Monday, November 5, 2012

Prosecutor: US soldier had blood of victims on him

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 2011, file photo, Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System photo, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, 1st platoon sergeant, Blackhorse Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division participates in an exercise at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. The preliminary hearing for Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians in March, begins Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, with villagers expected to testify by video from Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan. Bales is scheduled to appear at Joint Base Lewis-McChord for the pretrial hearing, which is expected to last two weeks. (AP Photo/DVIDS, Spc. Ryan Hallock, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 2011, file photo, Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System photo, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, 1st platoon sergeant, Blackhorse Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division participates in an exercise at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. The preliminary hearing for Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians in March, begins Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, with villagers expected to testify by video from Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan. Bales is scheduled to appear at Joint Base Lewis-McChord for the pretrial hearing, which is expected to last two weeks. (AP Photo/DVIDS, Spc. Ryan Hallock, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 2011, file photo, Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System photo, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, left, 1st platoon sergeant, Blackhorse Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division participates in an exercise at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. The preliminary hearing for Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians in March, begins Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, with villagers expected to testify by video from Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan. Bales is scheduled to appear at Joint Base Lewis-McChord for the pretrial hearing, which is expected to last two weeks. (AP Photo/DVIDS, Spc. Ryan Hallock, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 23, 2011, file photo, Defense Video & Imagery Distribution System photo, Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, 1st platoon sergeant, Blackhorse Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division participates in an exercise at the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. The preliminary hearing for Bales, accused of killing 16 Afghan civilians in March, begins Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, with villagers expected to testify by video from Kandahar Air Field in Afghanistan. Bales is scheduled to appear at Joint Base Lewis-McChord for the pretrial hearing, which is expected to last two weeks. (AP Photo/DVIDS, Spc. Ryan Hallock, File)

(AP) ? The soldier accused of killing 16 villagers in a nighttime rampage in Afghanistan returned to his base wearing a cape and with the blood of his victims on his rifle, belt, shirt and pants, a military prosecutor said Monday.

Staff Sgt. Robert Bales was incredulous when fellow U.S. soldiers drew their weapons on him when he returned to Camp Belambay in southern Afghanistan last March, prosecutor Lt. Col. Jay Morse said as a preliminary hearing opened at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.

Bales then turned to one sergeant at the scene and said: "Mac, if you rat me out ..." Morse said.

Bales, 39, has been charged with 16 counts of premeditated murder and six counts of attempted murder in one of the worst atrocities of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Nine of the victims were children. The hearing will help determine whether the case goes to a court martial.

Bales has not entered a plea. His attorneys have not discussed the evidence in the case, but say Bales has PTSD and suffered a concussive head injury during a prior deployment to Iraq.

The father of two from Lake Tapps, Wash., sat beside one of his civilian lawyers, Emma Scanlan, in green fatigues as an investigating officer read the charges against Bales and informed him of his rights. Bales said, "Sir, yes, sir," when asked if he understood them.

Morse said Bales seemed utterly normal in the hours before the March 11 killings. With his colleagues, Bales watched the movie "Man on Fire," a fictional account of a former CIA operative on a revenge rampage.

Just before he left the base, Morse said, Bales told a Special Forces soldier that he was unhappy with his family life, and that the troops should have been quicker to retaliate for a roadside bomb attack that claimed one soldier's leg.

"At all times he had a clear understanding of what he was doing and what he had done," said Morse, who described Bales as lucid, coherent and responsive.

Bales is accused of slipping away from the remote outpost with an M-4 rifle outfitted with a grenade launcher to attack the villages of Balandi and Alkozai, in a dangerous district.

American officials have said they believe Bales broke the slaughter into two episodes ? walking first to one village, returning to the base and slipping away again to carry out the second attack.

The prosecutor said Bales returned to the base at one point, telling a colleague about shooting people at a village. The soldier apparently took it as a bad joke and responded: "Quit messing around."

Prosecutors played for the first time a video captured by a surveillance blimp that showed a caped figure running toward the base, then stopping and dropping his weapons as he's confronted. There is no audio. Morse said Bales was the caped figure.

After being taken into custody, Morse said, Bales said: "I thought I was doing the right thing."

The hearing is scheduled to run as long as two weeks, and part of it will be held overnight to allow video testimony from witnesses, including an estimated 10 to 15 Afghans, in Afghanistan.

Bales' attorney, John Henry Browne, said the hearing will give the defense a chance to see what the government can prove. They are expecting a court martial.

Bales is an Ohio native who joined the Army in late 2001 ? after the 9/11 attacks ? as his career as a stockbroker imploded. An arbitrator entered a $1.5 million fraud judgment against him and his former company that went unpaid, and his attempt to start an investment firm in Florida also failed.

He was serving his fourth combat tour after three stints in Iraq, and his arrest prompted a national discussion about the stresses posed by multiple deployments.

Scanlan, his attorney, declined to say to what extent the lawyers hope to elicit testimony that could be used to support a mental-health defense. Bales himself will not make any statements because his lawyers said he would have nothing to gain.

Bales' wife, Karilyn, who plans to attend the hearing, had complained about financial problems on her blog in the year before the killings, and noted Bales was disappointed at being passed over for a promotion.

Browne described those stresses as garden-variety ? nothing that would prompt such a massacre ? and has also said, without elaborating, that Bales suffered a traumatic incident during his second Iraq tour that triggered "tremendous depression."

Bales remembers little or nothing from the time of the attacks, the defense said.

Scanlan, who deferred an opportunity to give an opening statement, said the Army had only recently turned over a preliminary DNA trace evidence report from the crime scenes, but defense experts have not had time to review it.

Bales, who spent months in confinement at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., before being transferred to Lewis-McChord last month, is doing well, Scanlan said.

"He's getting prepared," she said, "but it's nerve-wracking for anybody."

___

Johnson can be reached at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-11-05-Afghanistan%20Massacre/id-8d1b23bad08048e0ac202c961379a429

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NBA 2012 RS (03 nov) CHA Bobcats v DAL Mavericks 540p

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Tips For A Successful Web Marketing Plan

Saturday, November 3rd, 2012 at 9:38 am ?

Many people have made a bundle from online marketing. By using the information in this article, you will be able to turn web marketing into a profitable venture. Apply the tips in this article to start seeing positive results from internet marketing business ventures.

Anything you write as part of your online marketing efforts needs to be worded in positive terms only. Even common phrases that are sort of negative like ?worry free? can put customers into a negative frame of mind. g.

Pay-per-sale affiliate plans can be tricky. They can also be very rewarding if they work. Do your homework and see whether or not this is something you might be interested in.

Before you fully commit to an affiliate company, double check and make sure that you are going to get commissions for all sales. You need to know if they can track all orders, even those made by mail or phone. If you have earned profits through these alternative methods, you certainly want to ensure that you are paid.

In an ideal world, every affiliate website would be a breeze to use, but this is not always the case. Some sites are not user-friendly. Do not let the quality of your website design determine how well your business is. Not only is this helpful, but it also builds trust and encourages purchases.

This can be vital if you have an elderly audience, such as baby boomers. By increasing the font, you can surprisingly increase sales if it makes the text easier to read.

As you use internet marketing, think of giving your customers jobs as affiliates. You can use a customer?s purchasing record to determine whether or not they would be receptive to becoming your affiliate. If you can get one of your customers to become an affiliate for your business, you can increase your sales through their efforts. This can boost revenue and improve the visibility of your product.

Make sure you understand how order tracking works with the affiliates that you have chosen. If you direct orders to the company that get made by phone or by mail, and those orders are not connected back to your affiliate ID, you could lose out on significant portions of your commission.

It is important that your readers are able to trust your content. Readers that really like what you write will keep coming back for more, and they are also more likely to try your links.

It is good to act on suggestions from just a few books about affiliates than using several. There will be little to no return initially and be prepared to not make money until you get it right. However, if you find yourself doing more research than is necessary, recognize that you are stalling. Stop reading, choose a few tips and go out and apply them.

Be certain that you remain current on all the latest news in your industry. If it seems to you like you are falling behind, you probably are. If you don?t change this quickly, your competitors will quickly take business away from you.

Sometimes the age-old motto holds true, you must spend to earn. This motto is especially true when it comes to affiliate marketing. Invest some of your profits right back in your web marketing program. Advertising with venues, such as Google and Facebook, can yield a great return on investment.

Give your potential buyers a lot of information about your product, like screen shots and user reviews. By providing more information to a possible consumer, you have a higher chance of them making the investment in your products and sending additional business to you.

Take the tips and the advice that was included in this article and apply it to your upcoming online marketing business. Learning the established tricks of this trade from the experiences of veterans will benefit you substantially.

Eric Green

Skype ID: thedigitalgangster

P.S. If you are a Network Marketer or Affiliate Marketer, check out these 3 MLM Tips.

Stop Struggling in your business and learn exactly how you can be generating 100 Percent Commissions with one simple Blogging System.

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  3. Make More Money With Our Web Marketing Tips
  4. Fit These Affiliate Marketing Tips Into Your Plan
  5. Make A Competitive Affiliate Promotion Plan With These Suggestions

Tagged with: internet marketing ? marketing business ? online marketing ? web marketing

Filed under: Affiiate Marketing

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Source: http://thedigitalgangster.com/tips-for-a-successful-web-marketing-plan/

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Sunday, November 4, 2012

George Lucas & Disney: Vocally Anti-Corporate Filmmaker Sells To Movie Giant

LOS ANGELES ? There's no mistaking the similarities. A childhood on a dusty farm, a love of fast vehicles, a rebel who battles an overpowering empire ? George Lucas is the hero he created, Luke Skywalker.

His filmmaking outpost, Skywalker Ranch, is so far removed from the Hollywood moviemaking machine he once despised, that it may as well be on the forest moon of Endor.

That's why this week's announcement that Lucas is selling the "Star Wars" franchise and the entire Lucasfilm business to The Walt Disney Co. for more than $4 billion is like a laser blast from outer space.

Lucas built his film operation in Marin County near San Francisco largely to avoid the meddling of Los Angeles-based studios. His aim was to finish the "Star Wars" series_ his way.

Today the enterprise has far surpassed the 68-year-old filmmaker's original goals. The ranch covers 6,100 acres and houses one of the industry's most acclaimed visual effects companies, Industrial Light & Magic. Lucasfilm, with its headquarters now in San Francisco proper, has ventured into books, video games, merchandise, special effects and marketing. Just as Anakin Skywalker became the villain Darth Vader, Lucas _once the outsider_ had grown to become the leader of an empire.

"What I was trying to do was stay independent so that I could make the movies I wanted to make," Lucas says in the 2004 documentary "Empire of Dreams." "But now I've found myself being the head of a corporation ... I have become the very thing that I was trying to avoid."

After the blockbuster sale announcement Tuesday, Lucas expressed a desire to give away much of his fortune, donate to educational causes and return to the experimental filmmaking of his youth. Still, the move stunned those who've followed him. He'd contemplated retirement for years and said he'd never make another "Star Wars" film.

Dale Pollock, the author of the 1999 biography "Skywalking," said Lucas disdained the Disney culture in interviews he gave in the 1980s, even though he admired the company's founder. "He felt the corporate `Disneyization' had destroyed the spirit of Walt," Pollock said.

Lucas said through a spokeswoman on Saturday that he never said such a thing. But his anti-corporate streak is renowned. In the Lucasfilm-sanctioned documentary "Empire of Dreams", Lucas says on camera that he is "not happy that corporations have taken over the film industry."

Growing up in the central California town of Modesto, the independent streak was strong in young Lucas. The family lived on a walnut ranch and Lucas' father owned a stationery store. But, like his fictional protege Luke, George had no interest in taking over the family business. Lucas and his father fought when George made it clear that he'd rather go to college to study art than follow in his father's footsteps.

Lucas loved fast cars, and dreamed that racing them would be his ticket out. A near-fatal car crash the day before his high school graduation convinced him otherwise.

"I decided I'd better settle down and go to school," he told sci-fi magazine Starlog in 1981.

As a film student at the University of Southern California, he experimented with "cinema verite," a provocative form of documentary, and "tone poems" that visualized a piece of music or other artistic work.

The style is reflected in some of the short films he made at USC: "1:42:08" focused on the sound of a Lotus race car's engine driving at full speed and "Anyone Who Lived in a Pretty How Town," inspired by an e.e. Cummings poem. In later interviews, Lucas described his early films as "visual exercises."

Lucas' intellectual explorations led to an interest in anthropology, especially the work of American mythologist Joseph Campbell, who studied the common thread linking the myths of disparate cultures. This inspired Lucas to explore archetypal storylines that resonated across the ages and around the world.

Lucas' epic battle with the movie industry began after Warner Bros. forced him to make unwanted changes to an early film, "THX 1138." Later, Universal Pictures insisted on revisions to "American Graffiti" that Lucas felt impinged on his creative freedom. The experience led Lucas to insist on having total control of all his work, just like Charlie Chaplin and Walt Disney in their heyday.

"In order to get my vision out there, I really needed to learn how to manipulate the system because the system is designed to tear you down and destroy everything you are doing," Lucas said in an interview with Charlie Rose.

He shopped his outline for "Star Wars" to several studios before finding a friend in Alan Ladd Jr., an executive at 20th Century Fox. Despite budget and deadline overruns, and pressure from the studio, the movie was a huge success when it was released in 1977. It grossed $798 million in theaters worldwide and caused Fox's stock price at the time to double.

In one of the wisest business moves in Hollywood history, Lucas cut a deal with distributor Fox before the film's release so that he could retain ownership of the sequels and rights for merchandise. He figured in the 1970s that might mean peddling a few T-shirts and posters to fans to help market the movie. Over the decades, merchandising has formed the bedrock of his multi-billion-dollar enterprise, resulting in a bonanza for Lucas from action figures, toys, spinoff books and other products.

Industrial Light & Magic, the unit he started in a makeshift space in the Los Angeles suburb of Van Nuys, moved to the ranch in northern California and lent its prowess to other movies. It broke ground using computers, motion-controlled cameras, models and masks. Its reach is breathtaking, notably among the biggest science fiction movies of the 1980s: "E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial," "Poltergeist," "Back to the Future," "Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark," "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" and more.

"Between him and (Steven) Spielberg, they changed how movies got made," said Matt Atchity, editor-in-chief of movie review website Rotten Tomatoes.

These days, the talent at ILM has spread around the globe, and many former employees have become top executives at other special effects companies, said Chris DeFaria, executive vice president of digital production at Warner Bros.

"You meet anybody who's a significant executive or artist at a company, they've spent their time at ILM or got their start there. That's probably one of George's greatest gifts to the business," DeFaria said.

Lucas helped make the tools that were needed for his films. ILM developed the world's first computerized film editing and music mixing technology, revolutionizing what had been a cut-and-splice affair. Pixar, the imaging computer he founded as a division of Lucasfilm, became a world-famous animated movie company. Apple's Steve Jobs bought and later sold it to Disney in 2006.

But the goliath Lucas created began to weigh on him. Fans-turned-critics felt the "Star Wars" prequel trilogy he directed fell short of the first films. Others believed his revisions to the re-released classics undid some of what made the first movies great.

Giving up his role at the head of Lucasfilm may shield him from the fury of rebellious fans and critics. He said in a video released by Disney that the sale would allow him to "do other things, things in philanthropy and doing more experimental kind of films."

"I couldn't really drag my company into that."

Still, Lucas is not planning on going to a galaxy far, far away.

Speaking on Friday night at Ebony magazine's Power 100 event in New York, Lucas said: "It's 40 years of work and it's been my life, but I'm ready to move on to bigger and better things. I have a foundation, an educational foundation. I do a lot of work with education, and I'm very excited about doing that."

This week he assured the incoming president of Lucasfilm, Kathleen Kennedy that he'd be around to advise her on future "Star Wars" movies _just like the apparition of Jedi Knight Obi-Wan Kenobi helps Luke through his adventures.

"They're finishing the hologram now," he told Kennedy. "Don't worry."

___

Liedtke reported from San Francisco. Global Entertainment Editor Nekesa Mumbi Moody in New York contributed to this story.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/04/george-lucas-disney-sale_n_2072189.html

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California also worries about extreme storms after Sandy

In the wake of Hurricane Sandy, researchers in California are grappling with their own questions about increasingly extreme weather.

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. Climate issue heats up after superstorm

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: The climate change issue has been virtually a non-issue during the presidential campaign ? but it's primed to take a higher profile after the elections, in part due to Hurricane Sandy's horrific aftermath.

    2. How to cope with lab-animal tragedy
    3. Elephant can speak Korean ? out loud
    4. Bulgaria claims to find Europe's oldest town

The Pacific Ocean isn't warm enough to produce a superstorm like Sandy on the West Coast, researchers say, but climate change could give rise to more frequent severe storms in the region.

"We can see very big storms, and there are a couple of issues related to climate change to think about," said Roger Bales, director of the Sierra Nevada Research Institute (SNRI) at the University of California, Merced. Winter snowstorms, for example, help build up the snowpack in the mountains, which the state depends on for its year-round water supply.

"But if you warm the climate, those storms become rain events ? there's more immediate runoff, less water storage, and the rain will actually melt some of the existing snowpack," Bales said.

The state already sees a handful of major snowstorms over California's mountains each winter. A series of such storms, however, could unleash destructive flooding and landslides in the state.

"It's not uncommon during the winter, at least once, that we will see storms coming off the Pacific and drop more than 100 inches of snow in the mountains over short durations," Robert Rice, a researcher with SNRI, said in a statement Thursday. "That could translate into 10 inches of precipitable water ? numbers similar to what they're measuring in Hurricane Sandy."

Scientists are also concerned with "atmospheric rivers" like the so-called Pineapple Express, which drives moisture across from Hawaii to the West Coast and can produce severe, localized damage.

"We have very large storms that cross into California and affect our region ? not with the same widespread damage as Hurricane Sandy, but with water and wind that are comparable to hurricanes and tornados," Rice said.

The SNRI researchers have advocated for a monitoring system to observe snowpack statewide, which they say would help control California's water resources more efficiently.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also onFacebook & Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49683335/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Hannah the Pet Society raises questions as it expands quickly ...

Lease or buy?

There are arguments for either when it comes to a home or car. Now add "pet" to the list.

Hannah the Pet Society, a 2-year-old venture based in Portland, uses dating service-like software to matches people with pets that best fit their lifestyle, personality and means.

But customers attracted to the cuddly lineup at the company's Clackamas Town Center storefront don't plop down cash and walk out with one of Hannah's dogs, cats, rabbits or guinea pigs. They enroll in an unconventional program that mimics an HMO, complete with contract terms and termination fees.

Customers agree to pay $39 to around $200 a month, depending on species and size, that covers food deliveries, routine and emergency veterinary care at Hannah facilities, flea treatments, dental work, nail trims, training and initial supplies, such as a litter box or leash. The company requires a specific commitment depending on the animal's age. After that period, a client may buy out of the contract, a cost of as much as $600 for dogs.

Hannah says it has 1,000 human members with 1,400 pets, most of which were members' existing pets, and aims to open a second location in Washington Square soon. Next year it plans to unveil two 15,000-square-foot hospitals -- one near the Tigard mall and another near Mall 205 in Southeast Portland -- for routine and emergency care, surgeries and training.

That's an ambitious growth strategy for an upstart with a controversial model in a place that's passionate about its pets.

Portland has more than its share of pet supply and day care centers, as well as a few pet-friendly pubs. Animal lovers here are so emphatic about adopting "rescue" animals that the practice was parodied on the city-spoofing TV show, "Portlandia."

While "lease" is technically accurate, critics use it as a pejorative. They say the program devalues animals, treating them as products instead of family members.

They also question whether Hannah overplays its commitment to finding homes for rescued animals. They suspect Hannah relies heavily on animals acquired from breeders, citing images of apparent pure-breed puppies on the company's website and social-media pages.

Others, including Portland-area veterinarians, county animal agencies and the city's largest nonprofit shelters, including the Oregon Humane Society, say they won't adopt animals directly to Hannah out of concern its decisions about care could be less ethical or responsible than that of an individual.

"I'm not sure to what extent Hannah owners have control and discretion over their pets' health," said Sharon Harmon, director of the Oregon Humane Society. "That kind of murkiness left us with too many questions."


Pet hospital model
For pet advocates, in and out of Oregon, Hannah's pet subscription plan is unheard of. Yet aside from its 75-question pet-matching process and the ownership issue, the health plan is similar to an all-inclusive care model at the Banfield Pet Hospital chain founded in Northeast Portland by veterinarian Scott Campbell.

As Campbell managed what became the world's largest vet chain, his research led him to believe a pet's physical and mental health began with the right owner. Further, he contended, a preventive care model in which owners pay in advance for regular checkups and treatments kept animals alive years longer.

Before selling his Banfield stake in 2007, Campbell was featured in a trade publication series on revolutionary veterinarians. "Still today people want to focus on illness rather than wellness," he told "Veterinary Economics."

If costs continued to grow, Campbell contended, people will be less likely to schedule vet visits. And that, of course, isn't good for the industry.

Even if vets agreed with the philosophy, many independent operators were wary of his corporate machine, which had become the Walmart of vet clinics. That perception intensified after Banfield teamed up with national retailer PetSmart.

Indeed, pet spending has mushroomed, whether due to need, rising vet costs or more options for splurging on four-legged family members. Owners are expected to spend $52.9 billion on their pets this year, according to the American Pet Products Association. That's a 28 percent jump over five years, and a 79 percent surge in the last decade.

Will Novak, a veterinarian who had worked for Campbell at Banfield, said that company tried to limit costs by selling pet insurance but found premiums were too expensive. At Hannah, where Novak serves as CEO, the unique ownership twist caps costs without the middleman.

"Our cost is about 50 percent less than if you paid for it on your own," he said. "The cost stays the same, no matter what happens. There are no surprises."

If customers can't pay Hannah's monthly fee, they can return pets and pay off any balance, the company said. No one will show up to repossess the animal.

In addition to happier and healthier pets the format makes business sense: Increased longevity means increased profits.

Still, the humane society's Harmon and rescue volunteers fear Hannah vets might not offer a full range of care options when a pet is ill. Novak counters that customers can always buy out their contracts to seek a second opinion. If a pet's condition is potentially fatal, he said, Hannah will waive the $600 cancellation fee.

"Buyer beware!"
Portland area pet owners who've heard of Hannah's model liken it to 'Big Brother' watching. Customer Berniece Sullivan says it feels more like someone's always on standby to help.

A single mom on a fixed income, she put off her three children's pleadings for a puppy out of concerns about unexpected vet expenses. She heard about Hannah this year and, after a series of visits and the required hourlong pet meeting, her family walked away with a terrier mix puppy named Rudy.

"Having that sense of financial security," she said, "helps you sleep well at night knowing you won't have some kind of phenomenal fee -- or, have to decide to end their life -- if something awful happens."

So much so, she added her 9-year-old cat to the plan recently for $58 a month.

Sullivan isn't sure about Rudy's background. She thinks he's a rescue dog, but really it was his big brown eyes that were the attraction.

That worries Denise Hampton, a longtime animal rescue volunteer who helped author a news release last month warning "buyer beware!" and slamming Hannah's business practices.

She says Hannah employees overstate, whether intentionally or due to a lack of training, the company's partnerships with rescue groups and shelters. At the same time, she worries that if Hannah takes the cream of nonprofits' adoptable crop, they'll struggle.

"If they were getting dogs from breeders and being honest that would be fine for some people," she said. "Others could just say, 'This isn't for me.'"

Indeed, Hannah executives said they paid for animals in the past from pet owners who had the occasional or accidental litter. However, the company decided it wanted a new location at Washington Square in Tigard, a mall with strict policies forbidding stores selling pets from breeders.

To avoid confusion, Hannah's Placement Services Director Lori Davis said the company narrowed its focus and will now only adopt animals from nonprofit shelters, rescue groups or humane societies, either locally or across the country. The company also will buy animals from families who can no longer care for a pet.

Columbia Humane Society is the only local county shelter adopting directly to Hannah. Lisa Beggio, the shelter's lead, said the partnership has increased the tiny agency's adoption rate by double digits.

Beggio said she's adopted more than 100 dogs and cats to Hannah and in addition to adoption fees ranging from $50 to $500 she receives a $5 monthly residual for each pet.

"That goes right back into our spaying and neutering," she said.

And she earns it, she says, as Hannah has a strict animal screening process for medical and behavioral issues.

A number of pet groups nationwide say most folks acquire pets through family or friends, not stores or shelters. That's especially true in rural Columbia County, Beggio said. She can't afford the marketing city shelters can and gets a fraction of their traffic. Hannah extends her reach.

"And they're not just taking cute fluffy dogs either," she said. "They've taken hounds that are notoriously hard to place and huskies, too. Critics are losing sight of what the big picture is as far as what we're here to do:

"Find homes for homeless dogs."

Laura Gunderson

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/window-shop/index.ssf/2012/11/hannah_the_pet_society_raises.html

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Barnes & Noble drops prices of Nook Color and Nook Tablet ahead of holiday season

Android Central

Following the recent launch of the new Nook HD and HD+ in the US and the UK, Barnes & Noble has dropped the prices on their existing tablet range ahead of the holiday season. The cheapest Nook, the somewhat aging Nook Color is now down to just $139, with the Nook Tablet being reduced to $159 and $179 for the 8GB and 16GB versions respectively. 

With the cheapest Amazon Kindle Fire coming in at $159, the Barnes & Noble devices are priced competitively. It isn't the first price cut we've seen in recent months on the existing Nook range, but as we head into the busy holiday season, more choice for less dollars is a choice we'll take. 

Source: Barnes and Noble



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ecLxOccVRaU/story01.htm

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Mott looks to repeat Breeders' Cup double

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) ? Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott is halfway to repeating his Breeders' Cup daily double.

Mott pulled off a rare parlay last year, winning the $2 million Ladies' Classic with Royal Delta and the $5 million Classic with Drosselmeyer.

Mott snared the first leg on Friday, the opening day of the 15-race season ending championships at Santa Anita, as Royal Delta defended her title with a convincing victory in the Ladies' Classic.

And Mott has three shots Saturday in the Classic: Flat Out, 5-1, Ron the Greek, 6-1 and To Honor and Serve, 8-1.

"We have more work to do and we've got three good chances in there," Mott said. "We're certainly not counting out chickens before they hatch. They're doing very well and I think any one of the three has a chance."

The horse to beat in the Classic is Game on Dude, the 9-5 favorite, the runner-up in the Classic last year. Game on Dude, trained by Bob Baffert, is a perfect 5 for 5 at Santa Anita.

Don't discount momentum, and Mott certainly has it on his side.

"I know it's a deep race and there are good horses in there, horses that have proven themselves over this racetrack," Mott said. "We can't stop now. You've got to push forward and look to tomorrow."

Among the nine races Saturday, Shanghai Bobby puts a perfect 4 for 4 mark on the line in the $2 million Juvenile and Point of Entry looks to extend his winning streak to six against some of world's top grass horses in the $3 million Turf.

Royal Delta led all the way in winning the Ladies' Classic by 1? lengths, making the defending champion the only favorite to win on an upset-filled opening day of the Breeders' Cup.

Jockey Mike Smith earned his 16th victory in the event's 29-year history, breaking a tie for most wins with fellow Hall of Famer Jerry Bailey.

"I hope to be around a few more years to add to it," the 47-year-old rider said.

Royal Delta was the 8-5 favorite in the field of eight fillies and mares, considered one of the deepest fields among the 15 races during the world championships. She ran 1 1/8 miles in 1:48.80 and paid $5.40 to win.

After Royal Delta's win last year at Churchill Downs, she was sold for $8.5 million to Benjamin Leon. Mott didn't think he would be training the filly anymore and felt sad the day he had to walk her out of his barn.

"It was like walking to my best friend's funeral," he said earlier this week.

Mott attended the Keeneland sale and congratulated Leon after his purchase, not realizing that a couple weeks later Royal Delta would be back in his care.

"It's such a matter of pride to have a horse of that quality," Mott said. "I thought she could do it again if things went well and they did."

With two Ladies' Classic titles to her credit, Mott and Leon were already looking ahead to next year with Royal Delta. They plan to run her in the $10 million Dubai World Cup, where she finished ninth in March, and then have her close out her career at the Breeders' Cup.

Six different jockeys, trainers and owners won each of the Breeders' Cup races in front of 34,619 fans on a sunny day.

The biggest upset was Calidoscopio's 4?-length victory in the $500,000 Marathon, jockey Aaron Gryder's first Breeders' Cup win. The 17-1 shot from Argentina paid $36.40 to win and at 9 became the oldest Breeders' Cup champion.

Age also played a part in the second-biggest upset. Sent off at 15-1 odds, Hightail kicked off the two-day world championships with a nose victory in the $500,000 Juvenile Sprint, giving Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas his leading 19th Breeders' Cup victory at 77.

"At my age it's significant," Lukas said. "I still have the passion for it and I train every day and ride every day. I'm not going to retire. I'm going to ride out there one morning, fall off the pony. They will harrow me under and if the harrow goes over me a couple of times that will be the end of it."

In the $1 million Juvenile Fillies Turf, 11-1 shot Flotilla rallied to win by 1? lengths and paid $24.80. Trainer Mikel Delzangles and jockey Christophe Lemaire, both from France, won their first Breeders' Cup race.

Zagora won the $2 million Filly & Mare Turf by three-quarters of a length at 9-1 odds. She paid $20.40 to win under Javier Castellano for owner Martin Schwartz, who made his fortune trading on Wall Street.

Beholder led all the way to win the $2 million Juvenile Fillies, holding off 3-2 favorite Executiveprivilege by one length.

It was the 13th Breeders' Cup victory for jockey Garrett Gomez and the seventh for Mandella, who last won at the world championships in 2003 when he had four victories.

Beholder paid $9.80 to win, while trainer Bob Baffert's Executiveprivilege had her five-race winning streak ended after she drifted out in the stretch.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mott-looks-repeat-breeders-cup-double-081709700--spt.html

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Saturday, November 3, 2012

London Mayor Boris Johnson in talks with NFL

New England Patriots quarterback Ryan Mallett, makes a throw with St. Louis Rams middle linebacker James Laurinaitis, 55, centre, during the second half of a NFL football game at Wembley Stadium, London, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

New England Patriots quarterback Ryan Mallett, makes a throw with St. Louis Rams middle linebacker James Laurinaitis, 55, centre, during the second half of a NFL football game at Wembley Stadium, London, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

(AP) ? The Olympic Stadium is in need of a tenant, and London Mayor Boris Johnson thinks the NFL could be the right match.

Just a few days after the NFL's sixth regular-season game at Wembley Stadium, Johnson said he has spoken with the league about playing more games in the British capital.

"Sunday's game at Wembley, in front of over 80,000 fans, further cements London's reputation as the natural home of American football outside of the United States," the mayor's office said in a statement.

"Given the ever growing popularity of gridiron on this side of the Atlantic, the mayor and his team have held a number of meetings with senior executives in the last few days to explore further opportunities involving the NFL and London. The talks were exploratory. We are at an early stage, but the signs are encouraging."

All six NFL games in London so far have been at Wembley, including the New England Patriots' 45-7 win over the St. Louis Rams on Sunday. The two games scheduled for next season are also set for Wembley, and the NFL has a contract with Wembley through 2016.

But the Olympic Stadium, built for this year's games, have yet to find a permanent resident. Johnson happens to be the chairman of the London Legacy Development Corporation, which is responsible for deciding how the Olympic Stadium will be used in the future.

A decision on the future of the stadium is not expected before December. West Ham, a London soccer team, is the leading contender to take up residency ? and keep the running track in place.

The Olympic Stadium is not due to reopen before 2014.

The NFL said it has been in talks with local authorities in London for years about future possibilities.

The Jacksonville Jaguars have a deal to play one home game in London for four consecutive seasons, beginning in 2013. The NFL has raised the possibility of having a full-time franchise in London, although that is still considered a long shot.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-11-01-FBN-NFL-in-London/id-782020dfcbb0405282293fd598501f89

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Second Obama term would face fiscal crisis before inauguration (CNN)

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Yoselyn Ortega: Allegedly it wasn't like Downton Abbey

MH900444282_edited-1Riveting programming like "Downton Abbey" and "Upstairs Downstairs" depicts a world of caring, fair, and?trusting relationships between the elite family and their domestic help.

If that were ever the real situation and some historians of class warfare debate it was, it hasn't been the way things have been for a while.? Reformers, ranging from plaintiff lawyers to legislators, have to investigate how employees who do domestic work are treated. The fall-out from?"The UWS Nanny" alleged murder of two children in her care will make that a high profile issue.

As NEW YORK Magazine reports the nanny?for the Krim family on the Upper?West Side of New York Yoselyn Ortega contends there was tension between her and her employer.? According to the article, her job security was up in the air.? She had been warned that if she didn't improve performance she would be terminated.? This happens every day to many domestic workers.? There is little or no job protection or due process.

The exception could be if they are employed in a position in an organization rather than by individuals.? Often those jobs are unionized.? My mother had been a cleaning lady for?the Jersey City, New Jersey?Board of Education.? From first-hand experience I know she was a?difficult woman.? We were estranged for years. But I also know she did what she was supposed to.? So, I have to assume the cleaning part of her job went okay.? Because there was a union, she was never fired for what I have to assume were poor social skills.? Instead she was transferred.??Finally she seemed to get a hang of it and served long term at my former high school Snyder High.? She retired with a decent pension.?

With the economic so turbulent, domestic work is how even the middle class and the educated are making ends meet.? An acquaintance, forced out of a Fairfield, Connecticut corporate job, became a nanny for one family.? My neighbor, who has?some college,?does day work?as an aide to the elderly and apartment cleaning for individuals.? As an aging Baby Boomer, who had been a 1L at Harvard Law, I turn down pet care jobs in the home because of declining energy level and rising fortunes in my own writing business.? Five years ago, though, I would have grabbed them to supplement what I earn when my boutique was in transition as to the lines of business offered.?? And the bottom line is: When I contract cleaning help, routine and special items like carpets and windows,?for my own apartment, they are at my mercy.?I know that is wrong.? That should not be in America.?

Source: http://lawandmore.typepad.com/law_and_more/2012/11/yoselyn-ortega-allegedly-it-wasnt-like-downton-abbey.html

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Women conceived after rape speak out for Mourdock

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ? Women born as a result of rape are defending Indiana Republican Richard Mourdock in the waning days of a campaign that has been shaken up by the Senate candidate's comments on rape and abortion.

The women call Mourdock a hero for opposing abortion in cases of rape and incest in a new video from the Chicago-based One Nation Under God Foundation.

One Nation executive director Paul Caprio said Thursday the video is being spread online through social networks, but that there are no plans to air the video on TV.

Mourdock's comments in a debate last week that pregnancy resulting from rape is something "God intended" re-shaped the tight Indiana Senate race and gave Democrats a new line of criticism to use against him.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-11-01-US-Indiana-Senate/id-fe952080242341519af7af2d7c4d839e

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The State Farm Branding On Gawker's Backup ... - Business Insider

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Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/the-state-farm-branding-on-gawkers-backup-site-is-brilliant-2012-11

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Krakow's mini-boom in IT attracts Polish and foreign techies

One of the clearest illustrations of ?brain gain? in Poland comes from the southern city of Krakow which is experiencing a mini-boom in information technology ? at a time when much of Europe?s tech scene is in a windless ocean.

The global reverse migration ? turning brain drain to brain gain in many countries ? is obvious here: Some 70 IT and multinational firms have opened, employing 20,000 skilled workers ? Poles and foreigners alike. Cisco opened in May, and its 90-person staff will soon climb to 500. Google moved an R&D office here. State Street, Capgemeni and Lufthansa, Shell, Brown Brothers, and Philip Morris, to name a few, are all present.

The hopeful call Krakow a small Silicon Valley of Central Europe. And the buzz here is a magnet for brain gain: It?s a small oasis of Polish bohemia with 14 colleges and universities, and a bar-arts-and-film scene, and ? not destroyed like Warsaw in World War II ? it retains its Austro-Hungarian architectural charm.

Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.

In reporting for The Christian Science Monitor?s ?brain gain? project, I met a cluster of young and bright reverse migrants here in a translucent glass-and-steel tech-park. Recent-hires at the British firm Element14, an online interface provider for electronic parts sales, they are part of the vanguard of Poland?s brain gain. Their profiles tell as much about this city?s bright future as the vibrant draw it is at the moment.

Jaroslaw Grabon, a software engineer, was born in Poland, but his family moved to Germany. Now, in an admittedly ?wrenching? decision, he?s come back to Krakow, leaving a flat and friends in Munich. He says he got a call from a Krakow headhunter for Shell, and decided, out of curiosity and interest in the country, to move back.

?I felt better in Poland than Germany in ways I can?t easily explain, but it was a big decision. I left the whole family. I sent out 120 CVs and got 80 positive replies. Gdansk was a possibility but I decided on Shell. Then moved here [to Element14].?

Alessandro Lombardi couldn?t get work in his native Italy ? but, here, he?s wired-in.

Tomasz Wasilewski worked in Warsaw for a Silicon Valley firm that employed many people like him, offspring of ?migr? Poles who went abroad earlier. But he was sold on Krakow and moved here, partly because of the Krakow buzz and partly for the experience.

A young Finnish woman, Marianne Kuukkanen, arrived this year and says that the city?s multicultural environment requires looking ?more closely at oneself, and I think this has made me more efficient and aware at my job and with others.?

They report that the multicultural work environment, the new business models being employed, and the need to stay current in tech developments pipe a new and different mentality into Krakow.

?Everyone who is here can move somewhere else if they want, to any other site. We are not bound by nationality. Poles who return have a much bigger influence than elsewhere and they know this. It is a factor in their choice. Because it is a smaller setting,? says Wojciech Burkot, of his hometown, Krakow. He, himself, is a part of the Krakow buzz as head of Google?s R&D unit here, a reverse IT migrant who came home after years abroad to wrestling with increasing Google?s search engine speed.

The Krakow setting is key to drawing ?people smarter than us that [keep] the company growing ? and improving, says Mr. Burkot.

?It?s all city, city, city,? says Ramon Tancinco, head of strategy and business development in central Europe for Cisco. He spent two years on a team deciding where to locate the office, and landed on Krakow. ?We look at regions not countries, and Krakow is at an East-West corridor and in a stable EU country. When you bake in the student population, that?s very strong.?

Indeed, the area is low income and high education ? some 400,000 students live in the corridor between Krakow and Wroclaw ? giving it a dense population base that overseas firms call ?sustainable advantage.? And the city?s old square with its 11th and 14th century churches and charms and endless cafes are not lost on firms. For example, Kazimierz, the old Jewish quarter made famous in the film Schindler?s List, is rid of its postwar thuggish character and is a cultural center.

The city?s international draw, too, is key, says Elaine Barnes, a senior manager at Element14. ?We need 23 languages in one city. English is the business language, German is No. 2. We looked at Hungary and Finland, Sweden, and Poland. The Czech Republic. We couldn?t find the breadth of language anywhere else [but Krakow].?

The ferment of brain gain among European youth and IT wonks and mavens may be in the air. Yet ? like visiting any school classroom to ?see? education ? it is often difficult to instantly quantify something as amorphous as ?brain gain? taking place.

Google?s Burkot suggests that brain gain is ?incremental in Poland.?

His colleague Tancinco thinks he sees it, though. ?The empirical evidence of gain in Krakow is that when I came here four years ago there was one venture capitalist. Now there are six or seven. That is a barometer. Venture capitalists need to see a talent pool of emerging firms with good ideas or they won?t come. You need to see an incubation, a pool of start ups to be the next ?whatever.? ?

And, another plus for Krakow?s continued boom is that hasn?t recorded the corporate horror stories heard nearby out of Ukraine or Russia. There is less mafia and corruption. ?Go east of here and it is a wilder ride,? says one analyst.

?There is no support for gangsters here, I?ve never been shaken down or been told to give a bribe,? says Richard Lucas, a British citizen who owns 11 companies in Krakow and has been here 21 years.

One bit of learning gained by Mr. Wasilewski, who moved from Warsaw (Poles may seek work overseas but are often reticent to move internally) to Krakow, is about practice. He assumed there was a set of general rules applicable everywhere in the industry he works. But he found out differently.

The US firm he worked for in Warsaw stressed getting jobs done simply. ?They wanted us not to make work complicated by adding structure, but to be efficient and nice to the customer. The focus on being direct and pleasant was a big thing to learn,? he says. ?That was new."

?But they have a different way of resolving client problems than the European firm I work with now. The Americans wanted me to be a buffer, to dissolve problems. But this European firm wants client problems reported directly to the front line. They say, ?put us in direct touch, don?t filter.??

Tancinco from Cisco suggests that Krakow?s advantages are growing geometrically as hires from abroad accumulate here. The bulk of new hires ?spent time overseas,? he says, and they add breadth to local know-how and an intangible element that allows them to be effective in a multinational company.

?With a broader perspective, you learn to work around problems, not to take ?no,? or to treat petty issues as final ? [whereas] working around problems is more difficult if you don?t have a broader view.?

He adds a caveat: ?What I haven?t yet seen are professors starting companies. At MIT, everyone has a side business. In Poland, it is still either-or, business or classroom. Silicon Valley is all about ?And.?"

?But this may change. We?ll see.?

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/krakows-mini-boom-attracts-polish-foreign-techies-164100783.html

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Friday, November 2, 2012

Particle and wave-like behavior of light measured simultaneously

ScienceDaily (Nov. 1, 2012) ? What is light made of: waves or particles? This basic question has fascinated physicists since the early days of science. Quantum mechanics predicts that photons, particles of light, are both particles and waves simultaneously. Reporting in Science, physicists from the University of Bristol give a new demonstration of this wave-particle duality of photons, dubbed the 'one real mystery of quantum mechanics' by Nobel Prize laureate Richard Feynman.

The history of science is marked by an intense debate between the particle and wave theories of light. Isaac Newton was the main advocate of the particle theory, while James Clerk Maxwell and his greatly successful theory of electromagnetism, gave credit to the wave theory. However, things changed dramatically in 1905, when Einstein showed that it was possible to explain the photoelectric effect (which had remained a complete mystery until then) using the idea that light is made of particles: photons. This discovery had a huge impact on physics, as it greatly contributed to the development of quantum mechanics -- the most accurate scientific theory ever developed.

Despite its success, quantum mechanics presents a tremendous challenge to our everyday intuition. Indeed, the theory predicts with a remarkable accuracy the behaviour of small objects such as atoms and photons. However, when taking a closer look at these predictions, we are forced to admit that they are strikingly counter-intuitive. For instance, quantum theory predicts that a particle (for instance a photon) can be in different places at the same time. In fact it can even be in infinitely many places at the same time, exactly as a wave. Hence the notion of wave-particle duality, which is fundamental to all quantum systems.

Surprisingly, when a photon is observed, it behaves either as a particle or as a wave. But both aspects are never observed simultaneously. In fact, which behaviour it exhibits depends on the type of measurement it is presented with. These astonishing phenomena have been experimentally investigated in the last few years, using measurement devices that can be switched between wave-like and particle-like measurements.

In a paper published Nov. 1 in Science, physicists from the University of Bristol give a new twist on these ideas. Dr Alberto Peruzzo, Peter Shadbolt and Professor Jeremy O'Brien from the Centre for Quantum Photonics teamed up with quantum theorists Dr Nicolas Brunner and Professor Sandu Popescu to devise a novel type of measurement apparatus that can measure both particle and wave-like behaviour simultaneously. This new device is powered by quantum nonlocality, another strikingly counter-intuitive quantum effect.

Dr Peruzzo, Research Fellow at the Centre for Quantum Photonics, said: "The measurement apparatus detected strong nonlocality, which certified that the photon behaved simultaneously as a wave and a particle in our experiment. This represents a strong refutation of models in which the photon is either a wave or a particle."

Professor O'Brien, Director of the Centre for Quantum Photonics, said: "To conduct this research, we used a quantum photonic chip, a novel technology pioneered in Bristol. The chip is reconfigurable so it can be programmed and controlled to implement different circuits. Today this technology is a leading approach in the quest to build a quantum computer and in the future will allow for new and more sophisticated studies of fundamental aspects of quantum phenomena."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Bristol, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Alberto Peruzzo, Peter Shadbolt, Nicolas Brunner, Sandu Popescu, and Jeremy L. O?Brien. A Quantum Delayed-Choice Experiment. Science, 2012; 338 (6107): 634-637 DOI: 10.1126/science.1226719

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/ETEXEmXSf_c/121101141107.htm

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In the Badger State, divided over and baffled by Obamacare

BELOIT, Wisconsin (Reuters) - To Tim Givhan, Obamacare shouldn't be an excuse for election-year polemics: "It's a lifeline."

A former IT specialist, Givhan tripped on a machine at work and landed on his head, suffering neurological damage. His employer's insurance company wouldn't pay for an operation, saying the outcome was iffy. Plagued by debilitating migraines and tremors, he quit work. His wife, an attorney, divorced him.

Givhan, 49, has moved back to his mother's home in Beloit, Wisconsin. He has no health insurance but expects to get it once the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, takes full effect. "I often think of killing myself," he said. "But I have a 2-year-old son, and I can't do that to him."

Whether the sweeping 2010 law is fully implemented, as President Barack Obama intends, or repealed, as GOP nominee Mitt Romney pledges, no policy difference in next week's election is likely to affect more Americans in their daily lives.

This small Midwestern city - which anthropologist Margaret Mead once called "a microcosm of America" - offers a window into what is at stake. Obamacare is dividing patients and doctors, hospitals and government regulators, workers and employers, constituents and politicians. And here, as elsewhere, many are confused about the law's provisions.

A nationwide Reuters/Ipsos survey shows 49 percent of registered voters favor it, and 51 percent oppose it. At the same time, many who disagree with the legislation support key provisions such as cutting drug costs for seniors, expanding Medicaid coverage for the poor, and banning insurance companies from capping lifetime reimbursements or refusing coverage for preexisting conditions.

Beloit's Community Healthcare Center, where Givhan was picking up a prescription on a recent morning, is tucked in a corner of a shopping mall. It is a tidy place with comfy chairs and wall-to-wall carpeting. Helpful receptionists nod sympathetically behind a glass window. Brochures promote vegetables in your diet.

But the small public clinic is also a place where mounting rage against the machine of American healthcare is palpable. A quarter of the patients lack health insurance. Others are in life-or-death struggles with their insurance companies. Some can't find a surgeon who will take Medicaid.

The Affordable Care Act is expected to cut the number of uninsured Americans by 30 million over the next decade. Lynn Larsen, a clinic administrator, is eager for the law to remain in place.

"Most of our patients are working poor," she said. "Some have 32-hour-a-week jobs at Wal-Mart and can't afford insurance. Others were laid off from factories - their unemployment insurance has run out and they've lost their homes."

The community center, with two family physicians, three registered nurses and a handful of support staff, has no beds. Seriously ill patients are referred to Beloit Memorial Hospital. "But try to find an oncologist who takes an uninsured person," Larsen said. "They want 50 percent up front, and treatment can cost $500,000. If someone has lung cancer and needs charity, they're probably going to die."

SLOW RECOVERY

In Beloit, a city of 37,000, industry has been shrinking for decades. Shuttered hulks of century-old brick factories, some with broken windows, line the Rock River. On a recent evening a homeless man tended three fishing rods, and pulled out a wriggling sheepshead for his dinner.

The city has fought blight by preserving its historic downtown, building a sculpture-adorned bike path and fostering a farmer's market. The economy is slowly recovering, but unemployment remains high, at 9.9 percent. That's down from 19.1 percent in 2009 after a General Motors plant in nearby Janesville closed.

In a Reuters/Ipsos poll, 55 percent of Americans "strongly agree" with the statement "All Americans have a right to healthcare." Another 21 percent "somewhat agree," and only 10 percent express any disagreement.

With a 130-bed hospital, a $520 million budget and a staff of 1,400, Beloit Health System is the largest employer in town. Its administrators are divided over Obamacare, anticipating reforms with a mixture of hope and dread.

Senior Vice President Timothy McKevett said the law's incentives spurred the hospital to set up an electronic records network. "We had three computer systems which didn't talk to each other," he said.

Under Obamacare, "regional information exchanges will allow a doctor anywhere in the state to see, ?Oh, that patient had a lab test two weeks ago. We don't need to do it again.'"

However, McKevett said the Affordable Care Act will cost the hospital $22 million over 10 years. Even before the law was enacted, Medicare and Medicaid paid less than a quarter of hospital or physician costs for treating recipients. "When we see these patients, we lose money," he said.

Under Obamacare, more Beloiters would be covered by Medicaid, and new efficiency rules for Medicare will take effect. For example, hospitals can be denied reimbursement for some patients who are readmitted after previous stays. Doctors object because patients are often readmitted when they fail to follow instructions, rather than because of hospital negligence.

The hospital has been taking steps to cut costs. By merging with a local doctors group and eliminating duplicative CT-scanners and labs, it is saving $3.4 million a year. But with Obamacare, McKevett said, "We will have to do even more with less."

'THE SYSTEM IS COLLAPSING'

Emergency room doctor Richard Barney, who serves as Beloit Memorial's chief of staff, flatly opposes the law. "We can't afford to provide healthcare to millions more people," he said. "We already have a physician shortage. Not everyone should be able to have a knee replacement because their knee hurts."

Given low reimbursements for private physicians, he said, "Sprained ankles and strep throats end up in our overwhelmed ERs where federal law prohibits enforcing copays. You bill till you are blue in the face, but they're not going to pay a dime. We are the only industry in the world where you can dine and dash."

Barney acknowledges that something must be done: "Healthcare costs are out of control. The system is collapsing before our eyes." He favors parts of Obamacare, including the ban on denying coverage for preexisting conditions and lifting the lifetime coverage cap.

But instead of this "monstrosity of a law," he said, the system should "be fixed piece by piece." Barney is upset that the law fails to curb malpractice suits, which fuel expensive and unnecessary tests. "Billions are spent on defensive medicine, and nobody gives a crap because they're in the back pocket of lawyers," he said.

In the campaign, Democratic ads have mostly avoided the subject of Obamacare, focusing instead on attacking GOP plans to reform Medicare. Republicans and business-funded groups, who launched fierce attacks against Obamacare in the 2010 midterm elections, have continued to use it as campaign fodder.

In one spot, GOP Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan, whose congressional district adjoins Beloit, advises, "You should be in charge of your health, not government or insurance bureaucrats."

A Romney ad criticizes Obama for "taxing wheelchairs and pacemakers" and "raiding $716 billion from Medicare" to pay for the program. The Medicare figure, though, is the amount expected to be saved from hospital and doctors' costs under new regulations and does not involve cutting seniors' benefits.

According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the law's $938 billion cost over 10 years would be funded by wringing waste from Medicare and Medicaid, along with new levies, such as a tax on generous "Cadillac" insurance plans. The CBO estimates the law would cut the national deficit by $124 billion over a decade.

Several of Obamacare's major provisions do not take effect until 2014, but the ones in place are having an impact. Fairbanks Morse Engine, which employs 370 workers, is among Beloit companies forced to lift a million-dollar lifetime cap for health insurance spending. Several employees with cancer have benefited.

INFORMATION GAP

At the city's Bushel & Peck's market, cashier Kat Tow, 23, is now covered by her father's health insurance plan, thanks to the law's ban on companies cutting off children before age 26. Her boyfriend, who has a seasonal job with the city parks, also gets insurance through his parents.

"Obamacare is a godsend," she said.

At the community health center, Johnson Moore, 58, is among the clinic's 5,000 uninsured patients to be affected once the law is fully implemented. Filling out forms on a recent morning, Moore said he has never had insurance, public or private. Since the bakery where he worked went out of business, he has been unable to afford his diabetes medicine.

"It is slowly killing me," he said.

A few seats away, Wanda Taylor, a former restaurant manager, is also counting on the law. Her son Colin, 18, a hemophiliac, will age out of the Medicaid system next year. "It scares me half to death," she said. "Even if he gets a job, he probably won't get health insurance. Most people his age don't."

Neither Moore nor Givhan, the former IT specialist, has been able to get Badgercare, the state's Medicaid program, which is largely reserved for mothers and children. Wisconsin, under Republican Governor Scott Walker, has joined a dozen other states in tightening access to benefits.

Obamacare would move in the opposite direction, adding as many as 11 million to Medicaid, including 170,000 in Wisconsin. Anyone earning up to 133 percent of the poverty line would be covered.

Walker, who beat back a union-sponsored recall election in June, contends Obamacare "would require the majority of people in Wisconsin to pay more money for less healthcare."

He returned $38 million in federal funds allocated to Wisconsin for setting up insurance exchanges under the law, saying he hopes it will be repealed. The exchanges, which would give the state's half-million uninsured a central place to compare and buy plans, are to take effect in 2014.

Ignorance of the law's benefits is widespread. Among two dozen Beloiters interviewed during a recent visit, few could name even a single Obamacare provision. None were aware that, under the law, nearly 2 million Wisconsonites have been able to get free preventive services such as mammograms and colonoscopies with no copays.

None were aware that the law has saved Wisconsin Medicare recipients $84 million on prescription drugs since 2010; or that insurance companies are now banned from dropping people when they get sick; or that Wisconsonites got $10.4 million in insurance refunds because companies must now spend 80 percent of healthcare premiums on care.

"What does Obamacare do?" asked Jennifer Lorenz, a nurse at Beloit Memorial Hospital, genuinely puzzled. "I don't know the specifics." An Obama supporter, she was nonetheless unsure if she favors the law.

A few Beloiters were aware that Obamacare would require all Americans to have insurance - the so-called individual mandate. In the Reuters/Ipsos national survey, when questions detailing the law's specifics were posed, that so-called individual mandate was the only provision with less than majority backing. Asked about "requiring all U.S. residents to own health insurance," 40 percent agreed, 36 percent disagreed and 23 percent were undecided.

None of the Beloiters interviewed were aware that the law would offer subsidies for purchasing insurance to those with incomes between 133 percent and 400 percent of the poverty level.

'A SICK-CARE SYSTEM'

At his apple stand in Beloit's Saturday farmer's market, Brian Van Laar said he opposes Obamacare. "I don't think the government should get more involved in healthcare," he said. "The constitution doesn't say it should."

Van Laar, whose orchard is a side business, has a day job as an engineer for an appliance manufacturer. With the new law ensuring coverage to individuals through insurance exchanges, "People at work are worried that the company will stop offering benefits," he said. "They'll just kick us over to Obamacare and say, ?You're on your own.'"

Under the law, employers who cancel their plans would be liable for penalties. Nonetheless, Jeffrey Klett, a Beloit agent who handles benefits for 70 companies, said, "I have two larger clients thinking about doing away with health insurance altogether. Clients ask, ?Am I better off just paying the fine?' There's a lot of uncertainty."

John Bottorff, vice president for human resources at Fairbanks Morse Engine, predicts that "most employers will want to continue to provide healthcare coverage. If you drop it, you could be at a competitive disadvantage in attracting and retaining employees."

In the Reuters/Ipsos survey, 72 percent of voters favored the Obamacare provision that requires companies with more than 50 employees to offer health insurance. Only 28 percent were opposed.

Despite the ambivalence of his colleagues, Larry Bergen, director of Quality Reporting and Community Health at the hospital, calls Obamacare "a fabulous step in the right direction. More people will have insurance, so they won't put off seeing doctors until they have a crisis."

Bergen would have preferred a "single payer system" such as Medicare, rather than a law that relies primarily on private insurance companies. "People say the Canadian and British systems have flaws, but those countries have better life expectancy and less infant mortality than we do," he said.

"We don't have a healthcare system - we have a sick-care system. Fifty percent of health dollars are spent on the sickest 5 percent. If you're sick, we do great things, like an angioplasty in the middle of a heart attack. But people can't get in to see a primary care doctor."

Proponents of the law expect millions more to get treatment for high blood pressure to avoid a stroke, take cholesterol-lowering drugs to ward off a heart attack or get early diabetes intervention to prevent a gangrenous foot amputation.

"People can criticize the law, and we'll have a chance over the years to make it better," said Timothy Cullen, a former Blue Cross executive who represents Beloit in the state senate. Presidents have tried for a century to get healthcare for all Americans, he added. "They all failed and Obama succeeded. It's long overdue."

The Reuters/Ipsos database is now public and searchable here: http://www.tinyurl.com/reuterspoll

(Reporting by Margot Roosevelt; editing by Lee Aitken and Prudence Crowther)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/badger-state-divided-over-baffled-obamacare-050728267.html

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