Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Holy Cross: Coach accused of abuse goes on leave

BOSTON (AP) — Longtime Holy Cross women's basketball coach Bill Gibbons stepped aside Wednesday while the college reviews claims by a former player that he was physically and emotionally abusive.


Gibbons made the announcement to the team Wednesday afternoon, the school said in a statement. His assistant coaches will now assume all coaching duties while Gibbons is on voluntary, paid administrative leave.


The announcement comes a day after former player Ashley Cooper, 20, sued Gibbons and the school. Cooper says that Gibbons grabbed her, shook her and hit her at different times and that the school covered up the behavior.


Cooper's attorney, Elizabeth Eilender, said she's pleased Gibbons isn't running the team anymore because Cooper sued, in part, to force changes at Holy Cross. But she added the school deserves no credit for the move.


"This is damage control by them," Eilender said. "They knew they had a problem. Now the rest of the world knows they have a problem, and they can no longer deny it."


Gibbons did not return an email sent Wednesday seeking comment.


Cooper's suit says Gibbons yanked and pulled her by the shirt collar, shook her by the shoulder and struck her on the back during a game, leaving a red handprint.


It paints Gibbons as so volatile that opposing players would remark, "Your coach is crazy," and the players as so demoralized that alumni basketball games are impossible because players won't return to the Jesuit school in Worcester to participate.


The suit accuses Holy Cross of failing to turn over game tape that could show Gibbons striking Cooper and another player. It says the school has also refused to release results of an investigation into Gibbons' behavior.


Cooper gave up a full scholarship and left the school amid fear of physical pain and retaliation for complaining about Gibbons, according to the lawsuit, filed Tuesday in New York City, where Cooper lives.


Because of the abuse, "Cooper and other players suffered a loss of self-esteem and a loss of their love of the game of basketball," the suit said.


Cooper is seeking compensation for the costs of the college education she'll have to pay for after giving up her scholarship, as well as unspecified punitive damages.


In a statement, school spokeswoman Ellen Ryder said the "physical, mental and emotional wellbeing of our students is our highest priority at Holy Cross."


The school said it investigated previous complaints by Cooper and found them unsubstantiated. But Ryder said Cooper's lawsuit "includes a series of new allegations and we will now bring in outside counsel to review them."


Gibbons has 533 wins in 28 seasons as women's head basketball coach at Holy Cross and has led the team to 11 Patriot League championships.


Cooper, of Colts Neck, N.J., played in 21 of Holy Cross' 32 games last season, averaging 4.7 points per game and hitting 40 percent of her 3-point shots. She has transferred to New York University but is not on the women's basketball team, Eilender said.


The lawsuit says Gibbons' behavior was worse than Rutgers University men's basketball coach Mike Rice, who was fired this spring after practice tape surfaced showed him berating and kicking players and throwing basketballs at them.


In the suit, Cooper says she's bringing legal action "not only on her own behalf but also on behalf of all women athletes who are abused by their coaches under the grossly offensive rationale that the abusive behavior is 'motivational.'"


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/holy-cross-coach-accused-abuse-goes-leave-215136978--spt.html
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How the GOP Slowly Went Insane (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Leeches on the Public Dole (Balloon Juice)

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Why College Freshman May Feel Like Imposters On Campus

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235188760/why-college-freshman-may-feel-like-imposters-on-campus?ft=1&f=1007
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Source: 'Gravity' Scores Nov. 20 China Release Date


Alfonso Cuaron's space epic Gravity will get a much coveted screening in China, the world's second biggest market by box office, from Nov. 20, an industry source in China has told The Hollywood Reporter.



The news marks a big boost for Gravity, which features Sandra Bullock and George Clooney and has already notched up stellar box office earnings of $123.4 million worldwide.


PHOTOS: Top 10: Sandra Bullock's 'Gravity' Tour


It had been unclear if the movie would get a Chinese release because the quota of 34 movies for the year is nearly full. Also, films celebrating U.S. achievements in space might have been viewed as American propaganda in China, which is currently building its own space program.


However, it is understood that the fact that the movie is broadly sympathetic to China -- Bullock's character finds refuge in a Chinese ship, and there is recognition of China's technological prowess throughout -- helped secure it vital Film Bureau approval. THR's industry source said the release date came in a note from the distributor, China Film Distribution.


The long delay between its U.S. release and its China release does mean that many potential viewers will already have seen pirated versions of the movie, either on DVD or as downloads.


However, the fact the space drama is a strong 3D performer should ensure robust box office in China, where 3D and enhanced formats have driven the country's box office bonanza -- of the 13,118 screens in China at the end of last year, 72 percent were 3D screens.


PHOTOS: It's Lonely Out Here: 'Gravity' and 10 More Films About Isolation


The movie should go down well in China, which is enthusiastic about anything to do with interstellar travel, as the country's own space program has been promoted heavily in the state press, as it goes from strength to strength.


Hollywood remains increasingly keen to get a slice of the booming China market, which was worth some $2.75 million last year and is expected to match U.S. box office receipts by 2018 -- and double them by 2023.


The biggest foreign earner to date is Avatar, which took $220 million in 2010, while other big overseas hits include the third installment of the Transformers franchise, Dark of the Moon, which grossed $165 million in China in 2011 out of $1.1 billion worldwide.


China first launched a man into space in 2003, followed by a two-man mission in 2005 and a three-man trip in 2008, which featured the country’s first space walk, making it the third nation after Russia and the United States to achieve manned space travel independently.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/vgs2-r2_aqo/story01.htm
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Lawsuit accuses BlackBerry of raising false hopes


Ottawa (AFP) - BlackBerry shareholders on Tuesday launched a class-action lawsuit against the company, alleging its optimistic sales forecasts for its new smartphones cost them hundreds of millions of dollars, lawyers announced.


The lawsuit on behalf of Canadian shareholders who purchased BlackBerry stock between September 27, 2012 and September 20 of this year, alleges that senior management "knowingly or negligently" misrepresented that its BlackBerry 10 line of smartphones were being well-received by consumers and that the company was in a strong financial position.


The class action is the second launched against BlackBerry in the past week.


"For almost a full year, BlackBerry management made market statements based on prophecy rather than fact," class-action lawyer Tony Merchant said in a statement.


"Thousands of Canadians who invested in BlackBerry Limited in the past year have lost hundreds of millions of dollars."


BlackBerry unveiled its new platform in January as it sought to regain lost momentum, but its most recent numbers suggest this has been a spectacular failure.


Last month, the company announced it was laying off 4,500 staff -- or one third of its global workforce -- after losing $965 million in its last quarter as sales plummeted.


BlackBerry still has some 70 million subscribers worldwide, but most of these are using older handsets, with the newer devices on the BlackBerry 10 platform failing to gain traction.


BlackBerry's share price meanwhile has slid from a 52-week high of $17.80 in January to below $9 recently.



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawsuit-accuses-blackberry-raising-false-hopes-213808879.html
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Lonegan, Booker seize on fiscal stalemate





Democrat Cory Booker and Republican Steve Lonegan crisscrossed the state Monday in the final stretch of their U.S. Senate campaign in New Jersey, each pointing to the fiscal crisis in Washington as a reason he should be elected.


"This is an election that all of America is going to be watching," Booker said before about three dozen students and supporters in Camden, where he met with Mayor Dana L. Redd. "America's going to see what New Jersey wants: Whether we're going to send the tea party and endorse shutdown politics, or are we are going to choose a different way."


Booker, the mayor of Newark, called Lonegan the "tea-party leader of our state," whose support of the partial government shutdown and opposition to federal aid after Hurricane Sandy show him to be out of touch with most voters and members of his own party.


Lonegan also swung through South Jersey, drawing a cheering, sign-waving crowd of about 50 to downtown Medford, where he assured supporters he was about to pull off a "huge victory."





"It's time we rolled back this massive government that is a threat to our freedom," he said from the gazebo across Main Street from the town hall. He predicted that Republicans would emerge victorious from the budget negotiations in Washington.


Lonegan, a former mayor of Bogota, reiterated his support for House Republicans who have pushed for cuts or delays of part of the Affordable Care Act as part of a deal to reopen the government.


"President Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid - they'll be the ones who'll fold," he said.


Booker's allies, including his critics on the Newark City Council, mobilized to urge voters to reject what they called the radical views Lonegan would bring to Washington.


In a Web video released Monday, Obama echoed Booker's message, saying New Jersey "has the opportunity to send a message to the entire country about what kind of leadership we expect from our representatives in Congress, that we're better than the shutdown politics we've seen in Washington."


Booker's opponents in the Aug. 13 Democratic primary - U.S. Reps. Frank Pallone and Rush Holt, and Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver - also voiced support for Booker on Monday.


In a conference call organized by the Booker campaign, Oliver seized on comments by Lonegan's top strategist last week in which he suggested that Booker might be gay because he failed to express sexual interest during a Twitter exchange with an Oregon stripper. Lonegan fired the aide, Rick Shaftan, on Friday, calling his comments "distasteful and offensive."


"Mr. Lonegan's positions and indeed his own previous statements are just as reflective of this disrespect for and misjudgment of people as his strategist's statements are," Oliver said.


Booker reflected on the death of his father, Cary, last week. "I know the best way to honor my father's memory is not to be one of those leaders . . . who talks about the lines that divide us but who elevate those ties that bind us," he said in Camden, where he was joined by his brothers, Cary and John.


Two polls released Monday provided conflicting information on the direction of the race. A Rutgers-Eagleton poll gave Booker a 22-point lead, while a Monmouth University Polling Institute survey gave him a 10-point edge.


Lonegan said his gains in the polls were evidence of momentum, "and it's not going to be stopped."


The wide range underscored confusion and unpredictability about Wednesday's special election, which Gov. Christie called for in June after Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg died. Democrats have criticized Christie, a Republican seeking reelection, for not scheduling the election for Nov. 5, the same day as the statewide elections.


In an embarrassing moment Monday, the Republican National Committee urged voters via Twitter to go to the polls Tuesday. It later deleted the tweet and correctly said the election was Wednesday.


A spokesman for State Sen. Barbara Buono, the Democrat in New Jersey's gubernatorial race, said, "The only thing clear about Gov. Christie's self-serving decision to hold a $24 million special election on a Wednesday in October is that it confuses everyone - even the Republican National Committee."


Christie has said voters needed to have an elected senator as soon as possible.


Even Obama made pains to remind voters of the election date. "Be sure and vote for Cory on Wednesday - that's right, Wednesday - Oct. 16," he said in the video.


 



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Source: http://www.philly.com/r?19=961&43=166721&44=227751391&32=3796&7=195342&40=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page/20131015_Lonegan__Booker_seize_on_fiscal_stalemate.html
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Former San Diego mayor pleads guilty to felony over headlock


By Marty Graham


SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - Former San Diego Mayor Bob Filner, who resigned from the helm of California's second-largest city after a string of sexual harassment allegations, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to charges of false imprisonment and battery involving three women.


A former Democratic congressman who served only a brief mayoral tenure after being elected last year, Filner was charged with felony false imprisonment and two misdemeanor counts of battery for placing one woman in a headlock and kissing or groping two others, prosecutors said. Filner will serve three months of home confinement.


"This conduct was not only criminal, it was also an extreme abuse of power," said state Attorney General Kamala Harris, who filed the complaint against Filner. "This prosecution is about consequence and accountability. No one is above the law."


According to court papers, the felony count against Filner was filed because he used "greater force than was necessary." The misdemeanors included kissing a woman on the lips at a "Meet the Mayor" event and grabbing another woman's buttocks as she posed for a picture with the mayor at another public event.


Filner resigned in August as part of a settlement with the city over how to handle a lawsuit filed by a former press secretary, Irene McCormack Jackson, who was among at least 18 women who accused the 71-year-old politician of making unwanted sexual advances. She is so far the only one to sue him.


The first Democrat elected to lead the relatively conservative Southern California city in years, Filner's fall from grace raises questions about which party voters will favor in a special election to choose his successor, set for next month.


Under the terms of a plea agreement with prosecutors, Filner will serve three months of home confinement and will be on probation for three years, the attorney general said in a statement. Details of the conditions of his confinement will be determined by probation officials, a Harris spokesman said.


Filner is also prohibited from ever again seeking elected office.


APOLOGY


After Tuesday's hearing, Filner's lawyer said the former mayor saw the plea agreement as an opportunity to move on from a scandal that threatens to overwhelm his legacy as a 10-term Congressman who fought for civil rights and veterans.


"Mr. Filner profusely apologizes to each person he might have harmed," lawyer Jerry Coughlan said. "He admits he is guilty. ... He is a much more humble man now. He did not realize his behavior was as bad as it was."


Filner had previously apologized to San Diego residents but said no sexual harassment allegation against him had been proven.


In addition to his sentence to home confinement and probation, Filner will not be able to vote, serve on a jury or own a firearm while he is on probation. He will be required to undergo mental health treatment, Harris said.


Filner also will not earn a public pension for the time between the commission of the felony, which Harris said was March 6, 2013, and the date of his resignation, August 23.


In the race to replace him, City Councilman Kevin Faulconer is now considered the presumptive Republican nominee. Former U.S. Marine Nathan Fletcher, who was a moderate Republican before switching parties after finishing third in the 2012 mayoral primary, is the presumptive Democratic nominee.


(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento and Marty Graham in San Diego; Writing by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Gunna Dickson)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-san-diego-mayor-quit-over-harassment-allegations-163951345.html
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Miley Cyrus Dating Rolling Stone Magazine Heir Theo Wenner?

Miley Cyrus iHeartRadio Music FestivalMiley Cyrus has reportedly moved on from her relationship and engagement to Liam Hemsworth. The 20-year-old is rumored to be dating Rolling Stone magazine heir and photographer Theo Wenner. Wenner, 26, previously romanced the beautiful actress Liv Tyler, whom he dated in 2011 even though she was ten years his senior. Miley Cyrus is said ...

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Broncos lurch to 35-19 win over Jaguars

DENVER (AP) — This one turned out to be more about "if" than "how many" for Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos.


Derailed by their own mistakes, to say nothing of an in-your-face Jacksonville Jaguars defense, the Broncos found themselves in quite a tussle through most of a surreal Sunday afternoon.


Not until early in the fourth quarter, when Knowshon Moreno ran for his third touchdown, did the undefeated Broncos have any sense of security against the winless Jags. Denver won 35-19 but fell well short of covering the record 27-point betting line in Las Vegas.


"There was a lot of bad football out there," receiver Wes Welker said. "We've got to correct that stuff and come out better next time."


Manning went 28 for 42 for 295 yards, marking the first time he's been held under 300 this season. His two touchdown passes gave him 22 on the year, a record for an NFL quarterback through six games.


But he also lost a pair of fumbles on bad exchanges from center and threw his second interception of the season, which linebacker Paul Posluszny returned 59 yards for a touchdown to pull the Jaguars within 14-12 before the half.


At that point, it was clear this would be more than another stat-padding day for Manning and Co. That feeling was reinforced when Chad Henne led the Jaguars on an 80-yard touchdown drive against the banged-up Broncos (6-0) to make it 21-19 after Manning opened the third quarter with a TD drive of his own.


"Sometimes, you score a lot of points and people take it for granted," Manning said. "Even people in your own building can take it for granted. It's not easy to win football games. I learned a long time ago, don't take winning for granted."


Justin Blackmon had 14 catches for 190 yards for Jacksonville, which fell to 0-6 for the first time, but gave the Broncos a harder time on offense than any team they've faced this season.


In the second quarter, the Jaguars forced Denver's first punt of October. They got in front of receivers' routes, and when a Bronco did catch a pass, Jacksonville defenders wrapped up immediately.


The Jags gave up 407 yards, but very few were cheap. Were it not for a series of odd decisions and untimely mistakes, this one might have been even closer.


It began during Jacksonville's first possession, when tight end Clay Harbor was wide open for a big gain, but Henne underthrew him. Three plays later, coach Gus Bradley called a fake punt the Broncos diagnosed perfectly, leaving them only 27 yards from their first score, a 3-yard pass from Manning to Julius Thomas.


Denver's second touchdown — Manning to Welker for 20 yards — came after the Jaguars stopped Manning on third-and-long but had that nullified by a personal foul on defensive end Andre Branch.


There was a muffed snap on a field goal attempt, Bradley's failed decision to go for 2 after Posluszny's interception return, and a pass interference penalty that helped Denver on its opening drive of the third quarter. In all, Jacksonville did enough silly things to lose despite racking up 362 yards of offense.


"What I saw was a team that played with a lot of emotion and it got the best of us," Bradley said. " I just felt like the emotion got the best of us, but we settled down."


Only in Denver, where it's Super Bowl or bust this season, would a 16-point win be the cause for so much hand-wringing. But frankly, the lead-up to this game wasn't about who would win but about whether the Broncos would cover the record-setting spread and when Manning would come out of the game.


Neither happened.


Henne, whose wife was in labor back in Jacksonville, threw for 303 yards against Denver's league-worst pass defense. The Broncos welcomed back Champ Bailey, who found himself on the island against Blackmon for much of the afternoon.


"This is still the NFL," Bailey said. "Nobody's a cakewalk in this league."


Despite their struggles, Denver ended up undefeated without linebacker Von Miller, whose six-game suspension officially ends Monday.


But the Broncos also lost right tackle Orlando Franklin to a left knee injury in the third quarter and he hobbled out of the locker room on a cane — adding another question mark as they head to Indianapolis for Manning's return to play his old team.


Among other things, that game is being billed as Denver's toughest test to date. Turns out, the Jaguars gave the Broncos plenty to sweat over, as well.


Notes: DL Malik Jackson had both of Denver's sacks, spread three plays apart in the third quarter. ... Jags receiver Cecil Shorts III left in the first quarter with a right shoulder injury. ... Never a great sign for a defense: Denver CB Chris Harris led the Broncos in tackles with 11.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/broncos-lurch-35-19-win-over-jaguars-230922887--spt.html
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Strong quake kills at least 67 in central Philippines


By Erik De Castro


CEBU CITY, Philippines (Reuters) - A powerful earthquake measuring 7.2 struck islands popular with tourists in the Philippines on Tuesday, killing at least 67 people, some as they prayed in a centuries-old church, and causing widespread damage to infrastructure, officials said.


Low-rise buildings collapsed on at least two islands and historic churches cracked and crumbled during the quake, which sparked panic, cut power and transport links and forced hospitals to evacuate patients.


At least 57 people died in collapsed structures and landslides on the island of Bohol, about 630 kms (390 miles) south of the capital, Rey Balido, spokesman for the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC), told a briefing at army headquarters


He said nine others died in Cebu and another on Siquijor island. Nearly 170 were wounded on Cebu and Bohol islands.


President Benigno Aquino said he would visit earthquake-damaged areas on Wednesday. "Many of the structures there are old," he told reporters after attending the briefing.


The death toll looks bound to rise. Dennis Agustin, Bohol provincial police director, said in a radio interview as many as 77 people had died in 11 towns on the island, much of which was left without power and communications.


Four bridges collapsed and roads cracked, with many declared impassable due to landslides, prompting the authorities to declare a state of calamity in the province, along with Cebu.


Renato Solidum, head of the state seismology agency, said the magnitude 7.2 tremor had struck near Carmen town on Bohol island at 8:12 a.m. (0012 GMT).


"A magnitude 7 earthquake has energy equivalent to around 32 Hiroshima atomic bombs. Compared to the 2010 Haiti earthquake -- that had a magnitude of 7.0, this one had a magnitude of 7.2, slightly stronger," he told a news conference.


The volcanology agency said it was measured at a depth of about 56 km (35 miles).


GIRL DIES IN STAMPEDE


Hospitals moved patients to open spaces as aftershocks rocked Cebu, a city of about 870,000 people.


The NDRRMC's Balido said at least eight people who had been queuing for government aid payments in Cebu were hurt in a stampede sparked by the earthquake. A four-year-old girl was among them, said Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman.


Archbishop Leonardo Medroso of Tagbilaran city in Bohol said two people were killed by falling debris as they were praying in a church in the town of Loon. The church, Bohol's biggest, dates from 1753.


He said a church in Loboc town was also damaged and that both were designated historical treasures. The belfry of the church in Baclayon, one of the oldest in Bohol province, had crumbled and its facade was cracked.


"The quake was really strong. I am 75 years old already, I have undergone so many earthquakes, but this is the strongest I have experienced," he told Philippine television.


Television showed that the belfry of the Basilica Minore del Sto. Nino de Cebu, which was built in the 1700s, had collapsed.


Transport Secretary Joseph Emilio Abaya told Philippine radio that parts of Tagbilaran port in Bohol had collapsed.


Airline Cebu Pacific canceled flights to Cebu and Bohol due to the aftershocks and damage to airports. Ferry services were also suspended.


Television showed the collapsed viewing deck of Bohol's most famous tourist attraction, the Chocolate Hills in Carmen town, which is at the epicenter of the quake.


There were no reports of any foreign tourists among the casualties.


The volcanology agency said it had recorded nearly 300 aftershocks as of 5 p.m. (5.00 a.m. ET).


Strong earthquakes are common in the central Philippines.


Tens of thousands of people were ordered from their homes when a tsunami warning was issued after an undersea quake in the region in September 2012. One person was killed in that quake, which resulted in only minor damage and small waves.


(Additional reporting by Rosemarie Francisco, Manuel Mogato, Karen Lema and Erik dela Cruz in MANILA and Jonathan Thatcher in JAKARTA; Editing by Alan Raybould)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/four-killed-building-collapse-philippines-quake-disaster-agency-013956602.html
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Piracy Among Hot Topics Addressed at Australian International Movie Convention



Columbia Pictures


The local premiere of "Captain Phillips" opened the Australian International Movie Convention on Sunday



SYDNEY -- Australia’s major film exhibition and distribution confab, the Australian International Movie Convention opened Monday with a keynote speech from returning federal arts minister, Senator George Brandis, underlining the issues of copyright reform, piracy and ongoing support for both local and runway production as key to the continued growth of the film sector here.



In his first major address to the industry since his party’s win in the Sept. 7 election, Brandis said that he would “reaffirm the government’s commitment to content industries, keep the thresholds of the offset under review and readdress policy covering copyright and piracy in light of technological advancements”.


Brandis is also the nations Attorney General, who last held the post of arts minister in 2007 and was one of the architects of the package of screen production incentives which include the producer, location and post digital and visual effects offsets.  


He said that five years after introducing production incentives, they have “proved to be a highly successful stimulant for investment in Australian screen production. It has also served to attract a number of high budget films to be made in Australia. The producer offset, for films with significant Australian content, has helped raise the finance for 115 Australian feature films since I introduced it in 2007. This equates to over AUS$452 million ($429 million) in support, which has over time increased the viability of screen businesses”.


However, recent times have not been without challenges, he said “given the high value of the Australian dollar and an expanding number of tax breaks being offered in other countries and in many states in the United States.”


“During the election campaign I undertook to keep the thresholds of the offset under review and I reaffirm that commitment today,” he said.


And answering the content industry’s call for a new set of copyright laws “that work in the digital age,” he said that industry, as well as government, had to act effectively on the issue of piracy.


“In times of turbulent change, industry cannot rely solely on government to fix all the problems that arise,” he said. “Protection of copyright materials isn’t simply a matter of law or government intervention, it is importantly a matter of practice. You know better than I of the agility that modern successful businesses need, and I am pleased to say that you have been able to demonstrate.


“Australia already has a robust legal framework for the protection of copyright, but despite an extensive menu of criminal offenses applicable under copyright law, still the problems of piracy and unauthorized use remain,” Brandis said.  


 “I understand that content industries are facing challenges at the business level. And that means we are all facing challenges at a policy level. The Internet has led to and continues to drive structural adjustments to content industries. New technologies are changing how governments should respond. Australia is not the only country facing these changes.


 “We are all awaiting the Australian Law Commission’s final report on copyright which is to be provided to the government at the end of next month. The government will consider the commission’s findings and any recommendations carefully. But in considering those recommendations, I will bring to that consideration the views that I have expressed in this speech,” Brandis finished.


The 625 delegates at the Convention, on Queensland's Gold Coast, will also see a session on making Tracks, the upcoming adventure travel film starring Mia Wasikowska, based on the story of Robyn Davidson’s camel trek across Australia, with producer Emile Sherman and Davidson. Tracks had its Australian premiere at the Adelaide Film Festival on the weekend.


Distributors are also previewing their 2014 films for exhibitors, and delegates were treated to an advance screening of Tom Hanks-starrer Captain Phillips on Sunday. The annual box office achievement awards will be announced Tuesday.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HollywoodReporterAsia/~3/lXYCt4JIo3Y/story01.htm
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Beeing There: The Search for Pesticides Effect on Declining Bee Colonies Moves to the Fields




A honeybee's brain is hardly bigger than the tip of a dog's whisker, yet you can train a bee just as Pavlov got his pups to drool on hearing their dinner bell. Using a sugar solution as a reward, you can teach the insect to extend its little mouthparts in response to different scents.


Several Pavlovian lab studies of individual worker honeybees, however, found that those fed small amounts of pesticides—especially a class called neonicotinoids—do not learn which scents lead to a sweet reward as quickly as their pesticide-free peers do. Yet, until recently, it wasn't clear what these and other lab studies meant for the health of entire bee colonies, which might have strategies to mitigate the overall impact of problems with particular hive members. "Just because you see the effect in the bee in the lab, strapped into this lab apparatus, [doesn’t mean you know] how does this translate into a colony in a field?" says Reed Johnson, an entomologist at The Ohio State University who studies pesticides' effects on honeybees.


To probe the colony question, academic research on neonicotinoids and other pesticides is moving from studies in labs to the outdoors—examining both the effects on entire honeybee or bumblebee hives as well as those on solitary bees nesting near crops. Such studies could help determine how and to what extent pesticides are behind the accelerated rate at which honeybee hives are dying. They also seek to answer whether pesticides are harming other bee species that are important to agriculture.


Since 2006 U.S. honeybee-keepers have reported they lose 30 percent of their hives on average after every winter. Before then, beekeepers would usually lose 5 or 10 percent of their hives after winter. The immediate reasons keepers report their hives are dying seem ordinary enough—winter starvation, pests such as the varroa mite and problems with queen bees such as premature deaths—but researchers are trying to understand why these seemingly normal problems are now happening at an extraordinarily higher rate. Pesticides could be one answer.


So far, honeybee-keepers have replaced lost hives through breeding, but experts worry that in the future bees won't be able to sustain such a high replacement rate. Populations could decline below what U.S. agriculture needs to pollinate America's nuts, fruits, vegetables and even livestock feed.


What do we know?

The field studies entomologists repeatedly cite include ones that found different neonicotinoids reduced the number of honeybee foragers that return to their hive as well as reduced the population growth and queen bee production of bumblebee colonies. Another study found that the neonicotinoid imidacloprid, when applied in combination with another popular, non-neonicotinoid pesticide called lambda-cyhalothrin, increased the likelihood that bumblebee hives will fail. "I do think it is pretty clear that neonics interfere with bees' ability to forage effectively," says David Goulson, a bumblebee researcher with the University of Sussex in the U.K. and an author of the bumblebee population growth study cited above. "For bumblebees, the evidence is overwhelming."

On the other hand, the evidence for neonicotinoids' effects on honeybees is less convincing. Honeybee hives are larger than those of bumblebees and may be better able to compensate for impaired individuals. "It might be very difficult to show the effect in honeybees," says Nigel Raine, a Royal Holloway University of London entomologist who conducted the bumblebee field study suggesting that treated hives were more likely to fail.


Beyond neonicotinoids, research groups have started to find that other pesticides affect learning and population abundance in other bee species. At the 2013 International Conference on Pollinator Biology, Health and Policy, held at The Pennsylvania State University in August, one study found blue orchard bees and alfalfa leaf-cutter bees had trouble finding their own nests after foraging in outdoor fields that researchers sprayed with the fungicides iprodione, pyraclostrobin and boscalid. (Researchers covered the fields with dense mesh cubes, six meters at a side, to keep the bees from foraging elsewhere.) Another study found apple orchards treated more heavily with any type of pesticides had severalfold fewer wild bee visitors than more lightly treated orchards.


Applying research to regulations

What does all this research mean for laws regarding pesticide use? Are any regulatory agencies using these studies as a basis for changing how many pesticides bees are exposed to in the real world?


In the European Union officials have used studies from universities as well as their own reviews as the basis of a two-year moratorium on many uses of three neonicotinoids called clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiamethoxam. The ban is controversial, even among researchers. It's also not clear what its fate will be, as neonicotinoid-makers Bayer CropScience and Syngenta Crop Protection have sued against the ban, saying there's not enough evidence to merit regulatory change.


In the U.S. the Environmental Protection Agency depends mostly on its own six-year research plan to make regulatory decisions, agency spokesperson Catherine Milbourn wrote in an e-mail. The agency is reviewing six neonicotinoids: in addition to clothianidin, imidacloprid and thiamethoxam it is studying acetamiprid, dinotefuran and thiacloprid. The review is part of a program designed to regularly reexamine active ingredients in all pesticides approved for use in the U.S. The agency expects to finish its work by 2019. The reason it will take several years is to give pesticide companies the chance to acquire the data the EPA requested.


The EPA also considers studies by university researchers, but such studies often aren't designed to meet the agency's particular needs for addressing legal uncertainties for regulation, according to Milbourn. "We feel the studies that are currently underway at EPA's request are the most important for our regulatory purposes, since they were designed to answer specific uncertainties that we currently have and also to fully comply with federal laws and regulations," she wrote in an e-mail.


When asked for examples of how recent studies don't fill the bill, the agency declined to review others' work that way. Instead, Milbourn and other officials pointed to a proposal from 2012 that describes a method for regulators to determine pesticides' risks to honeybees in greater detail than the EPA had ever previously required before approving a pesticide.

What's next for research?

Entomologists working on field studies have their own plans for taking their research forward. Bumblebee researcher Raine is working on further studies for the U.K., including surveys to better determine how much pesticide bees pick up on their bodies or eat in pollen and honey when they live outdoors, for example. Derek Artz, a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) researcher who worked on the mesh-caged field study, plans a study in the open field. That will let him see whether the two solitary bee species he studies simply abandon nesting sites near crops treated with fungicides, a suspected coping strategy.


Ultimately, however, it may be impossible to perfectly answer all of scientists' and regulators' questions about the effects of pesticides on bees. "There's thousands of chemicals out there," Ohio State's Johnson says. "If you're going to require field studies for all of them, is there enough land area on the Earth to do all these studies?" To address this problem, the EPA and the USDA are developing mathematical models to test every possible combination of pesticides, bee species and crops.



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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beeing-search-pesticides-effect-declining-bee-colonies-moves-113000508.html
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Friday, October 11, 2013

The Idiot Jukebox


Do the names Robin Sparkles, Day Man or "Lazy Scranton" mean anything to you? If so, you should have no problem in this game, led by house musician Jonathan Coulton. He sings some well-known—and much-beloved—songs performed by TV show characters, though none are the shows' theme songs.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/10/231411966/the-idiot-jukebox?ft=1&f=1052
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