Sunday, June 30, 2013

Britain turns to Canada for its new banking chief

(AP) ? It's not often that central bank governors get compared to rock stars.

But for all the buzz being created about the new man taking over as governor of the venerable Bank of England, you would think his name is McCartney, rather than Mark Carney.

"He's got that charisma," said Paul Kavanagh, senior market strategist for Killik & Co. "People will warm to him."

Carney, the former head of the Bank of Canada and the first non-Brit to run the 319-year-old bank, moves into the bank's headquarters in the City of London on July 1. He faces a tough challenge: Helping rescue Britain's economy, which has been foundering since the onset of the 2008 economic crisis. While he won't do it alone, Britain's leaders are hoping he can inject confidence and try new ideas to revive the country's fortunes.

Carney, 48, will certainly be hoping for a calmer time of it than his predecessor, Mervyn King. In his 10 years on the job, King, 65, has had to steer the bank through the financial crisis of 2008, help rescue several major retail banks and try to revive the UK's economy by bringing interest rates down to an all-time low of 0.5 percent and introducing a 375 billion pound ($572 billion) bond-buying program.

The new governor brings an impressive track record. Carney is credited with keeping money flowing through the Canadian economy by acting quickly in cutting interest rates to their lowest level ever of 1 percent, working with Canadian bankers to sustain lending through the crisis and, critically, letting the public know rates would remain low so they would keep borrowing. And it wasn't just that he had good policies ? he sold them to the public in a way everyone could understand.

However, he didn't face the same challenges as Britain. Canadian banks were stronger and didn't dabble in subprime mortgages. None of them needed a bailout. Demand for Canada's energy and mineral exports also helped the country rebound faster than most industrial nations in Western Europe and the United States.

Canada recovered faster than many other countries from the 2008 financial crisis. During 2009, unemployment hit 8.7 percent and gross domestic product shrank 4.2 percent. But it came back.

The Canadian economy expanded 2.5 percent in the first three months of this year, the fastest pace since 2011. Unemployment is now around 7.1 percent.

In contrast, the UK economy grew at 0.3 percent in the same period and its unemployment is stuck at around 7.8 percent.

The new guy from Ottawa is getting hyped as a departure from the quiet, reserved King, who comes from the gray, serious world of central banking.

"If it is your view that central bankers are boring old people, he (Carney) was not." said Benjamin Tal, the deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets in Canada. "He looks differently. He has all his hair. He speaks in a way that it not typical."

Whereas most central bankers keep analysts busy parsing what they say ? much in the style of former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan ? Carney is known for his wit and informed clarity.

That's considered a golden attribute at the moment, especially for the UK. Public confidence in the country's financial sector has been undermined by scandals related to interest rate-rigging, rogue trading and a lack of accountability.

"We need honest appraisals of what is going on if the public is going to change their opinion," said Cary Cooper, a professor at Lancaster University Management School. "(The public) need someone who is open and honest."

Among those anxious for Carney to succeed is Treasury chief, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne, a man so unpopular in Britain that he was booed by the crowds at the 2012 London Olympics. Osborne reportedly wooed the Canadian for more than a year, happy to bear the brunt of the acerbic British media, which would criticize Carney's 874,000 pound ($1.3 million) pay and benefit package at a time when the average public sector employee received a 1 percent pay increase.

Carney's newness to Britain is an advantage: He can play the outsider ? replicating a common trait in business where a new face comes in to offer a fresh approach.

And for the UK, Carney is about as outside as you can get. He was born in Fort Smith, in Canada's remote Northwest Territories. When he was 6, his family moved to Edmonton, where his mother taught school and his father became a professor of education history at the University of Alberta

He got a partial scholarship to Harvard, where he was the backup goalie on the hockey team. Influenced by John Kenneth Galbraith, who pioneered the popular notion that economics should be accessible to the masses, Carney took up economics

But Harvard left him in debt and he opted for a job at Goldman Sachs after graduation in 1988.

"I felt it would be better to work for a few years and pay that off," he told Reader's Digest Canada in 2011 of the "exorbitant amount of money" he owed. But when asked how much, he cheerily replied: "That's a bit personal. But I paid it off ?I'm very trustworthy."

He went back to Goldman after studying at Oxford, where he met his British-born wife, Diana, who specializes in development. They have four young daughters.

Carney's years at Goldman Sachs in London, Tokyo and New York left him comfortable with the Wall Street world ? something that was particularly useful at the Bank of Canada. He understood how markets would respond, and wasn't intimidated when financial titans tried to throw their weight around. His backers like to recall a run-in with JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon, who had a heated exchange with Carney after accusing him of pushing "anti-American" bank regulations.

"He more than held his ground," former Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin said of the exchange. "Mark won the day clearly."

Carney also solidified his reputation by using "forward guidance," or locking in the interest rate outlook for months in at a time ? the idea being that if people knew rates would remain low they would be more likely to borrow. That helped stimulate spending and economic growth. The U.S. also uses this method, and analysts think Carney might try it in Britain.

But Canadians say it's risky to make too much of Carney's role, saying he's more like Ringo Starr ? someone who was in the right place at the right time. Talented, yes, but anyone would succeed with the Beatles ? and Canada's economy has proved resilient to the global economic downturn.

Canada's conservative banks didn't suffer from the same capital and subprime crises that U.S. and UK banks have ? Carney has not had to rescue a bank during his five years at the Bank of Canada.

Tal, the CIBC economist, said that while Carney was a great central banker, a bit less hype might be in order.

"If there are any expectations of a knight on a white horse who coming to save the British economy, I suggest that they will be disappointed," he said.

But Canadian observers also suggest Britain will note his style ? the events, speeches and press conferences tinged with humor.

"I'm a member of a team, the governing council of the Bank of Canada," Carney said at the University of Alberta in May. "If my legacy turns out to be bad, I'm taking them down with me."

Analysts expect he'll take it slow at first. Britain has a much larger financial sector and remains one of the world's great money centers despite its woes. All that candor may not go over well in London.

"He had no fear about wading into any (economic) subject," said Douglas Porter of BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. "(I) suspect he will be more cautious, at least initially, in England."

__

Associated Press Writer Rob Gillies in Toronto contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-30-Britain-Carney%20Profile/id-a8e9d30f91974cb38811ec2818def07d

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Rivals Reject Google?s Antitrust Remedies

By Maureen O'Gara

Article Rating:

June 29, 2013 01:00 PM EDT

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552

Google rivals are pressing the European Commission to reject Google's proposed antitrust settlement as "totally inadequate" because the search firm would still have "too much scope" to favor its own products in its search results.

The EC said it's gotten "very negative" feedback from Microsoft and other companies that originally leveled antitrust charges against Google.

Google offered to label its properties and show links "to three rival specialized search services close to its own." The EC said Google also has agreements with web sites and ISVs that stifle competition for ads.

Hubert Burda, president of the German magazine publishers' association, said either Google will have to improve on the remedies or the EC would be pushed to issue a statement of objections and force remedies on Google.

Competition commissioner Joaquin Almunia wants to end the EC's investigation with a deal.

Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025. Twitter: @MaureenOGara

Source: http://www.sys-con.com/node/2719835

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It's Whitey Bulger on trial, but FBI's bad behavior is recounted, too

Retired FBI supervisor John Morris took the witness stand in the Whitey Bulger trial Thursday and Friday, describing conduct that could have landed him in jail if he hadn?t gotten an immunity deal.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / June 28, 2013

This 2011 booking photo provided by the US Marshals Service shows James "Whitey" Bulger, captured in Santa Monica, Calif., after 16 years on the run.

U.S. Marshals Service/AP/File

Enlarge

Officially it is former crime boss James ?Whitey? Bulger who?s on trial, but this week a lot of incriminating evidence pointed in another direction: at Boston FBI agents whose job was to take down organized crime.

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Retired FBI supervisor John Morris was on the witness stand Thursday and Friday, describing behavior that could have landed him in jail if he hadn?t gotten an immunity deal for his willingness to testify.

Mr. Morris acknowledged that he accepted money and gifts from Mr. Bulger, that he helped to feed sensitive information to Bulger, and that he signed off on misleading reports about what information Bulger was sharing with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Bad behavior by the FBI doesn?t mean that Bulger is likely to win the ?not guilty? jury verdict that he hopes for. He's being tried on racketeering counts that include 19 alleged murders.

But the trial is opening a new window on a cautionary chapter in FBI history.

Four decades ago, in an era when the agency?s focus was on attacking Italian-American organized crime, its Boston office developed a cozy and corrupt relationship with the Irish-American crime group led by Bulger and a few colleagues.

The FBI listed Bulger and his partner, Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi, as top informants against other criminals. But Bulger?s handler, a former Morris subordinate named John Connolly, went from being lauded for his anti-Mafia successes to serving prison time as a convicted felon.

On Friday, Morris acknowledged that he panicked when Bulger and Mr. Flemmi were indicted in 1995 because he knew his acceptance of bribes from Bulger could be exposed.

"I was worried about whether I could be prosecuted," Morris said. "I certainly did not want my bad behavior known in any manner, shape, or form."

Mr. Connolly was convicted of tipping off Bulger to the 1995 indictment, which had prompted Bulger to flee Boston in what became a 16-year stint as a fugitive. Flemmi is in prison. Bulger was captured in 2011, while living in California, and is now immersed in a trial that could last through the summer.

Morris said he agreed to cooperate with prosecutors because he "wanted to set things straight" after taking actions he knew were wrong. He ended up testifying for the prosecution when Connolly was convicted of second-degree murder, in 2008.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/yrmFC9Hlfyg/It-s-Whitey-Bulger-on-trial-but-FBI-s-bad-behavior-is-recounted-too

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Sluggish April GDP confirms Canadian economy is slowing

By David Ljunggren

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's economy grew by just 0.1 percent in April from March, Statistics Canada said on Friday, confirming that after a strong first quarter, growth is slowing amid continuing global economic uncertainty.

Although April marked the fourth consecutive month-on-month gain, it was the smallest of the four increases. The figure matched analysts' expectations.

"(This) is no big surprise and fully consistent with the slow-motion expansion Canada now finds itself in. The modest April gain almost precisely matches the average increase seen over the past year," BMO Capital Markets chief economist Doug Porter said in a note to clients.

The Bank of Canada forecasts that second-quarter growth on an annualized basis will be 1.8 percent, down from the 2.5 percent in the first quarter.

The output of service industries expanded by 0.3 percent in April. Goods production fell by 0.3 percent on a decline in mining, quarrying and oil and gas extraction.

Porter and other analysts said second-quarter growth would be also hurt by major floods that hit Canada's oil capital last week, as well as a construction strike in the province of Quebec.

The Canadian dollar briefly pared its losses following the release of the data, before weakening back to C$1.0500, or 95.23 U.S. cents. It finished Thursday's North American session at C$1.0475 versus the U.S. dollar, or 95.47 U.S. cents.

The report showed wholesale and retail trade advanced by 0.6 percent and 0.5 percent, respectively, while the finance and insurance sector grew by 0.6 percent.

Manufacturing grew by 0.2 percent with durable goods output up by 0.5 percent on gains in computer and electronic products. Non-durable goods production dropped by 0.3 percent on declines in petroleum and coal products.

"The domestic economy is likely to remain subdued, which will prevent headline growth from moving materially above its trend rate," said TD Securities chief Canada macro strategist David Tulk.

Canada relies heavily on the economy of the United States, where the most recent data on consumer spending and jobs data suggests lukewarm growth.

Separately, Statscan said producer prices were unchanged in May from April as higher prices for petroleum and coal products offset declines in primary metal product and lumber prices. Analysts had estimated a 0.1 percent increase.

Petroleum and coal products climbed by 1.1 percent after two consecutive declines, pushed higher by a 3.6 percent increase in the price of gasoline.

Primary metal products slipped by 1.1 percent in part due to lower prices for gold, gold alloys, silver and platinum. Raw materials prices rose by 0.2 percent.

(With additional reporting by Andrea Hopkins in Toronto; Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson and Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/canadian-economy-grew-0-1-percent-april-services-124841741.html

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US futures head higher for fourth consecutive day

NEW YORK (AP) ? U.S. stock futures are rising for a fourth consecutive day, capping the biggest rally for S&P 500 index since January, thanks to a healthy dose of favorable economic news.

The S&P is now up 13 percent for the year, which makes it the best first half for the index since 2008.

Dow Jones industrial futures are up 23 points to 14,959. S&P futures have added 2.6 points to 1,609.20. Nasdaq futures are up 3.5 points to 2,903.

U.S. futures followed Asian markets higher Friday after a closely watched consumer price index in Japan, which has battled deflation for years, stopped falling for the first time in seven months.

Also on Friday, the Institute for Supply Management posts its gauge of business activity for June from Chicago.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-futures-head-higher-fourth-consecutive-day-122339749.html

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Lone Star

State Sen. Wendy Davis contemplates her 13-hour filibuster after the Democrats defeated the anti-abortion bill SB5, which was up for a vote on the last day of the legislative special session June 25, 2013 in Austin, Texas.

Texas state Sen. Wendy Davis filibustered for 10 hours to delay passage of an abortion-restriction bill.

Photo by Erich Schlegel/Getty Images

Texas politics favors the theatrical. ?Pappy? O?Daniel, the flour-milling Depression-era governor, won his position on the strength of his Western swing band. Texas Democrats idolize Ann Richards, the wise-cracking, tough-talking former governor and the last Democrat to hold the position. She was liberal, and she was a winner. Her ghost has totemic importance for Texas Democrats. For whatever reason?whether it be the state?s historically ingrained imbalances of party power, or an emphasis on individualism that outstrips that of most other parts of the country?showmanship is virtually a requirement for political office.

So when state Sen. Wendy Davis took to the Texas Senate floor Tuesday in pink tennis shoes for what would become a 10-hour talking filibuster to try to derail one of the most restrictive abortion bills in the country, she was drawing on a lengthy political tradition. But as the day went on?as the level of national attention grew, from President Obama to Judy Blume to the nearly 200,000 people who watched online as the midnight deadline loomed?it became clear that something was happening that was bigger than the bill itself. It was also something of a seance. And though Ann Richards? memory was summoned, the day animated a body much more moribund: the state Democratic Party of Texas.

Gov. Perry has called a second special session to begin July 1, and, with less ability to deploy delaying tactics, Democrats expect that the abortion restrictions will pass this time around. But Davis? filibuster may still prove a pivotal moment, one which portends a political transition. More than temporarily killing a bill, Davis helped create on Tuesday night a founding mythology for the rebirth of the state?s Democrats, a party that Davis may ultimately lead.

?It?s kind of awakened the Democratic Party, which didn?t really have a lot of lifeblood flowing through it,? says Terrysa Guerra, a rising strategist in the state party. ?I see a tremendous amount of excitement. More than I?ve ever seen at any point in my career?even in 2008.?

Davis, a longtime champion of Texas Democrats, has been profiled dozens of times in the last 24 hours. The child of a poor Fort Worth family, she was a divorced single mother by the age of 19. After putting herself through a two-year paralegal program at a nearby county college, she graduated first in her class from Texas Christian University. Then, Harvard Law, with honors. Charismatic, articulate, friendly, principled, and relentlessly driven, she?s been one of the great hopes of her party, which hasn?t won a statewide post in almost 15 years.

Next year, Perry will likely relinquish the governor?s mansion and prepare for a presidential run, and the Republican nominee to replace him will likely be Attorney General Greg Abbott, a man with hyperconservative social views, one of whose Twitter icons is himself with the stone statue of the Ten Commandments on the Capitol grounds. Also up for re-election is Sen. John Cornyn. Democrats have been desperately searching for competitive candidates for the 2014 cycle. Davis has?so far?declined.

Many of the party?s stronger candidates have shied away from the next cycle because they believe better circumstances will come by the end of the decade. Almost all discussion about Texas? increasingly competitive political balance has focused on the growing number of Latino voters. But there are a myriad of other factors Democrats will have to learn to exploit if they?re to win. Texas is enjoying rapid immigration from other parts of the United States, especially California, and its urban areas, which shade blue, are experiencing explosive growth. But traditionally Democratic demographics turn out to vote at anemic levels.

The Democratic coalition is a complicated one, and will require substantial investment in time and resources to put in order. But above all, it will require someone who can excite voters to jump in the water. Bill White, the party?s technocratic gubernatorial candidate in 2010, was liked and respected as a moderate Houston mayor, but did a shade worse than Obama?s 2008 performance.

Davis? problems, were she to run for governor or senator, would be the same as all Democratic state candidates: name recognition, fundraising, lack of support from the national party. After Tuesday, those issues suddenly seem surmountable, thanks to miscalculation by the state?s calcifying Republican establishment.

The measure Davis filibustered, Senate Bill 5, would have essentially dismantled the institution of legal abortion in the state. Abortions would have been prohibited after 20 weeks, and abortion clinics would have been subjected to a raft of complicated regulations aimed, supporters said, to protect the health of the mother. They include requirements that abortion doctors have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of their clinic, and that all abortions, even drug-induced ones, take place within the confines of facilities built to surgical standards.

Opponents argued that the regulations were medically unnecessary and a thinly-veiled attempt to close clinics. They pointed out?and Republican Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst gleefully acknowledged?that only five of the state?s 42 clinics, all in major cities, would remain open if the bill was passed. A woman living in El Paso, for example, who sought an abortion in Texas, would have to travel some 600 miles to San Antonio. Once there, thanks to laws passed in 2011, she would also have to receive a sonogram, and wait 24 hours in the city before undergoing the procedure and returning home, a round-trip almost half the width of the United States. This, opponents of the bill said, would pose an unsurpassable burden to poor women living in rural areas.

Other states, such as Arkansas and North Dakota, have passed laws which contain more restrictive provisions. But Texas? bill, because of the state?s size and the sheer number of women affected, would have been one of the most consequential in the country, and pro-choice groups started mobilizing against it immediately.

More than 700 people signed up to testify against the bill at a committee hearing. Dozens of Democrats in the House and Senate masterfully slow-rolled the bill, taking up crucial time. It didn?t help that Gov. Perry, expecting a glide path through the legislature, only opened abortion up for debate halfway through a special 30-day session, leaving his legislative allies without much room for error.

?It?s a reflection of arrogance and incompetence,? says longtime state Democratic strategist Matt Angle. ?You have a governor who?s really not paying attention to the issues in his state, and didn?t realize it would be this unpopular.? There?s a pervasive sense of complacency, he says, in the state?s Republican establishment. And it?s easy to understand why?Dewhurst, Perry, and Perry?s probable successor Abbott have each held their current positions for a decade or more. The state GOP, for the most part, floats unmolested from victory to victory.

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/politics/2013/06/texas_abortion_filibuster_and_wendy_davis_the_state_senator_has_revived.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Paparazzo sues Justin Bieber for alleged assault

FILE - In this March 28, 2013 file photo, singer Justin Bieber performs on stage during the "I Believe" tour in Munich, southern Germany. Bieber has been sued by a paparazzo who claims the singer kicked and punched him last year at a Southern California shopping center. A lawsuit filed Wednesday, June 26, 2013 alleges the "Baby" crooner attacked Jose Osmin Hernandez Duran after Bieber and his then-girlfriend went to the movies at The Commons in Calabasas. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, File)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Justin Bieber has been sued by a paparazzo who claims the singer kicked and punched him last year at a Southern California shopping center.

A lawsuit filed Wednesday alleges the "Baby" crooner attacked Jose Osmin Hernandez Duran after Bieber and his then-girlfriend went to the movies at The Commons in Calabasas.

Bieber's representatives did not respond to a request for comment.

Duran claims Bieber started to leave the shopping center in his Mercedes, but got out of his car and sprinted toward him.

Duran says Bieber jumped into the air from 6 to 8 feet away to deliver a martial-arts-type kick to the photographer's gut before punching him in the face.

The suit seeks unspecified damages for "severe and extreme emotional distress" and negligence.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/paparazzo-sues-justin-bieber-alleged-assault-023647768.html

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Google Looking For Groups To Provide The Next Hikers To Don Trekker Street View Backpack

IMG_6111Google is trying hard to build out its Street View-style imagery of locales off the beaten path with its Trekker program. The Trekker, a roughly 40-pound backpack that has a camera-ridden sphere poking out over its wearer's head, captures 360-degree fields of view which are then used to build interactive, first-person views of remote places like the Grand Canyon. Google is now looking for applicants to help it continue to expand its Trekker efforts.

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

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

GOP's complicated path forward (CNN)

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AP Interview: UN Iraq rep urges exile cooperation

BAGHDAD (AP) ? The United Nations envoy to Iraq said Wednesday that residents of an Iranian dissident camp are denied freedom of movement by the exile group, and that efforts to relocate them outside Iraq are being stymied in part by lack of cooperation from the residents themselves.

Martin Kobler made the comments in an interview with The Associated Press in Baghdad as he prepares to leave the country at the end of his term. The U.N. has been involved in relocating members of the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq dissident group to a camp on the outskirts of the Iraqi capital while it works to resettle them abroad.

The MEK is the militant wing of a Paris-based Iranian opposition movement known as the National Council of Resistance of Iran that opposes Iran's clerical regime and has carried out assassinations and bombings there. They fear persecution if sent back to Iran.

About 3,100 MEK members live in Camp Liberty, a former U.S. military base near Baghdad airport. The Iraqi government wants the group's members out of the country. So do Iranian-backed Shiite militants, who have claimed responsibility for deadly rocket strikes on the camp.

Kobler acknowledged that a major problem in resettling camp residents is a shortage of countries willing to accept them. He repeated his call for U.N. member states, including the U.S., to do more.

"We do not have enough recipient countries. ... There is also reluctance from the side of the Liberty residents to cooperate with the UNHCR," he said, referring to the U.N. refugee agency.

Albania has agreed to take 210 camp residents, but only 71 have made the move so far. Germany has also offered to take 100 residents.

Kobler also cited concerns about what he called "human rights abuses inside Camp Liberty done by the MEK themselves."

Residents are not free to move between different sections of the camp without approval, and some are denied Internet and mobile phone access by MEK officials, he said. Medical treatment outside is also often blocked by the group, he alleged.

"There are, of course, MEK residents who probably would like to disassociate themselves from the MEK," he said. "Everybody who wants to go out of the camp ... should have the chance to do so."

The NCRI, the MEK's affiliated Paris-based group, has repeatedly criticized Kobler. He retains the backing of U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and was recently appointed the U.N. envoy and head of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo.

NCRI spokesman Shahin Gobadi dismissed Kobler's comments as baseless and intended to "cover up the failure to provide minimum security provisions" at the camp.

"The only purpose they serve is they set the stage for more attacks," he said, insisting that residents cooperate with the U.N. Gobadi also charged that "Kobler has never been an impartial person and does not represent the values of the U.N."

Iraq gave foreign diplomats as well as journalists from AP and Iraq's state-run TV a rare glimpse of the camp in September. Diplomats on the tour described conditions as acceptable.

The MEK fought alongside Saddam Hussein's forces in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, and several thousand of its members were given sanctuary at a facility known as Camp Ashraf near the Iranian border. The MEK renounced violence in 2001 and was removed from the U.S. terrorism list last year.

Iraq's Shiite-led government, which has close ties to Iran, considers the MEK a terrorist group. Iraqi security forces launched two deadly raids since 2009 on Camp Ashraf, and in 2012 most residents were moved to Camp Liberty, which is meant to be a temporary way station.

Ali al-Moussawi, a spokesman for Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, said Baghdad also has concerns that MEK leaders are preventing residents from leaving.

"There is intimidation being practiced by some MEK leaders against their fellow people," al-Moussawi said. "Some MEK members are willing to leave the country, but they are being threatened by a minority preventing them."

The exiles say their new home is unsafe, and they want to return to Camp Ashraf. Several residents were killed in a Feb. 9 rocket strike on the camp, and two others died in a similar attack this month.

In another development Wednesday, Iraqi electoral officials said the Kurdish-backed al-Taakhi list won the largest single bloc of seats in provincial elections in the restive northern province of Ninevah. It claimed 11 of 39 provincial council seats up for grabs.

Ninevah borders Iraq's largely autonomous Kurdish region and has a sizable Kurdish minority. Many of the remaining seats went to Arab parties, with Iraqi parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi's Sunni Arab-backed United bloc coming in second, with eight seats.

Residents in Ninevah and neighboring Anbar province voted last week in local elections that were delayed due to security concerns.

Also Wednesday, Iraqi authorities said two policemen were killed in a bomb blast in the Ninevah provincial capital Mosul. Four others died in an explosion in a small cafe in Baghdad's Dora neighborhood, They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information to journalists.

___

Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul-Zahra contributed reporting.

___

Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://twitter.com/adamschreck

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-interview-un-iraq-rep-urges-exile-cooperation-163517746.html

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Windows 8.1 Start button makes cameo in Server 2012 R2 Preview

Windows 81 Start button makes cameo in Server 2012 R2 Preview

It's back! Yes, what you're looking at above is the Start button (plus matching options) that's been rumored to return with Windows 8.1 (formerly "Blue"). Yesterday .NET developer Robert McLaws tweeted a series of screenshots of Windows Server 2012 R2 Preview (build 9431) which show the new Start button and a revised "Taskbar and Navigation properties" dialog -- among other things. Microsoft faced massive criticism last year after shipping Windows 8 without the Start button -- prompting third parties to create replacements (like Start8 and Classic Shell) -- so this is a welcome change. Stay tuned for Build 2013 (the company's developer conference) which starts Wednesday in San Francisco -- we're likely to find out more about Windows 8.1 and the Start button in short order.

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Via: WinBeta

Source: Robert McLaws (Twitter)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/25/windows-8-1-start-button-makes-cameo-in-server-2012-r2-preview/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Comics (for iPad)


The Apple iPad reignited my interest in a favorite adolescent diversion: comic books. I was out of the loop for quite a while (in this case, "a while" equates to nearly 20 years) until I started fiddling with Comixology's free iPad app after a friend recommended it. The appropriately-named Comics offers over 30,000 digital comic books and graphic novels that you can read on your iPad, computer, and numerous other devices. Comics makes the buying and reading experience a simple and inviting endeavor, even though the library is missing quite a few older books (and Dark Horse Comics' catalog).

Getting Started
Comixology's Comics, to put it in the most basic terms, is the iTunes of digital comics. You begin by creating an account. Purchased books are tied to your account, so you can access them from Comics' multi-platform mobile apps, as well as the Comixology website.

Even though Comixology's tech powers Marvel and DC's own separate digital comics marketplaces, Comics is the place to go if your tastes aren't tied to a particular publisher. Comics features books from a wide array of publishers both big and small: The Big Two are well-represented, as are smaller houses such as Antarctic Press, Archie, Devil's Due, Dynamite, IDW, Image, Top Shelf, Valiant, and many, many more. Dark Horse Comics, which is pushing its own non-Comixology app, is notably absent from the Comics marketplace, so you won't find Hellboy or the new Captain Midnight series, for example. It's a shame, really. It would be nice to have all the publishers under one roof.

Navigation and Availability
The default screen is the Featured section which highlights sales and new digital releases. Books are available for purchase via the Comixology website on the same day as the print hits brick-and-mortar stores, but many titles don't hit the Comics app at the same time due to Apple's approval process.

Comics gives you numerous ways to browse books: you can do so by series, story arcs, ratings, publisher, genre, creators, and other criteria. I like the idea more in concept than in execution because the sections are split between Comics' menu bar and a drop-down box. I would've preferred a more unified navigation experience. You can, of course, search using Comics' built-in search function.

Purchases and Pricing
When you find a book that interests you, simply tap on an issue icon to see an issue synopsis, creator credits, pricing, rating, and sample pages (availability depending on comic) that you can try before buying. Building a collection is as simple as tapping books' price icons, and waiting for issue, collection, or graphic novel to download. Batman # 20 downloaded in just a few seconds time over my Clear 4G mobile hotspot. The potent combination of accessibility and ease of use means that comics-heads may have to show some restraint in order to not drain their wallets.

Pricing, however, may deter rampant spending. New digital comics are priced exactly the same as their paper-and-ink counterparts, which from a consumer's point of view is a tad ludicrous. Each issue of Marvel's new Super Spider-Man series is priced at $3.99?the same as the physical issues. Plus, there are still several pre-'90s books that are missing in action. Where's Secret Wars II?

That said, there are a few freebie and $0.99 issues in Comics' catalog, but $2.99 to $3.99 pricing appears to be the norm (collections, naturally, command more cash). Comics lets you set up alerts so that you know when new issues of your favorite series are in the store?a very cool way to say on top of things.

Should you ever feel the need to pick up a paper-and ink-comic, clicking the Buy In Print option lets you find the nearest brick-and-mortar comics shop by keying in your zip code. Comixology has comics fans covered on many fronts.

The Reading Experience
Comics gives you several ways to read your titles. You can scroll through an issue page by page and digest the story in the same way as you would with a traditional comic. Or, you could use Comixology's patented Guided View technology. Activated by double-tapping a page, Guided View simulates the flow of reading a comic, by guiding you from blown-up panel to blown-up panel when you swipe from right to left. It's an incredibly useful feature, especially for comics fans reading on smaller screens such as the iPad mini. It's also much better than the Panel Zoom feature found in Dark Horse Comics' iPad app.

Comics has the hookup for those who like to read with their iPad's turned horizontally. The new Fit to Width feature sizes a page so that it fills the entire screen, instead of being a centered, vertical strip with black space on their side. Fit to Width not only makes text easier to read, but also lets you get a closer look at the art (despite needing to do some scrolling, as it doesn't support Guided View). Users holding their iPad's in landscape mode can also enjoy reading two pages at once, though it makes the text a hair difficult to read. In addition, Readers with Retina Display iPads will absolutely drool over Comics' CMX HD format, which delivers incredibly crisp visuals. Once you go CMX HD, it's hard to go back.

A Marvel-ous App
iPad-owning comics fans, whether new or returning, should download Comics. The app adds convenience to the comic purchasing and reading process, but some pricing and catalog issues may drive some to visit their local comic shop. But if you prefer reading The New 52 without worrying about mylar bags and backing boards, Comics is the way to go.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/tPzKDsnDuTU/0,2817,2420908,00.asp

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'Family Ties' creator Gary David Goldberg dies

NEW YORK (AP) ? Gary David Goldberg, who created the 1980s sitcom hit "Family Ties" and expanded into feature films, has died.

Goldberg died of brain cancer in Montecito, Calif., on Saturday, days before his 69th birthday, The New York Times reported.

Goldberg's TV successes also included the ABC comedy "Spin City," which in 1996 reunited him with "Family Ties" breakout star Michael J. Fox as the deputy mayor of New York City.

"With a full heart I say goodbye to my mentor, benefactor, partner, second father and beloved friend," Fox said in a statement on Monday. "He touched so many with his enormous talent and generous spirit. He changed my life profoundly."

A more modest hit for Goldberg yet much-acclaimed, CBS' "Brooklyn Bridge" (1991-93) was a tender comedy based on his experiences growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y. Marion Ross starred as a character inspired by his grandmother.

Goldberg's films included "Dad" (1989), starring Jack Lemmon and Ted Danson, as well as "Bye Bye Love" (1995) and "Must Love Dogs" (2005), which he wrote as well as directed.

His own dog, Ubu, contributed the name of his production company and was widely known from the onscreen credit where viewers heard the command, "Sit, Ubu, sit," then a bark.

Goldberg began his TV career in the 1970s as a writer for series including "The Bob Newhart Show," and was a producer of "Lou Grant."

In 1982 "Family Ties" premiered on NBC, introducing Michael J. Fox as a business-loving Young Republican son of left-wing baby boomers who were former hippies.

"Basically, those parents are me and Diana," Goldberg once said, referring to his wife, Diana Meehan, who survives him.

The series became a huge hit, making Fox a star and Goldberg an important behind-the-camera name.

During his career, Goldberg won two Emmy awards, two Golden Globes and a Peabody award.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/family-ties-creator-gary-david-goldberg-dies-200720990.html

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Sunday, June 16, 2013

UK territories sign on to tax-avoidance crackdown

Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron speaks at the G8 UK Innovation Conference at the Siemens Crystal Building in London, Friday June 14, 2013. As part of UK's G8 Presidency, the G8 Innovation Conference brings together 300 leading international entrepreneurs, researchers, scientists, designers and policy makers. (AP Photo/Facundo Arrizabalaga, Pool)

Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron speaks at the G8 UK Innovation Conference at the Siemens Crystal Building in London, Friday June 14, 2013. As part of UK's G8 Presidency, the G8 Innovation Conference brings together 300 leading international entrepreneurs, researchers, scientists, designers and policy makers. (AP Photo/Facundo Arrizabalaga, Pool)

(AP) ? U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron struck a deal Saturday with leaders of Britain's overseas territories to share tax information ? a move he heralded as a "positive step forward" on an issue at the forefront of next week's G-8 summit in Northern Ireland.

The prime minister met Saturday at Downing Street with representatives from Britain's network of overseas territories and dependencies, and he said that all agreed to sign up to a multilateral convention to exchange information automatically between tax authorities.

"I commend their leadership and I look to other international partners to work with their own territories to reach similar agreements," he said, adding that the deal is a "very positive step forward" that will strengthen Britain's voice in the G-8 and its campaign on the issue around the world.

"At the G-8 I'm going to push for international agreements to fight the scourge of tax evasion and aggressive tax avoidance," Cameron said. "That means automatic exchange of information between our tax authorities - so those who want to evade taxes have nowhere to hide."

It also means getting companies to report to tax authorities where they earn their profits and where they pay their tax, plus transparency about who owns which companies and who benefits, he added ? all moves Britain's territories and dependencies supported by signing onto the tax initiative Saturday.

Cameron said in an interview with the Guardian newspaper that in order to set an example to fellow G-8 leaders, he will introduce a new central register in Britain requiring the owners of "shadowy shell" companies be declared to tax authorities.

"Personally, I would hope the whole world will move towards public registers of beneficial ownership, but I want to maximize the leverage that the U.K. has got over others in terms of each step in turn," he added later.

Britain has a number of offshore territories, which include the British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands and the Channel Islands.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-15-Britain-G8-Tax%20Avoidance/id-d98089fa67e443d1ade5752e9a47af98

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Consumers riding high as retail sales surprise: this week in the economy

Retail sales surged 0.6 percent last month, on the strength of auto sales and building materials. Also this week, stock prices swing wildly as core wholesale prices suggest tame inflation and manufacturing slows. ?

By Schuyler Velasco,?Staff writer / June 15, 2013

A woman looks at an electronic stock board of a securities firm in Yokohama, near Tokyo, Friday. World markets have swung wildly this week as traders speculate when central banks will throttle back their easy-money policies. The Fed, which meets next week, will be evaluating last month's sharp rise in retail sales, tame inflation, and the slowdown in manufacturing.

Koji Sasahara/AP

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Retail sales go big:? Retail sales rose 0.6 percent in May and 4.3 percent since last year, beating analysts? predictions and stoking optimism for more accelerated economic growth going forward. Auto sales ruled the report, jumping 1.2 percent for the month. Excluding auto sales, retail sales rose only 0.3 percent. Building materials also gained 0.9 percent in a strong showing.

Skip to next paragraph Schuyler Velasco

Staff writer/editor

Schuyler Velasco is a writer and editor for the Monitor's business desk.? She writes about consumer issues, sports, and the occasional sandwich.

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The data prompted Barclays Research to revise upward ? significantly ? its predictions for second-quarter gross domestic product: from a 1.1 percent annual rate to 1.8 percent.?

Wholesale prices rise sharply:?For the first time in three months, the index moved up, rising 0.5 percent from April to May, but it was due almost entirely to higher food and gasoline costs. Core prices, which exclude those two volatile categories rose only 0.1 percent. That suggests that underlying inflation is still tame, a key indicator the Federal Reserve is watching as it prepares to meet next week and review the economy and its own interest-rate policies. ? ??

Jobless claims fall: The number of people applying for initial unemployment benefits fell for the second week in a row last week, from 346,000 to 334,000 claims (a decline of 12,000), according to the Labor Department. It was the smallest number of applications since early May, and a hopeful sign that the job market is making further improvement. Job market performance will be a key factor in consumer spending and the growth of the US economy going forward, Josh Shapiro, chief US economist for MFR, Inc. in New York, wrote in an e-mailed analysis. ?On a fundamental basis, labor market conditions will be the key factor for the consumer, and evidence concerning job growth therefore will remain the paramount economic variable for some time.?

The stock market?s wild week: The US stock market has been on a roller coaster for the past week, with the Dow dropping over 100 points both Tuesday and Wednesday, then soaring on Thursday, and losing 105 points on Friday. The market gauge has swung more than 100 points in seven sessions over the past two weeks. The swings were felt abroad as well: Japan?s Nikkei Index plunged 6 percent Thursday.

The market volatility can be largely credited to uncertainty over central bank policies, and whether the Fed will allow short-term interest rates to climb in the coming months. In particular, bond prices have been falling in recent weeks over concerns that the Federal Reserve will soon scale back its stimulus efforts.?

Manufacturing goes flat: Total industrial production went unchanged in May, and manufacturing ticked up .01 percent. ?The weak numbers could be a signal that the US manufacturing sector is poised for a contraction, barring strong growth in June. ?Strong headwinds have made it difficult for the recovery to gain momentum,? IHS economist Erik Johnson wrote in an e-mailed analysis. ?The sequester will hurt growth through the end of the year, while slowing growth in emerging markets and a lengthy Eurozone recession have muted foreign demand. This is hurting manufacturing and prompting businesses to remain ultra-cautious about hiring and capital spending.?

Mortgage rates on the rise: ?The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage jumped to 3.98 percent this week, nearing the 4 percent mark for the first time in nearly a year and a half. The last time rates were over 4 percent was March 2012. ?Federal Reserve bond purchases have kept rates low during that period, and speculation that the Fed will end those purchases is pushing rates higher. Still, by historical standards, rates remain quite low.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/xyRCyr3GFbU/Consumers-riding-high-as-retail-sales-surprise-this-week-in-the-economy

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If American baseball used British announcers (hilarious) (Americablog)

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Big Daddy's big flop in Muay Thai

PATTAYA, Thailand (AP) ? Wincing in pain and clutching his shins, Riddick Bowe ended his debut in Thai kickboxing with a thud in the second round.

The 45-year-old former world heavyweight boxing champion came to a rude awakening on Friday that Muay Thai is just as punishing.

"It's much harder than boxing," Bowe said after limping out of the ring.

Bowe took a big beating from his 30-year-old Russian opponent Levgen Golovin, who assaulted the former champion with repeated kicks to the shins.

Bowe lost his balance and fell five times before the bout was ended by technical knockout after his last fall.

"You can recover from a head shot or a body shot, but when you get kicked in the leg it lasts a long time," he said. "My leg is still hurting. I don't know how long it's been ? 15 minutes?"

Bowe's last boxing match was in 2008. He says he decided to try Muay Thai because he was bored with retirement and needs the cash.

He made $150,000 from Friday's fight, organized by Thai promoters trying to increase the international appeal of Thailand's national sport. The bout was held at an outdoor ring set up beside the beach in Pattaya, a Thai town best known for its seaside red-light district.

Bowe beat Evander Holyfield in 1992 to become the undisputed world heavyweight champion.

Now weighing 300 pounds, Bowe was heavy and slow and barely landed a punch in Friday's fight.

Despite the pain in his legs, Bowe smiled for the cameras after the fight and mustered some optimism.

"I had a lot of fun. I'm going to do it again. Next time it's going to be different," he said. "I'll be back soon."

Bowe's opponent shook his head in disbelief when told the aging boxer isn't giving up on Muay Thai.

"It would be a big mistake. It's not for him," Golovin said. "He's too slow and a bit too old."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/big-daddys-big-flop-muay-thai-161055155.html

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SBDC reaching out to small businesses in fire area | Colorado ...

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The Small Business Development Center will provide assistance to the small businesses in Black Forest that are being harmed by the Black Forest fire.

smalldevcenter-1The SBDC will offer in-person assistance at the El Paso County Disaster Assistance Center, located at the El Paso County Citizens Service Center on 1675 Garden of the Gods Road. The center will be open starting today and remain open every day through Monday, June 17.

The assistance could include loans from the Pikes Peak Region Business Recovery Fund, available through a community collaboration of banks, the Colorado Springs Regional Busienss Alliance and community parnters. The loan program gives loans of up to $10,000 with no interest for a year, and 12 percent after a year. The loans are available for a three-year term, and businesses must show a 10 percent decrease in sales receipts for 2012 or 2013. Apply online at www.coloradoenterprisefund.org.

?The SBDC Disaster Relief Program has been an active program since the Waldo Canyon Fire in June of 2012,? said Aikta Marcoulier, executive director of the SBDC in Colorado Springs. ?We have continued our work on Disaster Relief and Preparedness for businesses long after the ashes settled and are now extending our services and expertise to businesses affected by the Black Forest Fire. Our mission is to help small business recover and advance from both the Waldo Canyon Fire and Black Forest Fires.

The SBDC is also part of the Pikes Peak Region Business Recovery Team which continues to work to identify federal, state, local and private resources to assist small businesses in the wake of the Waldo Canyon Fire and now the Black Forest Fire. Through the efforts of the Pikes Peak Recovery Team and other community partners, Colorado Enterprise Fund was able to offer a special loan program, Fire Impact Recovery Effort (FIRE), dedicated to supporting and rebuilding small businesses in the Pikes Peak Region after the Waldo Canyon Fire. This loan program has now been extended to assist businesses affected by the Black Forest Fire. Contact Ingrid Wood, Disaster Relief Program Coordinator at 667-3812 for more information.

?

Source: http://csbj.com/2013/06/13/sbdc-reaching-out-to-small-businesses-in-fire-area/

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Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Help Catalonia: Quimet, Catalan Food and Drink

Help Catalonia: Quimet, Catalan Food and Drink skip to main | skip to sidebar

Quimet, Catalan Food and Drink

The Catalan economy has always been externally oriented, despite often being subject to autarquic Spanish economic policies, some of which still survive, such as the blockade on Barcelona and Tarrogona Harbour?s railway connections. However, none of this has deterred Catalan entrepreneurs, who are becoming an incresingly common sight in all corners of the world. The following is a text by one of these entrepreneurs, labouring to bring traditional Catalan food to the British market, and clearly succeeding at that. Quimet, Catalan Food and Drink, started as a market stall (calledQuimet Canyal Cellar) that sold a small range of Catalan food and wine at the Real Food Market in London?s Southbank. We are now getting ready to launch a new UK online shop and, in parallel, we will be selling to British shops and restaurants. We are proud to come from a rich culture and tradition of food and wine. A land that holds what Colman Andrews described as ?Europe?s Last Great Culinary Secret?. He wrote this in 1988 and yet, in 2013, Catalan cuisine, despite the international recognition of some of its stars like Ferran Adri? ofEl Bulli and the Roca brothers of El Celler de Can Roca, has remained relatively unknown to the rest of the world. The culinary fireworks by Adri? and the Roca brothers have built on a very distinctive food tradition, and on the availability of ingredients of extraordinary quality. And since the Ancient Greeks and Romans arrived in Catalonia, it has been a land of wine. There are 11 protected wine appellations,and an extra one for Cava (sparkling wine). In the last few decades Catalan wine-makers have moved away from mass-production of bulk wines and the quality and variety of Catalan wines available is increasingly recognised internationally.
We can?t wait to ensure that good Catalan food and drinks are more easily available in the UK, and to help let people know about our rich gastronomic heritage. And we are starting very soon! On the 21st of April, from 12 to 4, in the context of a Catalan celebration of St George?s at London?s Borough Market, we will be launching Quimet. England and Catalonia share a patron saint, Saint George?s Day being a very important occasion. We will have a special stall for the day selling Catalan wines, cava, ratafia, beans from el Bages, anchovies from L?Escala, allioli, romesco, fuet? and even Bover snails in tomato sauce!

Links:

Source: http://www.helpcatalonia.cat/2013/06/quimet-catalan-food-and-drink.html

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A path to lower-risk painkillers: Newly-discovered drug target paves way for alternatives to morphine

June 10, 2013 ? For patients managing cancer and other chronic health issues, painkillers such as morphine and Vicodin are often essential for pain relief. The body's natural tendency to develop tolerance to these medications, however, often requires patients to take higher doses -- increasing risks of harmful side effects and dependency.

Now, new research from the University of Michigan Health System and a major pharmaceutical company has identified a novel approach to moderate and severe pain therapy that paves the way for lower dosage painkillers. The findings appear in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Drugs such as hydrocodone (the main ingredient of Vicodin) and oxycodone (Oxycontin) are often the best options for the treatment of moderate to severe pain for patients facing medical conditions ranging from a wisdom tooth extraction to cancer. The drugs bind to specific molecules (opioid receptors) on nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord to prevent the feeling of pain.

"We have for the first time discovered compounds that bind to an alternative site on the nerve opioid receptors and that have significant potential to enhance the drug's positive impact without increasing negative side effects," says co-author John Traynor, Ph.D., professor of pharmacology at the U-M Medical School.

"We are still in the very early stages of this research with a long way to go, but we believe identifying these compounds is a key step in revolutionizing the treatment of pain. This opens the door to developing pain relief medications that require lower doses to be effective, helping address the serious issues of tolerance and dependence that we see with conventional pain therapy."

Conventional drug treatments for pain work by targeting the so-called orthosteric site of the opioid receptor that provides pain relief. Targeting this site, however, is a double-edged sword because it is also responsible for all of the drug's unwanted side effects, such as constipation and respiratory depression. Tolerance also limits chronic use of the drugs because higher doses are required to maintain the same effect.

Using cell systems and mouse brain membranes, researchers have identified compounds that bind to a physically distinct and previously unknown "allosteric" site on the opioid receptor- a site that fine-tunes the activity of the receptor. Not only do these compounds act at a location that hasn't been studied as a drug target before but they bind to the receptor in a new way to enhance the actions of morphine -- which means lower doses can have the same impact.

"The newly-discovered compounds bind to the same receptor as morphine but appear to act at a separate novel site on the receptor and therefore can produce different effects. What's particularly exciting is that these compounds could potentially work with the body's own natural painkillers to manage pain," Traynor says.

"We know that conventional strong pain medications ultimately increase the risk of withdrawal symptoms and addiction, which is an especially serious issue with the current prescription drug abuse epidemic in our country. The implications of this work, if it translates to animal studies and then to humans, are highly significant to this area of study."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/S7LBKSEkcBM/130610192553.htm

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Governing in 2015 with much less money - LabourList

Last week Ed Miliband set out how we plan to control social security spending by focusing on the costs of failure. And Ed Balls explained the tough inheritance Labour will face if we win in 2015. The failure of the government?s economic policy? means we will have a substantial deficit and rising debt. Ed Balls has made it clear to everyone in the Shadow Cabinet that Labour? has to prepare to govern on the basis of falling department spending.

That is where we start from.

If Labour wins in 2015? we will govern on three organising principles. We will give power to local people, to shape their services and communities. We will invest for prevention, to avoid the costs of failure, and we will build into the system collaboration between public bodies, and end bureaucratic duplication and wasted money.

The last Labour government rebuilt our public services and made the country a much better place to live in.

We drove standards up and waiting lists down.

But too often we thought that a delivery state powered by choice and competition was the only answer to better and more productive public services.?It isn?t. We forgot that what mattered was giving those who used and worked in our hospitals and schools a greater sense of ownership.

In 2010 David Cameron announced a different kind of statecraft with the Big Society. He said, ?Today is the start of a deep, serious reform agenda to take power away from politicians and give it to people.??But the Coalition is continuing many of the most centralising features of? New Labour?s approach, with none of its virtues.

It is salami slicing the NHS . Instead of bringing costs down and caring for patients, and it is wasting time, energy and money on what NHS Chief Executive, David Nicholson, has described as a costly distraction at risk of ending in ?misery and failure?.

Michael Gove is not giving back power to local areas, he is centralising state power by running thousands of Academy schools from Whitehall.? The Conservatives have gone from Big Society back to no such thing as society.

Our country has suffered from decades of excessive centralisation and the failure of our political system can be seen in many of the scandals of recent years. The risk taking in the City. The phone hacking scandal. The neglect and abuse of older people at Mid Staffordshire hospital. The horsemeat scandal. When the market is out of control and the state unresponsive, the result is greed, abuse of power, money wasted and unkindness.

We won?t renew our politics or create a better society? from Whitehall. Labour in government will devolve power downward and build a new kind of state which is based on our values of responsibility, reciprocity and relationships.

Hilary Benn?s New English Deal will offer all English local government more powers and devolution to cover skills, job finding, housing and investment. Labour?s big English City Councils are already saving money by radically reforming services to tackle social exclusion. They are cutting costs by helping people to help themselves and taking a central role in creating jobs and growth by developing their regional economies with Strategic Partnerships, employment brokerages and the living wage.

We are changing politics from making demands on Whitehall for more spending toward people organising together to improve their communities and build resilience.

Government wastes huge sums trying to deal with the symptoms of social problems instead of investing small amounts to deal with the causes. We will invest for prevention to reduce the future burden on public spending. For example we can prevent an epidemic of childhood obesity and a future health crisis by low cost measures such as reintroducing the duties on schools to provide 2 hours of sport a week and lunches that meet healthy standards.

Early years intervention is key. Every taxpayer pays the cost of? educational failure and unfulfilled lifetimes on benefits. Manchester Council has shown what can be done with its offer of support for parents and children from birth to 5 years.

Many of the major social problems we face do not need more money. They need radical new ways to use existing resources, to frame regulations and provide incentives across local areas. We need to put relationships centre stage in service design and reform services around networks, households and co-creation rather than being delivered by centralised institutions.

Collaboration between organisations can end the fiefdoms and competition where money is wasted in duplicating activities. The CBI estimates that? delivering care closer to home for some patients could save the NHS up to ?3.4bn a year.

Today I?m giving a speech at the Local? Government Association on how Labour will govern in 2015 if we win the election.?Some will be sceptical. Labour talks local but has a habit of big government and top down command politics.?There?s no money so there is nothing we can do.?But lets remember our traditions. We grew out of the popular movements of self help and self improvement.

Our history lies in mutualism, cooperatism and organising. We gave political representation to working people by building political power in our English Cities.?We gave millions pride and meaning when we spoke about the virtue of work and about conserving the local places? people called home.?Our forebears built this country and made it a decent land to live in. They understood that politics is a struggle for power and they organised to win it,? not from the top down but from the bottom up.

And we will do so again because it is the only way.

Jon Cruddas is the Head of Labour?s Policy Review

Source: http://labourlist.org/2013/06/governing-in-2015-with-much-less-money/

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