Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Spanish doctor convicted over doping

A Spanish doctor accused of running one of the world's largest sports doping rings has received a one-year suspended sentence for endangering public health.

Eufemiano Fuentes was convicted over his role in supplying blood transfusions to professional cyclists.

He was charged under public health laws because doping was not illegal in Spain at the time.

A former cycle team official was sentenced to four months in jail, while three other defendants were cleared.

Police found some 200 bags of frozen blood and plasma when they raided Fuentes' offices in 2006.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) and Spain's domestic authorities had wanted access to the blood, to test whether athletes from other sports were involved in the doping ring.

But Judge Julia Patricia Santamaria on Tuesday declined to grant them access and ordered that the bags be destroyed.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis


"Late, disappointing and not even very conclusive: everything about the verdicts in the Operation Puerto case was in keeping with its seedy seven-year history. All that effort for two suspended prison sentences, a four-year ban from medicine and a bizarre fine - hardly what the doctor ordered to heal the effects of Europe's most talked-about doping scandal. It is a good thing Fuentes was not in court to hear his fate, pictures of him smirking would not have done Spain's tattered reputation on doping matters any good at all."

The Operation Puerto doping trial focused on cycling. Dozens of cyclists were implicated, though few have been sanctioned.

As well as handing Fuentes the one year suspended sentence, the court in Madrid struck him off as a medical doctor for four years and fined 4,650 euros ($6,000: ?3,940).

It sentenced Ignacio Labarta, a former official in the Kelme cycling team, to four months in prison.

Two other former cycling team officials, Manolo Saiz and Vicente Belda, were cleared, as was Fuentes' sister and fellow doctor Yolanda.

During the trial, Fuentes said he had worked with athletes, footballers and boxers, as well as cyclists, though he did not say whether he had helped them dope.

The bags of blood found in Fuentes' offices were labelled with codenames, which were believed to relate to well-known cyclists and possibly other athletes. But the judge's ruling means authorities will not be able to establish this.

Fuentes maintained that the aim of the blood transfusions was to protect athletes' health and improve their performance during training.

Spain has passed anti-doping legislation since 2006, and parliament is expected to vote on an anti-doping bill later this year that would bring Spanish law into line with Wada's guidelines.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22353145#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Students build professional identity through social media | ASU ...

?Check-ins,? ?tweets,? ?likes.? Less than 10 years ago, these terms would be foreign to a majority of the U.S. population.

Facebook has more than 552 million daily users in the U.S., and 40 percent of all social media users say they interact more over social media than face-to-face, according to mediabistro.com, an online Twitter resource.

As today?s workforce recovers from a struggling economy, college graduates starting a career strive to adapt to a professional environment filled with networking and social media and learn to maintain a balance between work life and personal life.

According to mediabistro.com, more than half of all social media users are between the ages 25 to 44, and 26 percent are 25 to 34 years old. This same age group also makes up the majority of the U.S. workforce, according to the 2012 Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The online population has an addiction to updating their selected group of ?friends? or ?followers? about where they are, whom they are with and what they are doing. Social media outlets, such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Foursquare, allow a quick type and click to inform hundreds of people about anything in a matter of seconds.

Social Media in the Workforce

The Internet has no boundaries; social media continues to expand rapidly. In the last five years, social media has exploded into a phenomenon that incorporates updates and sharing into daily social and work life. According to socialmediainbusiness.com, social media is a long-term plan that revolutionizes business, and no company that hopes to gain a competitive edge in its industry can avoid it.

ASU alumna Lauren Miller graduated in 2012 and began working at Digital Air Strike, a social media company that manages online media accounts for car dealerships around the country. Miller said the company?s goal is to maintain its online presence by posting content and interacting with customers on sites such as Facebook and Twitter.

Miller said she spends her whole workday on designated social media sites for her assigned dealerships. Because the company has relaxed social media guidelines, she said, personal social media use is observed based on the amount of content they produce for the client. Employees periodically check and update their personal Facebook and Twitter accounts throughout the day, mainly during breaks and lunch hour, Miller said.

?Being on the Internet, it?s impossible to not see stuff that might take you away from your job for a little bit,? she said.

Most workers in the Digital Air Strike office are 22 to 28 years old.

Miller said potential employees are hired based on their experience and knowledge of social media, because some of the older business demographic may not be aware of or have an appropriate background in personal or professional social media use. While this would not keep the company from hiring an older employee, Miller said, Digital Air Strike can train any employee willing to acquire social media knowledge.

Balancing Personal and Professional Boundaries

Any picture, post or Tweet remains on the Internet forever, whether deleted or not.

As of 2012, 37 percent of employers said they screen a job candidate?s social media profiles, and about 11 percent plan to do so in the future, according to a survey held by online job website CareerBuilder.com.

Seventy-five percent of college-level Facebook users check their Facebook pages at least once a day to maintain their social networks of classmates, friends, coworkers and competitors, according to Edudemic.com, an online technology resource. Sharing social media with these groups can offer networking perspective, show accomplishments and form personal connections; but it can also cross personal boundaries in a workplace.

New members in today?s competitive workforce make a conscious effort to maintain transparency between their personal and professional activities among their social media pages to keep a respectable professional reputation. College graduates entering the workforce struggle with decisions of whether to incorporate content on their profiles that appeal to their social circle as opposed to their professional circle of peers.

Kelly O?Brien, who graduated from the W. P. Carey School of Business in 2012, is finishing a master?s degree in accounting and teaches classes in the business school.

She said she linked many people in the professional field through social media, but deciding whether to be friends with a supervisor, boss or coworker is essential when trying to maintain a professional and personal transparency.

Forming connections and contacts is the best purpose for professional social media use and can benefit a professional reputation if used correctly, O?Brien said.

She said her advice to business students in her classes is, ?Employers expect you to have a life and expect you to go out, but you need to be aware of the way you portray yourself. They want you to be on Facebook, and if you?re not, they question why you aren?t.?

She said crazy antics portrayed on social media can make an employee a liability for the company and make a company reconsider the type of worker interacting with their clients.

Young workers starting a career must also decide whether to mix business and leisure, and be friends with their supervisors or coworkers. O?Brien said connecting to superiors and coworkers personally is acceptable, so long as content is censored.

Rachel Allen, a Digital Air Strike employee, said she is friends with many coworkers on Facebook.

?I feel like the lines are blurred,? she said, ?but I think it is increasingly more difficult for them not to be.?

Both Allen and Miller maintain professional Facebook profiles in addition to their personal accounts. They use their professional accounts for communication at work and keep their personal profiles private so only selected friends can see what they post.

Allen and Miller are selective about who they are friends with on their personal and professional profiles. They also make their information, page and pictures private so that only their select group of online friends can view their content.

?I wouldn?t consider (the content on my personal profile) to be a reflection of my professional career, however, more of a representation of how I like to spend my free time,? Miller said. ?The things I share on my work Facebook are relevant to my job, but I also will post interesting things that I come across on the Internet. I think it boils down to common sense. Don?t post something you wouldn?t want your boss or client to see.?

Allen said she has toned down crazy statuses and kept personal posts ?PG,? and also said social media can be reflective of how people perceive her in a professional setting.

What Does the Future Hold?

Despite the millions of college-age users who access their online profiles and accounts every hour or day, some miss out on self-networking, recruiting or job opportunities. Three percent of college students do not use social media websites.

O?Brien said younger professionals who are proficient in social media and have the ability to connect are considered an asset in a professional career, and not having social media can put prospective employees at a disadvantage.

Health science junior Chali Clarke deactivated her Facebook after three years of using it too much as a ?pointless distraction.?

She said because she used Facebook for pictures, she chose to use only Instagram instead.

Clarke said she doesn?t plan to ever use Facebook again and forgets that people have it.

Balancing personal and professional boundaries was also complicated for Clarke.

?I deleted my Facebook, because once I get into a professional career that I want, it?s a disadvantage if you have crazy pictures up. ? You don?t want to mix too much of your personal life with your business life,? Clarke said.

Reach the reporter at mrmill10@asu.edu or follow her on Twitter @mrmill10

Source: http://www.statepress.com/2013/04/29/students-build-professional-identity-through-social-media/

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The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: Modin

Like running out of gas on the final lap, spiking the ball on the one yard line after a Hail Mary, or catching the game-winning run sleeping on his lead at third, there is no worse feeling than losing on account of a premature celebration. The same goes for robo-bums fighting over a battery?you've got to plug in before doing the touchdown dance lest you wind up just as dead as your opponent.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-weirdest-thing-on-the-internet-tonight-modin-484467735

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Alexander Gustafsson, Daniel Cormier, Anderson Silva: Who should Jon Jones fight next?

To the surprise of few, UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones held onto his championship belt with a first-round TKO of Chael Sonnen on Saturday night. Part of the reason it was no surprise is that finishing fights is what Jones does. He won four of his last five fights by stoppage. He improves with every fight. Against Sonnen, he used Sonnen's strength of wrestling to control him on the way to the TKO.

Can anyone beat this guy? Here are a few contenders.

Alexander Gustafsson: He's one of the few elite, light heavyweight fighters who hasn't faced Jones. Like Jones, he uses his height and length to keep opponents at bay. He's ready for a fight now because he was pulled from a bout with Gegard Mousasi earlier this month because of a cut. Gustafsson is also who Jones wants to face.

[Related: Jon Jones makes quick work of Chael Sonnen]

"A lot of people think I've been successful because I appear to be larger than my opponents, and with Alexander, that would be no more," Jones said at the post-UFC 159 news conference. "That's who I would like to fight next."

Gustafsson is in:

Daniel Cormier: The Strikeforce grand prix heavyweight champ had a successful UFC debut against Frank Mir. As a two-time Olympic wrestler with knockout power, he has the skills to stop Jones. UFC president Dana White said Cormier would get an immediate title shot if he were to drop down. The weight drop is the biggest question. Cormier wrestled at 211 lbs., and suffered from kidney failure the last time he tried to get to that weight. It won't be an easy cut for him.

Anderson Silva: White said he received a call from the middleweight champ right after the Jones bout, asking for a superfight with either Jones or Georges St-Pierre. White wouldn't confirm who Silva was asking for, but why would he ask for a bout with GSP right after watching Jones fight? It's the superfight MMA fans want, but Silva has Chris Weidman in July first.

[Photos: Jon Jones pummels Chael Sonnen, suffers gruesome injury]

Time off: This is likely Jones' next contender. During Saturday night's fight, he broke his toe in an ugly fashion. Even with Gustafsson, Silva and Cormier waiting for a fight, Jones needs to heal.

Related UFC video on Yahoo! Sports

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
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? Giancarlo Stanton breaks HR drought with tape-measure shot
? Tony Stewart steamed at another driver ... again
? Don Cherry: 'I don't believe women should be in the male dressing room'

What do you want Jones to do next? Speak up on Facebook or on Twitter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/alexander-gustafsson-daniel-cormier-anderson-silva-jon-jones-150515611.html

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Age of Wushu


Enter Age of Wushu, a MMORPG from Snail Games and become a martial arts legend. Starting out? from a small tea shop or abandoning your royal family, you'll see your character rise in rank and spiritual understanding in one of the eight schools to become a noble hero or an opportunistic villain.

You start out by creating a character and engineer his or her model, even specifying the height of the cheekbones and length of the nose; Age of Wushu has a fairly well-detailed character creation screen. The exciting thing is selecting a Legend? one of four distinct "prologues" that start off your character in a specific Chinese city. You'll then get started on a gruesome, nearly two-hour series of tutorial missions that will teach you the basics of movement, combat, and skills.

House of Flying Tea Cups
It felt good to walk around Chengdu, a bustling city with lots of shops, non-player characters, and aspiring kung-fu masters?players. In terms of flavor and climate, Age of Wushu immerses is an experience distinctive from other MMOs. Fans of the Orient, martial arts movies, and Chinese culture will find plenty to be enthused about as they listen to the climatic, delicate tunes. The environments, although often way too vast and empty, are aesthetically pleasing: large, lush gardens, rivers, and traditional houses. The most interesting part, of course, is fighting with the martial art skills. NPCs react negatively as you run into them or scatter when you're horseback riding.

There's no auto attack in the game. Instead, each attack is a different move that you have learned and assigned to your task bar. Even the earliest, double sword slashes can have some kind of stacking or wounding property, be a lifting uppercut, or a charging move. Other than attacking, holding the right mouse button makes the character stand and block, something unusual for MMOs. It minimizes damage rather than negating it completely, but many special parry moves can apply additional effects like chance of paralyzing the opponent on block. And this is where feint moves come in; those overcome the blocking stance and give you the advantage. Effectively, the fighting is a rock-paper-scissor system, which works quite well and adds some depth. With double and triple jumping and other aerial movements, the combat is a pleasure to watch and execute, simulating fairly well what is seen in movies like House of Flying Daggers.

There are many traditional MMORPG elements from games such as World of Warcraft: guilds, various gathering and producing professions, quests, and so on. But Snail Games does some things differently. My character, Linhua, picked up calligraphy. Producing scripts that other players found useful involved a simple minigame. A nice touch, but the process can be found wearisome if you have a stack of items to produce. ?Leveling up skills can be done with one of three ways: Internal Cultivation, Practicing Martial Arts, or Team Practice. The first method involves selecting one skill to be passively learned as you play the game; the second is much faster, but requires money the third needs more players to gather. Team Practice can be done with less than 10 people, and it involves a minigame, but it goes really slowly unless you have a maximum squad. It's good that the game encourages playing socially, but unless you spend money, it takes an awful amount of time to increase skill levels, because the times increase significantly with each level while you can only train one at a time.

This is the beginning of the problems for Age of Wushu. In the initial hours of the game, I learned so many skills it was really hard to keep track of them. My entire action bar filled really fast with moves like "Flowers Reflected in Moon," "Flying Flowers and Falling Leaves," "Whispers of Falling Dust" and so on. They take time to sink in because of similar names and long tooltips that could be shortened significantly. They just came too early, and too fast, and while still learning the game, it felt overwhelming. After finishing the tutorial, I was able to select which of the eight Schools I wanted to be in. And while those have easily distinguishable philosophies, you still are presented with one of three skill sets that you need to select. RPG enthusiasts will embrace it; the rest will cry out and just settle on something. It just takes too long to look through 24 skill sets. Moreover, many tooltips in the game have spelling or grammar mistakes that extend into the dialogue of the game. The translation feels really obvious and is occasionally humorous.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/Us25jy4g7rE/0,2817,2418260,00.asp

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Canon imageFormula P-208 Scan-tini Personal Document Scanner


As its name implies, the Canon imageFormula P-208 Scan-tini Personal Document Scanner has a strong family resemblance to the Editors' Choice Canon imageFormula P-215 Scan-tini Personal Document Scanner. As the lower price suggests, it's a step down in Canon's line. The big difference in hardware is a somewhat slower speed and a 10-sheet, rather than 20-sheet, automatic document feeder (ADF). What keeps it from also being an Editors' Choice is its limited software. If you already have the programs you need, or are willing to buy them separately, however, it can still be a good choice.

At 1.5 by 12.3 by 2.2 inches, and only 1 pound 5 ounces, the P-208 is a touch smaller and about a pound lighter than either the P-215 or the Editor's Choice Canon imageFormula P-150 Scan-tini. Like both of them, however, it offers not just an ADF but duplexing (the ability to scan both sides of a page simultaneously) also.

One key difference between the P-208 on the one hand and the P-150 and P-215 on the other is speed. Canon rates both of those scanners at 15 pages per minute (ppm) for simplex (one-sided) scans in both grayscale and black and white modes, and at 30 images per minute (ipm) for duplex mode (with one image on each side of the page). For color mode, the ratings drop to 10 ppm and 20 ipm. The rating for the P-208, in contrast, is 8 ppm and 16 ipm in all three color modes. (At this writing, the Web site gives a faster speed for black and white mode, but Canon says that was a typo that should be fixed by the time you read this.)

One plus the P-208 shares with the P-215 (but is missing from the P-150) is the ability to scan hard plastic cards, like embossed ID cards and driver licenses. So as far as the scanner itself is concerned, the P-208 is basically a slightly less capable, but also less expensive, alternative to the P-215.

Setup and Software
As with the P-215, the P-208 offers easy setup. In fact, because the scanner gets power over a USB connection, and because it includes Canon's CaptureOnTouch Lite scan utility in on-board memory, setup can be as easy as plugging in the supplied USB cable and letting your computer run the utility.

Running the Lite version of the program from the scanner memory can obviously be convenient if you want to scan to a computer you don't use regularly. In most cases, however, it makes more sense to install the full version on your computer. The most notable additional features are the ability to store scan profiles and the ability to scan to specific destinations other than a file, including to your printer, to email, or to an application program.

Installing programs from the included disc on your computer also lets you install a combination Twain and ISIS driver, which will let you scan directly from most Windows programs; NewSoft Presto! BizCard 6 SE for scanning and managing business cards; and connectors for Evernote, Google Docs, and Microsoft Sharepoint.

The software installation is fairly typical, except that it suffers from the same issue I saw with the P-215 and the Canon imageFormula DR-C125. During installation, you need to choose between a Typical or Custom install. With most scanners, the Typical option would install everything. With the P-208, however, it doesn't.

As I've pointed out in other reviews, Canon should provide some additional information on screen during installation explaining what each choice installs. Without it you may well choose the Typical option and never know that there are other programs available or how to install them.

In any case, for my tests I installed all the software on a system running Windows Vista. For most of the tests I used the full version of CaptureOnTouch, which can scan to a searchable PDF file as well as to image PDF, JPG, BMP, and PPTX formats. In addition I used BizCard for testing business card scanning.

Performance
As with most document scanners, the P-208 offers a 600 pixel per inch (ppi) optical resolution, which is much more than you need for document scanning. Its 200 ppi default setting is also typical, since it's a high enough resolution for most text documents.

The P-208 did a good job on our document management tests. Using the default settings of 200 ppi and color mode, I timed it for scanning and saving the file in image PDF format at an effective 9.7 ppm, significantly faster than the 8 ppm rating. In duplex mode, it was only slightly slower, at 9.0 ppm and 18 ipm. These are not only blazingly fast speeds for a portable scanner, they're faster than the speeds I saw with the P-215, at 6.3 ppm and 12.6 ipm.

Even more impressive is that the P-208 doesn't slow down significantly when you scan to a searchable PDF file. A number of Canon scanners, including the P-215, can make the same claim, but most scanners can't. The Fujitsu ScanSnap S1300, for example, took 1 minute 43 seconds to scan 10 pages and save to an image file on our tests, but 2:37 to scan, recognize the text, and save the file. The P-208 took a total of 1:07 for scanning and saving to a PDF image file, and a total 1:13 for scanning and saving the same document to a searchable PDF file.

The results for business cards were mixed. The scanner had no trouble feeding a stack of seven cards at a time, so it could scan them all with a single scan command, and the speed was acceptably fast. However, the accuracy was poor, with three or more errors in name, company name, and phone numbers on just under half of the cards, and one or two on most of the rest. Depending on how good a typist you are, you might or might not consider this an improvement on entering the information by hand.

The one serious issue I ran into with the P-208 is that I couldn't test it for scanning to editable text format. Canon doesn't include a program than can handle the task. This seems like an odd oversight, since the scan utility offers optical character recognition (OCR) for scanning to a searchable PDF file. However there's no way to use the OCR to scan to a text file.

The inability to scan to editable text format makes it hard to give the Canon imageFormula P-208 Scan-tini Personal Document Scanner an unqualified recommendation. The scanner itself is impressive, thanks to its fast speed, ADF, and duplexing. And even the scan utility is capable as far as it goes. But it doesn't go far enough. If you don't need to scan to editable text format, or already have software for that task, this won't be an issue. If you have to buy a program, however, you may actually save money buying a more expensive scanner, like Canon's own P-215, that already includes the software you need.

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/fhixM3XAimY/0,2817,2418247,00.asp

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Lawmakers: Syria chemical weapons could menace U.S.

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons could be a greater threat after that nation's president leaves power and could end up targeting Americans at home, lawmakers warned Sunday as they considered a U.S. response that stops short of sending military forces there.

U.S. officials last week declared that the Syrian government probably had used chemical weapons twice in March, newly provocative acts in the 2-year civil war that has killed more than 70,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands more. The U.S. assessment followed similar conclusions from Britain, France, Israel and Qatar ? key allies eager for a more aggressive response to the Syrian conflict.

President Barack Obama has said Syria's likely action ? or the transfer of President Bashar Assad's stockpiles to terrorists ? would cross a "red line" that would compel the United States to act.

Lawmakers sought to remind viewers on Sunday news programs of Obama's declaration while discouraging a U.S. foothold on the ground there.

"The president has laid down the line, and it can't be a dotted line. It can't be anything other than a red line," said House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich. "And more than just Syria, Iran is paying attention to this. North Korea is paying attention to this."

Added Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.: "For America to sit on the sidelines and do nothing is a huge mistake."

Obama has insisted that any use of chemical weapons would change his thinking about the United States' role in Syria but said he didn't have enough information to order aggressive action.

"For the Syrian government to utilize chemical weapons on its people crosses a line that will change my calculus and how the United States approaches these issues," Obama said Friday.

But Rep. Jan Schakowsky, an Illinois Democrat, said Sunday the United States needs to consider those weapons. She said that when Assad leaves power, his opponents could have access to those weapons or they could fall into the hands of U.S. enemies.

"The day after Assad is the day that these chemical weapons could be at risk ... (and) we could be in bigger, even bigger trouble," she said.

Both sides of the civil war already accuse each other of using the chemical weapons.

The deadliest such alleged attack was in the Khan al-Assal village in the Aleppo province in March. The Syrian government called for the United Nations to investigate alleged chemical weapons use by rebels in the attack that killed 31 people.

Syria, however, has not allowed a team of experts into the country because it wants the investigation limited to the single Khan al-Assal incident, while U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has urged "immediate and unfettered access" for an expanded investigation.

One of Obama's chief antagonists on Syria, Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., said the United States should go to Syria as part of an international force to safeguard the chemical weapons. But McCain added that he is not advocating sending ground troops to the nation.

"The worst thing the United States could do right now is put boots on the ground on Syria. That would turn the people against us," McCain said.

His friend, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., also said the United States could safeguard the weapons without a ground force. But he cautioned the weapons must be protected for fear that Americans could be targeted. Raising the specter of the lethal bomb at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, Graham said the next attack on U.S. soil could employ weapons that were once part of Assad's arsenal.

"Chemical weapons ? enough to kill millions of people ? are going to be compromised and fall into the wrong hands, and the next bomb that goes off in America may not have nails and glass in it," he said.

Rogers and Schakowsky spoke to ABC's "This Week." Chambliss and Graham were interviewed on CBS's "Face the Nation." McCain appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press."

___

Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: https://twitter.com/Philip_Elliott

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawmakers-syria-chemical-weapons-could-menace-us-154735931.html

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Two bizarre endings mar UFC 159 prelims

The UFC debut of two Strikeforce light heavyweights was spoiled by a odd ending. Ovince St-Preux beat Gian Villante in a majority technical decision after the fight was stopped because of a poke to the eye.

After a back-and-forth, but not entirely thrilling bout, St-Preux threw a punch and accidentally poked Villante in the eye. Villante stepped back and crouched down, indicating to referee Kevin Mulhall that there was a problem with the eye. Mulhall asked Villante if he could see, and Villante said no, he couldn't see.

At that point, Mulhall waved his arms and the fight was stopped. Villante protested, but the fight was over. Because the round had started, it had to be judged. The scores were 30-28, 29-28 and 29-29 in St-Preux's favor.

?I couldn?t see. He did poke me in the eye so I don?t know," Villante said after the fight. "He said the fight was over and I didn?t expect that because I was just reacting to his question. I got poked and my eye was closed up so I thought he would stop it but he didn?t, he just kind of looked at me. I don?t understand how you score thirty seconds of a round and that?s how I lost? We were just getting going and I got poked in the eye. I don?t know what to say.?

Mulhall's stoppage adhered to the eyepoke rule, if not literally, then in spirit. When a fighter says he can't see, the fight is stopped. However, Mulhall could have used better communication and followed procedures. It would have been better if he explained to Villante that he didn't have time to recover and that the fight would be stopped if he said he couldn't see.

UFC 159's weird streak continued in the very next bout. Rustam Khabilov and Yancy Medeiros' fight was stopped halfway through the first round. Medeiros defended a Khabilov takedown attempt, but hit his hand awkwardly. His thumb ended up pointing a way thumbs are not supposed to point and the bout was stopped at 2:32 of the first round.

Two weird endings marred the preliminary card, but the UFC rarely lets a weird ending go. Quite often, these fights get a rematch, so don't be shocked if you see these fights happen again on a card this summer.

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
? New Cardinals DB Tyrann Mathieu continues to raise red flags
? Toronto Raptors reportedly mulling offer to Phil Jackson
? Owner Jeffrey Loria further alienates Marlins, fans with lineup mandate
? Packers announce long-term contract extension for Aaron Rodgers

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/two-bizarre-endings-mar-ufc-159-prelims-020815615.html

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In a first, black voter turnout rate passes whites (The Arizona Republic)

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Markets trade lower on weak U.S GDP data

The Toronto stock market was trading lower today, with nearly all sectors down in response to lower-than-expected U.S. GDP numbers.

The S&P/TSX composite index dropped about 130 points, or one per cent of its value, to 12,198 late in the trading day on Friday afternoon.

The base metals sector saw the largest decline of 2.05 per cent following a strong week for the metals, mining and gold.

Oil was trading down 61 cents on the day at $93.03 a barrel in New York.

The loonie gained a little over a quarter of a cent to 98.31 cents US.

The drops followed reports from the U.S. government that its gross domestic product grew only 2.5 per cent in the first quarter of this year ? economists had expected a rate of as high as three per cent.

CIBC World Markets chief economist Avery Shenfeld said deep public sector cuts were responsible for the slower pace. "While this wasn't a weak quarter, it wasn't the bang up start to the year we had hoped for, and the signals from March suggested that we will only decelerate from here into the spring trimester," Shenfeld said.

The New York Stock Exchange was also down about 35 points, or less than half a per cent, to 9,152, after several companies, including Amazon.com, released weak earnings. The online retailer reported net income declined in the first three months of the year even though revenue increased 22 per cent.

The NASDAQ fell about 18 points to 3271.68, while the the Dow Jones Industrial dipped slightly, dropping about seven points to 14,694.08.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-trade-lower-weak-u-gdp-data-173854384.html

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Wes Craven Set To Direct MTV's 'Scream' TV Reboot?

Big-screen horror franchise is slated to get the television treatment next summer.
By MTV News Staff

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706375/scream-mtv-series.jhtml

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Saturday, April 27, 2013

Rush to help airlines, travelers could crack open U.S. budget door

By David Lawder and Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congress got rid of a headache on Friday when it rescued the flying public from flight delays caused by its budget cutting. But in the view of many U.S. lawmakers, the pain is just about to begin.

Members of Congress and groups representing people hit by across-the-board budget cuts, ranging from cancer patients to welfare recipients, say the quick action on air traffic control staffing underscored the importance of being visible to millions of Americans.

"What are we going to do, every time there's a fire we're going to put it out by moving some funds around? That's a shell game," said Representative Gerald Connolly, a Democrat from northern Virginia.

"I'm going to predict that there's going to be more weeping and gnashing of teeth, as sequestration sets in and we're going to continue to approach this on a piecemeal basis," he said.

Next in line for individual funding relief will be advocates for national parks, low-income housing, AIDS funding, meals on wheels and Community Development Block Grants, Connolly said, adding that budget cuts for these and other safety-net services will be felt severely by local communities.

Representatives for some of these other programs said it was the television images of lines in airports and the interviews with angry passengers that led to action, combined with the lobbying power of the travel industry.

"It means we worry about who's going to scream the loudest now," said Chris Hansen, president of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, which has been lobbying against cuts in federal funding of medical research.

A heavy dose of lobbying from the airline and travel industry preceded the legislation enacted Friday, which permitted the Federal Aviation Administration to move money to avoid the furloughs of air traffic controllers that were causing the delays.

Sequestration - the $109 billion in automatic across-the-board budget cuts enacted by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama - formally took effect in March and barring Congressional action to replace it may continue for a decade.

Some programs won relief from Congress in March, notably the meat and poultry industry, which fought successfully to prevent furloughs of U.S. Department of Agriculture meat inspectors.

But because the furloughs in other programs, such as the FAA, were not immediately implemented, the impact was slow to build.

TRAVEL LOBBY

The travel industry began to accelerate its lobbying effort after it learned early last week from the FAA that as many as 6,700 flights per day could be delayed, potentially reducing capacity at major airports by 30 to 40 percent.

Nicholas Calio, president of Airlines for America, or A4A, the main airlines industry group, worked the phones throughout the week, said Jean Medina, senior vice president for communications at A4A.

"He certainly was in very close contact with a lot of people to make sure they understood what needed to happen," she said.

Its first course of action was to ask the administration for a 30-day delay.

When that was denied, the industry group began focusing on a legislative fix that would clear both houses with bipartisan support and be signed into law by Obama.

US Airways Chief Executive Doug Parker, who would head the world's largest airline if his carrier's merger with AMR Corp's American Airlines is approved, said he spent the past week making calls to government officials in his airline's hub markets to express concern about the furloughs.

"What I know is we're doing great disservice to the flying public and to the citizens of the United States and we need for this to get resolved," Parker told Reuters from Arizona earlier this week.

The non-profit U.S. Travel Association said it mounted its own "sequester offensive" in response to the furloughs and began a consumer texting campaign that connected travelers who had been delayed at airports to members of Congress.

The association also asked industry workers to contact their representatives in Congress to explain that the travel delays put their jobs at risk.

"We were in frequent contact with Congress urging them to solve this problem as soon as possible," Erik Hansen, director of domestic policy at the U.S. Travel Association, said on Friday. "We were able to generate hundreds of calls and emails to Congress and we're hoping that helped to move the ball forward," Hansen said.

VISIBILITY

Airlines for America reported about $6.3 million in lobbying expenses in 2012 according to the Center for Responsive Politics; the U.S. Travel Association spent about $1.7 million; US Airways and Delta about $2.8 million each.

While other interest groups have a lobbying presence in the national capital, they are hard pressed to match the visibility of air travel.

Compared to "longer lines at airports," said Cynthia Pellegrini, a vice president at the March of Dimes, which raises funds to improve the health of mothers and babies, "you can't see that a child's belly is emptier because her family couldn't get food assistance."

"We are not as well-heeled as the travel industry," said Deborah Weinstein, executive director of the Coalition on Human Needs, an alliance of social welfare organizations. "But I think as more people learn of this appalling choice," that Congress made on Friday, "they will get as mad as I am."

Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat from Minnesota, home to a major Delta Air Lines hub in Minneapolis, was among the members backing an FAA budget fix on Thursday when the Senate passed it.

She called it a "practical, pragmatic answer to an immediate problem," but acknowledged that it does nothing to get Congress closer to fixing the problems caused by sequestration. More effects of the cuts, demonstrated dramatically to the public, could do that, she added.

She may not have long to wait. Organizations that have been more quietly protesting the budget cuts were rethinking their strategy on Friday in the wake of Congress' action.

"It is inexplicable why proven and effective Meals on Wheels programs get overlooked from exemption from the sequester when both the business and social case exists," said Ellie Hollander, President and CEO of Meals on Wheels Association of America.

"I guess that's because we need to be a different kind of squeaky wheel."

(Additional reporting by Karen Jacobs, Susan Heavy and Karey Van Hall; Editing by Fred Barbash and Tim Dobbyn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rush-help-airlines-travelers-could-crack-open-u-235204174.html

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Movement of pyrrole molecules defy 'classical' physics

Movement of pyrrole molecules defy 'classical' physics [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stephen Jenkins
sjj24@cam.ac.uk
44-012-233-36502
University of Cambridge

New research shows that movement of the ring-like molecule pyrrole over a metal surface runs counter to the centuries-old laws of 'classical' physics that govern our everyday world.

Using uniquely sensitive experimental techniques, scientists have found that laws of quantum physics - believed primarily to influence at only sub-atomic levels can actually impact on a molecular level.

Researchers at Cambridge's Chemistry Department and Cavendish Laboratory say they have evidence that, in the case of pyrrole, quantum laws affecting the internal motions of the molecule change the "very nature of the energy landscape" making this 'quantum motion' essential to understanding the distribution of the whole molecule.

The study, a collaboration between scientists from Cambridge and Rutgers universities, appeared in the German chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie earlier this month.

A pyrrole molecule's centre consists of a "flat pentagram" of five atoms, four carbon and one nitrogen. Each of these atoms has an additional hydrogen atom attached, sticking out like spokes.

Following experiments performed by Barbara Lechner at the Cavendish Laboratory to determine the energy required for movement of pyrrole across a copper surface, the team discovered a discrepancy that led them down a 'quantum' road to an unusual discovery.

In previous work on simpler molecules, the scientists were able to accurately calculate the 'activation barrier' the energy required to loosen a molecule's bond to a surface, allowing movement using 'density functional theory', a method that treats the electrons which bind the atoms according to quantum mechanics but, crucially, deals with atomic nuclei using a 'classical' physics approach.

Surprisingly, with pyrrole the predicted 'activation barriers' were way out, with calculations "less than a third of the measured value". After much head scratching, puzzled scientists turned to a purely quantum phenomenon called 'zero-point energy'.

In classical physics, an object losing energy can continue to do so until it can be thought of as sitting perfectly still. In the quantum world, this is never the case: everything always retains some form of residual even undetectable energy, known as 'zero-point energy'.

While 'zero-point energy' is well known to be associated with motion of the atoms contained in molecules, it was previously believed that such tiny amounts of energy simply don't affect the molecule as a whole to any measurable extent, unless the molecule broke apart.

But now, the researchers have discovered that the "quantum nature" of the molecule's internal motion actually does affect the molecule as a whole as it moves across the surface, defying the 'classical' laws that it's simply too big to feel quantum effects.

'Zero-point energy' moving within a pyrrole molecule is unexpectedly sensitive to the exact site occupied by the molecule on the surface. In moving from one site to another, the 'activation energy' must include a sizeable contribution due to the change in the quantum 'zero-point energy'.

Scientists believe the effect is particularly noticeable in the case of pyrrole because the 'activation energy' needed for diffusion is particularly small, but that many other similar molecules ought to show the same kind of behavior.

"Understanding the nature of molecular diffusion on metal surfaces is of great current interest, due to efforts to manufacture two-dimensional networks of ring-like molecules for use in optical, electronic or spintronic devices," said Dr Stephen Jenkins, who heads up the Surface Science Group in Cambridge's Department of Chemistry.

"The balance between the activation energy and the energy barrier that sticks the molecules to the surface is critical in determining which networks are able to form under different conditions."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Movement of pyrrole molecules defy 'classical' physics [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stephen Jenkins
sjj24@cam.ac.uk
44-012-233-36502
University of Cambridge

New research shows that movement of the ring-like molecule pyrrole over a metal surface runs counter to the centuries-old laws of 'classical' physics that govern our everyday world.

Using uniquely sensitive experimental techniques, scientists have found that laws of quantum physics - believed primarily to influence at only sub-atomic levels can actually impact on a molecular level.

Researchers at Cambridge's Chemistry Department and Cavendish Laboratory say they have evidence that, in the case of pyrrole, quantum laws affecting the internal motions of the molecule change the "very nature of the energy landscape" making this 'quantum motion' essential to understanding the distribution of the whole molecule.

The study, a collaboration between scientists from Cambridge and Rutgers universities, appeared in the German chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie earlier this month.

A pyrrole molecule's centre consists of a "flat pentagram" of five atoms, four carbon and one nitrogen. Each of these atoms has an additional hydrogen atom attached, sticking out like spokes.

Following experiments performed by Barbara Lechner at the Cavendish Laboratory to determine the energy required for movement of pyrrole across a copper surface, the team discovered a discrepancy that led them down a 'quantum' road to an unusual discovery.

In previous work on simpler molecules, the scientists were able to accurately calculate the 'activation barrier' the energy required to loosen a molecule's bond to a surface, allowing movement using 'density functional theory', a method that treats the electrons which bind the atoms according to quantum mechanics but, crucially, deals with atomic nuclei using a 'classical' physics approach.

Surprisingly, with pyrrole the predicted 'activation barriers' were way out, with calculations "less than a third of the measured value". After much head scratching, puzzled scientists turned to a purely quantum phenomenon called 'zero-point energy'.

In classical physics, an object losing energy can continue to do so until it can be thought of as sitting perfectly still. In the quantum world, this is never the case: everything always retains some form of residual even undetectable energy, known as 'zero-point energy'.

While 'zero-point energy' is well known to be associated with motion of the atoms contained in molecules, it was previously believed that such tiny amounts of energy simply don't affect the molecule as a whole to any measurable extent, unless the molecule broke apart.

But now, the researchers have discovered that the "quantum nature" of the molecule's internal motion actually does affect the molecule as a whole as it moves across the surface, defying the 'classical' laws that it's simply too big to feel quantum effects.

'Zero-point energy' moving within a pyrrole molecule is unexpectedly sensitive to the exact site occupied by the molecule on the surface. In moving from one site to another, the 'activation energy' must include a sizeable contribution due to the change in the quantum 'zero-point energy'.

Scientists believe the effect is particularly noticeable in the case of pyrrole because the 'activation energy' needed for diffusion is particularly small, but that many other similar molecules ought to show the same kind of behavior.

"Understanding the nature of molecular diffusion on metal surfaces is of great current interest, due to efforts to manufacture two-dimensional networks of ring-like molecules for use in optical, electronic or spintronic devices," said Dr Stephen Jenkins, who heads up the Surface Science Group in Cambridge's Department of Chemistry.

"The balance between the activation energy and the energy barrier that sticks the molecules to the surface is critical in determining which networks are able to form under different conditions."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/uoc-mop042613.php

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VaporBLUNT Pinnacle Lightning Review: Get High on the Down Low

You're finally starting to make it in the world. You've got a good job, a sweet pad and the best damn tabletop vape money can buy. So why are you still smoking out of that metal sneak-a-toke from high school whenever you're mobile? Instead, take a hit off the new VaporBLUNT Pinnacle. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/yjuDksk6goc/vaporblunt-pinnacle-lightning-review-get-high-on-the-down-lowlike-an-adult

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Sudan's biggest sugar firm plans biofuel expansion, Joburg IPO

By Ulf Laessing and Khalid Abdelaziz

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - Kenana, Sudan's biggest sugar producer, plans to more than triple its ethanol output within two years to become a major biofuel exporter and intends to make a stock market offering in South Africa, its managing director said.

Kenana, which is mainly owned by the governments of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Sudan, is aiming to more than double its annual sugar output to 1 million tonnes by 2015 as the firm seeks new export markets such as South Sudan, Mohamed El Mardi El Tegani told Reuters.

Sudan, one of Africa's biggest sugar producers after Egypt and South Africa, wants to cut dependency on imports of sugar, a big ingredient in Sudanese food, which makes prices of the commodity politically sensitive locally.

The Khartoum-based company plans a major expansion to diversify into "green products" such as bio fuel, fertilizer and animal feed to satisfy rising demand at home and abroad.

Boosting sugar and biofuel production would help Sudan overcome the loss of most oil reserves with South Sudan's secession in 2011. Oil used to be the main source for dollars needed to fund imports of sugar or gasoline.

Kenana wants to boost its annual production of biofuel to 200 million litres by 2015 from 65 million, of which 50 percent would be exported.

While currently 95 percent of its output is being sold to the European Union, Kenana launched this month a partnership with Nile Petroleum, one of Sudan's biggest oil distributors, to roll out ethanol at petrol stations.

"There is a big potential for production in Sudan," Tegani said in an interview on Thursday. "It improves the environment. Cost-wise definitely ethanol is cheaper than the normal gasoline," he said. Sudan is cutting down on fuel subsidies fuelling a budget deficit.

To fund its expansion, Kenana expects to get $500 million in a capital injection this year from its main shareholders, he said.

To raise more the firm plans to make next year a 25 percent an initial public offering with a primary listing in Johannesburg and secondary listing in Dubai, he said. Kenana has appointed Russia-focused Renaissance Capital and Dubai investment bank Shuaa Capital to manage the offering.

He gave no details but the firm said last year it planned to raise around $200 million. It had previously eyed an offering in Hong Kong late last year but given up the plan due to U.S. sanctions deterring firms around the globe to deal with Sudan.

SUGAR

Kenana will produce around 370,000 tonnes of sugar at its plant in White Nile state in the 2012-13 season, up from around 355,000 last year, he said. It aims to produce more than 400,000 tonnes next season after adding some 11,000 acres of land.

It also plans to refine this year 200,000 tonnes of imported raw sugar from Brazil, which will be to be exported to African neighbours such as Chad and the Central African Republic.

Two new plants will come online to help double output. Redais, in which Chinese investors have a stake, will produce some 500,000 tonnes of raw sugar from 2015. El Ramash in Sennar state will produce 150,000 tonnes from 2016.

"We are in talks for a major contract with South Sudan...We expect to do around 100,000 tonnes," he said. Kenana already exported 100,000 tonnes raw sugar to the EU and 30,000 tonnes of white sugar to Kenya this year.

Sudan's White Nile Sugar Co, in which Kenana is the biggest shareholder, expects to produce 130,000 tonnes in the 2012-13 season after launching its operations last year, Tegani said. Output would double to 250,000 tonnes next year

As part of its "green" diversification, Kenana also plans to launch 200,000 tonnes of annual production of bio fertilizer from December. Half of that would be exported to the EU and Gulf with the rest to be sold at home.

The firm would also start producing between 100,000 tonnes and 150,000 cubic meters per day of carbon dioxide this year, he said. Kenana also plans making "green" plastic.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sudans-biggest-sugar-firm-plans-biofuel-expansion-joburg-124329766.html

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George Jones, country superstar, has died at 81

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ? George Jones, the peerless, hard-living country singer who recorded dozens of hits about good times and regrets and peaked with the heartbreaking classic "He Stopped Loving Her Today," has died. He was 81.

Publicist Kirt Webster says Jones died Friday at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville after being hospitalized with fever and irregular blood pressure.

Known for his clenched, precise baritone, Jones had No. 1 songs in five separate decades, 1950s to 1990s, and was idolized not just by fellow country singers, but by Frank Sinatra, Pete Townshend, Elvis Costello, James Taylor and countless others.

In a career that lasted more than 50 years, "Possum" recorded more than 150 albums and became the champion and symbol of traditional country music, a well-lined link to his hero, Hank Williams.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/george-jones-country-superstar-died-82-141703663.html

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Rotoworld: Where they went in Rd. 1, 1-32

Thursday, April 25, 2013
Mike Clay is a football writer for Rotoworld.com and the Founder/Managing Editor of Pro Football Focus Fantasy. He can be found on Twitter .
Email :Mike Clay

Source: http://www.rotoworld.com/articles/nfl/43146/71/2013-nfl-draft-tracker

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Friday, April 26, 2013

RNC Hires Former Real Estate Agent as Director of 'African ...

Click if you like this column!

I can?t decide if the Republican National Committee?s (RNC) minority outreach effort is more like watching a sitcom or a soap opera dubbed ?The Young and the Foolish.? In another twist to the organization?s Growth & Opportunity Project, to attract more voters of color to the GOP, the RNC hired former realtor Amani L. Council to the newly appointed position of Director of African American Communications.

No, you didn?t misread anything. I wrote realtor. (I won?t get started on why Republicans have followed Democrats into the hyphen world of calling blacks AAs. Blacks are no more African than whites are Caucasian, German or French Americans.)

As an RNC staffer remarked: ?Makes perfect sense. If she can sell real estate in the DC she should be able to sell the GOP to the black media or sell you a house.?

An Internet search revealed Council is an agent working for RE/MAX Specialists in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. You just can?t make this stuff up. According to the Branch Avenue in Bloom March/April 2012 newsletter, sponsored by the Maryland Small Business Development Center, Council is described as a ?successful realtor for the past six years,? working for RE/MAX Specialists.

Council said: ?I haven?t done real marketing since I?ve been in the business. My clients are my billboards. I truly do believe customer service is my best tool and I make it a point to treat each client with the same level of attention and care I would expect in any business deal I encounter. Anyone can sell HOMES but not everyone delivers great service!?

It looks like the RNC and its conservative message may be the biggest billboard Amani Council has ever had to ?sell? to one of the most dubious group of buyers ever, blacks. In the RNC press release touting this dynamic new hire, the RNC notes Council will be working with Deputy Press Secretary Raffi Williams, son of political commentator Juan Williams, to ?build relationships with African American media as we work to earn the trust of more African American voters.?

The RNC praised Council?s ?wealth of experience on the Hill and in public relations? but makes no mention of the six years she worked in real estate. Why?

Council's resume indicates since 2008 she has worked at Bass Public Affairs, as Director of New Media and Business Development. Council?s Hill experience includes working as a Legislative Assistant for Rep. J. Randy Forbes (R-VA) from 2001-2002 and as a Legislative Correspondent/Systems Administrator for Rep. Clay Shaw (R-FL) 1998-2001. From 2006-2007, her resume states she was Director of Government Affairs for the Family Research Council.

Source: http://townhall.com/columnists/crystalwright/2013/04/25/rnc-hires-former-real-estate-agent-as-director-of-african-american-communications-n1577499

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?Our Town? Cast Fails to Do Justice to Thorton Wilder's 1938 Pulitzer ...

OurTown-TownePlayers2013

Thornton Wilder?s masterpiece of modern drama, Our Town, is a deceptively difficult play to stage successfully, because it requires a large supporting cast capable of transforming their fleeting cameo roles into unforgettable characters. This powerful and poetic three-act play, which won the 1938 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, delivers three juicy slices of turn-of-the-century American life in Grover?s Corners, New Hampshire, circa 1901 until 1913. Wilder labeled Act I ?Daily Life,? Act II ?Love and Marriage,? and Act III ?Death and Eternity.? But to squeeze every delicious drop from Our Town requires a talent pool deeper and broader than the Towne Players of Garner have tapped for their current community-theater production.

Opening-night jitters arrived a day late for Towne Players mainstay Holmes Morrison, who struggled all Saturday evening ? and frequently failed ? to remember his lines as the omniscient, nearly omnipresent Stage Manager, who narrates the show and summons the rest of the cast to act out selected scenes in the lives of bashful high school baseball star-turned-farmer George Gibbs (played by Jackson Honeycutt) and the brainy girl-nextdoor, Emily Webb (portrayed by CeeCee Huffman), whom George chases until she catches him.

While Holmes Morrison was experiencing the actor?s nightmare live onstage, Jackson Honeycutt and CeeCee Huffman were charming Towne Players patrons with their cute old-fashioned courtship. Meanwhile, Tim Stancil and Leslie Dahlin were provoking chuckles as George?s prickly physician father, Civil War buff Dr. Frank Gibbs, and his restless wife, the fomer Julia Hersey, who wants to bankroll a trip for the two of them to Paris with the unexpected windfall that she received when she sold Grandmother Wentworth?s highboy to the dawn of the 20th century version of ?American Pickers? Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz.

Daniel Barth injects even more personality into his pithy portrait of Charles Webb, the crusty editor of the local newspaper; but Rebecca Stiles is out of her depth trying to impersonate Emily Gibbs? mother, Myrtle, and her characterization is bland.

Jason Weeks likewise fails to make much of a mark as troubled church organist and choirmaster Simon Stimson, but Verlene Oates provides some comic relief as town busybody Louella Soames.

Towne Players artistic director Beth Honeycutt, who staged a more successful production of Our Town in 2004, still has a lot of work to do to whip the current ensemble into shape. As it is, they fail to do justice to one of the masterpieces of the American theater ? and that?s a shame.

The Towne Players present OUR TOWN at 8 p.m. April 25 and 26 and 2 and 8 p.m. April 27 in Garner Performing Arts Center, 742 W. Garner Rd., Garner, North Carolina 27529. TICKETS: $15 ($12 students and seniors). BOX OFFICE: General-admission tickets will be sold at the door and online at http://www.garnerperformingartscenter.com/TPG.asp. GROUP RATES/INFORMATION: 919-779-6144. SHOW/SEASON: http://www.towneplayers.org/performances/current-season/. PRESENTER: http://www.towneplayers.org/. VENUE: http://www.garnerperformingartscenter.com/. DIRECTIONS: http://www.garnerperformingartscenter.com/Directions.asp. OTHER LINKS: Our Town (play) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Town (Wikipedia). The Script (with foreword by Donald Margulies): http://books.google.com/ (Google Books). Study Guide http://www.bard.org/education/studyguides/OurTown/town.html (Utah Shakespeare Festival). Thorton Wilder (playwright): http://www.twildersociety.org/ (Thorton Wilder Society) and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thornton_Wilder (Wikipedia). Beth Honeycutt (director): https://www.facebook.com/beth.honeycutt2 (Facebook page).

Robert W. McDowell is editor and publisher of Triangle Review, a FREE weekly e-mail arts newsletter. This preview is reprinted with permission from Triangle Review.

To start your FREE subscription to this newsletter, e-mail RobertM748@aol.com and type SUBSCRIBE TR in the Subject: line.

To read all of Robert W. McDowell?s Triangle Review previews and reviews online at Triangle Arts & Entertainment, click http://triangleartsandentertainment.org/author/robert-w-mcdowell/.


Tagged as: Beth Honeycutt, Garner Performing Arts Center, Our Town, Thornton Wilder, Towne Players

Source: http://triangleartsandentertainment.org/2013/04/our-town-cast-fails-to-do-justice-to-thorton-wilders-1938-pulitzer-prize-winning-play/

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