either the Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce or the Auburn Downtown Association," Lein said.

3 No Networking is made possible by a partnership between IPZ No. 15 Auburn, the City of Auburn Office of Economic Development, Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce and the Auburn Downtown Association.

Source: http://www.auburn-reporter.com/business/208529501.html

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Amanda Bynes: Destroyed By Fame!

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

DNA test shows Ohio kidnap suspect fathered girl

Culema Nevarez adds balloons to a growing tribute outside the hole of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. DeJesus was freed Monday from the home of Ariel Castro where she and two other women had been held captive for nearly a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Culema Nevarez adds balloons to a growing tribute outside the hole of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. DeJesus was freed Monday from the home of Ariel Castro where she and two other women had been held captive for nearly a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Balloons surround the porch at the home of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. DeJesus was freed Monday from the home of Ariel Castro where she and two other women had been held captive for nearly a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Deborah Knight, grandmother of Michelle Knight, drives her wheelchair past the home of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. Michelle Knight was freed from the home of Ariel Castro along with DeJesus and Amanda Berry Monday where the 52-year-old man had held them captive for a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

A member of the Guardian Angels stands watch outside the home of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. DeJesus was freed Monday from the home of Ariel Castro where she and two other women had been held captive for nearly a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

Deborah Knight, center, grandmother of Michelle Knight, drives her wheelchair past the home of Gina DeJesus in Cleveland Friday, May 10, 2013. Michelle Knight was freed from the home of Ariel Castro along with DeJesus and Amanda Berry Monday where the 52-year-old man had held them captive for a decade. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)

(AP) ? As relatives of the Cleveland kidnapping and rape suspect recounted claims of his unnerving paranoia and violent outbursts, DNA testing confirmed the man who allegedly held three women captive for nearly a decade is the father of a 6-year-old girl who escaped from the house along with the women.

Ariel Castro, charged with rape and kidnapping, remained jailed Friday under a suicide watch on $8 million bond while prosecutors weighed more charges, including some that might carry the death penalty. Public defender Kathleen Demetz, who said she is acting as Castro's adviser while he awaits a full-time attorney, said Friday she can't speak to his guilt or innocence and said only that she advised him not to talk to reporters.

But those who know the 52-year-old Castro are speaking up, saying he was often angry, paranoid and prone to violent outbursts against the mother of his children. He frequently beat her, played bizarre psychological games and locked her indoors, they said.

The stories, repeated in separate interviews with The Associated Press by members of Castro's extended family, have surprised people who knew him as a musician who played bass in several bands around Cleveland the last two decades.

Miguel Quinones, manager of a group Castro played with twice as a backup bass player about five years ago, said he had nothing bad to say about Castro based on his own experiences.

But in the interviews, some of Castro's ex-relatives said he frequently flashed his compulsions for secrecy and terrifying rage that often led him to beat his common-law wife, Grimilda Figueroa.

Figueroa left Castro years ago and died in 2012 after a long illness. Their early years together were happy, but something inside Castro snapped after the birth of their first child, they said.

Castro pushed her down the stairs, fractured her ribs, broke her nose several times, cracked a tooth and dislocated both shoulders, they said. In one incident, he shoved Figueroa into a cardboard box and closed the flaps over her head, they said. He kept her and children imprisoned, cut off from friends and family, and Figueroa couldn't even unlock her own front door, they said.

Figueroa filed domestic-violence complaints, accusing Castro of threatening many times to kill her and her daughters. She charged that he frequently abducted the children and kept them from her, even though she had full custody, with no visitation rights for Castro.

"When I go over there to visit her, and I ask her, 'Nilda, I'm here, open the door,' she's like, 'I can't. Ariel has the key,'" Figueroa's sister, Elida Caraballo, recalled.

Two of the women freed from Castro's home, including the one who gave birth to the girl, returned to relatives' houses earlier this week. The third woman, Michelle Knight, was released from a hospital Friday with a request that her privacy be respected.

"Michelle Knight is in good spirits and would like the community to know that she is extremely grateful for the outpouring of flowers and gifts," the statement said.

A police report alleged that Castro impregnated one of his captives at least five times and made her miscarry by starving her and punching her in the stomach. The report also said another one of the women, Amanda Berry, was forced to give birth in a plastic kiddie pool.

Tests by the state attorney general's office on a sample of Castro's DNA confirmed he fathered Berry's 6-year-old daughter, who was rescued from his house, the office said Friday. After her release, the girl returned home with the 27-year-old Berry. Officials also were entering the DNA profile into a national database to see if it links him to other crimes.

The three women said Castro chained them up in the basement but eventually let them live on the home's second floor. Each woman told a similar story about being abducted after accepting a ride from him.

The FBI has not recovered human remains in its search of the house, spokeswoman Vicki Anderson said Friday. Agents removed more than 200 pieces of evidence, she added, declining to say what was found.

Berry and former captive Gina DeJesus, 22, went home with relatives Wednesday.

The AP does not usually name people alleging sexual assault without their consent, but the names of the three women were widely circulated by their families, the media and law enforcement for years.

___

Associated Press writers Meghan Barr, Mike Householder, Thomas J. Sheeran and Andrew Welsh-Huggins and AP freelance writer John Coyne in Cleveland; Brendan Farrington in Florida; and Dan Sewell in Cincinnati contributed to this report along with news researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-11-Missing%20Women%20Found/id-aa031eeccef748c4b2086ce353b2b4df

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Great Gatsby Review: Does Visual Masterpiece Live Up to Expectations?

Source:

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China Slams Japan's Protest over US Military Island Okinawa in Sovereignty Row

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Friday, May 10, 2013
Ryukyu Islands belong to Beijing, according to China?s Communist party mouthpiece People?s Daily. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/466675/20130510/china-japan-okinawa-row-ryukyu.htm

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Collins, Pingree join urgent talks on military rape

Local & State Dispatches

Maine legislator taken from State House in ambulance / USM remembers student who died in Philippines / Kittery man sentenced for crash that injured couple ... and more news from around the state.

Source: http://www.pressherald.com/r?19=961&43=561087&44=206872581&32=10367&7=617322&40=http://www.pressherald.com/news/collins-pingree-join-urgent-talks-on-military-rape_2013-05-10.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Analyst who questioned Hispanic intelligence resigns

Jason Richwine, a Heritage Foundation analyst and the co-author of a study that measured the cost of an immigration reform bill, resigned from the conservative public policy organization after news organizations reported he had authored a dissertation asserting that Hispanics had lower IQs than whites and wrote for a website founded by white nationalists.

"Jason Richwine let us know he?s decided to resign from his position. He?s no longer employed by Heritage," Heritage spokesman Mike Gonzales said. "It is our long-standing policy not to discuss internal personnel matters."

Richwine came under scrutiny this week after he co-authored a study with Heritage senior research fellow Robert Rector estimating that it would cost $6.3 trillion to legalize immigrants currently living in the country unlawfully. Heritage -- under its new president, former South Carolina Republican Sen. Jim DeMint -- has worked actively to oppose the bipartisan immigration reform legislation currently pending in the Senate.

On Wednesday, the Washington Post reported that Richwine's PhD dissertation at Harvard University, published in 2009, argued that Hispanic immigrants had generally lower IQs than white Americans. On Thursday, Yahoo News revealed that Richwine had written two articles for the website AlternativeRight.com, a publication founded and run by white nationalists.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/heritage-foundation-analyst-questioned-hispanic-intelligence-wrote-nationalist-202820452.html

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'Ring of fire' eclipse crosses Australia, Pacific

SYDNEY (AP) ? Skygazers across the Australian Outback were among the lucky few to witness a solar eclipse on Friday as the moon glided between Earth and the sun, blocking everything but a dazzling ring of light.

The celestial spectacle, known as a "ring of fire" eclipse, is the second solar eclipse visible from northern Australia in six months. In November, a total solar eclipse plunged the country's northeast into darkness, delighting astronomers and tourists who flocked to the region from across the globe to witness it.

Friday's eclipse, also called an annular solar eclipse, is not considered as scientifically important or dramatic as November's, because the moon is too far from Earth ? and therefore appears too small ? to completely black out the sun. Unlike a total solar eclipse, which essentially turns day into night, an annular eclipse just dims the sunlight.

"A total eclipse is overall far more spectacular, far more emotional," said Andrew Jacob, an astronomer at Sydney Observatory. Still, he said, Friday's eclipse "will give you a nice ring of sunlight in the sky ? it will be quite different."

At remote outposts across Australia, scientists and spectators gathered to watch as the eclipse began casting its approximately 200-kilometer-wide (120-mile-wide) shadow at dawn over Western Australia, before moving east through the Northern Territory and the top of Queensland state. The shadow was drifting across Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and the tiny island nation of Kiribati, and will eventually end in a largely uninhabited area of the Pacific Ocean.

The eclipse lasted between three and six minutes, depending on its location, and blacked out around 95 percent of the sun at its peak. A partial eclipse was visible to people in other parts of Australia, Indonesia, New Zealand and the South Pacific.

U.S. astronomer Jay Pasachoff, who traveled to Australia to view his 57th solar eclipse, drove to a remote hill in the Outback about 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of the Northern Territory town of Tennant Creek, where he and around 100 others enjoyed one of the best and longest views of the eclipse in Australia.

Amateur astronomers clicked away on cameras and local high school students measured the drop in temperature as the moon moved in front of the sun and blocked out much of the light. The moment, Pasachoff said, was magical.

"The color of the light changes in an eerie fashion, and you sense that something very strange and weird and wonderful is going on," said Pasachoff, an astronomy professor at Williams College in Massachusetts.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ring-fire-eclipse-crosses-australia-pacific-022845396.html

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Paying Markets And Jobs For May 8th - Writers Weekly

May 08, 2013

| printable version

PAYING MARKETS

These markets are NOT recycled guidelines. WritersWeekly.com only features original market listings, received from and approved by the editors at each publication.

The Antigonish Review, P.O. Box 5000, 42 West St., Suite 217, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, NS, B2G 2W5, Canada. P(902)867-3962. F(902)867-5563. Email: TAR-at-stfx.ca. Website: http://www.antigonishreview.com. Bonnie McIsaac, Office Manager. "The Antigonish Review is a quarterly literary journal published by St. Francis Xavier University. The Review features poetry, fiction, reviews and critical articles from all parts of Canada, the US and overseas, using original graphics to enliven the format." Welcomes new writers. 90% freelance. Circ. 1200. Quarterly. Pays on publication. Publishes ms six months after acceptance. Buys first rights. No reprints. Responds 4-8 months. Sample copy available by mail for $7. Subscription $24, $40 foreign. Guidelines online at http://www.antigonishreview.com.
CURRENT NEEDS: Queries. Pays "$50.00 plus two copies for fiction, essays, articles and book reviews. $10.00 per page to a maximum of $50.00 plus two copies for poetry
$100.00 plus two copies for cover art."

HINTS: "Cover art - Queries by email only please." Cover art pays $100 plus two copies.

Antioch Review, P.O. Box 148, Yellow Springs, OH 45387. P(937)769-1365. Email: mkeyes-at-antiochreview.org. Website: http://antiochcollege.org/antioch_review/. "The Antioch Review, founded in 1941, is one of the oldest, continuously publishing literary magazines in America. We publish fiction, essays, and poetry from both emerging as well as established authors. Authors published in our pages are consistently included in Best American anthologies and Pushcart prizes. Finalist for National Magazine Award for essays in 2009 and 2011 and for fiction in 2010. We continue to serve our readers and our authors and to encourage others to publish the "best words in the best order." Welcomes new writers. Circ. 3K. Quarterly. Pays on publication. Publishes ms within six months. Buys all rights. Responds in 4-6 months. Sample copy available for sale online. Individual subscription $40, $60 Canada. Guidelines online here.
CURRENT NEEDS: "As always, their best work." Pays $20 per published page. "We don't publish pieces longer than 8000 words." Submit complete ms and SASE by mail.

Apex Magazine, Apex Publications, P.O. Box 24323, Lexington KY 40524. Email: jason-at-apexbookcompany.com. Website: http://www.apex-magazine.com. Lynne M. Thomas, Editor-in-Chief; Jason Sizemore, Publisher; Damian Taylor, Managing Editor. 100% freelance. "We want science fiction, fantasy, horror, and mash-ups of all three...the dark, weird stuff down at the bottom of your little literary heart. This magazine is not a publication credit, it is a place to put your secret places and dreams on display. Short fiction." Unsolicited poetry not accepted. Welcomes new writers. Circulation: 13K views per month. Monthly. Pays 30 days after publication. Publishes ms 3-9 months after acceptance. Buys first rights and non-exclusive anthology rights. Responds 30-60 days. Guidelines online here.
CURRENT NEEDS: See guidelines. Fiction: Pays $0.05/word. Stories no longer than 5000 words. Submit manuscript to apex.submission-at-gmail.com ONLY.

RUSSIAN LIFE, P.O. Box 567, Montpelier, VT 05601. P(802)224-1956. Email: editors-at-russianlife.com. Website: http://www.russianlife.com. Paul Richardson, Publisher. "A bimonthly magazine on Russian culture, history, travel and life." 70%-80% freelance. Welcomes new writers. Circ. 20K. Bimonthly. Pays 30 days after publication. Publishes ms 1-6 months after acceptance. Buys either first serial, second serial or all rights. Accepts reprints. Responds 1 month. For sample send 9 x 12 SASE w/ $2 postage affixed to the editorial office. Subscription $36 US; $48 Overseas. Guidelines online here.
CURRENT NEEDS: "Well-written travel pieces to far flung regions. Stuff that does not appear in mainstream media." Pays $300 per article for 2000-4000 words. Extra for photos. Submit query by email.
PHOTOS/ART: "We are a photographic essay magazine. Pay varies from $20 to $150 depending on placement, size and quality."

Trapper & Predator Caller, 700 E State St, Iola, WI 54990. P(715)445-4612. F(715)445-4087. Email: jared.blohm-at-fwmedia.com. Website: http://www.trapperpredatorcaller.com. Jared Blohm, Managing Editor. "Founded in 1975, Trapper & Predator Caller is the leading source of practical, comprehensive information for North American fur harvesters. Each issue is packed with feature articles by North America's most knowledgeable trappers and predator callers. /T&PC/ provides the most thorough wild fur market report in North America and informs readers about vital industry trends. Published 10 times each year ... January, February, March, April-May, June-July, August, September, October, November and December ... T&PC provides current, practical information for fur trappers, animal-control workers and predator callers. Each issue also contains up-to-date reports from state trapping association partners across the country." 75% Freelance. Welcomes new writers. Circ. 38K. Publishes 10 issues/year. Pays 45 days after publication. Publishes ms one year after acceptance. Buys all rights. Responds 2-5 weeks. Sample copy available by email. Guidelines online here.
CURRENT NEEDS: "Our editorial goal is to inform, educate and entertain our readers with articles, photographs and illustrations that promote trapping and predator calling. Highest consideration will be given to stories focused on methods and equipment used in trapping or predator calling. We also accept historical pieces, personality profiles and unusual experience stories." Pays $250 for feature story and photos up to 2500 words. Submit query by email.
PHOTOS/ART: "Photographs are required with submissions. Good photography can mean the difference between acceptance and rejection. We prefer to run photos of people in action. For example, a picture of a man removing a mink from a trap is more desirable than a shot of a smiling man posed with the animal. We encourage you to take posed photos with the catch, but also try some action shots in the field. We prefer high-resolution digital photos or slides, but sharply focused prints are acceptable. Digital photos should be saved as high-resolution tiff or jpeg file formats on a DVR or a CD. File-size compression should allow the file to maintain a minimum of 300 pixels per square inch when re-sized or edited in any fashion to actual image sizes of 11 inches by 17 inches for horizontal images, and 8.5 inches by 11 inches for vertical images. Please include your name and contact information on any CD or DVR you send for consideration, as well as on any included contact sheets. Please also send detailed information for each photo. Photos submitted with feature stories are accepted as a package. Payment for photos we accept individually vary from $50 to $200."
HINTS: "Check your facts. An error in fact reduces the credibility of the magazine and hurts your relationship with us. Please double check spelling, dates, proper names, etc."

FREELANCE JOBS

DO YOU PAY WRITERS?
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Online Dating Surrogate
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Source: http://writersweekly.com/markets_and_jobs/007960_05082013.html

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

After the breakup in a digital world: Purging Facebook of painful memories

May 9, 2013 ? The era is long gone when a romantic breakup meant ripped-up photos and burned love letters. Today, digital photos and emails can be quickly deleted but the proliferation of social media has made forgetting a bigger chore.

What about the ubiquitous digital records of a once beloved that lurk on Facebook, tumblr, and flicker?

"People are keeping huge collections of digital possessions," says Steve Whittaker, a psychology professor at UC Santa Cruz who specializes in human-computer interaction. "There has been little exploration of the negative role of digital possessions when people want to forget aspects of their lives."

In a paper, "Design for Forgetting: Disposing of Digital Possessions after a Breakup," Whittaker and co-author Corina Sas, of Lancaster University, examine the challenges of digital possessions and their disposal after a romantic breakup. Sas worked on the research as a visiting professor at UCSC.

Pervasive collections

Digital possessions include photos, messages, music, and video stored across multiple devices such as computers, tablets, phones, and cameras. Their pervasiveness "creates problems during a breakup, as people 'inhabit' their digital space where photos and music constantly remind them about their prior relationship."

In interviews with 24 young people between the ages of 19 and 34, Whittaker and Sas found that digital possessions after a breakup are often evocative and upsetting, leading to distinct disposal strategies. Twelve of the subjects were deleters; eight were keepers, and four others were selective disposers.

They presented their findings last week in Paris at the Association for Computing Machinery Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, the premier international conference on human-computer interaction, with more than 3,300 attendees. The paper will be published in the conference proceedings.

Some of the heartbroken may want to forget but are "extremely resistant to actual deletion," Whittaker and Sas found, most often the "dumpees." Others later regret disposing of everything.

Disposal is made more difficult today because "digital possessions are in vast collections spread across multiple devices, applications, web-services, and platforms," they write. "When the relationship is good, this promotes a rich digital life. But when it sours ? people have to systematically cull collections across multiple digital spaces."

Untagged but not deleted

Facebook photos can be untagged but not deleted if posted by someone else. "It's time consuming and emotionally taxing because people tend to re-engage with possessions, especially photos," they note.

Some of the initial tactics encountered: changing one's relationship status to "single," immediately unfriending or blocking ex-partner's access to ones' profile.

Whittaker and Sas propose that software solutions might help scrub cyberspace of painful memories, for instance automatic "harvesting" using facial recognition, machine learning or entity extraction. Or a holding pattern until a cooler head prevails.

"A lack of disposal tools meant most participants either kept, or disposed of everything," they said. "Keepers took longer to heal, disposers often regretted their impulsiveness."

'Pandora's Box'

The authors propose a "Pandora's Box" that could automatically scoop up all the digital artifacts of a relationship, put them in a single place for later strategic deleting or retention. Or a trusted friend could be put in the position as a gatekeeper.

Or there could be new tools for active selection from collections of digital possessions to create a "treasure chest" of valuable items that may be retained for later happy memories.

Whittaker joined UCSC in 2011. He was previously a professor in information retrieval at the information studies department at the University of Sheffield. He has also been a research scientist at HP Labs, Lotus, AT&T Labs, and IBM. His research was supported by a grant from Google.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/eLCI80Ai_fY/130509154550.htm

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A bit slimmer: Christie has weight-loss surgery

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses the media during the groundbreaking ceremony for TEAL Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses the media during the groundbreaking ceremony for TEAL Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie walks to a podium during the groundbreaking ceremony for the Technology Enhanced Accelerated Learning Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses the media during the groundbreaking ceremony for TEAL Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie walks to a podium during the groundbreaking ceremony for the Technology Enhanced Accelerated Learning Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie addresses the media during the groundbreaking ceremony for TEAL Center at Essex County Newark Tech, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Reports say Christie secretly underwent a weight-loss surgery in February, when a band was placed around his stomach to restrict the amount of food he can eat. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

(AP) ? Gov. Chris Christie, who once famously called himself "the healthiest fat guy you've ever seen," disclosed Tuesday he had secretly undergone weight-loss surgery, a major new step by the potential Republican presidential contender to address both his health and a political vulnerability.

The stakes are high for Christie, with medical professionals and campaign strategists alike suggesting there is no more serious barrier to his personal well-being and national ambitions than his weight.

It's not about politics, he said. It's about turning 50 and wanting to be around as his children grow up.

"This is a hell of a lot more important to me than running for president," Christie, a father of four, said at a news conference in Newark. "This is about my family's future."

Christie, who appeared thinner than he did earlier this year, said he decided around the time of his birthday in September to have the surgery and initially planned to have it done in November. But Superstorm Sandy's destruction in New Jersey pushed back the procedure until February. In the operation, a band was surgically placed around his stomach to restrict how much food he could eat.

Christie has not previously disclosed his weight, and he didn't on Tuesday. But it has been an issue throughout his political career. Comedians have often made fun of it, and in interviews with David Letterman, Oprah Winfrey, Barbara Walters and others, Christie has both joked about the issue and said solemnly that he was trying to shed pounds.

During a February appearance on "The Late Show with David Letterman," the governor pulled out a doughnut and said his girth was "fair game" for comedians.

Over the next few days, he was asked repeatedly about his weight. At one point, he said he had a plan. "Whether it's successful or not," he said, "you'll all be able to notice."

The next day, he responded angrily to comments from a former White House physician who said she hoped he would run for president but worried about him dying in office. The governor said the doctor should "shut up."

Ten days after that, on Feb. 16, Christie had the surgery. He said the operation lasted 40 minutes and he was home the same afternoon. He was back at work on Feb. 19 for a full day of events.

Christie, who is in the midst of a re-election campaign, said he has been eating less because he hasn't been as hungry. He also has been working out with a personal trainer.

He said he had told only a few top staffers ? not his communications office or campaign staff ? and his communications director was caught by surprise Monday when a New York Post reporter asked directly if he'd had the procedure. The Post first reported the surgery on Tuesday. Christie said he'd used an alias at the hospital.

Christie said he never intended to make a public announcement and that he was "not going to be the guy who writes a book" about losing weight. The Republican, who has been a fixture in the national media spotlight, said the scrum of reporters at his news conference was "silly" and "ridiculous" at a time when there are other things going on.

He said he tried other ways to lose weight for years, but none seemed to work.

"It's not a career issue for me; it's a long-term health issue for me," he said.

Still, it's a way to confront a significant hurdle in his indisputable quest to emerge as a key leader in the Republican Party. He's in the top tier of those considered potential contenders for the presidential nomination in 2016.

Weeks after the surgery, Christie launched an aggressive national fundraising tour, fueling speculation that he's laying the groundwork for a White House bid.

In a country facing an obesity epidemic, more than 220,000 stomach-reducing procedures of various types are performed each year. Gastric bypass, sometimes called stomach stapling, is the most common, where surgeons shrink the stomach's size and reroute food to the small intestine. Christie had gastric band surgery. It's best known by the brand name Lap-Band, and is a less invasive alternative in which an adjustable ring is placed over the top of the stomach and tightened to restrict how much food can enter.

The adjustable Lap-Band has been available in the U.S. since 2001 for the most obese patients, and in 2011 the Food and Drug Administration expanded approval to somewhat less obese patients.

Candidates for gastric banding must have a body mass index of between 30 and 40 ? plus a weight-related medical condition, such as diabetes or high blood pressure ? or a BMI of 40 and higher. They also must have previously attempted to lose weight through diet and exercise.

"If you eat appropriately and chew your food, it works nicely," said Dr. Christina Li, a bariatric doctor at Sinai Hospital of Baltimore. She said Christie has the resources to have people help him eat right and get exercise. While the band is removable, she said patients are told to adjust to having it for the rest of their lives.

Li said risks include infection, and that it does not work for all patients.

Dr. Jaime Ponce, who practices in Dalton, Ga., and is president of the American Society for Metabolic & Bariatric Surgery, said people who have the procedure Christie had often lose 1 to 2 pounds per week.

Christie's procedure was performed by Dr. George Fielding, head of NYU Medical Center's Weight Management Program, who did the same procedure for New York Jets coach Rex Ryan three years ago.

"It basically teaches you how to eat like a human," Ryan said of the device in an interview last week with The Associated Press. "The Lap-Band goes: 'No, no. You're only going to eat this or that,' and it trains your body how to eat right," said Ryan, who said he has lost 115 pounds from his pre-surgery weight of 348.

Few significantly overweight presidential candidates have succeeded in the modern political era, when television became a major factor in shaping voter attitudes. There are disputed reports that President William Howard Taft couldn't fit in a White House bathtub a century ago, but only a handful of presidents since have been considered obese. President Bill Clinton struggled at times with his weight, but he was substantially slimmer than the New Jersey governor.

"This has nothing to do with politics," said Christie adviser Bill Palatucci. "He said that he's doing this for his family and that's the right reason."

Backers publicly argue that Christie answered any questions about his weight's political impact in 2009, when he beat Gov. Jon Corzine despite the Democrat's reference in an ad to Christie "throwing his weight around" to get out of traffic tickets. Supporters say Christie's openness about his struggle is part of an authenticity people admire in him.

The governor's allies, medical professionals and even history suggest that his weight presents both practical and political problems.

"Gov. Christie's weight is an issue the same way that any candidate or official's health is an issue," said Michael Dennehy, a New Hampshire-based Republican strategist and veteran of presidential politics. "Anyone running for president will need to comfort Americans with an overall healthy picture for their future."

___

Mulvihill reported from Haddonfield, N.J., and Peoples from Providence, R.I. AP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard in Washington, AP writers Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, and AP Sports Writer Dennis Waszak in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-05-07-Christie-Weight%20Surgery/id-ab6f7522983a4611ae5034d4824a78a2

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