Sunday, July 14, 2013

Pro-life advocate: Prisoner sterilization in California follows familiar pattern

A pro-life advocate believes the illegal sterilization of inmates in California targeted minority groups believed to be prone to crime.

"I'm telling you, I bet my house that if someone goes out here and studies that, what you are going to find is that they are going to be the primary target groups ? blacks and Hispanics,? says Mike Crutcher, president of Life Dynamics.

The Center for Investigative Reporting found that doctors in California illegally sterilized almost 150 female inmates from 2006 to 2010. The center found that almost 100 more were sterilized prior to 2006 without proper procedures.

Crutcher, Mark (Life Dynamics)Crutcher says the sterilization ?tracks perfectly? with pro-life research that found abortion clinics target minority communites.

?There is no doubt about it,? he tells OneNewsNow.

The report says female inmates in prisons across the state were pressured to go through the procedure while they were pregnant.

"The original motive behind the legalization of abortion was to eliminate what they called dysgenic groups, primarily blacks and Hispanics, and a big part of that was sterilization,? Crutcher explains.

Doctors allegedly pressured and targeted inmates who had many children or were likely to be repeat offenders.

California banned forced sterilization in state prisons in 1979.?

Source: http://onenewsnow.com/pro-life/2013/07/12/pro-life-advocate-prisoner-sterilization-in-california-follows-familiar-pattern

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Facebook Home Android update brings improved personalisation options

If you've been using Facebook Home, which brings the social network to an Android device's home screen, you might have noticed some annoying quirks.

Many users have complained, for instance, that the new alternative home screen strips away some important features, like the ability to organise your apps into folders. Well, it appears that Facebook has been listening to your complaints, because that issue has been corrected.

The social network has rolled out an update for Facebook Home that now lets you drag apps into folders for a more organised and personalised Home screen. It's a small update, but it should be a welcome one for anyone using Home, especially if reviews in Google Play are any indication.

The app currently has a pretty sad rating ? just 2.5 out of 5 stars ? with many objecting the lack of personalisation options Android users have come to expect.

"I really like the app but my battery was always dying and it needs a way to organize apps," one user wrote. Now at least the second part of that complaint has been addressed.

The change comes after Facebook last month released an update for Home that added a dock for frequently accessed apps, another major shortcoming at launch.

First unveiled in April, Facebook Home takes over your Android phone's screen and replaces it with a flowing and interactive window into your Facebook feed.

Besides the organisation issues, Facebook Home has another major problem. It lets anyone in arm's reach of your phone post a comment or "like" activity on your behalf without having to enter a PIN code or otherwise unlock the security you have enabled on your Android.

Source: http://feeds.itproportal.com/~r/itproportal/rss/~3/hBU6qI86LYo/

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6Sec,The Only Full Vine Client, Now Available Free For Windows Phone 8

July 14, 2013

Now available for Windows Phone 8 before even the recently announced official Vine app is 6Sec,?the first and only full Vine client app (including upload feature) for Windows Phone. 6Sec for Vine is the best way to see and share life in motion. Create short, beautiful, looping videos in a simple and fun way for your friends and family to see. Take a look at the awesome free app below:

  • Find, follow, and interact with people close to you.
  • ? Explore trending posts, featured hashtags and channels.
  • ? Search Vines using hashtags.
  • ? Share Vines to Twitter and Facebook.
  • ? And so much more!

Although the app is free the ?upload? feature requires a big?and expensive?dedicated server to encode videos and make them compatible with the Vine service. This feature is available through an inexpensive in-app purchase. You will be able to test the service two times for free.

Download the free?app today below!

Source: Windows Phone Store

?

MBGW

I am a ghostwriter..don't know what I do look it up.. I just so happen to have this WP8, so why not write about it? :-)

More Posts

Written by: MBGW on July 14, 2013.Tags: 6sec, free, Sharing, Twitter, Video, VineAbout, Apps, News

Source: http://www.wp7connect.com/2013/07/14/vine-6sec-client/

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WBO champ Stieglitz wary of Japan's 'masked man' Kiyota

AFP - Super-middleweight champion Robert Stieglitz is wary of Japanese challenger Yuzo Kiyota's aggressive style ahead of Saturday's world title fight.

The 29-year-old Kiyota faces Stieglitz in his first professional bout outside of Japan in Dresden for the German world champion's WBO super-middleweight belt.

Kiyota raised a few eyebrows by turning up to the pre-fight press conference wearing a surgical mask, but explained he was concerned about picking up any illness before his title bout.

"It's common for Japanese athletes to protect themselves from infection. That's why I wear the mask," he told fightnews.com.

"Robert Stieglitz boxes very fast. He's a good fighter. I want to win this fight with a knockout."

Despite 21 knock-outs in 23 victories and three defeats, Kiyota is untested at this level and his last bout against an experienced fighter resulted in a first-round technical knock-out against Jameson Bostic of the USA in 2010.

Stieglitz regained his super-middleweight title he lost on a unanimous decision in August 2012 when he enjoyed a fourth-round technical knock-out against compatriot Arthur Abraham in the rematch last March.

The 2012 defeat to Abraham was the 32-year-old champion's only loss in the last four years and having won 44 of his 47 professional fights, Stieglitz said he will prove himself against Kiyota.

"The Abraham fight has clearly shown who the true champion is," said Stieglitz, who fights in Dresden for the first time since his unanimous decision win against Mexico's Enrique Ornelas in 2010.

"I have to use my physique and technical capability against Yuzo Kiyota and box with plenty of pressure.

"In my last fight in Dresden, the audience was great, so it's like boxing at home here.

"I've had a look at the last fights of Yuzo Kiyota. He boxes aggressively, goes forward and is physically strong.

"On Saturday, I must once again call on what I can do."

Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20130713-wbo-champ-stieglitz-wary-japans-masked-man-kiyota

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Tourists Continue Hot Streak, Roberson Star Commits to Northwestern, 27th Warhorse Golf Classic (7-12-13)

Updated: Friday, July 12 2013, 11:46 PM EDT
The Asheville Tourists continue to play well at McCormick Field, winning their fifth game in a row.? Asheville shuts out West Virginia 3-0 to continue the winning streak.

Roberson Baseball star, Connor Lind has committed to play college baseball at Northwestern University in Chicago.? Lind is a rising Senior, so the Rams get to have him on the roster for one more season.

Owen High School's Football program hosted the 27th Warhorse Golf Classic at Black Mountain Golf Course.? 16 foursomes showed up to participate, play golf, and support the Owen Football program.? Tourists Continue Hot Streak, Roberson Star Commits to Northwestern, 27th Warhorse Golf Classic (7-12-13)


Source: http://wlos.com/shared/sports/features/sports/stories/wlos_tourists-continue-hot-streak-roberson-star-commits-northwestern-27th-warhorse-golf-classic-71213-609.shtml?wap=0

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Mixed reactions to Exodus group leaving 'gay therapy'

Phelan M. Ebenhack / AP, file

Alan Chambers, left, president of Exodus International, sits with his wife, Leslie, in their home in Winter Park, Fla. on May 11, 2006

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

Former participants in a controversial program aimed at ridding people of their homosexuality congratulated its leader for deciding to shut down its ministry, but other groups said there was a role for the ?reparative therapy? used in the ?ex-gay movement.?

The Christian ministry, Exodus International, was founded in 1976 and claims more than 200 branches, churches and counselors in the United States and Canada. It insisted that people could overcome same-sex attraction through prayer and therapy.

But mainstream psychiatric and medical groups have said that program, also known as ?reparative therapy,? is not founded in science and can be harmful. The American Psychiatric Association said 15 years ago that it could cause depression, anxiety and self-depressive behavior in patients.

Such was the case for Bobby Painter, 45, who paid at least $48,000 to attend Exodus' ?Love in Action? program over two years from 1997 to 1999.

The use of a 12-step program ? akin to that popularized by Alcoholics Anonymous ? by "Love in Action" led Painter to once beat himself up when he got to the amends stage because he was so ?disgusted? with who he was.

?I actually just almost went insane. I was thoroughly depressed,? said Painter, of Columbus, Ohio, who came out as gay in 2003. ?You just become very hate-filled toward yourself.?

The premise itself ? that he could be cured of being gay ? was something the program promised in advertising, he said. But on his first day in the program, he was told there was no cure.

?It was all just a mind game and so you felt completely taken advantage of,? he said. ?I left my job, I left my church, I sold my home? to be in the program.

In an apology posted on the Exodus website, President Alan Chambers said he was ?sorry for the pain and hurt many of you have experienced.?

?I am sorry that some of you spent years working through the shame and guilt you felt when your attractions didn?t change,? he wrote.

In a statement, Exodus International, which describes itself as the oldest and largest group of its kind, said that its board of directors had decided to close down after a year of talking and praying about its place in a changing culture.

Polls show that a narrow majority of Americans, a steadily growing share, support gay marriage, which has been legalized in 12 states and the District of Columbia. The Supreme Court is preparing to rule on two landmark gay-rights cases.

Chambers, over the past year, had caused turmoil in the ex-gay movement by saying that reparative therapy could hurt gays and that there was no cure for same-sex attraction.

Restored Hope Network, a coalition of ministries that aims to help gays and lesbians overcome being homosexuals, formed ? in part ? last year due to that change in course.

?We don't reject reparative therapy out of hand as the Exodus leadership is doing. Neither is it the main platform that we use,? said Rob Gagnon, a board member and a professor at Pittsburgh Theological Seminar.

He said they felt reparative therapy would work for some but not all.

?People will even, without therapeutic intervention, go through shifts,? he added. ?For us then to say well the therapy can't assist that process in any way when we know it's going to happen anyway for many people, at least in a limited way, seems to me to be a little bit absurd, unreasonable.?

He also questioned whether Chambers ? who wrote in the letter that he had ?conveniently omitted my ongoing same-sex attractions? ? was acting out of ?guilt and shame? for not being transparent about that.

?It's out of that guilt and that shame that he's taken a ?throw the baby out with the bathwater? kind of decision,? he said.

California last year became the first state in the nation to ban reparative therapy for teens under 18 years of age. New Jersey's state legislature is weighing similar legislation.

Christopher Rosik, president of the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality, a group of therapists who believe sexual orientation can be changed through various approaches including reparative therapy, said he wasn't surprised by the decision.

But he didn't think it would mean the end of the practice, either.

?Reparative therapy ... does capitalize on certain insights that I think can be applicable for some men, maybe not every man or woman, but are applicable to some,? Rosik told NBC News. ?And these men and women would attest to that.?

He said Exodus' decision wouldn't impact his association's mission to help individuals experiencing unwanted same-sex attraction and behavior, but he felt it could help make clear the difference between the work being done by religious groups and that by professional therapeutic organizations.

Even as they celebrated the shutdown of Exodus, some, like Painter, said it had ultimately, and ironically, served as a bridge to coming to terms with their sexuality. He said there was a need for some kind of ministry to serve as such a gateway for conservative gay Christians.

?One of the things they said (at Exodus) was that God loved you regardless of all of that,? he said, noting it was ?liberating? and a ?turning point? in his struggle. ?All I had to think about was, 'Well, maybe God's not pleased with this part of my life but he's not going to destroy me anymore.'?

?I needed that experience,? he added, ?because I believe if I had just stayed home I would probably have ended my life.?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2e93a510/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C210C190A632920Emixed0Ereactions0Eto0Eexodus0Egroup0Eleaving0Egay0Etherapy0Dlite/story01.htm

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The latest Chrome update?version 28!

The latest Chrome update?version 28!?is now ready and waiting for you. Newly powered by Blink, not Webkit, it also has a sweet new rich notification system.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/e1_KvlawCnw/the-latest-chrome-update-version-28-is-now-ready-and-753587738

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Somerville Mayor on Everett Casino: 'I Have a Deep and Grave Concern'

Casino plans are "fool's gold," Somerville's mayor said. The city's Board of Aldermen president said a casino in Everett would "cannibalize" Somerville's economy.

Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone said Thursday he would do everything in his power to oppose a proposed casino in Everett.

"I don't know what's going to happen," with the casino proposal, he told the Somerville Board of Aldermen, adding, "I have a deep and grave concern."

Medford Mayor Michael McGlynn and the Medford City Council also oppose the project.


Everett residents?voted at the end of June to approve the casino, proposed by?Steve Wynn, along the Mystic River.

The?state gambling commission will consider the proposal along with one at Suffolk Downs in East Boston and another one, proposed by Foxwoods, in Milford. It will choose one.

200 yards from Somerville's $130 million investment


"The Wynn Everett casino proposal is probably at worst a 50/50 bet for them, and if you had to gives odds I'd say they're slightly ahead of Boston," Curtatone said.

The mayor said a casino in Everett would have dire consequences for Somerville's economy, particularly Assembly Row, a new retail, residential and office development that's also along the Mystic River.

"It could end up being about 200 yards away where we've invested, with?the state and federal government, $130 million of public tax money to unlock the potential of Assembly Square," he said.

It's one thing to mitigate traffic and infrastructure needs associated with a casino proposal, the mayor said,?but "how do we really gauge the impact on the consumer who may not spend that dollar in Assembly Square or on East Broadway or in Union Square and parts of Somerville?"

The mayor said,?"We have been contacted by representatives from Wynn, we have expressed our concern, we have told them what our plans are in Assembly Square."

"It's a harsh reality that we're looking at"


Curtatone said he was convening a regularly scheduled meeting of city officials to establish strategies for fighting the proposal. The first meeting was scheduled to take place Friday.

Among other things, "We'll talk about the city's legal posture and opportunities to take action on the matter," he said.

He said later,?"In terms of legal challenges we are on our own. We are on our own." He added,?"It's a harsh reality that we're looking at."

The mayor did say, "We are seeking out other allies as part of this process" and that "we will seek any ally or partner we can on the matter."

Somerville Alderman At-Large William White, who serves as president of the Board, agreed with the mayor that the casino proposal is a threat to Somerville.

"That is going to cannibalize a lot of what we've planned for," he said, adding it "could really effect our economic future."

"I've never seen something so bizarre"


Curtatone also questioned the state law governing casinos, which was passed in 2011.

He called it "the worst decision the commonwealth has ever made."

"This is desperate economic development on the part of the state," he said. "This is fool's gold at the end of the day."

He also criticized the mechanisms for establishing community support, in this case allowing Everett to vote on the matter, but giving neighboring cities no say.

"Think about what's happening here. A community like Everett, whose peninsula comes through Somerville ? they get to vote on an impact that has a radial, broad regional implications," he said.?"I've never seen something so bizarre: One community gets to vote on the regional impact ...?[the state] did not really think this through."

"A lot of sad personal stories"

Other than predicting economic woes for Somerville, Curtatone said a casino would bring gambling addictions to people around the area.

"There are going to be a lot of sad personal stories," he said.

"Ask the people of Mystic Connecticut if Foxwoods was good for them. Ask the people of downtown Detroit," he said.

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Source: http://medford.patch.com/groups/politics-and-elections/p/somerville-mayor-on-everett-casino-i-have-a-deep-and-grave-concern

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Change of Subject: Excellent iDea -- Coordinated crackdown on ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The Federal Communications Commission says 4 in 10 robberies in major cities involve mobile phones. ?The epidemic of violent street crime involving the theft and resale of mobile devices is a very real and growing threat in ...

Source: http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2013/07/excellent-idea-coordinated-crackdown-on-smartphone-thefts-is-long-overdue-.html

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Tiny Minnesota town becomes latest to get gigabit fiber

Minnesota Town 1Gbps Fiber NetworkMinnesota Town 1Gbps Fiber Network

The fiber revolution is slowly but surely rolling across America. In addition to major cities such as Kansas City and Austin, Tex., smaller communities in places such as rural Vermont have also been getting access to fiber networks that offer speeds of up to 1Gbps. And now TwinCities.com reports that the tiny town of Melrose, Minn., with a population of just 4,000 people, will get its own 1Gbps fiber connection through local broadband company?Arvig. Unlike Google Fiber, however, Arvig?s gigabit broadband service won?t be affordable for many residents since the company is offering a 1Gbps connection for $300 per month and a 100Mbps connection for $200 a month. The company is also offering a 20Mbps connection for a much more affordable rate of $20 per month, however.

[More from BGR: PlayStation 4 fans flock to sign petition demanding return of controversial Xbox One features]

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tiny-minnesota-town-becomes-latest-gigabit-fiber-024554796.html

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New USC coach Enfield hires assistants

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? New Southern California basketball coach Andy Enfield has made two new hires while retaining another coach for his staff.

Chris Capko was named director of basketball operations and Kurtis Schultz will serve as strength and conditioning coach for the men's team. Dieter Horton remains with USC while getting the new title of special assistant to Enfield.

Capko comes from Georgia Southern, where he was an assistant the last two years.

Schultz comes to the college ranks from the NFL, where he spent the last three years as head strength and conditioning coach for Tampa Bay. He had other NFL stints with Minnesota and Cincinnati.

Horton spent the last three seasons as an assistant under former Trojans coach Kevin O'Neill, who left earlier this year.

Source: http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/article/New-USC-coach-Enfield-hires-assistants-4658071.php

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Nine amateur players killed in S. Africa car crash

JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- The South African Football Association says nine amateur players were killed in a car wreck in the Eastern Cape province on Sunday.

SAFA sent condolences to the families and named the players, who were members of four different clubs and were traveling back from a game in the town of Jamestown.

Regional official Beja Maphelo said the players were "good role models to other youngsters. They always took football seriously and were eager to excel.''

South Africa has a poor road safety record and football has experienced similar tragedies recently. In October, national team assistant coach Thomas Madigage was killed in a car accident in the northern Limpopo province. A month later four players from South Africa's second-tier league died when their minibus crashed in the same region.

Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/si_soccer/~3/khxTX1BTipM/

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Egypt?s army chief El-Sissi trained at US Army War College

Source: ?Cumberlink

CARLISLE ? With unrest in Egypt, U.S. military officials looking for insight might test the ties they formed with the Egyptian defense minister, Lt. Gen. Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, when he was a student at the Army War College.

?In this little historical Pennsylvania town, the most important school in the world operates under the radar,? said retired Col. Stephen Gerras, a professor of behavioral science at the Carlisle Barracks.

Al-Sisi was Gerras? student. In 2006, he watched the Steelers beat the Seattle Seahawks, 21-10, in the Super Bowl in Gerras? home. Gerras remembers him as a warm man, quiet and devout.

?My mother was at our little party, too, and al-Sisi took her around my home and explained to her the meaning behind the Turkish artifacts that my wife and I had picked up when we lived in Turkey,? he said. ?At the time he was here, he was only a one-star general. We never dreamed at the time he would go on to lead the Egyptian army.?

Political unrest and a troubled economy marked the first year in office for Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, until a military coup ousted him on Wednesday. Al-Sisi, who deployed troops to cities when clashes broke out between supporters and opponents of the government, said the chief justice of the constitutional court replaced Morsi, the first elected president.

Recruiting al-Sisi and military leaders from other U.S. allies to build professional and personal relationships at the Army War College is an investment in the future, said Maj. Gen. Tony Cucolo, commandant at the college. Its international fellows program began in the 1970s.

?It is so critical to know that the voice on the other end of the line is someone you trust because you have spent a year together studying, talking about everything from Thucydides (a Greek historian and Athenian general) to ethics to favorite sports teams,? said Cucolo. Social events help their families to form bonds.

That can pay off when a crisis erupts in a country.

?You now have a friend, or at the very least a colleague, you can call to receive situational updates outside of known information from the media,? Cucolo said. ?They also have the ability to call you for advice and guidance.?

Cultivating leaders

Situated about 120 miles from Washington, off the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the Army War College is considered the country?s top military training program.

Armed guards at the entrance gate show visitors this is not a typical campus, though its mature hemlock and oak trees and 19th-century buildings give the feel of Ivy League grounds. A fly-fishing stream, LeTort Spring Run, a tributary of scenic Conodoguinet Creek, runs through the property.

The average student comes with 22 years of experience, which these days includes Operations Iraqi Freedom or Enduring Freedom. A board of military officials in Washington invites candidates to attend.

Despite its name, the college welcomes more than Army students for its yearlong course. The class of 2013, graduated on June 8, included 225 Army, 15 Navy, 32 Air Force, 17 Marine Corps and one Coast Guard officer; 24 civilian intelligence officers from agencies such as the CIA and the National Security Agency; and 71 international officers.

Classes begin on Aug. 1 to teach military men and women leadership skills, the theory of war and strategy, national security policy, campaigning and regional security. Elective subjects include cyber strategy, the industrial base, stewardship, board security and exploring the legitimacy of and alternatives to targeted killing.

Many attendees come with battlefield experience that involves making black-and-white decisions.

?Our intent is take these soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and intelligence officers to go from tactical-level operations and decision-makers to direct leadership roles,? said Bill Waddell, director of the command and control group and the

cyberspace operations. ?They have gotten promoted for being decisive and getting things done. Now they come here, and they have to get ready for roles where some of them will be general officers, admirals or on the staff of a senior leader.?

That means learning to think like those leaders and giving them a broader perspective, he said. At that level, there is no black-and-white; issues become complex.

?That officer who was being rewarded for being decisive and making things happen right finds decisiveness can be somewhat dangerous in the leadership environment,? Gerras said.

Thinking strategically

This is a college where professors do not lecture. Though military strategy is the mission, attendees swap their military regalia for shirts and ties.

They begin most days by discussing reading material from the prior day ? typically topics such as the civil war in Syria, anti-government riots in Turkey and Egypt?s turmoil.

They are taught to think their way through problems, Waddell said, and to consider the perspectives of other stakeholders.

Government agencies and foreign countries ?all have different cultures, and they don?t appreciate a military officer saying, ?Do it because I said so,? ? he said. ?That just doesn?t work in this world.?

Former CIA Director Michael Hayden, a four-star Air Force general, was one of four keynote speakers this summer at the college?s National Security Seminar on the implications of social, political and economic problems.

?The transition from tactical thinking to strategic thinking is not as easy as it sounds,? Hayden said.

He likes the international fellows program for its ability to introduce participants to American society.

?These people are living in Carlisle; they bump into normal Americans every day,? he said. ?If they have children, they attend school here. They shop and dine here. You don?t get much more ?Main Street America? than the Cumberland Valley in Pennsylvania.?

Steeped in history

The land that houses the Carlisle Barracks has been some sort of military facility since the founding of the country.

Dubbed Fort Washingtonburg to honor a young George Washington, a post built here in the 1750s protected settlers during the French and Indian War.

During the Revolutionary War, captured Hessians from the Battle of Trenton became prisoners here. The guardhouse they built still stands.

And it was here that President Washington gathered his troops with Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton to put down the Whiskey Rebellion, marking the only time a sitting president has led a battle.

The property served as an armory and recruiting station and, in 1838, became the Army calvary training center. Confederate Gen. J.E.B. Stuart swept into town and burned the barracks on July 1, 1863, at the start of the Battle of Gettysburg.

The Carlisle Indian Industrial School was established on the grounds in 1879. During its 39-year existence, coach Glenn ?Pop? Warner fostered distinguished athletic teams. His star athlete, football and track idol Jim Thorpe, is memorialized throughout the campus, including the gym where he honed his skills.

The Army War College was founded by President Theodore Roosevelt?s War Department secretary, Elihu Root, in 1901 in Washington. It moved to Carlisle in 1951.

Root wanted to school elite military leaders not to promote war, but to preserve peace through intelligent preparation to repel aggression.

Looking forward

The mission for Army War College faculty members won?t change as the U.S. military makes one of its largest transitions in decades after 12 years of war.

Cucolo, who commanded the 3rd Infantry Division in Iraq, said America?s battle-hardened military is tactically effective.

?For the future, I would offer, though, that our concentration on fighting over the last 12 years has caused us to atrophy in our abilities to apply the strategic art,? he said.

Though the military has effective strategists, he said, ?we just believe they are too few, and I?m not sure people understand just how hard this sort of activity is and the education and skills required to do it.?

?It is said that at the strategic level, there are rarely any good options or course of action ? only the best of nothing but bad options.?

Since 9/11, military leaders have been asked what element of surprise keeps them up at night.

?We just don?t predict very well,? Gerras said about enemy unknowns that nag at him. He worries, too, about diminished resources for the Armed Forces. ?Because we don?t predict this stuff very well, are we going to have the resilience and agility and the resources to respond to what might happen??

The steep drawdown of resources that inevitably follows the end of a conflict worries Waddell, too.

?If the budget cuts are catastrophic,? he said, ?we just need to know we have some flexibility and agility with our forces.?

?

Tags: Abdel Fattah, air force, Al Sisi, Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, Egypt, general, government, intelligence, leadership, military, program, radar, science, security, Stephen Gerras, strategy, student, Turkey, U.S., war

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/StratRisks/~3/qGSrgY1ItiI/13827

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Mapping the benefits of our ecosystems

July 1, 2013 ? We rely on our physical environment for many things -- clean water, land for crops or pastures, storm water absorption, and recreation, among others. Yet it has been challenging to figure out how to sustain the many benefits people obtain from nature -- so-called "ecosystem services" -- in any given landscape because an improvement in one may come at the cost of another.

Two ecologists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison report this week (July 1) in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences a novel approach to analyzing the production and location of 10 different ecosystem services across a landscape, opening the door to being able to identify factors governing their synergies and tradeoffs.

Monica Turner, the Eugene P. Odum Professor of Zoology, and graduate student Jiangxiao Qiu mapped the production, distribution, and interactions of the services in three main categories: provisioning (providing resources like food, fiber, or fresh water), cultural (such as aesthetics and hunting), and regulating (including improving ground and surface water quality, handling floodwater, preventing erosion, and storing carbon). They focused on the Yahara River watershed, which covers much of central portion of Dane County and parts of Columbia and Rock Counties in southern Wisconsin and includes the chain of Madison lakes.

"We found that the main ecosystem services are not independent of each other. They interact spatially in very complex ways," says Qiu, lead author of the new study.

Some of those interactions were not surprising -- for example, higher levels of crop production were generally associated with poorer surface and ground water quality. However, two other sets of services showed positive associations: flood regulation, pasture and freshwater supply all went together, as did forest recreation, soil retention, carbon storage and surface water quality.

"If you manage for one of these services, you can probably enhance others, as well," says Turner. "It also means that you can't take a narrow view of the landscape. You have to consider all of the things that it produces for us and recognize that we have to manage it very holistically."

Even in the expected tradeoff between crop production and water quality, the researchers found something unexpected.

"There is a strong tradeoff between crop production and surface and groundwater quality," Qiu says. "But despite this, there are still some locations that can be high for all three services -- exceptions that can produce high crop yield and good water quality in general."

Preliminary analysis of these "win-win" areas suggests that factors like flat topography, a deep water table, less field runoff, soil with high water-holding capacity, more adjoining wetlands and proximity to streams with riparian vegetation may contribute to maintaining both crop production and good water quality.

The results also show that nearly all of the land in the watershed provides a high level of at least one of the measured services but that they are not uniformly distributed. Most areas offer a high level of just one or two services. But a few, termed "hotspots" and making up just three percent of the watershed (largely parks and protected areas), provide high levels of at least six of the measured services.

"A single piece of land can provide different kinds of services simultaneously but you cannot expect that this land can provide all of the benefits," Qiu says.

The work was undertaken as part of a larger project to improve water sustainability in a mixed urban and agricultural landscape, supported by the Water Sustainability and Climate Program of the National Science Foundation (NSF).

"This paper is an initial assessment that gives us a picture of the spatial distribution of ecosystem services in contemporary times, a starting point for comparison," says Chris Kucharik, a UW-Madison professor of agronomy and environmental studies and principal investigator of the overall NSF project. The project aims to use a combination of contemporary and historical data to understand how the watershed may change over the next 50 to 60 years.

"We ultimately want to be able to look at future scenarios for this watershed," Turner says. "If climate changes or land use changes, what's going to happen to the values that we care about?"

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/R5jJZpNYVL8/130701163753.htm

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Xbox Music web version launches today

As teased by Microsoft last week, you can now get your Xbox Music fix on a browser (and non-MS hardware) starting today. The service has now gone live over at music.xbox.com, offering up a music interface similar to its recent Windows 8 app refresh. It's also curiously able to play music across multiple devices at the same time -- something that streaming rival Spotify doesn't allow. The player itself adjusts to the size of your browser window, like this site, while your playlists can be edited and then synced with your Windows phone, Windows and Xbox 360. At the moment, the web version is for subscribers only. Not sure if it's the music service for you? Don't worry, Xbox Music has kept the 30-day trial it's offered since it first launched on Microsoft's game console. Sample it for yourself at the source link below.

Steve Dent contributed to this report.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Xbox Music

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/01/xbox-music-web-version/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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