Monday, August 5, 2013

GULF OF THAILAND OIL SPILL Toxic matter may enter food chain in 3 months

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Source: www.thailandnews.net --- Saturday, August 03, 2013
Thailand's state health agency has said it will study the impact of the Oil spill on marine life around Koh Samet's Ao Phrao in Rayong province, saying toxic substances from the crude Oil may enter the food chain in the next three months. The Natural Resources and Environment Ministry has also set up a committee to monitor the environmental impacts of the spill. "Chaired by the ... ...

Source: http://www.thailandnews.net/index.php/sid/216211256/scat/f90d16c28a9b5294

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Klis: Broncos deserve to have more representatives in Pro Football Hall of Fame

Terrell Davis (Denver Post file)

Had the NFL made a big deal of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's 40th anniversary, the Broncos would have been shut out.

Can't attend a party if you're not invited. And don't start with Willie "Raider" Brown and Tony "Cowboy" Dorsett.

But it's the golden anniversary that the Hall of Fame is celebrating this weekend in Canton, Ohio, and thanks to a nice run at immortality in the past decade, the Broncos were well represented by John Elway, Gary Zimmerman, Floyd Little and Shannon Sharpe.

What the Broncos need now is one for the thumb.

"I think the next Bronco to go in might be Champ Bailey," Sharpe said.

Bailey still is playing cornerback for the Broncos, and while there's little doubt he's a Hall of Famer, the plan is to put off his eligibility until at least 2020.

Same for Peyton Manning.

There will be no problem if he's mostly remembered as an Indianapolis Colt ? so long as he wins one more Super Bowl title ring with the Broncos.

Here are other Broncos who deserve Hall of Fame recognition before Bailey and Manning become eligible:

Dan Reeves, coach and player. Bud Grant, who lost four Super Bowls with the Vikings, is in the Hall of Fame. Marv Levy, who lost four Super Bowls with the Bills, is in the Hall of Fame.

Reeves lost four Super Bowls with two teams and has yet to become a finalist through his first five years of eligibility.

This would be an outrage if not for his more flagrant omission from the Broncos' Ring of Fame.

"Not only Bud Grant and Marv Levy, but help me, my Super Bowl memory is a little foggy: What did George Allen win again?" said Sharpe, who was drafted and given a chance by Reeves.

Further pushing Reeves' candidacy: He threw a 50-yard halfback touchdown pass to Lance Rentzel in the Ice Bowl.

Terrell Davis, running back. The Hall of Fame is heavy on players who were good for a long time, but never great; light on players who were great for a brief time. Canton needs to consider more players like Gale Sayers and Joe Namath.

Davis was the NFL's best running back for three consecutive seasons. He played in eight playoff games and rushed for at least 100 yards in seven.

Just as Sandy Koufax has a plaque in Cooperstown, Davis should have a bust in Canton.

Randy Gradishar, Karl Mecklenburg, Steve Atwater, Louis Wright. Perhaps the astute senior selection committee will understand that the Broncos haven't posted the NFL's second-best record since 1975 on Elway alone.

Tom Jackson, player and contributor. Hall of Fame voters may scoff, but Jackson's 27 years on ESPN's "NFL Primetime" show should carry substantial weight.

Even if nearly every recognizable former player becomes a TV analyst, Jackson has soared to within shouting distance of John Madden.

Mike Klis: 303-954-1055, mklis@ denverpost.com or twitter.com/mikeklis

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/klis/ci_23791781/hall-call-broncos-deserve-have-more-representatives-canton?source=rss

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This mayor was asked to organize a blood donation drive because of a scary short...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/opposingviews/posts/10151648238556051

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

"Buresh Blog": EF-2 tornado: Radar images, video & photos; July weather #'s.

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/ActionNewsJacksonville/posts/526162270789597

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India permits CCI to export raw cotton

August 03, 2013?(India)

The Central Government has decided to allow export of cotton by The Cotton Corporation of India Ltd., a Public Sector Undertaking under Ministry of Textiles, during the current cotton season 2012-13 under Tariff Item HS code 5201 & 5203.

The conditions stipulated for issue of RC will not apply to grant of RC for export of cotton by Cotton Corporation of India. The stipulation regarding procedure for reporting will continue to apply.

Certain conditions regarding export of cotton have been relaxed for The Cotton Corporation of India Ltd., during the current cotton season 2012-13.


Ministry of Commerce
More Textiles News - India...

?
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Related News

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  • Maxime Knitting Mills bags funds from Canadian Government , Aug 03, 2013

Source: http://www.fibre2fashion.com/news/textile-news/newsdetails.aspx?news_id=149690

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Washington panel restricts octopus hunting

OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) ? A Washington state panel on Friday prohibited the recreational hunting of giant Pacific octopuses at seven popular scuba diving sites in the Puget Sound region, following an outcry when a man was spotted killing one of the elusive creatures.

The Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission called for a review of the rules after a diver killed an octopus in October near Alki Point in Seattle. A diving instructor who arrived on the beach saw him beating the octopus to death.

Photos of the event outraged other divers who are familiar with octopus lairs and watch for the creatures. Divers petitioned the panel to outlaw octopus hunting or to create marine preserves where they'll be safe.

The commission's unanimous vote came Friday, after the state Department of Fish and Wildlife, working with a citizen advisory committee that included sport fishermen and recreational divers, developed options ranging from no rule changes to banning the recreational hunt throughout Puget Sound.

Current rules allow a person with a valid state fishing license to harvest one giant Pacific octopus per day in most areas of Puget Sound.

One of the sites where hunting will be prohibited is the spot where the octopus was killed last fall.

Fish and Wildlife received hundreds of comments on the options, the commission said in a statement. The commission sets policy for the Fish and Wildlife Department.

Many sport fishermen wanted to keep current rules while many divers favored a Puget Sound-wide ban, said Craig Burley in Fish and Wildlife's fish management program.

The Puget Sound octopus population appears healthy and the current recreational harvest is very small, Burley said.

The Seattle Aquarium says giant Pacific octopuses average 90 pounds and their arms can span 20 feet across, but a fully grown octopus can fit through a hole the size of a lemon.

The octopuses live in rocky dens, recognized by the discarded shells of crabs and clams they eat. They hunt at night and also eat fish and other species of octopus. Their suckers hold prey, which the octopus tears apart with a parrot-like beak.

Giant Pacific octopuses can change color at will depending on their surroundings and mood.

Several commission members mentioned the creatures' broad appeal to recreational divers around the world.

"Washington is an important dive location, and protection of the octopus is important both to the dive community and to the economy of the state," said Commissioner Conrad Mahnken of Bainbridge Island, located west of Seattle across the sound.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/washington-panel-restricts-octopus-hunting-040114734.html

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Focused on apps, Apple's iOS 7 provides a sneak peak at new sharing icons

AppleInsider writes, Apple's upcoming iOS 7 introduces a bright, clean new visual appearance that strips away much of the shadowing and gloss that Apple introduced into the computing mainstream with iPhone six years ago, particularly evident in its new social sharing app icons. ????

Continue reading Focused on apps, Apple's iOS 7 provides a sneak peak at new sharing icons at AppleInsider

Source: http://machash.com/appleinsider/77453/focused-on-apps-apples-ios-7-provides-a-sneak-peak-at-new-sharing-icons/

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?Another Reason? Governor Palin Loves Our Troops


Governor Palin took to Facebook:

Love, love, love our U.S. troops! Here?s another reason why!

She links to a story over at The Blaze

A photo of a United States Marine hanging behind during a 5K race to accompany a 9-year-old who lost his group recently went viral on Facebook, and has since been picked up by national and international news outlets alike.

According to the ?Seal of Honor? Facebook page, which posted the photo, the child was struggling to finish on his own when he asked the Marine, ?Sir, Will you please run with me??

?Throughout the course, [Lance Cpl. Myles Kerr] urged him on when the boy wanted to give up and ensured that the boy saw the course to completion where he was reunited with his party,? the accompanying message reads. ?By his unwavering commitment to help those in need through his ability to inspire others by his unequivocal level of motivation, Lcpl Kerr reflected great credit upon himself and was keeping in the highest traditions of the United States Marine Corps.?

Read more here.

Source: http://conservatives4palin.com/2013/08/another-reason-governor-palin-loves-our-troops.html

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Obama refuses to condemn Democratic sex scandals | The Daily ...

White House spokesman Jay Carney Wednesday ducked, dodged and dived to escape questions about two top Democrats embroiled in sex scandals.

The simultaneous scandals have been caused by a Democratic candidate for New York mayor, Anthony Weiner, and the Democratic mayor of San Diego, Bob Filner. Their sexting and harassment of women have humiliated many Democrats, including those who have happily spent the last few years charging the GOP with waging a ?war on women.?

Obama is flying into the Filner scandal because he has announced an Aug. 7 visit to a U.S. Marine Corps base outside San Diego, Calif.

?The president is traveling to Camp Pendleton which is not in San Diego, which is outside,? Carney said July Wednesday. ?I don?t have anything on that.?

?He?s commander in chief. He doesn?t oversee municipalities. ? I don?t have any comment on that,? he said.

Filner is facing accusations of sexual harassment from eight women, including city employees.

?He pulled my hand closer to him and he reached over to kiss me,? said Lisa Curtin, a city college administrator, about an episode in 2011 when Filner was a Democratic member of Congress. ?I turned my head at that moment and on the side of my face, I got a very wet, saliva-filled kiss including feeling his tongue on my cheek.?

Asked about Weiner, who sent crudely sexual tests to women, Carney also evaded comment.

?No, we don?t? want to comment, he said.

Weiner has admitted send sexually themed texts to a series of women, even after he resigned in disgrace from Congress in 2011.

?i must have cum thinking about you and looking at you 100 times,? the former legislator wrote to a 22 year-old woman. ?how does that make you feel? gross??

Through the 2012 election, Obama?s deputies ? including Carney ? slammed GOP candidates and legislators for rude or insensitive comments about women. Obama?s allies characterized those comments as reflective of GOP attitudes, and declared them to be part of a GOP ?war on women.?

The strategy was intended to spur turnout by women voters, and mostly succeeded.

?After spending months waging a fake ?War on Women? to mislead voters, it appears the Democrats have much less ?courage? when it comes to calling out their own ? War on Women,? said a July 31 email from GOP spokesman Kirsten Kukowski

Since 2012, the president has changed his talking point to emphasize curbs on guns and increased immigration of Democratic-leaning low-skilled workers in the country, where 20 million Americans are already unemployed or underemployed.

?The president is focused on what we can do here in Washington to help the middle class,? Carney insisted July 31.

?I understand the allure of issues like this in the media,? Carney said. ?But I?m saying that the president believes his job is not to comment on those issues, but to do what we can do to get the economy moving.?

Follow Neil on Twitter

Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/07/31/obama-no-comment-on-democratic-sex-scandals/

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LG Optimus F3 comes to T-Mobile Aug. 7 for $0 down

LG Optimus F3

Available on T-Mobile’s Simple Choice Plan for 24 payments of $10 a month

After seeing releases on both Sprint and Virgin Mobile, a GSM variant of the LG Optimus F3 will now be available on T-Mobile, starting August 7. The carrier is offering a limited-time promotion price of $0 down with 24 equal monthly payments of $10. To take advantage of this deal, customers should be on T-Mobile’s Simple Choice Plan, and are subject to credit approval.

Like the Sprint and Virgin Mobile version, this device comes with a 4-inch IPS screen offering "sharp text and crisp images," a long-lasting 2460 mAh battery, and Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean with LG's own apps suite. Exclusive to this version of the Optimus F3 is T-Mobile's signature WiFi Calling.

The LG Optimus F3 can be found at T-Mobile retail stores, select retailers, and online at www.T-Mobile.com. For more about T-Mobile's latest entry-level phone, see our hands-on with the Sprint version.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/2697sYF5eqE/story01.htm

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Chenoweth to Weiner: Stop acting like a 'whore'

TV

21 hours ago

If New York City mayoral hopeful Anthony Weiner feels like he could use a little PR help following the sexting antics of his alter ego, Carlos Danger, then he's in luck. Kristin Chenoweth has a plan to improve his popularity.

The Broadway star took to the "Tonight Show" stage Tuesday night and delivered a bit of wisdom to Weiner, in the form a parody of her "Wicked" hit, "Popular."

?I?ll teach you zip your fly, you won?t be that guy with a camera down his pants," she sang. "I?ll teach you what tweets to tweet, something clean and sweet. We?ll make sure you?ll get your chance to be popular, the right kind of popular. They?ll think you?ve become a monk, though they?ve seen your junk. Now you?ll play a different show."

From there Chenoweth launched into her social makeover plan, since Weiner has "an awfully long way to go."

"There'll be no more sexy texts, with your biceps flexed," she added. "Your roaming eye will roam no more. You want to be the mayor? Stop acting like a big ol' whore!"

But if Weiner really wants to be the mayor, he's going to have to appeal to voters other than Chenoweth. Before she belted out her message to the man, she assured host Jay Leno that there's no way she could really support him.

While she's fascinated by the politician's drama, she's also "disappointed in that situation."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/kristin-chenoweth-sings-warning-anthony-weiner-stop-acting-whore-6C10804454

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Abandoning sales tax hike not an option barring big shocks: Japan's Amari

TOKYO | Tue Jul 30, 2013 6:05am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Economics Minister Akira Amari said on Tuesday that abandoning a planned increase in the sales tax is not an option unless there are significant external shocks to the economy such as the Lehman financial crisis.

Amari, speaking to reporters after a top government economic panel meeting, declined to comment whether there are alternative ways to raise the sales tax but said he would do the utmost to pave the way for the tax increases to be implemented as planned.

The planned increase in the sales tax is heavily indebted Japan's most significant fiscal reform in years but recent developments have suggested that it could be delayed or watered down.

(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko; Editing by Shinichi Saoshiro)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/rPUyuFk9Elk/story01.htm

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The CW to introduce The Flash on 'Arrow' season 2

This publicity image released by The CW shows Stephen Amell as Oliver Queen/Arrow in a scene from "Arrow." (AP Photo/The CW, Cate Cameron)

This publicity image released by The CW shows Stephen Amell as Oliver Queen/Arrow in a scene from "Arrow." (AP Photo/The CW, Cate Cameron)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) ? The upcoming season of The CW's "Arrow" is getting some flash, as in the popular DC comic book character, the network announced at Tuesday's annual Television Critics Association press tour.

"We plan to introduce a recurring character and the origin story of Dr. Barry Allen, who you know as The Flash," said network President Mark Pedowitz. "We do want to expand upon the DC Universe. We think that there are rich characters we can use, and we felt like this was a very organic way to get there."

If all goes as planned, there could be a spinoff.

"Arrow" debuted in the 2012-2013 season and was The CW's most popular new show.

It stars Stephen Amell as Oliver Queen, who is based on the DC Comics character The Green Arrow. A spoiled billionaire who was stranded on an island for five years, Queen returns home as a secret hooded crime fighter out to rid his city from corruption using his newfound talent with a bow and arrow.

"Arrow" returns for its second season in October.

___

Online:

http://www.cwtv.com/shows/arrow

___

Alicia Rancilio covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow her online at http://www.twitter.com/aliciar

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-30-TV-The%20Flash-Arrow/id-127fbb640cf240b993befbf292c755d4

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Cleartrip dips toe into multi-modal travel search with Rome2Rio ...

Cleartrip is on a roll. Today, the company has launched a trip planning tool by the name Waytogo, powered by Australia-based?multi-modal search engine?Rome2Rio.

Using Waytogo, users will be able to search for various route and mode of travel options. The product also displays layovers at transit, travel duration and distance, point to point pricing, links to more information for a particular route.

Cleartrip claims to have route options to 2.5 million destinations across the world, 5000 billion routes, 670+ airline schedule options, 600+ ground transport options. Various transport options are flight, car, bus, ferry, and train.

Below screen grab shows travel options for Bangalore to London.

Cleartrip Waytogo - Rome2Rio Integration 1

Below screen grab shows travel options for Bangalore to Mumbai where Indian Railways travel option is displayed. The rates displayed are more or less accurate.

Cleartrip Waytogo - Rome2Rio Integration 2

Most of Rome2Rio?s (TLabs here) user interface is retained in Waytogo. But, quite a few customisations have happened.

For the environment conscious travellers, Waytogo has a ?Green Travel? feature where travel options are sorted by their carbon footprint.

Upon selecting (clicking on Book) a particular travel option, user is directed to Cleartrip?s flight/car/train/bus booking page.

Waytogo is still in Beta version. So, we can expect a lot more new feature to come in near future.

Overall ? Waytogo is a travel planning wrapper product for underlying booking engines for various products (flight, hotel, etc).

Recently, Cleartrip spoke about how it redesigned (Project Tuxedo) its entire website over a period of one year. In April, the company rolled out an industry-first feature in which users can perform flight modifications entirely online.

In March, rome2rio announced a functionality that display point-to-point pricing. The recently refreshed Google Maps (that has multi-modal search option) was seen as a threat to rome2rio, but the company explained why its not the case.

Rome2Rio?s API is becoming popular. Tnooz?s THack Sydney winner Flight Center built an iPhone app by name NowWhat that works on top of?APIs from?Rome2Rio,?Viator?and?TourWrist.

The app?gives suggestions to users about what to do on a journey based on the weather (it?s raining ? do something indoors, etc) and other variables.

Related posts:

  1. Google Maps to out-Rome2rio Rome2rio? We don?t think so
  2. Google Maps to out-Rome2rio Rome2rio? We don?t think so
  3. Google Maps likely to add flights and multi-modal search this week

Source: http://www.tnooz.com/2013/07/31/news/cleartrip-dips-toe-into-multi-modal-travel-search-with-rome2rio-powered-waytogo/

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How a Functional Manual Physical Therapist treats pain caused by ...

viscera2How Organs Can Affect Your Body

with Dave Potucek, MSPT, CFMT

As discussed in the previous visceral article your organs can cause a variety of pains and dysfunctions if they lose their ability to slide on neighboring structures due to surgery, infections, trauma, poor posture, poor diet, etc.

The gastrointestinal (GI) system is made up of the esophagus, stomach, small and large intestines, gallbladder, liver and pancreas. These structures all have to work in harmony to have efficient digestion and transit times. Normal transit time is 16 hours and it has been studied that people with low back pain can have transit time of >30 hours. These structures can be mobilized to improve digestion, decrease low back pain, abdominal pain and many other issues as previously stated.

Another important system in the body is the urinary system. It is made of the kidneys, ureters, bladder and pelvic floor. Problems with the function of the urinary system can lead to frequent urinary tract infections, pelvic pain, incontinence, hypertension, swelling of the body or legs and can be a part of sciatica.

The female reproductive system consists of the ovaries, fallopian tubes and uterus. These structures can be treated directly through the abdomen. Problems in this area can come from C-Sections, child birth, infections, etc. Often times we treat this system for dysmenorrhea (painful periods), scar tissue (post C-Section), pelvic pain and ow back pain as well.

The coccyx is a frequently treated structure on many of the patients treated at Elite Health Services. It impacts are system wide.? As Manual Therapists, we can positively effect neck motion, shoulder motion, core strength, nerve mobility and much more from treating this single structure. It is basically our ?tail? and has attachments from the spinal cord so treating this structure can have far reaching effects on the body. We commonly treat it when a patient is experiencing back pain, nerve pain and coccyx pain, but it is often the source of other various pain and problems as well.

It is amazing that internal organs can have such far reaching, widespread effects on the rest of our body. The good news is that when something is not working optimally, there is manual treatment available to eliminate pain and improve your overall health and well-being.

Source: http://www.elitehealthservices.com/blog/?p=1024

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Thomas Pink Suing Victoria's Secret Pink - Business Insider

Victoria's Secret swim collection

Valerie Macon/Getty Images

A luxury British shirt maker called Pink is suing Victoria's Secret for infringement.?

London-based Thomas Pink filed the suit against the British arm of Victoria's Secret in May, alleging that the name of the brand's teen line is confusing to customers, Vogue reports.?

"Thomas Pink is determined to protect the considerable investment that has been made into building the world's luxury leading shirt brand," a spokesperson told Vogue.?

Now Victoria's Secret is fighting back. Last week the lingerie brand filed a declaratory judgment suit in the U.S., seeking to?to establish "the rights of the parties, allowing them to continue the peaceful coexistence that has been in place for many years," according to Vogue.

The teen line has seen wild success in recent years, leading the brand to open standalone stores around the world.?Victoria's Secret just launched two standalone Pink stores in London.?

Victoria's Secret hasn't commented on the suit.?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/thomas-pink-suing-victorias-secret-pink-2013-7

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Maillot De Football Nike Gar?on 2012/13 Fc Barcelona Replica Shor - 478315

Accueil > > > Maillot De Football Nike Gar?on 2012/13 Fc Barcelona Replica Shor - 478315
Publi? le 16/07/2013

Historique des prix :Historique des prix de Maillot De Football Nike Garçon 2012/13 Fc Barcelona Replica Shor - 478315

Mod?le Enfant UnisexeRendant hommage aux champions catalans avec les couleurs et les embl?mes audacieux de cette ?quipe, le maillot de football ? manches courtes 2012/13 FC Barcelona Replica pour Gar?on (8-15 ans) garantit confort sur le terrain et dans les tribunes, gr?ce ? son tissu l?ger qui ?vacue la transpiration.

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Fiche technique de Maillot De Football Nike Gar?on 2012/13 Fc Barcelona Replica Shor - 478315
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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Football: Cardinals offense flies high in scrimmage at Hobart

An East Chicago player runs with ball during scrimmage against ChestertBrickyard Football Stadium Hobart Ind. Tuesday July 16 2013.

An East Chicago player runs with the ball during a scrimmage against Chesterton at the Brickyard Football Stadium in Hobart, Ind., Tuesday, July 16, 2013. | Taylor Irby~For Sun-Times Media

storyidforme: 52220613
tmspicid: 19364565
fileheaderid: 8790753

Updated: July 17, 2013 2:04AM

HOBART ? The Carlos Fernandez and Tre?Quan Burnett connection for East Chicago Central was on display multiple times at the four-team Hobart scrimmage on Tuesday night at the Brickyard.

Senior running back and Northern Illinois-bound Martayveus Carter was also at it again as he made Chesterton, Hobart and West Central defenders miss tackles rolling into the end zone a couple times. Carter rushed for 1,296 yards on 93 carries and 19 TDs last season.

But all three of those players said they might not have been at the Hobart scrimmage had fourth-year coach Stacy Adams lost his job at a recent East Chicago school board meeting.

Adams, who coached the Cardinals to a 9-2 season a year ago, was seriously worried that he was going to lose his job just a couple weeks back. But the board decided to keep him.

Now that he?s here to stay ? for at least another year, anyway ? he?s got business to take care of, and the Cardinals should be one of the area?s better teams thanks to all the talent on his roster.

?We?ve got a lot of good skill players returning this year,? said Adams, who is 21-11 in three seasons at East Chicago. ?What we have to do is do what other teams are not doing, so we have to push ourselves a little bit harder and take that extra rep and stuff like that.?

The offense, which averaged more than 30 points a game last year, should be even more explosive with second-year QB Fernandez?s improvements. It could be the key to getting past defending sectional champion Morton.

?Carlos is going to be the main key to this clock,? Adams said. ?If he?s going then everything is going to go as well. His passing has improved and his drop back and reads are better as well.?

Hobart coach Ryan Turley is excited about his team?s upcoming season. The Brickies went 8-3 last year after finishing 3-8 the previous season. But he knows the opener against West Side is still more than a month away.

?The best thing about this is you get the jitters out of the system for the kids that are young,? he said. ?I thought our composure was good out there and we got off the ball well.?

Former Chesterton assistant coach and current West Central coach Darren Rodriguez said the scrimmage gives his kids a chance to face some of the area?s top programs. His 1A school plays all small schools in the regular season.

But West Central is no pushover, having knocked off undefeated Whiting 41-3 in the sectional semifinal in a 10-3 season last year.

?This is the best competition we see,? Rodriguez said. ?It?s a great eye-opening experience and gives them an opportunity to see where they fit. Last year, we had two kids that went to D-II schools and when we were here last year you could see that they fit.?

Chesterton is coming off an 8-3 finish but will have a new coach roaming the sidelines in Mark Peterson.

Peterson said the scrimmage was a great starting point for his new offense.

?This is a great opportunity to see a different face and compete against somebody else,? he said. ?We play at Hammond Morton next Thursday and just gives us another feel for what we?ve got here. We?re putting in some new offensive stuff and this is phase No. 2. I?m pretty happy overall.?

Source: http://posttrib.suntimes.com/sports/21366579-556/football-cardinals-offense-flies-high-in-scrimmage-at-hobart.html

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Initially split Florida jury heard Zimmerman call for help


NEW YORK | Tue Jul 16, 2013 8:12am BST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Jurors in the trial of George Zimmerman were originally split whether the shooting of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin amounted to murder, but most agreed it was Zimmerman, not Martin, calling for help in the background of an emergency call, a juror told CNN.

The six-woman jury acquitted Zimmerman, ending a trial that became a national story about race in America. The unnamed juror, number B-37, said no one on the jury believed that race played a role in the shooting.

Defence lawyers argued that Martin attacked Zimmerman, who shot the unarmed black 17-year-old in self-defence. Prosecutors said Zimmerman, 29, who is white and Hispanic, wrongly suspected Martin of being a criminal.

The jury in Sanford, Florida, on Saturday found Zimmerman not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaughter after a three-week trial.

The jury initially had three votes for not guilty, two votes for manslaughter and one vote for second-degree murder when deliberations began, juror B-37 told CNN on Monday.

"There was a couple of them in there that wanted to find him guilty of something. And after hours and hours and hours of deliberating over the law, and reading it over and over and over again, we just decided there's no other way or place to go," she told CNN.

One key question in the trial was whether Zimmerman's or Martin's voice was heard calling for help in the background of an emergency call.

"I think it was George Zimmerman's. All but probably one (juror agreed)," said Juror B-37 told CNN with her identity concealed.

ZIMMERMAN IN HIDING

Immediately following the verdict, civil rights activists began calling for federal charges against Zimmerman, saying the trial in Florida failed to serve justice.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder on Monday called the shooting death of unarmed black teenager Martin "unnecessary," raising questions about whether he believed the shooter, Zimmerman, acted in self-defence.

Holder did not indicate whether he intended to bring a federal case.

The federal hate crimes law would require the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Zimmerman shot Martin because of race.

Zimmerman, 29, has gone into hiding since the verdict. Friends, family and defence lawyers have said he will need time to put his life back together and was considering entering law school to help people wrongly accused of crimes.

Zimmerman's parents told ABC television on Monday they were unaware of his whereabouts and feared for his safety after receiving death threats.

Asked by interviewer Barbara Walters if his son would remain in hiding, Robert Zimmerman said, "If I was him, I would."

His mother, Gladys Zimmerman, described the moment she saw her son after the verdict. "I hugged him. I kissed him," she said. "And he said, 'Thank you, mom. I want to go home.'"

Ben Crump, a lawyer for Martin's divorced parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, said the family would weigh its options regarding a wrongful death civil lawsuit. For now, they were still devastated by the verdict, he said.

"She cried, she prayed to God, and then she cried some more," Crump said of Fulton. "She said, 'I will not let this verdict define Trayvon. We will define our son Trayvon's legacy.' It was real inspiring."

PROTESTS ACROSS THE COUNTRY

The verdict triggered protests across the United States from people who said Zimmerman racially profiled Martin as a possible criminal and pursued him while armed with a loaded 9mm pistol.

Then on Sunday the Justice Department announced it would reopen its investigation into the case. It said prosecutors would determine whether any of the "limited" applicable civil rights laws had been violated, and whether the case met guidelines for bringing a federal case after a matter has been decided in state court.

By finding Zimmerman not guilty of second-degree murder, the Seminole County jury rejected the charge that Zimmerman acted with ill will, spite or hatred.

CNN also aired an interview with a crucial witness in the case, Rachel Jeantel, a friend of Martin's who was on the phone with him when the confrontation with Zimmerman began. Jeantel said the jury failed to comprehend that race was a factor and lacked an understanding of youth culture.

"They're white, well, one Hispanic, but she's stuck in the middle," Jeantel said. "They're old school. We're in a new school. My generation."

(Additional reporting by Daniel Trotta in New York and Barbara Liston in Orlando; Writing by Daniel Trotta and Peter Henderson; Editing by Dina Kyriakidou, Xavier Briand and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/Reuters/UKTopNews/~3/kA2EPotwwJg/story01.htm

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Watchdog warns of waste in Afghan aircraft buy (The Arizona Republic)

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Why Russia evacuated its naval base in Syria

In a surprise move, Russia has pulled all its military and nondiplomatic civilian personnel out of Syria. That includes a complete evacuation of the naval supply station in the Mediterranean port of Tartus, which is often discussed as one of Russia's key reasons for its long and stubborn support of Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad.

"We have neither servicemen nor civilians in Syria anymore. Or Russian military instructors assigned to units of the Syrian regular Army, for that matter," a Russian defense ministry spokesperson is quoted as telling the Moscow business daily Vedomosti yesterday.

The Tartus naval supply station, Russia's only military base outside the former USSR, has been effectively closed, Russian deputy foreign minister and special Middle East envoy Mikhail Bogdanov confirmed in an interview with a Turkish newspaper. He insisted that the base, which housed about 70 fulltime military technicians to service visiting Russian warships, was of no strategic importance to Russia.

RECOMMENDED: What is Russia thinking on Syria? A brief guide

"It's just a technical facility for maintaining ships sailing in the Mediterranean," he said.

That answer seems a trifle inadequate. The obvious question is: Why abandon Tartus now, given that the Russian naval presence in the Mediterranean has never been so large?

Earlier this month Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia will maintain a permanent naval flotilla in the region for the first time since the collapse of the USSR more than 20 years ago. "This is a strategically important region and we have tasks to carry out there to provide for the national security of the Russian Federation," he said.

The Russian Navy has been holding almost nonstop maneuvers in the eastern Mediterranean for more than a year, and currently has a 16-warship task force in the area.

"The first and likeliest reason for the closure is that Russia doesn't want to risk the lives of 70 military personnel stationed at Tartus," says Vladimir Sotnikov, expert with the official Institute of Oriental Studies in Moscow.

"Now that the battlefield initiative in Syria's civil war is in the hands of the Assad regime, Russia might fear some [rebel] provocations against our people. Another possible reason may be to help promote the Geneva-2 talks. We have information that Russia, the United Nations and the US have agreed to a format for the talks. So, perhaps Russia wants to dispel impression that its position is based on some desire to hold on to this station," Mr. Sotnikov says.

"In any case, Russian ships have the opportunity to go to Cyprus for supplies and maintenance, and it's safer for them to do so right now," he adds.

Russia has also been steadily evacuating the estimated 30,000 Russian citizens living in Syria since early this year, and yesterday the Ministry of Emergency Services reported that it had extracted another 130 Russians from Latakia in northwest Syria and flown them back to Russia.

Other Russian analysts agree that, whatever the reasons for Russia's personnel pullout, it probably doesn't signal any change of the hard, pro-Assad position that Mr. Putin most recently reiterated at last week's G8 summit in Northern Ireland.

"Russia's position hasn't changed. In fact it's getting tougher," says Sergei Strokan, a foreign affairs columnist with the pro-business Moscow daily Kommersant.

"The reasons behind this evacuation probably come down to security. That base's importance has been greatly overrated in Western reporting. It just isn't that big a deal. So, I guess the thinking is, why risk some major incident that the rebels might stage by attacking Russians at this sensitive moment when all the hopes are pinned on a new Geneva peace conference?"

RECOMMENDED: What is Russia thinking on Syria? A brief guide

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-russia-evacuated-naval-syria-162410006.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Many cancer patients expect palliative care to cure

By Kathryn Doyle

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In a survey of patients with terminal lung cancer, nearly two-thirds did not understand that radiation treatments intended only to ease their symptoms would not cure their disease.

Among the nationwide sample of patients with advanced lung cancers, four out of five thought the radiation would help them live longer and two in five believed it might cure their cancers.

"Radiation therapy can be used to relieve symptoms caused by metastatic lung cancer, such as pain from bony metastases, shortness of breath from lung tumors, or neurologic symptoms, such as weakness, from brain metastases," said the study's lead author, Dr. Aileen Chen of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Patients with metastatic lung cancer usually live less than a year, she told Reuters Health, and their radiation treatments are intended to improve quality of life for the time that remains, so Chen was surprised that so many patients believed they would cure them.

Previous studies have shown that cancer patients have unrealistic expectations for chemotherapy as well, according to Phyllis Butow, professor of psychology at the University of Sydney in Australia.

"Our experience is that it is common with many late stage cancers," Butow, who was not involved in the new research, told Reuters Health. "We have done studies with patients with all sorts of late stage cancers and found similar results," she said.

The current study included 384 people who were diagnosed with incurable lung cancer between 2003 and 2005 and were receiving radiation therapy. The patients answered questions about their expectations of the therapy.

Overall, 64 percent did not understand that radiation was not at all likely to cure them.

Older patients and ethnic groups other than whites were more likely to have inaccurate beliefs about their care, according to the results published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

Twenty percent of the patients expected radiation treatments were "very likely" to cure their cancer, and another 25 percent thought they were "somewhat likely." Less than 40 percent answered that the radiation was "not at all likely" to cure their cancer.

Seventy-eight percent believed radiation was "very" or "somewhat" likely to help them live longer.

There was no difference in overall survival time between patients who expected to be cured and those who did not.

Both patients and doctors may avoid conversations about prognosis for emotional reasons, which may drive these inaccurate beliefs, Butow said.

"It is bad, because it can lead to poor decision making where patients and their families feel driven to continue with toxic treatments that significantly reduce patients' quality of life and do not extend their lifespan," she said.

All cancer clinicians have probably come across this problem in their practice, said Dr. George Rodrigues, a radiation oncologist at the London Health Sciences Centre in Ontario, Canada.

"The more surprising finding of the study was the extent to which this phenomenon was detected, in nearly two thirds of patients," Rodrigues said in an email. "According to this data, nearly 2/3 of patients are agreeing to palliative radiotherapy with the misconception that this radiotherapy may cure their disease."

Lung cancer patients might be especially prone to misplaced expectations, he said, since they tend to have short survival times and 95 percent of cases are caused by cigarette or tobacco smoke, and those patients tend to have more guilt and shame about their disease and may be more emotionally susceptible.

"What needs to occur is specific research to identify evidence based strategies that can improve patient understanding of prognosis and goals of therapy," he said. "Just telling physicians to do a better job in communicating to patients is not likely to affect any meaningful change," he said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/172HIRs Journal of Clinical Oncology June 17, 2013.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/many-cancer-patients-expect-palliative-care-cure-180523977.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

A Bloomsday Appreciation of Ulysses by James Joyce, Greatest Mind-Scientist Ever

Tomorrow is Bloomsday, June 16. On this day in 1904 Leopold Bloom, hero of James Joyce?s great novel Ulysses, wandered through Dublin having all manner of adventures before returning late at night to the bed of his cheating wife Molly. To celebrate Bloomsday, I?m reposting an appreciation of Ulysses that I wrote last summer when I re-read the classic 1922 novel.

Marilyn Monroe reads Molly Bloom's soliloquy in Ulysses.

Joyce did something that still feels fresh and revolutionary, although it has inspired countless imitations. He put us inside the head of another human, in a way no one had done before. We eavesdrop on someone?s thoughts as though they are being telepathically transmitted into our brain. Joyce was not a theorist of mind but he was an exceptional observer of it, far more so than any scientist. He helped us become more aware of our awareness.

I?ve written about the problem of solipsism, how each of us is trapped in a hermetically sealed chamber of his or her own subjective awareness. Joyce knocks a hole in the prison of our selves so that we can peer into the mind of another person. We can never really know what it is like to be a bat or cat, but thanks to Joyce we have a better idea what it is like to be a human being.

Joyce had scientific precursors. William James, in the late 19th century, drew attention to the weird nature of consciousness. It is not a train?a collection of objects moving through space?but a stream, James said. And thoughts are not like atoms or protons, uniform and durable; they are evanescent, ever-changing, slip-sliding into each other. Another precursor of Joyce was Freud, who held that deep down we are nasty, horny creatures, much more so we realize or care to admit.

James and Freud merely told us these things about ourselves. Joyce showed us, dramatizing the scientists? hypotheses about the nature of mind. Joyce?s novel has the vivid immediacy of a first-person video game, with extra screens for memory and fantasy. Joyce immerses us in the streaming thoughts of his characters, thoughts that swirl, cascade, eddy, ebb, rush onward, colliding with and swerving around the hard facts?the sights, sounds, smells, tastes, people and places?of Dublin on June 16, 1904.

Joyce?s characters?Stephen Dedalus, a young, intellectually pretentious teacher and would-be writer (modeled after Joyce himself); Leopold Bloom, a Jewish ad salesman, father and husband; Molly Bloom, his cheating, songstress spouse?are in many respects exotic, idiosyncratic, especially to an American reading in the 21st century. And yet these fictional humans feel real and universal.

Joyce reveals?revels in?the animality of his characters. Bloom pisses, poops, gobbles, swills, haggles, preens, cringes, lusts, jerks off. Joyce was a taboo-buster not for its own sake but in the service of truth, of reportorial accuracy. Unlike gloomy, judgmental Freud, however, Joyce was fond of his fellow humans, in spite of all our flaws. Bloom, my favorite character, is timid, scheming, lecherous, gluttonous, but also noble, brave, generous, loving, dignified. He?s tragic and comic, brooding one moment about the suicide of his father and the death of his baby son and the next hungering for a piece of cheese or ogling a babe on the street.

Joyce reminds me of comedian Louis C.K., whose jokes about masturbation and farts segue into riffs on death, heartbreak and loneliness, and whose overall philosophy seems to be: Life sucks sometimes, but it can be pretty great, too, and so funny! Real wisdom should put a smile on your face.

Joyce achieved a kind of hyper-realism, rendering the experience of ordinary awareness so faithfully that other depictions seem quaintly artificial, like medieval paintings before artists mastered perspective. Ulysses accomplishes this feat while constantly reminding you of?even rubbing your face in?its artificiality, its existence as an elaborate literary composition, like Hamlet or the Odyssey (which provided Joyce with a template for his work).

As Joyce would be the first to admit, the mirror that he holds up to nature is distorted, blurred, cracked, as all representations?whether scientific or literary, fictional or factual?must be. Joyce?s mirror is made of words, and some intuitions, intentions, desires, anxieties flit through the gaps between words. They are inexpressible, or ineffable, to use James?s term.

Also, Ulysses ain?t everyone?s cup o? tea. Virginia Woolf, another modernist master, was unimpressed, once complaining, ?I don?t know that [Joyce has] got anything very interesting to say, and after all the pissing of a dog isn?t very different from the pissing of a man.? Some feminists view Molly?s sexy soliloquy, which concludes Ulysses?and which I consider to be a masterpiece within a masterpiece?as an all-too-male fantasy of a female mind.

But to my mind, Joyce exemplifies Noam Chomsky?s dictum that we will always learn more about ourselves from literature than from science. In the 90 years since Ulysses was published, scientists have not progressed much toward a theory of consciousness. Hence the persistence of creaky old paradigms like psychoanalysis and even behaviorism, which assumes, absurdly, that mind doesn?t matter. Although Joyce didn?t offer a theory of consciousness, he gave us a better sense of what consciousness is, and for that we should be grateful.

Postscript: Joyce has been in the news lately. Louis Menand just wrote a fine piece on Joyce in The New Yorker, as did Michael Chabon in The New York Review of Books. And mega-bestselling author Paul Coelho recently suggested that he is a better writer than Joyce, provoking a British blogger to call Coelho?s work ?a nauseous broth of egomania and snake-oil mysticism with slightly less intellect, empathy and verbal dexterity than the week-old camembert I threw out yesterday.?

Post Postscript: So I?m plowing through Part II, Episode 10 of Ulysses now, a section called ?Wandering Rocks.? This and other similar sections of Part II defeat lots of readers, because they are so fragmentary, chaotic, scattered, jumbled. Joyce flits about Dublin, landing briefly in the mind of this or that denizen before darting away. He seems to be thwarting, deliberately, perversely, our desire for order, for a linear story line. His technique reminds me of a film in which the camera soars over a cityscape before swooping down to zoom in on an individual, the film?s hero, striding down a street or drinking in a bar. Except in the case of Ulysses, the camera never stays put. After alighting on one person, just as you?re getting comfortable with his perspective, the camera swoops away again in search of someone else. It?s fair to think, What?s the point? Here?s my theory. With this method, Joyce gives us a view of macrocosmic reality as composed of innumerable microcosms, individual minds. This pointillist approach, Joyce is implying, represents shared, social reality more faithfully than the phony-baloney, pseudo-objective, omniscient-narrator method of traditional novelists like Dickens, Balzac, Austen. Not that there isn?t a real world out there, with stuff that all sentient creatures bump into, hear, see, smell. The multitudinous minds in Ulysses keep offering us different subjective views of the same objective things, places, events, people, notably Leopold Bloom, who is seen, pitied, disdained, admired, talked and listened to by other Dubliners, even as we get his view of them. Joyce, in other words, is a philosopher, offering a theory of reality in all its subjective-objective complexity. But he doesn?t spell out his theory in dull, prosaic, Kantian or Cartesian fashion. He dramatizes it, makes us feel it. So that?s my theory of ?Wandering Rocks.? But to be honest, I prefer the sections of Ulysses where Joyce give us one sustained point of view, especially that of Bloom.

Post Post Postscript:?One reason I like Leopold Bloom so much may be that, like me, he?s a nerd, a science enthusiast, without actually being a scientist. He may be even nerdier than I am, more interested in how things work, in a nuts and bolts, engineering sense. (My scientific tastes lean toward the philosophical, that is, impractical.) Consider the following passage, which takes place in a bar. Bloom and a couple of other guys are yakking about capital punishment, more specifically hangings. Bloom, an anti-execution liberal (also like me!), expresses doubt about the deterrent effect of hangings, provoking a response from his bar mates:

?There?s one thing it hasn?t a deterrent effect on, says Alf.

?What?s that? says Joe.

?The poor bugger?s tool that?s being hanged, says Alf.

?That so? says Joe.

?God?s truth, says Alf. I heard that from the head warder that was in Kilmainham when they hanged Joe Brady, the invincible. He told me when they cut him down after the drop it was standing up in their faces like a poker.

?Ruling passion strong in death, says Joe, as someone said.

?That can be explained by science, says Bloom. It?s only a natural phenomenon, don?t you see, because on account of the ?

And then he starts with his jawbreakers about phenomenon and science and this phenomenon and the other phenomenon.

The distinguished scientist Herr Professor Luitpold Blumenduft tendered medical evidence to the effect that the instantaneous fracture of the cervical vertebrae and consequent scission of the spinal cord would, according to the best approved tradition of medical science, be calculated to inevitably produce in the human subject a violent ganglionic stimulus of the nerve centres of the genital apparatus, thereby causing the elastic pores of the CORPORA CAVERNOSA to rapidly dilate in such a way as to instantaneously facilitate the flow of blood to that part of the human anatomy known as the penis or male organ resulting in the phenomenon which has been denominated by the faculty a morbid upwards and outwards philoprogenitive erection IN ARTICULO MORTIS PER DIMINUTIONEM CAPITIS.

What I love about this passage is that Bloom is trying to educate, enlighten, inform his ignorant bar mates, but they just roll their eyes and yawn. Even Joyce gently mocks Bloom, depicting him as a pompous German professor pontificating on the physiology of hanging-induced erections. (Joyce does this a lot, offering different linguistic representations of the same thing to comic effect.) Although he clearly identifies with Bloom the Jewish outsider, Joyce must also acknowledge that Bloom is a bit of a bore, a blowhard know-it-all. And that is, let?s face it, how many people view science writers, with all our bloviating ?about phenomenon and science and this phenomenon and the other phenomenon.?

Postscript 4: Phew! Just survived the whorehouse scene of Ulysses. The section is called ?Circe,? after the Greek sorceress who, in Homer?s Odyssey, turned the hero?s shipmates into pigs after they pissed her off. (Is the sorceress Bella Cohen, the scary she-male madam of the whorehouse, or Joyce himself?) ?Circe,? which takes the form of a play, reminds me of A Midsummer Night?s Dream or some other gender- and even species-bending Shakespearean comedy, except much edgier and weirder. It?s a funhouse ride conceived by a brilliant, demented Jungian, trying to dramatize his wacky theory of humanity?s collective id. The characters are all caricatures, parodies of themselves, wearing grotesque masks, spouting all sorts of nonsense, constantly shape-shifting. Bloom morphs into a masterful lawyer, an adored ruler, a craven peeping Tom gratifying himself as he watches his rival bonk his wife Molly. The rhetoric keeps morphing too from grandiloquent/hifalutin to coarse/smutty and everything in between. Each of us, Joyce seems to be saying, swarms with multitudes of personas, from the angelic to the beastly. And each of our personas speaks with?can only be understood in terms of?its own unique language. (It?s kind of a Kuhnian take on the human psyche, if we all suffered from multiple-personality disorder.) But somehow, in spite of all this dreamy, fantastic, hallucinatory craziness, Joyce never lets us forget that something real is happening. Real, flesh-and-blood characters in a real place at a real time are uttering real words and doing real things, all of which someone in Bella?s whorehouse could have recorded with a video camera. As I said above, Ulysses, for all its extraordinary inventiveness, is ultimately a work of realism. The hard, factual foundation?the ground of being?that underpins Ulysses distinguishes it from Joyce?s next novel, Finnegans Wake, which I ?read? in a summer seminar 30 years ago. (My professor was a white-haired, red-faced, hard-drinking Irishman. Perfect.) In Finnegans Wake, there is no ground of being. It?s dreams all the way down, and you can never wake up.

Postscript 5: Approaching the end, can?t stop, feel like I?m riding a cataract of words toward the sea. Late last night finished ?Ithaca,? the homecoming, in which Bloom, having already saved drunken Stephen Dedalus from an enraged whorehouse madam and belligerent British soldier, brings the young man, who reminds Bloom of his dead son Rudy, into his house and makes him a cup of hot cocoa. This section, the most science-y part of Ulysses, takes the form of a Q&A. Although the Q?s and A?s are not actually voiced or thought by Bloom, they are Bloom-esque, that is, practical, factual, empirical, scientific, technological. The language is for the most part dry and straight-forward, as much as any part of Ulysses?but it occasionally blossoms?blooms!?into poetry. As Bloom fills a kettle with water, a Q about the water prompts an elaborate A about Dublin?s water supply, which is traced back to ?Roundwood reservoir in county Wicklow of a cubic capacity of 2,400 million gallons, percolating through a subterranean aqueduct of filter mains of single and double pipeage? and so on. The next Q, which asks what Bloom admires about water, uncorks a marvelous riff on water in all its polymorphous glory. Google the passage, read it, see for yourself what I mean. Joyce demonstrates that science?or, more generally, a materialistic, practical, nuts-and-bolts approach to life?can also be poetic, aesthetic, acutely sensitive to the beauties of the natural and unnatural worlds. Richard Dawkins couldn?t have said it better. Joyce implies, perhaps, that as a young writer he was too self-consciously literary and metaphysical, too much like young Dedalus, but as he matured he became more like Bloom, that is, attentive to reality in all its nitty-gritty wondrousness. So Bloom is a kind of father to young Dedalus after all!

Final Postscript: Yeah just finished Ulysses sad happy relieved glad to be back in real world my own thought stream but thoughts feel different Joycean yeah words seep into you osmosis self porous not waterproof looking for summation wrap up epiphany ?What Ulysses Means? impossible Ulysses like legendary Borges map big as territory it maps as intricate complicated confusing lovely ugly absurd sublime sad funny yeah how can you map a map like that reduce irreducible thin description of thick description impossible gotta try yeah maybe take on claim Joyce too cold all technique wordplay brain no heart like what hack Coelho said all style no substance bullshit Joyce almost mushy at end Bloom wounded still by death of Rudy so kind caring toward Dedalus when young man leaves Bloom forlorn slips into bed beside Molly he knows Blazes was in his bed can?t hate her hurt her he forgives her lover not hater kisses ?plump mellow yellow smellow melons of her rump? Joyce gives Bloom his fetish Joyce liked butts like Updike liked feet lots of Joyce in Bloom wife Nora Barnacle in Molly Nora never read her husband?s books Joyce hurt still loved her she him Bloom?s butt-kiss wakes Molly she?s annoyed but asks about his day he tells her leaves out masturbation and whorehouse parts she?s no fool we know when Joyce plops us into her thought stream she suspects he?s screwed someone else he?s cheated before she?s mad at Bloom scorns him Molly?s so vain competitive with other women into clothes proud of her body breasts men?s desire for her Boylan?s desire they did it four five times that afternoon she sees frailty of men pathetic little egos if we men could read thoughts of wives girlfriends we?d shrivel up and die dig the passage where she disses pompous God-denying atheists take that Dawkins and when she says men messing up world women should be in charge would do a better job yeah but Molly loves men too wants to feel their eyes on her stroke them screw them do other things even fantasizes about young Dedalus can see why Molly makes feminists squirm sexy material girl like Helen Gurley Brown Cosmo girl but Joyce just doing for women what he did for men Molly wounded human a lover like her husband even farts like him yeah and she loves him after all book ends with memory of him proposing making love and Joyce wrote this Great Book during Great War horrible war to end all wars war Joyce left all that insanity and horror out saying that?s not life this is life cheating flawed husband crawling back to bed of cheating flawed wife and they love each other in spite of everything and they love their daughter and dead son love redeems us our best hope only hope that?s enough yeah

Photo of Marilyn Monroe reading Ulysses by Eve Arnold.

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=a-bloomsday-appreciation-of-ulysses-by-james-joyce-greatest-mind-scientist-ever

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