Sunday, June 30, 2013

Social lemurs make better larcenists, scientists say

Social lemurs were found to be better thieves than their less social counterparts, in a study that could have implications for how animal intelligence in measured.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 27, 2013

Seven weeks old ring-tailed lemur twins sit in their enclosure in the Zoo in Erfurt, Germany, in May 2013. A recent experiment found that social lemurs make better thieves than do lemurs that live in small social groups.

Jens Meyer/AP

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If you ever have the occasion to dine with a lemur, choose one from a small social group.

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Researchers from Duke University have found that lemurs living in large social groups are smarter thieves, a find that could have implications for how scientists measure primate intelligence, which is usually correlated with brain size.

Researchers first trained 60 lemurs to see humans as their competitors for food and then arranged an experiment that gave the animals a choice between which human to steal food from: A person placidly staring down the lemur, or another person facing away from the lemur, their food left vulnerable.?

The lemurs from small social groups were indiscriminate in which food they went after, reaching as often for the vulnerable food as they did for the well-protected items. But the lemurs that came from large groups were savvier. They could read the social cues, and those cunning animals were more likely to target the food that the humans had left foolishly unguarded.

Scientists said that the lemurs in small and large social groups have brains of roughly the same size. Usually, brain-size is an indicator of how well an animal will score on intelligence tests, say researchers. But this study, says the scientists, suggests that social factors could also influence animal cognition and that more studies are needed that test forms of animal intelligence un-related to brain size.

?These data provide evidence for a relationship between group size and social cognition in primates, and reveal the potential for cognitive evolution without concomitant changes in brain size,? the scientists wrote in the study, published in PLOS ONE.

The results offer tentative support for what is called the ?social intelligence hypothesis,? which proposes that a group living selectively favors cognitive skills that help animals compete for food and mates within the group, while also maintaining the stability of large social groups. Animals who have those skills are favored in natural selection, meaning that the group as a whole will evolve to have heftier cognitive abilities than animals that have not experienced that natural selection in their small groups.

The stealthy knowledge that the large-group lemurs used in the experiment would also have been useful in their social groups, in which underling individuals must procure food or seize mating opportunities in secret.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/BRYFVtTK1RQ/Social-lemurs-make-better-larcenists-scientists-say

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Alt-week 6.29.13: DARPA's robot finalists, the IRIS solar mission and empathetic computers

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 62913 Darpa's robot finalists, IRIS solar mission launch and computers that feel your pain

Sure, DARPA is slightly sinister, but it's so into robots that we're willing to let that slide. In fact, last year it launched the DARPA Robotics Challenge, and it just announced the top six nine seven teams to advance. But if just the idea of figuring out robotics frustrates you, NC State's face tracking program literally gets that, and NASA just launched the IRIS solar probe from the belly of a transport jet. It's Alt-week, baby.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/29/alt-week-6-29-13-darpa-robots-iris/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Page Not Found - Yahoo!

Please check the URL for proper spelling and capitalization. If you're having trouble locating a destination on Yahoo!, try visiting the Yahoo! homepage or look through a list of Yahoo!'s online services.

Please try Yahoo Help Central if you need more assistance.

Source: http://rss.news.yahoo.com/rss/techblog

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Debt Relief Network

This is a legal wrestling match with creditors that uses basic contract law principles. When creditors lend credit card money, the contract includes an offer to lend money, the terms for using the money and an implied acceptance by the use of the card. These same three factors are about to be used against the lender; so when the client gets his next set of credit card statements, the minimum payment plus the forty three dollars and the bill is sent to the debt relief network. When the network passes along this minimum payment, deliberately late, included is a statement that says that on the cashing of the 2% check the new minimum payment is ten dollars a month and that no interest, no late fees and no negative reports on credit histories can be assigned to the consumer. It also says that the network will assume responsibility for all the debts and the cashing of the minimum payment check is acceptance of the new agreement. In addition, the cashing of the check also means acceptance that any late payment fees or any other demands will result in penalties to them of between five hundred and twenty five hundred dollars. With the forty three dollars, the debt relief network will continue to send about four months of ten dollar payments for that particular account.

Of course it's not hard to see the gigantic collision that's about to happen. Instead of agreeing to the contract, which the lenders always legally do by cashing the 2% check, they begin violating the terms by adding interest and tacking on late fees. Each lender occurrence of violating the agreement is costing the lender big penalties. The debt relief network will pay the debt at ten dollars a month for as long as the lender follows the agreement, but they never do. Within months the credit card company owes more in penalties than what it was owed on the original account. Then the network asks for relief of the debt or it will go after the lender for the penalties. God reminds us that there is an awful for our sin when the bible declares, "The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord." (Romans 6:23)

It a lot of ways, the debt relief network plan is genius. And when it comes to getting back at lenders who have practiced high powered usury for years, a person wants to stand up and cheer. The incredible toll that year after year of debt can exact on individuals is staggering, including violence, health issues and divorce. But there are dilemmas for those who see this strategy as an unbiblical abandonment of responsibilities. Much of the discussion comes down to whether a person should be subjected to ungodly and anti-scriptural usury. The Old Testament would appear to limit the lender to no more than seven years of a business relationship with a borrower and the interest had to be fair and not punitive. If anyone would say with authority that this plan is right or wrong, the authority would have to come into question, for the quandary may be more about self-inflicted guilt than a definitive biblical answer.

The debt relief network does have some caveats to share with their potential customers. First, creditors may shower the former owner of the accounts with bill collectors. The network says it can get those stopped. The network also warns that the credit report will take a nose dive, a direct violation of the agreement that the creditor made with the relief agency. When the final agreement is reached between network and who are now their creditors, the erasure of all negative remarks and their effects will be completed.

Whether the decision is to use this debt relief network plan or to use credit counseling which is another possible abandoning of obligations, or to work three jobs to pare down the principle, each one has negative drawbacks. With recent days being filled with news of possible depression-like conditions on the horizon, the possibility of greed and power finally being addressed may become a reality. But the fact remains that those who have great riches will always have usurped power over the not so rich. If a person sees this strategy as the chance for the little guy to strike a blow for the whole gang, take time to really investigate the plan. Look for critics, search for legal loopholes and pray for guidance on this most interesting option for credit elimination.

Source: http://www.christianet.com/debtrelief/debtreliefnetwork.htm

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India:-Airtel & Google join hands to provide free internet for mobile users

Airtel mobile customers will have access to mobile web search and feature-phone-friendly versions of Gmail and Google+ in India for free.

Leading global telecommunications company, ****** Airtel has joined hands with Google to launch free internet service for mobile users in India.

They announced the launch of Free Zone, which will give Airtel mobile customers access to mobile web search and feature-phone-friendly versions of Gmail and Google+ in India for free.

According to a statement released by Airtel, Free Zone aims to make the web accessible and affordable to all mobile users.

The Internet services available via Airtel includes:

Gmail: Users have unlimited access to Gmail from their mobile browser. If users click on a link or attachment within the email they are directed to a page where they can purchase a data package.

Google+: Users can share online photos and messages with circles of family, selected friends or the public; follow updates on the things they are passionate about - from cricket to photography, music to news; and follow people they?re interested in.

Google Search: Users can search the entire Internet and access the first page of websites from the results for free. If they click further into a website after that, they are directed to a page where they can purchase a data package.

While Airtel subscribers will not incur any data charges to access these services on Free Zone powered by Google, access to more advanced services such as attachment download or browse through to web sites from the ones accessed in the Free Zone would be enabled through the subscription to a standard data package. The first page of a website linked from search results is provided at no data cost. They are informed about the data charges and given the option to purchase an appropriate data package.

Rajan Anandan, VP and Managing Director, Google India said, ?The mobile Internet user base is growing really fast in India. Working with Airtel on this exciting trial means that we can offer Internet services at no cost to anyone with a phone. This gives people easier access to information in a way that benefits everyone, whether it?s an individual or a small business that wants to reach more people on the web. We hope this initiative will encourage more Indians to experience the value of the Internet and gain from it. Students can easily look up for facts to work on their assignments, housewives will be able to easily check on recipes and connect with their friends and family from their mobile phones."

Free Zone aims to put the web in the hands of more people and empower first time Internet users with several useful services of the Internet.

Airtel mobile customers can access the service by visiting airtel Free Zone | Gmail, Google+, Google Search on Mobile | No Data Costs and start using the Internet without having to sign in to the service.

?As the country?s leading telecom services provider, we at Airtel are constantly looking for new ways of exciting more and more of our 200 million plus customers in India about the data experience. In this market, where feature phones predominate, our association with Google to bring Free Zone to India will encourage millions of users to discover the power of mobile Internet for the very first time and leverage the amazing world of information search, email and social collaboration - at no incremental cost? said N Rajaram, Chief Marketing Officer ? Consumer Business, ****** Airtel.

Airtel and Google join hands to provide free internet for mobile users in India - Sci/Tech - DNA

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/members-club/261237-india-airtel-google-join-hands-provide-free-internet-mobile-users.html

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Kentucky Announces Online Gaming Settlement | LEX18.com ...

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - For the second time this month, Kentucky has announced an Internet gaming-related settlement, this time recovering $15 million in online gambling losses by Kentucky residents.

Gov. Steve Beshear's office said Kentucky filed a case against bwin.party in August 2010 and reached an agreement earlier this month.

Justice and Public Safety Cabinet spokeswoman Jennifer Brislin said the money will go into the state's General Fund. Another $6 million was earlier announced to be headed for Kentucky's General Fund from a settlement of unrelated federal court actions in New York and Maryland stemming from online gambling.

Beshear said in a statement that bwin.party was trying to comply with U.S. law and be known for "integrity and honesty in this industry."

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

Source: http://www.lex18.com/news/kentucky-announces-online-gaming-settlement-340977/

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91% We Steal Secrets: The Story Of Wikileaks

All Critics (46) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (42) | Rotten (4)

Sometimes it takes a feature-length documentary to stitch together a story we think we already know.

A real-life cyber-thriller with real-life consequences, Alex Gibney's We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks is a riveting and revelatory documentary ...

Gibney builds a remarkable level of suspense, given how exhaustively WikiLeaks has been covered in the media.

Engaging, kinetic, revelatory and unexpected.

At once an awkward mingling of two complex life stories and a gripping, necessary look at how information is gathered, shared and, yes, stolen.

Who is "We" in the title We Steal Secrets? There's no need for a spoiler alert, but it's neither Gibney nor Assange.

Which is the real Assange? This movie cannot say. It's as if Gibney threw up his hands, put the whole mess in the audience's lap and said, "Here, YOU figure this guy out."

A psychological suspense film with an open ending that's more haunting than the tricky climaxes of most post-Hitchcock thrillers.

With an approach that feels like a thriller, Gibney looks at both sides of the debate over the site's purpose and effectiveness.

Smart and opinionated, it's a great introduction to this ongoing story.

Gibney continues his run as the premier nonfiction filmmaker working today.

Arguably furthers WikiLeaks' stated purpose, but with a necessary whiff of the investigative filmmaker's instinctive skepticism.

The film is fascinating and provocative, deftly navigating complex personalities and shifting allegiances.

Who decides what stays secret? This brilliant documentary explores that question, itself a meta-narrative as the documentarian exposes the secrets of the secret-sharers.

Works...as a saga of self-destructive behavior by capable people whose judgment was perverted by smugness about their own oprinciples.

A fascinating account of a man who loved stirring the pot until he was the one sitting in it.

Gibney has created one of the signature discussions on the signature debate of the post-9/11 information-security age, namely: Who needs to know?

No quotes approved yet for We Steal Secrets: The Story Of Wikileaks. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/we_steal_secrets_the_story_of_wikileaks_2013/

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Egypt prepares for worst ahead of Sunday protest

CAIRO (AP) ? As the streets once again fill with protesters eager to oust the president and Islamists determined to keep him in power, Egyptians are preparing for the worst: days or weeks of urban chaos that could turn their neighborhoods into battlegrounds.

Households already beset by power cuts, fuel shortages and rising prices are stocking up on goods in case the demonstrations drag on. Businesses near protest sites are closing until crowds subside. Fences, barricades and walls are going up near homes and key buildings. And local communities are organizing citizen patrols in case security breaks down.

For yet another time since President Mohammed Morsi took office last year, his palace in Cairo's upscale Heliopolis neighborhood is set to become the focus for popular frustration with his rule. Some protests outside the capital have already turned deadly, and weapons ? including firearms ? have been circulating more openly than in the past.

"We're worried like all Egyptians that a huge crowd will come, and it will get bloody," said Magdy Ezz, owner of a menswear shop across from the walled complex, a blend of Middle Eastern and neoclassical architecture. Besides ordinary roll-down storm shutters, storefronts on the street are sealed off with steel panels.

"We just hope it will be peaceful. But it could be a second revolution," he said. "If it lasts, we'll have to keep the store closed. But it's not like business has been booming here anyway, especially since the problems last year."

Last winter, the area saw some of Cairo's deadliest street violence since Egypt's 2011 uprising, with Islamists attacking a sit-in, anarchists throwing gasoline bombs, and police savagely beating protesters.

Morsi's opponents aim to bring out massive crowds starting Sunday, saying the country is fed up with Islamist misrule that has left the economy floundering and security in shambles. They say they have collected 22 million signatures ? compared to around 13 million voters who elected Morsi ? calling for him to step down, and they hope the turnout will push him to do just that.

Morsi's Islamist allies say they will defend the mandate of the country's first freely elected president, some with their "souls and blood" if necessary, while hard-liners have vowed to "smash" the protests.

On Friday, thousands of Morsi supporters launched a counterdemonstration, which some plan to continue as an open-ended sit-in at a mosque near the presidential palace ? the endpoint of the main protest march two days later.

Both camps say they intend to be peaceful, but demonstrations could rapidly descend into violence ? especially if the two sides meet. Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood group has said five of its members were killed in clashes with protesters in Nile Delta provinces over the past days, and Brotherhood offices have been attacked in several cities. A total of eight people, including one American, have been killed in protests this past week. The nation's highest religious authority, Al-Azhar, has warned against "civil war."

At the Brotherhood's national headquarters in Cairo's Muqattam district, workers added a final layer of mortar to a brick wall topped with grating to reinforce the main gate. A bank on the corner was completely boarded up. Some fear protesters could descend on the neighborhood to attack the headquarters, as happened last spring when supporters and opponents of the president fought street battles that left 200 wounded.

"The police have to get this place secured. It's their job and I'm sure they will," said Hadi Saad, a designer who lives around the corner from the headquarters. "The demonstrations will be very big across the country, no matter if (Morsi) stays or goes, so we should be prepared here as well."

Other neighbors said they don't expect a repeat of violence in the area, a hill overlooking the rest of the city. Only a handful of police patrolled the neighborhood ahead of the weekend protests, corralling a 100-car queue to the main avenue's gas station.

Engineer Hasan Farag, also a neighbor, said residents were "hoping for the best." Some have begun to resent the Brotherhood's presence, however, and a petition to force the offices out has been circulating.

"The neighborhood is divided ? some don't mind the headquarters being here, others do," Saad said.

Security has been redoubled at the presidential palace in Heliopolis. Walls set up last year still block some traffic access, and curved concrete slabs designed to prevent climbing now protect the main gates. Shipping containers also line much of the perimeter, and nearby apartment buildings have blocked off their parking lots and side streets with barbed wire. On Friday, authorities built a new wall of concrete blocks to surround the complex.

Peter Soliman, a communications student who lives in the neighborhood, said most residents don't know what to expect.

"Of course, parents are worried about their children going out to demonstrate by the palace, especially if the Brotherhood shows up," he said. "People fear things will turn bloody and divide the country."

Other Heliopolis residents and protest organizers say neighborhood watch groups are already being formed.

In the city center, concrete walls continue to block off the Interior Ministry and southern access routes to Tahrir Square, epicenter of the uprising that overthrew longtime autocrat Hosni Mubarak. At the weekend, protesters gathered by the thousands at the square, saying they plan to dig in for a protracted conflict.

The nearby Semiramis Hotel is taking no chances, even though Tahrir is expected to be a sideshow compared to Sunday's march on the palace. The site of repeated clashes between stone-throwing youths and riot police this past year, the luxury hotel has just finished fortifying itself with a spiked metal fence topped with razor-sharp blades.

To the south, in the leafy Garden City neighborhood ? an area that has sometimes seen spillover violence from Tahrir ? some residents were securing their homes.

Metalworker Sameh Haddad used an arc welder to put the final touches on an apartment building's new wrought iron gate before hurrying to other appointments. "For once, business has been great," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-prepares-worst-ahead-sunday-protest-074010870.html

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Lincoln-Sudbury's Griffin finishes college career as lacrosse champ at North Carolina

Lincoln-Sudbury graduate Jessica Griffin finally found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow this spring with the University of North Carolina women?s lacrosse team.

That was true in a personal and team sense as the Tar Heels won the Division I national championship in triple overtime by beating Maryland and Griffin received significant playing time as a starter for the first time in her career during her senior season.

"You go into college knowing that playing a Division I sport is like have a full-time job," Griffin said. "I love competing and I love working hard to get better, so I never regretted my decision to play at this level for a second."

Deb DeJesus, her high school coach, is proud of her ex-player and the difficult journey she took.

"For someone who was an all-star in high school, someone who was the number one player on her team, this was a big challenge," DeJesus said. "It says something about her character to stick with it.

"It can be discouraging to go and play for a premier program like North Carolina when you?re used to starting and playing pretty much every minute of every game. Now you?re sitting on the bench. It says something about her as a person."

The collegiate landscape is littered with athletes who want to play at the Division I level, but aren?t prepared for the level of talent and competition they face. They?re used to being the big fish in the small pond and when most of the fish are the same size or bigger, they struggle. Sometimes they transfer, often landing at a school at a lower division. Sometimes they simply throw their hands in the air and quit in disgust.

Jessica Griffin would have none of that.

"I never thought about quitting," she said. "It only motivated me to work harder."

To a certain extent, she was a victim of geography in this struggle.

"I came into college sports with high expectations," said Griffin. "But I came from Massachusetts, not one of the lacrosse hotbeds like Maryland and Long Island. I have never played with or against players who were so skilled. That was a very big adjustment."

But instead of sulking and blaming the rest of the world for her plight, Griffin worked hard. And then worked some more.

In the North Carolina media guide the following notation is part of her bio: "One of the hardest workers on the Tar Heel squad."

Which is saying something, because she was a member of a team that worked hard and wouldn?t take no for an answer.

"The difference this year was that we truly believed we could win (in the tournament)," said Griffin. "Every other year, we didn?t get out of the ACC tournament. We got together this year before the season started and said we simply can?t lose this year. We won?t allow it to happen."

Egos were checked at the door and anything that got in the way of winning was eliminated.

"A lot of times, there?s drama on women?s teams," said Griffin. "We didn?t have any this year. Class year didn?t matter. If you could help us win, you were a valuable part of the team."

The Tar Heels lost to Maryland twice before the NCAA tourney, once during the regular season and in the ACC title game. "We went into the championship game feeling we had nothing to lose," said Griffin. "We went into that game with a chip on our shoulders."

North Carolina handed the Terps their only loss of the season in winning the NCAA championship, 13-12. In the semifinals, the Tar Heels had beaten defending national champion Northwestern, 11-4.

Griffin had been one of the first players off the bench as a junior, playing in all 19 games. She scored 14 goals and an assist that season.

This past season, she started 12 of the 21 games, scoring 15 goals on 35 shots.

"At the end of the day, I found out that if you work hard you can accomplish something great," Griffin said.

What advice would she give someone about to embark on a similar journey?

"I?d tell them to know what they?re getting into," she said. "Make sure you?re going to a place you?re going to be happy. Make the best of your situation."

Griffin graduated from North Carolina with a degree in journalism and mass communication, Griffin is contemplating the future while working at some lacrosse camps this summer.

"I?m playing it by ear," she said. "I want to go abroad for a while and not jump right into the corporate world. I love writing and blogging, but I don?t know what I want to do right now."

Her high school lacrosse coach is proud of her former player.

"Jess is a competitor and she?s proud," said DeJesus. "I?m very proud of her for sticking it out. The end result is she can now call herself a national champion."

Griffin is a winner on several different levels.

Source: http://www.wickedlocal.com/sudbury/newsnow/x853679651/Lincoln-Sudburys-Griffin-finishes-college-career-as-lacrosse-champ-at-North-Carolina?rssfeed=true

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Oil work to go on in Alaska?s Active waters without drilling

Saturday, June 29th, 2013

Oil production platform and supoort ships Alaska29 June 2013, News Wires ? No one will drill in Arctic waters off Alaska this year, but there is still plenty of offshore work for the oil industry to do when conditions finally allow it next month, Reuters reports.

The Royal Dutch Shell Plc, which canceled its 2013 Arctic offshore drill season after numerous troubles there last year, plans to send ships to study sites around oil prospects in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, according to permit applications.

The company plans to do specialised surveys in the Chukchi, investigating shallow water hazards and other features around its prospects, said Curtis Smith, Shell?s Alaska spokesman. ?This work continues to increase our understanding of the sub-surface and ocean bottom near our leases,? he said via email.

The Chukchi survey will involve one or two ships, according to Shell?s permit application, a far cry from the armada amassed last year for preliminary drilling. Shell also plans scientific and ecological baseline surveys in both seas, collecting data in preparation for more aggressive exploration activities.

Smith said no decision had been made about drilling in 2014.

Two other firms plan to conduct seismic surveys off Alaska?s coast. The most extensive programme will be by SAExploration , which will have eight vessels survey the Beaufort, according to its application for permits submitted to federal agencies.

Another, TGS-NOPEC Geophysical Company, plans to use two vessels to conduct surveys in U.S. and international waters of the Chukchi Sea, according to its permit application.

Shell, SAExploration and TGS-NOPEC plan to start work as early as mid-July and continue as late as October, according to their applications. Permits are pending but have not yet been issued, according to the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

These plans are a shadow of what was contemplated a year ago, when Shell expected to complete multiple exploration wells off Alaska and ConocoPhillips was preparing for a 2014 drill season at its Devils Paw prospect in the southern Chukchi.

But after the grounding of a Shell drillship in the Gulf of Alaska, citations for safety and environmental breaches on its second rig, and equipment failures, Shell had to limit last year?s drilling to incomplete ?top holes? at two sites. Future drilling is shelved until repairs are completed on both rigs at shipyards in Asia and other equipment is reviewed and augmented.

Conoco has also postponed its drilling plans indefinitely.

For the U.S. government, which is promoting increased energy production as part of a new National Arctic Strategy, fallout from 2012 is just a setback.

?I think it is safe to say we were disappointed in Shell?s performance last year,? Tommy Beaudreau, director of the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, said at a meeting in Anchorage this month.
But Beaudreau added that he is still bullish on energy exploration in the waters off northern Alaska, and the relative lull in activity this year should not be seen as a harbinger of future events, given ongoing interest from the industry.

Source: http://sweetcrudereports.com/2013/06/29/oil-work-to-go-on-in-alaskas-active-waters-without-drilling/

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Friday Fourplay: Beer Berries, Yogurt Liqueur, Sushi Donuts, and ...

Flavorful World?s Friday Fourplay offers up a bite-sized tidbit of info on each of the four food- and drink-related things we found most interesting each week.

Photo credit: Moonstruck Chocolate Co.

Photo credit: Moonstruck Chocolate Co.

Beer Berries

These candies from Moonstruck Chocolate Company?are not so-named because they possess any alcohol (there is, in fact, no beer in them). To create them, malted wheat berries of the sort used when brewing dark beers get tumbled in dark chocolate. Moonstruck suggests pairing them with a nice stout beer, marking the first of two examples you?ll be getting from Flavorful World today (you lucky goose, you) of ways to combine chocolate with beer. Read on.

Via Tasting Table

Photo credit: Maggie Hoffman / Serious Eats

Photo credit: Maggie Hoffman / Serious Eats

Yogurt Liqueur

Let?s see if I can make it through this one without any punny, yogurt-themed references to drinking up some cultures. Damn. So close. Anyway, Lucas Bols Amsterdam has released a liqueur made with fresh yogurt. Depending on your tolerance for sugary, dairy-based libations, this product promises either to make your smoothies a bit smoother or offend you horribly. Speaking for myself, the phrase ?Challenge accepted!? springs to mind.

Via Serious Eats

Photo credit: Buzzfeed.com

Photo credit: Buzzfeed.com

Sushi Donuts

The day I discovered a cake that cut a thoroughly convincing figure posing as a bowl of ramen was what cemented my knowledge that Japan excels at food catfishing creating impossibly delicious foods that masquerade as other foods. The latest gustatory ?Gotcha!? I?ve uncovered comes to us from Mister Donut, a U.S.-founded, Japan-headquartered franchise whose Thailand?branch is selling donuts visually fashioned after sushi. These ?Sushido? have actually been around a few years, but recently had their popularity surge via Twitter. Viewing the pictures I found over at Buzzfeed, it?s not difficult to see why (he wrote, as a Homer Simpsonesque hunger sound erupted low in his throat?)

Via Buzzfeed

Photo credit: Foodiggity.com

Photo credit: Foodiggity.com

Chocolate Peanut Butter Beer

Sure, its flavor profile sounds like the newest addition to the Three Broomsticks Inn?s beverage menu, but Sweet Baby Jesus! is something else entirely. Unlike our top entry in this week?s FF, this porter brew is, for better or worse, exactly what it sounds like: a beer flavored to taste like peanut butter and chocolate. One can?t help but smile at thought of all the ?You?spilled beer all over my Reese?s Peanut Butter Cup!? vs. ?You dropped your Reese?s Peanut Butter Cup in my beer!? arguments just begging to be played out among drinkers who know where to find this new product of Maryland-based Duclaw Brewing.

Via Foodiggity

*Mention of a product, good, or service in a Friday Fourplay posting should not be interpreted as an endorsement either from Anthony Beal or Flavorful World food and drink blog. Vendors are not notified ahead of time that their products/services will be featured, thus Flavorful World will at the time of posting have had no related interactions with said vendors or any sample of their products/services by which to judge them. As such, we have no idea what these vendors are like to work with, or about the quality of their merchandise and are unqualified to vouch for them as reputable. Our Friday Fourplay lists are posted in the simple spirit of our having come across something that looks and sounds engaging, and thinking that perhaps our readers will think so too; no more, no less. With that in mind, patronize these establishments and vendors at your own risk.

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Source: http://flavorfulworld.com/2013/06/28/friday-fourplay-beer-berries-yogurt-liqueur-sushi-donuts-and-chocolate-peanut-butter-beer/

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Penguins' Bylsma to coach US Olympic team in Sochi

Dan Bylsma has never coached hockey at the international level. The Pittsburgh Penguins coach does, however, know how to win while juggling a roster dotted with superstars.

That was good enough for USA Hockey to select Bylsma as coach of the U.S. Olympic men's hockey team at the 2014 Winter Olympics on Saturday, hoping the free-flowing style he teaches translates well to the wider rinks that await in Sochi, Russia in February.

The 42-year-old Michigan native didn't hide from the glaring hole in his resume moments after being introduced. When asked how he was going to build on his limited experience in international coaching, Bylsma quickly offered a correction.

"I don't have any experience," Bylsma said with a laugh. "So 'very little' is wrong."

The next eight months should take care of that as the U.S. vies for its first gold medal since the "Miracle on Ice" in 1980.

The U.S. won silver in 2002 at Salt Lake City and was runner-up to Canada in Vancouver three years ago, losing 3-2 in overtime when Penguins star Sidney Crosby beat U.S. goaltender Ryan Miller 7:40 into the extra session.

Bylsma, who won the 2009 Stanley Cup with Crosby, was watching the game from a restaurant when he saw his captain take a pass from Jarome Iginla and race in on Miller to produce one of the most iconic moments in the history of the sport.

"I got off of my chair because I had a pretty good notion he was going to put that home for the win," Bylsma said.

NHL officials will meet with the players' association, the International Olympic Committee and International Ice Hockey Federation in New York on Monday to iron out an agreement allowing the league's top players to compete in Sochi.

Once approved, Bylsma will have to find a way to slow down Crosby and 2012 NHL MVP Evgeni Malkin, who is expected to play for his native Russia.

"I'm also a little bit concerned (Crosby) knows me as a coach, my strengths and my weaknesses he's going to bring that to the attention of the Canadian team," Bylsma said.

Nashville Predators general manager David Poile, who will serve in the same capacity for Sochi, called Bylsma "one of the very best coaches in the league."

Bylsma played nine years as a defensive-minded forward for the Los Angeles and Anaheim from 1995-2004 before moving into coaching. He replaced Michel Therrien as Penguins' coach in February 2009 and guided Pittsburgh to the third championship in franchise history.

He won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL Coach of the Year in 2011 and helped the Penguins post the best record in the Eastern Conference during the lockout-shortened 2012-13 season. Pittsburgh advanced to the conference finals before being swept by the Boston Bruins. The Penguins rewarded Bylsma with a two-year contract extension through 2017 a week after their season ended.

The process of building the Olympic team will begin with an orientation camp in Washington D.C. in late August.

Poile expects the core of the team that won silver in Vancouver to return but allowed changes need to be made. The U.S. has historically struggled in Olympic competition overseas. The last time the U.S. team medaled at an Olympics outside of North America came in 1972 when it won silver in Sapporo, Japan and hasn't medaled at an Olympics in Europe since 1956.

"We can't be the same type of team because we haven't had success over there," Poile said.

Bylsma's system should help. The Penguins are regularly among the highest scoring teams in the NHL thanks in part to a talented core and a style of play that focuses on puck control and pressure. It's made Pittsburgh one of the most feared teams in the league. Now Bylsma hopes to do the same in the Olympics.

"We have one goal in Sochi," Bylsma said, "and that's to go over there and win gold."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/penguins-bylsma-coach-us-olympic-team-sochi-151014508.html

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    Apple's chip deal with TSMC could hasten messy Samsung divorce

    Apple has signed an agreement with Taiwanese semiconductor company TSMC to build mobile processors for its iOS devices, the Wall Street Journal has reported.

    The rival chip-maker will eventually take over from Samsung as Apple's key supplier, eventually phasing out a business relationship destroyed by endless patent infringement lawsuits between the two.

    The report claimed TSMC will begin building chips in 2014, although Samsung will continue to be the primary supplier for that year and perhaps beyond.

    Apple and TSMC had been in talks since 2010, the report said, but were finally able to agree a deal after the latter resolved "glitches preventing the chips from meeting Apple's speed and power standards."

    End of an era?

    The procurement of a new chip supplier could be the final piece in the puzzle for Apple as it seeks to lessen its reliance on Samsung as a component manufacturer.

    It no longer buys the displays for iOS devices from Samsung and has been spreading the wealth by finding other firms to manufacturer RAM and flash memory for iPhones and iPads.

    Apple and Samsung had done great business together for many years before Samsung emerged as a genuine contender to the iPhones dominance with its Galaxy smartphone range.

    Apple strongly alleged that Samsung got its leg-up by "blatantly copying" its own devices, leading to countless suits and counter suits around the world.

    Although they make plenty of money together, it seems neither is too keen on lining the other's pockets regardless of how mutual beneficial the business relationship has been.

    Via The Verge

    Source: http://www.techradar.com/news/phone-and-communications/mobile-phones/apple-s-chip-deal-with-tsmc-could-hasten-messy-samsung-divorce-1162535?src=rss&attr=all

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    Saturday, June 29, 2013

    Pa. girl doing well after 2nd lung transplant (Providence Journal)

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    John Calipari talks college hoops, NASCAR, gray hair during visit to Kentucky Speedway

    SPARTA, Ky.?Kentucky coach John Calipari texted with Kyle Wiltjer on Saturday and said a final decision on whether Wiltjer will transfer is still to be determined.

    Having averaged 10.2 points in 23.8 minutes a game last season, but with a strong recruiting class that might decrease his minutes, Wiltjer is exploring whether to transfer before his junior year.

    Calipari, at Kentucky Speedway on Saturday to drive the pace car prior to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, said he was in contact with Wiltjer, who is in Canada training with the men?s national team.

    ?I don?t know (if he?ll be back),? Calipari said. ?He and I texted each other today, so I?ll probably text him to see where he is with things.?

    Calipari talked racing and basketball in his brief visit with the media Saturday.

    He was philosophical about Nerlens Noel dropping from the possible No. 1 pick in the NBA draft on Thursday to the sixth, when he was drafted by New Orleans and traded to Philadelphia.

    Calipari said he had talked with Noel about the possibility of dropping in the draft and Noel had a good attitude going into it.

    ?I wished Nerlens would have gone (No.) 1, but 6 is fine,? Calipari said. ?He?s going to have to prove himself anyway. ? There was a chance he could have moved to 11th or 12th.

    ?He didn?t work out for a bunch of teams after the first three teams. So if they didn?t see that need, there was a chance he was going to slip.?

    Kentucky had another first-round pick as guard Archie Goodwin went to Phoenix as the 29th pick overall.

    ?He is 18 years old, he?s the youngest kid in the draft, it?s a good deal,? Calipari said. ?We could say he should have come back. Well, he was just picked 29th.?

    Calipari had two likely first-rounders?Alex Poythress and Willie Cauley-Stein ?opt to stay for their sophomore seasons.

    ?We get two guys in the first round and (could have) had have four guys in the first round,? Calipari said. ?We were an NIT team. How bad a coach am I?

    ?I was happy for both of them.?

    As far as racing, Calipari reminisced about being asked by Jeff Gordon and crew chief Ray Evernham to use the ?Refuse to Lose? slogan back in the mid-1990s.

    ?They asked me if they could use it back then, and I was at UMass and I said, ?Absolutely, but I want to meet you,?? Calipari said. ?I just went and saw Jeff. I looked at him and he has a little gray now. I?m looking at him saying, ?I?m gray, you?re gray, you remember how long ago that was???

    Calipari has been to several races, and he got to ride in a pace car Saturday at about 95 mph in the rain as Kurt Busch gave him a tutorial even though Calipari would only be driving 45 mph in the pace car.

    ?I?m white-knuckled, I?ve got two feet through the floorboard,? Calipari said. ?He says, ?You kind of glide up to the wall? and I thought we were sliding into the wall. ? When they told me (to go) 45, I?m good with 45.?

    Source: http://www.sportingnews.com/ncaa-basketball/story/2013-06-29/john-calipari-kentucky-speedway-nascar-kyle-wiltjer-nerlens-noel-archie-goodwin-

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    Major changes needed for coral reef survival

    June 28, 2013 ? To prevent coral reefs around the world from dying off, deep cuts in carbon dioxide emissions are required, says a new study from Carnegie's Katharine Ricke and Ken Caldeira. They find that all existing coral reefs will be engulfed in inhospitable ocean chemistry conditions by the end of the century if civilization continues along its current emissions trajectory.

    Their work will be published July 3 by Environmental Research Letters.

    Coral reefs are havens for marine biodiversity and underpin the economies of many coastal communities. But they are very sensitive to changes in ocean chemistry resulting from greenhouse gas emissions, as well as to coastal pollution, warming waters, overdevelopment, and overfishing.

    Ricke and Caldeira, along with colleagues from Institut Pierre Simon Laplace and Stanford University, focused on the acidification of open ocean water surrounding coral reefs and how it affects a reef's ability to survive.

    Coral reefs use a mineral called aragonite to make their skeletons. It is a naturally occurring form of calcium carbonate, CaCO3. When carbon dioxide, CO2, from the atmosphere is absorbed by the ocean, it forms carbonic acid (the same thing that makes soda fizz), making the ocean more acidic and decreasing the ocean's pH. This increase in acidity makes it more difficult for many marine organisms to grow their shells and skeletons, and threatens coral reefs the world over.

    Using results from simulations conducted using an ensemble of sophisticated models, Ricke, Caldeira, and their co-authors calculated ocean chemical conditions that would occur under different future scenarios and determined whether these chemical conditions could sustain coral reef growth.

    Ricke said: "Our results show that if we continue on our current emissions path, by the end of the century there will be no water left in the ocean with the chemical properties that have supported coral reef growth in the past. We can't say with 100% certainty that all shallow-water coral reefs will die, but it is a pretty good bet."

    Deep cuts in emissions are necessary in order to save even a fraction of existing reefs, according to the team's results. Chemical conditions that can support coral reef growth can be sustained only with very aggressive cuts in carbon dioxide emissions.

    "To save coral reefs, we need to transform our energy system into one that does not use the atmosphere and oceans as waste dumps for carbon dioxide pollution. The decisions we make in the next years and decades are likely to determine whether or not coral reefs survive the rest of this century," Caldeira said.

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/vYe4Rj2O_NE/130628131023.htm

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    Mich. ban on domestic partner benefits blocked (Providence Journal)

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    Ipswich East Business over Breakfast (BoB Club), The Angel ...

    This successful business networking club in Ipswich East meets every two weeks on a Tuesday. For those of you who may have tried networking before and felt under pressure to refer each week, try BoB Networking as we concentrate on quality referrals rather than quantity at our meetings. So come along and try our lively group and learn more about how Networking through BoB clubs can help both you and your business.

    Event Organised By

    Business over Breakfast (BoB) Clubs

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    BoB Clubs creates a secure and successful networking environment for members to cooperate and exchange referrals. Members actively seek and create opportunities for each other.

    You and your business will thrive during your professionally structured meetings where you feel welcome, trusted and respected, whilst building confidence and potential business and profits.

    You are encouraged to focus on quality referrals, not quantity, leaving you free to network without any undue pressure.

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    Interested in Running your Own Business over Breakfast (BoB) Clubs Event?

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    Source: http://www.findnetworkingevents.com/events/index.cfm?action=eventdetail&eventid=60281&utm_source=sitefeeds&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=regionfeed

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    Cancer risks double when two carcinogens present at 'safe' levels, epigenetics study finds

    June 28, 2013 ? Science knows that arsenic and estrogen can cause cancer. At certain very low levels, the chemicals offer little to no threats to human health.

    However, new research conducted by Texas Tech University scientists has found that low doses of both chemicals together -- even at levels low enough to be considered "safe" for humans if they were on their own -- can cause cancer in prostate cells.

    The combination of the two chemicals was almost twice as likely to create cancer in prostate cells, the research found. The study published online in the peer-reviewed journal The Prostate.

    Kamaleshwar Singh, an assistant professor at The Institute of Environmental and Human Health (TIEHH) at Texas Tech said the findings could have an impact on health regulations regarding the "safe" doses of these chemicals and others. Most regulations are set by testing one chemical at a time on cells. Very few if any have looked at multiple chemicals at the same time.

    "The majority of cancers are caused by environmental influences," Singh said. "Only about 5 to 10 percent of cancers are due to genetic predisposition. Science has looked at these chemicals, such as arsenic, and tested them in a lab to find the amounts that may cause cancer. But that's just a single chemical in a single test. In the real world, we are getting exposed to many chemicals at once."

    Singh said he became interested in studying two chemicals at once after looking at arsenic's carcinogenic properties in a previous paper.

    Because cigarette smoke and well water in some areas, including India, Mexico and even Lubbock county, can contain arsenic, Singh and his doctoral student, Justin Treas, wondered how the carcinogenic properties might change when paired with the presence of another carcinogenic chemical.

    The two focused on estrogen because of the chemical's abundance. Many plastics, such as food can liners and bisphenol A (BPA), release small amounts of chemicals that mimic estrogen in the body.

    "Co-exposure was creating a greater impact," Singh said. "That was one of the important findings of our study. The next thing we wanted to know is how these two chemicals are creating a greater effect."

    Unlike stronger chemicals that do major damage to the DNA in a cell, such as benzene, arsenic and estrogen aren't major mutagens Singh said. Instead, their presence tends to stop certain genes from expressing. The process is called DNA hypermethylation.

    In the experiment, human prostate cells were treated about once a week for six months with arsenic, estrogen and a combination of the two. Many of the tests involved levels of arsenic, estrogen or both at levels considered safe by the Environmental Protection Agency.

    Treas said the two chemicals stopped the MLH1 gene, which is responsible for sending the signal to start the self-destruct sequence when a cell is damaged. Because the self-destruct couldn't activate, the cells became cancerous after exposure.

    "With the lower dose not killing the cell, it's causing damages that go under the cell's radar," Treas said. "We found when you have two compounds together, lower doses could be more serious problem."

    Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/4KxfKkjkKvo/130628130713.htm

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    Pujols lifts Angels over Tigers 3-1 in 10 innings

    DETROIT (AP) ? Albert Pujols got the biggest hit of the game. Jered Weaver delivered the most encouraging performance, as far as the Los Angeles were concerned.

    Pujols hit a tiebreaking double in the 10th inning and the Angels beat Detroit 3-1 on Thursday for their ninth straight victory over the Tigers.

    Mike Trout had four hits and was in the middle of the decisive rally for the Angels, who completed a three-game sweep. Weaver pitched seven strong innings in a tight duel with Detroit right-hander Doug Fister.

    "Just wanted to concentrate on keeping things simple and keeping the mechanics sound and tried to locate," said Weaver, the staff ace who had struggled since coming off the disabled list.

    Making his sixth start since returning from a broken left (non-throwing) elbow, Weaver gave up one run and four hits. He walked two and struck out six.

    After the Tigers scored in the second, Weaver allowed only a hit and a walk in his final five innings. He retired his last 13 batters.

    "We're confident that he's going to pitch more like he did today than the way he has in a couple of his last starts," Angels manager Mike Scioscia said.

    J.B. Shuck singled leading off the 10th against Phil Coke (0-5) and went to third on Trout's single to right field. Pujols sent a drive to deep center, where Austin Jackson tried to make a difficult catch with his back to home plate.

    The ball tipped off the webbing of Jackson's glove, hit the wall and trickled to the ground.

    "That ball was crushed," Scioscia said.

    After an intentional walk to Howie Kendrick loaded the bases, Josh Hamilton made it 3-1 with a sacrifice fly.

    "The Pujols pitch wasn't a bad pitch. I think that maybe it wasn't the right pitch in that particular moment," Coke said. "I didn't feel like I made the perfect pitch to him by any means, but the last thing I thought he was going to do is hit it as far as he did. It was away from him. I looked at where (catcher Brayan) Pena was set up and he was going away from Pujols with his glove, going away to receive the ball. He found it with his barrel."

    Kevin Jepsen (1-2) worked a scoreless ninth for the win and Ernesto Frieri got three outs for his 19th save in 21 chances.

    Neither team could do much against the starters.

    Scott Downs replaced Weaver and set down the leadoff man in the eighth. But Downs then allowed Omar Infante's pinch-hit double and hit Jackson with a pitch. Downs was pulled for Michael Kohn, who struck out former Angel Torii Hunter and Miguel Cabrera, both swinging, to end the inning.

    "Having a situation with Torii, as clutch as they come, and then you've got the best hitter in the league up next," Scioscia said. "What he did to get out of that eighth inning was huge."

    Fister yielded one run and seven hits in seven innings, walking one and striking out four. After the Angels tied the game in the fourth, he gave up only one hit in his final three innings and didn't allow a runner past second.

    "He did a tremendous job. The fact that he was able to contain that offense, that shows that he's a good pitcher," Pena said. "He kept us in the ballgame and he gave us a chance to win the ballgame. That's what you ask. He pitched beautifully."

    Fister was relieved by Al Alburquerque, who pitched a scoreless eighth. The Angels got runners to second and third with two outs in the ninth against Joaquin Benoit, but he struck out Erick Aybar swinging at a 3-2 pitch to get out of the jam.

    Detroit took a 1-0 lead in the second on Brayan Pena's two-out RBI single. It scored Victor Martinez, who singled with one out and went to second when Jhonny Peralta followed with a single.

    Los Angeles tied it in the fourth on three consecutive singles to start the inning. Brad Hawpe's single to right scored Hamilton from third. Alberto Callaspo was thrown out at third by Hunter on the play.

    NOTES: Los Angeles placed RHP Tommy Hanson on the 15-day disabled list. Hanson was scratched from his scheduled start Wednesday night when he felt tightness in his right forearm while warming up in the bullpen. Scioscia said Hanson (4-2, 5.10 ERA) would have an MRI on Thursday. The team recalled LHP Michael Roth from Double-A Arkansas. ... Detroit RHP Anibal Sanchez, on the 15-day DL with a right shoulder strain, threw to batters before the game. ... Cabrera is the sixth player since 1920 with 1,200 RBIs and 300 home runs in his first 11 seasons. The others were Hank Aaron, Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Jeff Bagwell and Pujols. ... Cabrera went 1 for 4 on Thursday to extend his hitting streak to 12 games, which tied a season high. ... The Tigers begin a three-series road swing this weekend at Tampa Bay. Max Scherzer looks to run his record to 12-0 on Friday night when he faces Alex Colome (1-0, 0.00 ERA). ... The Angels head for Houston, where Jerome Williams (5-3, 3.36) will oppose Astros RHP Bud Norris (5-7, 3.60).

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pujols-lifts-angels-over-tigers-3-1-10-210840986.html

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    Judge: Determining size of BP spill no 'easy task' (Providence Journal)

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    Who Leaked the Stuxnet Virus Story?

    Gen. James E. Cartwright

    Gen. James E. Cartwright

    Photo by Hyungwon Kang/Reuters

    In one way, it?s a big surprise that the Justice Department is investigating retired Gen. James ?Hoss? Cartwright for allegedly leaking classified information about the Stuxnet computer virus, which briefly disabled Iran?s nuclear program a few years back.

    In another way, though, it?s not a surprise at all.

    It?s surprising because four-star generals, active or retired, aren?t the usual targets of such probes. This is especially so of a general like Cartwright, who, from 2007?11, was vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff?the U.S. military?s second-highest-ranking officer?and who, in his final years, was known as ?Obama?s favorite general.? Officers of this stature tend to build layers of insulation around themselves.

    But Cartwright was unusual in that respect. As one former senior defense official described him, he was ?a lone wolf.? He was very smart, a policy intellectual on the level of Gens. David Petraeus and James Mattis, but he had no protective layers, no inner circle of loyalists, and no talent (or desire) for building alliances with his fellow officers. To the contrary, he would often work up his own ideas, his own position papers, and brief them to his civilian superiors outside the military chain of command. As vice chairman, several officials say, he would sometimes brief Obama himself?the two had a similar style of crisp, analytical thinking?then come back to the Pentagon without telling his boss, the chairman, Adm. Mike Mullen, what he?d said.

    The big rupture came in the fall of 2009, during the National Security Council meetings on how to proceed with the war in Afghanistan. President Obama kept asking the chiefs for more options on troop levels, something in between Vice President Joe Biden?s pitch for just 10,000 more troops and Gen. Stanley McChrystal?s recommendation of at least 40,000 more. Mullen never provided them. Cartwright wrote a paper, on his own, for what could be done with 20,000 more and 30,000 more. Mullen suppressed the study and chewed Cartwright out for doing it. In an end-run, Cartwright gave the study to one of Biden?s aides. Mullen and the other chiefs were furious.

    Two things drove Cartwright to take that step. First, he was a straight shooter (he was nicknamed ?Hoss,? after an honest character named Hoss Cartwright on the old TV show Bonanza). He thought the military should respond to a president?s request, and since nobody else was doing it, he did it himself. But most other generals in his position would first try to get other officers, or maybe the secretary of defense, to buy in. Cartwright, the lone wolf, didn?t do that.

    As a result, whenever Cartwright got into trouble, there was nobody who felt compelled to stand up for him. Around the same time as the flap over Afghanistan policy, the military?s inspector general investigated Cartwright on charges of having an affair with a female subordinate. The IG report accused him of misconduct. The secretary of the Navy, a civilian, took no disciplinary action, but the report alienated Cartwright still further from his military colleagues, many of whom regard such behavior as a serious breach of the military code.

    When Mullen prepared to step down as JCS chairman in 2011, rumors flew that Obama would appoint Cartwright as his successor. But several advisers, including Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, warned the president that Cartwright had no support from the other chiefs and no ability to craft consensus on military policy. Obama appointed Gen. Martin Dempsey to be chairman instead. Cartwright retired from the Marine Corps after a 40-year career.

    Here?s the biggest problem now with being the lone wolf: If the Justice Department continues its probe and winds up indicting Cartwright for violating his security oath, it?s unlikely that any officers will leap to his defense in this crisis either. It?s a fair guess, in fact, that some of those officers may have pointed prosecutors in his direction.

    No evidence of his possible guilt or innocence has been publicized (Cartwright?s lawyer issued a no-comment on the news reports), but the charge is not implausible. Cartwright was chief of U.S. Strategic Command, in Omaha, Neb., from 2004?07. (For the story of how a Marine general came to be head of StratCom?an unprecedented appointment, since StratCom deals mainly with the nuclear arsenal and the Marines have no nuclear weapons?click here.) At the time, the military?s main cyber-warfare unit was embedded in StratCom. (In 2009, an independent U.S. Cyber Command was created at Fort Meade, Md., alongside the National Security Agency.) Operation Olympic Games, aka Stuxnet, was created in 2006. Cartwright was involved in its creation and briefed the program to Presidents Bush and, later, Obama.

    Details about Stuxnet were first revealed on June 1, 2012, in a New York Times story by David Sanger. Cartwright was one of the few officials involved in the program that Sanger identified by name. In a book that Sanger subsequently wrote, Confront and Conceal: Obama?s Secret Wars and Surprising Use of American Power, this intriguing passage appears on Page 269:

    One of the creators of the government?s offensive cyber strategy, Gen. James Cartwright, makes a compelling case that the secrecy [of the cyber program] may be working against American interests. ?You can?t have something that?s a secret be a deterrent,? he argued shortly after leaving his post as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. ?Because if you don?t know it?s there, it doesn?t scare you.?

    Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/war_stories/2013/06/did_retired_gen_james_cartwright_leak_the_stuxnet_virus_story.html

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