Thursday, May 30, 2013

Bell Labs doubles beams in fiber optic lines to reach 400Gbps on a global scale

Bell Labs doubles light in fiber optic lines to reach greater distances

It's comparatively easy to run fiber optic lines at high speeds; it's another matter to sustain that pace between continents. Alcatel-Lucent's Bell Labs has found a way to go that extreme distance by relying on the basic concept behind noise-cancelling headphones. When the researchers send data across two light beams in opposing phases, they can superimpose the signals and neutralize the distortion that would normally occur at long ranges. Such clean output lets Bell Labs ramp up the signal strength and maintain high speeds across whole oceans: its test pushed 400Gbps through 7,954 miles of fiber. There's no word on how soon we'll see twin-light technique put into practice, although we suspect that a networking giant like Alcatel-Lucent wants the extra bandwidth as quickly as possible.

[Image credit: JL Hopgood, Flickr]

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Via: BBC News, The Verge

Source: Nature Photonics

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/28/bell-labs-doubles-beams-in-fiber-optic-lines/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Medieval readers had eclectic 'Internet' tastes

University of Chicago Press

By Tanya Lewis
LiveScience

Nowadays, people bounce effortlessly from reading news to blogs to email. And it turns out the reading habits of people in medieval times weren't so different, a new book suggests.

People in 14th-century London consumed a variety of texts, often linked together in bound volumes. Arthur Bahr, a literature professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, explores these habits in his new book "Fragments and Assemblages" (University of Chicago Press, 2013).

"Medieval manuscripts?usually survive as fragments, and at the same time, they are also very often assemblages of multiple, disparate works," Bahr told MIT news. The interesting question is why?these works were grouped together in that way, Bahr said.

The printing press hadn't yet been invented, so people copied manuscripts by hand and bound them together, often including many different kinds of text in a single volume. [Image Gallery: Medieval Art Tells a Tale]

For example, the chamberlain for the city of London in the 1320s, Andrew Horn, possessed bound manuscripts that contained a mixture of legal treatises, French poetry and descriptions of London, among other things.

But Horn's bound manuscripts weren't just a random hodgepodge, Bahr said. Rather, Horn juxtaposed different texts to create "literary puzzles" for the reader. Placing poems next to legal documents portrayed law and literature as a kind of yin and yang, Bahr said.

MIT

The custom of cobbling together many different texts might explain the origin of Geoffrey Chaucer's"The Canterbury Tales," a linked set of stories that could be read in different orders. Chaucer arranged them in a loose sequence, but he also invited reader participation, Bahr said.

Consider the "Miller's Tale," a somewhat crude comedy in "The Canterbury Tales" about a miller, his wife and her lover. In preparing to tell the story, Chaucer warns the reader that if they don't like dirty stories, they should skip to another section in the book. More than just a joke, the warning encourages readers to view the text in a new order. Skipping around in text may not seem new, but it is surprising, Bahr pointed out.

Medieval manuscripts also reveal the multilingual culture of 14th-century England, Bahr said. Chaucer wrote in English, but Latin was the language of the church and state, while French was the language of the upper classes. Welsh and other regional languages were also widely spoken.

Medieval scholars praise Bahr's book for unifying the divided time period and showing how the production of literature was an ongoing process.

The findings also reveal that today's sophisticated consumers of diverse global media may not be so different from consumers in the Middle Ages.

Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter?and Google+.?Follow us @livescience, Facebook?and Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2c8867af/l/0Lscience0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A50C280C185640A990Emedieval0Ereaders0Ehad0Eeclectic0Einternet0Etastes0Dlite/story01.htm

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Spring Camp, Day 1: We?re Gettin? There

Spring Camp, Day 1: We’re Gettin’ There
We're stepping out to the Sierras for three days of Wired Spring Camp.

Source: http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2013/05/spring-camp-day-1/

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Democrat seeks to topple Nikki Haley without sounding too much like a Democrat

South Carolina state Sen. Vincent Sheheen (Getty Images)

COLUMBIA, S.C. ? South Carolina Democratic state Sen. Vincent Sheheen, who is planning to challenge Republican Gov. Nikki Haley in 2014, says he wants nothing to do with Washington?but not in quite the same way Haley does.

"I don't keep up with what's going on nationally," Sheheen told Yahoo News in an interview earlier this month at the headquarters of the state Democratic Party.

Does he support the push for federal immigration reform currently going through Congress? "I don't really know enough about that to tell you."

What's his specific plan to implement the national health care law that passed in 2010? "I can't give you a detailed answer because I haven't studied it."

Sheheen, 42, a tall, floppy-haired, half-Lebanese, half-Italian lawmaker with an easygoing drawl, isn't clueless. His hesitancy to talk about Washington's priorities is part of an intentional effort to cast his opponent as an out-of-touch state executive who cares more about what's happening along the banks of the Potomac than at home along the Santee.

Since moving into the governor's mansion, Haley has become a nationally renowned conservative icon despite tepid approval ratings at home. Among South Carolina adults, Haley had a statewide approval rating of 43.5 percent and a disapproval rating of 36.6 percent, according to a Winthrop University poll conducted in April. The same poll taken a year earlier showed her with 37.3 percent approval.

But Haley is wildly popular on the right and enjoys nearly 70 percent approval among Republican and Republican-leaning voters in South Carolina, according to the poll. During her governorship, she has traveled the country to motivate conservative allies while railing against the mandates, regulations and tax increases coming from the nation's capital.

She talks about Washington a lot.

That's precisely where Sheheen plans to hit her hardest.

"She talks incessantly about national issues," Sheheen told Yahoo News. "She rarely talks about South Carolina issues. I'll talk about those policies, and I'll talk about those ideas. And while I do that, she'll be talking about Washington, D.C. She'll be talking about national political figures. Because that's what she's all about. She's made Columbia more like Washington, D.C., and my job is to make it less like Washington, D.C."

With about 19 months to go before the election, Sheheen is trying to define Haley early. In 2010, when she beat him by 4.4 percentage points, the cards were stacked against Democrats, as conservative candidates like Haley coasted into office on the national tea party wave.

Looking back, Sheheen saw himself within striking distance, and this time, he thinks he can use Haley's record against her while benefiting from an election year that will likely be more friendly to his party than 2010.

This time, Haley is an incumbent with a record that opponents can use against her. Sheheen says he can capitalize on her shortcomings to make up the ground he'll need to bridge the gap from the last election.

"There's a much greater opportunity in this election to draw contrasts between a positive agenda to move forward and the same old, same old," he told Yahoo News.

As a Democrat in a red state, Sheheen faces obvious statistical hurdles. An attorney first elected in 2004, he has been in the minority his entire political career.

On Election Day, it will have been 11 years since a Democrat held the governor's mansion. The state Senate and House haven't been majority blue since 1996 and 1994, respectively.

While he'll be required to show contrasts between himself and Haley, Sheheen refuses to call himself a liberal.

"I consider myself a pragmatist," Sheheen said.

That balance can be a tricky one.

While he doesn't like to dwell on national issues, as governor, Sheheen would be responsible for guiding the implementation of the federal health care law?a task Haley has refused. (At the state party convention in May, Haley told fellow Republicans that South Carolina will "never allow Obamacare to enter into this state.") Since the federal law passed three years ago, Haley has made every effort to push back against the state-based health insurance exchanges or expand Medicaid in the state.

"Haley has said no, and that's clearly stupid," Sheheen told Yahoo News. "It's stupid because it's our money, and she's going to send it to another state."

His willingness to adopt the state mandates in the law, he was careful to add, doesn't mean he approves of the law.

"I didn't support Obamacare, but we are where we are, and we have to work with what we have to work with," he told Yahoo News. "I opposed the mandates in 2010, and I still feel like that was the wrong approach. I think that there's been a lot of confusion, and I think you need a governor who finds ways to stop the bad things from happening and works to make the good things occur."

And of course, if he does defeat Haley next year, every Democratic presidential hopeful will be knocking down his door seeking an endorsement before the all-important South Carolina primary. Sheheen, who voted for then-Sen. Barack Obama in the 2008 South Carolina Democratic primary, won't say whom he likes in 2016.

But if those candidates come looking for support, he has a response waiting for them: "My question will be, What can you do for South Carolina?"

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/democrat-seeks-topple-nikki-haley-without-sounding-too-094026759.html

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Uganda News | Uganda gets Business Process Outsourcing trainers

The National Information Technology Authority (NITA) has graduated twelve Ugandans as trainers to teach fellow Ugandans business process outsourcing skills in order to create jobs.

Currently, the common BPO services in Uganda include management of call centres, branding, website marketing, tele-marketing, payroll management, customer care, sales and advertising. The training which was facilitated by the Egyptian Ministry of Communications and Information Technology is part of the ICT capacity building programme between Uganda and Egypt to lower the cost of training locals in the sector.

While passing out the graduates last week, former Information Communication Technology Minister Ruhakana Rugunda said the training is government?s strategy to prepare 3,000 jobless youth for the sector.

?Government has identified ICT as a core strategy for enhancing public service delivery. BPO business is very competitive and companies that provide these services need to adhere strictly to the set standards as well as operating procedures,? Dr Rugunda said.

Currently NITA is conducting the training in conjunction with the Uganda Institute of Communications Technology with support from Techno Brain one of the leading BPO service providers in the United States of America.

According to Dr James Saaka the Executive Drector NITA, BPO is a new form of labour which is among the fastest-growing service in Europe and Asia.

He observed that with Uganda?s large unemployed computer literate youth, the country is destined to become a leading BPO destination in the East African Community, where currently China and India dominate the business because of the cheap labour.

BPO is largely aided with the availability of cheap internet which Mr. Saaka said will soon be fixed.

sotage@ug.nationmedia.com

Source: http://www.ugandan-news.com/s.php?22958

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Sensitivity Gets More Complex As Society ... - Golf News Now

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Home / HUTCH'S BLOG / Sensitivity Gets More Complex As Society Becomes More Diverse

As I mentioned in my Toronto Sun column here, I don?t believe Sergio Garcia made his infamous ?fried chicken? comment about Tiger Woods with any intent to be offensive, but that doesn?t excuse him for perpetuating one of the oldest stereotypes in the books.

Since then, a variety of potential punishments have been volleyed about in the media, although there has been no response to those suggestions by either the PGA or European Tours and I?m not sure that any of them would actually deal with the bigger problem.

Such retaliation is putting a band-aid on a gaping wound. It?s not as if this hasn?t happened before in golf.

Similar quotes by Fuzzy Zoeller about Woods in 1997 was brought up countless times in all of the Garcia controversy and let?s not forget what Golf Channel anchor Kelly Tilghman said in jest about ?lynching? Woods in 2008.

Such comments are more thoughtless than intentional, but they do hit home.

I?ve listened to Charlie Sifford, the World Golf Hall of Fame member and an African-American pioneer in golf, about his experiences.

Renee Powell, who carries on her dad William?s legacy after his efforts to bring equality to America?s golf courses, also describes through experience her reaction to such comments.

Those feeling can?t simply be blown off. In the Garcia case, Tiger was gracious enough to tweet that he felt Sergio had ?real regret? about the comment, adding that it was time to move on and talk golf, but it isn?t.

It?s time to tackle the problem. The Garcia comment will fade into time, only to be brought up the next time it happens down the road.

Professional athletes in general spend their time honing their skills and if they make it to the top of their respective games, they?re suddenly in front of cameras, in press conferences and in high profile situations where something they say can result in the backlash Garcia received.

That?s not to excuse Garcia?s comment, but to point out that the tours need sensitivity training for the players who represent them that can be done during orientation.

If the players want to simply blow off what they hear, they also need to be reminded, not only about the backlash they?ll get, but what can they can expect if the tour makes official fines and suspensions in such incidents.

It?s also an idea that facilities at the grassroots of Canadian golf may want to consider considering the changing and diverse society around us. The hurt that can come from a comment isn?t limited to staff or members of African descent, but other ethnic groups, as well.

Former LPGA Tour commissioner Carolyn Bivens stepped in it a few years ago when a proposed policy would suspend players who could not efficiently speak English, a move that was seen as directly targeting Asian-born players. After considerable pressure, the tour backed off.

The tour was correct in saying that learning English would be to the players? benefit considering the number of events that are played in North America, but the tyrannical way it handled it was the issue and it came across as singling out one particular ethnic group.

The matter will become more complex as society continues to change and people of various cultures arrive in Canada, each with its own identity.

To understand what offends each group may be difficult to do, but quite often, such incident can be avoided through awareness, common sense and sensitivity.

Like the Garcia incident, the intent to be racist may not be there, but an operation will want to avoid any such incident, whenever possible.

What you think is innocent may not be seen as such by somebody else and that goes beyond race to people with disabilities, for example, and there are no easy solutions.

The first step, however, is awareness.

About Ian Hutchinson
Ian Hutchinson is a veteran Canadian golf writer, whose history in the game includes an extensive background with Canadian golf trade publications. A golf columnist with Sun Media, Hutch is also a regular contributor to publications and websites in Canada and the United States.


Source: http://www.golfnewsnow.ca/2013/05/27/sensitivity-gets-more-complex-as-society-becomes-more-diverse/

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Steve Wozniak discusses his dependency on a MacBook Pro and his affinity for transistor radios

Steve Wozniak discusses his dependency on a 17inch MacBook Pro and transistor radios

Every week, a new and interesting human being tackles our decidedly geeky take on the Proustian Q&A. This is the Engadget Questionnaire.

Steve Wozniak pioneered the personal computing industry with the Apple I and II. In a throwback to our 31st issue of Distro, we'll take a very thorough look at the mind and habits of the Woz. Spoiler alert: he has a thing for the bitten fruit.

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Source: Distro Issue 31

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/l5tCwgfnAME/

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Senator McCain meets with rebels in Syria

By Andrea Shalal-Esa

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Senator John McCain, a former presidential candidate and an outspoken advocate for U.S. military aid to the Syrian opposition, met with some of the rebels during a surprise visit to the war-torn country on Monday, his spokesman said.

Spokesman Brian Rogers confirmed McCain's meeting with the rebels, but declined to give any details about the visit, which may fuel pressure on Washington to intervene in a conflict that is believed to have claimed 80,000 lives.

The visit came as U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pledged to do their utmost to bring Syria's warring parties together, and new allegations surfaced about chemical weapons use in the civil war.

General Salem Idris, who leads the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, told the Daily Beast in an interview that McCain's visit came at a critical time for the rebels, who have stepped up their calls for U.S. support, including heavy weapons, creation of a no-fly zone and air strikes.

"The visit of Senator McCain to Syria is very important and very useful especially at this time," the publication quoted Idris as saying. "We need American help to have change on the ground; we are now in a very critical situation."

McCain is the highest-ranking U.S. official to visit Syria since Robert Ford, the U.S. ambassador to Syria, crossed the border into northern Syria to meet with Syrian opposition leaders earlier this month.

It was not immediately clear if McCain, a fierce critic of the Obama administration's handling of the Syrian crisis, told government leaders about his plans to visit the country.

The White House had no immediate comment.

A senior State Department official, in Paris with Kerry, confirmed that McCain did "cross into Syrian territory" but referred all questions to McCain's office.

McCain entered Syria from the country's border with Turkey and stayed there for several hours before returning to Turkey, according to the Daily Beast report. It said McCain met with assembled leaders of Free Syrian Army units in both Turkey and Syria.

McCain, who made a similar visit to Libya early in that conflict, called for U.S. military aid to the forces opposing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in a Time magazine column earlier this month, arguing that the cost of inaction outweighed the cost of intervention.

"The U.S. does not have to act alone, put boots on the ground or destroy every Syrian air-defense system to make a difference," McCain wrote, arguing that training for the rebels, targeted air strikes and the stationing of Patriot missiles just across the border would help change the current dynamic.

McCain recalled his support for a U.S.-led effort under then President Bill Clinton to stop mass atrocities in Bosnia two decades ago and said the United States was uniquely positioned to help in Syria as well.

"Taking these steps would save innocent lives, give the moderate opposition a better chance to succeed and eventually provide security and responsible governance in Syria after Assad," he wrote in the Time magazine article. "However, the longer we wait, the worse the situation gets."

The Obama administration has increased humanitarian aid but has stopped short of providing lethal assistance to Syrian opposition forces. The president has resisted pressure to deepen U.S. involvement in Syria, wary of getting U.S. forces embroiled in another ground war just as American troops are preparing to withdraw from Afghanistan.

A U.S. Senate panel voted overwhelmingly last week to send weapons to forces fighting the Syrian government, but the Pentagon remains concerned about Assad's ability to shoot down enemy aircraft with surface-to-air missiles, particularly in a sustained campaign.

The Pentagon estimates than Syria has five times more air defenses than those that existed in Libya, where the United States helped establish a no-fly zone in 2011. They are also far more densely packed and sophisticated.

In Libya, there were no Western casualties. But the risks are higher in Syria and it's unclear whether the war-weary American public - exhausted by the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan - would tolerate U.S. casualties.

(Additional reporting by Arshad Mohammed in Paris and Jeff Mason in Washington; Editing by Eric Walsh and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senator-mccain-met-rebels-syria-monday-spokesman-183001895.html

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Four-star general in eye of U.S. cyber storm

By Andrea Shalal-Esa

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Depending on your point of view, U.S. General Keith Alexander is either an Army four-star trying to stave off a cyber Pearl Harbor attack, or an overreaching spy chief who wants to eavesdrop on the private emails of every American.

Alexander, 61, has headed the National Security Agency since 2005, making him the longest-serving chief in the history of an intelligence unit so secretive that it was dubbed "No Such Agency." Alexander also runs U.S. Cyber Command, which he helped to create in 2010 to oversee the country's offensive and defensive operations in cyberspace.

The dual role means Alexander has more knowledge about cyber threats than any other U.S. official, since the NSA already protects the most sensitive U.S. data, extracts intelligence from foreign networks and uses wiretaps to track suspected terrorists. But it also puts the general at the center of an intense debate over how much power the government should have to spy on private citizens in the name of protecting national security.

"He's lasted as long as he has because he's focused and he's persistent. I've never heard him yell," said retired four-star general Michael Hayden, who was Alexander's predecessor at the NSA. "He doesn't spread himself too thin. He decides what's important and puts his personal energy into those things."

Raised near Syracuse, New York, Alexander graduated from West Point, the Army's elite training academy, in 1974. He had planned to serve in the military for just five years but got hooked on the work when he served in Germany as an intelligence officer, monitoring what he once described as "sensitive issues on the border of East Germany and Czechoslovakia."

After Germany, Alexander held a series of increasingly senior intelligence jobs and spent the first Gulf War as a senior Army intelligence officer in Saudi Arabia. Over the years, he also earned four master's degrees, in electronic warfare, physics, business and national security studies.

In 2005, after two years as the Army's top intelligence officer, Alexander replaced Hayden at the helm of the NSA, where he continued to run a warrantless surveillance program initiated after the September 11, 2001, hijacking attacks.

The program, which bypassed a federal court that authorizes domestic wiretapping, was first revealed late in 2005, sparking lawsuits, congressional hearings, leak investigations and a furor that still dogs the agency - and Alexander.

Against this backdrop, his push to expand the NSA's role in domestic cybersecurity has drawn criticism from privacy advocates, and sometimes put Alexander at odds with the White House and the Department of Homeland Security, according to current and former officials.

Alexander had wanted the NSA to control a government security program to aid non-military companies against cyber threats, but others at DHS insisted on civilian control of the project, and they ultimately prevailed, the officials said.

Jane Holl Lute, who stepped down this month as the No. 2 at DHS, said she has had intense conversations with Alexander about the roles of their two agencies in improving cyber security. She declined to detail any differences of opinion, but said they were all judgment calls and she respected the general.

"He pushed up his hill, and I pushed up mine, and what we came to was essentially two sides of the same hill," Lute said.

"We didn't always call balls and strikes the same way. That does not mean he wasn't trying to get it right," she said. "I would challenge anyone who would question his integrity."

HEADING FOR RETIREMENT

Alexander, who told Reuters he plans to retire in the first half of 2014, has presided over one of the busiest times in the NSA's 61-year history, from tracking the cellphone calls that helped pinpoint Osama bin Laden to drawing national attention to cybersecurity. He played a key role in shaping a series of recent cyber policy orders from the Obama administration.

More controversial has been the NSA's construction of a $1.2 billion data center in Utah, which has fanned concerns about the agency's expansive eavesdropping capabilities.

NSA whistleblower William Binney, a former senior crypto-mathematician, last year accused the agency of building the Utah facility to collect data on virtually every American, including private emails, cellphone calls and Google searches.

Alexander told the Reuters Cybersecurity Summit that such claims about the Utah project are completely false. He rattled off a long list of agencies that oversee the NSA's work, including the Justice Department, White House and Congress. "Either all of them are complicit in us doing this or the allegations are absolute baloney. It's the latter," he said.

He told Reuters the center was built in Utah instead of Maryland, where the NSA is based, to take advantage of cheaper electricity. "I'm not a brain surgeon," he said. "But you can try to put power where it's expensive, Maryland, or you can put it (where there is) really cheap power."

According to Alexander, the NSA has its hands full keeping tabs on potential terrorists, and does not have the bandwidth to read the 420 billion emails generated by Americans each day - even though some foreign governments were trying to do that.

"The great irony is we're the only ones not spying on the American people," he quipped.

Alexander has tried to make the NSA appear more transparent, crisscrossing the country to talk about cyber issues. He likes to pepper his speeches with jokes, once blaming his late arrival at a Washington event on a "distributed denial of service" hacking attack on city street lights.

A gadget lover, Alexander is known to roll up his sleeves to become versant with the latest security technologies. On one flight, he and his aide-de-camp learned "BackTrack," a Linux-based product that helps people test their network security. Aides say the general often scores over 1 million points on the "Bejeweled Blitz" online puzzle game.

Alexander's biggest strength is his ability to reach out to a wide range of audiences, said Shawn Henry, former FBI executive assistant director. He cites a speech Alexander gave at the Defcon hackers conference last year, an appearance that would have been unheard of a few years ago.

"Here's a guy who is seen as a symbol of oppressive government ... and he stands up in front of a thousand people, many of whom probably have hacked networks over the years," said Henry, recalling that Alexander had ditched his decorated uniform for jeans and a black T-shirt. "He is just trying to connect, talking about coordination, collaboration."

DUAL HATS

Alexander has asked the Pentagon to give Cyber Command the same elevated status as other major military commands, but it is not yet clear if that request will be granted.

Ira Winkler, president of the Information Systems Security Association, said Alexander's leadership of both NSA and Cyber Command is an advantage but also a complication.

"He's stuck in a bad position. He basically has to defend U.S. cyberspace which requires securing commercial websites and infrastructure, but no one wants him to have access to those networks, since he's also in charge of NSA," Winkler said.

Alexander said he feels strongly that whoever succeeds him should continue to wear the two hats, but not everyone agrees.

"How much can you consolidate before it gets so huge that one person can't manage it," said Harry Raduege, a retired Air Force general and former director of the Defense Information Systems Agency, which oversees military IT systems. "It's an awful lot for somebody at the top of those organizations to deal with."

Still, Raduege, now with the consulting firm Deloitte, said he expects the Pentagon to elevate Cyber Command to a full unified command before the general's retirement next year.

"There's no one in a better position to know the depth, magnitude and broad-based nature of today's increasing and evolving cyber threats," said Raduege. "When Keith Alexander talks about cyber attacks, we should all listen."

(Additional reporting by Joe Menn in San Francisco, and Warren Strobel and Peter Apps in Washington; Editing by Tiffany Wu, Tim Dobbyn and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/four-star-general-eye-u-cyber-storm-124341707.html

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Marchers in over 400 cities protest Monsanto (Washington Post)

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Arizona Sheriff Ruled to Unfairly Target Latinos (Voice Of America)

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Give Yourself Permission - The Self Improvement Blog

positive300By Linda Binns ?

Very often you might find yourself struggling to accomplish something, let go of something or someone or make some kind of change. You may want to be happier, wealthier, or more successful. You may want to have closer, more loving relationships. Or you may want to travel, take a wonderful vacation, or change your career, or have a more successful business. You work hard, you do all the things you think you should do or that people tell you to do and yet it doesn?t seem to happen for you. The answer may be very simple.

Most of the time, the only thing that?s stopping you is you. You may simply need to give yourself permission to do, be or have what you want. That sounds so simple doesn?t it? It is, and yet it?s not always so easy.

It seems silly to think that if you want something you may not have given yourself permission to have it. Yet it?s true. Very often that can be the thing that holds you back. Think of something you want, and ask yourself if you?ve given yourself permission to have it. If you ask and answer honestly ? and journaling can help you discover your answer ? you might find that there?s a part of you that does not what you to have it and doesn?t give permission.

So the question is are you willing to give yourself permission to have what you want? If the answer is yes, then you simply acknowledge that to yourself.

What do you want to give yourself permission for? Create an affirmation for yourself:

I give myself permission to:

  • Release all excess weight
  • Have a close and loving relationship
  • Love myself
  • Have a successful business
  • Be myself
  • Take a fabulous trip
  • Make new friends
  • Make the money I know I deserve
  • Be a successful business owner
  • Have a new career
  • Open myself up to new possibilities for my life
  • Let go of fear
  • etc?

Create your affirmation and repeat it to yourself daily. Write it down. Notice how your body feels when you say it and write it. How do you feel? What thoughts come up for you? Do you feel resistance as you say or write it?

If you feel any discomfort, if you feel excuses or arguments coming into your thoughts, or if you feel any resistance at all, you will know that there?s a part of you that is withholding permission. You?ll want to find out what part of you that is. Perhaps it?s the voice of a parent or someone else. Perhaps it?s a part of your personality that?s afraid of what will happen if/when you have what you want.

Sometimes this is the only thing that?s holding you back. You just don?t have your permission to go for what you want. So what are you going to give yourself permission to do, be or have?

Linda Binns is an energy expert. She specializes in helping sensitive and highly sensitive people understand and manage themselves and their energy so they can be more successful and fulfilled both personally and professionally.

Linda Binns is the author of 7 books on energy, including her popular Energy Tips Series which demonstrates how to easily improve your health, increase your income, sell your house and create a supportive home environment by changing your energy.

Go to http://www.TheHighlySensitiveProfessional.com for a free survey to find out whether you are sensitive or highly sensitive and how you can manage and make the most of your sensitivity.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Linda_Binns
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Source: http://theselfimprovementblog.com/self-improvement/featured/give-yourself-permission/

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Asparagus and caramelized onion tart

It's asparagus season, and this delightfully simple tart keeps the weekend restful so you can be ready to greet a new week.

By Christina Masters,?The Rowdy Chowgirl / May 25, 2013

Making an asparagus and caramelized onion tart is the perfect activity for a quiet Sunday afternoon.

The Rowdy Chowgirl

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There are hints of both the blessed and the accursed about some Sundays. The good parts, of course, are obvious. A day of worship for many. A day of rest. It is a day of sleeping in, and long breakfasts, and lolling and lounging and hot baths and long runs and maybe even a nap.?

Skip to next paragraph Christina Masters

The Rowdy Chowgirl

Christina Masters is a Seattle-based food blogger. As The Rowdy Chowgirl, she writes about recipes, gardening, restaurants, food ethics, feeding the hungry, and more. She believes that food is never just food ? it is always part of a larger story that includes context, community and connections. An enthusiastic home cook, she favors local, seasonal ingredients prepared in simple, flavorful ways

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All good. All very good. But there is this whiff of despair in the air some Sundays, or maybe it?s just me, looking ahead and counting the dwindling hours of freedom and ease.?

Instead of staying in the pleasant?now?of couch and cat and book I start doing mental arithmetic:?this many hours until I need to get ready for work tomorrow, and then get to bed and then get up and go to work?and oh, my week is going to be so busy, and I don?t want to go to work, not yet ? and there I am, dreading Monday morning instead of living Sunday afternoon. I?m sure I smell a whiff of brimstone in the air, possibly hear the echo of devilish laughter.

But you know what helps drive back the darkness?? A little time spent in the kitchen ? not hurrying, just flowing with the chopping and stirring. ?And then a good meal, like this summer-y tart. Yes, the leftovers will be good for lunch on Monday afternoon, too.? But don?t think about Monday while you are making it.

Asparagus and Caramelized Onion Tart

?1 shortcrust tart shell

1 large onion

1 teaspoon olive oil

15 ounces whole milk ricotta

1/4 cup cream

1 egg

1 teaspoon lemon zest

1/4 tsp salt

several grinds of pepper

1-2 tablespons/small handful of fresh parsley, minced fine

15-20 stalks of asparagus, ends trimmed

drizzle of olive oil

1. You will need a tart shell that is approximately 10 inches wide for this recipe.? Buy one, take one out of the freezer, or use your favorite shortcrust recipe to create one from scratch. Whichever way, you?ll need it rolled out and pressed into a pan. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

2. Coarsely chop onion. In a saut? pan or wok over medium heat, stir onions in 1 teaspoon of olive oil,? then cook very, very slowly until caramelized ? at least half an hour, stirring occasionally.? Add a splash of water every now and then if needed to keep onions from frying/burning/overbrowning. They are done when they are soft, golden brown, and smell sweet.

3. Meanwhile, prebake the tart shell for 10 minutes, then remove from oven.

4. Vigorously stir together ricotta, cream, egg, lemon zest, parsley, salt and pepper.? Pour into tart shell.? Top ricotta mixture with caramelized onions, distributed evenly. Arrange asparagus spears on top of onion layer. Drizzle very lightly with olive oil.

5. Place tart pan on a baking sheet and place in oven. Bake for 30 minutes, then check periodically and remove from oven when ricotta is set, asparagus looks cooked, and tart is generally golden brown on top.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/OvLqx_67wKA/Asparagus-and-caramelized-onion-tart

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Blackstone notifies Cohen's SAC it intends to pull money: pension consultant

By Matthew Goldstein

(Reuters) - Billionaire hedge fund manager Steven A. Cohen is losing the financial support of Blackstone Group Inc, the largest outside investor in his embattled SAC Capital Advisors, which is yanking much of its client money, according to a letter reviewed by Reuters.

A pension consultant, in a May 21 letter to clients, said Blackstone has notified Cohen that it intends to "fully redeem" a significant portion of the roughly $550 million the investment firm has invested with the $15 billion hedge fund. The letter from pension consulting firm Russell Investments said Blackstone submitted its redemption notice to SAC Capital sometime before May 15 because of ongoing concerns about the insider trading investigation that continues to engulf Cohen's fund.

Blackstone's investment with SAC Capital is through several investment funds known as hedge fund of funds and also through separately managed accounts it maintains for clients. The decision to redeem from SAC Capital impacts only client money invested in its hedge fund of funds, according to the letter. It's not clear how much of the $550 million is in those hedge fund of funds and it is not clear what Blackstone is advising clients who have money in separately managed accounts that is invested with SAC Capital.

Russell did say in the address to its pension clients that Blackstone "expects to receive 100 percent of investors' capital by year-end." Russell, which manages $173 billion in assets and oversees a number of index funds, also provides advice to pensions and institutional investors on where to invest their dollars in hedge funds.

The timing of Blackstone's request to withdraw money from SAC Capital is critical because it came before the hedge fund told investors on May 17 that its cooperation with federal authorities was no longer unconditional. Soon after, news broke that federal prosecutors had issued grand jury subpoenas earlier this month to Cohen and several of his top executives, seeking their testimony about insider trading at the hedge fund.

The decision by Blackstone, which has invested with SAC Capital for at least a decade, is a big blow to the 56-year-old fund manager, who is widely regarded as one of the most successful traders of his generation. Blackstone - which manages about $46 billion in hedge fund investments for public pensions, foundations, corporations and wealthy individuals - is seen as something of a bellwether for other investors in the $2.2 trillion hedge fund industry because of its stature.

Representatives for Blackstone did not immediately respond when asked for comment on Saturday. An SAC Capital spokesman declined to comment.

The letter from Russell Investments, which was reviewed by Reuters, made no mention of the subpoenas on Cohen and his executives and was sent after a Russell representative talked to a Blackstone executive about the redemption decision. The letter said Blackstone decided to submit a redemption notice to SAC Capital after reviewing the terms of a $616 million deal SAC Capital reached in March with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to settle allegations that the hedge fund's employees had engaged in insider trading in four stocks.

Blackstone, according to the letter, said the settlement with the SEC "did not give additional comfort that the issues at-hand were resolved."

A representative for Russell Investments did not respond to a request for comment about the letter from its Russell Research division.

Outside investors in SAC Capital like Blackstone, who account for roughly $6.75 billion of the $15 billion managed by Cohen, have until June 3 to decide whether to submit redemption notices for the second quarter. In the first quarter, outside investors notified Cohen they intend to withdraw about $1.7 billion of that $6.75 billion by year's end.

People close to SAC Capital said Cohen, who has roughly $8 billion of his money invested in SAC Capital, is bracing for another large round of redemption requests. The speculation is growing in the hedge fund world that if Cohen gets another large round of redemption requests, he may opt to return all the outside money and convert SAC Capital into a family office ? an unregistered firm that manages money just for himself and his friends and family.

SAC Capital is one of the world's larger hedge funds with 1,000 employees.

Blackstone's hedge fund of funds invests client money with more than four dozen hedge funds, including SAC Capital, Pershing Square Capital Management, Elliott Management and DE Shaw & Co, according to people familiar with the private equity firm's asset management business.

The decision by Blackstone to redeem comes after the private equity and investment firm has stuck with Cohen throughout the course of the long-running investigation that has so far resulted in nine one-time employees of the firm being charged or implicated in insider trading schemes.

Cohen himself has not been charged with wrongdoing, but the investigation is seen as increasingly focusing on him and his firm.

In late April, lawyers for Cohen and his firm met with federal prosecutors in Manhattan to make their best case argument about why the hedge fund billionaire and his SAC Capital Advisors should not be charged with criminal wrongdoing. But people familiar with that meeting said the lengthy presentation did not impress federal prosecutors, who are now considering whether to use a racketeering law aimed at prosecuting the Mafia and drug gangs to pursue a criminal case against Cohen's hedge fund.

(Editing by Martin Howell and Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blackstone-notifies-cohens-sac-intends-pull-money-pension-154556025.html

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A Snapshot of the Inside of an Atom

So if matter is really an expression of a wave, let suppose that its a wave in some more fundamental *stuff* we can't currently envisage. So the *stuff* is rippling and where that ripple is large we perceive it to be a particle.

http://i.imgur.com/AUXb2N9.gif

In other words, we can only see the big circles in that picture, we can't perceive the underlying stuff, and these particles do all manner of weird things, jump around, have a certain probability of being found in unexpected places, appear to travel fas

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/NYDvg7u5nU4/story01.htm

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Late turnovers doom Heat in Game 2 loss, 97-93

MIAMI (AP) ? LeBron James blamed one person after the Miami Heat let home-court advantage in the Eastern Conference finals slip from their hands.

Predictably, that was himself.

The league's MVP had two turnovers in the final minute ? both times on passes that were knocked away by David West ? and they proved particularly costly for the defending NBA champions.

Roy Hibbert scored a postseason career-high 29 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, and the Indiana Pacers evened the series at a game apiece with a 97-93 victory in Game 2 on Friday night.

"I made two mistakes tonight that hurt our team," James said. "And that hurt more than anything. I let my teammates down. They expect me to make plays down the stretch and I had the ball with an opportunity to make a couple plays, and I came up short.

"That burns, but the best thing about it is, this isn't college. It's not one loss and you're done. I have another opportunity to get better in Game 3."

Game 1, Miami won it with James coming through with a layup at the end of overtime.

Game 2, the Pacers simply took away the MVP's opportunity to take command in the final moments.

Paul George scored 22 points, George Hill added 18 and West finished with 13 for the Pacers, who handed the Heat just their fourth loss in their last 50 games, closed the game on a 13-5 run ? and denied one of the game's best playmakers in James twice in the final moments to finish it off.

"There's only like one person that's more scarier than that," Hill said. "And that's, you know, God."

The series resumes with Game 3 on Sunday night in Indianapolis.

"It's one of the best basketball games I've ever been a part of," Pacers coach Frank Vogel said. "It wasn't about LeBron making mistakes down the stretch. He played one of the best basketball games I've ever seen anybody play. We were just able to make a couple plays late in the game."

More specifically, West made a couple plays late in the game.

"These are two close, competitive games that can go either way," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "We had our opportunities. Enough opportunities."

With Indiana up 95-93, West intercepted a pass that James was throwing to Ray Allen with 43 seconds left. Indiana didn't cash in that mistake, instead turning the ball over with a shot-clock violation.

So on the next Miami trip, West denied James ? who led all scorers with 36 points ? again.

James drove to the right block, spun and tried passing out toward the perimeter. West got his right hand on that pass, knocking it off-course and into the hands of Hill, then extended his hand skyward.

The Pacers ? just as they did in the second-round series last year ? knew they were winning Game 2 in Miami. Hill made two free throws with 8.3 seconds left to clinch it, and just like that, the series was tied.

"We've been able to maintain our composure throughout the year," West said. "That's helped us throughout these playoffs and especially in environments like these."

The Heat got 17 points from Chris Bosh and 14 from Dwyane Wade. The Heat led 88-84 in the fourth quarter, only to let the lead, the game and the home-court edge slip away, and James had almost an expressionless look afterward.

"Nothing broke down," Wade said. "He's going to be hard on himself. He saw guys open, but West was able to get his arms out there at the last moment."

Lance Stephenson scored 10 for the Pacers.

The Heat trailed for virtually all of the game's first 30 minutes, then tied the game three times in the third quarter ? but Indiana always had a response. When the game was tied at 60, the Pacers scored seven of the next 10 points. Tied at 67, George quickly had a layup to put the Pacers back on top. Tied at 69, George struck again, this time with a jumper.

With 5.1 seconds left in the third, George drove the lane and finished a highlight-reel dunk over Miami's Chris Andersen while getting fouled, the free throw putting the Pacers up by five. James connected on a long 3-pointer to close the quarter, then he and George exchanged a few words afterward and slapped each other's hand as if to say, "here we go."

Sure enough, the show was just getting started.

"We had our chance tonight," Bosh said.

Hibbert was creating one problem after another for Miami, so James took it upon himself to challenge him in the fourth. And with about 8 minutes left, he swatted a putback attempt away from the 7-foot-2 Indiana center, starting a play that ended with Mario Chalmers scoring at the other end to give Miami an 85-84 lead.

On the next possession, James tied up a rebound with Hibbert, then won the ensuing jump ball. Not long afterward, Bosh made a 3-pointer and Miami's lead was up to 88-84 ? its biggest of the night.

"We just didn't finish the game like we're capable of," Spoelstra said.

Indiana scored the next five points to reclaim the lead. James' three-point play with 3:32 left put the Heat on top 91-89, and Hibbert answered that with a jump hook over the reigning MVP to tie the game for the 10th time.

Frantic to the finish, again. And this time it went Indiana's way.

"Heck of a basketball game, wasn't it?" Vogel asked afterward.

If there was any remaining lament from losing Game 1 on the final play of overtime, the Pacers didn't show it. They trailed for all of 15 seconds in the first half, and after neither team held a lead of more than seven in the series opener, Indiana found itself leading by 10 late in the first quarter and by 13 with a minute to go before intermission.

Hibbert was either unguarded or unguardable, making six of his eight shots in the first two quarters and getting to the line on the way to a 19-point half. West, Hill and George combined for 27 more before the break, and when Hibbert scored with 1:25 left the Pacers' lead was 53-40.

The Heat needed less than a minute to erase more than half of that deficit.

James made a pair of free throws with 59.1 seconds left, Chalmers had a layup and Mike Miller ? who hadn't taken a shot since May 8, but checked in with 3:23 remaining in the half after Allen and Shane Battier continued to struggle from the outside ? connected on a 3-pointer as time expired, pulling Miami within 53-47 at the break.

And when Indiana went up nine early in the third quarter, Miami responded with another burst, this time an 11-2 run highlighted by a spectacular reverse dunk by James and capped by two baskets from Wade, the last of which knotted the game at 60-all.

By then, it was clear.

Just like Game 1, this one wouldn't be decided until the end.

"We haven't done anything yet," Hibbert said. "We haven't closed the series out. We won one game. A lot of us feel we should be up 2-0."

NOTES: South Florida resident Jozy Altidore of the U.S. men's national soccer team was among those in attendance, two days before he's set to report to Cleveland and begin training camp for the upcoming World Cup qualifiers. Other celebs in the crowd included newly retired football star and Miami Hurricanes great Ray Lewis, Baseball Hall of Famer Cal Ripken Jr. and Rosie O'Donnell. ... The Pacers were called for four technicals (one a defensive 3-second) in a 4-minute span of the second quarter. ... Indiana reserve Sam Young sprained his left ankle in the third quarter. ... Indiana was not planning to fly home after the game, instead staying in Miami one more night and avoiding getting back to Indianapolis around 4 a.m. or even later.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turnovers-doom-heat-game-2-loss-97-93-044437704.html

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Kerry blasts Iranian election maneuvering (The Arizona Republic)

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Blake Shelton organizes Okla. benefit concert

Music

6 hours ago

Image: Blake Shelton

Matt Sayles / AP file

Blake Shelton.

Country music star and "The Voice" judge Blake Shelton is spearheading a benefit concert and telethon to aid those affected by the tornadoes that devastated Oklahoma earlier this week.

The "Healing in the Heartland: Relief Benefit Concert" will take place at the Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City on May 29. The event will be televised live at 9 p.m. ET on NBC and on the cable networks Style, G4, Bravo, E! and CMT either live or delayed.

Shelton will be joined by fellow country stars including his wife Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, and Vince Gill, among others. The concert aims to raise funds for the United Way of Central Oklahoma May Tornadoes Relief Fund.

"Everyone has their way to help, and mine as an entertainer is to perform to help raise money and awareness for this tragedy," said Shelton, who was born and raised in Oklahoma. "This is why I want to do this special and especially hold it in Oklahoma City, which is near ground zero."

The city of Moore, Okla, was devastated by a powerful tornado on May 20. The storm killed 24 people, including 10 children.

Tickets for the concert will go on sale Saturday at the arena box office, Ticketmaster locations, by phone at 800-745-3000 and online at Ticketmaster.com.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/blake-shelton-organizes-healing-heartland-benefit-concert-oklahoma-6C10069891

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Monkey teeth help reveal Neanderthal weaning

May 24, 2013 ? Most modern human mothers wean their babies much earlier than our closest primate relatives. But what about our extinct relatives, the Neanderthals?

A team of U.S. and Australian researchers reports in the journal Nature May 22 that they can now use fossil teeth to calculate when a Neanderthal baby was weaned. The new technique is based in part on knowledge gained from studies of teeth from human infants and from monkeys at the California National Primate Research Center at the University of California, Davis.

Using the new technique, the researchers concluded that at least one Neanderthal baby was weaned at much the same age as most modern humans.

Just as tree rings record the environment in which a tree grew, traces of barium in the layers of a primate tooth can tell the story of when an infant was exclusively milk-fed, when supplemental food started, and at what age it was weaned, said Katie Hinde, professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University and an affiliate scientist at the UC Davis Primate Center. Hinde directs the Comparative Lactation Laboratory at Harvard and has conducted a three-year study of lactation, weaning and behavior among rhesus macaques at UC Davis.

The team was able to determine exact timing of birth, when the infant was fed exclusively on mother's milk, and the weaning process, from mineral traces in teeth. By studying monkey teeth and comparing them to center records, they could show that the technique was accurate almost to the day.

After validating the technique with monkeys, the scientists applied it to human teeth and a Neanderthal tooth. They found that the Neanderthal baby was fed exclusively on mother's milk for seven months, followed by seven months of supplementation -- a similar pattern to present-day humans. The technique opens up extensive opportunities to further investigate lactation in fossils and museum collections of primate teeth.

Although there is some variation among human cultures, the accelerated transition to foods other than mother's milk is thought to have emerged in our ancestral history due, in part, to more cooperative infant care and access to a more nutritious diet, Hinde said. Shorter lactation periods could mean shorter gaps between pregnancies and a higher rate of reproduction. However, there has been much debate about when our ancestors evolved accelerated weaning.

For the past few decades researchers have relied on tooth eruption age as a direct proxy for weaning age. Yet recent investigations of wild chimpanzees have shown that the first molar eruption occurs toward the end of weaning.

"By applying these new techniques to primate teeth in museum collections, we can more precisely assess maternal investment across individuals within species, as well as life history evolution among species," Hinde said.

Authors in addition to Hinde were: Christine Austin and Manish Arora, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, Harvard School of Public Health, and University of Sydney, Australia; Tanya Smith, Harvard University; Asa Bradman and Brenda Eskenazi, UC Berkeley; Renaud Joannes-Boyau, Southern Cross University, Lismore, Australia; David Bishop, Dominic Hare and Philip Doble, University of Technology Sydney, Australia.

The work was funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, U.S. National Science Foundation, Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, Australian Research Council and Harvard University.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/NS3GpXvtMhc/130524104828.htm

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Some unions now angry about health care overhaul

WASHINGTON (AP) ? When President Barack Obama pushed his health care overhaul plan through Congress, he counted labor unions among his strongest supporters.

But some unions leaders have grown frustrated and angry about what they say are unexpected consequences of the new law ? problems that they say could jeopardize the health benefits offered to millions of their members.

The issue could create a political headache next year for Democrats facing re-election if disgruntled union members believe the Obama administration and Congress aren't working to fix the problem.

"It makes an untruth out of what the president said, that if you like your insurance, you could keep it," said Joe Hansen, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. "That is not going to be true for millions of workers now."

The problem lies in the unique multiemployer health plans that cover unionized workers in retail, construction, transportation and other industries with seasonal or temporary employment. Known as Taft-Hartley plans, they are jointly administered by unions and smaller employers that pool resources to offer more than 20 million workers and family members continuous coverage, even during times of unemployment.

The union plans were already more costly to run than traditional single-employer health plans. The Affordable Care Act has added to that cost ? for the unions' and other plans ? by requiring health plans to cover dependents up to age 26, eliminate annual or lifetime coverage limits and extend coverage to people with pre-existing conditions.

"We're concerned that employers will be increasingly tempted to drop coverage through our plans and let our members fend for themselves on the health exchanges," said David Treanor, director of health care initiatives at the Operating Engineers union.

Workers seeking coverage in the state-based marketplaces, known as exchanges, can qualify for subsidies, determined by a sliding scale based on income. By contrast, the new law does not allow workers in the union plans to receive similar subsidies.

Bob Laszewski, a health care industry consultant, said the real fear among unions is that "a lot of these labor contracts are very expensive and now employers are going to have an alternative to very expensive labor health benefits."

"If the workers can get benefits that are as good through Obamacare in the exchanges, then why do you need the union?" Laszewski said. "In my mind, what the unions are fearing is that workers for the first time can get very good health benefits for a subsidized cost someplace other than the employer."

However, Laszewski said it was unlikely employers would drop the union plans immediately because they are subject to ongoing collective bargaining agreements.

Labor unions have been among the president's closest allies, spending millions of dollars to help him win re-election and help Democrats keep their majority in the Senate. The wrangling over health care comes as unions have continued to see steady declines in membership and attacks on public employee unions in state legislatures around the country. The Obama administration walks a fine line between defending the president's signature legislative achievement and not angering a powerful constituency as it looks ahead to the 2014 elections.

Union officials have been working with the administration for more than a year to try to get a regulatory fix that would allow low-income workers in their plans to receive subsidies. But after months of negotiations, labor leaders say they have been told it won't happen.

"It's not favoritism. We want to be treated fairly," said Hansen, whose union has about 800,000 of its 1.3 million members covered under Taft-Hartley policies. "We would expect more help from this administration."

Sabrina Siddiqui, a Treasury Department spokeswoman, declined to discuss the specifics of any negotiations between the administration and union officials. But she said the law helps bring down costs and improve quality of care.

Katie Mahoney, executive director of health policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said employers were concerned about possible increases in health care costs and would do what was needed to keep their businesses running and retain worker talent. The Chamber has not taken a position on the union concerns, but Mahoney said it was highly unlikely that the administration would consider subsidies for workers in the union plans.

"They are not going to offset the expense of added mandates under the health care law, which employers and unions are going to pay for," Mahoney said.

Unions say their health care plans in many cases offer better coverage with broader doctors' networks and lower premiums than what would be available in the exchanges, particularly when it comes to part-time workers.

Unions backed the health care legislation because they expected it to curb inflation in health coverage, reduce the number of uninsured Americans and level the playing field for companies that were already providing quality benefits. While unions knew there were lingering issues after the law passed, they believed those could be fixed through rulemaking.

But last month, the union representing roofers issued a statement calling for "repeal or complete reform" of the health care law. Kinsey Robinson, president of the United Union of Roofers, Waterproofers and Allied Workers, complained that labor's concerns over the health care law "have not been addressed, or in some instances, totally ignored."

"In the rush to achieve its passage, many of the act's provisions were not fully conceived, resulting in unintended consequences that are inconsistent with the promise that those who were satisfied with their employer-sponsored coverage could keep it," Robinson said.

Harold Schaitberger, president of the International Association of Firefighters, said unions have been forceful in seeking solutions from the Obama administration, but none have been forthcoming. While Congress could address the problem by amending the health care law, Schaitberger said Senate Democrats told union leaders earlier this month that any new legislation was highly unlikely.

___

Follow Sam Hananel on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SamHananelAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unions-now-angry-health-care-overhaul-074904729.html

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