Sunday, June 30, 2013

Obama to announce new power initiative for Africa

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) ? President Barack Obama on Sunday will announce a new initiative to double access to electric power in sub-Saharan Africa, part of his effort to build on the legacy of equality and opportunity forged by his personal hero, Nelson Mandela.

Obama, who flew from Johannesburg to Cape Town Sunday, will pay tribute to the ailing 94-year-old Mandela throughout the day. The president and his family were visiting Robben Island, where the anti-apartheid leader spent 18 years confined to a tiny cell, including a stop at the lime quarry where Mandela toiled and developed the lung problems that put him in the hospital for most of the month.

The White House said Obama's guide during his tour of the island will be 83-year-old South African politician Ahmed Kathrada, who also was held at the prison for nearly two decades and guided Obama on his 2006 visit to the prison as a U.S. senator. The president will also see the prison courtyard where Mandela planted grapevines that remain today, and where he and others in the dissident leadership would discuss politics, sneak notes to one another and hide writings.

During the tour, which took place against the backdrop of sunshine and clear, blue skies, Obama, first lady Michelle Obama and their daughters took in the expansive view of the island's lime quarry, a huge crater with views of the rusty guard tower from where Mandela likely would have been watched. Obama commented on the "hard labor" Mandela endured and asked Kathrada to remind his daughters, Malia and Sasha, how long Mandela was in prison.

Michelle Obama asked how often Mandela would work and was told he worked daily. As the family turned to leave, Obama asked Kathrada to tell his daughters how the African National Congress, the South African political party, got started.

After the tour, Obama will deliver what the White House has billed as the signature speech of his weeklong trip, an address at the University of Cape Town that will be infused with memories of Mandela.

During the speech, Obama will unveil the "Power Africa" initiative, which includes an initial $7 billion investment from the United States over the next five years. Private companies, including General Electric and Symbion Power, are making an additional $9 billion in commitments with the goal of providing power to millions of Africans crippled by a lack of electricity.

Gayle Smith, Obama's senior director for development and democracy, said more than two-thirds of people living in sub-Saharan Africa do not have electricity, including 85 percent of those living in rural areas.

"If you want lights so kids can study at night or you can maintain vaccines in a cold chain, you don't have that, so going the extra mile to reach people is more difficult," Smith said.

The U.S. and its private sector partners initially will focus its efforts on six countries: Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria and Tanzania, where Obama will wrap up his trip later this week. Former President George W. Bush, who supports health programs throughout the continent, will also be in Tanzania next week, and the White House did not rule out the possibility that the two men might meet.

Obama will also highlight U.S. efforts to bolster access to food and health programs on the continent. His advisers said the president sees reducing the poverty and illness that plague many parts of Africa as an extension of Mandela's example of how change can happen within countries.

The former South African president has been hospitalized in critical condition for three weeks. Obama met Saturday with members of Mandela's family, but did not visit the anti-apartheid icon, a decision the White House said was in keeping with his family's wishes.

Obama's weeklong trip, which opened last week in Senegal, marks his most significant trip to the continent since taking office. His scant personal engagement has come as a disappointment to some in the region, who had high hopes for a man whose father was from Kenya.

Obama visited Robben Island when he was a U.S. senator. But since being elected as the first black American president, Obama has drawn inevitable comparisons to Mandela, making Sunday's visit particularly poignant.

The president said he's also eager to bring his family with him to the prison to teach them about Mandela's role in overcoming white racist rule, first as an activist and later as a president who forged a unity government with his former captors.

He told reporters Saturday he wanted to "help them to understand not only how those lessons apply to their own lives but also to their responsibilities in the future as citizens of the world, that's a great privilege and a great honor."

Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy national security adviser, said Mandela's vision was always going to feature prominently in the speech. But his deteriorating health "certainly puts a finer point on just how much we can't take for granted what Nelson Mandela did."

Harkening back to a prominent theme from Obama's 2009 speech in Ghana ? his only other trip to Africa as president ? Obama will emphasize that Africans must take much of the responsibility for finishing the work started by Mandela and his contemporaries.

"The progress that Africa has made opens new doors, but frankly, it's up to the leaders in Africa and particularly young people to make sure that they're walking through those doors of opportunity," Rhodes said.

Obama will speak at the University of Cape Town nearly 50 years after Robert F. Kennedy delivered his famous "Ripple of Hope" speech from the school. Kennedy spoke in Cape Town two years after Mandela was sentenced to life in prison.

___

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-announce-power-initiative-africa-085714963.html

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Obama has new power initiative for Africa

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) ? President Barack Obama on Sunday will announce a new initiative to double access to electric power in sub-Saharan Africa, part of his effort to build on the legacy of equality and opportunity forged by his personal hero, Nelson Mandela.

As residents await word on former South African President Nelson Mandela's condition, U.S. President Barack Obama is announcing a major initiative, "Power Africa," on Sunday, June 30, 2013. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

As residents await word on former South African President Nelson Mandela?s condition, U.S. President Barack Obama is announcing a major initiative, ?Power Africa,? on Sunday, June 30, 2013. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)

Obama, who flew from Johannesburg to Cape Town on Sunday, is paying tribute to the ailing 94-year-old Mandela throughout the day. The president and his family visited Robben Island, where the anti-apartheid leader spent 18 years confined to a tiny cell, including a stop at the lime quarry where Mandela toiled and developed the lung problems that sent him to the hospital for most of the month.

The White House said Obama?s guide during the tour was 83-year-old South African politician Ahmed Kathrada, who also was held at the prison for nearly two decades and guided Obama on his 2006 visit to the prison as a U.S. senator. The president also saw the prison courtyard where Mandela planted grapevines that remain today, and where he and others in the dissident leadership would discuss politics, sneak notes to one another and hide writings.

?On behalf of our family, we?re deeply humbled to stand where men of such courage faced down injustice and refused to yield. The world is grateful for the heroes of Robben Island, who remind us that no shackles or cells can match the strength of the human spirit,? Obama wrote in the guest book in the courtyard, his U.S. Secret Service agents standing watch in the old guard tower above.

During the tour, which took place under sunshine and clear, blue skies, Obama, first lady Michelle Obama and daughters Malia and Sasha took in the expansive view of the quarry, a huge crater with views of the rusty guard tower from where Mandela was watched. Obama commented on the ?hard labor? Mandela endured and asked Kathrada to remind his daughters how long Mandela was in prison.

Michelle Obama asked how often Mandela would work and was told he worked daily. As the family turned to leave, Obama asked Kathrada to tell his daughters how the African National Congress, the South African political party, got started.

After the tour, Obama will visit with retired archbishop Desmond Tutu before delivering what the White House has billed as the signature speech of his weeklong trip, an address at the University of Cape Town that will be infused with memories of Mandela.

Obama will use the address to unveil the ?Power Africa? initiative, which includes an initial $7 billion investment from the United States over the next five years. Private companies, including General Electric and Symbion Power, are making an additional $9 billion in commitments with the goal of providing power to millions of Africans crippled by a lack of electricity.

Gayle Smith, Obama?s senior director for development and democracy, said more than two-thirds of people living in sub-Saharan Africa do not have electricity, including 85 percent of those living in rural areas.

?If you want lights so kids can study at night or you can maintain vaccines in a cold chain, you don?t have that, so going the extra mile to reach people is more difficult,? Smith said.

The U.S. and its private sector partners initially will focus its efforts on six countries: Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria and Tanzania, where Obama will wrap up his trip later this week. Former President George W. Bush, who supports health programs throughout the continent, will also be in Tanzania next week, and the White House did not rule out the possibility that the two men might meet.

Obama will also highlight U.S. efforts to bolster access to food and health programs on the continent. His advisers said the president sees reducing the poverty and illness that plague many parts of Africa as an extension of Mandela?s example of how change can happen within countries.

The former South African president has been hospitalized in critical condition for three weeks. Obama met Saturday with members of Mandela?s family, but did not visit the anti-apartheid icon, a decision the White House said was in keeping with his family?s wishes.

Obama?s weeklong trip, which opened last week in Senegal, marks his most significant trip to the continent since taking office. His scant personal engagement has come as a disappointment to some in the region, who had high hopes for a man whose father was from Kenya.

Obama visited Robben Island when he was a U.S. senator. But since being elected as the first black American president, Obama has drawn inevitable comparisons to Mandela, making Sunday?s visit particularly poignant.

The president said he was eager to bring his family with him to the prison to teach them about Mandela?s role in overcoming white racist rule, first as an activist and later as a president who forged a unity government with his former captors.

He told reporters Saturday he wanted to ?help them to understand not only how those lessons apply to their own lives but also to their responsibilities in the future as citizens of the world, that?s a great privilege and a great honor.?

Ben Rhodes, Obama?s deputy national security adviser, said Mandela?s vision was always going to feature prominently in the speech. But his deteriorating health ?certainly puts a finer point on just how much we can?t take for granted what Nelson Mandela did.?

Harkening back to a prominent theme from Obama?s 2009 speech in Ghana ? his only other trip to Africa as president ? Obama will emphasize that Africans must take much of the responsibility for finishing the work started by Mandela and his contemporaries.

?The progress that Africa has made opens new doors, but frankly, it?s up to the leaders in Africa and particularly young people to make sure that they?re walking through those doors of opportunity,? Rhodes said.

Obama will speak at the University of Cape Town nearly 50 years after Robert F. Kennedy delivered his famous ?Ripple of Hope? speech from the school. Kennedy spoke in Cape Town two years after Mandela was sentenced to life in prison.

Source: http://fuelfix.com/blog/2013/06/30/obama-has-new-power-initiative-for-africa/

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Apple Seeds 'MacBook Air WiFi Update 1.0' for Testing

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

'No one wants this fight:' Ecuadoreans divided over Snowden asylum

Dolores Ochoa / AP

A vendor who sells roasted corn pushes her cart past a flower shop in Quito, Ecuador, on Wednesday. Unlike with China, Russia or Cuba, the Obama administration could swiftly hit Ecuador in the pocketbook by denying reduced tariffs on cut flowers, artichokes and broccoli if it grants Snowden's request for asylum.

By Mary Murray and Miguel Almaguer, NBC News

QUITO, Ecuador -- Ecuador, the South American country known for the Middle of the World -- a park honoring the Equator that boasts a yellow line painted on the ground said to be precisely at Earth?s midpoint -- is now becoming the center of an international chase for National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden.

Public opinion in Ecuador runs hot and cold on whether the country should extend political asylum to Snowden. While some admire their president for trying to stick it to the United States, others fear economic fallout if Snowden settles in Ecuador.

One Ecuadorean newspaper this week called the leaker a ?hot potato,? while another labeled him ?a spy.?

Luis Ortega, who makes his living working in tourism, believes political fighting of any kind is bad for business. His big question: ?Will Americans stop coming here??

The 25-year-old, who had just finished showing a tour group from Chicago around Quito?s World Heritage landmarks, said he was worried about his livelihood.

?I just got married and I can?t afford for my business to suffer,? he said.

Ecuador?s tourism industry generates more than $1 billion a year and is growing.

Jose Jacome / EPA file

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa smiles at the crowd during a military act at the presidential palace in Quito, Ecuador, on Wednesday. Correa announced that his government will decide with 'absolute sovereignty' on political asylum for Edward Snowden.

?Americans come here because we?re friends,? Ortega said. ?No one wants this fight.?

Rodrigo Espinosa shared that same point of view. He?s employed by a private security firm that caters to American business executives.

?Snowden is not our problem, so why are we sticking our nose into this business?? he said.

The concerns are not unfounded. On Wednesday, U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-NJ, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, vowed to eliminate the preferential trade agreements in place under the Andean Trade Preference Act should Snowden, 29, gain asylum in Ecuador.

"Our government will not reward countries for bad behavior," Menendez said in a written statement. At the end of July, Congress must vote to renew the trade accord.

That message angered Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, an economist educated in the United States. In a tweet, Correa denounced the U.S. view as ?unjust? and ?immoral."

Heightening tensions further, Correa's representative on Thursday renounced the trade benefits and called the lower tariffs ?blackmail,? sarcastically suggesting that Washington instead use Ecuador?s share of $23 million for human rights training inside the United States.

"Ecuador does not accept pressure or threats from anyone, nor does it trade with its principles," said Fernando Alvarado, the communications secretary.

U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman told reporters in Washington that despite Alvarado's comments, Ecuador was still eligible for benefits under two different programs, Reuters reported.

Although China invests heavily in the region, the U.S. remains Ecuador's main trading partner, accounting for some 40 percent or about $9 billion of all exports.

Ecuador benefits heavily from its Andean trade program with the United States. An oil-rich country, Ecuador exported an estimated $5.4 billion worth of oil, as well as $166 million from its flower industry, $122 million of fruits and vegetables and $80 million of tuna to the United States in 2012.

In a country that battles a high poverty rate, the flower industry alone employs more than 100,000 workers, many of them women.?

Ecuadoreans like Dr. Catalina Nuncios applaud Alvarado's view and stand ready to welcome Snowden with open arms.

?We are Christians and cannot turn our back on this young man who needs our help,? said Nuncios, a pediatrician who voted for Correa twice. She said she felt offended by Menendez's statement.

President Obama remarks on the situation with admitted NSA leaker Edward Snowden, saying he has no plans to disrupt relations with Russia and China, nor to scramble jets to capture the "29-year-old hacker."

?No one can threaten us to toe their line," Nuncios said.

Engineering student Jesus Lombardi, who was born in Ecuador but raised in southern California, said he feels torn.

?The American part of me understands national security, but my Ecuadorean side is proud that Correa is putting my country on the map.?

As tensions escalate, Snowden remains in legal limbo somewhere in the Moscow airport.

Ecuadorean law is, in fact, hindering his case. Under the constitution, Snowden must make his asylum request in person either in the country or at an Ecuadorean embassy or consulate. And, according to local press reports, Snowden still does not possess a legal travel document that would allow him to board a flight to Quito.

NBC's Carlos Rigau and?Reuters contributed to this report.?

Related:

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It?s ?Wedding Weekend In San Francisco? After Prop 8 Ruling

It?s ?Wedding Weekend In San Francisco? After Prop 8 Ruling

Filed by KOSU News in US News.
June 29, 2013

?A long line of fianc?s and their families snaked out of the clerk?s office? in San Francisco on Saturday, the Chronicle reports, as couples lined up to be among the first to be married now that it?s legal again for same-sex couples to be get hitched in California.

On this, the first weekend since the Supreme Court ruling that let stand a lower court?s decision invalidating California?s Proposition 8 ban of gay marriages, it was ?wedding weekend? in the city, the Chronicle declares.

KTVU-TV says that ?big crowds were expected from across the state as long lines had already stretched down the lobby shortly after 9 a.m. City officials decided to hold weekend hours and let couples tie the knot as San Francisco is also celebrating its annual Pride weekend expected to draw as many as 1 million people.?

City Hall plans to stay open until 8 p.m. local time (11 p.m. ET) on Saturday and to be open from 8 a.m to 5 p.m. local time on Sunday.

According to the Chronicle, Saturday at City Hall ?some wore shorts and sneakers while others dressed in lacy white dresses and spiked heels. They carried flowers or rainbow signs or just handbags with wedding necessities, like rings. ? The ceremonies were punctuated with whoops from a joyous crowd.?

Some in the line said they were anxious to be married before any more legal challenges are filed. ?You have the feeling in your mind they?re going to take it away on Monday, so it?s like, ?Let?s go!? ? Petra Torri said, according to KTVU. She and her domestic partner, Antoinette Torri, were the first couple in line Saturday. [Copyright 2013 NPR]

Source: http://kosu.org/2013/06/its-wedding-weekend-in-san-francisco-after-prop-8-ruling/

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Obama: No wheeling or dealing to extradite Snowden (The Arizona Republic)

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Ritalin for Cocaine Addiction? | Psych Central News

By Rick Nauert PhD Senior News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on June 28, 2013

Ritalin for Cocaine Addiction? New research suggests a single dose of methylphenidate (brand name Ritalin) can help to improve brain function in cocaine addiction, which ultimately could make it an add-on treatment for such addictions.

Researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York performed imaging studies to develop their hypothesis. They found that the drug modified connectivity in certain brain circuits that underlie self-control and craving among cocaine-addicted individuals.

The research is published in the current issue of JAMA Psychiatry.

Previous research has shown that oral methylphenidate improved brain function in cocaine users performing specific cognitive tasks such as ignoring emotionally distracting words and resolving a cognitive conflict.

Similar to cocaine, methylphenidate increases dopamine (and norepinephrine) activity in the brain, but, administered orally, takes longer to reach peak effect, giving it a lower potential for abuse.

By extending dopamine?s action, the drug enhances signaling to improve several cognitive functions, including information processing and attention.

?Orally administered methylphenidate increases dopamine in the brain, similar to cocaine, but without the strong addictive properties,? said Rita Goldstein, Ph.D., who led the research while at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in New York.

?We wanted to determine whether such substitutive properties, which are helpful in other replacement therapies such as using nicotine gum instead of smoking cigarettes or methadone instead of heroin, would play a role in enhancing brain connectivity between regions of potential importance for intervention in cocaine addiction.?

Anna Konova, a doctoral candidate at Stony Brook University, who was first author on this manuscript, added, ?Using fMRI, we found that methylphenidate did indeed have a beneficial impact on the connectivity between several brain centers associated with addiction.?

For the study,?Goldstein and her team recruited 18 cocaine-addicted individuals. Participants were then randomized to receive an oral dose of methylphenidate or placebo.

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure the strength of connectivity in particular brain circuits known to play a role in addiction before and during peak drug effects. They also assessed each subject?s severity of addiction to see if this had any bearing on the results.

Methylphenidate decreased connectivity between areas of the brain that have been strongly implicated in the formation of habits, including compulsive drug seeking and craving.

The scans also showed that methylphenidate strengthened connectivity between several brain regions involved in regulating emotions and exerting control over behaviors?connections previously reported to be disrupted in cocaine addiction.

?The benefits of methylphenidate were present after only one dose, indicating that this drug has significant potential as a treatment add-on for addiction to cocaine and possibly other stimulants,? said?Goldstein.

?This is a preliminary study, but the findings are exciting and warrant further exploration, particularly in conjunction with cognitive behavioral therapy or cognitive remediation.?

Source: The Mount Sinai Hospital / Mount Sinai School of Medicine

APA Reference
Nauert PhD, R. (2013). Ritalin for Cocaine Addiction?. Psych Central. Retrieved on June 29, 2013, from http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/06/28/ritalin-for-cocaine-addiction/56583.html

?

Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/06/28/ritalin-for-cocaine-addiction/56583.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Ecuador heats rhetoric as Obama downplays Snowden

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) ? President Barack Obama tried to cool the international frenzy over Edward Snowden on Thursday as Ecuador stepped up its defiance and said it was preemptively rejecting millions in trade benefits that it could lose by taking in the fugitive from his limbo in a Moscow airport.

The country seen as likeliest to shelter the National Security Agency leaker seemed determined to prove it could handle any repercussions, with three of its highest officials calling an early-morning news conference to "unilaterally and irrevocably renounce" $23 million a year in lowered tariffs on products such as roses, shrimp and frozen vegetables.

Fernando Alvarado, the secretary of communications for leftist President Rafael Correa, sarcastically suggested the U.S. use the money to train government employees to respect human rights.

Obama, meanwhile, sought to downplay the international chase for the man he called "a 29-year-old hacker" and lower the temperature of an issue that has raised tensions between the U.S. and uneasy partners Russia and China. Obama said in Senegal that the damage to U.S. national security has already been done and his top focus now is making sure it can't happen again.

"I'm not going to have one case with a suspect who we're trying to extradite suddenly be elevated to the point where I've got to start doing wheeling and dealing and trading on a whole host of other issues, simply to get a guy extradited so he can face the justice system," Obama said at a joint news conference with Senegal's President Macky Sall.

While the Ecuadorean government appeared angry over U.S. threats of punishment if it accepts Snowden, there were also mixed signals about how eager it was to grant asylum. For days, officials here have been blasting the U.S. and praising Snowden's leaks of NSA eavesdropping secrets as a blow for global human rights.

But they also have repeatedly insisted that they are nowhere close to making a decision on whether Snowden can leave Moscow, where he is believed to be holed up in an airport transit zone, for refuge in this oil-rich South American nation.

"It's a complex situation, we don't know how it'll be resolved," Correa told a news conference Thursday in his first public comments on the case aside from a handful of postings on Twitter.

The Ecuadorean leader said that in order for Snowden's asylum application to be processed, he would have to be in Ecuador or inside an Ecuadorean Embassy, "and he isn't." Another country would have to permit Snowden to transit its territory for that requirement to be met, Correa said.

WikiLeaks, which has been aiding Snowden, announced earlier he was en route to Ecuador and had received a travel document. On Wednesday, the Univision television network displayed an unsigned letter of safe passage for him.

Officials on Thursday acknowledged that the Ecuadorean Embassy in London had issued a June 22 letter of safe passage for Snowden that calls on other countries to allow him to travel to asylum in Ecuador. But Ecuador's secretary of political management, Betty Tola, said the letter was invalid because it was issued without the approval of the government in the capital, Quito.

She also threatened legal action against whoever leaked the document, which she said "has no validity and is the exclusive responsibility of the person who issued it."

"This demonstrates a total lack of coordination in the department of foreign affairs," said Santiago Basabe, a professor of political science at the Latin American School of Social Sciences in Quito. "It's no small question to issue a document of safe passage or a diplomatic document for someone like Snowden without this decision being taken directly by the foreign minister or president."

The renunciation of trade benefits was a dramatic but mostly symbolic threat. The U.S Congress was widely expected to let the benefits lapse in coming weeks, for reasons unrelated to the Snowden case. And if they continued, it appeared highly unlikely that the Ecuadorean government would be able to unilaterally cancel tariff benefits that went directly to their country's exporters.

Behind Ecuador's mixed messages, some analysts saw not confusion but internal divisions in the Ecuadorean government.

Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a think tank focused on Latin America, said many in Washington believed that Correa, a leftist elected to a third term in February, had been telegraphing a desire to moderate and take a softer tack toward the United States and private business.

Harder-core leftists led by Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino may be seeking to maintain a tough line, he said, a division expressing itself in confusing messages.

"I think there really are different factions within the government on this," Shifter said. "Correa wants to become more moderate. That has been the signal that has been communicated in Washington."

Embarrassment for the Obama administration over the surveillance revelations continued as the British newspaper The Guardian reported that it allowed the National Security Agency for more than two years to collect records detailing email and Internet use by Americans. The story cited documents showing that under the program a federal judge could approve a bulk collection order for Internet metadata every 90 days.

A senior Obama administration confirmed the program and said it ended in 2011, according to The Guardian. The records were first collected during the Bush administration and involved "communications with at least one communicant outside the United States or for which no communicant was known to be a citizen of the United States."

The report said that eventually the NSA was allowed to "analyze communications metadata associated with United States persons and persons believed to be in the United States," according to a 2007 Justice Department memo marked secret.

The U.S. administration was expected to decide by Monday whether to grant Ecuador export privileges under the Generalized System of Preferences, a program meant to spur development and growth in poorer countries. The deadline was set long before the Snowden affair and officials said Thursday that there would be an ongoing review of Ecuador's privileges under the program.

More broadly, a larger trade pact allowing reduced tariffs on more than $5 billion in annual exports to the U.S. is up for congressional renewal before July 21. While approval of the Andean Trade Preference Act has long been seen as doubtful in Washington, Ecuador has been lobbying strongly for its renewal.

On Wednesday, Sen. Bob Menendez of New Jersey, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, pledged to lead an effort to block extension of U.S. tariff benefits if Ecuador grants asylum to Snowden, who turned 30 last week. Nearly half of Ecuador's billions a year in foreign trade depends on the United States.

The Obama administration said Thursday that accepting Snowden would damage the overall relationship between the two countries and analysts said it was almost certain that granting the leaker asylum would lead the U.S. to cut roughly $30 million a year in military and law enforcement assistance.

Granting asylum to Snowden would cause "great difficulties in our bilateral relationship," State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said. "If they take that step, that would have very negative repercussions."

Alvarado, the communications minister, said his country rejects economic "blackmail" in the form of threats against the trade measures.

"The preferences were authorized for Andean countries as compensation for the fight against drugs, but soon became a new instrument of pressure," he said. "As a result, Ecuador unilaterally and irrevocably renounces these preferences."

Alvarado did not explicitly mention the separate effort to win trade benefits under the presidential order.

He did suggest, however, how the U.S. could use the money saved from Ecuadorean tariffs ? to train government employees to respect citizens' rights.

"Ecuador offers the United States $23 million a year in economic aid, an amount similar to what we were receiving under the tariff benefits, with the purpose of providing human rights training that will contribute to avoid violations of people's privacy, that degrade humanity," he said.

___

Pace reported from Dakar, Senegal. Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Peter Orsi in Caracas, Venezuela, and Ken Thomas in Washington contributed to this report.

___

Follow Michael Weissenstein on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mweissenstein

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ecuador-heats-rhetoric-obama-downplays-snowden-194838354.html

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Nelson Mandela's daughter to NBC News: 'I can't stress enough what a fighter he is'

Ben Curtis / AP

Zindzi Mandela, right, receives a hug from an unidentified woman as she arrives Wednesday at the Pretoria hospital where he father is being treated.

By Marian Smith, Cheryll Simpson and F. Brinley Bruton, NBC News

PRETORIA - Nelson Mandela ?is not going to go anywhere anytime soon,? one of the anti-apartheid icon's daughters told NBC News in an exclusive interview on Thursday.

Speaking to Special Correspondent Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Zindzi Mandela said her father was "very comfortable" and "responding" as he battles a lung infection at a Pretoria hospital.

NBC's Keir Simmons shares the latest of the condition of the South African president.

?His whole legacy is about fighting,? she said. ?I can't stress enough what a fighter he is. He?s a strong man. He's about resilience.?

When asked whether the family would welcome a visit by President Barack Obama, who is due to visit South Africa this weekend, Mandela said she wasn't aware of any formal request but added that decision would be left with doctors treating the Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

She described Mandela's condition as "typical for a 94-year-old man whose health is frail."

"He is with us," Mandela added.

Meanwhile, Mandela's eldest daughter said he appeared to be able to hear family members.

Speaking to SABC radio, Makaziwe Mandela said: "I?won't lie, it doesn't look good. But as I say, if we speak to him, he responds and tries to open his eyes. He's still there. He might be waning off, but he's still there."

Other members of the former South African president's family thanked well-wishers around the world for their support.

President Barrack Obama has said in the last hour that his thoughts and prayers are with Nelson Mandela's family. They have been at the 94 year old's bedside in hospital in Pretoria this morning, where he is still in a critical condition. His granddaughter, though, did tell reporters awaiting news outside the hospital that he is "stable." ITV's Neil Connery reports.

?Sometimes it is very hard for all of us in the family,? said Swati Dlamini, one of Mandela?s 17 grandchildren. ?We just appreciate that he?s loved.?

Relatives collected flowers from outside the hospital on Thursday. A choir prayed and sang outside the building, as other?people arrived to deliver bouquets and messages of support for the 94-year-old. By late afternoon, a crowd of about 1,000 people had gathered nearby.

Earlier, one family member described Mandela's condition as "stable." However, presidential spokesman Mac?Maharaj told reporters that the condition remained "critical."

Mandela has already spent 20 days in the hospital, his fourth hospitalization in six months.?

Earlier, President Jacob Zuma canceled a trip to Mozambique?in an indication of heightened concern about Mandela,?who is?widely regarded as the father of the nation and?whose health deteriorated last weekend.

In a statement, Zuma said that Mandela was "much better" Thursday than he had been the previous night.

"The medical team continues to do a sterling job," he added.

NBC News' Rohit Kachroo and Reuters contributed to this report.

/

View images of civil rights leader Nelson Mandela, who went from anti-apartheid activist to prisoner to South Africa's first black president.

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Gorilla taunting: If you want to go to Hogwarts, be nice to zoo animals

Children taunting a zoo gorilla got their just dues when the animal decided to best them at their own game.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 27, 2013

A gorilla scared a group of children cruelly taunting it.

Children who apparently have never read Harry Potter, and who don?t know that only non-magical kids are mean to zoo animals, were fittingly scared when a gorilla decided it had grown weary of their taunting.

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In the now viral video, a group of children yell ?You?re ugly!? at a gorilla sitting placidly near the glass at a Dallas zoo, beating their chests in an imitation of more enthusiastic gorillas they might have seen on television. The gorilla watches them, calmly accepting their criticism.?

But suddenly the gorilla has had enough. Well-versed in the art of surprise, as well in the benefits of deadpan facial expressions, it lunges toward the glass and presses its hands and face to the window. The kids scream. And the gorilla saunters off, turning back for one last disapproving look at the appropriately terrified kids.

The kids had it better than Harry Potter?s Dudley Dursley, who taps the glass on a bored boa constrictor?s cage and then later gets his due, ending up sealed behind the glass (in the movie version, at least; in the book, the snake just slithers around his ankles).

Harry, the superstar wizard who goes on to save the whole world, is more restrained with the snake: no tapping, just a casual, pleasant conversation with the exasperated animal about how a little privacy would be nice, sometimes.

The apparent moral: people who tap on glass are non-magical. If you want to go to Hogwarts, be good to gorillas.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/7irLrVHReec/Gorilla-taunting-If-you-want-to-go-to-Hogwarts-be-nice-to-zoo-animals

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Oracle and NetSuite unveil cloud-computing alliance

By Noel Randewich

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Software companies Oracle and NetSuite announced an alliance to deliver cloud-based services to mid-size business customers, the third tie-up unveiled this week by Oracle as it pushes further into services delivered over the Internet.

The agreement will focus on integrating Oracle's software for human resources with NetSuite's services for enterprise resource planning and will be aimed at mid-size companies, Oracle and NetSuite said.

"You shouldn't think of this as a date. You should think of this as us continuing to integrate our products closer and closer together," Oracle President Mark Hurd told analysts and reporters on a conference call. "Think of this almost as rolling thunder as opposed to an event."

NetSuite, in which Oracle Chief Executive Larry Ellison is a major shareholder, makes web-based software for small and mid-size companies to manage their businesses and customers. Connecting their products gives the two technology companies new sales opportunities.

The partnership with NetSuite follows Oracle agreements announced earlier this week with cloud-computing leader Salesforce.com and top software maker Microsoft.

Oracle wants to speed up its move into cloud computing, a fast-growing area of technology where the No. 3 software maker has fallen behind smaller rivals selling all-in-one solutions that are less expensive than Oracle's offerings.

Shares of NetSuite have more than tripled over the past five years, while Oracle's have gained about 40 percent.

Microsoft will support Oracle's software on its cloud-based platforms, which have also struggled to catch up with Amazon.com's cloud offering, called Amazon Web Services, which blazed the trail in elastic online computing services.

Ellison and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff on Thursday are due to hold a conference call to outline the details of their new nine-year partnership.

(Reporting by Noel Randewich; Editing by Bernard Orr)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oracle-netsuite-unveil-cloud-computing-alliance-211505810.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Wash. state lawmaker tells teachers: quit whining about money, enjoy your summer off

Washington state rep. Liz Pike has unleashed the fury of teachers and schoolmarms in general across The Evergreen State after she suggested in a Facebook post that teachers who want to make more money should find a different line of work.

Pike, a Republican from the southwest corner of the state who favors small government and low taxes, prefaced her ?open letter to public educators? by noting that she has received a number of emails from teachers who are unhappy because teachers across the state have gone without a salary increase for two years. Some teachers have taken a pay cut of nearly two percent.

?Congratulations on enjoying your last day of the school year,? Pike?s post reads. ?If I had the opportunity to choose my career all over, I would have opted to get the necessary degree and teaching certificate so that I too could enjoy summertime off with my children, spring break vacations, christmas [sic] break vacations, paid holidays, a generous pension and health insurance benefits.

?Instead, I chose to work a career in private sector business so that I could be one of those tax payers who funds your salaries.?

Pike?s electoral website says she has been a small business owner for the last 15 years, running the Pike Advertising Agency. Before that, she worked at a small newspaper. She also has two grown children and operates a small-scale sustainable farm.

After some words of gratitude to various ?excellent instructors? who are ?inspiring our children to reach their full intellectual potential,? Pike cuts to the quick.

?[W]e have unions that only care about the adults in the system,? she charges. ?Since the rise of teachers? unions in this nation, our public education system has deteriorated.

?If you are uninspired because of the lack of a cost of living increase, I encourage you to speak with your neighbors who work in the private sector,? she advises. ?Ask them when was the last time they were guaranteed pay increases that were not based on performance standards.?

Pike then goes on to explain her small-government beliefs ? and rudimentary economics ? in stark, simple terms.

Naturally, reports The Seattle Times, many teachers were seriously displeased with Pike?s Facebook post.

?It?s disheartening that she?d take such a dim view of teachers. It shows such a disrespect for the teaching profession,? Jamie Hurly, a social-studies teacher at Battle Ground High School, told The Times. ?To imply that we only work by the clock, we don?t. We work outside of our school day.?

Coincidentally enough, Pike is a graduate of Battle Ground High School.

?Most of our teachers have master?s degrees or higher,? Rick Wilson, executive director of the Vancouver Education Association, told The Times. ?They work very hard. They get extra training in the summers. They?re here because they want to make a difference in the lives of children. And they do.?

?[W]e?re getting cut after cut after cut, it?s hard to survive,? elementary school teacher Tim Kelly told FOX affiliate KPTV. ?We?re not greedy. I don?t make a lot of money. As a matter of fact I work a second job throughout the year just so we could barely get by.?

Rep. Pike has not responded to the torrent of criticism from educators, saying that her Facebook post speaks eloquently for itself.

Follow Eric on Twitter?and send education-related story tips to?erico@dailycaller.com.
Join the conversation on The Daily Caller

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Tea Party IRS witness calls for other whistleblowers to step forward

Immigration reform critics flood Senate with phone calls

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wash-state-lawmaker-tells-teachers-quit-whining-money-123621080.html

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Whitey Bulger Lawyers Challenge Informant File


(Adds quote from family member, details on disgraced FBI agent)
By Scott Malone
BOSTON, June 25 (Reuters) - Reputed mob boss James "Whitey" Bulger's lawyers questioned the accuracy of a key piece of evidence in his murder and racketeering trial on Tuesday, seeking to cast doubt on the 700-page informant file that a now-disgraced FBI agent had kept on him.
The attorneys pointed out several times that the agent, John Connolly, is in prison after being convicted on racketeering and murder charges in 2009, and that a federal investigation found that Connolly had falsified some of his reports.
The reports were part of a file that the FBI developed through the 1970s and '80s when Bulger is accused of murdering or ordering the murder of 19 people.
Prosecution witnesses this week told jurors about meetings during which Bulger had provided tips on gangland rivals to his Federal Bureau of Investigation handlers, including Connolly.
But Bulger, 83, has heatedly denied serving as an informant.
The defendant, whose story had inspired Martin Scorsese's 2006 Academy Award-winning film "The Departed," has pleaded not guilty to all charges and faces the possibility of life in prison if convicted.
On Tuesday, Bulger's attorneys cross-examined FBI Special Agent James Marra, who headed the Justice Department probe that lead to Connolly's conviction on murder and racketeering charges.
"Can you confirm firsthand that (Bulger) gave any of that information?" Henry Brennan, of the Boston law firm Carney & Bassil, asked Marra.
"Firsthand? No," the agent replied.
Brennan later asked if the federal government went out of its way to protect informants, getting Marra to admit that "it was clear to me that John Connolly was protecting them."
Marra acknowledged that agents such as Connolly received financial incentives from the FBI to develop high-level informants such as Bulger.
"I don't know if it was an enormous incentive, but the agents were encouraged to cultivate informants," Marra said.
Bulger's attorneys have argued that Connolly made up at least some of the information in Bulger's file to justify his frequent meetings with the gangster.
Connolly's former boss, John Morris, is due to take the stand as soon as Wednesday.
Jurors also heard on Tuesday how Connolly had set up alerts in U.S. Justice Department computer systems that ensured he was tipped off whenever another law enforcement agent ran a background check on Bulger.

'RATTING PEOPLE OUT'
The families of some of Bulger's victims said they were not buying the argument that he had not worked with the FBI.
"He was obviously an informant, he's been ratting people out left and right, even his own colleagues," said Tom Donahue, son of Michael Donahue, one of the people Bulger is accused of killing. "That wasn't even a question of mine."
Cooperating with the FBI was enough of a breach of mob ethics that prosecutors contend it was the motivation behind several of Bulger's murders, but this was not uncommon - as the testimony of some of Bulger's former associates in the past two weeks showed.
Prosecutors say Connolly, who shared Bulger's Irish background, turned a blind eye to Bulger's crimes in exchange for information on the Italian Mafia, which was the top priority of the Justice Department at the time.
Prosecutors also scoff at the idea that Bulger was not an informant, noting that he met with several other FBI agents and supervisors in addition to Connolly.
In an exchange before jurors were brought into the courtroom on Tuesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Kelly accused Bulger's defense of wanting to "play the game of 'Let's pretend. Let's pretend he wasn't an informant.'"
Bulger's story has fascinated Boston for decades. He was one of two brothers to rise from gritty South Boston to positions of power. James was a feared gangster, while his brother William was the powerful speaker of the state Senate.
"Whitey" Bulger fled the city after a 1994 tip from Connolly that arrest was imminent. He spent 16 years evading arrest, many of them on the FBI's "Most Wanted" list, before authorities caught up with him in a seaside apartment in Santa Monica, California, a little more than two years ago.
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Paul Thomasch, Douglas Royalty and Richard Chang)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/25/whitey-bulger-informant-file_n_3497142.html

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Rdio updates its family plans, now allows up to five on one subscription

Android Central

Most expensive plan now $32.99 per month, limit increased from three people to five

Rdio, the popular music streaming service, has updated their family subscription plans to now allow up to five people to subscribe for one monthly payment. The previous plans only allowed for three different people, but thankfully those with slightly larger families can now take advantage. 

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

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