Sunday, June 30, 2013

Status of the states on same-sex marriage

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FILE - Christian Olivera, of Newark, N.J., shouts toward the Statehouse in Trenton, N.J. on Thursday, June 27, 2013 as he and other advocates for gay marriage in New Jersey gather, saying they'll press their case in the legislature and the courts after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that invalidates parts of the federal Defense of Marriage Act. Gov. Chris Christie said he would again veto a same-sex marriage bill if it reaches his desk, and that Wednesday's U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down a ban on federal benefits for same-sex married couples will have no effect on New Jersey, one of a handful of states that allows civil unions. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)The Supreme Court issued a pair of decisions this week with major consequences for efforts to legalize or bar same-sex marriage. One ruling opened the way for California to become the 13th state to allow gay marriage; the other struck down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act and directed the government to recognize legally married same-sex couples.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/status-states-same-sex-marriage-215635329.html

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Zaki Hasan: INTERVIEW: Director Paul Feig on The Heat, Bridesmaids, and Freaks and Geeks

As an actor, Paul Feig has appeared on shows as diverse The Facts of Life, The Drew Carey Show, and Sabrina, the Teenage Witch. As creator of the short-lived, much-loved NBC series Freaks and Geeks, he helped launch the careers of such current comedy icons as Seth Rogen, Jason Segal, and James Franco. As a director, he helped 2011's Oscar-nominated comedy smash Bridesmaids, which should have firmly put to bed the antiquated notion that women can't be funny.

I guess what I'm saying is that after this many years in the trenches, Paul Feig knows his way around the serious business of being funny. His latest project is The Heat, now in theaters, re-teaming him with Bridesmaids alum (and Oscar-nominee) Melissa McCarthy alongside Sandra Bullock. I recently had the opportunity to participate in a panel interview with the director about the film, his two stars, and other lessons he's learned from his time in the industry. Here's the transcript:

Given all of your television experiences that you've done, both as an actor and filming some great television series, how has that formed your work as a director - a feature film director??

TV is such a great proving ground. I went to USC film school, so I had film school, but I always credit TV as the ultimate film school. Because you're working in a world where you are in a very tight schedule, and also a lot of times you are not getting the script until very late in the process. I used to be very prep heavy.

I would storyboard, work all the stuff out and TV actually freed me from that made me a better comedy director because I show up and I'm ready to be in the moment because what happens is we get to the set and you start doing the scene, or say even rehearsing or whatever, and you go, like, "Oh, these funny things." You have to be able to adapt very quickly and from television I was able to do that, and so I feel like it just helps me capture the energy of a funny performance better by not being so planned out.

So, I always say a little bit of chemistry goes a long way, and in this film [Melissa] McCarthy and [Sandra] Bullock have fantastic chemistry. How did you decide on the two of them coming together? Was it always the two of them?

It was just a happy accident, weirdly. I got sent the script and was told that Sandra was interested in being in it but then there was nobody mentioned for the other role. So I started reading it, and about ten page in suddenly I had this epiphany of like, "This is Melissa!" And she and I had been trying to figure out something to do together since Bridesmaids. After that moment to me, it was just like, "There's nobody else who could play this role. This has to be the two of them."

And fortunately we were able to nail them down and because of that, you know, I'd never done a movie before where I didn't audition people together but, since they're two big movie stars, we're just so happy to get 'em. And when I was going to the first rehearsal, I remember thinking, like, "What if they don't ?have any chemistry?"

You think to yourself, "Clearly they're gonna be great together!" and you get two people together and it's like, "Oh, they're terrible." But they just hit it off like a house on fire the very first time they met. They bonded over being mothers of young kids, and then from there just their comedy sensibilities meshed and yet were different enough. They both kind of enjoyed each other, and was kind of in awe of what each other did.

As a comedy director, how beholden do you feel to the words on a page, and how much leeway are you willing to give to just let a scene play out? Because, somebody like Melissa McCarthy, at some point you probably just want to let her go and do her thing.

Yeah, I'm very beholden to the script in that we really work those scripts hard, because you need...that is your template. That is your blueprint. But then once I get to the sets, I'm not even that hardcore about it like, "We have to get those word for word," 'cause I want people to start to make it their own immediately. That's when it's funny. I feel like actors sort of reciting lines, there's an energy that you lose for comedy.

We definitely stick to what we have but then we really start loosening it up very quickly, and then that will slowly evolve, because on the set I'm coming up with ideas in the moment, I'm kind of calling them in, the actresses are having their moments. Katie Dippold, who wrote this script, she was with me the entire time.

We bring in other writers to sit with us, and what they do is they have Post-it pads, and they write jokes and they put 'em on my script -- they put 'em on my arms and everything, so I'm just sitting there getting these jokes, 'cause I like to create lightning in a bottle really is what it is. And then we cross-shoot, so we're kind of shooting both actresses at the same time, so if they surprise the other one with something the first time, we have it.

Then we just kind of go. From there sometimes it degenerates into just total anarchy, but most of the time it's pretty controlled though, because again if it gets too far afield you can't use it. But at the same time, I never wanna stop something that I think won't fit in, because sometimes we'll just figure out how to use it, and it'll be great.

Following up on that, with all the improvisation you've done, how many scenes did you have to cut out? Did you have a preset running time for it? Because comedy really depends...sometimes when you see a movie that runs over two hours you feel like there's a lot of padding...

I very much don't like movies to run over two hours. I actually still to this day feel like Bridesmaids was a little long, 'cause we were like two hours and five minutes long on that. My target is always about 1:45, and this movie's like 1:50. If something's working, I won't cut it out. I've sat through movies that are seventy minutes long and they feel like they're five hours long, and I've sat through three hours movie that feel like they go by like that.

So it's really that just needs to dictate it, but that's why we do so much test screening during all of post. I start 2-3 weeks into my director's cut doing recruited 500 people screenings 'cause then it allows me to...I'll get to a point where I'm like, "I think this works." We're trying out stuff we like, but I'm not in love with everything, so that if people don't react to something it's very easy to be like, "Okay, throw that out. Lose that."

You do your full director's cut at ten weeks, and by the time you show it to the audience, you're just like, you're in love with everything and you're just tense, and they don't laugh and you're like, "Well they don't get it!" It's like, you've gotta be brutal. We don't even settle for chuckles. We record the audience and some people will go, "Did that get a laugh?" and ?you listen, and like a few people laughed and you're like, "You know what, it's not strong enough. Let's try to top that."

We always want big laughs from the audience, and so by the time, after ten test screening over the course of several months you end up with something that you go, like, "This works." We know it may have varying levels of working with different crowds, but we know that it always works. The majority of the people are going to laugh. It's a big commercial comedy. There's a lot of money at stake for the studio so you really have to be scientific amidst the art of comedy.

A small extension of that: do you cut your own trailers, or did you cut the trailer for this film? I noticed there - and this sort of goes with that improv - there are some scenes in the film that differ from those that show up in the trailer.

Yeah, I don't cut the actual commercials. What I do is I feed them, really from the very beginning of the process, they're getting the dailies even when we're shooting, but then I always set up a thing between the editing room and with the marketing department to go like, "Here's a bunch of funny stuff we found. Here's a bunch of funny combos." I have no problem with putting stuff in the trailers and the TV spots that aren't in the movie because I know whatever we put in the movie is gonna be funnier than those jokes, and we have all these extra funny things. And I hate when I go to the movies and I feel like I've seen all the comedy already. For us it's very...it's fun to say, "Look, this is gonna be funny, here's a bunch of funny things."

And when you go to the movie, then it's this great surprise, like, "Oh, hurray, I didn't expect that." Even that scene in the trailer where she breaks the glass , and then faints, that's great for that, but in the context of the movie it didn't feel right. Like, I didn't believe that Melissa's character would faint, and it's so funny when she starts laughing, but that's an extra thing. You go, like "I know what's coming...oh, that's different, and that's funny!"

Circling back around to Bridesmaids, obviously that was a huge success in a way that I think a lot of people were surprised. Were you surprised by it?

I was surprised by the level of success it hit. You never make something thinking it's not gonna do well, but at the same time, I was kind of in my head it was like, "If we could get to $100 million I would be thrilled," 'cause then it would kind of be considered as having done well, it'll show the town that women can attract an audience. And then when it went past that, it was kind of like, "Oh!" But it was great, I was so happy.

Did that put pressure on you for your follow-up?

I put pressure on myself for that, because you don't want to backslide if you can avoid it. And I like making the bigger commercial comedies. I've seen a few directors I know have that big success, and then they immediately parlay that into their small personal film, which from an industry point-of-view is kind of like, not that exciting 'cause they go like, "What, has he only got one in him?" And I'll be honest, I've made indie films before, and while I love it, I really love making something that a lot of people are gonna see. And the fact that you make a studio film, you get a marketing machine behind you, you know you're going to get out there.

I suffered with little indie films, where...just trying to get people to care about them, and we all work too hard to not have our stuff seen, so I love it. But with this...I couldn't figure out what to do next, and it took me awhile, so when this script came it seemed like the perfect next step from Bridesmaids, 'cause it's still strong women, but it's not that same story and it's even more of a bridge between men and women, because it's creeping into the male genre but it's with these two women. So, my hope is always to just make people not care if it's men or women in a movie, they'll just go, like, "That looks funny," and guys will not be afraid of a movie with two women on the poster.

I couldn't help think about Jerry Lewis' statement recently about female comedians...

Yeah, what is Jerry doing? I love Jerry Lewis, he's one of my heroes, and it's like, "Jerry, just stop."

Sometimes when it comes out that way, it's like, "It was such a different generation." But even then there were female comics...

That's what I don't get. I mean, some of my favorite female comedy actresses, if you look at Bringing Up Baby and His Girl Friday, and all those old screwball comedies, the women are hilarious in those movies, so I don't quite know where this is coming from. It's such an antiquated...you kinda can't believe that we're still kind of having the conversation sometimes.

When Bridesmaids was coming out, it was all about "Can women be funny?" It was like, "Seriously? Is that the question?"

"With this cast you're gonna ask that question?"

Yeah, I know! Like, aren't these the funniest women you've ever seen? And I've known funny women my whole life and grew up around them and knew women who were funny actresses, and then professionally I've met a bunch, worked with a ton. So it's never...I'm always perplexed by people's perplexion at that.

Well, this sort of is a corollary to the idea that women couldn't carry a film - ?especially comedy, that you always needed a male anchor as well. Remember a couple of years ago, I forget what studio it was, one of the senior executives was very vocal about it. He wasn't going to greenlight any movies that starred a woman.

Oh, totally. I ran up against that for years and years. I mean, there's things I want to develop...I did a movie, a Christmas movie called Unaccompanied Minors, based on a Miss American Life story, about a pair of sisters, one sister gets lost. And when the script was sent to me, it was with a boy and his little sister, and I was like, "Well, can we make this like it was in the thing, and have two girls?" And it was like, "No, no, you can't." They were so, kind of like, "You can't do that," that you almost go like, "Oh, I guess you can't."

With Bridesmaids, you kind of go, like, "Why?" I'd been hearing for years you just can't have women in this stuff. And I'm like, "Why? Who says?" Women are half the population of the planet. I think they will show up to a movie with themselves in it, and so it's nice to slowly be proving that wrong. But it's still...there's still not that many movies starring women. We're the only...us and ?Aubrey Plaza in the To-Do List are kind of the only...and those are smaller movies, we're the only big studio film that's got all these women in it, and it's embarrassing.

Speaking of that struggle, in Bridesmaids you have Annie with...she tries to be independent and she has that failed bakery. And you have Sarah in this movie, who can be seen as abrasive because she's ambitious, and she has that failed marriage. Is that meant to be a commentary on sort of that struggle in the industry, or is it more incidental to the story?

I always want to have flawed characters who have things to overcome. I mean, with Bridesmaids it was very much...we're introducing you to a character who's kind of, quote-unquote, a loser, when we meet her, and so in order to stick with that character, you had to go, "Oh, she used to not be like this, she used to together, she used to be strong, and she's in a bit of a downslide." That allows you to go through her destroying her friend's wedding showers, stuff like that. With this it was really about strong professional women who've not compromised.

And it's great, because they're great at their jobs, and we're not judging that, whereas in so many movies it's like, "You have a job, you're not getting a husband!" It's like, no one cares about that. I just like the idea of a character who's great, but she has a flaw, which is she's a little too arrogant, or she just needs to learn how to work with people, which is all in service of getting her to having a friend, to be able to open up. But it's not any big commentary really, beyond just letting these characters be three-dimensional and flawed and having a journey to go on.

Circling back around to television: Freaks and Geeks. It's been 13 years. It came and went, but it's now thought of as one of the greatest comedies of all time. Do you feel vindication from that?

Yeah, you definitely do. When the rug is pulled out from you so unceremoniously...we kind of knew we were gonna get cancelled at the same time. Ratings-wise we were not good, so I can never get too mad at them about it. Still, to the critical acclaim we had at the time, today I think would have floated us. The business is so different now, with all shows out on DVD and streaming.

Now they're seeing, like, if you have a show that you know is good, but it doesn't have an audience, keep it going, because people eventually binge-watch it, then it'll pick up. So, I think if we'd had the business model around that we do now, I bet we probably would have survived. But being the show that, 13 years later, people are still commenting on...it's crazy. It's such a wonderful feeling.

And it was talent-rich too. There were so many people involved that, wow, they've all gone on. You're kind of like the godfather of modern comedy.?

That's right. I don't really like to think that. It's funny, because people occasionally go, "Is there gonna be reunion?" It's like, I can't afford the cast!

*****

Many thanks to Paul Feig for his time. Be sure to check out?The Heat, now playing in a theater near you!

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Follow Zaki Hasan on Twitter: www.twitter.com/zakiscorner

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/zaki-hasan/interview-director-paul-f_b_3522200.html

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Immigration legislation faces obstacles in House

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The focus of hotly contested immigration legislation swung Friday from the Senate to the House, where conservative Republicans hold power, there is no bipartisan template to serve as a starting point and the two parties stress widely different priorities.

"It's a very long and winding road to immigration reform," said Rep. Tom Cole, an Oklahoma Republican who said it could be late this year or perhaps early in 2014 before the outcome is known. His own constituents are "very skeptical, mostly opposed," he said.

Supporters of the Senate's approach sought to rally support for its promise of citizenship for those who have lived in the United States unlawfully, a key provision alongside steps to reduce future illegal immigration.

"The Republican Party still doesn't understand the depth...of this movement and just how much the American people want comprehensive immigration reform," Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., said on Friday. "We need to make sure they come to this understanding."

But Rep. Matt Salmon, R-Ariz., said in an interview that any bill that results in citizenship was a nonstarter. He called the approach "patently unfair" to those trying to "do it the legal way."

Within hours after the Democratic-controlled Senate approved its bill Thursday on a 68-32 vote, President Barack Obama telephoned with congratulations for several members of the bipartisan Gang of Eight who negotiated an early draft of the bill that passed.

Traveling in Africa, he also called House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California from Africa, urging them to pass an immigration bill.

Yet not even a firm timetable has been set.

The House Republican rank and file is scheduled to hold a closed-door meeting on the issue shortly after returning from a July 4 vacation, and Boehner has said previously he hopes legislation on the topic can be passed by the end of the month. Aides also say it is possible the issue wouldn't come to the floor until the leadership had successfully resurrected a farm bill that was defeated last week.

In contrast to the all-in-one approach favored by the Senate, the House Judiciary Committee has approved a series of single-issue bills in recent days, none including a path to citizenship that Obama and Democrats have set as a top priority.

One, harshly condemned by Democrats, provides for a crackdown on immigrants living in the United States illegally. Another sets up a temporary program for farm workers to come to the United States, but without the opportunity for citizenship the Senate-passed measure includes.

A third, which drew several Democratic votes, requires establishment of a mandatory program within two years for companies to verify the legal status of their workers. The Senate bill sets a four-year phase-in, although supporters of the legislation have also signaled they are agreeable to tighter requirements. A fourth increases the number of visas for highly-skilled workers.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., criticized the approach followed so far by House Republicans. "We have taken up a series of small-bore partisan bills that are in some cases bizarre," she said at a panel discussion hosted by Bloomberg Government and the National Restaurant Association. "We have not touched the whole issue of how you get 11 million people right with the law."

Also appearing on the panel, Republican Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart of Florida said the House must find a solution for the estimated 11 million immigrants now living in the United States unlawfully. "Ignoring that reality does not make it go away," he said.

Lofgren and Diaz-Balart are part of a bipartisan group that has tried to struggled unsuccessfully so far to produce legislation roughly comparable to the one drafted by the Gang of Eight in the Senate.

In their discussions to date, the lawmakers have agreed to a pathway to citizenship over 15 years, two years longer than the Senate legislation provides. Their efforts at an overall compromise have stumbled over details of a guest worker program and other issues.

The situation was far different in the Senate, where the Gang of Eight drafted legislation, shepherded it through the Senate Judiciary Committee and then helped negotiate tough border security requirements that helped swell Republican support.

As the measure was passing the Senate on Thursday, members of the Gang of Eight were urging the House to be ready to compromise.

"You may have different views on different aspects of this issue, but all of us share the same goal, and that is to take 11 million people out of the shadows, secure our borders and make sure that this is the nation of opportunity and freedom," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

The bill passed by the Senate devotes $46 billion to border security improvements, including calling for a doubling of the border patrol stationed on the U.S.-Mexico border and the completion of 700 miles of fencing. No immigrant currently in the United States illegally could qualify for a permanent resident green card until those border enhancements and others were in place.

___

Associated Press reporters Luis Alonso Lugo, Donna Cassata and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-legislation-faces-obstacles-house-190820534.html

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Anthem insurance plan with MaineHealth under review ? Health ...

GARDINER, Maine ? A proposed deal between two heavy hitters in Maine?s health care market to offer insurance next year is raising concerns that patients may have to travel further for care and to find new doctors. The deal could affect tens of thousands of residents and greatly shape the rollout of President Barack Obama?s health reform law in Maine.

MaineHealth, the parent organization of Maine Medical Center in Portland, and health insurer Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield plan to offer a new insurance product on Maine?s health insurance exchange, an online market where consumers and small businesses can shop for coverage beginning in October 2013. The plans would take effect in January 2014. The exchanges are a key component of the reform law, which aims to widen coverage to 30 million people.

A Friday public hearing hosted by the Maine Bureau of Insurance addressed the network of hospitals and doctors that would provide care to customers who buy the Anthem-MaineHealth plans, which would be available to individuals who buy their own insurance, small businesses and the uninsured.

Workers who have health insurance through a large employer aren?t eligible to shop for plans on the exchange and wouldn?t be affected by the Anthem-MaineHealth deal.

The plans include 32 of Maine?s 38 hospitals, but exclude Central Maine Healthcare, which operates Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston, Bridgton Hospital and Rumford Hospital, as well as Parkview Adventist Medical Center in Brunswick, York Hospital, and Portland?s Mercy Hospital.

Central Maine Healthcare officials have denounced the plan as a ?backroom deal? that allows MaineHealth to undercut hospitals that compete with its health system, undermining the intent of the reform law to improve access to affordable health care. Central Maine Healthcare filed a lawsuit earlier this month to make Anthem?s application public before the insurance bureau decides whether to approve the plan. It also launched a website dedicated to defeating the deal, stopanthemsbackroomdeal.com.

Brenda Weeks, 54, of Auburn, has held an individual Anthem policy for 29 years. She?s worked hard to assemble a team of CMMC medical providers who treat her for multiple sclerosis, and now fears losing them, she said.

Weeks, who uses a wheelchair and relies on a ventilator to breathe, said she?s overwhelmed by the prospect of having to find new doctors and a different hospital, as well as a new health plan with unknown costs and coverage.

?I?ve been very loyal to them, ? she said of Anthem, which also insured Weeks through her parents when she was young. ?I don?t like the idea that they are going to turn my world upside down, and that?s what will happen if I have to make these changes.?

Chuck Gill, a spokesman for Central Maine Healthcare, said Friday?s hearing has led to further confusion about which doctors are included in the network, after discrepancies in Anthem?s list were discovered.

?It?s got everyone asking more questions that we didn?t expect and not getting lots of answers,? he said by phone, stepping away from the hearing.

Anthem and MaineHealth contend that their collaboration will lead to lower health insurance premiums for consumers. The hospitals included in the network agreed to significantly reduced payments from Anthem in exchange for having more patients funneled to their facilities. Anthem has said those rate reductions are critical in offsetting extra costs associated with the Affordable Care Act, which requires insurers to offer a wider scope of benefits and prohibits them from denying customers with preexisting medical conditions.

MaineHealth serves much of southern and western Maine, with nine member hospitals and affiliate hospitals in Augusta, Brunswick and Lewiston.

Magnifying the effect of the move by Anthem and MaineHealth is the fact that the only other option on Maine?s exchange next year will be plans offered by a small startup nonprofit, Maine Community Health Options. The plans must be reviewed by the insurance bureau by July 31 and win approval from federal regulators.

Additional insurers could potentially join Maine?s exchange and sell policies in 2015.

About 257,000 Mainers are expected to be eligible to shop for insurance on Maine?s exchange, which will be run by the federal government. Yet, the insurance exchange won?t be their only option for health insurance coverage, and companies can still sell policies off the exchange.

Some of the 33,000 individuals who buy their own insurance may stick with another insurer, Mega Life, which will still sell policies in Maine but not through the exchange. Similarly, many of the 91,000 people who have coverage through a small business could continue getting coverage from several insurers that plan to stay in Maine?s market but not sell policies on the exchange. The third group eligible to shop on the exchange, Maine?s 133,000 uninsured, are more likely to do so, but could choose to remain without coverage, become eligible for Medicaid, or find a way to afford an off-exchange plan.

Both Anthem and Maine Community Health Options are interested in offering plans both on and off the exchange. Plans sold off the exchange wouldn?t be eligible for federal subsidies.

The Anthem-MaineHealth plans would affect not only future Anthem customers, but also existing customers. Anthem has requested permission from the insurance bureau to cancel or stop renewing its ?nongrandfathered? individual and small group policies and replace them with the new ?narrow network? policies.

Colin McHugh, who leads Anthem?s contracting efforts with health providers in the region, said the narrow network would still allow policyholders plenty of choice in who they see for care, according to his written testimony. All of the state?s northern hospitals and at least one hospital in every southern Maine county (except Sagadahoc, which doesn?t have a hospital) will be included, he said.

?The more focused network is still broad, offering members significant choices in high-quality hospitals, primary care physicians and specialists,? his testimony read.

Patients could still visit any hospital for emergency care, according to McHugh.

Anthem has stressed that its proposal with MaineHealth remains in the early stages.

Jud Knox, president of York Hospital, said his facility?s exclusion from the network will force Anthem patients to sever ties with their preferred medical providers unless they pay out of pocket.

?Almost all of these Anthem subscribers will not be able to afford that,? he said, according to his written testimony. ?As a result, these patients will have to discontinue treatment with their primary care providers and discontinue treatment with their customary treating specialists. They will have to decide whether they should forego or postpone treatment, or travel a considerable distance to a new hospital, [primary care physician], or specialist.?

Mercy CEO Eileen Skinner raised similar concerns about Portland-area patients covered by Anthem, and questioned whether Maine Medical Center could handle an influx of tens of thousands of Anthem patients who would have to abandon the excluded hospitals and turn to MMC for care.

?It is still unclear to me how the network was developed and what criteria were used by Anthem to select participating network providers,? Skinner said, according to her written testimony. ?Mercy is a longstanding, low-cost, high-quality Anthem participating provider, yet Mercy was never approached by Anthem with a proposal to join the network.?

A number of insurance carriers nationally have turned to narrow network plans, contending that limiting network size allows them to offer plans with better quality or more efficient doctors and hospitals, which could dampen spending or improve care.

The hospitals excluded from the Anthem network complained that the company failed to take into account hospital cost and quality criteria, which insurers in other states have relied on in devising narrow network plans.

Health insurers in Maine aren?t required to contract with every hospital, but must provide ?reasonable access to services.?

Central Maine Healthcare spokesman Gill also previously criticized the move by Anthem and MaineHealth as an affront to taxpayers. The exchanges will offer federal subsidies to qualifying working families to help them afford insurance. Anthem may be a private company, but the products it sells on Maine?s exchange will be partially financed by taxpayers, Gill has said.

While the provider network has garnered the most attention, it?s just one element in determining whether health insurance under Obamacare will lead to better and less expensive coverage in Maine. No information about how much the exchange plans will cost or specifics about the benefits they?ll include has been released yet publicly. That information, which will affect patients beyond western and southern Maine, is expected later this summer.

The insurance bureau will accept written comments from the public about the Anthem-MaineHealth provider network through next Friday.

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2013/06/28/health/anthem-insurance-plan-with-mainehealth-under-review/

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Obama travels to South Africa as Mandela's condition worsens (cbsnews)

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Energy blackout proposal dismissed

Michael Fallon: "I can assure you, the lights are not going to go out"

The government has dismissed a proposal that big shops and factories could be paid to cut their energy use to prevent shortages leading to blackouts.

Electricity network owner National Grid has suggested large consumers could be asked to lower use between 16:00 and 20:00 on weekdays in the winter.

It was responding to a warning from energy regulator Ofgem that the risk of power cuts has increased in the UK.

Energy Minister Michael Fallon insisted the lights would stay on.

He told BBC Two's Newsnight programme: "I can assure you the lights are not going to go out.

"The latest [Ofgem] assessment has shown that the position is slightly worse than the previous assessment last year.

"The regulator Ofgem has got to make sure, with all the tools at its disposal - bringing some mothball plant back in action and back on line - that the lights stay on and they will."

In an assessment released on Thursday, Ofgem said spare electricity production capacity in the UK could fall to 2% by 2015, increasing the risk of blackouts.

The watchdog said more investment in power generation was needed to protect consumers.

'Tightening margins'

It said: "Ofgem's analysis indicates a faster than anticipated tightening of electricity margins toward the middle of this decade."

The global financial crisis, tough emissions targets, the UK's increasing dependency on gas imports and the closure of ageing power stations were all contributing to the heightened risk of shortages, Ofgem said.

It said measures could include negotiating with major power users for them to reduce demand during peak times in return for payment.

Ofgem also suggested keeping some mothballed power plants in reserve in case of emergencies.

National Grid said it welcomed the Ofgem consultation on the proposed preventive measures and had been working with the Department of Energy and Climate Change.

"This does not mean that disruption is imminent or likely, but Ofgem, DECC and ourselves believe it appropriate to consider what measures could be taken in case margins deteriorate further," National Grid said.

It acknowledged that dealing with tightening margins in the energy industry "sits outside of National Grid's usual system operator role", but added that "given our position in the industry and our experience, we're happy to propose and consult on solutions."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-23093581#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Polish PM faces challenge for party leadership: report

WARSAW (Reuters) - A former Polish justice minister will challenge Prime Minister Donald Tusk for leadership of their party in an internal election later this year, broadcaster TVN24 reported on Thursday.

Jaroslaw Gowin, who was fired from the government in April, is the unofficial leader of a conservative faction within Tusk's center-right Civic Platform party and has often clashed with the party leader.

Tusk's powerful position has been weakened by a sharp slowdown in the economy, but analysts and party insiders say he should still win the leadership contest. The broadcaster said Gowin would announce his candidacy later on Thursday.

(Reporting by Christian Lowe and Karolina Slowikowska; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/polish-pm-faces-challenge-party-leadership-report-092112439.html

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Personal Assistant App Donna Goes Live, With Better Battery Performance And Instant Uber Requests

donnaPersonal assistant app Donna is ready to help simplify users' lives, and is being launched on the Apple App Store today to do just that. With the general release also comes a few new features, like instantly hailing an Uber or sending email notifications to people you're meeting to tell them that you're late.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Nu9S9a2q1K8/

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Video: Did Pats know murder charges were coming?

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/52323435#52323435

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Stock Futures Point Higher; Synaptics Leaps On ... - Investors.com

Stock futures were higher, but trimming earlier gains ahead of Wednesday's open despite a cutback in first-quarter GDP growth estimates.

Dow futures were ahead 66 points. Nasdaq 100 futures traded up 20.25 points and S&P 500 futures were 9.5 points higher.

The stock market today opens in search of direction, with only mild losses so far this week. The S&P 500, the Nasdaq and the Dow were down 0.3% through Tuesday's close and sitting at the top of the week's trading range. All three indexes are well below their 50-day moving averages and the market remains in a correction.

Mortgage application activity decreased 3% last week, down for a fourth-straight week as interest rates posted their largest one-week increase since 2011, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Refinance applications slowed 5% to the lowest level since November 2011. New purchase applications increased 2%.

Estimates for first-quarter GDP growth were revised lower, to 1.8%, according to the Commerce Department, from a prior estimate of a 2.4% gain. Economists had projected no change for the latest estimate. The GDP price index edged up 1.2%, in line with the 1.1% initial estimate.

Discount store Five Below (FIVE) tumbled 5% in pre-market action after announcing late Thursday it would postpone a secondary stock offering. A company statement cited current capital market conditions. The stock has been fighting to hold support at its 10-week moving average. Shares have been consolidating since March after clearing an IPO base.

Touchpad and computer controller maker Synaptics (SYNA) bolted 13% ahead of the open. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company late Tuesday raised its revenue outlook for the fiscal fourth quarter, which ends this month. The stock has declined for six straight weeks and is well below the 10-week average.

Leading stocks milled about in a narrowly mixed rage. Valeant Pharmaceuticals (VRX) topped the IBD 50 list with a 2% gain. Its four-week pullback stopped short of a test of 10-week support, ending Tuesday 19% above a flat base buy pint of 71.89.

Overseas, Europe's market leaned firmly higher with the CAC-40 in Paris up 2% and Frankfurt's DAX ahead 1.5% heading toward afternoon trade. In China, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rebounded 2.4%, while the Shanghai Composite ended 0.4% lower. Tokyo's Nikkei 225 booked a 1% loss.

Gold mining issues and ETFs were taking a pounding in early action as gold futures slumped 3%. Oil was off a fraction, trading above $95 a barrel and up not quite 2% for the week.

Source: http://news.investors.com/investing-stock-market-today/062613-661439-stock-future-higher.htm

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Daily Caller Communications Aide to Reason - FishbowlDC

The Daily Caller?s former Communications Aide Pat McMahon starts his new job at Reason Magazine this week. As some may be aware, McMahon was replaced by Clark Hennessy, who, in his first few weeks on the job, went viral when he tweeted out that H.N.I.C. lyric about RNC Chairman Reince Priebus.

McMahon told us he left The DC on good terms and will miss all his pals there. He looks forward to attending their parties as a guest.

?I?m excited about my new role at Reason, as a communications specialist,? he told FishbowlDC. ?Everyone has been very welcoming and helpful during my first week. I?m looking forward to working with an awesome group of people!?

Source: http://www.mediabistro.com/fishbowldc/daily-caller-communications-aide-to-reason_b108972

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Fiction Writers Review ? Blog Archive ? Ideas of Home: An Interview ...

Personal, Douglas TrevorGirls I Know, Douglas Trevor?s debut novel, which was released this spring by Sixoneseven Books, is set in Boston and tells the story of a twenty-nine year old graduate-school-dropout Walt Steadman, who, after witnessing a tragic act of violence, searches to make sense of the tragedy and life in general with the help of two girls: Ginger Newton, a Harvard student, and eleven-year-old Mercedes Bittles, whom he begins to tutor. A coming-of-age novel, a novel about place, and a stirring social novel, Girls I Know is dark, deeply moving, and funny?a complex and nuanced book that defies categorization.

Trevor is also the author of the short story collection?The Thin Tear in the Fabric of Space (University of Iowa Press, 2005), which?won the 2005 Iowa Short Fiction Award and was a finalist for the 2006 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for First Fiction. His short fiction has appeared in the Paris Review,?Glimmer Train, Epoch, Black Warrior Review,?the New England Review, and many other literary magazines.?He lives in Ann Arbor, where he is an Associate Professor of Renaissance Literature and Creative Writing at the University of Michigan.

In his first scholarly book, The Poetics of Melancholy in Early Modern England (2004), Trevor argues that that writing can be both the cause of and cure for melancholy, and that certain writers such as John Donne and John Milton claimed having depression to enhance their artistic and intellectual street cred. Earlier this spring, while he was in Michigan and I was in Greece, Doug and I had an email conversation over the course of several days about issues of grief, sadness, writing, and more.

Interview:

Natalie Bakopoulos: Let?s start with the basics. How did you come to writing?

Doug Trevor: I began to write stories at a young age?six, seven. I think it was partly a way of avoiding my family, partly out of interest in reading and books. I really loved books as a kid. Reading was something that mattered to me, but in a way the material book mattered more. I just loved the way books smelled and felt in my hands. I had asthma?the kind of thing you can treat with a pill today and be on your way. But the medicine wasn?t nearly as effective back then so I spent a lot of days at home in bed. The rule in our house was, no TV if you were sick, unless you were in bed for three days, at which point the rules would bend. So the objective was to make it to the third day. The first day in bed, I would tend to read a lot. Then the second day I?d work on my stories. And the third day I?d watch reruns of ?I Love Lucy? and ?The Dick Van Dyke Show.?

Yet somehow you didn?t become a sitcom writer?Instead, you?re both a scholar and a fiction writer. How do these two pursuits influence one another?

They are complementary insofar as I procrastinate on one front by working on the other. So if I have an article due on?King Lear, I might work on a short story as a way of avoiding the article. And if I?m supposed to finish up a story, I might instead read a book about?King Lear. The best days are those during which I write fiction in the morning, take a break, and then get some academic work done in the afternoon. But the influence of the two on one another has been more unconscious for me than conscious. I?m working on a couple of stories now in which professor types figure prominently, but I?ve never tended to write, or read, fiction about academics, or novels set on college campuses. There are intellectual topics like medieval philosophy that I do find really interesting but that I?m not at all an expert on, and those I tend to engage with in my fiction. And I think, because my efforts at balancing two different careers have kept me at the keyboard quite a bit, I?ve been less inclined to feel blocked as a writer. I just try to chip away on both fronts every day.

Girls I Know is your second work of fiction. Everyone seems to have an opinion on writers? second books: that they are the hardest to write, that it?s hard to live up to the first, etc. (I myself am terrified of it). What are your feelings about this? How did the actual experiences of writing differ?

Girls I KnowIt was a very hard book to write. To begin, it?s my first crack at a novel. I think I had a short story writer?s view of novel writing, which is that it couldn?t possibly be as hard to produce 300 pages that ostensibly starts and stops just once, as opposed to a collection of nine stories or whatever my first collection was comprised of, that started and stopped, let?s say, nine times. But in fact I found writing a novel to be incredibly difficult and slow going. When you are writing short stories, you are active and engaged with others in a much more immediate way: sending stories out, revising stories for publication, etc. But once I dug into?Girls I Know, I felt as if I more or less disappeared from the earth?s surface. As a writer, I struggled some with that feeling of isolation. And I had so internalized the cadence and clock that dictates short fiction that once I let that go, I had a tough time figuring out how to pace a longer narrative. It really wasn?t until the third draft of the novel that I felt like I had a sense of how to manage the narrative arc. Then the project became incredibly fun and really all consuming. And then, somewhat sadly, it ended, and now I have to start the whole process again with another book project.

I?m interested in what you said about isolation, and also about having had asthma as a child and all the quiet time that accompanied it. Quietness plays a huge role in?Girls I Know?what isn?t said, for instance, or who has a voice, particularly in relation to race and class but also within relationships, between people. Can you talk a bit about this? In general, but also in relation to Ginger and Mercedes?both such complex characters, by the way.

You are so right to notice the huge role that quietness plays in the novel. Mercedes, the eleven-year-old whose parents are slain quite early in the book, does not speak until page 271. Ginger is a talker, but her book project?itself entitled?Girls I Know?is organized around the idea that she will get other women to talk so that their voices will more or less drown out hers. I really admire Mercedes?s determination not to speak just to put people at ease?her refusal to talk when she doesn?t feel like talking. Ginger?s silence is much more rehearsed and problematic. She is a very strategic kind of person?very writerly in her own way?so I identify with her at the same time that I don?t fully endorse her mode of being.

And there is absolutely a class and race dimension in play here as well. Ginger is used to people listening to her, and she solicits and directs the speech of other women, hardly any of whom are as entitled as she is. Mercedes is an observer. Even before her parents die, she tends to watch people. I think when she is asked to speak in the predominantly white school she transfers to after her parents die, Mercedes recognizes those invitations to speak as inauthentic, as condescending?intended to put the people who ask her to speak at ease, not her?so she rejects them.

Do you know that Woody Allen movie Sweet and Lowdown, about the jazz guitarist played by Sean Penn?

Yes.

Sean Penn?s character, Emmet Ray, falls in love with a mute woman played by Samantha Morton. Morton?s character?I think her name in the film is Hattie?never speaks in the film. The role just blew me away because the character came across as so expressive and appealing. I filed the observation away. Then when I discovered, somewhat unexpectedly, that Mercedes was going to figure prominently in the novel, I thought it made sense for her to be introverted in the wake of he parents? deaths, and initially I pushed this introvertedness to the point of muteness because I was nervous about getting her voice right. Fiction writing is the opposite of film in this regard, though, because once a character stops talking in prose, her narrative voice can really expand, rather than contract. In one sense, then, no one in the book talks as much as Mercedes does. We get her internalized stream of narration throughout much of the second half of the book, which I really enjoyed writing. Her voice ended up being the most appealing one for me, I think because words really matter to her. I also think I envy someone who just refuses to speak. I had a roommate my junior year in college who hardly every spoke. He just thought talking was overrated. I think he was right.

Well, please don?t stop talking yet! I have more questions. This is a big social novel, and it?s also a character-driven coming-of-age novel. Often we talk about novels being one or the other, which I find reductive. I love Saul Bellow?s idea that positions should not guide a work of art but emerge from one, though of course as writers we write from a certain angle. In Girls I Know, issues of privilege and race and class are front and center. Are these ideas you knew you wanted to explore? Or did they emerge from the process and narrative?

Isn?t Saul Bellow the best? I feel like he is the Shakespeare of the American novel. I did very much want to juxtapose class and race issues in such a way as to suggest that they cut across one another and inform one another in a more complicated manner than I sometimes think we allow them to in contemporary American discourse. So, for example, I wanted Mercedes and Walt to share a class background but not a racial background. And I wanted Walt and Ginger to share a racial background but not a class background. Walt is the hinge. Ginger and Mercedes share neither a racial nor a class background, and in fact they never meet in the novel, in part as a result. So I imagined that the book would be about privilege and race and class issues, but once I began to develop the characters and they began to do things, some of the evident ?themes? of the book (to use that dreaded word) became more complicated than I had imagined, which I realized?I think even at the time?was a blessing, since otherwise the book would have seemed very axiomatic and stiff. Walt and Mercedes, for example, end up sharing a class background in a way, but in another way they don?t, because of race. At the very end of the book, Walt says to Ginger, ?You were right and wrong about America: about class, about race. I was right and wrong as well.? I feel like I was right and wrong, too. The categories can?t be separated entirely and I think?Girls I Know ended up being in part about that, which I hadn?t anticipated.

The idea of home figures prominently throughout the novel: where it is, where we make it, and how we define it. Many of these characters have been displaced, and many find themselves in, or claim, places that aren?t their own. This is clear from the beginning and takes on a new, illuminating glow at the end, which just about rises off the page. How do ideas of home operate here, in your opinion?

The Thin Tear in the Fabric of SpaceYou?re right that all the central characters in?Girls I Know are away from home through most of the book. I hadn?t really realized until now the degree to which this is simply true. Mercedes is in her grandmother?s home after her parents die, but she won?t be able to stay there for long. Like Walt, she is looking for a home. Ginger is the kind of person who has the resources and the confidence to make any place a home, or not to care about having a home insofar as that word means a safe place where you are surrounded by people who love and care for you. Home is a charged concept for me. My first book,?The Thin Tear in the Fabric of Space, circles around the unexpected death of my sister, and the last story in the collection ends with the two of us as children, in our childhood home, thinking about where we will be in the future. It sounds obvious, but when someone you care about dies, whatever space you inhabited with them changes forever. It becomes just saturated with melancholy and loss. Mercedes misses her family?s apartment painfully throughout the course of the book, but she doesn?t want to see the apartment?not without her parents in it. Much of Walt?s journey in the novel is toward trying to understand what it means to adopt a city as your home, only to have it then traumatize you. Like most of what I write about, then, my sister?s death is lurking there, in the homes that do and do not appear in?Girls I Know. Also, I?ve moved around a lot in my life so I feel really aware of the degree to which my ?home??say, in Ann Arbor?will never be my ?hometown,? which is Denver.

Jesmyn Ward [National Book Award Winner for her novel Salvage the Bones] says in her beautiful essay ?We Do Not Swim In Our Cemeteries,? about the unexpected, tragic death of her brother and of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated her own hometown on the coast of Mississippi:

Even after that which you love dies, the love you have for it does not die. Grief is learning how to live with that love. My small town dies and becomes something else.

I think this is a particularly evocative way to describe grief, and it seems to apply very well to Girls I Know, and also regarding your earlier comment that ?when someone you care about dies, whatever space you inhabited with them changes forever.? Do you see writing as a way to exercise, and exorcise, grief? Fear? Darkness? Or as a way to explore its presence, perhaps?

I do think that?s an apt way to describe?Girls I Know: as an exercise in living with grief and trying to marshal or use grief in order to turn toward, rather than away from, the world. I don?t think writing exorcises loss?at least in my experience? so much as it attests to its shaping power. I suppose different mysteries compel different writers, but for me the experience of surviving loss is something I?ve thought a lot about. This was true even before my sister died. My father lost both his parents at a really young age: his mother to breast cancer at twelve, his father to stomach cancer at thirteen. So I grew up with this story of loss very much in our family. I wanted really badly to know the details of how my father got by with his parents gone. I knew he had an aunt who moved into his family home to raise him, but I never managed to get very many details out of him about that arrangement. The stories I wrote as a kid were, I think in hindsight, oddly dark partly because of this mystery of my father?s childhood.

But in broader terms, the way landscapes?human and natural?rebound from death, the way the machinery of life just continues on, regardless . . . I find that dimension of reality to be quite an extraordinary thing. At the end of?Girls I Know, Walt and Mercedes walk by the former Early Bird Caf? and the restaurant space has already?in just a few short months?been remodeled and redone: refitted for its next occupants. That to me is very indicative of our contemporary moment?the way we have almost come to expect our lived experiences to be replaced in due course. That strikes me as a very American kind of reality. As opposed to permitting a crumbling Parthenon to remain in our midst for centuries, for example.

Which I?m looking at now, by the way, as we talk. So. Speaking of grief. Finishing a novel, I?ve found, though nothing like experiencing a real loss, is a sort of loss. I was devastated and relieved at the same time. And then excited and nervous to start the next thing. So back to what we started, with a twist, or a bit more: do you have something in the works now?

I do have a sense of my next novel, and I have a little bit of it done. Bob Stewart at?New Letters is publishing chapter three in the fall as a stand-alone story entitled ?Slugger and the Fat Man.? The novel is set in Denver and it is a spiraling and capacious thing: imagined mostly at this stage as interlinked stories. I want to write about a young man who discovers that the contours of his family are other than he imagined them to be growing up, and I want this discovery to parallel a retelling of the history of the West that is less clich?d and more in touch with the profound ethnic, racial, and political tensions that were a part of the westward migration. The plan is to skip around and pick up different characters at different junctures in the history of Colorado, although I will stick mostly to the contemporary moment.

And the contemporary moment is?

At the center of the story is a messed up dad (the subject of the piece coming out); a politically outspoken, ancient bookstore owner; a young woman of Japanese descent who is dating the central character; and the central character, Luke, who discovers as the narrative unfolds that he is connected to everyone around him, in one way or another. So there are lots of characters, lots of different sub-stories, lots of stuff about Denver. The plan is to do most of the research this summer and to try to write the book in pieces, at least initially. I?m hoping in part that writing the book as interlinked stories will enable me to stay connected more to the world of journals and magazines. One of the things I missed most during the final stages of?Girls I Know was sending work out and having interactions with editors and readers. So I?m hoping this approach will mitigate some of the loneliness that comes with trying to write novels.

I hope so, too, Doug. Thanks so much for talking with me.

Thank you, Natalie.

Further Links and Resources:

  • For more on Douglas Trevor and his work, please visit his author website.
  • Read an excerpt from Girls I Know in Issue Forty-Six of The Collagist.
  • You can also check out Doug?s ?Stories We Love? post on Raymond Carver?s ?A Small Good Thing? for this year?s celebration of Short Story Month.
  • Read an interview with Natalie Bakopoulos, whose debut novel, The Green Shore, was just released in paperback.

Source: http://fictionwritersreview.com/interviews/ideas-of-home-an-interview-with-douglas-trevor

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Hernandez charged with murder, cut by Patriots

FILE - In this Jan. 13, 2013 file photo, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez runs after a catch during the second half of an AFC divisional playoff NFL football game against the Houston Texans in Foxborough, Mass. Hernandez has been taken from his home in Attleboro, Mass. in handcuffs, Wednesday, June 26, 2013, after a Boston semi-pro football player was found dead in an industrial park a mile from his house. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 13, 2013 file photo, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez runs after a catch during the second half of an AFC divisional playoff NFL football game against the Houston Texans in Foxborough, Mass. Hernandez has been taken from his home in Attleboro, Mass. in handcuffs, Wednesday, June 26, 2013, after a Boston semi-pro football player was found dead in an industrial park a mile from his house. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2012 file photo, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez (81) tries to break free of Buffalo Bills linebacker Chris Kelsay (90) during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game in Foxborough, Mass. Hernandez has been taken from his home in handcuffs, Wednesday, June 26, 2013, after a Boston semi-pro football player was found dead in an industrial park a mile from his house. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File)

The New England Patriots didn't wait for Aaron Hernandez's legal troubles to play themselves out.

Two hours after police arrested Hernandez but before he was charged with murder in court on Wednesday afternoon, the Patriots cut the tight end who had signed a five-year deal with New England just last summer.

"Words cannot express the disappointment we feel knowing that one of our players was arrested as a result of this investigation. We realize that law enforcement investigations into this matter are ongoing," the team said in a statement. "We support their efforts and respect the process. At this time, we believe this transaction is simply the right thing to do."

Hernandez was taken from his home in handcuffs early Wednesday, more than a week after a Boston semi-pro football player was found dead in an industrial park a mile from Hernandez's house. He was arraigned later in the day and charged with murder.

Odin Lloyd, a 27-year-old member of the Boston Bandits, was found slain June 17. Officials ruled the death a homicide but did not say how Lloyd died.

The NFL released a statement expressing sympathy to Lloyd's family.

"The involvement of an NFL player in a case of this nature is deeply troubling. The Patriots have released Aaron Hernandez, who will have his day in court," it read. "At the same time, we should not forget the young man who was the victim in this case and take this opportunity to extend our deepest sympathy to Odin Lloyd's family and friends."

The 23-year-old Hernandez was an All-American at Florida and part of a tight end duo in New England that was among the league's most productive.

But heading into the 2010 NFL draft at least one team said it took him off its draft board ? refusing to select him under any circumstances ? and all of the other teams in the league bypassed him repeatedly as he fell to New England in the fourth round.

Afterward, Hernandez said he had failed a single drug test in college ? reportedly for marijuana ? and was up front with teams about it.

Ever since he became entangled in the investigation into Lloyd's death, other off-field issues have become public.

A South Florida man filed a lawsuit last week claiming Hernandez shot him in the face after they argued at a strip club. The man, who lost his right eye, told police after the February incident that he did not know who shot him.

The Boston Globe reported that Hernandez lost his temper and threatened teammate Wes Welker during an argument in the team's weight room shortly after being drafted.

Hernandez became a father to a daughter on Nov. 6, and he said it made him think.

"I'm engaged now and I have a baby. So it's just going to make me think of life a lot differently and doing things the right way," he said. "Now, another one is looking up to me. I can't just be young and reckless Aaron no more. I'm going to try to do the right things, become a good father and (have her) be raised like I was raised."

The loss of Hernandez deprives the Patriots of the second half of one of the league's best tight end tandems. Fellow Pro Bowl selection Rob Gronkowski has had five operations this offseason on his back and broken left forearm.

Hernandez was chosen for the Pro Bowl in 2011, when he caught 79 passes for 910 yards and seven touchdowns. He missed 10 games last season with an ankle injury.

In 38 games over his three NFL seasons, the 6-foot-1, 245-pound Hernandez has 175 receptions for 1,956 yards and 18 touchdowns. Last summer, the Patriots gave Hernandez a five-year contract worth $41 million just months after the team locked up Gronkowski through 2019.

"Aaron's improved a lot," Patriots coach Bill Belichick said at the time. "He's worked hard, he's improved a lot in all phases of the game ? the passing game, the running game, protection and his overall versatility. He's doing a good job for us."

Despite the size that makes him a capable blocker, Hernandez has the speed and moves of a wide receiver and is elusive after making a catch.

Born in Bristol, Conn., Hernandez played at Bristol High School before attending Florida, where he won the John Mackey Award as the nation's best tight end as a junior in 2009. He was college teammates with two current Patriots ? quarterback Tim Tebow and linebacker Brandon Spikes on the team that won the national championship in 2009.

Hernandez had shoulder surgery in April, but was expected to be ready for training camp. The Patriots did not say which shoulder was operated on.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-26-Patriots-Hernandez/id-92692f75ceb84289b3c343051ec57738

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Brazil Congress shelves controversial legislation

A woman from the Rocinha slum gives a speech during an anti-governement protest in front of Rio de Janeiro state governor Sergio Cabral in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Tuesday, June 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

A woman from the Rocinha slum gives a speech during an anti-governement protest in front of Rio de Janeiro state governor Sergio Cabral in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Tuesday, June 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

A protester from Rocinha slum shouts slogans as he holds a sign that reads in Portuguese; "Peace" during a protest in front of Rio de Janeiro state governor Sergio Cabral in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Tuesday, June 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)

(AP) ? Brazil's congress has shelved legislation that had been a target of nationwide protests, hours before another expected round of large-scale demonstrations on Wednesday.

The lower house of congress voted 403-9 late Tuesday to drop a measure that would have limited the investigative powers of federal prosecutors, a bill that many feared would make it harder to prosecute official corruption.

The wave of protests that hit Brazil on June 17 began as opposition to transportation fare hikes, then expanded to a laundry list of causes including anger at high taxes, poor services and high World Cup spending, before coalescing around the issue of rampant government corruption.

It has become become the largest eruption of public demonstrations Latin America's biggest nation has seen in two decades.

At many protests across Brazil in the past week, a sea of signs denounced the proposal to strip prosecutors of the ability to investigate, known as the "PEC 37" measure. Many demonstrators vowed to keep returning to the streets until it was knocked down.

"The PEC 37 only served to protect the corrupt," said Aline Campos, a 29-year-old publicist at a recent protest in Brasilia. "Society wants more effort to combat corruption, not less."

Federal prosecutors were behind the investigation into the so-called "mensalao" cash-for-votes scheme that came to light in 2005. It involved top aides of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva buying off members of congress to vote for their legislation.

Before mass protests broke out on June 17, the PEC 37 legislation appeared heading to easy victory in the lower house of congress.

Congress also approved a bill earmarking 75 percent of oil royalties to fund education and 25 percent to health services.

Social media sites used by protest organizers were calling for more big demonstrations on Wednesday, with the largest expected in the city of Belo Horizonte, where the Brazilian national football team plays a match against Uruguay in a semifinal of the Confederations Cup, the warm-up tournament to next year's World Cup. Protests are expected in several other cities as well.

___

Associated Press writers Bradley Brooks and Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-26-Brazil-Protests/id-e2bf84048672437bb146fdab9faf8aad

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Lotus Developing 200 BHP C-01 Motorcycle - MotorBeam

Lotus C-01 Motorcycle

What does Lotus remind us of? It is our national flower. It is also a car manufacturer based in Norfolk, UK and has a Formula one team, which borrows engines from Renault for racing. Lotus on the other hand is known for many adventures on four wheels. Lotus car manufacturers are known for making the best chassis in the world. They have tuned numerous cars for various manufacturers. To give you an example, they are involved in making the chassis for the famed Nissan GT-R. Albeit, Lotus makes cars for themselves in a very unusual way.

Lotus takes flagship engines from reliable manufacturers like Honda and Toyota and supercharges them to give it the extra punch. Later on, they plonk the engines in the middle of their extremely light and stiff sports cars and make them go around corners exactly like you dreamed off, flat, quick and with tones of grip. Lotus has made its appearance like background music in a movie when it comes to their Indian ventures. Long ago, Lotus stepped in and tuned the chassis on the Mahindra Scorpio (no one is perfect at first).

Not so long ago, Lotus stepped in and tuned Force Motors? SUV to make it better and less floppy given the fact it is a barge. Moreover, very recently the Sail twins from Chevrolet got their chassis tuned from Lotus. Chevrolet went ahead and biased the suspension towards ride quality over dynamics. The reason we mentioned all the ventures to make you realize that Lotus is not unknown and because they are about to enter a highly competitive and established segment in the automotive world, Motorcycles!

Lotus has announced that they will be entering the motorcycle market with a 200 BHP motorcycle. Yes! That is right, they are tapping into the niche market of hyper bikes. Lotus says this bike will be the best looker on the road and engineers will focus on design, ergonomics and high-end technologies. The bike is code named C-01. The venture is being commenced with partnership with Kodewa German auto racing team, car designer Daniel Simon and the Holzer group.

Daniel Simon is no ordinary man. He is responsible for carving out Bugatti cars and has designed the world famous Tron motorcycle for Disney in 2010. So finally, we can expect Tron styled motorcycle? Not so sure, but it may end up borrowing some cues from it. The motorcycle will be developed with Formula One experience and technologies. Carbon fiber, titanium and aerospace steel is bound to be used for this challenging venture. All the latest equipment is on disposal for making the Lotus C-01 motorcycle reliable with equipment and attention to detail making sure that it rolls out without any production faults.

Given the rich past of Lotus when it comes to design and quality, we just hope the motorcycle turns out with Lotuses core beliefs. Light, dynamic, fast and immense fun. The C-01 could be a game changer for Lotus and may get the cash registers ringing again because the car manufacturing business is a bit cold given the market scenario. Given the fact that the hyper bike market is dominated by Japanese and single European manufacturer BMW, we wish Lotus all the best for their venture and welcome them to the world of two wheels.

Tron Legacy

Source: http://www.motorbeam.com/cars/lotus-cars/lotus-to-launch-200-bhp-c-01-motorcycle/

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Julianna Margulies lawsuit with ex-manager to go forward in October

By Tim Kenneally

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "The Good Wife" star Julianna Margulies was allegedly a bad client, and now the actress will have to face trial over it.

Margulies suffered a legal setback in court on Tuesday, when a judge denied her motion for summary judgment in a lawsuit brought against her by her former management company over commissions it says it's owed.

D/F Management claims it's owed money stemming from Margulies' work on "The Good Wife" and for her work with cosmetics company L'Oreal.

Margulies, who has filed a cross-complaint against D/F Management for breach of contract, denies the claims, arguing that the company had no written agreement. While the actress' legal representation will move forward with that and other defenses, the argument wasn't enough to spur a summary judgment of the suit.

A trial date on the matter has been set for October 9.

"We are pleased but not surprised by the judge's well reasoned decision rejecting Miss Margulies' motion," Matthew Rosengart, an attorney for D/F, said. "My clients are disappointed that she reneged on her agreement and then filed a meritless motion. We look forward to the trial in October."

According to court documents obtained by TheWrap, Margulies retained D/F in 2009 and terminated the relationship in April 2011. But D/F contends that it's owed a 10 percent commission on Margulies' earnings for "The Good Wife" and L'Oreal after the dissolution of the relationship, an assertion that the actress disputes.

Margulies' motion for summary judgment, filed in February, argued that, since she is a New York resident and D/F's business is based in New York, that the state's statute of frauds should be applied, which Margulies' team contended should lead to a summary judgment. However, the judge said that there was a factual dispute that prevented him from ruling on the motion as a matter of law at the moment.

(Pamela Chelin contribute to this report)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/julianna-margulies-lawsuit-ex-manager-forward-october-000055162.html

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