Friday, March 8, 2013

Friends forever: Rodman warms to North Korean dictator (+video)

Former NBA bad boy Dennis Rodman declared North Korean leader Kim Jong-un his 'friend for life' after watching the Harlem Globetrotters in the isolated country today.

By Whitney Eulich,?Staff writer / February 28, 2013

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, left, and former NBA star Dennis Rodman watch North Korean and U.S. players in an exhibition basketball game at an arena in Pyongyang, North Korea, Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013. Rodman arrived in Pyongyang on Monday with three members of the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team to shoot an episode on North Korea for a new weekly HBO series.

Jason Mojica, VICE Media/AP

Enlarge

Former Chicago Bulls basketball star and 1990s bad boy Dennis Rodman may not have run into K-Pop star Psy during his ?basketball diplomacy? jaunt to North Korea this week, but he reportedly met secretive leader Kim Jong-un.

Skip to next paragraph Whitney Eulich

Latin America Editor

Whitney Eulich is the Monitor's Latin America editor, overseeing regional coverage for CSMonitor.com and the weekly magazine. She also curates the Latin America Monitor Blog.

Recent posts

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?You have a friend for life,? The Associated Press reports Mr. Rodman telling Mr. Kim today. The two men were watching the Harlem Globetrotters and North Korean basketball players face off on the court in front of a crowd of thousands, and later dined on sushi together, according to the news agency.

Rodman traveled to the isolated country along with three members of the Globetrotters and producers from VICE media to film an HBO series. The scene, described by VICE employees at the game, sounds like quite a sight:

Dressed in a blue Mao suit, Kim laughed and slapped his hands on the table before him during the game as he sat nearly knee to knee with Rodman. Rodman, the man who once turned up in a wedding dress to promote his autobiography, wore a dark suit and dark sunglasses, but still had on his nose rings and other piercings.

The high-profile visit comes at a precarious time for North Korea, which recently launched its third nuclear test, raising already sky-high tensions with neighboring South Korea and garnering condemnation from the international community.

?Pyongyang has engaged in high-profile saber-rattling in recent weeks, including a warning this past weekend of "miserable destruction" if the United States and South Korea go ahead with a planned joint naval exercise next month,? The Christian Science Monitor notes.

?The North is trying to persuade the world ? and in particular the United States ? that it is a full-fledged nuclear power that can threaten others as much as it is threatened by them,? The Monitor reported in a separate story after the nuclear test.

That Pyongyang chose the day of President Obama's State of the Union address on which to conduct its test indicates how much the test was meant as a message for the US, regional analysts say.

The test was also directed at an internal audience. Leader Kim Jong-un, in power for just a year, is still establishing his credentials, observers say, and a successful test adds to his prestige and legitimacy, thus strengthening internal security.

The true aims of North Korea, however, remain officially unstated, and therefore open to speculation.

But Kim reportedly told Rodman that he hoped the former NBA player?s visit could help ?break the ice? between the US and North Korea, VICE founder Shane Smith relayed to the AP.

?They bonded during the game,? Mr. Smith told the AP.

Rodman and the film crew reportedly returned the invitation, according to the Los Angeles Times, asking Kim to visit the US.

If Kim visits, and relations between the US and North Korea improve, will Rodman win the Nobel Peace Prize? Now that would be crazy.

The game ended in a tie of 110 all.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/o87qodIuGmY/Friends-forever-Rodman-warms-to-North-Korean-dictator-video

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Video: Watch Texas A&M practice unfold as Johnny Manziel, Aggie quarterbacks take part in passing drills

For Texas A&M fans already dying for more Aggie football, spring practice finally got underway this weekend. If you?re curious just what an A&M practice looks like these days, you can check out this YouTube videos from last week?s practice of Johnny Manziel and other Aggie QBs going through passing drills. You?ll probably notice the music blaring the background, something Kevin Sumlin brought with him as part of his new regime.

Check it out:

This entry was posted in Texas A&M Aggies by SportsDayDFW sports. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://collegesportsblog.dallasnews.com/2013/03/video-watch-texas-am-practice-unfold-as-johnny-manziel-aggie-quarterbacks-take-part-in-passing-drills.html/

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Billboard defaced with stickers advertising jobs in wintery...

Diamonds & Wood
Diamonds & Wood Blog: A blog along the lines of; internet diversions | photography / lens media | animals | Fashion | stripes | film stills | Detail shots | gold | Palm trees | foliage | Architecture | screenshots | A collaborative effort by Claire and Neeve

Source: http://diamonds-wood.tumblr.com/post/44698315222

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ICNVICT 2013 : The First International Conference on New Visions ...

Call For Papers

The First International Conference on New Visions for Information and Communication Technology (ICNVICT 2013)
Middle East University, Amman, Jordan
October 26-28, 2013
(http://www.dirf.org/icnvict)

Emerging information technologies offer new solutions to the society, improving processes, enabling automation and effective decision-making mechanisms and changing current ways of work. Research has tended to consider a direct causal relationship between the emerging and prospective information technologies and the future of society.

The research in information technology initiatives will greatly assist in enhancing the quality of information technology support provided to the different areas and domains. Thus this conference will present a scenario-planning exercise that aimed to identify possible future information technologies that the society would face.

The conference with this agenda will address the following but not limited to-
Data Warehousing
Enterprise Reporting & Analysis
Geographic Information Systems
Cloud computing
IT and renewable energy
Bi-informatics and e-health
Semantic web and its applications
E-technology (e.g. E-banking, E-disability, E-business)
Computer and network security
Visualizations and simulation
Virtualization
Web Services and Technologies
Information retrieval and data mining
Software engineering
Multimedia
Internet
Communication, Technologies, Software, engineering
Speech processing
Data Communications, Data Hiding
Digital Communication
Databases and applications
Distributed Computing
Intelligent Agent systems
Security - Servers, Routers, Switches: Configuration and Security
Encryption
Wireless Communications
Logging and Scanning
Disaster Recovery

The papers submitted will be blind reviewed and the authors of the selected papers will be invited to present the papers.

The best papers for general and student categories will be awarded.
The papers will be published in the proceedings. Besides, ALL the selected papers after modification will be published in the following DLINE journals.

Journal of Digital Information Management
International Journal of Web Applications
International Journal of Computational Linguistics Research
International Journal of Information Studies
Journal of E-Technology
Journal of Networking Technology
Journal of Information Technology Review
Journal of Information Security Research
Journal of Intelligent Computing
Journal of Multimedia Processing and Technologies
Journal of Information & Systems Management
Journal of Data Processing
Journal of Information Organization
Journal of Electronic Systems
Electronic Devices
Signals and Telecommunication Journal
Progress in Computing Applications
Transactions on Machine Design
Progress in Machines and Systems
Progress in Signals and Telecommunication Engineering

Important DatesPaper Submission June 15, 2013
Notification of Acceptance/Rejection August 15, 2013
Camera ready September 15, 2013
Registration September 15, 2013
Conference October 26-28, 2013

Paper submission at http://www.dirf.org/icnvict/submission.asp
Email: service at dirf.org
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Source: http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=29444©ownerid=7682

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Physicists on Higgs hunt: Nearly there but not yet

FILE - This 2011 image provide by CERN, shows a real CMS proton-proton collision in which four high energy electrons (green lines and red towers) are observed in a 2011 event. The event shows characteristics expected from the decay of a Higgs boson but is also consistent with background Standard Model physics processes. Physicists in Italy said Wednesday, March 6, 2013 they are closer to concluding that what they found last year was the elusive "God particle." But they still haven't reached that "Eureka moment" when they can announce the Higgs boson is found. The long theorized subatomic particle would explain why matter has mass and has been called a missing cornerstone of physics. (AP Photo/CERN)

FILE - This 2011 image provide by CERN, shows a real CMS proton-proton collision in which four high energy electrons (green lines and red towers) are observed in a 2011 event. The event shows characteristics expected from the decay of a Higgs boson but is also consistent with background Standard Model physics processes. Physicists in Italy said Wednesday, March 6, 2013 they are closer to concluding that what they found last year was the elusive "God particle." But they still haven't reached that "Eureka moment" when they can announce the Higgs boson is found. The long theorized subatomic particle would explain why matter has mass and has been called a missing cornerstone of physics. (AP Photo/CERN)

(AP) ? Physicists in Italy said Wednesday they are achingly close to concluding that what they found last year was the Higgs boson, the elusive "God particle." They need to eliminate one last remote possibility that it's something else.

The long theorized subatomic particle would explain why matter has mass and has been called a missing cornerstone of physics.

With new analyses, scientists are 99.6 percent certain they found the crucial Higgs boson. But they want to be 99.9 percent positive, said Pauline Gagnon, a physicist with the European Center for Nuclear Research.

Last July scientists with the world's largest atom smasher, the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider on the Swiss-French border, announced finding a particle they described as Higgs-like, but wouldn't say it was conclusively the particle. Now thousands of checks show them even closer.

"It looks more and more like a Higgs boson," said Gagnon after an update presented Wednesday at a conference in the Italian Alps.

Gagnon compared finding the Higgs to identifying a specific person. This looks, talks, and sings like a Higgs, but scientists want to make sure it dances like the Higgs before they shout "Eureka."

She said there is only one last thing the particle they found could also be: a graviton. That's another subatomic particle associated with gravitational fields, not mass.

By checking the spin of the particle, scientists will be able to tell if it is a Higgs boson, which is far more likely, or a graviton. If it has no internal spin, it's the Higgs boson; if it has a lot of spin it's a graviton.

Wednesday's presentation was by one team of researchers and another team will present more findings next week.

Physicist Sean Carroll of the California Institute of Technology, who isn't involved in the research, said scientists are just being careful, covering all bases.

Without the Higgs boson to explain why electrons and matter have mass, Carroll said, "there would be no atoms, there would be no chemistry, there would be no life, so that's kind of important."

___

Online:

http://public.web.cern.ch/public/

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-03-06-US-SCI-God-Particle/id-2fba3f95ed774e6d9c31be1914f4882f

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Obama reaches out to congressional Republicans

FILE - In this March 4, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington. Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, hosting GOP senators for dinner at the White House Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - In this March 4, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington. Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, hosting GOP senators for dinner at the White House Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 12, 2013 file photo, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., left, and Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., confer on Capitol Hill in Washington. Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, hosting GOP senators for dinner at the White House Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 26, 2013 file photo, Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., left, and Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., talk on Capitol Hill in Washington. Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, hosting GOP senators for dinner at the White House Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 24, 2013 file photo, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis. is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, hosting GOP senators for dinner at the White House Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Enveloped by political gridlock, President Barack Obama is reaching out to rank-and-file Republicans, meeting for dinner with GOP senators Wednesday night and then visiting Capitol Hill next week for separate meetings with Senate and House Republicans.

Among the lawmakers scheduled to attend Wednesday's dinner are Sens. John McCain, Lindsey Graham, Kelly Ayotte, Pat Toomey, Bob Corker, Ron Johnson, Saxby Chambliss and Tom Coburn.

Obama raised the idea of a dinner during a phone conversation with Graham earlier this week and asked the South Carolina senator to put together the guest list, a White House official said.

Obama and the lawmakers planned to meet on neutral territory, with dinner scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at a hotel near the White House. With a snow storm barreling down on the Washington region, the White House said the dinner could be postponed if the weather deteriorated throughout the day.

The dinner will be followed up by a rare trip by Obama to Capitol Hill. He'll meet there with Senate Republicans next Thursday and hold a separate meeting with House Republicans, although a date for that meeting is yet to be scheduled. The president will also meet next week with Senate and House Democrats.

Obama's Republican outreach follows Washington's failure to reach a deal to avert the $85 billion in automatic budget cuts that started going into effect Friday. The new GOP charm offensive also underscores the limitations of the president's previous strategy, which centered on using public pressure to win Republican cooperation, not negotiations with lawmakers.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said the president requested the meeting through his chief of staff. McConnell's office said the president last attended the Senate GOP's policy lunch in May 2010.

"We have numerous challenges facing the country and Republicans have offered the president serious solutions to shrink Washington spending and grow the economy," McConnell said in a statement. "And we will have an opportunity to discuss them with the president at the lunch."

House Speaker John Boehner's office said Wednesday that the president had also requested the meeting next week with House Republicans. The White House and Boehner's office were working to schedule that meeting, the speaker's office said.

McConnell, Boehner and other members of GOP leadership are tellingly being left out of the dinner Obama will host Wednesday. They also didn't make the list of Republican lawmakers Obama started calling over the weekend. Several of the senators attending the dinner also received calls from the president.

"This is how you solve hard problems," Graham said of Obama's outreach. "We're talking about following up on that, how we can get more people in the mix, so what I see from the president is incredibly encouraging."

White House aides say the president's calls with Republicans focus in part on jumpstarting broader budget talks, but also on Obama's proposals for overhauling the nation's immigration laws and enacting stricter gun control measures.

"He is reaching out and talking to members about a variety of issues ? not just our fiscal challenges, but certainly the fiscal issues are among the issues he is talking about with lawmakers," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.

___

Associated Press reporters Dave Espo, Erica Werner and Alan Fram contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-06-Budget%20Battle-Obama/id-472089225d7047799b81ee9a832dc76b

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Column: 'It is now time to recast his legacy.'

FILE - This is an undated file photo showing Jack Johnson. Lawmakers seeking a presidential pardon for Johnson, the world's first black heavyweight boxing champion imprisoned a century ago for his romantic relationships with white women, are renewing their efforts. Sens. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and John McCain joined Reps. Peter King, R-N.Y., and William "Mo" Cowan, D-Mass., on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 in reintroducing a resolution urging President Barack Obama to pardon Johnson because he was wronged by a racially motivated conviction. (AP Photo)

FILE - This is an undated file photo showing Jack Johnson. Lawmakers seeking a presidential pardon for Johnson, the world's first black heavyweight boxing champion imprisoned a century ago for his romantic relationships with white women, are renewing their efforts. Sens. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and John McCain joined Reps. Peter King, R-N.Y., and William "Mo" Cowan, D-Mass., on Tuesday, March 5, 2013 in reintroducing a resolution urging President Barack Obama to pardon Johnson because he was wronged by a racially motivated conviction. (AP Photo)

President Barack Obama walks across the South Lawn to the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, March 5, 2013, from the Marine One helicopter, as he returned from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center where he visited with Wounded Warriors who are being treated at the hospital and their families. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

For all the things President Obama says he can't do because of the political gridlock in Washington, he can right a century-old wrong simply by picking up a pen. Tomorrow wouldn't be too soon.

Jack Johnson, boxing's first black heavyweight champion, was arrested in October 1912, railroaded by an all-white jury the following June and eventually served a year in prison, essentially for escorting a white woman across state lines. All these years later, for all the other things that have changed since, Johnson's name is still lashed to those tracks.

For the third time in less than a decade, a bipartisan group of lawmakers sent a resolution back to the president's desk Tuesday urging him to change that by granting Johnson a posthumous pardon. The first one went up to the White House in 2004, but it was declined by Obama's predecessor, George W. Bush, even though while governor of Texas, Bush honored the Galveston native with a "Jack Johnson Day" for five straight years.

Obama, likewise, passed on his first chance in 2009. By way of explanation, the attorney in charge of pardons at the Department of Justice said at the time that the resources of his small staff could be put to better use pardoning the living. Fair enough. There are plenty of deserving people who could benefit from clemency right now.

Yet in terms of granting pardons, Obama has room to spare. So far, he's been the least generous president in modern history, issuing a total of 39, including 17 just last week, and none posthumously. According to data compiled by the DOJ, President Clinton granted 396 pardons over his two terms, but only one posthumously; Bush pardoned 189 people over his two, also just one posthumously.

Two of Johnson's staunchest backers, Sen. John McCain of Arizona and Rep. Peter King of New York, both Republicans, were joined in the latest effort by Democrats Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada and Rep. William Cowan of Massachusetts.

"Johnson's memory was unjustly tarnished by a racially motivated criminal conviction and it is now time to recast his legacy," Reid said in a statement. Not long after it was issued, the White House declined to comment. Exactly why remains anyone's guess.

The measure certainly seems popular enough. In addition to the lawmakers, supporters as diverse as filmmaker Ken Burns and rapper Chuck D have lobbied on Johnson's behalf at one time or another. It can't be because the president or the DOJ needs more information about his life and times, either.

Johnson's win over white boxer Jim Jeffries in the 1910 "Fight of the Century" touched off deadly race riots across the country. Scorned by the same boxing establishment for many of the same sins a half-century later, Muhammad Ali lionized Johnson and like his predecessor, refused to back down. Unlike Johnson, Ali has lived long enough to see the world around him change.

But Obama knew all that already. And as a former law professor, especially one who taught a course in sports and law, he no doubt admired Johnson's legal moxie. An urbane man by any measure, but especially for his time, Johnson filed more than a few appeals for clemency on his own from the jailhouse, unafraid to get straight to the point. In one letter to the attorney general, Johnson demanded to know why the previous AG denied his parole despite a recommendation from the board.

"I would like to know if my being a black man would have anything to do with the action of (his predecessor). I would like to know if my being a pugilist has had anything to with the denial of the application. ... I am up a tree as to why I should be denied and other men released, men whose criminal records are almost as black," Johnson wrote, "as the ace of spades."

Johnson died in a car crash in 1946, racing into the night along U.S. Highway 1 after being refused service at a diner near Raleigh, N.C. He was buried in an unmarked grave in Chicago, where a stone bearing only the name "Johnson" was eventually put up. All those who hoped the nation's first black president might help relaunch their campaign to provide a more fitting tribute to the man who blazed a similar trail in infinitely tougher times are waiting still.

A few hold out hope that Obama will get around to pardoning Johnson, as the rapper Chuck D put it, "at the tail end of his presidential run."

Maybe so.

But as the president himself is fond of pointing out, if something is worth doing, there's no time like the present.

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org and follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-06-BOX-Jim-Litke-030613/id-a8dfcbfcc7f042eda0c709cbc1b79ea3

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