Sunday, June 30, 2013

Tesla's Direct-Sales Model Exhausts Auto Dealers, Prompts White House Petition

Car dealers are upset with a car manufacturer willing to do whatever it takes to sell cars. Their problem? The cars don't go through local dealerships, which in some states is against the law.

That company, a certain electric vehicle manufacturer by the name of Tesla, isn't without allies, and has been known to put up a fight.

A White House petition, voicing support for Tesla's direct-to-consumer sales, seeks an end to what it says are "state legislators ... trying to unfairly protect automobile dealers in their states from competition."

Started by "Ken," a Tesla fan, the petition supports the company's sales model, which cuts dealers entirely out of the process. According to the petition, "Tesla is providing competition, which is good for consumers." Reached for comment by CNet, Ken, who requested to remain anonymous, said he owns some stock in Tesla, but doesn't work for the company.

As of this writing, the petition had more than 35,000 signatures of the 100,000 required by July 5 to qualify for a response from the White House.

Signatures or no, with regulations in 48 states banning or restricting the direct sales of automobiles, a quick fix may be hard to come by.

According to CNBC, local auto dealers consistently are among the largest contributors to state legislators, and often generate a great deal of tax revenue. So the incentive for state-level change, at least on the legislative level, is low at best. Adds Forbes contributor Steve Blank, "In these states it appears innovation be damned if it gets in the way of a rent seeker with a good lobbyist."

Of course, car dealers have a far different perspective. Bob Glaser, president of the North Carolina Automobile Dealers Association, told The Associated Press local car dealers have a vested interest in bettering their communities, while big car manufacturers do not.

"It's a consumer protection," explained Glaser, "and why we say that is a dealer who has invested a significant amount of capital in a community is more committed to taking care of that area's customers."

As the battle between Tesla and auto dealers inevitably heats up, the question may have best been distilled by an unnamed Tesla official, who asks: "How do you sell the future if your business depends on the present?"

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/28/tesla-direct-sales-auto-dealers-petition_n_3516836.html

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30 sent to hospitals in Las Vegas as record heat parks over West, Southwest

In Los Angeles, heat-related power failures snarled traffic, and in Death Valley, where temperatures hit triple digits, the forecast is could bring a record 129 degrees. NBC's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

Thirty people were taken to hospitals for heat-related injuries and illnesses Friday at a music festival in Las Vegas, authorities said, as a wave of life-threatening blistering temperatures blazed across the West.

Clark County fire personnel treated about 200 people for heat-related nausea, vomiting and fatigue Friday afternoon and evening at the Vans Warped Tour, an eclectic outdoor music festival at the Silverton Casino off the famous Strip.


Most were given water and taken to shaded areas, but 30 had to be taken to hospitals for further treatment, the fire department said.

The high temperature officially hit 117 degrees at Las Vegas-McCarran International Airport ? equaling the airport's record ? on the same day thousands of people streamed to the casino site for the festival.

Records are similarly expected to be broken across the West and the Southwest through the weekend and into next week, the National Weather Service said, thanks to a high pressure "dome" parked over the sprawling region.

Death Valley, Calif., could even top 130 degrees Saturday through Monday, just below the world record high of 134 recorded there on July 10, 1913, The Weather Channel said.

Temperatures in Phoenix are expected to soar between 115 and 120 degrees. In western parts of Arizona, temperatures could reach 125.

Officials in Arizona warned residents to take precautions.

"If you get dizzy or lightheaded, those are some signs of dehydration. If you become confused, that's a real warning sign," Dr. Kevin Reilly of the University of Arizona Department of Emergency Medicine told NBC station KVOA of Tucson.

In Las Vegas, meanwhile, the National Weather Service warned of the potential for a "life-threatening heat event." Temperatures were expected to match those of a July 2005 heat wave when 17 people died in the Las Vegas Valley.

The extreme weather is expected to reach Reno, Nev., reach across Utah and stretch into Wyoming and Idaho, where forecasters are predicting potentially lethal hot spells. Triple-digit temperatures were forecast during Idaho's Special Olympics in Boise.

Matt York / AP

Runners take advantage of lower temperatures at sunrise Thursday in Mesa, Ariz. Excessive heat warnings will continue for much of the Desert Southwest as building high pressure triggers major warming in eastern California, Nevada and Arizona.

Organizers urged coaches to prepare their athletes.

"The basic stuff, wearing breathable, appropriate clothes, staying in the shade as much as possible, staying hydrated is obviously a big thing," Matt Caropino, director of sports and training for Special Olympics Idaho, told NBC station KTVB. "We've put in place some misters that we're going to have at our outdoor venues."

The National Weather Service advised people to keep tabs on signs of potentially lethal heat stroke.

"Heat stroke symptoms include an increase in body temperature, which leads to deliriousness, unconsciousness and red, dry skin," it said in a report. "Death can occur when body temperatures reach or exceed 106-107 degrees."

Los Angeles was forecast to peak between the upper 80s and the lower 90s Saturday as inland communities like Burbank edge toward the low 100s. Palm Springs, Calif., no stranger to steamy summers, may peak at 120 degrees, NBC station KMIR reported. Sweltering heat also is expected for the state's Central Valley, according to The Weather Channel.

While the west remains hot and dry, the east is getting lots of rain that has resulted in flash flooding. Some of the worst flooding was in upstate New York where whole neighborhoods remain under water. ?The Weather Channel's Mike Seidel reports.

Commercial airlines were also monitoring conditions because excessive heat can throw flights off course. The atmosphere becomes less dense in extremely high heat humidity, meaning there's less lift for airplanes ? calculations that have to be made individually for every type of aircraft.

Triple-digit heat forced several airlines to bring operations to a halt after Phoenix climbed to 122 degrees in June 1990.

Daniel Arkin of NBC News contributed to this report.

Related:

'It's brutal out there': Weekend heat wave to bake western US

Alaska sweating through brutal blast of heat

Oppressive heat hits West as storms soak East

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Minister says Iraq isn't heading to civil war

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? Iraq's foreign minister says the deadliest and most sustained wave of violence to hit the country since 2008 won't lead to civil war.

Hoshyar Zebari said in an interview with The Associated Press that Iraqis have been close to civil war in the past "and there is no winner, so everybody is pushing the envelope to the limit, but not pushing it over the edge."

More than 2,000 people have been killed in bombings and other violent attacks in Iraq since the start of April, raising fears the nation is returning to the widespread sectarian-charged bloodshed that pushed it to the brink of civil war in 2006 and 2007.

Zebari insisted that a decade after the U.S.-led invasion toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, Iraq is far better off than countries emerging from the Arab spring that are struggling to find a new system of government, build institutions and write constitutions.

"Iraq is not crashing," Zebari said. "The crisis is manageable." He spoke to AP Thursday after addressing the U.N. Security Council.

Zebari said one reason he doesn't think Iraq will go "over the edge" into civil war is the success of recent local elections, where Iraqis "voted conscientiously" and "there has been major, major changes."

Next year, Iraq will hold a general election that could change parliament and the government, now led by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

"You will see the next election would be the most significant elections in the new Iraq," Zebari said. "There will be new alliances. The old alliances have crumbled, and there could be cross-sectarian, cross-ethnic alliances."

He also pointed to Iraq's extremely good economic performance that has significantly raised per capita income.

Last year Iraq became the second-largest oil producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and is now churning out more than 3 million barrels of crude a day. The World Bank expects Iraq's economy to grow by 9 percent this year, compared with just over 2 percent for the overall global economy.

"The country is really enjoying an economic boom with investment, with oil companies, with diplomatic representation. What is lacks is really political stability, because as long as you have political discord and division, it would be reflected immediately on the security," he said.

Zebari said the Syrian conflict is also having an impact on Iraq and other neighboring countries, and he urged all countries to support the fight against terrorism, which he called "an international menace."

He said Iraq has been communicating with both sides to try to help end the two-year conflict that has killed more than 93,000 people, "but in an armed conflict preaching doesn't help."

Zebari blamed the paralysis in the deeply divided U.N. Security Council for turning the Syrian conflict into a type of "proxy war, an attrition war that could be dragged on for a long time."

He said Iraq doesn't support any "militarization" of the Syrian conflict, pointing to its inspection of some Iranian flights bound for Syria for arms and its recent halt to all Iraqi flights headed to Damascus to keep volunteers heading to the war from taking advantage of Iraqi transport.

Iraq is also concerned that arms destined for the rebels in Syria ? from the United States and elsewhere ? might make their way to Iraqi militants, he said.

The Iraq-Syria border even before the conflict was "troubled" and the Americans helped build trenches to enhance border security, Zebari said. "But still they are quite open for movement of terrorist groups, or weapons," though Iraqi forces on occasion carry out operations to prevent militant groups from operating in the country.

Zebari flew to New York from Geneva, where he was involved in talks with senior officials from the U.S., Russia and the U.N. on preparations for an international conference that aims to get the Syrian government and the opposition to agree on a transitional government that would prepare for democratic elections.

The conference has been delayed by an upsurge in fighting that has given the government the upper hand, and the opposition's refusal to attend until it gets more arms and regains the initiative. Zebari said "it's not easy" to organize the conference, citing differences on its purpose and problems with unifying the opposition.

The Syrian opposition should have better unified its vision and expelled extremists, he said, "but one should not blame them at the same time for all the failure."

"What the regime is doing is absolutely unacceptable. Who would have imagined five years, six years ago, a regime to bomb its people, shell residential cities in front of the world?" he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/minister-says-iraq-isnt-heading-civil-war-174733468.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

NFL criminal cases put focus on vetting

Two felony charges in one day were more than a bump in the NFL's offseason. They pointed to an ongoing problem for the league ? players who wind up at the center of criminal cases.

Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez was arrested Wednesday in Massachusetts, accused of murdering his friend Odin Lloyd. Also Wednesday, Browns rookie linebacker Ausar Walcott was charged with attempted murder in New Jersey.

Both players were cut later in the day by their teams. On Thursday, the league said any club that now wants to sign Hernandez will face a hearing with Commissioner Roger Goodell first.

The question now is whether the veteran tight end and the rookie should have been in the league at all.

"It is difficult, it's always a balancing act," says Tony Dungy, who won a Super Bowl as Colts coach and has served as a mentor to players since leaving the NFL, including Michael Vick after the quarterback served federal prison time for dogfighting. "The league has a security department that sends out information, and every team is different in terms of how much its scouting department does and what areas are concentrated on most.

"It's really a matter of what you do with the information and what your organization feels is important. One thing you have to keep in mind is a lot of the (negative) things that happen come when they are 15 or 17 or 19 years old."

According to FBI statistics cited by the league, the incidence of NFL players getting arrested is much lower than in the general public. The average annual arrest rate of NFL players is roughly 2 percent of about 3,000 players who go through the league each year, including tryouts and minicamps. That's about half the arrest rate of the general U.S. population, the league says. The NFL notes the disparity becomes even more dramatic when the group is narrowed to American men ages 20-34.

But Jeff Benedict, author of several books on athletes and crimes, including "Pros and Cons, The Criminals Who Play In The NFL," believes the FBI statistics are a bad gauge.

"The danger of doing comparisons with the general public is, if you look at these people and their backgrounds, how many of those guys who have been arrested in the FBI numbers have been to college, make a lot of money like NFL players do, and live in safe, good neighborhoods?" Benedict says. "The issue is why any of these guys are doing this when they have all these good things going on in their lives."

The San Diego Union-Tribune, which has tracked NFL arrests "more serious than speeding tickets" dating back to 2000, has listed 36 this year, including Hernandez and Walcott and three players who were charged twice.

By comparison, the NBA says six players of its players have been arrested since last July 1, and Major League Baseball says it's aware of three cases this year worse than a speeding ticket: two DUIs and a misdemeanor drug charge.

While granting that NFL rosters are far bigger than those in the NBA or MLB, Benedict says, "You can't take these tiny snap shots and say the NFL is low."

Of course, even a few cases such as Hernandez's or that of Jovan Belcher ? the Kansas City player who shot his girlfriend to death last December, then committed suicide in front of his coach and general manager ? can create a widespread negative image.

And anyone who has suited up for an NFL team will face extra public scrutiny for even minor transgressions.

That, in turn, puts more pressure on the league's vetting process.

Dungy stresses that the amount of homework teams do is critical because they don't get all that much one-on-one time with prospective players. Some clubs do psychological analyses, even hiring outside agencies to handle them. Though others like the approach, Dungy is not a fan of it and always believed in his gut feeling about a player.

"You have to find out if they have grown from the issues, or there seems to be a pattern, or will these issues always be there," he says.

Bill Polian, who built the Bills, Panthers and Colts into Super Bowl teams as one of the NFL's most successful general managers and team presidents, strongly maintains that the league's vetting process is solid. It delves into players' histories from high school and college before they enter the league. Those investigations have become more sophisticated through the years; background checks include not only public records such as court documents and arrest data, but talking to teammates and coaches, high school principals and other people who have been a part of a player's life and development.

"It uncovers a fair amount of information," Polian says. "It is not designed to uncover information that is usable in court, but it is a process by which the clubs try to ascertain a clear picture of the individual that they are thinking about taking."

But there's no way of knowing how playing football for a living will change a young man.

"First of all, it is important to remember that no team is immune from having a player run afoul of the law, whether it's a speeding ticket up to what we have seen in the Hernandez and Belcher cases, which are as serious as is possible to be," Polian says.

"There's no magic wand a team can wave and change that player who has had serious problems. It's no different than any other workplace in America, just more publicized."

Benedict agrees that teams perform due diligence on draft prospects and they know what they are getting ? or avoiding ? in their draft rooms when it comes to skills or 40-meter dash times or health issues.

"The hardest thing they deal with on draft day is the character question," he says. "That is what keeps them up at night."

Former Broncos general manager Ted Sundquist says the vetting process wasn't particularly thorough for many of his years in the NFL ? he left after the 2007 season ? but he's certain it is more efficient now.

"I think Michael Vick was the turning point on the timeline," Sundquist says. "He was right in their backyard and they didn't know it was going on, an example of a team that had not had a handle on what players were doing."

Sundquist believes teams could get a better handle on developing problems by hiring security firms that are available around the clock to keep watch on players already in the league, even though the NFL's personal conduct policy is very direct in saying it expects "lawful, ethical and responsible" behavior.

"It's better to have a system in place that can monitor or check that guy, a security firm that is part of these guys' lives, not just vetting them," he says. "They are tied to the hip with these guys. I think that investment is well worth it."

Ultimately, if the public grows tired of player misconduct, regardless of the low percentages, it could become a huge problem for the NFL. And it could change how the teams approach player procurement.

"As these issues become a much more public situation in a business that relies upon the public for its goodwill," Polian says, "you are more and more concerned about taking chances on individuals ? no matter what the talent ? if they have problems in their background."

___

AP Sports Writers Dennis Waszak Jr., Brian Mahoney and Ronald Blum contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nfl-criminal-cases-put-focus-vetting-221910656.html

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Gmail app for Android returns quick-access delete button following user feedback

Confused by where that delete button went when you updated to the latest version of Android's Gmail app? You weren't the only one. The delete button has now reappeared alongside the archive option for quick access, while the update also improves settings for showing both buttons, accessed through the menu icon on the far right corner. Touching sender images will now let you choose multiple emails in a thread and Google's bundled in a handful of bug fixes too, just weeks since the last refresh.

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

High Court Deals a Blow To Voting Act (WSJ)

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Dems move past Scott Brown ghost with Mass. win

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, with wife Dr. Susan Blumenthal, celebrates his victory in the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate at his campaign party Tuesday, June 25, 2013, in Boston. Markey defeated Republican candidate Gabriel Gomez for the Senate seat vacated by Secretary of State John Kerry. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, with wife Dr. Susan Blumenthal, celebrates his victory in the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate at his campaign party Tuesday, June 25, 2013, in Boston. Markey defeated Republican candidate Gabriel Gomez for the Senate seat vacated by Secretary of State John Kerry. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, with wife Dr. Susan Blumenthal, celebrates his victory in the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate at his campaign party Tuesday, June 25, 2013, in Boston. Markey defeated Republican candidate Gabriel Gomez for the Senate seat vacated by John Kerry. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Gabriel Gomez, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in the Massachusetts open seat special election, pauses while addressing supporters during an election day party in Boston, Tuesday, June 25, 2013. Gomez lost his bid against Democrat U.S. Rep. Ed Markey, who won the election and will take the seat vacated by John Kerry's departure to become Secretary of State. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey speaks to supporters at his campaign party Tuesday, June 25, 2013, in Boston. Markey defeated Republican candidate Gabriel Gomez in the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Secretary of State John Kerry. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

Democratic U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, with wife Dr. Susan Blumenthal, takes the stage to celebrate his victory in the Massachusetts special election for the U.S. Senate at his campaign party Tuesday, June 25, 2013, in Boston. Markey defeated Republican candidate Gabriel Gomez for the Senate seat vacated by Secretary of State John Kerry. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola)

(AP) ? Drawing on the political might of the White House, Democrats have exorcized the ghost of Scott Brown.

Three years after the little-known Republican state senator shocked the political world with an unlikely victory here, veteran Democratic Congressman Ed Markey won the special election for U.S. Senate to replace John Kerry on Tuesday, defeating a Republican political newcomer with an all-star resume who failed to inspire Massachusetts voters and Washington's Republican leaders alike.

It was a resounding victory in a low-turnout election for a national Democratic Party still haunted by Brown's 2010 special election stunner.

"To everyone in the state, regardless of how you voted, I say to you tonight this is your seat in the United States Senate," Markey, 66, declared in his victory speech, echoing one of Brown's most common lines.

Markey defeated Republican Gabriel Gomez, a former Navy SEAL, 55 percent to 45 percent.

Tuesday's contest served as a reminder that President Barack Obama has vowed to play a more aggressive political role for his party through next year's mid-term elections with huge stakes for his legacy and final-term agenda. Democrats face several competitive Senate contests in less-friendly terrain in 2014, when their grip on the Senate majority will be tested.

The White House, led by Obama himself, invested heavily in the Massachusetts' election, fueled largely by widespread fear of another Brown-like surprise.

"The people of Massachusetts can be proud that they have another strong leader fighting for them in the Senate, and people across the country will benefit from Ed's talent and integrity," Obama said in a statement Tuesday night.

Republicans claimed a moral victory of sorts, having forced Democrats to deploy their biggest political stars in an election in which Markey enjoyed significant advantages in Democrat-friendly Massachusetts. Markey's victory follows personal visits by Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, former President Bill Clinton and Democratic National Committee chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz.

"Not every fight is a fair fight," Gomez said in his concession speech. "Sometimes you face overpowering force. We were massively overspent. We went up against literally the whole national Democratic Party. And all its allies."

From the beginning, it appeared that national Democrats were more committed to the contest than national Republicans, raising questions about the GOP's commitment to candidates who might help improve the party's appeal after a painful 2012 election season.

Washington Republican leaders distanced themselves from Gomez partly by design. The 47-year-old businessman attacked Markey as the ultimate Washington insider and was reluctant to link himself to the same national forces he condemned. But as Democrats poured money and manpower into Massachusetts, Gomez needed help to capitalize on Markey's weaknesses.

U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani campaigned in Boston for Gomez.

But what help he got appeared to be too little too late.

"It's unclear whether Republicans in Washington intended to compete in this race and truly let an opportunity slip away or they were just blowing smoke the whole time," Guy Cecil, executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, wrote in a post-election memo.

Both sides conceded that Markey was not a perfect candidate.

The senator-elect, who first became a congressman in 1977, struggled to connect with voters at times on the campaign trail. He also faced repeated questions about whether he was a full-time resident of Washington or Massachusetts.

On paper, Gomez's credentials appeared to fit the gold standard for the new breed of mass-appeal Republican that the GOP wants as it works to improve its standing among women and minorities. A former Navy SEAL turned businessman, Gomez speaks Spanish, supports immigration reform and moderate positions on social issues ? characteristics the Republican National Committee recently called for in a post-election internal autopsy as key to GOP growth.

Washington's traditional Republican campaign apparatus sent Gomez some paid workers and campaign cash, but Markey and his national allies dramatically outspent Gomez's side. The disparity was fueled by Gomez's inability to attract pro-Republican super PACs that funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into elections to help Republican candidates last fall.

At the same time, Gomez's moderate positions alienated the GOP's most passionate voters. The national tea party movement that helped fuel Brown's rise sat out the race.

"Gomez left his base unenthused and unexcited," said Sal Russo, chief strategist to the Tea Party Express, which was among the first national groups to help Brown's 2010 campaign. "When a Republican tries to look like a Democrat-light, what Democrats do is vote for a Democrat. You have to create some contrast."

Still, Republicans suggest that Markey's need to involve the White House could mean trouble for Democrats in the mid-term elections.

Almost immediately after winning re-election, Obama vowed to go all out for his party for the 2014 elections, mindful that sending more Democrats to Congress could be the difference between success and failure for key aspects of his second-term agenda like immigration, climate change and a budget deal.

Already, Obama and the first lady have hit the campaign trail with vigor this year, traversing the nation to raise money and rally support for Democratic candidates and the committees that work to elect them. In addition to Massachusetts, the president has campaigned this year in California, Texas, Illinois, New York and Georgia. But Republicans and Democrats agree that Obama's direct involvement would be less helpful in competitive 2014 Senate contests in states such as South Dakota, West Virginia, Arkansas and Iowa, where he's not as popular as in Massachusetts.

"The national climate for Democrats is not good," said Republican strategist Ron Kaufman, also a Massachusetts national Republican committeeman. "I promise it's not good in places like Iowa and the Dakotas where we have open Democrat seats."

Meanwhile, Gomez's future is unclear.

He said this week that, win or lose, he'd be willing to help the GOP expand its appeal among the nation's growing Hispanic population. And he has repeatedly hinted that his political career would not end with Tuesday's election.

"In the future, we are going to be better," Gomez said in Spanish at the end of his concession speech.

Markey, who serves out the rest of Kerry's term, faces his first re-election test in 2014.

___

Associated Press writers Steve LeBlanc and Bob Salsberg contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-06-26-US-Massachusetts-Senate/id-80b60a625e3e4d80ad7f091798401a87

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Photos of the Day (Powerlineblog)

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Iran's currency rises after presidential election

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- Traders in Iran say the country's currency has briefly reached its strongest level in nearly 10 months, reflecting hopes that Iran's newly elected president might ease tensions with the West.

Iran's rial was exchanged around 29,000 for $1 Sunday, compared to more than 36,000 before the June 14 election of Hasan Rowhani. The rial had not dipped below 30,000 since late September. Later Sunday it rose to about 31,000.

The rial has lost more than two-thirds of its value against the U.S. dollar since late 2011, partly because of sanctions over Iran's nuclear program.

Rowhani's election boosted hope that his promises of international outreach could bring progress in the nuclear impasse. The West fears Iran is seeking a nuclear weapon. Iran says its program is for energy and research.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irans-currency-rises-presidential-election-154013546.html

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Markets roiled by Bernanke's exit strategy

LONDON (AP) ? Markets were roiled Thursday by a suggestion from U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke that the central bank may be done with its monetary stimulus next year. While stocks and commodities took a pounding on the news, the dollar surged.

For nearly five years, the Fed has been pursuing an aggressive monetary policy to shore up the U.S. economy, which was battered by the financial crisis. Now that the U.S. economy has shown signs of improvement, Bernanke said the Fed is considering when it should start normalizing its policy.

In the latest round of its monetary stimulus program ? known as quantitative easing, or QE ? the Fed has been buying $85 billion worth of financial assets each month to keep long-term interest rates low in the hope of boosting borrowing and spending. After the Fed's decision to keep the policy unchanged, Bernanke confirmed that the central bank's purchases will likely slow down this year and end next year. When the reduction ? so-called tapering ? begins will hinge on the U.S. economic data, though.

That prompted some concern among investors who have grown used to the Fed's active involvement in the financial markets ? the Dow tumbled over 200 points Wednesday while oil and gold prices slid? even though the remarks signal a healthier U.S. economic outlook. Much of the reason why a number of assets, including stocks around the world, have advanced over the past few years is that the money created by central banks through QE has found itself in financial markets.

"Doubtless the analysis will continue for some time yet and just where markets settle will take some time to establish but this was always an inevitable move," said Fawad Razaqzada, market strategist at GFT Markets.

"Critically however the exact timing of the tapering is still up in the air so once the dust settles, the battle between greed and fear is likely to ensure there's no immediate shortage of volatility."

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 2.2 percent at 6,209 while Germany's DAX fell 2.3 percent to 8,007. The CAC-40 in France was 2.2 percent lower at 3,756.

Wall Street was poised for further losses at the bell, with Dow futures down 0.5 percent and the broader S&P 500 futures 0.6 percent lower.

Earlier, stocks in Asia tanked too, with stocks further negatively impacted by a private survey showing a slowdown in manufacturing in China in June. HSBC's preliminary purchasing managers' index fell to a nine-month low of 48.3 in June, down from 49.6 in May. Numbers below 50 indicate a contraction.

Among Asia's markets, Tokyo's Nikkei 225 down 1.7 percent lower at 13,014.58 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index tumbled 2.9 percent to 20,382.87.

It's not just stocks that have responded to the developments with the Fed. The dollar has pushed higher as the prospect of new Fed money has diminished in light of Bernanke's statement. The euro was down a further 0.5 percent at $1.3217 Thursday while the dollar rose 1.3 percent to 97.90 yen.

The dollar's surge is having a particular impact on commodities, which are priced in the currency.

The benchmark New York oil price was down $2 at $96.48 a barrel, while the gold price slid 4.6 percent t, or a little over $61 to near three-year lows of $1,312 an ounce.

Michael Hewson, senior market analyst at CMC Markets, said gold, for so long a preferred investment for the risk-averse, is now nearing "precarious territory."

"Currently at three-year lows there is a risk we could see an even bigger sell-off if the $1,300 level is breached significantly," he said. "While the time line for the Fed exit strategy is very much data dependent and based on a whole host of economic indicators between now and next summer, gold prices have slid sharply as the dollar goes sharply bid across the board."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-roiled-bernankes-exit-strategy-094255558.html

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

A street view of Obama?s Berlin visit

Editor's note: Marc Young is a Berlin-based freelance journalist covering President Obama's visit for Yahoo! News.

Ever since John F. Kennedy made his legendary ?Ich bin ein Berliner? address almost 50 years ago to the day, Berlin has been a place where U.S. presidents come when they have something important to say.

In 1963, JFK set down a marker that America would not yield West Berlin to the Soviets just two years after the Wall had been built. And Ronald Reagan made one of his most memorable speeches in the still-divided city in 1987, demanding Mikhail Gorbachev tear down that very same Cold War barrier.

Keenly aware of the gravitas a Berlin visit can lend, Barack Obama made a passionate plea for a better world as a presidential candidate in 2008 to a huge crowd of 200,000.

Now returning as the leader of the free world, President Obama is giving an eagerly awaited foreign policy address in front of Berlin?s symbolic Brandenburg Gate. But with the entire center of the German capital on lockdown for the duration of his whirlwind 25-hour-and-5-minute visit, Obama will have little opportunity to mingle with Berlin?s denizens.

Yahoo News correspondent Marc Young hit the city?s few remaining unblocked streets to find out what people thought of all the presidential pomp and ask which U.S. president they considered to be the best Berliner.

10 a.m. on Unter den Linden boulevard

Bernd Schneider

The 63-year-old civil engineer for Germany?s railway took the day off to travel from Leipzig, an hour south of Berlin by train. But on the city?s grand Unter den Linden boulevard, there was no getting any closer to the Brandenburg Gate just visible in the distance. After growing up in communist East Germany, Schneider fled to the West in 1986, just three years before the fall of the Berlin Wall.

?I just wanted to see what all the fuss was about. I asked the police if they were getting the day off, since it?s so sunny and nice, but they really didn?t think it was that funny.

?Obama is okay. I?m not really bothered by the [National Security Agency] snooping, I grew up in East Germany and you just can?t compare it with the Stasi [or the Ministry for State Security, the former secret police of East Germany]. I guess if I send pictures of my vacation and say, ?The weather was the bomb,? I?m going to be scanned. But I don?t mind if it helps stop terrorism. However, I?m pretty un-German about stuff like that.?

Presidential pick: JFK

10:45 a.m. near the Ritz Carlton Hotel at Potsdamer Platz

Once a derelict wasteland near the Berlin Wall, Potsdamer Platz is now home to shiny glass towers and the Ritz Carlton Hotel, where Obama and his family spent the night in Berlin. Rumor has it that the president picked it because of its nice gym. Manfred Fiifi, a 58-year-old Berlin resident who works as a security official for an embassy, stopped by after a doctor?s appointment.

?It?s a huge operation today, but these types of visits are normal for Berliners. I?m here because of my profession; it?s interesting to see how the police are handling all this.?

(At this point, the police stop a car to let a dog sniff for explosives. One burly officer demands we step further away with the friend phrase: ?When the dog is dangling from your bones??)

?I don?t have anything against Obama, he?s doing the best he can. I?m not disappointed in him, but I didn?t really expect that much from him either. Of course, JFK was the first U.S. president to come to Berlin, then Reagan and Obama. So I?d say Kennedy really set the standard.?

Presidential pick: JFK

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/view-obama-berlin-visit-street-134111608.html

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KDL Weblog ? Blog Archive ? Legit Resources for your College ...

money scaleJust try Googling ?college financial aid? and see if your head doesn?t explode from all the information. The links below are considered by many to be Step 1 for any students looking to expand their education beyond high school.

Federal Student Aid Web Resources provides a list of websites that are available to students to help them learn about and apply for financial aid.?The document also includes shortcut URLs to popular topics and lists resources for those who assist students in learning about financial aid.

Help Students Find Money for College or Career School provides instructions for ordering free materials and highlights a few publications that may be relevant to your college search.

Both links above come from the U.S. Department of Education, which provides more than $150 billion in financial aid to
college and career school students each year.

Powered By DT Author Box

Written by Morgan J.

Morgan J.

Morgan J. is a KDL communications assistant. She spends summers as a ?hood ornament? of sorts while her husband captains their old, cedar-sided pontoon down the Flat River. In the wintertime she counts the days until she?ll have her toes in the water again.


Posted by: Morgan J.

Source: http://blog.kdl.org/?p=21895

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New CEO begins Alcatel makeover

By Leila Abboud

PARIS (Reuters) - Telecom equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent plans to focus on networking products and high-speed broadband and will slim down with a billion euros in cost cuts by 2015 in a bid to reverse years of losses.

The plan unveiled on Wednesday by Michel Combes, the company's new chief executive, will also include more than a billion euros of unspecified asset sales and 2 billion euros in debt re-financing by 2015, followed by a further 2 billion in debt reduction that could include issuing new shares.

Alcatel shares jumped more than 7 percent to a new year high in early trade.

"This plan goes in the right direction, but I believe some elements of it are not aggressive enough," said Pierre Ferragu, analyst at Bernstein Research, who thought the cost savings could have gone further in a tough competitive landscape.

Alcatel-Lucent, which competes with Sweden's Ericsson, China's Huawei, and Nokia Siemens Networks, has been unable to post regular profits and generate cash since it was formed in a merger in 2006.

Combes, who used to run telecom giant Vodafone's European businesses, is the third CEO to try to right Alcatel.

Combes explained that the group would reposition itself as a specialist player by focusing research and marketing efforts on its high-growth Internet Protocol (IP) networking products and very high-speed broadband in fixed and mobile. These priority areas will get 85 percent of the company's R&D budget, while older, legacy products would be "managed for cash".

The aim is for sales of IP products, which help direct data traffic inside telecom networks via specialized routers, to grow by roughly 15 percent to more than 7 billion euros by 2015, or about half of group sales.

Combes also wants to improve the operating margins on IP networking from their current 2.4 percent to at least 12.5 percent and make the firm free-cashflow positive by 2015.

"To deliver on this strategic plan, we need to regain competitiveness - that means having the right products, quality of execution, and lowering our costs to be similar to peers," Combes said on a conference call.

Alexander Peterc of Exane BNP Paribas was hoping for more emphasis on what would drive the business forward.

"Alcatel-Lucent's plan includes more of the same on restructuring, and not enough of the new focus," he said.

Alcatel-Lucent shares have risen 40 percent this year on hopes that Combes can turn around the Paris-based group.

But its market capitalization has shriveled to 3.2 billion euros ($4.3 billion), far from its pre-merger levels of roughly $36 billion.

(Reporting by Leila Abboud; Editing by Geert De Clercq and Will Waterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ceo-begins-alcatel-makeover-061113213.html

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Ad Giant WPP Takes Stake In Muzy, A Mobile Microblogging Startup With 20M Users

muzyAdvertising giant WPP is taking another step into the world of startup investments, this time specifically in mobile and social media. WPP Ventures, an investment arm of WPP digital, today announced a stake in Muzy, a social media platform arranged in a Pinterest-style grid layout that lets users incorporate links to images, games, text and more, which they then share with their friends, or with the world at large. The site, in some regards, has flown under the radar, but it has some 20 million users and is adding 1 million each month. Terms of the investment were not disclosed but we are trying to find out.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Htj7pfO4lxo/

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Artificial bone: Designing synthetic materials and quickly turning the design into reality with 3-D printing

June 17, 2013 ? Researchers working to design new materials that are durable, lightweight and environmentally sustainable are increasingly looking to natural composites, such as bone, for inspiration: Bone is strong and tough because its two constituent materials, soft collagen protein and stiff hydroxyapatite mineral, are arranged in complex hierarchical patterns that change at every scale of the composite, from the micro up to the macro.

While researchers have come up with hierarchical structures in the design of new materials, going from a computer model to the production of physical artifacts has been a persistent challenge. This is because the hierarchical structures that give natural composites their strength are self-assembled through electrochemical reactions, a process not easily replicated in the lab.

Now researchers at MIT have developed an approach that allows them to turn their designs into reality. In just a few hours, they can move directly from a multiscale computer model of a synthetic material to the creation of physical samples.

In a paper published online June 17 in Advanced Functional Materials, associate professor Markus Buehler of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and co-authors describe their approach. Using computer-optimized designs of soft and stiff polymers placed in geometric patterns that replicate nature's own patterns, and a 3-D printer that prints with two polymers at once, the team produced samples of synthetic materials that have fracture behavior similar to bone. One of the synthetics is 22 times more fracture-resistant than its strongest constituent material, a feat achieved by altering its hierarchical design.

Two are stronger than one

The collagen in bone is too soft and stretchy to serve as a structural material, and the mineral hydroxyapatite is brittle and prone to fracturing. Yet when the two combine, they form a remarkable composite capable of providing skeletal support for the human body. The hierarchical patterns help bone withstand fracturing by dissipating energy and distributing damage over a larger area, rather than letting the material fail at a single point.

"The geometric patterns we used in the synthetic materials are based on those seen in natural materials like bone or nacre, but also include new designs that do not exist in nature," says Buehler, who has done extensive research on the molecular structure and fracture behavior of biomaterials. His co-authors are graduate students Leon Dimas and Graham Bratzel, and Ido Eylon of the 3-D printer manufacturer Stratasys. "As engineers we are no longer limited to the natural patterns. We can design our own, which may perform even better than the ones that already exist."

The researchers created three synthetic composite materials, each of which is one-eighth inch thick and about 5-by-7 inches in size. The first sample simulates the mechanical properties of bone and nacre (also known as mother of pearl). This synthetic has a microscopic pattern that looks like a staggered brick-and-mortar wall: A soft black polymer works as the mortar, and a stiff blue polymer forms the bricks. Another composite simulates the mineral calcite, with an inverted brick-and-mortar pattern featuring soft bricks enclosed in stiff polymer cells. The third composite has a diamond pattern resembling snakeskin. This one was tailored specifically to improve upon one aspect of bone's ability to shift and spread damage.

A step toward 'metamaterials'

The team confirmed the accuracy of this approach by putting the samples through a series of tests to see if the new materials fracture in the same way as their computer-simulated counterparts. The samples passed the tests, validating the entire process and proving the efficacy and accuracy of the computer-optimized design. As predicted, the bonelike material proved to be the toughest overall.

"Most importantly, the experiments confirmed the computational prediction of the bonelike specimen exhibiting the largest fracture resistance," says Dimas, who is the first author of the paper. "And we managed to manufacture a composite with a fracture resistance more than 20 times larger than its strongest constituent."

According to Buehler, the process could be scaled up to provide a cost-effective means of manufacturing materials that consist of two or more constituents, arranged in patterns of any variation imaginable and tailored for specific functions in different parts of a structure. He hopes that eventually entire buildings might be printed with optimized materials that incorporate electrical circuits, plumbing and energy harvesting. "The possibilities seem endless, as we are just beginning to push the limits of the kind of geometric features and material combinations we can print," Buehler says.

The work was funded by the U.S. Army Research Office.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/ZC29AFejCKE/130617122359.htm

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Friday, June 14, 2013

Daniel Ellsberg On Edward Snowden: 'He Made The Right Choice' (VIDEO)

The man who 42 years ago leaked to The New York Times the 7,000-page report that became known as the Pentagon Papers called Edward Snowden's disclosure that revealed details of the U.S. government's domestic surveillance programs "as important as any disclosure that's ever been made."

Daniel Ellsberg, who in 1971 leaked the "Report of the Office of the Secretary of Defense Vietnam Task Force," a study detailing how the administration had misled Congress and the American public about the Vietnam War, joined HuffPost Live as part of a 90-minute town hall to discuss domestic surveillance in light of the disclosure of the PRISM program and the NSA's broad collection of Americans' telephone records.

Speaking from his home in the San Francisco Bay Area, Ellsberg, 82, told HuffPost Live hosts Ahmed Shihab-Eldin and Josh Zepps that he, Snowden and accused WikiLeaks leaker Pfc. Bradley Manning "chose to give priority to our oath to defend and support the Constitution, rather than our promise to keep secrets for our boss or for our agency, when those secrets were concealing evidence that the Constitution was being violated."

The Guardian and The Washington Post on Sunday revealed that Snowden, 29, a government contractor at Booz Allen Hamilton, was the source of reports on the domestic surveillance programs.

Snowden is in hiding in Hong Kong, the newspapers have reported. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said Thursday that Snowden should be prosecuted.

But Ellsberg, who faced 12 felony counts for leaking the Pentagon Papers -- charges which were ultimately dropped -- said that Snowden "made the right choice." Ellsberg called PRISM, the program that allegedly collects user data from large technology companies like Google, Yahoo! and Facebook, as well as the NSA's broad collection of American's telephone records, "clearly unconstitutional."

AOL, which owns The Huffington Post, was revealed in the NSA document published by the Guardian and The Washington Post as one of the tech companies that participates in PRISM. AOL denies the claim.

Ellsberg also took issue with critics who've said that Snowden cared more about the threat to civil liberties than the threat of terrorism.

"That's ridiculous," Ellsberg said in a later interview with The Huffington Post, pointing to recent editorials by David Brooks and Thomas L. Friedman, both of The New York Times. "Look what his job is," Ellsberg said of Snowden. "He joined the Army. He worked for the CIA. He worked for the NSA ? That's like saying that I, Daniel Ellsberg, couldn't have trust for authority. I was in the Marine Corps, and like Snowden, I was highly promoted."

NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake, author Jeremy Scahill, "The Week" editor Marc Ambinder and Amy Goodman, the host of "Democracy Now," were among the panelists who participated in HuffPost Live's PRISM town hall.

Click here to watch the full interview with Daniel Ellsberg.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/13/daniel-ellsberg-edward-snowden_n_3438431.html

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Marks on Martian dunes may be tracks of dry-ice sleds

June 11, 2013 ? NASA research indicates hunks of frozen carbon dioxide -- dry ice -- may glide down some Martian sand dunes on cushions of gas similar to miniature hovercraft, plowing furrows as they go.

Researchers deduced this process could explain one enigmatic class of gullies seen on Martian sand dunes by examining images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) and performing experiments on sand dunes in Utah and California.

"I have always dreamed of going to Mars," said Serina Diniega, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and lead author of a report published online by the journal Icarus. "Now I dream of snowboarding down a Martian sand dune on a block of dry ice."

The hillside grooves on Mars, called linear gullies, show relatively constant width -- up to a few yards, or meters, across -- with raised banks or levees along the sides. Unlike gullies caused by water flows on Earth and possibly on Mars, they do not have aprons of debris at the downhill end of the gully. Instead, many have pits at the downhill end.

"In debris flows, you have water carrying sediment downhill, and the material eroded from the top is carried to the bottom and deposited as a fan-shaped apron," said Diniega. "In the linear gullies, you're not transporting material. You're carving out a groove, pushing material to the sides."

Images from MRO's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera show sand dunes with linear gullies covered by carbon-dioxide frost during the Martian winter. The location of the linear gullies is on dunes that spend the Martian winter covered by carbon-dioxide frost. By comparing before-and-after images from different seasons, researchers determined that the grooves are formed during early spring. Some images have even caught bright objects in the gullies.

Scientists theorize the bright objects are pieces of dry ice that have broken away from points higher on the slope. According to the new hypothesis, the pits could result from the blocks of dry ice completely sublimating away into carbon-dioxide gas after they have stopped traveling.

"Linear gullies don't look like gullies on Earth or other gullies on Mars, and this process wouldn't happen on Earth," said Diniega. "You don't get blocks of dry ice on Earth unless you go buy them."

That is exactly what report co-author Candice Hansen, of the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Ariz., did. Hansen has studied other effects of seasonal carbon-dioxide ice on Mars, such as spider-shaped features that result from explosive release of carbon-dioxide gas trapped beneath a sheet of dry ice as the underside of the sheet thaws in spring. She suspected a role for dry ice in forming linear gullies, so she bought some slabs of dry ice at a supermarket and slid them down sand dunes.

That day and in several later experiments, gaseous carbon dioxide from the thawing ice maintained a lubricating layer under the slab and also pushed sand aside into small levees as the slabs glided down even low-angle slopes.

The outdoor tests did not simulate Martian temperature and pressure, but calculations indicate the dry ice would act similarly in early Martian spring where the linear gullies form. Although water ice, too, can sublimate directly to gas under some Martian conditions, it would stay frozen at the temperatures at which these gullies form, the researchers calculate.

"MRO is showing that Mars is a very active planet," Hansen said. "Some of the processes we see on Mars are like processes on Earth, but this one is in the category of uniquely Martian."

Hansen also noted the process could be unique to the linear gullies described on Martian sand dunes.

"There are a variety of different types of features on Mars that sometimes get lumped together as 'gullies,' but they are formed by different processes," she said. "Just because this dry-ice hypothesis looks like a good explanation for one type doesn't mean it applies to others."

The University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory operates the HiRISE camera, which was built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. of Boulder, Colo. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages MRO for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the orbiter.

To see images of the linear gullies and obtain more information about MRO, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/mro .

For more about HiRISE, visit: http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu .

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/DQLvO9gp3QI/130611145103.htm

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Wednesday, June 12, 2013

No one's picking up in North Korea day after talks with South founder

SEOUL (Reuters) - A day after snubbing Seoul by offering to send a junior official to hold the first supposedly high-level talks between the two Koreas in six years, North Korea appeared to be refusing to pick up a phone line it re-established just last Friday.

The unpredictable North had called for talks between the two countries in order to try to reopen a money-spinning joint industrial park that it closed in April after threatening the South with nuclear annihilation.

The proposed two days of talks were due to start on Wednesday but foundered over disagreement over the seniority of delegates.

Two attempts by Seoul on Wednesday to raise North Korean officials using a Red Cross hotline that was shut by Pyongyang amid rising tension earlier this year failed, according to the Unification Ministry in the South Korean capital.

The ministry said it made calls at 9 a.m. (8 p.m. EDT on Tuesday) on Wednesday to re-establish contact and at 4 p.m., but they went unanswered.

North Korea has not commented on the calls.

The talks had been billed as offering a breakthrough that could see the joint Kaesong industrial park on the border between the two countries re-open. The park generates $90 million a year in wages for North Korea whose economy is smaller than it was 20 years ago.

The North's failure to turn up for the talks in Seoul appeared to cast a pall over prospects for an improvement in ties between the two sides, still technically at war after their 1950-53 civil conflict ended with a mere truce.

After the talks were called off, South Korea's presidential office accused the North of trying to humiliate it with its plans to send a junior official.

North Korea's main diplomatic ally, China, had urged the reclusive state to return to the negotiating table after the country staged its third nuclear weapons test in February.

Beijing backed U.N. sanctions imposed after that test.

(Reporting by David Chance; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-ones-picking-north-korea-day-talks-south-083452068.html

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Ted Cruz: ?Proud wacko bird?

The Fine Print

As immigration debate begins before the full Senate for the first time, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) has become one of the most vocal opponents to the current bill. But Cruz says the true obstacle to immigration reform is not him, but President Obama.

?The biggest the biggest obstacle to passing common sense immigration reform is President Barack Obama,? Cruz tells The Fine Print, going on to say that the White House?s ?insistence? on including a path to citizenship is standing in the way of the bill?s ultimate passage.

?The path the White House is going down, I believe, is designed for this bill to fail,? Cruz says. ?It is designed for it to sail through the Senate and then crash in the House to let the President go and campaign in 2014 on this issue.?

Over his six month run in the Senate, Cruz has developed a reputation for not towing the line with party leadership, and has even been called a ?wacko bird? by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).

Though Cruz says he?s not sure exactly what a ?wacko bird? is, he?s not rejecting the name outright.

?If standing for liberty, if standing for free market principle and the Constitution makes you a wacko bird, then, then I am a very proud wacko bird,? Cruz says.

Underscoring his hard-line approach, Cruz says he won?t compromise on his stance against a path to citizenship despite calls from many Republicans that passing an immigration reform package is necessary for the party?s success in the 2014 and 2016 elections

?Leadership in both parties is what has gotten us in this mess, and I think we ought to be doing our job and standing for principle regardless of the politics,? he says.

When asked if he has ruled out the possibility of leading a filibuster against the immigration bill this week, Cruz did not directly answer the question, except to say that ?there are going to be lots of efforts to change, to amend, and to improve this bill.?

For more of the interview with Sen. Cruz, and to hear what he says was the most surprising thing when he came to the Senate, check out this episode of The Fine Print.

ABC's Eric Wray, Sunlen Miller, Freda Kahen Kashi, Betsy Klein, Melissa Young, and David Girard contributed to this episode.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/power-players-abc-news/ted-cruz-obama-biggest-obstacle-immigration-reform-calls-112202690.html

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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Wyden cites contradiction in eavesdropping answer

WASHINGTON (AP) ? One of the staunchest critics of government surveillance programs said Tuesday that the national intelligence director did not give him a straight answer last March when he asked whether the National Security Agency collects any data on millions of Americans.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., called for hearings to discuss two recently revealed NSA programs that collect billions of telephone numbers and Internet usage daily. He was also among a group of senators who introduced legislation Tuesday to force the government to declassify opinions of a secret court that authorizes the surveillance.

"The American people have the right to expect straight answers from the intelligence leadership to the questions asked by their representatives," Wyden said in a statement.

He was referring to an exchange with Director of National Intelligence James Clapper during a Senate Intelligence hearing in March about threats the U.S. faces from around the world.

Wyden said he wanted to know the scope of the top secret surveillance programs, and privately asked NSA Director Keith Alexander for clarity. When he did not get a satisfactory answer, Wyden said he alerted Clapper's office a day early that he would ask the same question at the public hearing.

"Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?" Wyden asked Clapper at the March 12 hearing.

"No, sir," Clapper answered.

"It does not?" Wyden pressed.

Clapper quickly and haltingly softened his answer. "Not wittingly," he said. "There are cases where they could, inadvertently perhaps, collect ? but not wittingly."

Wyden said he also gave Clapper a chance to amend his answer.

A spokesman for Clapper did not have an immediate response on Tuesday, but the intelligence director said in an interview with NBC News last weekend that he did think that Wyden's question during the March hearing was "not answerable necessarily, by a simple yes or no." Officials generally do not discuss classified information in public hearings, reserving discussion on top-secret programs for closed sessions where they will not be revealed to adversaries.

"So I responded in what I thought was the most truthful or least most untruthful manner, by saying, 'No,'" Clapper said in the NBC interview when asked about his response to Wyden.

The programs that do sweep up such information were revealed last week by The Guardian and The Washington Post newspapers, and Clapper has since taken the unusual step of declassifying some of the previously top-secret details to help the administration mount a public defense of the surveillance as a necessary step to protect Americans.

One of the NSA programs gathers hundreds of millions of U.S. phone records to search for possible links to known terrorist targets abroad. The other allows the government to tap into nine U.S. Internet companies and gather all communications to detect suspicious behavior that begins overseas.

A senior U.S. intelligence official on Monday said there were no plans to scrap the programs. Despite backlash from overseas allies and American privacy advocates, the programs continue to receive widespread, if cautious, support within Congress as an indispensable tool for protecting Americans from terrorists. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive security issue.

Wyden said lawmakers must have clear and direct answers to questions in order to conduct oversight. "This job cannot be done responsibly if senators aren't getting straight answers to direct questions," he said in the statement.

The Justice Department is weighing whether to charge the American man who claims to have given documents about the classified programs to journalists. The whereabouts of Edward Snowden, 29, were not immediately known. He was last in Hong Kong, where he hopes to avoid being extradited to the United States for prosecution.

The NSA contractor for whom he worked, Booz Allen Hamilton, announced Tuesday that they had fired Snowden after less than three months on the job.

Meanwhile, the European Parliament planned to debate the spy programs Tuesday and whether they have violated local privacy protections. EU officials in Brussels pledged to seek answers from U.S. diplomats at a trans-Atlantic ministerial meeting in Dublin later this week.

The global scrutiny comes as other lawmakers including Senate intelligence chairwoman Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California accuse Snowden of committing an "act of treason" that should be prosecuted.

Officials in Germany and the European Union issued calm but firm complaints Monday over two National Security Agency programs that target suspicious foreign messages ? potentially including phone numbers, email, images, video and other online communications transmitted through U.S. providers. The chief British diplomat felt it necessary to try to assure Parliament that the spy programs do not encroach on U.K. privacy laws.

And in Washington, members of Congress said they would take a new look at potential ways to keep the U.S. safe from terror attacks without giving up privacy protections that critics charge are at risk with the government's current authority to broadly sweep up personal communications.

"There's very little trust in the government, and that's for good reason," said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who sits on the House Intelligence Committee. "We're our own worst enemy."

House Speaker John Boehner, however, said he believes President Barack Obama has fully explained why the program is needed. He told ABC's "Good Morning America" Tuesday that "the disclosure of this information puts Americans at risk. It shows our adversaries what our capabilities are and it's a giant violation of the law." He called Snowden a "traitor."

Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, who sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said he was considering how Congress could limit the amount of data spy agencies seize from telephone and Internet companies ? including restricting the information to be released only on an as-needed basis.

"It's a little unsettling to have this massive data in the government's possession," King said.

Snowden is a former CIA employee who later joined Booz Allen, where the papers said he gained access to the surveillance. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine said, it was "absolutely shocking" that a 29-year-old with limited experience would have access to this material.

FBI agents on Monday visited the home of Snowden's father, Lonnie Snowden, in Upper Macungie Township, Pa. The FBI in Philadelphia declined to comment.

The first explosive document Snowden revealed was a top secret court order issued by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that granted a three-month renewal for a massive collection of American phone records. That order was signed April 25. The Guardian's first story on the court order was published June 5.

Snowden also gave the Post and the Guardian a PowerPoint presentation on another secret program that collects online usage by the nine Internet providers. The U.S. government says it uses that information only to track foreigners' use overseas.

It was unclear when or if Snowden would be extradited.

"All of the options, as he put it, are bad options," Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald, who first reported the phone-tracking program and interviewed Snowden extensively, told The Associated Press on Monday. He said Snowden decided to release details of the programs out of shock and anger over the sheer scope of the government's privacy invasions.

"It was his choice to publicly unveil himself," Greenwald told the AP in Hong Kong. "He recognized that even if he hadn't publicly unveiled himself, it was only a matter of time before the U.S. government discovered that it was he who had been responsible for these disclosures, and he made peace with that. ... He's very steadfast and resolute about the fact that he did the right thing."

Greenwald said he had more documents from Snowden and expected "more significant revelations" about NSA.

Although Hong Kong has an extradition treaty with the U.S., the document has some exceptions, including for crimes deemed political. Any negotiations about his possible handover will involve Beijing, but some analysts believe China is unlikely to want to jeopardize its relationship with Washington over someone it would consider of little political interest.

Snowden also told The Guardian that he may seek asylum in Iceland, which has strong free-speech protections and a tradition of providing a haven for the outspoken and the outcast.

The Justice Department is investigating whether his disclosures were a criminal offense ? a matter that's not always clear-cut under U.S. federal law.

A second senior intelligence official said Snowden would have had to have signed a non-disclosure agreement to gain access to the top secret data. That suggests he could be prosecuted for violating that agreement. Penalties could range from a few years to life in prison. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the process of accessing classified materials more frankly.

The leak came to light as Army Pfc. Bradley Manning was being tried in military court under federal espionage and computer fraud laws for releasing classified documents to WikiLeaks about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, among other items. The most serious charge against him was aiding the enemy, which carries a potential life sentence. But the military operates under a different legal system.

If Snowden is forced to return to the United States to face charges, whistle-blower advocates said Monday that they would raise money for his legal defense.

Clapper has ordered an internal review to assess how much damage the disclosures created. Intelligence experts say terrorist suspects and others seeking to attack the U.S. all but certainly will find alternate ways to communicate instead of relying on systems that now are widely known to be under surveillance.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said Obama was open for a discussion about the spy programs, both with allies and in Congress. His administration has aggressively defended the two programs and credited them with helping stop at least two terrorist attacks, including one in New York City.

Privacy rights advocates say Obama has gone too far. The American Civil Liberties Union and Yale Law School filed legal action Monday to force a secret U.S. court to make public its opinions justifying the scope of some of the surveillance, calling the programs "shockingly broad." And conservative lawyer Larry Klayman filed a separate lawsuit against the Obama administration, claiming he and others have been harmed by the government's collection of as many as 3 billion phone numbers each day.

Army records indicate Snowden enlisted in the Army around May 2004 and was discharged that September.

"He attempted to qualify to become a Special Forces soldier but did not complete the requisite training and was administratively discharged from the Army," Col. David H. Patterson Jr., an Army spokesman at the Pentagon, said in a statement late Monday.

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Associated Press writers Donna Cassata, Frederic Frommer and Matt Apuzzo in Washington, Robert H. Reid in Berlin and Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

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Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at https://twitter.com/larajakesAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wyden-cites-contradiction-eavesdropping-answer-141730377.html

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