Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Elon Musk's Hyperloop Announcement Time Is 4 ... - Business Insider

Elon Musk will release his plans for the "Hyperloop," a super fast form of transportation this afternoon at 1:30 Pacific time.

In a tweet, he teased that he was up all night, with others, putting the final touches on the plan.?We'll have full coverage of the Hyperloop as soon as it's announced.?

For the most part, the Hyperloop is a mystery.?

Musk has teased it by saying?it will be able to get people from San Francisco to Los Angeles in 30 minutes. He described it as?a "cross between a Concorde, a railgun and an air hockey table."

He will not build the Hyperloop himself. He's going to released the design and hope someone else does it.?

Here's another little detail from Alex Weprin:

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-i-will-announce-the-hyperloop-at-130-pacific-2013-8

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Monday, August 12, 2013

From The Desk Of Shari Brodsky: Supermarket Superstar Week Three

Guest Blogger Shari Brodsky watches the teevee so you don?t have to.

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Lifetime is throwing a little more support behind Supermarket Superstar. They?ve moved it to Thursday 10:30 EST. Which makes Project Runway its lead in.

So, I had to wait an extra three days to see it. (Not really a hardship, but still) Anyway this week was:

Natural Foods

We had three contestants?per usual.?First up was a mom with two boys. One of her kids was diagnosed with a neurological disorder when he was six, (He?s seven now). She altered his diet to only all natural foods and went gluten free and he?s doing well. Um? okay. So she brought her chi tea cakes which sandwiched a cinnamon espresso cream. Yup, gluten free whoopee pies, you know, for kids.

Funny story, contestant number two, quit her corporate gig, spent a year teaching herself to cook. Lost fifty lbs, and now runs a health food focused food truck called Molly?s Milk Truck. (Her name is Hoda. She?s from Hoboken, NJ) Her product is an Apple Bomb. It?s an apple, baked and coated with apple pie goodnesses like walnuts, cinnamon nutmeg and butter and wrapped in pie crust with a pie crust bow at the top. It looks AWESOME.
It tastes good but then Michael (the chef mentor) asks her what?s healthy about it. And she starts talking and he stops her. ?How many calories in this?? She doesn?t know. ?Over a thousand?? She is sure, ?absolutely not.?

After the jump, Shari gets buggy with it?

When they go to the kitchen to start cooking we find out a little more about her healthy apple bomb

apple bomb nutrition information

That?s right folks, 1260 calories for this health conscious treat. 570 calories from fat, 83 grams of sugar and even if you subtract the fiber count, you?re still at 78 grams of carbs per serving. That?s twice an Atkins Maintenance allowance and with only 9 grams of protein, just a lot of carbs and fat.

Please do not misread this as a condemnation of this product. I have always said that the key to making food delicious is to add sugar and fat. But delicious and healthy are sadly, just not the same thing. I mean Jesus, her cost per item was $12.89 per apple w/pastry crust. So its half a day?s calories and half a day?s budget for food and in the end, you get something that?s almost, but not entirely unlike apple pie.

They told her to make the apples smaller and the crust less buttery and then moved on because the third guy was the charm.

He was concerned, as am I, about the inefficient system of growing protein in our country. Look, I love beef and chicken. (don?t like pork or pig, growing up Jewish I just never developed a taste for it) but in so many markets these are the choices, five cuts of beef, ranging from chuck and ground to ribeye and flank/skirt steak, and chicken. And a boatload of pork too. So contestant three, a new dad who wants to make the world better for his daughter, introduced us to the Chirp Chunk.</p><p style=?text-align:left;?>A chirp chunk has 18 grams of protein and a low, (but never discussed) level of carbs. It?s a perfect energy bar made without whey or soy but with almond butter, flax seeds, puffed rice, and?crickets

Crickets. I was thinking we could raise goats or eat sheep, but bugs are a viable alternative protein source, and if I had to grab a protein bar for the road, his numbers would intrigue me and I wouldn?t be turned off, but then, I?m not a picky eater and it won?t be the first but I ever ate, I mean I had an older brother.

The mentor?s response??Crickets

But then they tasted it and they had to admit, it wasn?t bad. Well, Michael and Cornyn did, Debbie Fields took one small bite, and then never got near it again. Even as later while he was making a batch, Cornyn and host, Stacie chowed down on a few

cornyn and stacie enjoying crickets

Mrs. Fields? response to that?

mrs fields watching ppl eat crickets

In the kitchen they proclaimed three dollars too high a cost for a protein bar with bugs in it, so to cut the costs they suggested that he mix in the devil?s tears and a few rabbit turds rather than using almond butter. (It?s possible they suggested switching the almonds butter out for peanut butter. To me, those are the same result)

So Beelzebub?s tears were substituted for the rich and not stupid or mundane almond butter. I really don?t understand why people would like desserts and the like to taste like a second grader?s lunch, but I?ll admit, crushed peanuts blended with sugar is a cheap way to go. And go he did.
crickets

The advice to the Whoopee Pie Chick? Make them smaller and since the center oozes out, or as professional chef Michael Chiarello says, ?Fix the poopie in your whoopee? they suggest adding Ticalose CMC, a stabilizer. Her eyes almost pop out of her head, but they explain it?s a cellulose product with no gluten.

Naturally delicious.

The Focus Group this week is personal trainers. The bug guy is thrilled. Trainers LOVE protein bars.

Debbie Fields tells them about the bar, gives all the specs and then tells them there are crickets in it. They like it. One guy says it has an aftertaste and he thinks that?s the crickets, but since the crickets are dehydrated, ground into a fine flour and then added, it?s probably psychosomatic. Either way, it got a better response than the tough and excessively used dough wrapped around a perfectly good apple and coming in with a lower calorie count than before but still high enough for it not to be lower than good old fashioned apple pie.

They liked the whoopee pies and the fact that they were gluten free but not really thrilled about her 18 grams of sugar per serving.

The Apple Bomber went home. She spent a year studying food and doesn?t know that sugar and fat and flour all mixed together are not healthy? maybe she?ll learn that in the second year.

That leaves Crickets and Whoopee pies in the Con Agra Branding Studio.

the branding lab

She has incorporated her son Isaac, ?Izzy? for short into her brand. Cornyn is very sensitive to her sick son?s place in this process.

cornyn deltes her little boy

He has no idea what to do with The Chirp Chunk Logo
the chirp logo playful but not hiding the cricket component

They present to the head of buyer at the Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company.

the Whoopee Pie still has some Poopie in its Whoopee

whoopee buyer squish

And the concept of Crickets in his stores, combined with the fact that they taste good actually gets him to not just smile but laugh!
He Laughed?

Mrs. Fields gave her advice. I would never feed bugs to my children. (Not advice really, mostly a closed minded attitude by a woman who baked cookies in the eighties in big factories where some bugs no doubt got into the dough), but hey, it?s her opinion and okay, she?s not cutting edge. Both Michael and Cornyn believed that the Chirp Bar was groundbreaking and delicious. Michael told him. ?You have a chance to do right by the community, the planet and your balance sheet? Big words from a guy with a restaurant and store in Napa.

Cornyn agreed that the Chirp Bar was probably the best way to break through this barrier and get people used to the idea.

The man from A&P gave it some thought.

On the one hand he had expensive ($4.69 for three two bit cakes) trendy, (gluten free) Whoopee pies, that don?t hold together when you eat them. On the other you have a ground breaking new source of protein to introduce to American consumers in an easy to eat and familiar tasting format.

He made his decision and American consumers will have the opportunity to purchase Gluten Free Whoopee Pies in your freezer section.

Sigh.

Supermarket Superstar is on
Lifetime Thursdays at 10:30pm EDT

1972bShari Brodsky is not a food critic. She?s not even a picky eater. She is a writer and has a fuckton of fan fiction porn that you can find here. (It?s mostly QAF and SPN and it?s all slash) She?s also the younger sister of Adam Brodsky and lived with him for the first 21 years of his dorkiness, which means she knows some wicked cool embarrassing stories and where a few of the bodies are buried.

She hates facebook and long walks on the beach, but does have a twitter account that she rarely uses @sharibrodsky

If you feel the need to contact her directly email her: Shari.brodsky@gmail.com or you know, comment here.

Source: http://www.phoodie.info/2013/08/12/from-the-desk-of-shari-brodsky-supermarket-superstar-week-three/

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Backfire: Editor of NY paper that published map of gun owners gets canned (Michellemalkin)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Texas Comptroller Susan Combs Joins Forces with Libraries to Fight Battle Against Childhood Obesity

July 16, 2013

(AUSTIN) ? Texas Comptroller Susan Combs today announced a partnership with the Texas Library Association to provide all public libraries and more than 1,100 public elementary schools with nutrition and fitness-related books and DVDs geared to children and pre-teens in the fight against obesity.

The partnership is part of the Comptroller?s efforts to boost awareness of the agency?s legislatively mandated Reshaping Texas Web portal ? a comprehensive statewide collection of resources and information to help Texans address the economic effects of obesity. Besides books and DVDs, the Comptroller is also supplying free sports equipment to public schools in areas identified as being at high risk for obesity.

?Our goal is to raise awareness and understanding about the importance of healthy habits throughout life,? Combs said. ?Libraries serve the most critical role of any entity in empowering people with the information they need. They offer many resources to help improve family health and fitness.?

The Web portal, www.ReshapingTexas.org, is a result of legislation which charged the Comptroller with collecting research and information on the economic effects of obesity and areas in which children are at risk.

According to studies, one in three Texas children is overweight or obese, including almost half of the state?s Hispanic children.

?For most children, being overweight or obese is the result of unhealthy eating patterns and too little physical activity,? Combs said. ?Innovative policies and practices can reach children while they are still young, reversing unhealthy weight trends and preventing weight gain in the first place.?

The Comptroller?s office will order and distribute free of charge more than 15,000 books and DVDs to be distributed to all 910 Texas public libraries and more than 1,100 select public elementary schools in August and September. The libraries include 588 main locations and their 322 branch locations, located in 248 of Texas? 254 counties.?(The counties that do not have public libraries reporting to the Texas State Library and Archives Commission are Loving, Glasscock, Delta, McMullen, Roberts and Borden.)

The sports equipment will go to students in the fifth through eighth grades at more than 3,500 schools.

For a complete listing of the book titles and DVDs, go to www.reshapingtexas.org/content/reshaping-texas-books-libraries.

?30?

Go to Facebook Join the discussion and connect with the Texas Comptroller on Facebook for the latest economic news, surveys and more.

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Source: http://www.window.state.tx.us/news2013/130716-tpl.html

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Merkel challenger tries to calm storm over east German jibe

By Noah Barkin

BERLIN (Reuters) - Chancellor candidate Peer Steinbrueck travelled to eastern Germany on Saturday to try to calm a storm over his recent comments suggesting opponent Angela Merkel lacked passion for Europe because she grew up in the former communist East.

The Social Democrat (SPD) trails Merkel's conservatives by some 15 points in opinion polls with just six weeks left until a German election, and has been searching desperately for issues that might help him narrow the gap.

But his campaign has been dogged by gaffes, including the latest remarks, which infuriated some east Germans and drew rebukes from parties across the political spectrum.

At an SPD campaign event in the eastern city of Halle, Steinbrueck told his audience that the comments, made in a newspaper interview earlier this week, had been misconstrued and he praised easterners as "capable and hard-working people".

"I certainly did not mean to suggest that people who grew up in the East have an innate or regionally-determined distance to Europe," he said. "And I ask you to please not understand the remarks this way."

Roughly a fifth of German voters live in the former communist East. The SPD has not done well there in past elections. In 2009, they won roughly 18 percent of the eastern vote, compared to nearly 30 percent each for Merkel's conservatives and the far-left "Linke" party.

During the euro zone debt crisis, some of Germany's partners and domestic critics have accused Merkel of focusing too much on German interests, and lacking the passion for Europe that drove previous chancellors like Helmut Kohl, who pushed Germany into the euro.

Some have suggested it is a generational phenomenon - she is the first German leader to have been born after World War Two. Others point to her upbringing in the communist East, where European integration was not the major topic it was in the West.

In the Tagesspiegel interview, Steinbrueck was asked about comments by another former chancellor, Helmut Schmidt, that Merkel lacked passion for Europe.

"That is right," Steinbrueck said. "The interesting question is whether this is because she grew up in the GDR (German Democratic Republic) and therefore the European project is more distant for her than a politician who grew up in the West."

He added in the interview that he was not accusing Merkel of anything, as she had not chosen which side of the Iron Curtain she grew up on. That has not spared him from criticism.

Members of Merkel's party, keen to score political points before the vote, have accused Steinbrueck of insulting millions of people from East Germany and central Europe.

Even the SPD's allies have weighed in, with the head of the Greens, Juergen Trittin, saying in a weekend interview with the Welt am Sonntag newspaper: "Frau Merkel's European policies are bad, but not because she comes from the GDR."

(Additional reporting by Holger Hansen; editing by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/merkel-challenger-tries-calm-storm-over-east-german-161537345.html

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Saturday, August 10, 2013

Elliott Wave Overview: Gold and Oil Are Looking Bullish

From an Elliott Wave perspective the price action looks nice and clean on several markets, for possible trading set-ups, but unfortunately not much on the FX. I am looking gold, and tracking short-term bullish wave pattern. Current minor pull-back could be wave four, with wave five in view. For any long scalps, keep an eye on 1297 for invalidation-stop level.
GOLD 1h
Gold
Oil is also looking bullish, but on 15min chart this time where five waves from the low suggest that price will travel higher in the near-term. Any longs here should have stops at the lows. First support of interest comes in at 103.50-103.70.
OIL 15min
Oil
Trade Well,
Grega

Source: http://www.fxstreet.com/analysis/reports/elliot-wave-corner/2013-08-09.html

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This?

Triune brain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reptilian complex

The reptilian complex, also known as the R-complex or "reptilian brain" was the name MacLean gave to the basal ganglia, structures derived from the floor of the forebrain during development. The term derives from the fact that comparative neuroanatomists once believed that the forebrains of reptiles and birds were dominated by these structures. MacLean proposed that the reptilian complex was responsible for species-typical instinctual behaviors involved in aggression, dominance, territoriality, and ritual displays.

http://science.howstuffworks.com/lif...ain/brain4.htm

Source: http://www.alien-ufos.com/ufo-alien-discussions/58683-please-explain-reptilian-side-part-brain-president.html

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Court declines to hear lawsuit against Tim McGraw

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ? A federal court has declined to hear Curb Records' lawsuit against Tim McGraw and Big Machine Records, another setback in the label's legal fight with the country star.

A U.S. District Court judge in Nashville, Tenn., signed an order administratively closing the case until a decision over copyright of music McGraw recorded is made in a lawsuit filed in Tennessee state court.

Curb initially filed a lawsuit over copyright and breach of contract issues and tried to bar McGraw from signing with Big Machine Records.

McGraw has countersued, and a judge allowed him to make new music with a different label for the first time in his more than 20 years as a recording artist.

He released that album, "Two Lanes of Freedom," earlier this year.

___

Online:

http://timmcgraw.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/court-declines-hear-lawsuit-against-tim-mcgraw-225409888.html

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Friday, August 9, 2013

Nonprofit labor organizers using taxpayer funds to attack businesses ...

By Eric Boehm | Watchdog.org

HARRISBURG ? Labor activists using tactics adopted from the Occupy Wall Street movement are crashing restaurants across the nation in an effort to raise wages for workers ? and they?re getting taxpayer money to fund the effort.

Using a combination of federal grants and grants from left-leaning organizations, the Restaurant Opportunity Center, or ROC, is technically a charitable nonprofit and not a union. But their pro-worker messages, anti-employer protests and self-proclaimed goal of organizing service sector employees for the purposes of negotiating higher wages make ROC look and sound much like a labor union.

UNION OR NOT: With the help of unions like AFSCME, the Restaurant Opportunities Center protested an Olive Garden in center city Philadelphia.

Some see their tactics as a deliberate attempt to skirt the nation?s labor laws. Only unions elected by a majority of a workplace can negotiate with employers on workers? behalf, though ROC seems to be doing so in the absence of any election.

But others, including the head of the AFL-CIO, an umbrella group for dozens of labor unions, see ROC and groups like them as the new face of labor organizing in America.

ROC gets bankrolled with taxpayer cash

While the Restaurant Opportunity Center is working to increase wages for some workers, they are getting paid, in part, with federal tax dollars.

According to tax filings for ROC United, the parent organization that has launched the smaller chapters operating in many cities, the group got $180,000 in government grants during 2010 and another $60,000 in similar grants during 2011.

The organization?s budget was about $1.72 million in 2010 and $2.65 million in 2011 ? meaning taxpayer dollars accounted for a little more than 5 percent of their operating costs.

Other funding for ROC?s initiatives comes from the usual left-wing sources, including grants from the Tides Foundation, a group that also gets tax dollars from the federal government, as a previous Watchdog.org investigation uncovered.

Some Republican members of Congress are asking for an investigation into a Department of Labor?grant to ROC.

Getting ROC-ed

The group employs?disruptive ?mic-check? tactics made popular by the Occupy Wall Street movement. Take ROC?s?July 25 action at the Capital Grille restaurant in midtown Manhattan.

On that day, ?during the usual lunch rush, a?signal was given ? and?more than a dozen protesters stood at their tables and shouted their concerns to all within earshot.? They were calling attention to what they said was an unfair minimum wage law that allows restaurants in New York City to pay their tipped workers only $5 per hour.

?Capital Grille, shame on you. Restaurant workers deserve fair pay too,? they chanted as they were escorted from the dining area.

It wasn?t only happening in New York.

At the same time, a similar group gathered outside an Olive Garden restaurant in center city Philadelphia.

?If we don?t get no justice, you don?t get no peace,? they chanted in unison.

Across the nation, minimum wage activists rallied outside Red Lobster, Olive Garden and Capital Grille restaurants ? all of which are owned by the same parent company, Darden Inc. ? to decry corporate lobbying they say puts a lid on the minimum wage for restaurant workers.

But these supposedly grassroots efforts were in fact a well-orchestrated assault launched by ROC and labor union allies in several major cities. Other groups, such as the SEIU-backed Fast Food Forward, are working toward the same goal.

According to the group?s website, ROC began targeting Darden restaurants because the company joins with the National Restaurant Association, to lobby Congress in order to keep wages and benefits low.

Darden Restaurants did not return calls seeking comment.

A similar effort targeting a chain of New York restaurants owned by Chef Mario Batali came to an abrupt halt last year when Batali sought and received a restraining order against ROC.

From humble beginnings to national network

Rather than unionizing a work place and using the collective bargaining process to negotiate with employers, groups like ROC use loud protests designed to attract public and media attention.? They threaten lawsuits and disrupt business.

ROC-ING ALONG: During a 2011 meeting of the National Restaurant Association in Chicago, ROC organized a ?flash mob? to protest.

In short, they use techniques that would be illegal if they were an actual union, said Stefan Marculewicz, an attorney who specializes in labor issues.

?Labor organizations by their very existence are supposed to be democratic institutions,? Marculewicz said.? ?A majority of the workers have to sign up, or they have the option to not sign up.?

But ROC is not a union. And because they do not have to gain support from a majority of employees at a certain business ? as a union world before it could begin negotiating with employers ? groups like ROC can make their voices heard and their presence known without officially representing the workers they claim to support.

Maria Myotte, communications director for ROC, did not return calls and emails seeking comment on the organization?s strategy.?But in a 2007 interview with the New York Post, one of ROC?s top officials described the practice as ?minority unionism.?

?While a union has to go in and organize the majority of a shop to get some kind of collective bargaining agreement, in our case we?ll have a group of workers come in ? a small number from a restaurant, and we will ?organize? them to create a demand letter, eventually file litigation, protest in front of the restaurant and get press,? said Saru Jayaraman, a co-founder of ROC.

ROC started in New York City to provide community support to the families of restaurant workers killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Now, they claim their goals include organizing workers ?to create consequences for ?low road? restaurants that employ illegal and other exploitative workplace practices.?

There are more than 200 groups like ROC across the country. They have names like Our Walmart, Warehouse Workers for Justice, and the Food Chain Workers Alliance. There are direct affiliates of ROC now operating in almost a dozen major cities.

And the group is attracting attention from some high-profile figures in the labor movement.

Richard Trumka, president of the AFL-CIO, an umbrella group for dozens of major labor unions, praised Jayaraman and ROC in June during his comments at a gathering of the Labor Research Action Network in Washington, D.C.

?The Restaurant Opportunity Center has built a dynamic and expanding advocacy organization in an industry where 40 percent of the workers earn the minimum wage or less,? he said. ?Saru is a real pioneer who is demanding answers to the questions that need to be asked about the future of workers.?

The AFL-CIO has entered into partnership agreements with several national networks of worker centers and created a procedure under which dozens of worker centers have affiliated with state federations of labor and central labor councils. Trumka said labor unions and work activists should try to ?thicken those ties? in coming years.

Boehm is a reporter for Watchdog.org and can be reached at Eric@PAIndependent.com.? Follow him on Twitter @EricBoehm87

The post Nonprofit labor organizers using taxpayer funds to attack businesses for low wages appeared first on Watchdog.org.

Source: http://sayanythingblog.com/entry/nonprofit-labor-organizers-using-taxpayer-funds-to-attack-businesses-for-low-wages/

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Tiwai workers? union welcomes agreement with Meridian



8 August 2013

Media Release

Tiwai workers? union welcomes agreement with Meridian

The union representing workers at the Tiwai Point smelter welcomes the agreement reached between Meridian Energy and the smelter owners.

?This agreement protects jobs and offers some stability for the workers and the community of Southland,? says EPMU organiser for Invercargill Trevor Hobbs.

?It?s concerning that the agreement only guarantees the smelter will stay open for a few more years, but our members and their families now have some breathing room. We?ll be following up with the smelter owners to get clarification about the details of the deal and how it might affect the smelter workers in future.?

?Having received $30 million of taxpayer support, NZAS now has a strong obligation to keep the smelter operating for many more years to come.?

The Tiwai Point smelter is worth 3200 jobs and $1.6 billion a year to Southland?s economy.

?The job security which the smelter provides for the people of Invercargill is hugely important,? says Trevor Hobbs.

The Parliamentary Inquiry into Manufacturing, which released its report earlier this year, found that a strong and successful manufacturing sector is vital for exports, better jobs and higher incomes in New Zealand.

?What we need is a dedicated national plan to grow our manufacturing sector and lower our exchange rate, which is hurting Kiwi businesses and workers.?

The EPMU thanks the people of Invercargill, who have rallied around the smelter workers during this stressful time. ?Thousands of postcards were sent to Bill English, Minister of Finance, asking him to save our smelter. The Southland community have been a huge support to our members,? says Trevor Hobbs.

The EPMU remains concerned about yesterday?s proposals to make some maintenance staff at the smelter redundant and will be working with the company to try to reduce this number.

ENDS

? Scoop Media

Source: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/BU1308/S00273/tiwai-workers-union-welcomes-agreement-with-meridian.htm

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Thursday, August 8, 2013

News Summary: Closing Fannie Mae could boost rates

IN PLANNING STAGES: Homebuyers could feel the pinch if Congress phases out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage guarantee giants that were rescued with a $187 billion taxpayer bailout during the financial crisis.

STATUS UPDATE: Congressional efforts to overhaul the nation's mortgage finance system got a boost Tuesday from President Barack Obama's call for changes that are generally in line with the Senate's bipartisan plan.

POCKETBOOK HIT: Typical borrowers could pay about $75 per month in extra interest payments, about half a percentage point, on an average mortgage under the Senate proposal, and about $135 more under the House plan. That's on a conforming loan of about $200,000 with the borrower providing a 20 percent down payment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-summary-closing-fannie-mae-165907962.html

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Apple juice and arsenic

In response to the investigation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) into the arsenic content of apple juice, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) offers guidance to families concerned about the impact of such exposure to their children?s health.

The FDA tested hundreds of samples of apple juice for arsenic and found the overall level of arsenic is low. Because a small proportion of samples had higher levels of arsenic, the FDA is now proposing an ?action level? of no more than 10 parts per billion of inorganic arsenic in apple juice ? the same level set by the Environmental Protection Agency for drinking water. Action levels represent limits above which FDA may take enforcement action to remove products from the market.

Based on its investigation, the FDA is confident in the overall safety of apple juice for children and adults. The AAP reminds parents that it is not necessary to offer children any juice to have a well-balanced, healthy diet.

For years, the AAP has recommended limited intake of all sweet beverages, including juice, to reduce the risk of poor nutrition, obesity and childhood cavities.

If parents want to include juice in their children?s diet, juice should be limited to 4 to 6 ounces a day for children ages 1 to 6 years, and 8 to 12 ounces a day for children age 7 and older.

Children should be encouraged to eat whole fruits to meet their recommended daily fruit intake.

The AAP will work with the FDA and other federal agencies to limit the level of arsenic in foods and drinks and will participate in discussions about decreasing arsenic exposure. Parents who have questions about their child?s nutrition are encouraged to speak with their pediatrician.

?

Source: http://downtown.woio.com/news/health/130141-apple-juice-and-arsenic

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Tim Cook meets with China Mobile chairman

Apple CEO Tim Cook reportedly met with China Mobile Chairman Xi Guohua on Tuesday to "discuss matters of cooperation," according to Reuters. The meeting is thought to be a step towards the Chinese wireless carrier offering the iPhone to its customers, though no official statement was released regarding an agreement.

With over 700 million customers and the title of the largest wireless operator in the world (by subscribers), a deal to offer the iPhone would be a huge win for both the state-owned China Mobile as well as Apple. China Mobile users have notoriously shied away from 3G and higher speeds in greater numbers than its competitor's subscribers. Whether or not the iPhone can help change that trend remains to be seen.


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Source: http://www.tuaw.com/2013/07/31/tim-cook-meets-with-china-mobile-chairman/

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Wind and waves conquer Hitler&#39;s Atlantic Wall - The Local

Decades of weather and waves have done what World War Two and post-war demolition attempts failed to do - bring the enormous concrete bunkers which formed Hitler's Atlantic Wall to the brink of collapse.

?

Now Danish authorities are tearing down, or blowing up, the bunkers to protect swimmers and holidaymakers from the crumbling remains, the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper reported on Thursday.

"The bunkers did not exactly make our beaches more beautiful," said Iver Einvoldsen, mayor of Ringk?bing, which is on the 50-kilometre stretch of coast where the huge concrete defence structures are being torn down.

As the weather has taken its toll, the concrete has started to fall to pieces, exposing sharp and rusted iron reinforcement rods, on which it is feared tourists could injure themselves.

Yet some Danes are upset that the bunkers are being removed from the landscape.

"This is part of our history. One is removing something which could have great meaning for future generations," said Louise Kjaer, a landscape architect. She said the landscape was given edge by the bunkers, and they were relevant in an age where much about World War Two was being forgotten.

The bunkers were part of the Atlantic Wall, an enormous series of defensive structures built to protect the Third Reich from sea-based invasion. It stretched from Norway to Spain. The Danish section was built between 1942 and 1944 - by Danish companies who made huge profits from the business, the Frankfurter Rundschau said.

Post-war attempts to destroy them failed and they were abandoned to the weather - which has now done enough of a demolition job that they can be torn down.

"The old bunkers are reminders of a dark chapter in Denmark's history that we cannot be allowed to forget," said Environment Minister Pia Ohlsen Dyhr. "But we have to accept that some of the bunkers have become a risk to tourists and swimmers. Now we are removing the most dangerous, to the delight of all of those who enjoy our beautiful west coast environment."

The remains will be used in road-building projects. Work started this week to demolish around a fifth of the 600 or so bunkers along the coast.

The Local/hc

Source: http://www.thelocal.de/society/20130801-51173.html

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GIMME SHELTER: Summer is busy season for the Niagara Falls ...

Cathy Fugler

GIMME SHELTER/Cathy Fugler

Oh, a storm is threat?ning
My very life today
If I don?t get some shelter
Oh yeah, I?m gonna fade away



Saturday was a great day: We participated in Niagara Dogfest, which is a big annual event celebrating all things canine.

Baby bunnies have a temporary home at the Niagara Falls Humane Society. (Photo NFHS)

The Niagara Falls Humane Society was invited to host a barbecue lunch for the day, as we did last year, and we also included our signature Sour Puss Lemonade stand, and an Art for Animals tent. Thanks to everyone who supported our efforts and helped us pull off another successful fundraiser.

Every day is a busy day at our little shelter, and yesterday was no exception. In addition to her usual duties, our vet tech, Jen, was caring for a baby robin, feeding a tiny hummingbird, and attending to two baby bunnies. The variety of things she is responsible for sure makes her days interesting. There is a tremendous amount of caring in our building every single day, and it makes me proud to work here.

The Niagara Falls Humane Society?s vet tech, Jen Wanless, cradles a tiny hummingbird for feeding. (Photo NFHS)

Summer is such a busy time at the shelter. Please be patient if you call and get put on hold, or if you have to wait in our lobby. If you have an animal to surrender, call us first to set up an appointment. And be aware that we have a waiting list for cat surrenders because the shelter is full right now.

Unbelievably, people are still leaving their dogs in cars in our community. I implore you to leave your pets at home where they are safe and cool on these hot summer days. It?s incredible to me that every single day we get calls about dogs suffering in locked cars in the summer heat. Your dog?s health and wellbeing is completely your responsibility. Keep them safe. Leave them at home. And if you see a dog in a hot car, please call us, or the police immediately, don?t take matters into your own hands.

Please visit our website, www.nfhs.ca? to view all the animal profiles, and to check out what?s happening at the shelter. Our Facebook page is another great way for you to stay in the loop.

***

Please visit our website, www.nfhs.ca and like us on Facebook. We have so many wonderful animals looking for their forever families right now, check them out on our Facebook albums HERE.

If you think you might have a talent or skill that would help the shelter, please call or email me. Are you good at fixing things? Gardening? Desktop publishing? Are you crafty? We could use your help. Call me so I can fill you in. The number at the shelter is 905-356-4404, or visit our website at www.nfhs.ca.

* * * *

Stay up-to-date. Click HERE to sign up for daily email alerts. It?s free, why not try
it?

?

Source: http://www.bulletnewsniagara.ca/2013/08/01/gimme-shelter-summer-is-busy-season-for-the-niagara-falls-humane-society/

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[Q] Screen resolution for android games

?

parihar40
Old

Today, 11:04 AM

Junior Member - OP

Posts: 1

Join Date: Jul 2013


Hello,

I want to know, does screen resolution really matters for playing games on android os?.

having a phone with 196ppi is enough or not?



Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2384899&goto=newpost

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

New EPA chief: Climate controls will help economy

By Dina Cappiello, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama's top environmental official wasted no time Tuesday taking on opponents of the administration's plan to crack down on global warming pollution.

In her first speech as the head of EPA, Gina McCarthy told an audience gathered at Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Mass., that curbing climate-altering pollution will spark business innovation, grow jobs and strengthen the economy.

The message was classic Obama, who has long said that the environment and the economy aren't in conflict and has sold ambitious plans to reduce greenhouse gases as a means to jumpstart a clean energy economy.

McCarthy signaled Tuesday that she was ready for the fight, saying that the agency would continue issuing new rules, regardless of claims by Republicans and industry groups that under Obama the EPA has been the most aggressive and overreaching since it was formed more than 40 years ago.

"Can we stop talking about environmental regulations killing jobs? Please, at least for today," said McCarthy, referring to one of the favorite talking points of Republicans and industry groups.

"Let's talk about this as an opportunity of a lifetime, because there are too many lifetimes at stake," she said of efforts to address global warming.

In Obama's first four years, the EPA has issued the first-ever limits on toxic mercury pollution from power plants, regulated greenhouse gases for the first time, and updated a host of air pollution health standards.

McCarthy acknowledged the agency had been the most productive in its history. But she said Tuesday that "we are not just about rules and regulations, we are about getting environmental improvement."

But improvement, she said, could be made "everywhere."

That optimistic vision runs counter to claims by Republican lawmakers and some industry groups that more rules will kill jobs and fossil fuel industries. The EPA under Obama has already put in place or proposed new rules to reduce carbon pollution from cars and trucks, large smokestacks, and new power plants ? regulations that McCarthy helped to draft as head of the air pollution office. Next on its agenda is the nation's existing fleet of coal-fired power plants, the largest single source of carbon dioxide left. Obama in a June speech gave the agency until June 2014 to draft those regulations.

"It is not supposed to be easy. It is supposed to be hard," McCarthy said of the road ahead. "I don't think it is my job out of the gate to know what the path forward is. It is my obligation to let those voices be heard and listen to them."

A panel in the Republican-controlled House recently signed off on a plan to cut the agency's budget by a third and attached a series of measures that McCarthy said "do everything but say the EPA can't do anything."

Yet, last week, in a victory, a federal court dismissed challenges brought by Texas and power companies to EPA's plans to regulate the largest sources of heat-trapping gases.

"Climate change will not be resolved overnight," she added. "But it will be engaged over the next three years ? that I can promise you."?

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

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2f5aeaa7/sc/11/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C30A0C197788810Enew0Eepa0Echief0Eclimate0Econtrols0Ewill0Ehelp0Eeconomy0Dlite/story01.htm

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Bradley Manning Guilty on Most Charges, But Not Aiding Enemy

Bradley Manning, the source of one of WikiLeak's largest disclosures of U.S. secrets, was found guilty of most of the charges against him today, but not the most serious charge of aiding the enemy.

Manning had already pleaded guilty to 10 of the less serious of the 21 charges in a deal that got him an expected 20 years in prison. Today a military judge announced the court's finding on the rest of the charges, a majority of them guilty verdicts, for espionage, theft and fraud. However, Manning managed to avoid the charge of aiding the enemy, which could have carried with it a life sentence.

Despite that finding, Manning could still face 136 years in prison for the other convictions, according to a legal expert briefing reports on the scene. The sentencing phase of Manning's trial begins Wednesday.

LIVE UPDATES: Bradley Manning Verdict

With his dress sleeves drooping well below his wrist line, almost to his fingertips, Manning stood rigid as military judge Col. Denise Lind briskly read the verdicts. More than two dozen spectators took seats in the courtroom, many of them Manning supporters who wore black t-shirts that read, simply, "truth." They remained silent throughout the proceeding, which lasted mere minutes.

When Manning first entered the courtroom, he appeared relaxed, but as the hour of his verdict drew near, he became more pensive, silently taking his seat.

Following the hearing, Manning's family released a statement to The Guardian newspaper, saying they are "obviously disappointed in today's verdicts, [but] are happy that Judge Lind agreed with us that Brad never intended to help America's enemies in any way."

"Brad loves his country and was proud to wear its uniform," the family said, according to The Guardian.

WikiLeaks tweeted that the verdict today was an example of "dangerous national security extremism from the Obama administration."

The court martial began three years after Manning, now 25, was first detained in Iraq for suspicion of having leaked the video of a 2007 Apache helicopter attack that killed several Iraqi civilians. He was subsequently charged in relation to the November 2010 leak of the nearly three-quarter million classified or confidential documents. The release of the documents has been described as the most extensive leak of classified information in U.S. history.

READ: WikiLeaks Releases Confidential Diplomatic Cables

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has said that Manning was a "hero" for doing what he did. Prosecutors called him an anarchist and traitor.

As part of his earlier partial guilty plea, Manning read a 35-page statement in which he explained his motivations in releasing the classified documents. Manning said he had wanted "to spark a debate about foreign policy" and show "the true cost of war." Manning was originally charged with 22 counts, but a judge dismissed one count in May.

Manning did not testify during the nearly two-month court martial.

Army prosecutors argued that Manning showed "general evil intent" in aiding the enemy. They argued that given his intelligence training he knew that leaking classified information to the Internet would end up in the hands of al Qaeda.

Prosecutors provided evidence that some of the military battlefield reports had been found on a computer belonging to Osama bin Laden that had been seized during the U.S. military raid that killed the al Qaeda leader in May 2011.

READ: WikiLeaks Suspect Bradley Manning Chokes Up at Hearing

Prosecutors presented detailed computer forensics of Manning's computer activity during his deployment to Iraq in late 2009 to mid-2010. They said the evidence showed that within weeks of his arrival in Baghdad, Manning had begun searching classified military computer networks for materials that were of interest to WikiLeaks.

Manning's attorneys said Manning did not begin leaking information until February 2010. They described Manning's doubts about his military service following a Christmas Eve incident where an Iraqi family was injured by a roadside blast that had targeted soldiers from his unit.

"He couldn't forget the lives lost that day," said defense attorney David Coombs during opening arguments. He portrayed Manning as a young, naive soldier who decided to release the classified documents he had access to "because he thought he could make the world a better place."

In their closing arguments prosecutors dismissed those claims. "He was not a humanist, he was a hacker," said Maj. Ashden Fein.

Fein said the only naivete Manning displayed during the time he was sending classified documents to WikiLeaks was that "he actually thought he would get away with what he did and wouldn't get caught."

Fein was equally dismissive of the support Manning has received from civil liberties and anti-secrecy advocates who consider him a whistleblower.

"He was not a whistleblower, he was a traitor," said Fein as he concluded his lengthy closing arguments last Thursday.

Now being held at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Manning's initial detention at the Marine brig at Quantico, Va., became the subject of controversy after jailers deemed him a suicide risk.

Manning was forced to remain in solitary confinement for up to 23 hours a day and on a few occasions he was required to remain naked. His attorneys said the treatment merited dismissing the case against him because it amounted to cruel and unlawful punishment.

After a lengthy pre-trial hearing late last year, judge Lind found there was validity to some of the allegations and reduced any potential prison sentence by 112 days.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bradley-manning-guilty-most-charges-not-aiding-enemy-183603163--abc-news-topstories.html

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Pulsating star sheds light on exoplanet

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Astronomers have devised a way to measure the internal properties of stars ?- a method that offers more accurate assessments of their orbiting planets.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/XgZdLiDPG6k/130729161520.htm

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Live.Laugh.L0ve.: Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Hey friends. I hope your weekend was good and that your week has started off with a bang! One thing that is getting me through the waiting game about my back {besides my husband, kids & family of course} is crafting. For awhile now, I have been wanting to add more crafts to this little space of mine and I finally started taking the leap. I adore crafts and making over furniture and rooms and I miss doing that and sharing those things on the blog. So, you could consider today a little start to doing just that! A couple of weeks ago I ordered some Persnickety Prints. When I got them in the mail, I was SO happy with them and I really wanted to do something fun with them. I have two things in mind, this is part 1 of my persnickety prints crafts!
Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

I have seen pictures hung on walls in so many different ways and I really wanted to do something different. I have always liked different, it's just part of who I am and I just kept looking at them and looking at my house and my small amount of craft supplies and BAM it hit me. I wanted to "hang" them but, not in a traditional way. Insert this tutorial.


Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

You will need:

Your prints

A needle

String

Scissors

Tape


Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Step 1 - Poke a hole in the top of your pictures in the center {or at least near the center}.


Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Step 2. Stick a small piece of whatever string you want {I went with white} through the small hole and tie a double knot.


Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Step 3. Cut enough small pieces of a tape of all of your pictures & begin hanging them on your wall in whatever shape you wish. I wasn't 100% sure I wanted to do this V shape but, it worked out perfect. Hang them all up and wa-la. You now have pictures "hanging" on your wall. :)


Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

Live.Laugh.L0ve. // Persnickety Prints Craft - Part 1

I can't wait to show you what I am doing with the rest of my prints! :)?

p.s. the little heart you see in these pictures is covering up my ugly light switch that I have yet to put the cover back on yet! Ha, you can see the other uncovered one right around the corner, yikes! I should really do that shouldn't I? ;)


This months in-post ad
------------------------------

Source: http://www.livelaughl0veblog.com/2013/07/persnickety-prints-craft-part-1.html

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Detachment - Aeon Magazine

We drove to the orphanage on a pleasant December morning, under a sky that seemed too blue. It was a short ride through a residential neighbourhood of Bucharest, littered with posters of politicians? heads for the upcoming elections. Nervous, I mentally recited the two rules the American professor had given me the night before: no picking up the kids, and no crying in front of them.

We pulled up to a dingy pink building, lined on all sides by tall wire fencing, and parked at the curb. After passing through the checkpoint of a stoic security guard, we stepped into an empty hallway. It was cleaner than I had expected; old plaster walls and chipped steps, yes, but no obvious filth. There was an overpowering smell of institutional food, like burned meatloaf.

Over the next hour or so, the manager of the place ? a short and affable 24-year-old guy ? gave us a tour. He didn?t speak much English, but Florin ?ibu, a Romanian who works with the professor, translated for us. About 50 children and teenagers lived there, boys and girls ranging in age from about six to 18, and I saw just six adults: our tour guide, three female caregivers, and two cleaning ladies in white coats. The children weren?t in school because of the big holiday: Romania?s National Day, a celebration of the country?s unification in 1918. Perhaps a typical day wouldn?t have been so chaotic. Then again, ?ibu said, the kids always flock to new visitors.

And flock they did. A boy in a red T-shirt and sweats skipped up to me, grabbed my hand, and wouldn?t let go. His head didn?t reach my shoulders, so I figured he was eight or nine years old. He was 13, ?ibu said. The boy kept looking up at me with an open, sweet face, but I found it difficult to return his gaze. Like most of the other kids, he had crossed eyes ? strabismus, the professor would explain later, a common symptom of children raised in institutions, possibly because as infants they had nothing to focus their eyes on. A couple of dozen kids gathered around us in a tight circle, chirping and giggling loudly as children do. At one point they broke into a laughing fit, and I asked ?ibu what happened. They were gawking at the whiteness of my teeth, he said. Two of the girls, somewhere in that gaggle, were pregnant.

We saw the kids? bedrooms. Each had half a dozen mattresses lying on the floor and one television set. All the TVs were blaring old cartoons, some of the same ones I remember watching in my own childhood 25 years ago. Kid after kid dragged me proudly to see their room. Once, we walked in on a cleaning lady frantically sweeping, embarrassed by the cigarette butts, grey dirt, and insect carcasses all over the floor. One of the rooms held three or four older boys, still sleeping. They were heroin addicts, I would learn, and sometimes shot up in front of the younger children.

After about half an hour of holding the sweet boy?s hand, I suddenly, urgently, needed to let go. I wriggled my fingers free, only to have him clutch them again.

St Catherine?s, a sprawling complex of late 19th-century stone buildings and desolate courtyards that was once the largest orphanage in Bucharest. Photo courtesy Dr Charles Nelson St Catherine?s was once the largest orphanage in Bucharest. Photo courtesy Dr Charles Nelson

We Americans drove back to St Catherine?s, a sprawling complex of late 19th-century stone buildings and desolate courtyards that was once the largest orphanage in Bucharest. Today, it?s mostly office space, with rooms along one long hallway occupied by the professor?s team. We sat in one of them to talk about the morning visit.

The professor is Charles Nelson, a neuroscientist from Harvard University who studies early brain development. In 1999, he and several other American scientists launched the Bucharest Early Intervention Project, a now-famous study of Romanian children who were mostly ?social orphans?, meaning that their biological parents had given them over to the state?s care. At the time, despite an international outcry over Romania?s orphan problem, many Romanian officials staunchly believed that the behavioural problems of institutionalised children were innate ? the reason their parents had left them there, rather than the result of institutional life. And because of these inherent deficiencies, the children would fare better in orphanages than families.

The scientists pitched their study as a way to find out for sure. They enrolled 136 institutionalised children, placed half of them in foster care, and tracked the physical, psychological, and neurological development of both groups for many years. They found, predictably, that kids are much better off in foster care than in orphanages.

Nelson has visited Bucharest 30 to 40 times since his first trip in 1999. Some things have changed: in 2007, Romania joined the European Union (EU). It has greatly expanded its state-funded foster-care system. The number of children in institutions ? or ?placement centres?, to use the preferred bureaucratic euphemism ? has dropped dramatically. But other things haven?t changed. Romania is still a post-communist country suffering from high levels of poverty and corruption. It still has a weak medical and scientific infrastructure. It still has some 9,000 children ? more than half of all the children in its child protection system ? living in orphanages, like the boy who took my hand.

Nelson had warned me several times about the emotional toll of meeting these children. So I was surprised, during our debrief, to hear him say that our visit had upset him. Turns out it was the first time that he had been to an orphanage with older teenagers, not all that much younger than his own son. ?I?m used to being really distressed when I see all the little babies, or the three- and four-year-olds,? he said. ?But here, I almost had to leave at one point, to get myself some air. Just the thought of these kids living like this, it was really depressing.?

How does he do this? I wondered.

Nelson never expected to be an advocate for orphans, or for anybody really: he?s a neuroscientist. In 1986, he launched his first laboratory at the University of Minnesota, which specialised in using electroencephalography (EEG) ? a harmless technique for measuring brain waves via a soft skullcap of electrodes ? on babies and toddlers.

His field of developmental neuroscience got a surge of attention in April 1997, when Bill and Hillary Clinton put on a one-day meeting of researchers called ?The White House Conference on Early Childhood Development and Learning: What New Research on the Brain Tells Us About Our Youngest Children?. The First Lady gave the gist of the meeting in her opening remarks: the first three years of life, she said, ?can determine whether children will grow up to be peaceful or violent citizens, focused or undisciplined workers, attentive or detached parents themselves?.

The conference was covered widely in the media. In the wake of all the hoopla, the Chicago-based John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation asked Nelson to lead a small group of scientists to dive more deeply into these topics. The resulting Research Network on Early Experience and Brain Development, fully launched in 1998, included 12 researchers who shared a plush budget of about $1.3 million a year. Nelson held the purse strings.

The Network?s first studies used animals: baby mice that were either frequently or infrequently handled by their human caretakers; baby barn owls whose brain wiring changed dramatically after wearing prisms over their eyes; and most striking, baby rhesus macaque monkeys that had been separated from their mothers.

Researchers had isolated monkeys before. In the 1960s, the American psychologist Harry Harlow famously reared baby monkeys in complete isolation for up to two years. The animals showed severe and permanent social deficits, bolstering the then-controversial idea that the maternal-child bond is crucial to healthy development. The Network scientists wanted to know whether the timing of the maternal separation made any difference.

Monkeys typically become independent around six months old. The Network studies found that when monkeys are separated very early, at just a week old, they develop severe symptoms of social withdrawal, just as Harlow had observed: rocking back and forth, hitting and biting themselves, and running away from any approaching monkey. In contrast, when the babies are separated at one month old, they show inappropriate attachment, grabbing hold of any nearby monkey. ?We concluded from this that the four-week animal had an attachment with mom and then had that attachment ripped away,? Nelson says ?The one-week animal never formed an attachment, so it didn?t know how to relate socially.?

Children were getting adequate food, hygiene and medical care, but had woefully few interactions with adults, leading to severe behavioural and emotional problems

As the monkey data rolled in, Nelson was hearing about human social deprivation from his Minnesota colleague Dana Johnson, a neonatologist who had long worked on international adoptions. Johnson treated orphans from all over the world, but was most disturbed by those from Romania.

Nelson invited Johnson to talk at a Network meeting in January of 1998. In a conference room of the Claremont Hotel in Oakland, California, Johnson switched off the lights and played the Network scientists a few disturbing movies of children in Romanian orphanages. Some kids were rocking and flailing and socially withdrawn; others were clingy. ?We were all very teary-eyed,? Nelson recalls.

Dr Charles ?Chuck? Nelson photographed outside the St Catherine?s orphanage in Romania. Photo by Ginny Hughes Dr Charles ?Chuck? Nelson photographed outside the St Catherine?s orphanage in Romania. Photo courtesy Dr Charles Nelson

Immediately following Johnson?s presentation, Judy Cameron, leader of the monkey project, gave the group an update of her findings. ?She starts showing videos of these monkeys, and they look just like the videos of Dana?s kids,? Nelson told me. ?It really freaked us all out.?

Romania has had orphanages for centuries. But its orphan crisis began in 1965, when the communist Nicolae Ceau?escu took over as the country?s leader. Over the course of his 24-year rule, Ceau?escu deliberately cultivated the orphan population in hopes of creating loyalty to ? and dependency on ? the state. In 1966, he made abortion illegal for the vast majority of women. He later imposed taxes on families with fewer than five children and even sent out medically trained government agents ? ?The Menstrual Police? ? to examine women who weren?t producing their quota. But Ceau?escu?s draconian economic policies meant that most families were too poor to support multiple children. So, without other options, thousands of parents left their babies in government-run orphanages.

By Christmas day in 1989, when revolutionaries executed Ceau?escu and his wife by firing squad, an estimated 170,000 children were living in more than 700 state orphanages. As the regime crumbled, journalists and humanitarians swept in. In most institutions, children were getting adequate food, hygiene and medical care, but had woefully few interactions with adults, leading to severe behavioural and emotional problems. A handful of orphanages were utterly abhorrent, depriving children of their basic needs. Soon photos of dirty, handicapped orphans lying in their own excrement were showing up in newspapers across the world. ?I was very taken with the kids in orphanages,? Johnson says. Their condition ?was a stunning contrast to most of the kids we were seeing come for international adoption who had been raised in foster homes?.

In his presentation, Johnson had mentioned that the head of Romania?s newly formed Department for Child Protection, Cristian Tabacaru, was keen on closing down his country?s institutions. After seeing the movies, Network scientist Charles Zeanah, a child psychiatrist from Tulane University who specialised in infant-parent relationships, was gung-ho about meeting Tabacaru and setting up a humanitarian project.

Nelson was touched by the videos, too. And he couldn?t help but think of the scientific possibilities of studying these children. ?The animal model could allow us to dig into brain biology and all of that but, at the same time, we?d be running a parallel human study.?

Eleven months after that emotional hotel meeting, Zeanah and his wife, a nurse and clinical psychologist, travelled to Romania and saw the orphans for themselves. During their first orphanage visit, the couple couldn?t help but start bawling in front of the kids. One child reached out to comfort them, saying: ?It?s OK, it?s OK?.

The Zeanahs also met with Tabacaru. He was eager to work with the MacArthur group because he thought that a rigorous scientific study could help his cause. ?If there was scientific evidence to support the idea that foster care was better for kids, he thought he?d have more leverage with his political colleagues,? Nelson told me. The data, in other words, could speak for the children.

Two days before our visit to the orphanage, I accompanied Nelson to a homely green building that houses the psychology department of the University of Bucharest, where he holds an honorary doctorate. He had been invited by the Dean to give a talk on the ethics of human research.

All reputable scientific institutions follow a few ethical principles to guide their human experiments: participants must give informed and unambiguous consent; researchers must thoroughly consider possible risks and benefits; the gains and burdens of research must be equally distributed to participants and society at large. These rules are largely unheard of in Romania, let alone enforced.

In a packed auditorium, Nelson began his lecture by describing the fundamental moral dilemma facing all clinical studies. ?The real goal of research is to generate useful knowledge about health and illness, not necessarily to benefit those who participate in the research,? he said. That means, he added, that participants are at risk of being exploited.

Nelson outlined the sad history of human rights violations done in the name of science. There was Josef Mengele, the Nazi physician who performed medical experiments ? radiating, sterilising, infecting, and freezing identical twins, among other atrocities ? on Auschwitz prisoners. Mengele escaped capture after the war, but 20 other Nazi doctors were tried in a US military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany. The judges at these trials created a list of 10 ethical tenets for human research, known as the Nuremberg Code. These included voluntary consent, avoidance of suffering, and the right of the subject to end the experiment at any time.

The Nuremberg Code provided the intellectual basis for the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki, the first ethics text created by the medical community and one that?s still updated frequently. It?s not legally binding, but thousands of research institutions use the declaration to guide their formal regulations and ethical review committees.

Could there be a more vulnerable study population, after all, than orphans with physical and psychological disabilities living in an economically feeble and politically unstable country

Today the importance of these rules is obvious, but it was decades before they were systematically enforced ? and many ethically dubious experiments happened in the interim. In the 1950s and ?60s, for example, researchers from New York University fed mixtures of fecal matter infected with hepatitis to mentally retarded children living at the Willowbrook State School in Staten Island. The researchers? intent, as they would publish in the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine in 1958 and ?59, was to track the course of the disease and the effect of new antibody treatments. (The researchers argued that since hepatitis was rampant in the institution anyway, they weren?t exposing the children to any additional harm.)

Meanwhile, 1,000 miles south, other researchers were testing the natural history of untreated syphilis on hundreds of poor black men in Tuskegee, Alabama. The men were not only denied treatment for the disease, but had no idea they were sick. In 1972, the study?s 40th year, a whistle-blower scientist finally told the press about the effort, which had been sanctioned by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Tuskegee syphilis experiment triggered a public uproar and a US Congressional investigation that ultimately shut down the research. ?It became the standard bearer of unethical research,? Nelson told the room of Romanian students.

These were the ugly precedents confronting Nelson and his colleagues in 1999, when they began discussions of how to set up the early intervention project in Bucharest. They knew from the outset that the project would be ethically precarious: could there be a more vulnerable study population, after all, than orphans with physical and psychological disabilities living in an economically feeble and politically unstable country? As the bioethicist Stuart Rennie later wrote of the Romanian orphans: ?Researchers who choose them as study participants ? in this age of intensified ethical scrutiny ? would seem to have a career death-wish.?

The MacArthur Network scientists spent the better part of a year hammering out the ethical parameters and experimental design of the project. They wanted to use the gold standard of clinical research design: a randomised controlled trial. This would allow them to objectively compare children given one intervention (foster care) with those given another (institutional care). For most randomised controlled trials, if one intervention proves to be better toward the beginning of the trial, researchers will call off the study and put all participants on that treatment.

But that wouldn?t be an option for this study. The problem was that, with a few exceptions, foster care didn?t exist in Romania. That meant the scientists would have to create their own system, leading to a slew of sticky complications. How would they choose families and adequately train them? What was appropriate payment? What if a particular foster-care family was abusive, or otherwise didn?t work out? Was it fair to leave half of the children languishing in orphanages? What would happen to the children if the study (and its funding) ended?

The team answered these questions with the help of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in Romania that specialised in orphan care. They would recruit foster families through newspaper advertisements and put them through a rigorous training programme for parenting skills. They would pay the families well ? 250 Romanian Lei per month (about $96 at the time), which was almost twice the minimum wage in Romania. And after that initial placement, the Department for Child Protection would be in charge of the children?s whereabouts, just as they were before. So, for example, if a biological mother came forward and wanted her child back, the department could opt to ?reintegrate? the child. Or if more foster homes were to become available, then the department could move children from the institutions into families. And if the project were to stop for any reason, the Romanian government had agreed to take over the payment of the foster-care families.

Three of the MacArthur scientists ? Nelson, Zeanah, and the psychologist Nathan Fox of the University of Maryland ? stepped up as leaders of the project. After getting approval from ethics committees at each of their universities, the study launched a feasibility phase in November of 2000, and officially began collecting data in April 2001. The plan was to end the study after 42 months.

The researchers set up a satellite lab in St Catherine?s, which at the time was still operating as a placement centre for about 500 children. The researchers hired half a dozen Romanians to follow the participants? personal cases and collect data ? on physical growth, IQ, psychological development, and later, EEG and brain scans ? every few months.

These Romanian researchers, many of whom are still part of the project, were intimately familiar with their country?s orphan problem. Take Anca Radulescu, who is now the project?s manager in Bucharest and the team?s mother hen. Radulescu was born in 1968, two years after Ceau?escu?s abortion ban, Decree 770. People born around this time are known as Decre?ei: children of the decree. As a young girl, Radulescu remembers, her mother told her that despite her birth year, she was not one of the Decre?ei ? she was wanted.

In 1997 Radulescu had begun working at St Catherine?s as a psychologist. She was hired thanks to new legislation ? passed because Romania was trying to get into the EU ? that moved the administration of orphans from the Ministry of Health to the newly created Department for Child Protection. The law marked the beginning of a philosophical change in the government?s treatment of orphans, with a new focus on nurture over nature.

The transition was ?a nightmare?, Radulescu says, because of the doctors who managed the institutions. They were dismissive of psychology and social work, both of which had been banned during Ceau?escu?s reign, and believed that the orphans? problems were medical. They gave the children a physical exam nearly every day, and prescribed them sedatives at night. Meanwhile, the children weren?t getting the social interaction they desperately needed. They lived in units of 40 or 50 kids, each with about six adult caretakers who were kept busy preparing food and doing laundry. The kids were left in big rooms to play by themselves.

In late 2000, Radulescu started working for the brand-new Bucharest Early Intervention Project, in offices just a few corridors away from those residential units. She and the rest of the team, working closely with Romanian NGOs, used newspaper advertisements to find foster-care families and never-institutionalised children (who would serve as community controls). The team screened 187 orphans from six Bucharest institutions, eventually choosing 136 who did not have major medical problems. The children ranged from six to 31 months old. They were randomly assigned to either foster care or the orphanage, with siblings kept together. In the end, 69 children went into foster care and 67 stayed in institutions.

For its first couple of years, the Bucharest project rolled along smoothly and quietly. This was remarkable given the constant political turnovers (including one in which Tabacaru, the researchers? government ally, was booted out).

Then, in June of 2002, a crisis. The Bucharest lab had an unannounced, and unwelcome, visitor: Baroness Emma Nicholson.

The children who grew up in institutions have less white matter, the tissue that links up different brain regions, compared with those in foster care

Nicholson, hailing from the village of Winterbourne in England, was a member of the European Parliament and had been appointed to represent Romania?s application into the EU. This made her a powerful figure in Romania, which had been trying to join the EU since 1993. She also happened to be an outspoken opponent of international adoptions, which she felt were avenues for child trafficking. Thanks to her influence, in 2001 Romania placed a moratorium on international adoptions.

After Nicholson?s visit to the lab, she was quoted in several Romanian newspapers making damning accusations against the Bucharest project. ?She goes to the press and says that we?re doing a study, using high-tech American measures, to identify the smartest orphans so we can sell them on the black market,? Nelson told me one night, practically sputtering.

Nicholson would deny that she ever accused the scientists of trafficking, but she continued to describe the MacArthur project as illegal and unethical. Although the claims were patently false, and no formal charges were ever made, the story was quickly picked up by international newspapers, including Le Monde and The New York Times.

The scandal died down quickly after Nelson called Michael Guest, then US ambassador to Romania, who ran interference with the Romanian government. But the team learnt an important lesson about their public profile. ?We never, ever took a position on international adoptions ? it would have been suicide,? Nelson said. ?We took the model of, look, we?re scientists. Our job is to collect the data and give it to others who know how to do policy, not to take sides on an issue.?

The BEIP project stayed under the radar until 8 June 2004, when Nelson?s team held a press conference to announce some exciting data. In the Hilton Hotel in Bucharest, with representatives from several Romanian ministries and the US ambassador in attendance, the researchers reported that, as expected, the 136 children who started in institutions tended to have diminished growth and intellectual ability compared with controls who had never lived outside of a family. But there was a surprising silver lining. Children who had been placed in foster care before the age of two years showed significant gains in IQ, motor skills, and psychological development compared with those who stayed in the orphanages.

The scientists published these findings in 2007, in the prestigious journal Science. That paper is the most famous to come out of project, but it?s just one of nearly 60. Others have shown, for example, that toddlers who never left institutions have more repetitive behaviours than those who went into foster care. Long-institutionalised toddlers also show different EEG brainwave patterns when looking at emotional faces.

As the children got older, the researchers gave them brain scans (renting out time with a private clinic?s MRI machine, one of only a handful in the country). These scans showed that, at around the age of eight, the children who grew up in institutions have less white matter, the tissue that links up different brain regions, compared with those in foster care. The researchers looked at the children?s genomes, too, and found that those who lived the longest in orphanages tend to have the shortest telomeres, the caps on the end of chromosomes that are related to lifespan.

The project is now funded not only by the MacArthur Foundation, but by grants from the US National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Binder Family Foundation. After 14 years, the Bucharest project is well-known and well-respected in the scientific community. At first, though, many scientists had concerns about its ethical design.

For example, when the researchers first submitted their data to Science, the journal?s editor didn?t know what to make of its ethics. So she sent it to bioethicists at the NIH for a thorough review. ?Even if you study ethics all the time, it turns out this is a very interesting ethical case,? said Joseph Millum, one of the NIH bioethicists who reviewed it. As Millum and his colleague Ezekiel Emanuel would explain in a commentary published in the same issue of Science, they did not find the work to be exploitative or unethical.

The Bucharest project study differs from most randomised control trials done in disadvantaged countries, Millum explained. Those tend to be studies of a new treatment ? an antiretroviral drug to treat HIV in Africans, say. It?s ethical to put people through those trials because the researchers don?t know from the outset whether the drug will work. ?The hope is that the new knowledge you get out of the study is then going to be useful in informing practice,? Millum said.

However, in the Bucharest project?s case, the researchers already knew from a multitude of studies in Western countries that foster care is better for children than institutionalised care ? that?s why Western countries have so few institutions. So although the study could potentially answer lots of new, open questions, the one that justified its existence had already been answered.

Still, that older research had not influenced Romanian social policy; many government officials did not trust the idea of foster parents, and believed that institutions provided adequate care. That, plus the fact that the project had close connections with the government, lent credence to the argument that the study could change policy, Millum explained. ?The answers to the question the study asked could have changed practice.?

But realistically, how likely was it that the study would change anything? And once the study was over, were the scientists supposed to then become advocates for those policy changes?

It?s complicated, Millum said. ?People have different views about whether there is an obligation to provide successful interventions after a study is complete.? If a medical study is taking place in Western Europe, for example, where there is a relatively robust health care system, then those health institutions will probably be the ones integrating the new data into policy, he says. But in an African country, for example, with no health care to speak of, the researchers might share more of the burden.

These are not easy waters to navigate. And there are limits, of course, to what even the most motivated scientists can do. ?The idea that there is a single experiment that leads to a breakthrough, and then we solve the problem is, sadly, naive,? Millum said. ?They can?t control what happens in Romania.?

In late May this year, exactly six months after my Bucharest trip, I had lunch with Nelson in Boston to catch up. I asked him whether he thought Romania?s orphan situation had changed much since he first learnt about it 14 years ago. After all, I pointed out, some of Romania?s most destructive policies regarding orphans are still in place. The international adoption moratorium was made permanent in 2005. Domestic adoption exists, but comes with onerous regulations. A taxi driver in Bucharest told me a story about friends of his, native Romanians, who have been trying to adopt a Romanian orphan for years. The regulations seem ridiculous; for example, children can?t be adopted until the state has attempted to make contact with all of their fourth-degree relatives.

?There are two things that have changed,? Nelson said: one good and one bad.

The good: Romania has seen a significant drop in the rate of child abandonment and institutionalisation. On 23 June 2004, 15 days after the Bucharest project?s first big press conference, Romania passed Law 272/2004, stating that children younger than two are not allowed to be placed into residential facilities. The law has loopholes ? children with severe handicaps can still be institutionalised, and young babies can still be left in maternity hospitals for their first few years ? but it signifies a major change in attitude, and seems to have reduced the overall number of institutionalised children.

It?s impossible to know how much credit the Bucharest project deserves for that law. The project was by then well known among Romanian officials. But there was another powerful force at work: Romania badly wanted to get into the EU, and the EU (thanks in large part to Baroness Nicholson) had demanded that Romania deal with its orphan problem. The Bucharest project data and the EU pressure were ?like a perfect storm?, Nelson said.

The more depressing change that Nelson has noticed since 1999 is the global recession, which hit eastern Europe hard. A study last year by the European Commission found that Romania still has the continent?s highest rate of babies abandoned in maternity hospitals per year, at 8.6 per 1,000 live births. ?Since the recession hit, Romania has cut back on foster care,? Nelson said, ?and parents with kids in foster care are putting the kids back in institutions.?

For all that they hope to change in Romania?s social policy, the researchers are more immediately concerned with the children in their study. These kids have known some of these researchers for as long as they can remember. Relationships have formed.

Of the original 136 children the researchers recruited from institutions, 62 are now living with foster or adopted families, 31 were reintegrated with their biological parents, and just 17 are still living in institutions (of the rest, 10 live in ?social apartments?, which are similar to group homes, and 16 dropped out of the study). All evidence suggests that these kids are no worse off today than they would have been had the study never existed. But that doesn?t mean they?re doing well.

In the Bucharest lab, I met a 12-year-old project participant named Simona and her biological mother. Simona was the youngest of four children; when she was eight months old, her mother could no longer afford to keep her. So she dropped her off at St Catherine?s, where her older sister, an epileptic, had already been living for several years. Simona?s mother told me how difficult it was to give up her babies. She visited them every week, and was sad to see that they were often sick with a cold or a rash. When Simona was five years old, her mother was receiving enough financial assistance from the government to bring her back home. But those years in the institution took a toll: Simona has a sweet disposition, like her mother, but she?s very thin, and her IQ is 70.

I next met 13-year-old Raluca, a strikingly pretty girl who went into foster care at 21 months old and has lived with the same family ever since. Raluca is stylish and intellectually sharp; her big eyes, unlike Simona?s, made frequent contact with mine. At first, I thought of Raluca as one of the lucky ones; she escaped the hell of the orphanage. But she has different problems. She?s defiant to her teachers and parents, and has started smoking and seeing older boys. Her foster mother has threatened to give her up.

These two girls are doing relatively well. The Bucharest project?s staff is dealing with a handful of participants in more dire situations. While sitting in on a lab meeting, I heard a few examples: a girl who at age 10 was sexually attacked by her neighbour; a Roma girl who, at age 12, was returned to an orphanage because her foster-care mother said she was stealing, lying, and ?had a gipsy smell?; another 12-year-old girl who was reintegrated with her grandparents and then, with their blessing, married a 12-year-old boy. The scientists worry that these sorts of horror stories will become more common as the children ride the rollercoaster of adolescence.

And then there are the 17 participants who still live in orphanages. They?re slightly better off than the average institutionalised child, in that they get regular medical assessments and constant check-ins from the researchers. After doing a brain scan of one boy, for example, the researchers discovered a nasty infection hidden in the space behind his ear. These mastoid infections can be fatal, but the boy was fine after a round of antibiotics.

?Well, you couldn?t do what I do if you got upset all the time.?

Still, institutional life is undeniably miserable. During my visit to the orphanage, I chatted with a 14-year-old Bucharest project participant named Monica. Monica was abandoned at birth and spent her first four months in two different maternity hospitals. She?s been in orphanages ever since, moving every few years. She has a normal IQ, which means she?s far more resilient than others with her history. She was shy when we talked, and didn?t make much eye contact, but otherwise seemed like a normal girl.

In the placement centre as part of the Bucharest project, April 2013. Monica (14) is to the far left. Photo by Chuck Nelson In the placement centre as part of the Bucharest project, April 2013. Monica (14) is to the far left. Photo courtesy Dr Charles Nelson

I asked Monica what she thought was the worst thing about living in the placement centre. She said it was the older boys who take drugs.

And what about the best thing? I asked. She paused for about half a minute, looking down at her purple Crocs. The times we get to leave for a little while, when we can take the bus to the park, she said.

When Nelson?s team first set up the Bucharest Early Intervention Project, the MacArthur Foundation gave them a separate pot of money to create a humanitarian institute in Bucharest. The goal of the so-called Institute of Child Development was to work with local officials and non-profits on orphan issues, as well as to train a new generation of Romanian researchers. The institute has put on several scientific and policy workshops, inviting hundreds of researchers from across the world. The last of these will probably take place in November. Then in December 2013, the MacArthur funding runs out, and it?s unclear whether the institute will continue under local direction.

?We?re limited in our resources,? says Elizabeth Furtado, who has been the Bucharest project?s manager since 2006 and visits the Bucharest lab about twice a year. Furtado has a four-year-old son. She copes with the job by compartmentalising; for example, she has very intentionally not read the full life histories of any of the participants. But sometimes the pain is unavoidable. She was with Nelson and me the day we visited the orphanage ? her first time in an institution since becoming a mother. ?It took me almost a month after coming back to get to a [point] where I could kind of let it go and focus on my relationship with my son,? she told me.

The last two years on the project have been somewhat defeating, Furtado says, because the adolescents? behaviours are becoming more difficult to manage, and the foster-care parents are getting less and less support ? financial, educational, emotional ? from the government. ?On the one hand, I know that we are doing a lot of good for a lot of these kids,? she says. ?But it makes me sad that legislation isn?t keeping up with enough of what we?re finding.?

Nelson, too, has felt his share of emotional tension over this project, though he tends to downplay it (he often refers to being sad, for example, as having an ?activated amygdala?). Like the Zeanahs, he wept on his first visit to St Catherine?s, in 1999, where he saw a room full of babies lying in cribs and staring at white ceilings while their adult caretakers chatted and smoked cigarettes in the corner. He remembers staring out the plane window for most of the long flight back. When he arrived at his house, he rushed to hug his bewildered teenage son. ?You just feel grateful,? he told me at our recent lunch.

Over time, though, Nelson has become desensitised, holding on to the idea that scientific data will eventually pave the road for better social policy.

This June, the researchers learnt that a grant they received from the NIH was renewed for another five years (a coup given recent cuts to the US federal budget). With that money, the team can track the children?s brain structures, cognitive skills, and emotional maturity from age 12 to 16 ? a period that, despite major brain reorganisation, doesn?t get much attention in policy circles. And Nelson is in the process of setting up similar child intervention projects in other parts of the world, including Brazil and Chile.

Nelson?s last trip to Bucharest was in April. Soon after he got home to Boston, his mother came to visit. She asked him how he could go over there all the time without being constantly upset. He told her, ?Well, you couldn?t do what I do if you got upset all the time.?

But how do you avoid it? I pressed. ?You just sort of learn to deal with it,? he said. ?You put on your scientist hat and detach.?

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Source: http://www.aeonmagazine.com/world-views/can-research-on-romanian-orphans-be-ethical/

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