Sunday, June 30, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 hits the FCC with LTE you probably can't use

Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 80 hits the FCC with LTE you probably can't use

The FCC can be cruel sometimes, showing us devices we're unlikely to see in the US without significant changes; this is one of those moments, unfortunately. A Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 has once again surfaced at the FCC, this time as the SM-T315 with built-in cellular access. However, it's not optimized for American use -- while there's AT&T-friendly HSPA data, the LTE inside is only meant for a handful of other countries, like South Korea. As such, this model won't be coming stateside unless there's a frequency change. We're not totally surprised at the lack of US-ready LTE when AT&T already offers the Galaxy Note 8.0, but it would be nice to have a little more variety in our 8-inch LTE slates.

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Source: FCC

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Ch0BKMbWTPs/

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Over $1 Million in Coupons to U.S. Military

Published: Sunday, June 30, 2013 at 12:20 a.m.
Last Modified: Sunday, June 30, 2013 at 12:20 a.m.

The Columbiettes of Dr. Lawrence J. O'Rourke, Auxiliary 4726 have sent $1,021,345.53 worth of coupons to the military through June 10.

The coupon idea started in March 2011 when Jan Read and Margie Zamana heard about the Overseas Coupons Program ? sending manufacturers' coupons to overseas military bases where they can be used six months past the expiration dates.

The Columbiettes began cutting out their Sunday newspaper coupons for group collection and the project has expanded to a well-oiled production.

Ed Zamana, Margie's husband, and Margie start with cutting, separating and counting coupons, bagging and boxing them, and then mailing them. Helpers are many.

Betty Hunter cuts coupons donated by The Hamptons' residents amounting to $10,000 to $12,000 at one time. Columbiette Annie Winn and her father, John Meroni, separate coupons into non-food and food piles, and count them.

Cutting coupons are Columbiettes Jan Read, Marie Oliver, Maria Lopez, Helen Forster, Audrey Daniels, Louise Windhauser, Vergie Fuentes and Tracy Hartpence.

And Knights of Columbus members Charles Langbein and Tom Berdis also help with the coupons. Bingo players of Knights of Columbus 4726 help, including Julie Roberts and Nhi H. Linne among other ladies.

Columbiette Sylvia Moulton cuts coupons and collects those that are cut by Laura Irish, Ann Wentworth and Flo Grace from Woodland Lakes Park, and delivers them to Ed Zamana to finish getting ready to mail.

This has grown from one box a month sent to one Air Force Base in Incirlik, Turkey, to two to four boxes a month sent to two military bases. The other base is a Marine Corps Air Base in Iwakuni, Japan. This program wouldn't be such a huge success if it weren't for all the help from those who care.

Anyone can start an Overseas Coupons Program by going to www.ocpnet.org.

SUMMERLIN ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS

Summerlin Academy is accepting applications for the freshman class. Those interested in applying are encouraged to pick up an application at Summerlin Academy's main office, 1500 S. Jackson Ave., Bartow.

Applications will be accepted until July 18.

The prestigious military academy is a college preparatory school for young people striving for an exceptional educational opportunity and an atmosphere of structure and discipline.

Summerlin Academy has been training JROTC cadets since it opened its doors Aug. 7, 2006. It birthday remains Nov. 8, however, because that's when in 2005 the Polk County School Board formally gave the approval for Summerlin Academy.

Parents who are interested in learning more about Summerlin Academy should the school directly at 863-519-7504.

AUBURNDALE PRINCIPAL REWARDED FOR SURVEY

The National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP) awarded Auburndale Central Elementary Principal Badonna Dardis $3,000 for her school after she did a stellar job of filling out a survey about the Common Core State Standards.

The standards were developed with teachers, school administrators and experts to provide a clear and consistent framework to prepare students for college and the workforce.

NAESP collaborated with the American Institutes of Research (AIR) to survey a pool of kindergarten through 12th-grade principals to determine their needs and concerns related to implementation of the Common Core State Standards.

Ten respondents were selected and received an incentive for participating.

ANGEL'S CARE CENTER NEEDS DONATIONS

As The Angel's Care Center of Eloise continues making and distributing toiletry and first aid kits, it is in need of deodorant, sunscreen and insect repellent to provide to patients' families through the hot summer months.

There remains an ongoing request for all toiletries (shampoo, soap, wash cloths, toothbrushes and paste, etc.) and first aid items (bandages, hand sanitizer, wet wipes, cotton balls, Q tips, etc.).

These kits really make a difference in the health of those served.

For details on where to take your donations, call the center at 863-875-5595.

In other news, Larry Powell, the board's president, has been appointed to the Eloise Community Redevelopment Agency Advisory Committee by the Polk County Board of Commissioners.

COMPUTER CLASS AT LAKE ALFRED LIBRARY

The basic computer class is available free at Lake Alfred Public Library, 245 N. Seminole Ave., from 2 to 3 p.m. Thursdays.

The Friends of the Library continue to hold its weekly used book sales in the library from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays.

Send community news and photos to bbrader@tampabay.rr.com.

Source: http://www.theledger.com/article/20130630/news/130639995

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Obama says climate change is make-or-break issue

President Barack Obama wipes sweat from his head during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Barack Obama wipes sweat from his head during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

FILE - In this May 21, 2013 file photo, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz speaks after being sworn in as Energy Secretary, at the Energy Department in Washington. Moniz says coal will continue to play a role in meeting America?s energy needs even as the Obama administration seeks to reduce carbon emissions and combat global warming. In an interview with The Associated Press, Moniz refuted claims by Republicans and even some coal-state Democrats that the president?s climate plan would cripple the coal industry. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

President Barack Obama gestures during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is trying to frame climate change as a make-or-break political issue, urging Americans to vote only for those who will protect the country from environmental harm.

He says people in the United States already are paying a price for climate change, including in lost lives and hundreds of billions of dollars.

"If you agree with me, I'll need you to act," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address. "Remind everyone who represents you, at every level of government, that there is no contradiction between a sound environment and a strong economy ? and that sheltering future generations against the ravages of climate change is a prerequisite for your vote."

In his remarks released Saturday but recorded at the White House before his trip to Africa, Obama is trying to persuade the public to help sell his climate change plan for him.

That plan, released last week, is bypassing Congress after years of efforts to get lawmakers to pass legislation to deal with the issue.

At the core of Obama's plan are new controls on new and existing power plants that emit carbon dioxide, heat-trapping gases blamed for global warming. The program is intended to boost renewable energy production on federal lands, increase efficiency standards and prepare communities to deal with higher temperatures.

None of the measures in Obama's plan requires congressional action.

Republicans and some Democrats have denounced the plan as a job-killing "war on coal," and opponents could try to undercut Obama's plan or hinder it through legal action if Americans don't seem to be on board.

"The question is not whether we need to act. The question is whether we will have the courage to act before it's too late," Obama said.

Obama has also pledged that the U.S. will lead other nations in a "coordinated assault" to reduce pollution. But he acknowledged Saturday in a town hall meeting with young people in Johannesburg that the U.S. and other wealthy countries must shoulder a disproportionate part of the burden.

His proposal to cut off U.S. subsidies for coal-fired power plants overseas, for example, includes exemptions for the poorest countries where no better technology is available.

"The United States cannot do it by itself," Obama said in South Africa. "I expect it's going to be your generation that helps lead this, because if we don't, it's going to be your generation that suffers the most."

In the Republican address, Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas says there are troubling, unanswered questions about the implementation of Obama's health care law.

"We must put an end to the fear and uncertainty," Roberts says. "Those 'bumps' and 'glitches' the president talks about? It's a train wreck, folks, and we have to get America out of the way."

___

AP White House Correspondent Julie Pace in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

___

Reach Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-29-Obama-Climate%20Change/id-7feb46c56e4e4611b47d8a9ee48bee73

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iOS 7 preview: Sprite Kit

iOS 7 preview: Sprite Kit

I've written a lot already about how Apple is changing the interface game by making iOS 7 not only objectified but gamified. It almost feels like you play it as much as you use it. The original iPhone's interface required good enough OpenGL support that it eventually birthed a mobile gaming empire. iOS 7's physics and particle engine -- rumored to have been built by a first-class gaming engineer who's work you've likely enjoyed, a lot -- seems poised to take all of this not only to the next level, but to the next generation. The reason for that is as simple as it is spectacular -- Apple's taken a lot of the new stuff behind their physical new interface, and bundled it together for developers as Sprite Kit.

Here's how the public-facing portion of Apple's iOS developer portal describes it:

Create new immersive experiences using the latest game technologies in iOS 7. Develop high-performance 2D games with the powerful new Sprite Kit framework, which combines everything you need to animate sprites, simulate physics and create beautiful particle systems all in one easy-to-use set of APIs. Hand the controls over to your users by adding support for upcoming MFi game controllers to your game. And the re-designed Game Center adds more modes for turn-based games and more leaderboards, as well as allowing you to authenticate players, and securely transmit game scores and achievements.

The public side of the Mac developer portal has similar:

Create high-performing 2D games with the powerful new Sprite Kit framework, which allows you to control sprite attributes such as position, size, rotation, gravity, and mass. Sprite Kit?s OpenGL-based renderer efficiently animates 2D scenes. Built-in support for physics makes animations look real, and particle systems create essential game effects such as fire, explosions, and smoke.

And this bit on Graphics and Animation:

Sprite Kit is a powerful graphics framework for 2D games such as side-scrolling shooters, puzzle games, and platformers. A flexible API lets developers control sprite attributes such as position, size, rotation, gravity, and mass. Sprite Kit?s OpenGL-based renderer efficiently animates 2D scenes. Built-in support for physics makes animations look real, and particle systems create essential game effects such as fire, explosions, and smoke. To assist SpriteKit-based game development, Xcode supports texture atlas creation and includes a particle creator.

It's easy to see what this means for game developers, or people who want to be developers. They get a lot of really good stuff, and they get it "for free". Existing projects can throw away code and let Sprite Kit take its place, and new developers can just include it from the get go, adding effects they might not have been able to do on their own.

What's more, iOS 7 is showing the world that part of next generation interfaces is this objectification and gamification. Making high quality interactions in iOS 6 and older versions sounded tough and tedious, animating more than modeling, and building even a few types really well was really difficult. iOS 7 and technology like Sprite Kit removes that burden. Designers and developers can dream up the perfect interactions for their apps, and Sprite Kit will conceivably help them achieve it.

Sprite Kit isn't a user-facing feature. It's not one of the 10 tentpoles Apple's senior vice-president of software, Craig Federighi, spent any time on during the WWDC 2013 keynote. However, he did show off every delightful ricochet in Notification Center, every bounce in Messages, every flip, every spin, every zoom, every parallax, every pan, and every bit of interactive awesomeness that Sprite Kit, in part, enables.

And that's just what Apple's doing with it. Imagine 3 months post-iOS 7 launch, 6 month, 1 year... It could fundamentally change the nature of the apps we use every day. It's something that could be transformative.

Sprite Kit is available to developers now, and the rest of us will get our first look at the results of it this fall when Apple ships iOS 7 and OS X Mavericks. Check out the resources below for more, and let me know -- are you looking forward to getting App Store apps that have the physics and particle effects of iOS 7?

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/XIOPq1CJAv0/story01.htm

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Arizona authorities search for missing woman

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) ? Authorities in suburban Phoenix are conducting a large-scale search for a 19-year-old woman who has been missing for two weeks.

Tempe Police Sgt. Mike Pooley says more than 100 officers from the police department, Maricopa County Sheriff's Office and the FBI began the operation early Saturday near 5th and Hardy Streets. They're looking for Adrienne Salinas.

Salinas was last seen around 5 a.m. on June 15. Her vehicle was later found by her father, and it had two flat tires.

Family and friends have been passing out fliers in the hope that someone has information. A reward of $8,000 is being offered.

Pooley says Saturday's search also included Tempe Town Lake.

He says authorities have learned from past disappearance investigations that large-canvass searches are often helpful in providing new and pertinent information.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/arizona-authorities-search-missing-woman-190924370.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Obama says shouldn't have to talk to Xi, Putin about Snowden

DAKAR (Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Thursday he had not yet spoken to Chinese President Xi Jinping or Russian President Vladimir Putin about the U.S. request to extradite former American spy agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Speaking at a news conference in Senegal at the start of an African tour, Obama said normal legal channels should be sufficient to handle Washington's request that Snowden, who left Hong Kong for Russia, be returned.

"I have not called President Xi personally or President Putin personally and the reason is...number one, I shouldn't have to," Obama said.

"Number two, we've got a whole lot of business that we do with China and Russia, and I'm not going to have one case of a suspect who we're trying to extradite suddenly being elevated to the point where I've got to start doing wheeling and dealing and trading on a whole host of other issues," Obama said.

Snowden has become an embarrassment for the Obama administration after he leaked details of secret U.S. government surveillance programs.

His fate is now the focus of an international wrangle pitting the United States against its frequent opponents in the U.N. Security Council, China and Russia.

Snowden himself remains in limbo at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport, where he has been waiting in the transit area since his arrival on Sunday. He had been expected to fly to Havana on Monday en route to Ecuador, where he has asked for asylum.

In the Ecuadorean capital of Quito, the government said it had not processed Snowden's asylum request because he had not reached any of its diplomatic premises.

Bristling at suggestions Quito was weighing the pros and cons of Snowden's case in terms of its own interests, officials also said Ecuador would waive its preferential trade rights under a soon-to-expire treaty with the United States.

(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Mark Felsenthal; writing by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-says-shouldnt-talk-xi-putin-snowden-case-121300425.html

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Chicago prepares for concealed weapons

CHICAGO (AP) ? This city, where violent street gangs shoot it out dozens of times a week despite some of the nation's toughest restrictions on guns, now faces a new challenge: Well-meaning citizens with the legal right to hit the streets with loaded firearms, whenever they want.

As Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn mulls whether to sign off on eliminating the country's last concealed carry ban, the question in Chicago is whether it will matter in the crime-weary city. Will a place that long had one of the tightest bans on handguns be more at risk? Or will it be safer with a law that can only add to the number of guns already on the street?

Neighborhood leaders, anti-crime activists and police officials worry about additional mayhem in Chicago. But other residents, including some who live in Chicago's more violent areas, believe more guns will allow them to defend themselves better.

"We just had a weekend where something like 48 people were shot, seven died," said Otis McDonald, 79, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit that ended with the U.S. Supreme Court tossing out Chicago's strict gun ban three years ago. "Now law abiding citizens like myself ... can carry them when they want to and not carry them when they don't want to, and the people out there who will do us harm won't know when we got them and when we don't."

At City Hall, where Chicago's anti-gun campaign has centered for years, the reaction to concealed carry legislation has been relatively quiet. The reasons seem to boil down to this: The city can do little about stopping the law because a federal appeals court ordered Illinois to end its public possession ban by this summer.

"We would prefer to have the (gun) bans we've always enacted... (but) it's the best we could do based upon the mandate we have," said Alderman Patrick O'Connor.

The bill sitting on Quinn's desk is a hard-fought compromise between conservative downstate lawmakers who opposed most gun restrictions and anti-gun lawmakers from Chicago and other urban areas. The legislation requires state police to issue a concealed-carry permit to any gun owner with a state-issued Firearm Owners Identification card, and who passes a background check, pays a $150 fee and undergoes 16 hours of training.

It's not as stringent as concealed carry laws in California, New York and a handful of others states, which give law enforcement authorities more power to deny permits. But it's more restrictive than earlier proposals by gun rights advocates, including one that would have superseded all local gun restrictions. For example, it won't wipe out Chicago and Cook County's ban on assault weapons.

Most significantly for gun control advocates, the legislation does prohibit guns in places like schools, buses, trains, bars and government buildings.

"If you think about all the prohibited places there are ... I don't think you will see an overwhelming number of people actually (carrying weapons) because it becomes such a headache," said state Sen. Kwame Raoul, a Chicago lawmaker and lead negotiator on the bill who represents President Barack Obama's former state senate district.

But other city officials aren't so assured. Superintendent Garry McCarthy calls a requirement that people go through only 16 hours of training before they are issued a concealed carry permit "woefully inadequate" because about the only thing people can learn in that time is how to "point and fire a weapon" and not when they can legally do so.

"Our officers receive six months of training in the police academy and then three months on the streets and at the end of the day we make mistakes frequently," he said.

Another concern by Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart is the provision in the bill that calls for law enforcement and prosecutors to object to a governor-appointed panel if they suspect applicants are dangerous. In Cook County, where there are 358,000 registered gun owners, Dart said he's worried gang members and others who shouldn't have guns will slip through the cracks and be granted permits.

Quinn, a Chicago Democrat, has been quiet on his intentions with the legislation, his office saying he's "reviewing the bill carefully." But what he decides may be moot, given that the Legislature passed it by wide enough margins to override any veto.

Once the law is in place, Dart said he expects a flood of applications for permits, something that happened in November 2011 in Wisconsin, where within hours of becoming the 49th state to have a concealed carry law, tens of thousands of people downloaded applications. By the end of 2012, the state had issued nearly 110,000 permits.

During 2012, the first full year the law was in effect, Milwaukee's total for homicides and rapes remained virtually the same as the year before. As for robbery, the kind of crime that concealed carry supporters say would be reduced if more regular citizens had weapons, Milwaukee saw a 17.2 percent drop between 2011 and 2012. But police say so far this year the number of robberies has climbed by 19 percent.

Whether the law will have similar effects in Chicago is a matter of contention. Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Catholic priest and activist on the city's South Side, doesn't believe criminals will hesitate out of some concern their victims might be armed.

"You are going to see a lot more gun fights and you are going to see people using guns as their first line of defense when they are confronted. To think guns are suddenly going to be the answer to violence in the city or the state, it's absurd," Pfleger said.

But Richard Pearson, Illinois State Rifle Association executive director, predicts Chicago's crime rate will fall. He argues that both sides in the gun debate will be watching closely what transpires.

"What goes on in Chicago is a very big deal because of their history of resisting firearm use," Pearson said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chicago-prepares-concealed-carry-gun-law-193704212.html

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Angry Birds Trilogy slingshots to Nintendo's Wii U and Wii consoles on August 13th

Angry Birds Trilogy slingshots to Nintendo's Wii U and Wii consoles on August 13th

As if its flock of angry fowl weren't already near-ubiquitous, Rovio's today announced an August 13th release date for the Wii and Wii U versions of Angry Birds Trilogy. The Finnish company had previously committed to the two Nintendo ports earlier this year, prompted by the success of the title on the 3DS, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Rovio's not just pushing out a repackaged redo, either -- this collection bundles the original Angry Birds game with Seasons and Rio, while also adding some new levels. And given the finger-flicking origins of the franchise, gamers will be able to make use of the Wii U's GamePad for that famed asymmetric play (read: GamePad-only) and touch controls. If you haven't already exhausted your lust for flipping Rovio's birds, then the dog days of summer should see you and that Wii U making nice. Of course, by then you could also be flinging zombie-like Pikmin with reckless abandon. What's a Wii U owner to do?

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Source: Polygon

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/sNEC4FjT2Ds/

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Mumford & Sons' Hootenanny For The Soul

By Cathleen Falsani
Orange County Register

(RNS) ?Listen to the words,? the young woman behind me stage-whispered to her chatty date. ?Are you listening??

He wasn?t. But I was and so was most of the rapt, standing-room-only crowd that crammed the Greek Theatre at UC Berkeley for the second of three sold-out Mumford & Sons concerts late last month.

The standing-room-only crowd that crammed the Greek Theater at UC Berkeley for the second of three sold-out Mumford & Sons concerts late last month.

This is what I had come for -? not just a concert, but a shared experience with a congregation of strangers (and a few friends).

?Love; it will not betray you, dismay or enslave you, it will set you free,? Marcus Mumford and his bandmates ?- Ben Lovett, Winston Marshall and Ted Dwane -- sang. ?There is a design, an alignment, a cry of my heart to see, the beauty of love as it was made to be.?

More biblical allusions, declarations of spiritual yearning and what felt like prayers of the heart followed during the 90-minute show and the remaining two concerts.

I was not surprised. As a longtime fan, it was what I had expected to hear.

Since their debut in 2009, Mumford & Sons has achieved monumental success, both critically and commercially, particularly among a subset of diehard fans I?d describe as the spiritual-but-not-religious.

It?s a modifier that could be (and has been) applied to the band members themselves. Frontman and lyricist Mumford, 26, who was born in Anaheim, Calif., is the son of John and Eleanor Mumford, founders of the evangelical, charismatic Christian Vineyard Fellowship in the United Kingdom and Ireland. He is a pastor?s kid, reared in the church where his musical vocation first took root.

Recently, in an interview with Rolling Stone magazine where he was asked about his religious predilections, Mumford declined to affix the ?Christian? label to himself, causing a lot of hand-wringing from some evangelical fans who thought he was ?one of ours.?

His spiritual life is a ?work in progress,? Mumford said, adding that he has never doubted the existence of God and that his pastoring parents aren?t lamenting the condition of his soul.

I?m not worried about him, either. To my ear, the lyrics he?s written belie any doubts about where his heart lies.

The other fellas in the band have a spiritual heartbeat as well, though none has described himself as ?religious? by any stretch of the imagination.

A hootenanny for the soul, is the way I?d describe it. Mumford & Sons are a delight to watch, all foot-stomping, banjo-blasting, jig-inducing gladness and passion. It is obvious that the four band members not only love what they do, but they love each other.

Last week came unexpected news that Mumford?s animated bassist, Dwane, had a blood clot on his brain and would need surgery. Many fans took to Twitter with messages of love and support, as did I, offering prayers for comfort and a speedy recovery.

?You are not alone in this,? I added, quoting from one of the band?s songs.

A Twitter follower I don?t know responded to my tweet, saying, ?How odd that a band which provides such a ?religious? experience wouldn?t ask for prayers. Closeted piety is so refreshing.?

I thought about his comment and posted a response of my own: ?They didn?t have to ? and I hope they knew that. #wegottheirback.?

That is the kind of kinship and faith that the band at once expresses and inspires. There is a community inside the sound. (Happily, word is that Dwane?s surgery went well, and he is on the road to recovery.)

In all honesty, I had hoped the visit to Berkeley would result in a sit-down interview with Mumford, whom I find terribly compelling as a musician and a person of faith. I thought we might further explore the soul behind the music and its inspiration.

There was no interview to be had, but in hindsight, it would have been something of a fool?s errand. I don?t know that there?s anything Mumford could have told me in a conversation that I didn?t know after hearing the band play and watching the audience have an experience with the music and the musicians themselves.

Much of what I learned came not through words, but in posture, gesture, and moments at once visceral and transcendent.

When the band sang a cappella or in softer tones, the audience collectively leaned forward, listening intently, perhaps even prayerfully.

The most meaningful and powerful moments in the show for me arrived with the same song: ?Timshel.? It takes its name from John Steinbeck?s novel ?East of Eden,? which has been described as a modern midrash of the biblical story of Cain and Abel.

In their song, Mumford & Sons begin with another line borrowed from Steinbeck, ?Cold is the water,? from ?Of Mice and Men.?

The song is more contemplative than rollicking. But it builds?

?Cold is the water that freezes your already cold mind,? it begins, the quartet singing in harmony with no accompaniment. ?Death is at your doorstep, and it will steal your innocence. But it will not steal your substance.?

As the crowd joined, I saw thousands of raised hands and upturned faces, some with eyes closed, repeating the lyrics at the top of their lungs.

?You are not alone in this,? we sang. ?You are not alone in this. As brothers we will stand and we?ll hold your hand.?

It was a sacred promise from fellow travelers along the spiritual journey that is this life.

Mumford offered no easy answers, no trite salvos.

?I will tell the night, whisper, ?lose your sight,?? he sang, ?but I can?t move the mountains for you.?

Such heavy lifting is the work of the Spirit alone.

While we wait, the hold music is marvelous, and we?re in great company.

Cathleen Falsani is the faith and values columnist for the Orange County Register. You can follow her on Twitter @godgrrl.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/27/mumford-and-sons-soul-hootenanny_n_3468243.html

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'Despicable Me's' Carell: 'I hope I'm a cool dad'

Movies

17 hours ago

There are times in your life when career changes just have to be made -- and Steve Carell, who left "The Office" to pursue a film career, knows all about that. And in "Despicable Me 2," he returns as former evildoer Gru, who has left the bad guy biz to look after three young girls and make "terrible" jams and jellies, as the actor explained to TODAY's Savannah Guthrie Wednesday.

"(Gru) needed to shake it up," said Carell. "He's sort of at a career impasse. He can't be a villain any more because he's got these three little girls to take care of now. He has a lot on his plate right now."

The funnyman said he actually empathized with some of what Gru is going through -- one of the daughters in the movie is hitting her teen years and finding an interest in boys, while in real life Carell says he's bracing for when those emotions well up in his real-life 12-year-old daughter.

"There's that anticipation of 'Am I going to be an overprotective dad?'" he wondered. "I will roll with it. I hope I'm a cool dad."

"Despicable Me 2" opens in theaters on July 3.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/despicable-mes-steve-carell-i-hope-im-cool-dad-6C10455619

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Hard throwers evolved a long time ago

Contested study traces slingshot shoulders to 2-million-year-old ancestor

By Bruce Bower

Web edition: June 26, 2013

Enlarge

Pitching's Past

College baseball players and other athletes hurled baseballs to provide scientists with data suggesting, in a controversial analysis, that humanlike throwing abilities evolved around 2 million years ago.

Credit: Harvard Athletic Communications

Upper bodies that could throw objects at high speeds appeared for the first time in a human ancestor known as Homo erectus, say biological anthropologist Neil Roach of George Washington University in Washington, D.C., and his colleagues. Nearly 2 million years ago, H. erectus hunters exploited their slingshot shoulders to throw rocks or wooden spears at animal prey, Roach?s team reports in the June 27 Nature. But at least one critic argues that skeletal changes behind modern humans? throwing ability didn?t show up until much later.

However human throwing evolved, chimps got the heave-ho. ?Adult male chimps are incredibly strong but can only throw about 20 miles per hour, one-third the speed of a 12-year-old Little League pitcher,? Roach says.

To uncover the inner workings of Homo sapiens? ability to fling fastballs, Roach and his colleagues used a 3-D camera system to record the movements of 16 college baseball players and three athletes in other sports as they hurled baseballs, sometimes while wearing motion-limiting braces. Computerized analysis of each participant?s throwing motions indicated that energy storage and release enabled the shoulder to act much like a slingshot during fast throws.

Three anatomical traits characteristic of hard throwers today combined for the first time in H. erectus, the scientists propose. Expanded waists made the torso more flexible, realigned elbows increased energy storage in the dominant arm?s shoulder while cocking the arm, and broad shoulders boosted the power of shoulder and chest muscles.

Anatomist and fossil researcher Susan Larson of Stony Brook University in New York disagrees with that assessment. No tendons for energy storage are available at the shoulder, so human throwing probably doesn?t work as proposed in the new paper, Larson says.

In addition, H. erectus and two other early hominids ? 4.4-million-year-old Ardipithecus ramidus in eastern Africa and almost 2-million-year-old Australopithecus sediba in southern Africa ? had similarly aligned elbows in both arms, not in one throwing arm as observed in humans, Larson says.

Ancient eastern and southern African hominids had relatively short collarbones, suggestive of narrow shoulders unsuitable for flinging objects fast, she says. Larson regards estimates of longer collarbones in H. erectus, based on partial fossils recovered in western Asia, as unreliable. Those estimates are a centerpiece of Roach and his colleagues? reconstruction of how throwing evolved, making the issue of when longer collarbones arose in the human lineage a central one.

Elongated collarbones and broad shoulders first appeared, Larson says, not in Homo erectus but in a European hominid ? dubbed Homo antecessor by some researchers and Homo heidelbergensis by others ? roughly 1 million years ago.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/351227/title/Hard_throwers_evolved_a_long_time_ago

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Polling the Public About Investing Is Loads of Fun! | The Big Picture

Back in August of 2011,?Gallup decided to do what they do best ? which is poll the American public for their thoughts. In this instance, it was their thoughts on investing.

The questions asked was simply: What do you think is the best long term investment?

Their answers were very instructive: 34% of Americans said gold is the best long-term investment. Real estate came in second at 19% with stocks at 17% in third, and bonds at 10%.

Of course, the public has the tendency to emphasize what just happened, rather than what is likely to happen. We need to keep that in mind when we look at how well the public has done since then.

Let?s start with the public?s then favorite investment, Gold:? As a reminder, the shiny yellow metal was approaching an all time high of $1900 per ounce, in August 2011, about to embark on a 35% crash, still in progress.

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Gold (GLD ETF)
GLD

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How about Equities? They were the 3rd of the 4 investments ? how has the public done with that pick? As the chart below shows, not too well. Back in August 2011, the SPX was around 1100. Its since rallied 50% (including the recent sell off since May).

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S&P500
SPX

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Note that the S&P500 was not the best performing index ? others, notably Russell 2000, have done much better. But since its the benchmark, I chose that chart.? Nice call, Public! (not).

The masses, believe it or not, got their least favorite asset class, Bonds wrong too. Despite the incredible run up in yields this month, bond prices are still above (and yields below) where they were in August 2011.

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Treasury Bonds (Yield inverse to price)
BND

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The public did get one things right ? Real Estate has been rallying since 2011. It was their second favorite asset class behind gold.? The Vanguard REIT index is up about 30% since then ? so they did manage to pick one asset class out of 4 that worked out.

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Vanguard REIT Index
sc

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The public has spoken! As a reminder, you might want to avoid following their advice . . .

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Previously:
Best Investment According to the Public? Gold (May 3rd, 2012)

Source:
Americans Choose Gold as the Best Long-Term Investment
Men, seniors, middle-income Americans, and Republicans are more enamored with gold
by Dennis Jacobe, Chief Economist
http://www.gallup.com/poll/149195/americans-choose-gold-best-long-term-investment.aspx

Category: Cognitive Foibles, Contrary Indicators, Investing, Really, really bad calls

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Source: http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2013/06/polling-the-public-loads-of-fun/

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

?I Was Dipping a Pen at My Dying Mother's Bedside?: An Interview ...

There are two oft-repeated statements about Carol Tyler (well, at least they?re oft-repeated in my house): 1) She is an AMAZING cartoonist; 2) She is WAY under-appreciated.

The latter might have changed ? at least a little bit ? with the release of You?ll Never Know, Tyler?s three-volume epic about not only the trauma her father suffered during World War II, but Tyler?s own relationships with her dad, with her teen-age daughter, and with her husband, the equally great cartoonist Justin Green, who, as Tyler portrays it, abandoned both wife and daughter for another woman (spoiler: they eventually reconciled). The books not only deal with such weighty issues as PTSD, family strife, loss and death, they highlight Tyler?s utterly unique sense of color, compositio,n and storytelling chops.

With the release of the third and volume not completely out of the rear-view mirror yet, I thought it would be the perfect time to talk to Tyler about the work as a whole and how it came together. As Tyler recounts below, the third volume?s production came at such a difficult and traumatic period in her life that it?s only recently she?s been able to even begin to assess the book?s merits and failings.

I talked with Tyler over the phone back in February. The interview was then copy edited by me and Tyler, who added and expounded on a number of things I had misheard or mistyped in my haste to get everything down. I?d like to take this opportunity to thank her for her time, honesty, and generosity.

Chris Mautner: How does it feel to be finally finished with the project? Relieved? Sad? All of the above?

Carol Tyler: All of the above and more. I still can?t believe I?m done. There was so much turmoil in the last year and a half of putting the last book out. I finished it in tandem with a tremendous illness in my family.

The first book, I started it in 2004 and it didn?t come out until 2009. I started putting the [second] book together right away. I didn?t want to lose momentum. I had most of Book Two done when Book One came out. Nothing came out in 2011, because I really needed a little space of time to make sure I was attacking the ending [properly] and tying up any loose ends. I wanted to work on the transitions and storylines and narratives to make sure they made sense.

For [the third book] to come out by Fall 2012, I needed to have it delivered to Fantagraphics in the beginning of the year. As I was pulling it together, my mom got sick and went from the hospital to the nursing home to having hospice at the house. At the very same time, my sister, who was my tag-team partner over the years in caring for Mom & Dad, ended up with a stage four ovarian cancer. Awful.

Both my parents and my sister live clear across the state of Indiana from me and this came about while I was teaching comics Fall Quarter at the University of Cincinnati. So I would teach class, get in the car, drive four hours to the nursing home or stop at the house to take care of my sister?s husband, who has Alzheimer?s, or my niece who has Asperger?s. I?d have the pages in one hand, a seasonal bouquet in the other, ink in my purse, and I?d be running back and forth. ?Hi mom how are you doing,? then grab her bedside table and start lettering. I literally had to do the back end of Book III in hospitals, nursing homes, at the chemo place and in waiting rooms. It was insane.

My sister?s illness?? our family was blindsided because she always took good care of herself. She didn?t smoke or drink, but ovarian cancer doesn?t care about those things, apparently.

My sister started chemo in December 2011. My mother died in February 2012. I got the book done in May while mourning the loss of my mom and dealing with my sister?s cancer treatments. As a result, the book has been barely on my radar screen because it?s the characters from my book who are in trouble and I care mostly about them as living beings. (My sister has cameo appearances here and there.) These women were my best friends during the making of these books. They were 100% behind me all the way.

That sounds horrible. With all that going on, no one would have criticized you if you put the book on hiatus. You could have taken a break.

Oh no. I?ll tell you why. The rumor about me for years had been, ?Tyler isn?t serious. Nice start years ago but she doesn?t work that much.?

Justin [Green, Tyler?s husband] had his sign business and his comics deadlines and so the bulk of childcare fell on my lap. When parenting, as you know, there?s that immediate pull for your time, especially for Mom-eee.

And, in the story I tell [in You?ll Never Know], how he left us and I moved across country to reinvent myself. I had never been to Cincinnati before. I just came here on impulse. My daughter went bonkers after we got here. She got the OCD gene from her Dad. It took awhile to figure out and diagnose. Many years of therapy. The bulk of her breakdown fell on my shoulders to deal with, and I gladly bore the weight because I was the one who yanked her out of her California life.

Women cartoonists with kids get to a certain age [where their kids are a little older] and can jump back in almost full time. But due to my marital drama and her OCD treatment, I didn?t get back to the drawing table until she went off to college. Then I had some quiet time and space.

The thought of having a reputation of not being a finisher, though, that has never been OK with me. I was always very committed to my art. People say, ?Damn, don?t you take a day off?? Nope. I?m a hard worker. The idea that anything could stop me? Nuh-uh. Not ev-ah. I was dipping a pen at my dying mother?s bedside. Can?t get more committed to the craft than that.

In the story I talk about my dad?s crankiness and our relationship difficulties, and in real life he acted very shitty at the end of my mother?s life. His negative energy was part of the fuel that helped me in a weird way. He?d rail on me, I?d come home and would add an extra page or two in order to turn up the dial on his being a jerk. In Book Three, I drew him hurdling saw blades at me; that?s straight out of his behavior. He did talk like that.

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How long from beginning to end did the whole project take you?

Eight years, with life sprinkled in between, as I earlier described.

I?m a binge worker. I?ll stay up all night and sleep days for two weeks and finish ten pages knowing I?ve got to go to Mom and Dad?s for the weekend. I always did it in clumps or clusters. I just had to pull the clusters together.

The other thing I did was if I was working on a page I said to myself, ?Tyler you could do it that way, but what if you challenged yourself and put the figure on this side and how could the word balloons be reconfigured from there? Would it give a more exciting result?? I was always trying to up my game a bit.

Note the criss-cross motif on this page.

Note the criss-cross motif on this page.

Can you give me a concrete example?

Somewhere along the line someone said to me, ?Oh when you have two word balloons in a panel, never crisscross the tails with one another. Show where they?re coming from and leave it at that.? In the books, Dad has an X on back from his suspenders and I have an X pattern on my jacket. So when Dad & I get more intensely agitated toward each other, I would crisscross the balloon tails to match the X of the suspenders and the jacket.

There?s a part at the end with the WWII memorial. The entire space is so grand and was designed with circles and ovals as a motif. So I thought, ?How can I maximize that? How can I use the motif?? There?s the flatness of the page, but you can imply depth. Can I do something with that? That was a formal thing that came to mind that I challenged myself with. Then it was, ?How do I work the mood?? Funny thing, I pulled the plug on color as it nears the end because I wanted it to feel like the energy of the story was subsiding.?I wanted the reader to feel the ebb.

One page of Tyler's two-page spread of the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.

One page of Tyler?s two-page spread of the World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C.

And here's the second page

And here?s the second page

Can you talk a little more about your use of color in the books?

I started doing comics in black and white, for Weirdo, ?cause that was the only option back then. Turns out that was good because along with tonality, I needed to understand all the comic-book stuff ? the arc of the story, timing within panels, dialogue, the lettering. I had to learn those structures. If you remove color as a factor, you?re removing this giant thing, which for me, a painter, had been the main conduit for all sorts of non-verbal things. It?s like color is this whole world that gives you moods and suggestions. So I was dealing with the bare bones, the mark itself, how to shade things with cross-hatching. It took several years, fiddling with that. Then when laser scanners came in, it was like, ?Are you saying I can use color pencil or a watercolor wash? Wow.?

Working in black and white all those years taught me about weight. I don?t exactly know how to explain it. You put a light green up against a rust color, there?s a difference in weight. The colors have different meanings, as well as what happens chromatically. In the ?kid crisis? part of Book Two I used red panel borders, thinking, ?Let?s get down to it, let?s get simple.? When there?s a crisis, you focus on the crisis. I made it stark in order to have the reader focus. In a couple of other places I did that too. Just focus in.

A page from the red-borderd sequence

A page from the red-borderd sequence

I don?t know if you noticed, but I do things with the panel border too, that informs speed and weight, because I?m concerned about depth and solidity and anchoring things together. These are conscious decisions that seem to have more to do with dimension, sculpture and architecture.

I used 53 colors. I counted them one day. I had maybe a dozen shades of black. Not all blacks are alike. There are grays and tan-colored grays and variations on variations. I mixed it by hand and put it into little crafter?s containers.

YNK2-077

Sometimes I was surprised by the colors of ?normal? things I would take for granted like sky and grass. I was trying to tweak it and finally I was like, ?Duh, grass is green, just put green down.? Even though I was tempted to tool and retool, some shortcuts are no-brainers.

I have to say, what you see printed in the book, though, is not at all what the original pages look like.

No? ? ? ? ?

Absolutely not. And I didn?t notice it till Book Three. I had to open Book Two to compare the original page to the printed product, ?Why is paper so friggin? white?? I called Kim [Thompson] and said, ?Dude, there?s something about the book I don?t like.? The white pages killed all my fussy little color subtleties.

Don?t get me wrong. I?m very proud of the book. It?s beautiful to look at. But sometimes the printed blacks are too dark or the browns dominate or there?s too much blue. There was never a chance for me to work directly with the printer in Singapore.

It was all done digitally. My originals never left the house. I scanned the art and corrected it at school. I work at a big-assed design school with expensive, state-of-the-art machines. Fantagraphics has good [scans] too. But something happened in the printing. So when you say the book looks exquisite, I think, ?If you could just see the real art.? You can like [the book], but know the original art is better than the pages.

A perfectionist is saying this. I?m talking about difference between cousins ecru and eggshell. I?m saying this as a person who created the book and who will fussbudget over every shade and tint of color. As it should be.

You may know that my master?s degree is in painting. People always said to me, ?You have such a thing for color.? I understand it on a cellular level. I understand color beyond belief. How come I?m so keen on color? Where does that come from? As a baby I was told to shut up a lot by older siblings and [was not allowed] an opinion whatsoever. I did have coloring books and in them I did work on nuance and did sophisticated work for a kid. I?d take one type of purple and put orange over it and see what that did.

I could tell you that the Beatles poster was a certain type of red that was different from the kind found on a bubblegum card. I always had a gift to point out that, say, a certain car had the same color red as that on the Special K box. It?s not cherry red.

There are things about the printed book layout-wise that ? I could have improved on. That?s OK. I could have extended that line a little bit or moved this over a quarter of an inch. An artist is never satisfied with the results. Overall, yeah I?m proud to say I worked on it. I told the family from the beginning, ?Don?t expect perfect likenesses. If I have to stop and do a full portrait, it will never get done. These are cartoon representations of our interactions. They?re not literal, visual characterizations.?

The books have a loose, improvised feel. Was that by design? How did the books take shape?

One of things I realized in making the book is how intuitive I approach everything. The knowing part is ?game over? for me. I like that I ?sorta? know [what I want].

This is how I describe it [while I?m working]: ?OK, in this page thingy comes in and this thing goes ?bloop,? and all right, boom!? Does that make any sense? No. But I know exactly where I have to weave the whole thing together. The biggest surprise was having to work on short sections and being interrupted so much I didn?t realize I didn?t have a solid way of connecting the various sections that didn?t seem flaky and fragmented.

For example, I knew what I wanted the ending to be, but I didn?t know how to get there. I just knew that at the end [my dad] is crying at the memorial. But I?ve gotta get the reader to understand how important that moment is to the book?s overall theme.

Even though I wanted to talk about me and Dad and our differences and World War II, I didn?t know how deep I was going to have to dig. I started scrawling notes on this giant white sheet of paper on a wall but it wasn?t big enough. I ended up with miles of material.

I initially thought, ?I can do this book in 80 pages. I can make the entire statement and then sit down and explain Dad?s bout with cancer, which shows he has fortitude and stick-to-itiveness, which is an underlying theme, but the cancer part would need to be fifteen or twenty pages ? so much for an eighty-page book.?

YNK2-63-chemotherapy

Clusters. I did what I would do if Aline [Kominsky-Crumb] called and said, ?I need a story for Weirdo.? I was doing what I knew, which was how to knock out two or five or ten pages. Then I just had to manage the clusters.

The thing that clicked was the idea that I wanted to tell the story of when Justin left. I wanted to simultaneously work through the personal hurt that occurred and talk about the hurt to Julia. I thought, ?Tyler, you don?t just want to tell Dad?s army story.? Because then it?s just a blog post. How many army guys? kids have set up a blog? And if you read them it?s straight military stuff ? it?s someone?s story about the army. I had to find a device [to broaden the scope] and the device was the scrapbook. I could, in the story, turn to a project to have things make sense and the project would be the thing that tied everything together. I could explain the soldier stuff?that [my Dad] was a jerk because of the war?and about what PTSD can do to a child. It all started to become clear once I anchored it to the device of the scrapbooks.

Intuitively I knew where I was going. There was a whole bunch of stuff that didn?t make it into the book that has to do with Dad?s pain and me trying to resolve it. Being a Catholic. Ultimately that stuff doesn?t affect what happened. I?d have to say, ?Is this is a cul-de-sac or does it bring me back to main point I?m trying to make?? At times, like in the first book it can seem like, ?This is my dad, he?s a crazy dude.? I wanted people to see him as a goofy guy and happy-go-lucky and contrast that with the guy at the end, so they?d think, ?Oh wait a minute, this is a suffering dude.?

YNK3-107hebroke

Did you have any problems with your family members in revealing their secrets?

Not much. I asked my daughter. I said, ?Honey, I am going to talk about you jumping out the window.? She said, ?I don?t care, go ahead. My life is an open book.? We?re an autobiographical family. Anything you say and do will be in print someday. I said to them, ?Listen everybody, I want to take our troubles to the bank.?

However, Justin was more uncomfortable. Mr. Autobiographical Cartoonist #1 himself! At first he expressed strong concern about bringing ?the other woman? into the book. I said, ?It?s not about her. It?s about us.? I am not in it for vindictiveness. I am dealing with truth and trying to speak of our greater humanity. I need to show all of us as flawed characters that need to triumph over our difficulties, otherwise we wouldn?t be human beings.

He just recently finished all three volumes. I said, ?Do you feel like I did right by you?? He said it was a great book, but still, nobody likes to be depicted as the bad guy. He had to bear that outright, whereas with the rest of us, our crimes are more subtle.

YNK-029

Are you happy with how the book has been received? Do you feel like it found an audience?

Since I?m in mourning for my mother and pre-mourning my sister, I haven?t paid much attention.?But when I do hear something, it?s on the lines of, ?I read the first one.? Those who read all three are blown away and they usually take the time to tell me. That?s awesome.

I did make a Facebook fan page but I don?t update it.

Back in days of black and white, I called the people that followed my work ?The Faithful 500? because I always felt I probably had 500 readers. I think now with social and traditional media it might have gone up to like 750. I might have 3,000 Facebook friends, but I?m guessing only a few of them have read all three books.

The sadness for me is that I made a major statement about PTSD that speaks to the generations and it?s just not getting through to the masses. I tried to be as clear as I possibly could with well-crafted pages and hip-shaking drama, but?

Kim suggested I start putting Carol Tyler [instead of C. Tyler] on the cover so I can make women?s lists. I didn?t do that for the last five years specifically because I didn?t want to be judged by my gender. I wanted people to connect with the book on its own merits. But I?ll tell you what ? that glass ceiling thing is for real. And ?Carol? is a 1950s baby boomer name that turns off some young people.

Here was a big part of my logic: I was going to write a book about my Dad and he?s C.W. Tyler. I thought, ?I can be C. Tyler. It?s the C. Tyler book.? But I quit doing C. Tyler now. I?m tired of trying to out-psyche ageism and sexism. No matter how much lotion I throw on them, my wrinkles are not going away.

It strikes me that one of the big themes of the books is loss and trying to come to terms with loss.

Loss is a very big part of the book and I experienced loss while finishing the back part of the book. I think one of things I?ve learned this year? I?ve never seen anyone? I watched my mother die this year, being attentive to the end of her life, and now my sister?s got this disease. When I drew ?The Hannah Story?, I had just lost my job. The emotion of loss is powerful and one of things I recently come to realize. You actually do go through a period of mourning that?s physical.

There were lots of other losses too. In fact, last year was the suckiest year ever! I had to put my dog down. You name it. All the worst shit you could deal with I had to go through. Everything from my house being robbed twice to my daughter?s car being stolen. Justin and I got invited to [Europe] and I got sick on the trip. Some weird virus that lasted two months. Twenty-two days of fever and being bedridden, unable to move. I had a reaction to the virus and ended up with reactive rheumatoid arthritis. I couldn?t move. It traveled around different joints in my body. Couldn?t roll over. Couldn?t walk. I remember when I could finally move my foot one day, ?Wow. There?s hope.? After the fever broke, I had lost twenty-five pounds and weighed 119. This was in November.

Then this nice man Jay Stowe [from Cincinnatti magazine] called me up and said, ?We have a space at the back of our magazine, the page before the back cover. I thought about you, would you like to do anything? Do you want to do a strip for the inside back cover? I looked up to the heavens and declared, ?Thank you, Mom!?

This idea of 2012 ending with a call offering me to do whatever I want next year and someone having that much confidence in me as an artist ? I was real happy when 2013 came.

So what are you working on now?

That monthly one-pager for Cincinnati magazine. I have the inside back page and it?s a series called Tomatoes, about trying to grow tomatoes in my diverse, urban neighborhood. Although I?m keeping it ?light.? No ?crack-head screaming on the corner at 3 a.m.? stories. I?ll save that excellent dimensional shit for Tomatoes the book, someday.

Can you talk a bit more about what you mean by ?undefined?? Did you do a lot of revising and editing?

Whenever I had to add a page to the book it was hard. I?ll tell you why. For the most part the pages were set up to start left side of the page, often as spreads. It was very right page, turn to the left page dependent. If I had to add a page, that meant I had to put in a second page somewhere else.?So it wasn?t easy. If I had an idea it had better by golly be worth tearing into my existing compositions. I had to get to the flow part down. I was often like, ?Oooh, I?m not going to do that.?

I have to tell you this story about page five [in Book One]. I?d get some pages done and leave a spot empty. ?Pick it up here,? I?d say. ?I don?t know what page nine is at this moment. I?m going to do page nine later, and put it on the list [of things to do]. Oh shit, don?t know how I want to look,? and I deferred it for a year and a half. I gotta do that page, but I have no idea what I?m going to do.

I used Post-it notes and gridded stuff out on the wall trying to organize [the book]. Some pages I called transitional, the joint that connects the femur. You have to have something to connect this big statement with this big statement. Can you pull it off with one page? Should it be two? What speed do you want people to attack it with?

The page 9 sequence in question from Book One.

The page 9 sequence in question from Book One.

I was just about finished with Book One. I knew I had one other page to do and I went, ?I know exactly what want to do with page nine,? and I did it in two hours. It was the one where [Dad?s] been at the lumber store and he drives the car home. I wanted the reader to go from the bottom of the page where he?s leaving the store. Why jump up to the top left corner of the page? Why can?t I have him [travel] up there to the upper right corner, which is going to be just as satisfying for the reader now to turn the page because they?ll have traveled up there with him.

The message I wanted [for the book] was ?Not all scars are visible,? but I didn?t know until that morning what I was searching for. I didn?t know how or when it came to me. I guess it was just inside. The technical thing was to go backwards [along the page]. I did that other one [in Book Three], where I am chasing the dog.

It occurs to me that with You?ll Never Know you?re offering a portrait of middle America that doesn?t get portrayed in comics very often.

It?s funny you say that. One of things I felt in charge of in doing this book was a time-and-place factor, in that I?m very painfully aware that the world I grew up in is gone. The Chicago I knew was gone. The Chicago my dad knew was gone. He used to talk about turning on the tap water and minnows would come out. That?s how clean Lake Michigan was.

I did want to show that [time]. I love the prairie and Americana and stories about the dust bowl. I love that era. Grant Wood paintings, I love that. I live in this heart of the country. I was born and raised here. I?m a sucker for the concept of the American experience. Life seems to be more intense now only because we have more information to process. The truth is if you pay attention to wherever you are there?s still a lot of local flavor. I wanted to sing about that. I felt like I was responsible to make sure that note came through. This is where we were. This is how it is in this place. Some people lived in this time and place and this is what happened to them. All great writers and artists nail down their place and reference it. Not sayin? I?m great, but time and place are key to a good story no matter what.

I wanted that feel of ? not the east coast, not the west, just an American place, without it being that icky flag-waving shit that has hijacked our culture. People think that the middle of America is like that, but it?s not. I really just wanted to show the gentleness of the ordinary, I guess, and how it?s all subject to change. I think it got through.

The dog-walking sequence from Book Three.

The dog-walking sequence from Book Three.

Source: http://www.tcj.com/i-was-dipping-a-pen-at-my-dying-mothers-bedside-an-interview-with-carol-tyler/

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European Publishers, Others Slam Google On ?Abusive? Practices, Ask EC To Reject Google Proposal

google euroIt looks like it may be back to the drawing board for Google on the European competitive front: hundreds of publishers and publishing trade associations today are coming out in force to ask the European Commission and its Vice President Joaqu?n Almunia to "reject outright" Google's draft remedies, which Google submitted to the EC as its offer for rebalancing rebalance competition in search and other online products where it is dominant in the region. The statement put out today, by the European Publishers' Council, comes on the same day that other would-be Google competitors, including online mapping and travel companies, as well as the Fairsearch consortium, are also expected to call for much deeper scrutiny of Google and rejection of its proposals.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3r8929WNZ54/

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Italy court convicts Berlusconi on sex charges

By Silvia Aloisi and Sara Rossi

MILAN (Reuters) - Silvio Berlusconi was handed a seven-year jail sentence on Monday for abuse of office and paying for sex with a minor, adding to the complications facing Italy's fragile left-right government.

The former prime minister will not have to serve any jail time before he has exhausted an appeals process that could take years, but the conviction angered members of his centre-right party who questioned whether he should continue to support the coalition.

The 76-year-old media tycoon expressed outrage at the verdict which he said was politically motivated.

"An incredible sentence has been issued of a violence never seen or heard of before, to try to eliminate me from the political life of this country," Berlusconi said in a statement.

"Yet again I intend to resist against this persecution because I am absolutely innocent and I don't want in any way to abandon my battle to make Italy a country that is truly free and just."

Berlusconi's lawyers announced they would appeal against the ruling that also banned him from holding public office.

Berlusconi was found guilty of paying for sex with former teenage nightclub dancer Karima El Mahroug, better known under her stage name "Ruby the Heartstealer", during "bunga bunga" sex parties at his palatial home near Milan.

The panel of three women judges also convicted him of abuse of office by arranging to have El Mahroug released from police custody when she was held in a separate theft case.

The verdict closes a two-year trial that has mesmerized Italy with its accounts of wild sex parties at the billionaire's villa outside Milan while he was premier in 2010.

Several members of Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party have urged him to withdraw his backing for the government of centre-left Prime Minister Enrico Letta, which needs the PDL's support.

"It's disgusting, a disgrace," one of his most faithful lieutenants, senior party official Daniela Santanche, told reporters in front of the Milan court.

She said the ruling would not impact the functioning of the government, but other Berlusconi allies were less conciliatory.

"It is absurd to think that the current government can continue to work calmly while the leader of one of the parties backing it is being massacred politically," said PDL senator Sandro Bondi.

Letta's Democratic Party (PD), which was dealt its own blow on Monday by the resignation of Equal Opportunities and Sports Minister Josefa Idem over a tax evasion scandal, said the Berlusconi verdict should be respected and called on the PDL to show restraint.

Berlusconi says the purported sex parties were elegant dinners where the female guests performed "burlesque" shows. El Mahroug denied having sex with Berlusconi.

CALL TO POLICE

In the verdict, the judges said around 30 witnesses in the case, including Deputy Foreign Minister Bruno Archi, should be investigated for perjury for their testimony in favor of Berlusconi.

In May 2010, the then-prime minister called a Milan police station to instruct officials to release El Mahroug, who was being held on suspicion of stealing a 3,000 euro ($3,900)bracelet.

A Brazilian prostitute who lived with El Mahroug had called the premier on his mobile phone to tell him she had been arrested, prosecutors said.

Berlusconi's lawyers have said he made the call to avoid a diplomatic incident because he believed that El Mahroug, who is actually Moroccan, was the grand-daughter of Hosni Mubarak, then the Egyptian president.

The prosecution said he was anxious to cover up the relations he had with her at his sex parties.

The media magnate has recently used his own television stations to promote his version of events, with his flagship Canale 5 channel broadcasting a prime-time documentary on the so-called "Ruby Trial".

The verdict is only part of Berlusconi's legal problems. Last month an appeals court upheld a four-year jail sentence against him for orchestrating a tax fraud scheme in his business dealings - leaving him just one more appeal, at the Supreme Court, which could come within a year.

Despite Berlusconi's professions of loyalty to Letta, he may eventually prefer to gamble on another election, in which he could potentially become prime minister once again.

Even if he opts to keep backing the government, the verdict could make parts of Letta's PD party highly uneasy and increase the coalition's instability, according to Giovanni Orsina, professor of contemporary history at Rome's Luiss University.

"The PD would be in the same majority with a person who has been condemned in the first degree for juvenile prostitution, which is not a trivial issue," he said before the ruling. "It would add up to a difficult situation." ($1 = 0.7637 euros)

(Additional reporting by Manuela D'Alessandro; Writing by Gavin Jones and James Mackenzie; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/italy-court-finds-berlusconi-guilty-sex-charges-153729068.html

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Gunmen kill police officer, driver in Pakistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) ? Police say gunmen on motorcycles have killed a mid-ranking police officer and his driver in northwest Pakistan.

Police officer Mohammed Ibrahim Khan says Amanullah Khan, a deputy superintendent, and his driver were killed Monday in the main northwest city of Peshawar. Khan was in charge of the traffic police in Peshawar.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban.

The group is based in Pakistan's semiautonomous tribal region along the border with Afghanistan and has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for years.

Peshawar is located on the edge of the tribal region and has been hit by hundreds of attacks over the years.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gunmen-kill-police-officer-driver-pakistan-055507452.html

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