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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/28oXbj1y7No/
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By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News
A Maine judge is expected to decide whether to allow 577 "extremely sexual" Skype screenshots in the case of Zumba prostitution defendant Mark Strong on Tuesday.
The defense attorney for Strong, 57, warned of the graphic nature of the images and said Monday they would "drown" his client, according to the Bangor Daily News.
"I think some of this stuff is going to horrify some of these people to the point where he won't possibly get a fair trial," defense attorney Daniel Lilley said.
But prosecutors allege that the images are crucial evidence showing that Strong was involved in running a prostitution ring out of Alexis Wright's Pura Vida Zumba studio in Kennebunk. Wright is due to stand trial separately.
"The state has to prove that Mark Strong was actively involved in the prostitution [business]," Deputy District Attorney Justina McGettigan told Superior Court Justice Nancy Mills on Monday. "Part of that active involvement was that he was monitoring the prostitution from his Thomaston location through Skype."
Also to be discussed on Tuesday was a motion filed by the defense to dismiss the remaining charges against Strong. Defense attorney Lilley has accused the prosecution of missing deadlines to turn over documents related to the case.
Strong is on trial for 13 charges related to promotion of prostitution. Forty-six charges related to alleged violations of privacy were dismissed by the judge in a decision affirmed by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court on Feb. 15. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
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As a comprehensive travel searching and booking service, Orbitz has traditionally been my first stop online anytime I need to investigate the cost of a car rental, explore the best possible dates to take a summer holiday, or find a last-minute flight during a family emergency. On the iPad, however, Orbitz is only just now catching up to its competitors, finally extending its Orbitz Flights, Hotels, Cars iPhone app to the full sized tablet. (Previously, Orbitz's only dedicated iPad app offered search and booking for hotel rooms only.) Officially called Orbitz Flights, Hotels, Cars (free), the app centralizes your ability to search for and pay upfront for reservations in all three categories invoked in the name. The app works quickly and fairly well, but not with quite as much finesse and fun as Kayak PRO iPad app (99 cents, 4.5 stars), our Editors' Choice among travel search and booking apps on the iPad, and the competitor that Orbitz should watch most closely.
Orbitz's app is more than fine?and similar to Kayak's in many ways?but a few interface choices and lack of features make it pale slightly in comparison. For example, the Orbitz iPad app doesn't let you explore places to travel based on the best price you can find all year long, as Kayak's iPad app does. Nor can you find the status of a flight that you need to track as easily as you can on Kayak's app. The one major advantage to using Orbitz is the company's price assurance, which isn't specific to the iPad at all.
Searching and Booking Flights, Hotels, Cars
Orbitz's iPad app pits the trinity of travel search across the top of the screen with three main icons for hotels, flights, and car rentals. While on the full Orbitz website you can search for all three reservations in one fell swoop, they're kept separate in the iPad app. Kayak similarly keeps the searches separate, although it displays the options along the left rail, which results in a slightly cleaner and simpler design, in my opinion.
You can jump among the three sections easily enough, and, when you do, Orbitz remembers your most previous dates and cities, and it auto-fills them into the search criteria.
The flight search appears to support one-way, round-trip, and multi-city journeys, although that last one is a farce. Click the multi-city option, and Orbitz will tell you to go to its full website instead. Kayak's iPad app, meanwhile, fully supports multi-city journeys. Two other options from the primary flight search area let you select the number of travelers (and say whether they are adults, children, infants, etc.) and choose between economy, business, and first class fares.
The search results appear quickly, with a left panel showing a running list of flight option summaries, with filters and sorting tools accessible at the top. The main area of the screen, however, doesn't fill in until you select one of the possibilities. That blank area doesn't exactly draw you into the possibilities. When you do tap a summary to see more details, the use of space again feels very unbalanced, and the resulting information, when affiliated with a round-trip search, doesn't even show all the information?it only gives you the outbound details. The reason: Orbitz lets you choose your outbound and inbound legs separately, which on the one hand gives you more flexibility in deciding exactly the flights you want, but on the other hand can drastically change the price you initially saw in the summary based on which return flight you choose.
Once you have your flights picked, you're only one tap away from a payment page, which gets the app back on track to being a convenient and efficient tool for travelers.
Two more sections, a flight tracker and "my trips" section, which shows upcoming travel when you're logged in with an Orbitz account, give the app even more utility, although the flight tracker needs to be more search-friendly. You can only search by airline and flight number, whereas often, people only know the time of the flight and departure/arrival cities. Kayak's app has the additional search options, as well as the ability to save flight-tracking for multiple flights, which is especially helpful for frequent travelers or small business owners who need to watch the status of multiple employees' flights.
The hotel section and results page work much in the same manner as the flights, with appropriate filters to help you narrow down your options. One filter called "areas" puts a much more user-friendly spin on the "distance" filter found in Kayak. Orbitz lets you choose by neighborhood name or district, which makes sense if you're perhaps looking for a hotel in Oakland, California, but need to be near the UC Berkeley campus (just choose "Berkeley, Emeryville").
Hotel photos, ratings, and amenities are all easy to find in Orbitz's app. An interactive map likewise makes it simple to see where a hotel is situated. Neither Orbitz nor Kayak includes in its hotel search results alternative accommodations, such as private house rentals or apartment for let on a daily or weekly basis. For those options, try Hipmunk iPad app (free, 3.5 stars), which also has some really interesting filter options for hotels, like proximity to nightlife and being in a pedestrian-friendly area.
Searching for car rentals in Orbitz's iPad is straightforward, too, and one helpful feature is how it displays comparisons from one select provider. Select any search results, and a preview window shows additional cars from the company, such as mid-sized sedan or SUV, and how much extra it will cost to get that option. In this context, seeing not the total price but how much more makes sense.
Oddities and Lack of Extras
One area where Orbitz could really improve its iPad app would be to add some additional exploratory features, something that gives armchair travelers a reason to launch it. Currently, the app is very utilitarian, whereas Kayak includes an entire section dedicated solely to exploring cheap flights anywhere around the world from any starting destination. Given that Orbitz's full website includes loads of other travel ideas and deals, like vacation packages and cruises, Orbitz could and should leverage that content in the app to make it more fun. It would play well to the platform's surfing and entertainment uses, to be sure.
Orbitz is clearly still new to the tablet app space and needs to clean up the experience a little bit. Some of its most basic functionality and layout choices just seem off. For example, what appears to be a "profile" button (the silhouette of a head and shoulders) turns out to be a logout button.
Choose Orbitz for its Additional Services, Not for its App Design
Orbitz's strength remains its ability to help you not only search for, but also pay for, flights, hotel stays, and rental cars. And its price assurance policy is the second leg that keeps Orbitz upright. While Kayak has been adding the ability to pay for bookings as of late, it traditionally was just a search site, and thus doesn't have a reputation for providing a soup-to-nuts experience, which Orbitz does. Customer reputation goes a long way in the travel industry.
If you're an Orbitz customer and time permits, work through your search criteria on Kayak before buying on Orbitz. Chances are the reservation will be offered from Orbitz via Kayak, which means you have nothing to lose and everything to gain by starting on Kayak, our Editors' Choice for iPad travel search and booking apps.
More iPad App Reviews:
??? Orbitz Flights, Hotels, Cars (for iPad)
??? Kayak PRO (for iPad)
??? TurboTax for iPad
??? H&R Block for iPad
??? TaxACT Deluxe Tablet App (for iPad)
?? more
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/bgBwQmwAUdM/0,2817,2415865,00.asp
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GAINESVILLE -- This time, there were no surprises.
No. 5 Florida (21-4, 11-2 Southeastern Conference) avenged one of only two conference losses, upending Arkansas 71-54 at the O?Connell Center in front of a sellout crowd of 12,609. The win gives the Gators a two-game lead in the SEC with four games remaining in the regular season.
On Feb. 5, Arkansas ended Florida?s 10-game winning streak and handed the team its first conference loss with a hot shooting night that led to an 80-69 upset victory. Gators guard Mike Rosario chalked it up as a lucky break for the Hogs.
?We let luck play into that game and those guys knocked down 3-pointers,? he said. ?They got guys shooting 16 percent from three and they come out and hit three in a row. I just felt like luck played into their hands with that.?
The Razorbacks had no such luck Saturday night in Gainesville.
The Gators were 12-0 at home entering the game while the Razorbacks were just 1-6 on the road. Playing smart basketball, Florida frustrated Arkansas early and often, forcing 14 turnovers and putting one of the Hogs? best players on the bench because of foul trouble.
Arkansas played much of the game without its second-leading scorer and reigning SEC Player of the Week Marshawn Powell ? one of the biggest reasons why it wasn?t able to replicate its surprise victory from nearly a month ago.
?Any time you got a good player that gets in foul trouble, it always alters what you?re doing,? Florida coach Billy Donovan said. ?I thought that was really important.?
Powell scored seven of his team?s first 13 points as Arkansas kept it tight in the opening minutes. But Powell picked up his second personal foul when Florida forward Casey Prather drew a charge with 10:25 remaining in the first half.
?That was big because he?s been playing well of late ? he?s an offense machine,? Rosario said. ?We did a great job of being aggressive with him from the beginning of the game to the end.?
UF capitalized, going on a 9-0 run to extend its lead to 10.
Although the Hogs were able to claw back into it to trail by just four at the half, that momentum quickly evaporated when the second half began and Powell quickly picked up fouls three and four in the first three minutes after the break.
The Gators opened the second half on an 11-1 run and extended their lead to 20 at 57-37 at the 10:31 mark. Behind 14 points and seven rebounds from center Patric Young, Florida simply pulled away.
?My daughter could have thrown the ball to him inside tonight,? Donovan said. ?He was open, he made himself available and he wanted it.?
When it was over, the Gators held a 42-18 advantage in points in the paint ? a number Donovan said actually could have been higher if not for several missed layups. However, Florida?s coach was pleased with the emphasis on getting the ball inside after his team attempted 33 shots from three in a 63-60 loss to Missouri on Tuesday.
?You learn from the Missouri game ? that was a great thing,? Donovan said. ?We should have had a lot more points in and around the basket than we did, but at least we had a mentality that we?re trying to attack a little bit more.?
Rosario led Florida with 15 points, while guard Kenny Boynton and forward Erik Murphy both chipped in 12.
??Freshman guard Michael Frazier (concussion) will be out for at least Tuesday?s game against Tennessee and possibly longer after getting hit in the head with the knee of teammate Scottie Wilbekin while both were attempting to secure a loose ball in the second half.
Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/02/23/3250753/florida-gators-defense-stifles.html
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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50909369/
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Feb. 22, 2013 ? A study published Feb. 21 in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) provides clinical evidence of the safety and effectiveness of a new magnetic medical device to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). Santiago Horgan, MD, professor of surgery at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and study co-author, was the first surgeon in the United States to implant the FDA-approved device.
"What we found is that the LINX magnetic device can solve GERD's underlying problem, a weak spincter," said Horgan, chief of minimally invasive surgery, UC San Diego Health System. "The device corrects an anatomical defect that allows acids to move up the throat. For my patients this has been an effective way to permanently treat this painful condition, improve their quality of life, and end the need for over-the-counter medications."
The LINX system is composed of a series of titanium beads, each with a magnetic core, that are connected to form a ring shape. It is implanted at the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), a circular band of muscle that closes the last few centimeters of the esophagus and prevents the backward flow of stomach contents.
As reported in the study, after sphincter augmentation with the LINX System, the majority of patients were able to substantially reduce or resolve their reflux symptoms, while eliminating use of their reflux medications such as proton pump inhibitors. Severe regurgitation was eliminated in 100 percent of patients, and nearly all patients (93 percent) reported a significant decrease in the need for medication. More than 9 in 10 patients (94 percent) reported satisfaction with their overall condition after having the LINX System, compared to 13 percent before treatment while taking medication.
Horgan said the device is an alternative to Nissen fundoplication which involves irreversibly wrapping the stomach around the esophagus. The LINX System allows surgeons to leave the stomach intact and support the weak sphincter with a small device that can be removed.
More than 20 percent of the U.S. population experiences the painful burning symptoms of GERD. For these 20 million Americans, the first line of defense is medication. GERD can cause both pain and injury to the esophageal lining and may lead to a precancerous condition called Barrett's esophagus. Symptoms of GERD include heartburn and regurgitation, often associated with the inability to sleep and dietary constraints.
The LINX system was studied in a controlled, prospective, multicenter trial involving 14 U.S. and European medical centers as part of the FDA approval process. The patients in the study reported suffering from reflux symptoms for a median of 10 years and taking reflux medications for a median of five years.
The LINX? Reflux Management System is manufactured by Torax Medical which funded the study.
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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Z-70c8g6y4E/130222143138.htm
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Rosa Golijan , NBC News ? ? ? 5 hrs.
The rumors you might've heard are true: Samsung's got a new 8-inch tablet, appropriately named the Galaxy Note 8.0, on the way.
The new tablet will sit between the 5.5-inch Galaxy Note 2 smartphone and the 10.1-inch Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet. It competes with Apple's 7.9-inch iPad Mini and Google's 7-inch Nexus 7.
Like the other devices in Samsung's Galaxy Note line, the Galaxy Note 8.0 will include the S Pen, which Samsung emphasizes is not merely a stylus. You can use the pressure-sensitive digital pen ? which is powered by technology created by Wacom, the company behind professional-grade digital drawing tablets ? to add notes, manipulate content on the screen, and even preview videos and emails by simply hovering it close to the Galaxy Note 8.0's screen.
The Galaxy Note 8.0 will run Android 4.1.2 (better known as Jellybean). Under the hood, it has a 1.6GHz quad-core processor, a 5 megapixel camera in the back, a 1.3 megapixel camera in the front, 2GB of RAM, and a microSD slot. The tablet's 8-inch display offers 1280x800 pixels, which breaks down to 189 pixels per inch (ppi). (In comparison, the iPad Mini and Nexus 7 have 163 ppi and 216 ppi displays, respectively.)
Those who were intrigued by the Galaxy Note 10.1's multi-app split-screen feature will likely jump for joy when they hear that it is included on the Galaxy Note 8.0 and that it now supports nearly any app ? not just Samsung's included suite of tools. (This means that you can take notes while watching a video, type out emails while editing a spreadsheet on the side, scribble over a photo while checking out instructions in a document, and so on.)
The Galaxy Note 8.0 will come in 16GB and 32GB versions. No word yet on pricing details, but since we should see the tablet hit shelves in the second quarter of this year, it won't be too long before we find out how much Samsung wants for its latest gadget.
Want more tech news or interesting links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on Twitter, subscribing to her Facebook posts, or circling her on Google+.
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You'll have the opportunity to start and rule your own house, give your loyalty to one of the Great Houses from the series, stockpile resources, and jockey for position. There's room for cooperative and decidedly uncooperative maneuvers with other players. There's no word yet on whether or not House Targaryen players get a bonus for recruiting siblings.
Skip below the cut to check out the game's trailer.
[Source: Disruptor Beam press release]
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Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (NYSE: COG) today reported year-end 2012 proved reserves of 3.8 trillion cubic feet equivalent (Tcfe), an increase of 27 percent over year-end 2011. This is 100 percent organically generated growth and represents the third consecutive year of reserve growth exceeding 20 percent, after adjusting for the sale of its Rocky Mountain properties in 2011. Total reserve replacement from all sources was 417 percent at a finding cost of $0.87 per thousand cubic feet equivalent (Mcfe). "In spite of a 33 percent decrease in the benchmark natural gas price used in calculating proved reserves in 2012, we grew year-end proved reserves significantly without an increase to our PUD percentage," said Dan O. Dinges, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. "Our all sources finding cost of $0.87 per Mcfe is our lowest in 15 years and further highlights the capital efficiency of our portfolio."?
Cabot's reserve growth was primarily driven by its drilling programs in the Marcellus Shale, Eagle Ford Shale and Marmaton oil play, which resulted in 926.8 billion cubic feet equivalent (Bcfe) of additions for the year. The Company
See full press release
Posted in: News, Guidance, Contracts, Asset Sales, Management, M&A
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The running of four public golf courses in Winnipeg has become to expensive? so the city is exploring other options..
Colin Craig of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation told CJOB??? privatization is a? viable? option..
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But, ?the head of the city's largest union? Mike Davidson says reported losses of 850-thousand dollars a year are bogus..?? And, He ?claims the? City has raided a fund to help cover the cost of operations
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Davidson?? told CJOB's nighthawk?? the union has suggested?? adding? miniature golf coures or revisiting leasing agreements with semi-private courses?? and both those ideas and others have been rejected..
Source: http://www.cjob.com/News/Local/Story.aspx?ID=1894292
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AMMAN, Jordan (AP) ? A Syrian opposition leader's call for dialogue is a test for the intentions of President Bashar Assad, the international envoy to Syria said Sunday as fighting raged between rebels and government forces in at least three Syrian provinces.
Lakhdar Brahimi, the joint U.N.-Arab League envoy to Syria, said the proposal by Mouaz al-Khatib, the president of the opposition coalition, "has opened the door and challenges the Syrian government to fulfill its often-repeated assertion that it is ready for dialogue and a peaceful settlement."
"This initiative is on the table and will be on the table," Brahimi told reporters in Cairo following talks with Arab league chief Nabil Elaraby.
"We believe that if a dialogue begins in one of the U.N. headquarters, at least initially, between the opposition and an acceptable delegation from the Syrian government, it will be a start for getting out of the dark tunnel in which Syria is placed," Brahimi added.
But in a statement Friday, the opposition's main umbrella group, the Syrian National Coalition, said it would not allow President Bashar Assad or members of his security services to participate in talks to end the crisis.
It did not rule out, however, dialogue with some members of his ruling Baath party, saying it welcomed talks with "honorable people" from all parts of society who "have not been embroiled in the crimes against the Syrian people."
Still, neither side has proposed a concrete plan for the talks.
Technically, al-Khatib's offer no longer stands. Although he did not rescind it officially, he warned he would revoke it by last Sunday, if the regime didn't release tens of prisoners ? which it didn't.
Meanwhile, Syrian Parliament Speaker Jihad Laham told fellow lawmakers in a session Sunday that dialogue is the path that must be pursued under a political agenda Assad proposed recently to end the 23-month-old crisis that wrecked his nation.
"All Syrians must work within the framework of this program to resolve the crisis in the country," he said, pleading to "all Syrians, from all sects and orientation, to confront terrorism facing us."
Addressing the same session, Syrian Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi admitted that sanctions and rebel attacks "are beyond the capacity and the ability of any country to bear."
He said the economic blockade imposed by the European Union, the United States and some Arabs has had a "negative impact" on the health sector, although he did not elaborate.
Rebel attacks, he added, damaged 2,500 high schools and caused serious power outages, reducing electricity distribution by up to 60 percent nationwide.
He also blamed a shrinking oil supply ? which he said now meets around 40 percent of the country's needs ? on rebel attacks on oil refineries.
Earlier Sunday, Syrian Electricity Minister Imad Khamis told the state news agency, SANA, that electricity has been restored in most parts of the Syrian capital and that power will gradually reach the south as technical teams were trying to restore power completely. He blamed the blackout on an unspecified fault in high-voltage lines.
The power outage plunged Damascus into darkness late Saturday and affected much of southern Syria, mainly the provinces of Daraa and Sweida along the Jordanian border.
The Syrian capital's 2.5 million residents have grown used to frequent power cuts as the country's nearly 2-year-old conflict has damaged infrastructure and sapped government revenue. A fuel shortage makes it hard for residents to run backup generators.
A similar blackout struck the same areas on Jan. 20. The government blamed that outage on a rebel attack, and power was restored to most areas the following day.
Also on Sunday, a Britain-based rights group reported that at least six rebel field fighters were killed in clashes with Assad's army in the suburbs of the capital, the northern province of Hama and the southern restive town of Daraa.
In Hama's suburbs, rebels with the Free Syrian Army took over a police checkpoint and destroyed an army tank, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The U.N. says nearly 70,000 people have been killed in Syria's conflict since the revolt began in March 2011.
In a related development, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay pressed for international action to help stem the bloodshed, but acknowledged that achieving that won't be easy. She alleged that Assad's regime had committed crimes against humanity and should be referred to the International Criminal Court.
___
Hendawi reported from Cairo. Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria, Ben Hubbard in Beirut, Lebanon, and Geir Moulson in Berlin, Germany, contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-envoy-backs-syrian-oppositions-call-talks-123918602.html
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The ways of Washington D.C. - and the Congress - can sometimes be sort of odd, and that was on display Thursday in the U.S. Senate, as Republicans blocked the nomination of former GOP Senator Chuck Hagel for Secretary of Defense, but also telegraphed that Hagel was likely to be confirmed for that post later this month.
The vote itself made history, as it was the first time the Senate had ever refused to break a filibuster on a Cabinet nominee; supporters were one vote short of invoking cloture and shutting off debate.
Four Republican Senators broke ranks to vote with all Democrats: Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Sen. Mike Johanns of Nebraska.
Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah voted "Present," which is basically the equivalent of voting for the filibuster, since 60 votes are needed.
The outcome brought forward the expected political reaction from Democrats.
"Today, Senate Republicans put political posturing ahead of our nation?s security," said White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
"Republicans continued their embarrassing display of disregard for our national security by blocking Senator Hagel?s nomination," added Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who labeled the GOP filibuster of Hagel "unprecedented."
As noted above, Reid was correct - this was the first time since the Senate changed its rules to allow for cloture votes on nominations in 1949 that a Cabinet nominee had been successfully blocked; cloture votes on Cabinet choices had only happened two other times, in 1987 and 2006.
But even as the votes were being cast, it looked like Hagel would still be approved as Defense Secretary later this month, as Reid quickly set a re-vote on the cloture motion for February 26, and some GOP Senators publicly indicated they would support ending debate at that point.
"When the Senate returns on Feb. 26, there should have been sufficient time to consider Sen. Hagel?s record, so I will vote to end debate because I believe a president?s cabinet members deserve an up-or-down vote," said Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN).
Alexander took to the Senate floor after the cloture vote was over and told the story of how his own nomination for Secretary of Education - while it wasn't filibustered - was put on hold for several months by Democrats during the first Bush Administration.
Alexander said the advice he was given by GOP Senators at the time was that he just had to wait. He did wait for almost three months, and then his nomination was finally approved by the Senate.
In this case, the "wait" is going to be another week and a half. And then it looks like Hagel will be confirmed.
Republicans say they need that time to get extra information about the former Senator and copies of other speeches that Hagel made in recent years.
But also at work was something unsaid - that Hagel left the Senate without many friends in the Republican Party, and his support for President Obama and opposition to policies of President George W. Bush left him with very little goodwill among his former colleagues.
Hagel was always sort of a maverick during his two terms in the Senate, and frankly, while most Republicans call him a "friend," they're just being nice. ?It again raises the question as to why the White House didn't go with other top ranking civilian military officials, who would have been quickly approved by the Senate, like Michelle Flournoy, who would have been the first woman to run the Defense Department.
So, now we wait for the Senate to return from its vacation.
Will anything really change before February 26? Probably not.
And it was one more head shaking reminder of why the Senate can be a frustrating place, especially for the White House.
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ABU DHABI (Reuters) - Police firing tear gas clashed with hundreds of stone-throwing youths in Bahrain on Saturday in heightened unrest that could complicate new efforts to end political deadlock in the strategically placed Gulf Arab kingdom.
The violence has clouded the atmosphere around talks begun on February 10 between the mostly Shi'ite Muslim opposition and the Sunni Muslim-dominated government to find a way out of the impasse over Shi'ite demands for more democracy.
Witnesses said the confrontation, in which some of the hundreds of opposition demonstrators also threw petrol bombs at police, followed the funeral of a teenager the opposition said was killed in clashes between police and activists on Thursday.
The disturbance in the village of Sanabis west of the capital Manama was the latest in a series of skirmishes between Shi'ite youths and police since Thursday, when opposition activists commemorated the second anniversary of a pro-democracy revolt in the U.S.-allied state.
The kingdom, base for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, has been in political turmoil since the protests erupted in 2011, led by majority Shi'ites demanding an end to the monarchy's political domination and full powers for parliament.
Thirty-five people died during the unrest and two months of martial law that followed, the government said, although the opposition puts that number at more than 80. The government has accused opposition groups of being linked to Shi'ite power Iran.
BIRDSHOT
Bahrain remains volatile, and its Shi'ite villages are the scene of almost daily clashes between youths and police.
The next round of talks is meant to happen on Wednesday, February 20, Isa Abdul Rahman, the spokesman for the process, known as the National Dialogue, told Reuters.
The next gathering had been due to take place on Sunday but at a February 13 session of the talks all participants decided to postpone the meeting to February 20, he said.
Earlier on Saturday police found a bomb planted on a busy causeway linking the Gulf island to Saudi Arabia, and four officers were shot and wounded in a village, officials said.
The 2-kg bomb, discovered on Thursday near a mosque on the Bahraini end of the route used by thousands of people a day, was safely defused, according to the Information Authority.
Late on Friday, four officers were hit by birdshot pellets in the Shi'ite village of Karzakan, the authority added, quoting public security chief Major-General Tariq Hassan al-Hassan.
Bahrain denies accusations of discrimination against Shi'ite citizens and accuses Iran of stirring up trouble in the kingdom, something the Islamic Republic denies.
The Interior Ministry said on Thursday a security official had been killed in a "terrorist attack" using what it said was an inflammable projectile, according to a statement on its Twitter account.
(This Clarifies next talks on Feb. 20, not 17; teenager killed on Thursday, not Friday)
(Reporting by Raissa Kasolowsky and William Maclean; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Alison Williams)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bahrain-police-youths-clash-funeral-003925964.html
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - The boards of AMR Corp and US Airways Group Inc
The all-stock merger, which is set to be announced early on Thursday, would finalize the consolidation of legacy U.S. air carriers that helped put the industry on a more solid financial footing.
AMR's bankruptcy creditors will own 72 percent of the combined airline, which will do business under the American Airlines brand and be based in Fort Worth, Texas, the people said. US Airways shareholders will own the rest.
The board approval came after AMR's unsecured creditors committee, which includes all three of AMR's major unions, met earlier on Wednesday to approve a proposed merger agreement, the people said.
The merged company will have a board of 12 members: four from US Airways including its chief executive Doug Parker, three from AMR including chief executive Tom Horton and five to be designated by the AMR creditors, two of the people said.
That will shrink to 11 members in 2014 after Horton steps down following the combined company's first annual meeting, the person added. Parker becomes chief executive of the new airline.
AMR's unsecured creditors are expected to be made whole on their claims in the form of stock in the merged company and also get accrued interest, the people said. AMR's shareholders will get a small equity stake as well, they added.
All the sources asked not to be named because the matter was not public. US Airways declined to comment while AMR representatives could not be immediately reached for comment.
The deal comes more than 14 months after the bankrupt parent of American Airlines filed for bankruptcy in November 2011, and would mark the last combination of legacy U.S. carriers, following the Delta-Northwest and United-Continental mergers.
A tie-up with US Airways would create the world's top airline by passenger traffic and help American and US Air better compete with United Continental Holdings
Some $11 billion valuation of the combined American-US Airways compares to the roughly $12.4 billion market capitalization for Delta, and $8.7 billion for United Continental.
(Additional reporting by Karen Jacobs, Writing by Ben Berkowitz; Editing by Bernard Orr and Andrew Hay)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/american-us-air-merger-gets-board-approval-sources-003055203--finance.html
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The spectacular steam and water fountains erupting from geysers makes tourists go "ooh" and "aah," but they present a plumbing problem for scientists: What goes on underground beneath a geyser?
Are there long, narrow conduits like drinking straws running up to the surface, or do big chambers trap bubbles and water before they explode into the air?
A couple of fearless geologists decided the best way to solve the mystery was to look inside a geyser with a sturdy video camera. With only raingear for protection, Alexander Belousov and Marina Belousova, researchers at Russia's Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, lowered a camera into six geysers in the famed Valley of the Geysers on Russia's volcanic Kamchatka Peninsula.
The videos, combined with studies of rocks surrounding extinct geysers, revealed that the Kamchatka geysers aren't fed by long, narrow tubes, as once thought. Instead, bubble traps form between jumbled boulders deposited by landslides.The results provide a new model for understanding how geysers work, the researchers said. The study was published online Jan. 25 in the journal Geology.
Geyser valleys explained
"Our work has demonstrated how many geysers can be formed in one small area, and why you have a few places where there are many geysers with very different discharge rates with different periods," Belousov told OurAmazingPlanet.
Like all geyser fields, the Valley of the Geysers is near active volcanoes, the source of its hydrothermal heat. The mountainous terrain also triggers frequent landslides. Part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the Valley of the Geysers is second only to Yellowstone in its concentration of geysers.
Belousov and his colleagues built a custom camera that can withstand the boiling water and violent steam explosions within a geyser. On three trips to the Valley of the Geysers, Belousov gently lowered the camera into a geyser with a steel cable or a flexible pole, then filmed an eruption. The videos show boulders and burbling bubbles while the geyser rests, then bursts of steam during fountaining eruptions. [Video: Inside a Gurgling Geyser]
Soon after the researchers started their study in 2005, a landslide buried part of the Valley of the Geysers. As a result of changes caused by the landslide, extinct geysers were exposed, revealing more clues to the plumbing below.
"Looking at the outcrops and having the information from the video inside the geysers, I suddenly realized why the geysers are contorted," Belousov said.
The contorted conduits are built from boulders deposited by ancient landslides, Belousov said. The landslides have covered the region's hydrothermal vents with jumbled rocks of different sizes, and spaces within the rocks form bubble traps.
Boulders and bubbles
Geysers are rare features ? only about 1,000 exist around the world. To form a geyser, there must be a volcanic heat source to warm water, plentiful groundwater, open spaces in the overlying rock for the water to escape, and a way to trap bubbles.
Boiling water rising from deep in a hydrothermal system will always contain some bubbles of steam. When the rising water meets a bubble trap, the steam bubbles start to gather in place, displacing water. Eventually, enough steam collects that it can push water ahead of it, up through the remaining channels to the surface, causing a violent steam explosion that bursts into the sky as a fountain.
The interplay between how quickly bubbles accumulate in a trap and the geometry of a geyser conduit affects the time between eruptions, Belousov said. Geysers that trap bubbles slowly go longer between eruptions, and vice versa.
Belousov suggests that the same model could also apply at Yellowstone. Geologists have long thought that long, narrow conduits in rhyolite lava feed the valley's famous geysers, including Old Faithful. Sinter, or silica rock, built up in the conduits, forming bubble traps, scientists suggested. But Belousov thinks Yellowstone's geysers may instead be plumbed through moraines, massive rock piles left behind by glaciers that once covered the region.
"Moraines have very similar mechanical properties to landslides, so this explains why there are so many geysers in Yellowstone," he said.
Reach Becky Oskin at boskin@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @beckyoskin. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.
Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Source: http://news.yahoo.com/geyser-video-reveals-151205253.html
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?I think I could support it if it stays the way it is, that has, number one, keeping the guns out of the hands who people who don?t have any business having guns,? she told a local New Mexico blog.
Currently, private sales of firearms do not require a background check. This allows criminals to easily obtain a gun undetected through avenues like Craigslist, pawn shops, or even gun shows. Eighty percent of guns used in crimes are likely privately purchased.
A bill that would close the existing background check loophole in New Mexico has already passed through committee. The state?s full House of Representatives is expected to take up the measure on Wednesday.
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Mayor Bloomberg today joined Office of Emergency Management (OEM) Commissioner Joseph F. Bruno, Police (NYPD) Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, Fire (FDNY) Commissioner Salvatore J. Cassano and the City?s Chief Service Officer Diahann Billings-Burford in presiding over a graduation ceremony for 103 new Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) volunteers.
The graduates recently completed an intensive, 10-week training program in disaster preparedness and basic emergency response skills. Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Bruno also presented Ramona Ponce, a CERT Team Chief, with the third annual John D. Solomon NYC CERT Award for Exemplary Service in Emergency Preparedness Education. The award was introduced two years ago to honor the late John D. Solomon, a CERT member who labored tirelessly to involve his community in preparedness efforts. The CERT graduation took place at the Frank Sinatra School of the Arts in Astoria, Queens.
"CERT members volunteered throughout the Hurricane Sandy response and recovery efforts, even when their own homes suffered severe damage from the storm," said Mayor Bloomberg. "That's the kind of dedication that really defines CERT volunteers. You are our most direct connection to communities in times of crisis, and you are a vitally important part of helping us prepare New Yorkers before a crisis starts."
"I would like to congratulate and thank the graduating class of CERT volunteers for their commitment to service," said Commissioner Bruno. "CERT launched 10 years ago with 106 members and today the program is over 1,200 volunteers strong. These volunteers devote their personal time to educate the public about emergency preparedness and to protect the safety of their neighbors."
"CERT volunteers embody the spirit of service and civic dedication that police and partner agencies are built upon," said Commissioner Kelly. "Their support of first responders helps to keep New York City moving and thriving in the face of disaster."
"Time after time ? for large scale events that bring this city together ? and during difficult emergencies that threaten lives and property, Community Emergency Response Team members volunteer their time providing important support when needed most," said Fire Commissioner Salvatore J. Cassano. "CERT members are a tremendous asset to all first responders and truly make a difference in their communities."
In 2011, Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Bruno introduced a new emergency preparedness award to honor the late John D. Solomon, a CERT member who made emergency preparedness his life?s work. Solomon was an active member of his team on Manhattan?s Upper East Side. He also maintained a preparedness blog, had begun work on a family preparedness book, and wrote several newspaper articles on the topic. Throughout his illness Solomon remained steadfast in his dedication to raising awareness of the need to prepare our families, neighbors, workplaces, and communities for all hazards. The John D. Solomon NYC CERT Award for Exemplary Service in Emergency Preparedness Education is presented annually to a CERT member who embodies John?s enthusiasm for volunteerism and purposeful engagement to make their communities better prepared for emergencies. Solomon?s widow, Abby, joined Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Bruno in presenting this year?s award to CERT Team Chief Ramona Ponce.
Ramona Ponce, Team Chief for Manhattan 10 South in Harlem, joined the NYC CERT program in 2006. She has been a resource to other CERT teams and members throughout the City by providing on-site Ready New York presenter training, thereby increasing the number of CERT members who are able to provide community disaster preparedness presentations. On a larger level, she has also contributed to the CERT program through her additional involvement in many projects, including planning citywide CERT preparedness events and representing CERT in the City?s Emergency Operations Center during events such as Hurricane Irene and Hurricane Sandy.
Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT) in New York City
The New York City CERT program started in 2003 with 106 volunteers. Today, the City has 54 CERT teams and more than 1,200 volunteers representing all five boroughs. New York City CERT volunteers participate in a 10-week training program in disaster preparedness and basic emergency response skills taught by active and retired members of the Police and Fire Departments. After completing training that includes lessons in fire safety, search and rescue, first aid and triage, CERTs support their local communities by assisting City agencies that prepare for and respond to emergencies. CERT volunteers also work to educate their communities about emergency preparedness through OEM?s Ready New York campaign.
New York City CERT members have a demonstrated history of assisting the City with response and preparedness outreach. Recently, more than 600 CERT members logged over 20,000 hours of volunteer service during Hurricane Sandy. For example, prior to the storm CERT members on Staten Island canvassed neighborhoods in Zone A reminding residents that they were in an evacuation zone. During the storm CERT members supported the Healthcare Facility Evacuation Center by staffing its call center at OEM. Members also staffed shelters, OEM?s logistic center, and the Emergency Operations Center (EOC). After the storm, CERT members reported to distribution sites to hand out water and food. They also assisted with pumping fuel from tankers at Floyd Bennett Field and in the Rockaways to get fuel to emergency vehicles and storm-damaged areas.
The CERT concept was first developed in 1985 by the City of Los Angeles Fire Department, which recognized citizens would likely be on their own during the early stages of a disaster. The Los Angeles CERT training proved to be so beneficial that FEMA decided the program should be made available to communities across the United States. In 1994, FEMA and the Los Angeles Fire Department expanded the CERT curriculum. And, in 2003, FEMA?s Citizen Corps Council adopted CERT as a primary way to encourage people to volunteer to make their communities safer, stronger and better prepared to respond to emergencies. There are currently more than 3,500 active CERT programs in the United States.
The next round of CERT training will begin in late February. For more information about the CERT program, or if you are interested in becoming a CERT volunteer, call 311 or visit?www.nyc.gov.
?
Source: http://www.mikebloomberg.com/index.cfm?objectid=CBDEC07E-C29C-7CA2-F7FD0AC6F0D9C108
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Feb. 11, 2013 ? A new study suggests that exercise may reduce Caucasian men's risk of developing prostate cancer. And among Caucasian men who do have prostate cancer, exercise may reduce their risk of having more serious forms of the disease. Unfortunately, the benefits do not seem to apply to African-American men. The study is published early online in Cancer.
Previous research has linked exercise to a reduced risk of developing prostate cancer. Studies have also revealed that African-American men have an increased risk of developing prostate cancer and of dying from the disease compared with Caucasians. It is not clear if exercise as a function of race plays any role in these disparities.
To investigate, Lionel L. Ba?ez, MD, of the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and his colleagues asked 307 men (164 white; 143 black) undergoing a prostate biopsy to complete a survey that assessed their exercise amounts per week. The exercise categories included sedentary, mildly active, moderately active, and highly active. Among Caucasians, men who were moderately or highly active were 53% less likely to have biopsy results indicating that they had prostate cancer compared with men who were sedentary or mildly active. There was no association between exercise amount and prostate cancer among black men.
The investigators also looked to see if exercise influenced the grade of tumors that were detected in men who did develop prostate cancer. Among men with cancer, those who exercised had a 13% reduced risk of having high grade disease, meaning that their cancer cells looked particularly abnormal under a microscope and were likely to quickly grow and spread. When this relationship was further explored as a function of race, it remained significant in Caucasians but not in African Americans.
"These findings that African-American men may not benefit from exercise the way Caucasian men do could be a contributor to why African-American race is a risk factor for prostate cancer and aggressive prostate cancer. Further studies are needed to investigate the mechanism behind this racial disparity in deriving cancer-related benefits from exercise which disfavors African-American men," said Dr. Ba?ez.
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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/F5gKadvjHCY/130211091022.htm
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Erika Riggs , Zillow ? ? ? 12 hrs.
This week in celebrity real estate, actor Jason Bateman bought the home of actor Ernest Borgnine and singer Carly Simon relisted her New York apartment.
Jason Bateman buys Ernest Borgnine home
In actor Jason Bateman?s latest movie ?Identity Thief,? a woman steals his identity and goes on a spending rampage with his money. Here?s hoping that Bateman?s recent big purchase was his decision and not the action of identity theft.
Bateman and his wife, Amanda Anka, recently spent $3 million on a new home for the family. The Beverly Hills compound was owned by actor Ernest Borgnine, who passed away in 2012 and owned the home for 60 years. Borgnine?s residence was listed for $3.395 million in late September 2012.
The estate was built in 1938 and was designed by architect L.G. Scherer, contemporary of well-known Los Angeles architect Paul Williams. The 6,148-square-foot home sits on a half-acre lot with an additional 1-bedroom guesthouse with a full living room and kitchen.
The interior of the 6-bedroom house remains unchanged from Borgnine?s near lifetime in the home. Details include a formal entry hall with grand staircase, large master suite with his and her baths and dressing rooms, a study, paneled library, office, den and formal dining room.
Carly Simon relists NYC apartment
The third time?s the charm. At least that?s what singer-songwriter Carly Simon is hoping.
Simon relisted her apartment for $2.495 million over the weekend. According to The Real Estalker blog, Simon first listed the duplex back in 2008 at $3.85 million. In 2010, she stuck the home back on the market for $2.975 million. Now she?s looking to sell again, and with rising median home prices, Simon?s apartment may finally snag a buyer.
Located in the West Village at 46 Commerce St #3-4, New York, NY 10014, Simon?s co-op unit is in a desirable corner building that holds only three residences. Built in 1817, the co-op is just ?steps from? Hudson River Park and world-class restaurants.
The 2-bedroom, 2-bath home includes two wood-burning fireplaces, hardwood flooring, exposed brick walls and high ceilings. Despite the original charm of the apartment, the home has been renovated and its kitchen has custom built-ins and cabinets.
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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/jason-bateman-buys-ernest-borgnines-estate-1B8325829
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Devin Coldewey , NBC News ? ? ? 14 hrs.
A bug in Google search ? fortunately, a rare one ? gives porn links and images as results when the user puts certain mathematical equations into the search box. It's certainly strange, but there is an explanation.
It was discovered by a user of the Q&A site Quora, who wrote a question asking why the search "-4^(1/4)" should return not just the result of that equation but hundreds of links to a wide variety of porn sites.
The search still works, and you can try it yourself, although if you're at work, you might want to wait until the boss is out of sight. Results are similarly inappropriate with image search.
So what's happening here? Another user of Quora (who stayed anonymous to avoid being associated with porn by Google, clearly a serious risk) broke it down. Google calculates the numerical query as it should, but also runs it as a normal text search as well, just in case. When it does that, it interprets things differently: the parentheses act like quote marks and the negative sign is used to exclude unwanted words from results.
The end result is that Google tries to find pages that have a 1 and a 4 next to each other... but no 4s. Obviously there are no pages that both have and don't have a 4, and as Google search engineer Jeremy Hoffman showed up at Quora to explain, it should return no results.
Instead, the bug results in these porn sites being shown, which have been extensively optimized to show up on as many searches as possible, even unrelated ones. The optimization is so strong that porn is showing up even for queries that don't make sense! Other contradictory queries return porn results, but not all.
Google declined to comment to NBC News. But the Google engineer who answered the question says that a bug fix is on the way, so you can calculate on Google with no fear of smutty links clogging up your results.
Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.
Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/google-bug-returns-porn-mathematical-queries-1B8332578
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Feb. 12, 2013 ? Simon Fraser University evolutionary biologists Bruce Archibald and Rolf Mathewes, and Brandon University biologist David Greenwood, have discovered that modern tropical mountains' diversity patterns extended up into Canada about 50 million years ago.
Their findings confirm an influential theory about change in modern species diversity across mountains, and provide evidence that global biodiversity was greater in ancient times than now. The scientific journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology has published their research.
About 45 years ago, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Pennsylvania theorized that change in species from site to site across mountain ranges in the tropics should be greater than in temperate latitudes.
Daniel Janzen reasoned that the great difference between summer and winter in temperate latitudes (high seasonality) offers a wide window to migrate across mountainous regions. The small difference in the tropics (low seasonality) allows a very narrow opportunity, annually. Consequently, communities across tropical mountains should have fewer of the same species. Many studies examining modern communities support this theory.
Archibald, Mathewes and Greenwood realized that fossil beds across a thousand kilometres of the ancient mountains of British Columbia and Washington provided a unique lens through which to deepen evaluation of this theory.
Fifty million years ago, when these fossil beds were laid down, the world had low seasonality outside of the tropics, right to the poles. Because of this, if Janzen's theory is right, the pattern of biodiversity that he described in modern tropical mountains should have extended well into higher latitudes.
"We found that insect species changed greatly across British Columbia's and Washington State's ancient mountain ranges, like in the modern tropics," Archibald says, "exactly as Janzen's seasonality hypothesis predicted.
This implies that it's the particular seasonality now found in the modern tropics, not where that climate is situated globally, that affects this biodiversity pattern." He adds: "Sometimes it helps to look to the ancient past to better understand how things work today."
The findings also bolster the idea that ancient Earth was a much more diverse world than now with many more species.
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FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2013 file photo, Ken Haiterman, of Pioneer Market, holds a CMMG 5.56mm AR 15 during the 2013 Rocky Mountain Gun Show in Sandy, Utah. A bipartisan quartet of senators, including two National Rifle Association members and two with ?F? ratings from the potent firearms lobby, are quietly trying to reach compromise on expanding the requirement for gun-sale background checks. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
FILE - In this Jan. 6, 2013 file photo, Ken Haiterman, of Pioneer Market, holds a CMMG 5.56mm AR 15 during the 2013 Rocky Mountain Gun Show in Sandy, Utah. A bipartisan quartet of senators, including two National Rifle Association members and two with ?F? ratings from the potent firearms lobby, are quietly trying to reach compromise on expanding the requirement for gun-sale background checks. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
FILE - In this Jan. 26, 2013 file photo, a customer looks over shotguns on display at the annual New York State Arms Collectors Association Albany Gun Show at the Empire State Plaza Convention Center in Albany, N.Y. A bipartisan quartet of senators, including two National Rifle Association members and two with ?F? ratings from the potent firearms lobby, are quietly trying to reach compromise on expanding the requirement for gun-sale background checks. (AP Photo/Philip Kamrass, File)
David Keene, president of the National Rifle Association, smiles during an exclusive interview with Associated Press reporters in Denver on Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. He said he's confident that Congress won't approve an assault weapons ban or an ammunition limit in the wake of mass shootings in Colorado and Connecticut. David Keene called such gun control proposals "feel-good" measures that he says "won't do any good." Keene is scheduled to meet with Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper and other lawmakers at the Capitol later Thursday. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)
WASHINGTON (AP) ? A cornerstone of President Barack Obama's drive to check gun violence is gathering bipartisan steam as four senators, including two of the National Rifle Association's congressional champions, privately seek compromise on requiring far more firearms purchasers to undergo background checks.
The talks are being held even as Obama's call to ban assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines, the two other major pillars of his plan, are hitting rough waters on Capitol Hill. An agreement among the four senators to expand background checks would add significant impetus to that high-profile proposal by getting the endorsement of a group that ranges from one of the Senate's most liberal Democrats to one of its most conservative Republicans.
"We'll get something, I hope. I'm praying for it," said Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., one of the participants.
Manchin, a moderate Democrat, is an NRA member who aired a 2010 campaign ad in which he literally shot a hole through Democratic environmental legislation that he pledged to oppose.
Also involved is Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., another NRA member with a strong conservative record but occasional maverick impulses; No. 3 Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer of New York, a liberal; and moderate GOP Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois.
Background checks are required only for sales by the nation's 55,000 federally licensed gun dealers, but not for private purchases like those at gun shows, online or in person. There are few indisputable, up-to-date statistics on how many guns change hands without background checks, but a respected study using 1990s data estimated that 30 percent to 40 percent of gun transactions fit into that category.
The senators' talks have included discussions about how to encourage states to make more mental health data available to the federal system for checking gun buyers' records, according to people who spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to describe the private negotiations. They are also considering potential exemptions to expanded background check requirements, including transactions involving relatives or people with licenses to carry concealed weapons
People involved in the talks would share little about their substance. In one of the few public remarks about the talks by participants, Schumer said last week that the talks have been productive and said the package they were seeking "will not limit your ability to borrow your Uncle Willie's hunting rifle or share a gun with your friend at a shooting range."
Congress has been focusing on guns since the December massacre of 20 first-graders and six adults at a school in Newtown, Conn. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., wants his panel to approve gun control legislation in the next few weeks and has voiced strong support for universal background checks for firearms purchases.
While an expansion of background checks is expected to be a key part of any gun control bill Leahy produces, a version of that provision with bipartisan support could give the entire package a boost.
It is likely that any gun-control bill will need 60 votes to pass the 100-member Senate. Democrats have 55 votes, including two Democratic-leaning independents.
Leaders of the GOP-run House are planning to see what, if anything, the Senate passes before moving on gun legislation. Strategists believe that a measure that passes the Senate with clear bipartisan support could pressure the House to act.
The political impact that the four senators could have by reaching agreement stems largely from who they are.
If Coburn embraces an agreement, that could help win over other conservative Republicans at a time when the GOP is responding to its White House and congressional election losses of last November by trying to broaden its national appeal.
In an Associated Press-GfK Poll last month, requiring more background checks got overwhelming public support, compared to just over half who backed bans on assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines.
"The whole goal is to keep guns out of the hands of the mentally ill and criminals," Coburn said in a brief interview.
Manchin's support could make it easier to win backing from other Democratic senators from GOP-leaning states, many of whom face re-election next year and who have been leery of embracing Obama's proposals.
"If the language is meaningful, it would be obviously a huge step," said Josh Horwitz, executive director of the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, which represents child welfare, religious and other groups favoring gun curbs. "To have someone like Coburn, who's voted consistently with the gun lobby, to come out and endorse a meaningful background check would be very helpful."
Schumer and Kirk each have "F'' scores from the NRA for their voting records in Congress, while Coburn and Manchin have "A'' ratings.
Though widened background checks is given the strongest chance for enactment of Obama's major proposals, it is opposed by the NRA and many congressional Republicans, who consider it intrusive and unworkable for a system they say already has flaws.
"My problem with background checks is you're never going to get criminals to go through background checks," Wayne LaPierre, NRA executive vice president, told the Senate Judiciary Committee at its gun control hearing last week.
"That's the way reductions in liberty occur, when you start saying people have to sign up for something and they have a database where they know exactly who's who," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said in an interview.
Gun control supporters note that federal laws specifically forbid the national background check system from being used as a registry of gun owners. Much of the information the system collects must be destroyed within a day.
NRA spokesman Andrew Arulanandam declined to comment on the senators' discussions.
According to Justice Department estimates, the federal and state governments ran 108 million background checks of firearms sales between 1994 when the requirement became law and 2009. Of those, 1.9 million ? almost 2 percent ? were denied, usually because would-be purchasers had criminal records.
People legally judged to be "mentally defective" are among those blocked by federal law from firearms purchases. States are supposed to make mental health records available to the federal background check system and receive more generous Justice Department grants if they do, but many provide little or no such data because of privacy concerns or antiquated record-keeping systems.
People following the discussions say the talks have touched on:
?The types of family relatives who would be allowed to give guns to each other without a background check.
?Possibly exempting sales in remote areas.
?Whether to help some veterans who sought treatment for traumatic stress disorder ? now often barred from getting firearms ? become eligible to do so.
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