Saturday, July 20, 2013

Health and Fitness Friday : Giving myself a kick in the Butt

It Friday! Woohoo!

Linking up with Jen over at A Daily Dose of Davis of Health and Fitness Friday.

I said last week that I was being a total slacker.

Not doing any running.

No workouts.

Nothing.

Guess what?

This week wasn't any different.

It's not good enough!!

I'm letting myself down.

I did so much good work up to last month and now I feel like I'm going to have to start over again.

I feel like I'm letting all you ladies here at the link-up down.

I read your posts for inspiration.

For new recipes, workouts and motivation to keep going.

I'm not pulling my weight at all here.

But tomorrow is a new day.?

Tomorrow is race day for me.

I was collecting my race pack today.

It's going to be tough.

The heat, lack of training and too make cupcakes are all things that won't help.

( I'm eating a cupcake while I write this. Oops!)

Starting Monday everything changes.

I'm going to be joining Jen?on her quest to become a morning person.

I'm going to be doing some sort of workout EVERY day.

Start doing yoga.

No more snacking on crap.

Drink more water.

I what you girls to keep me in check.

I'm sharing this smoothie recipe that I pinned ages ago.

Have any of you tried it?

I'm hoping that it will give me the energy I need and help with the poundage issue. Ha!

?The recipe?

Two handfuls of baby spinach

1 apple

1 banana

1 cup of yogurt

5 strawberries

1/2 orange

Blend well and enjoy!

I hope you've had a better week than me fitness wise.

Have a great weekend.

Source: http://mycountrygirlramblings.blogspot.com/2013/07/health-and-fitness-friday-giving-myself.html

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Samsung: new Exynos 5 Octa SoC coming next week

Samsung new Exynos 5 Octa SoC coming next week

Samsung's current ARM superchip, the Exynos 5 Octa, was revealed at CES and has just started making its way into handsets, but the company claims it's already got a new and improved version ready to roll. Today, the company's SamsungExynos Twitter account revealed that a "more powerful, enhanced" Octa will make its debut next week. What, exactly, that means remains to be seen, but we'll be bringing you that info as soon as Samsung dishes it out. Stay tuned.

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Comments

Source: SamsungExynos (Twitter)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/cBT6-_vnD9M/

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Napolitano expected to be named head of University of California


Thu Jul 18, 2013 12:55pm EDT

(Reuters) - The University of California's governing board was expected to vote on Thursday to confirm U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to become the first woman president of the prestigious 10-campus system.

Napolitano's nomination to head the sprawling UC system, long regarded as one of the top U.S. public universities, was announced last Friday by a 10-member special search committee as she revealed she was leaving President Barack Obama's cabinet.

If approved as anticipated by the Board of Regents, she would become the 20th president in the 145-year history of the university, which has been battered by nearly two decades of boom-and-bust funding, leading to tuition increases and classroom shortages.

The financial crunch has strained university relations with faculty and staff who have been hit with furloughs and hiring freezes.

The appointment of Napolitano, a career politician who has never held an academic post, has generated controversy.

Republicans have long criticized the former two-term Arizona governor, a Democrat, most recently saying she was soft on border control and immigration issues. Latino leaders, meanwhile, have blasted Napolitano over immigration sweeps that led to large-scale detention and deportations involving undocumented immigrants.

Some opposition to her UC hiring was expected to surface Thursday afternoon, when the regents were due to hold a public session in San Francisco to discuss the appointment.

A vote was scheduled after the session, and a university spokeswoman said the Napolitano would speak publicly about the job at that time.

Last Friday, she announced she would resign as secretary of Homeland Security, pending the regents' decision.

Napolitano has acknowledged she is not a typical candidate and said she would meet with faculty, students, politicians and others to learn about the system.

"Whether preparing to govern a state or to lead an agency as critical and complex as Homeland Security, I have found the best way to start is simply to listen," said Napolitano, a lawyer by training.

She was credited with championing the cause of public education during her gubernatorial tenure and protecting funding for the state's universities, even as she faced a $1 billion budget deficit upon assuming office.

Departing UC President Mark Yudof, also a lawyer, was chancellor of the University of Texas and president of the University of Minnesota before taking over at the University of California. He will step down on August 31 at the end of the academic year.

(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento; Editing by Daniel Trotta and Jeffrey Benkoe)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Reuters/domesticNews/~3/1SQr9NYu0Fc/story01.htm

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Louis Davidson : Why We Write Supplemental - I find out how long it ...

My next entry has ran into a number of issues getting finished, and from the start, I have planned on blogging my ?current? answers, so now is as good a time as any. I have taken the questions from all of the previous entries, and have left them as is, but picking the questions I wanted to answer (or wanted to force myself to answer!) To make sure this didn?t turn into a commercial, I took off the bonus question about other projects I am working on. Hopefully you have read about that on my blog already.

------------------------------------------

1. Every superhero has an origin story, and in many cases it wasn't because they specifically were planning to go into the field of superhero-ness. I mean, clearly Peter Parker didn't really want to get bitten by a radioactive spider. So what is your story that led you to spend part of your free time writing about SQL?

I was at a VBits conference in New York City, over 15 years ago (back when I was doing SQL and VB semi regularly). I met someone from Wrox and they were looking for technical editors for a VB and SQL book, and it sounded like fun. Back then books had 10 technical editors, so the pressure was a bit lower as you could be wrong and 9 other people would have checked the work as well. At the same time, the book?s editor and I started chatting about why all database design books (that weren?t written by Code, Date, Pascal, etc) ended their description of Normalization at 3rd Normal Form. So I was adamant that it would be a good idea to have a trade press book that was deeper than that, but still accessible to the average programmer. Then came my radioactive spider. An offer to write a book with an advance that was more money than I had ever seen in one place. Turned out to be a very good idea, as well as a very bad idea.

I had picked up a lot of the practical aspects of database design building several database systems, particularly my first where I had to write/rewrite/modify all of the code (800+ procedures/triggers) by hand, helping me to feel the pain of design mistakes (even though my mentors had been quite good at db design. So I picked up one of C J Date?s books, and read a large part of it, and did my best to translate the topic from a bunch of technical/mathematical jargon and contrived examples that work for explaining the topic, but never seem to resonate with trade press readers because we are generally not academic minded. We want to get things done, and ideally, well. We set a deadline of around six months, and well over a year later, I (well, we) finally finished the book. It was the longest thing I had written in my life, and it was only fair before the technical editors beat me half to death?

2. We all have influencers that have advanced our careers as writers. It may be a teacher who told you that you had great potential Another writer who impressed you that you wanted to be like? Or perhaps on the other end of the spectrum it was a teacher who told you that you were too stupid to write well enough to spell your own name, much less have people one day impressed with your writing? Who were your influences that stand out as essential parts of your journey to the level of writer you have become??

There are a few writers that I tried to learn from. Kalen Delaney was kind of my inspiration when I got started. I remember meeting her at a PASS conference and getting her to sign a copy of her 2000 book. I loved her book because it didn?t stop with ?this is what to do?, but I remember it diving really deep and telling me stuff that, while perhaps not immediately useful, help you to understand how SQL Server does operations. I still have that book in my collection, and is the only book I have signed (other than the two MVP Deep Dives books that were signed at the release as our thank you to the teams.)

I also am a fan of C S Lewis? apologetics, because, while he doesn?t dumb it down, he does speak on a level that is accessible to the average person. It has definitely flavored my writing over the past few editions, because in my head I want my writing to feel intelligent, but also very human.

My deflectors were never that vocal to tell me I couldn?t make it, but I don?t think I ever made greater than a C in an English class where writing was involved. I had always hated writing, and in retrospect I have no idea why I said yes to the book (unless it was the money :)

3. As the years pass, how has your writing changed?? Do you feel like it is becoming a more natural process? Or perhaps you get more critical of your own writing to the point that it takes you longer?

A little of both. On the one hand, I can certainly write a LOT faster than when I got started. Sometimes the words will just flow naturally, and I can sit down on my laptop and Tablemate TV tray and write for hours. When I wrote the 2000 Design book, I averaged 3 pages a day (3-4 hours after my day job), when I knew what I was trying to do. Now I can easily hit 6-10 pages a day.? What makes this a bit more interesting is that in 2000, my publisher did a lot more of the work. They edited for English (making me say ?whilst? a lot), they redrew artwork, etc. Now almost all of that work is done by we authors, except that there are editors that tweak the English for you.

On the other hand I tend to write a bunch of text and then sit on it for a lot longer than I would like. These answers will take a few hours to write, and then a few days to re-edit and re-edit.? I don?t want to get anything wrong, and even worse, I don?t want to offend anyone inadvertently.

Probably the biggest thing that has changed my writing has been SQL Saturday. Before we had so many SQL Saturday events, I was super lucky to speak once a year at the SQL PASS event. Speaking is generally where I learn what people want to hear about, and what I need to write about. If a session falls on its face, then I know that either people don?t want to hear about a topic (I am looking at you Sequence Session), or, as was the case with my first database design session, that I had a lot to learn.? The fear of looking stupid in front of the crowd has always pushed me to produce and test way too much material for a session, often started from stuff I have written about in the book. The extra material I write then ends up in a blog and/or chapters of my next book. So it is kind of a symbiotic relationship between speaking and writing, and that has always worked well.?

4. Assume a time machine has been created, and you are scheduled to speak to a group of potential writers, in which you and I are in attendance. Without concern for the temporal physics that might cause the universe to implode making the answer moot, what would you tell "past us", and do you think that your advice would change where you and I are in our careers now? (like would you tell yourself to get excited for the day you will be sitting here for a rather long period of time answering interview questions and not getting paid for it, instead of feeling the warm sun on your forehead?)

?Don?t. Do. It. Run away fast. If there is anything else in life you can see yourself doing with your free time. Do it.

Think back to high school and/or college when you had that writing assignment. You turned it in to your teacher and when you got the paper back, you got a C. Now imagine that instead of giving it to one person to read, you give it to millions. Of those millions, you will be lucky if hundreds read it. Of those hundreds, you will easily get a failing grade from 10% of those people, no matter how good your writing is. If you are lucky, a few of the sane readers who disagree with you will explain in detail their problems with your writing. Unfortunately you will often get the insane ones who write ?it sucks, and his mother should be ashamed of raising a child that would turn out such dreck.?

Finally, you will do most of your technical writing for no pay. None. And when you do get paid, not only will it often be less than minimum wage, getting paid will empower the person paying you to bend your ideas to meet their needs.

If you are still listening to my speech and haven?t run out of the room screaming? it isn?t all bad?

Those people who disagree with you, listen to them. You will learn more from an intelligent bad review than you will from a completely favorable review. (Though the favorable reviews do balance out the bad ones to keep you sane.)? And the sting of the bad reviews will drive you to avoid making the mistakes that lead to bad reviews. And even if you never make one shiny nickel writing, doing the proper preparation to write about a topic will leave you with a deeper knowledge of the topic you write about. And since you probably make your living with the product you are writing about? it will pay off in the end. ?

----------------------

At one time in my life, I considered being a pastor. I went to my pastor, Dr Allan Lockerman and asked what I needed to do. He said the same thing to me. Is there anything else you can see yourself doing? I was just becoming a decent SQL programmer, and I said that I loved what I was doing. He told me to keep doing it for now, and so far it has stuck.

As it turned out, I love SQL, and (after getting through the aforementioned pain,) I love writing about it, and truly I love everything these things have given me. I have enjoyed my 9 years as a Microsoft MVP, brought about at least in strong part with the books and blogs I have written over the past 11 or so years. It has actually become a kind of addiction. If I am not writing, I am preparing to write or prepping a presentation (which is just like writing in front of a live studio audience).

5.? What would you say has been your greatest success story as a writer, even if it was not a commercial success? And conversely, have there been any projects that were just complete disasters that you probably could have looked back and realized that before you got started?

My favorite success has been as a writer and editor of the SQL MVP Deep Dives and SQL MVP Deep Dives 2 books. First off, because I was able to work with my favorite people, with 53 MVPs working on the first book, and 64 on the second, you just can?t beat that. We made well into the 5 digits for a couple of great charities with these books, and delivered a heck of a great bit of content, with ~15 page chapters on a very wide array of topics that would be useful to any SQL DBA, Programmer, or Data Architect.

My biggest failure would have to what I can see now was the quality of my first book, the one with my picture on the cover (I never loved that aspect of Wrox books, but my photographer did a decent job in any case). I was new at writing, and hadn?t had the experience of being ripped apart from some of the great people who reviewed my book. It wasn?t bad because of the great technical editors I had working with me (some of them were very brutal in their reviews which I really appreciated?after the book was finished!). I still hear about people having that book on their desk and really liking it, but if I could I would love to do an exchange program to get one of the later books in their hands.

For the 2005 book, I met the most horrifically wonderful editor I have ever worked with, Tony Davis (@TonyTheEditor). He took my first draft of pretty much the entire book and ripped it apart and helped me put it all back together again. When we finished (months after I had expected to be finished!), the book was so much better and I I still work with Tony blogging and writing with Simple-Talk). And definitely no slouch,? Jonathan Gennick (@JonathanGennick) has guided me to even greater heights over the past two editions. That is one of the big downsides to writing books, unlike the Internet where you can replace material, books exist forever?

6. Finally, beyond the "how" questions, now the big one. There are no doubt tremendous pulls on your time. Why do you do write?

I must admit that I started this ongoing series of blogs to figure out just why I do this. Because there must be a good reason for it that I can glean from other?s answers. For all I can gather, I write because I do.

When I got started, I wanted in on the gravy train that book writing offered. Of course, a lot of changes were in store for the technical book business with the Internet providing more and more material for less and less. So while I have bought a few interesting trinkets now and again from my writing proceeds, the grand riches were never quite there. As I alluded to in my past me speech, I certainly don?t do this for the money at this point.

In some part, I find I do it a bit out of ego. I have produced 5 versions of the Pro SQL Server 20XX series, and when I think of letting someone else take it over, I just can?t stand to consider it. I know it will occur some day, but I don?t want to forecast when. The fact is, when I have no idea how to make the next edition better, I will probably give up. I truly hope that ego isn?t ever my only answer to the why question, but it certainly does fit in.

The answer I am most pleased with is that I do it to keep up. By forcing myself to write about the subject, I keep up with the latest version of SQL Server even if it takes a few years to actually get to the point of using the product in day to day work. For example, for 2005 I wrote a chapter in Pro SQL Server 2005, where I covered all of the new T-SQL features in SQL Server 2005. I learned the features very deeply, and to this day can use most of them without a lot of assistance from the F1 key. Writing gives me the impetus to learn features that are then useful day to day.

So my wishy washy answer is that I get a wee bit of money, a modicum of ego boost, and lots of deep practice of my favored trade, but I still hope that a future interviewee with provide me with that ?aha!? answer that helps me to figure out why I keep doing this to myself.

-------------------------------------------------------

Here I usually recap and comment on the answers given, but instead, I am going to ask you to do the same. In the comments, please say anything you want to, ask any questions you want to ask me or future entries, suggest future entries, etc. I will respond and answer any questions you want to hear too.

How long did it take? Quite a few hours over several days over a few weeks? Whew?

Source: http://sqlblog.com/blogs/louis_davidson/archive/2013/07/17/why-we-write-supplemental-i-find-out-how-long-it-takes-to-answer-the-questions-myself.aspx

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

London tenants in un-air-conditioned apartment buildings face special challenges

From blasting fans to sleeping on rooftop patios, Londoners are doing what they can do beat this heat wave.

For renters in London with no air conditioning, it?s becoming a hot mess and there?s no legal requirement landlords provide air conditioning.

?The only obligation is to provide heat from Sept 1. to June 15, no less than 20 degrees,? said Michael Joudrey of Neighbourhood Legal Services.

It?s nothing new, but tenants are constantly turning to home air conditioners, fans and open windows to find relief.

Erika Faust and her fiance have lived in their apartment in Old South for 31/2 years. They have a portable air conditioner but Faust says it?s not nearly enough to cool the place.

?I do have concerns about how hot the apartment can get. Even with the portable air conditioner going, it can be really warm and stuffy in there. Last summer was just unbearable. On those 40-degree humid days, I felt like I couldn?t breathe,? Faust said.

Stefanie Farrant and her roommate have rented a room in a Platt?s Lane apartment building for more than a year. They recently bought a window air conditioner, but Farrant says she hasn?t seen much of an improvement.

?Honestly, it only makes one of the rooms cold anyway, so we sleep with our doors open and have fans blasting the whole night.?

The health unit recommends landlords provide access to a cooler spot in apartment buildings to help residents cool down.

If you?re feeling over-heated at home, it might be time to get out of the apartment.

?For the apartment buildings, normally if they do not have any cool-off spots, for example, or they are a really old building, we do recommend that residents go to a cooling centre in close proximity to get away for a little while, spend time in a cool place so you can cool yourself down,? said the health unit?s Iqbal Kalsi.

For at least one renting couple, their main concern is for those who may not be able to help themselves.

?My only concern would be for my cat. I do have a couple fans that I keep running to try to keep the apartment at a bearable temperature for her,? said Jeremy Brock, who rents an apartment with his fiance in the northeast.

Lynzee Barnett, his fiance, agreed.

?We?re a young couple, so we manage and get a break when we go to work, but it?s unfair for elderly people who maybe can?t afford to move somewhere with air and never get a break, and it?s unfair to our pets.?

Joudrey, of Neighbourhood Legal Services, acknowledged a lack of regulation and it doesn?t appear regulations to require air conditioners are in the cards.

?I can?t say that it can?t change, but there?s been no discussions that I?m aware of,? Joudrey said.

In the meantime, Londoners like Farrant will do what they can to stay cool.

?I stood in the fridge once for a while; I?m not even kidding.?

melanie.anderson@sunmedia.ca

twitter.com/MelatLfpress

WHAT TO DO

  • The Middlesex London Health Unit recommends landlords take these actions to decrease the risk of heat-related illness to their residents.
  • Provide access to a cooler spot for several hours at a time, such as a common room with air-conditioning or a basement area.
  • Keep windows in hallways slightly open to allow air to circulate.
  • Use fans to draw cool air at night, but don?t rely on a fan as a primary cooling device during long periods of excessive heat.
  • Provide heat safety information to residents or post the information in common areas.
  • Have building staff check on at-risk residents every few hours.
  • Advise residents to drink lots of water and natural fruit juices even if they don?t feel thirsty.
  • Ask residents to keep windows open and the drapes drawn.
  • Keep lights off. Do not use stove or oven.
  • Suggest residents cool down with cool baths, showers, foot baths or by placing cool, wet towels on their necks or underarms.

WHAT TENANTS SAID

?Air conditioners are expensive. The landlord is already paying for utilities. I could only imagine that if everybody in this building has an air conditioner then it would be ridiculously expensive, so having central air would probably save them money.?

? Stefanie Farrant, Platt?s Lane tenant

?In newer buildings, I think AC should be a requirement. In a city that gets as hot and as humid as London does, you need AC just to be able to be somewhat comfortable during this muggy time of year.?

? Erika Faust, Grand Ave. tenant

COOLING CENTRES

For a list of London?s current cooling centres: tinyurl.com/coolingcentres

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0 votes

Yes

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No

Source: http://www.lfpress.com/2013/07/16/london-tenants-in-un-air-conditioned-apartment-buildings-face-special-challenges

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Familiarize Yourself With The Forex Market Well With These Helpful ...

Forex is approximately foreign exchange exchange which is accessible to anyone. Please read on to uncover the basics of forex, and a few methods for you to generate profits by trading.

Keep up to date with current developments, in particular those that could affect value of currency pairs you happen to be trading. The speculation that causes currencies to fly or sink is often a result of reports within the press. Putting together some sort of alert, be it email or text, helps you to capitalize on news items.

In case you are only entering into the swing of Fx trading, keep towards the fat markets leaving the thin markets to experienced traders. The definition for thin industry is one which is lacking in public interest.

You can easily become over zealous whenever you create your first profits but this can only allow you to get in trouble. Consequently, not having enough confidence can also force you to generate losses. Do not a single thing according to a ?feeling?, get it done because you will have the understand how and knowledge.

People are usually greedy and careless as soon as they see success in their trading, which can lead to losses in the future. Fear and panic can also cause the same result. Making trades depending on emotions is never a good strategy, confine your trades to people that meet your criteria.

Do not ever stop trying if you are intending to offer advice to another Forex trader. Every trader has his ups and his downs, and often the not so good days outnumber the good. Continuing to use, even when times are tough, is really what is likely to make or break a trader. Irrespective of how dire a scenario seems, carry on and in the end you may be back on the top.

Try to stay with trading 1 or 2 currency pairs when you initially begin Fx trading to protect yourself from overextending yourself and delving into every pair offered. This will just enable you to get confused or frustrated. It?s better to stay with major currency pairs. This provides more opportunities for success and gives the practice you should develop your confidence.

If one makes the machine be right for you, you might be influenced to rely on the program entirely. The unfortunate results of doing this may be significant financial losses.

Since you?ve read this article, you have the tools you must start trading. Even when you felt well-prepared, you almost certainly learned a few things you didn?t know before. Hopefully you have found the tips in this post useful and could rely on them to obtain started trading on the foreign exchange market. Eventually, you will be trading as being a professional.

Adam has been trading forex for several years. He has been through the learning curve and come out a very successful forex trader. In the last year Adam has been sharing his best trading strategies through his forex signals business which you can try completely free for 30 days.

Source: http://bestfinance1.com/familiarize-yourself-with-the-forex-market-well-with-these-helpful-tips

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Finding her place ? Mercer Island lacrosse player excels in college

Sometimes finding the right niche can take a while. Though Mercer Island High School graduate Elena Skouras did end up finding exactly what she wanted, it was on a different route.

The 2012 MIHS grad started playing lacrosse in sixth grade and realized later in high school that it was something she?d like to continue playing in college.

?Recruiting for lacrosse, you have to start sophomore year really, but I didn?t really know that I was good enough to play until my junior or senior year,? said Skouras. ?I was really late on the whole recruiting process, which was unfortunate for me because I was going to camps and they were looking at sophomores, and I was like, why didn?t I have that opportunity??

Once Skouras knew she was interested in playing, she started going to camps, but had a run of bad luck. Stanford was interested, but a broken wrist sidelined her.

?I went to the Stanford one and on the first day they said I broke my wrist, so I was in a splint the entire time and they were looking at me to see if they wanted to recruit me, but I couldn?t play,? she said. ?I came back home and I go to an orthopedic surgeon, and they said it wasn?t broken. So I sat out for nothing. That was really tough because I finally realized that I did love lacrosse and I wanted to do something with it. It became that lacrosse wasn?t going to be my primary entrance into college, and people were saying you could go to a lot better academic school than if you do lacrosse, but I was just too late to do that.?

It was a setback, but luckily for Skouras, she was accepted at the University of Southern California, and while she wasn?t offered a scholarship to play for the Division I girls program, she knew it was a good school, and it had a women?s club lacrosse team.

?I got into USC and they had a program and everything. I thought, I can play D-I lacrosse, but I feel like when you go to college and you play lacrosse, you do your sport and then you go to school,? she said. ?I?m a very academically driven person, and I didn?t think I could do that. In high school you could play soccer, basketball, lacrosse, whatever, but in college you really do have to pick because it?s a year-round commitment. I wanted to be in a sorority and experience college life, but you couldn?t really do that. I was talking to the coaches about playing D-I, but they said they couldn?t give me a scholarship because it?s too late, but ?we can definitely see you and you can play.? It just seemed like with the commitment level and everything, my freshman year, I wanted to do good academically and get into the groove of college. So I decided to do club, and it was actually the right level of competitive atmosphere that I needed.?

The women?s D-I team at USC was a new program last season, and in part the club team attracted many players with D-I experience.

?A lot of players had played D-I; they were a year ahead of me, and they dropped down to club and said this is so much better and this is so much fun, and so we did that,? she said. ?We did really, really well that season. It was the best USC has ever done. We took ninth in the nation, with an 18-4 record, which is unheard of ? USC lacrosse was always a joke in the past. We did really well.?

Skouras finished the season tied for the most goals on her team at 69, with 13 assists and 89 points. She averaged 3.9 points per game in the Western Women?s Lacrosse League.

The highlight of her first season on the team was surpassing their expectations.

?Our initial goal in the season was just to make it to our league playoffs. We ended up making it to the championship and then we ended up going to Nationals and ending up getting ninth, and honestly we didn?t even think we would make the playoffs,? she said. ?Just sitting there looking at your teammates and seeing how far you came was such an amazing feeling because we never in the world thought we could ever get there. I think that was awesome. It was the first time in USC history that the girls lacrosse had ever gone that far.?

The Trojans finished with a record-setting season, and in the process of playing, Skouras discovered how deep her love of the game went.

?I just think that you shouldn?t let go of your sport just because you don?t play D-I. I think you should continue because it?s really nice having something you?re passionate about. You meet so many people and so many friends in lacrosse, and you get to travel together and it?s really fun,? said the attacker.

Though the club team was still a time commitment, Skouras said for the USC team, it was less than most others.

?We do have to make some sacrifices, but what was really unique about our team was that we were one of the most competitive teams in our league, but we only practiced two days a week and everyone else who was the same ranking as us practiced five days a week and conditioned every day,? she explained. ?It just showed us that for our team, it was about having fun and playing because you?re passionate about it, not making it a job. I feel like when you play D-I it becomes a job and you lose that intrinsic satisfaction for playing a sport. It gave me that adrenaline rush of playing.?

She said she plans to play again next season, and is still considering moving up to Division I, but doesn?t know how it will pan out yet.

On Mercer Island, many of the high school players are encouraged to coach younger teams. This helped Skouras realize that continuing to play was something she wanted to do.

?On Mercer Island they give you a lot of opportunities to coach,? said Skouras. ?I coached a seventh-eighth grade team and a third-fourth grade team one year. Mercer Island just provided you with a lot of opportunities as players to see every aspect of the game, playing it and seeing it from the sideline, and I think that really helped me grow as a player. It helped me understand what my coaches had been telling me. So I would be coaching my seventh, eighth-graders and tell my head coach, Liz Shields, and she would be like, this is what I?ve been telling you!?

Skouras, who was a two-time all-state team member in high school, said for anyone interested in playing in college just to get out and play the game as much as they can.

?I think that it?s hard because no one really knows they want to really play sophomore year ? I feel like sophomore year you?re not really thinking about where you want to go to college as much,? she said. ?I think that for advice, they should just go to camps, because I know that?s where you get recruited a lot. But also joining select teams, like in soccer, but I just think if they are passionate about the game and they are willing to sacrifice your time to be on select teams if should be a sign that maybe they do want to pursue this in college.?

Skouras is a business major at USC, doing an accounting internship with Costco this summer.

?I may not go accounting, but I?m a person who is a hands-on learner, so I like to do things to see if I like it. That?s why I tried lacrosse, to see if I liked it, and I love it,? she said.

Contact Mercer Island Reporter Reporter Megan Managan at mmanagan@mi-reporter.com or (206) 232-1215 ext. 5054.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/mirsports/~3/nOdFSIGX3ag/215534881.html

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NFC/ Android Beam Not Working





I tried to Beam a picture to my sister's nexus 4 with my own nexus 4 but my screen just goes back to the homescreen and the file is not transferred. But when my sister sends me a photo, it works. Also the "touch to beam" screen does not show up for either phones but my sister's phone just immediately transfers the photo.

Any help is appreciated!

P.S. We are both running Xylon latest nighly with latest Franco.Kernel.

Source: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2365623&goto=newpost

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Moto X features outed in leaked Rogers video

'OK Google Now, what's the forecast for today?'

The torrent of Moto X leaks continue today, as a video from Canadian carrier Rogers has appeared online showing many of the headline features from Motorola's upcoming handset. The video also reveals that the Moto X will launch exclusively on Rogers in Canada this August, and come in black and white color options.

Among the Moto X's software tricks is a new voice command system that's always active — the video shows it linking in with Google Now to produce a weather forecast, and mentions that directions and alarms can be activated in the same way. And the notification dynamic has been changed up a bit, too — instead of a notification LED, Moto X pulses icons on its screen when its asleep, allowing you to see which apps have notifications waiting.

The camera app it also shown being activated with a double-twist gesture — presumably this is another "always on" feature that allows you to get to the camera at any time. And the app itself is different to what we've seen in stock Android — tap anywhere to take a photo, or long press to take a burst shot.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Z_4xt4xdhzs/story01.htm

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

'Breitbart News Sunday' on SXM 125: #JusticeForDarryl, Zimmerman, DC March for Jobs, VA Gov. Rumors

14 Jul 2013, 12:12 PM PDT post a comment

Breitbart's Sonnie Johnson will co-host with Bannon, and Breitbart News investigative reporter Matthew Boyle will also provide in-studio analysis. They will be joined by Kevin Jackson, a radio host and entrepreneur.?

Breitbart News Editor-at-Large Ben Shapiro will headline the program to discuss his "Justice for Darryl" story about the tragic and gruesome death of a black child in Chicago who relatives say refused to join a gang at school. While liberal politicians, the mainstream press, civil rights leaders, and their Hollywood allies have all opined about the Zimmerman case, they have been silent about Green's death. As Shapiro wrote: ?

The only media outlets that have covered the murder of Darryl Green are The Chicago Sun-Times and ABC 7 Chicago. The New York Times? Joe Nocera mentioned Green in passing in a blog post devoted to highlighting gun crimes across the country. President Obama has not commented on Green?s death. Neither have any other politicians, including local Congressmen Danny Davis and Bobby Rush, or Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Neither has anyone at MSNBC, CNN, ABC News, NBC News, CBS News, The Washington Post, Associated Press, Reuters, or throughout the Hollywood community.

Breitbart News will?exclusively cover the?"DC March for Jobs" rally on July 15?in its entirety live for five hours. Leah Durant, the founder of the Black American Leadership Alliance, which is organizing the rally, will join the program. The rally will bring together progressives and conservatives of all races and backgrounds who believe the Senate's immigration bill will devastate America's working class, particularly low-skilled workers.?

Bannon will host the broadcast on Monday?and?will be joined on Monday by David Webb, of "The David Webb Show"?on Sirius XM Patriot channel 125, and Breitbart's Sonnie Johnson. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) will keynote the event. Rep. Steve King (R-IA) and former Rep. Allen West (R-FL) will also be featured speakers. Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL), who has been one of the staunchest opponents of the immigration bill and a champion of the working class, will also address the rally. He has emphasized, with data and facts, all of the ways in which the immigration bill will devastate working class Americans of all backgrounds and has been a voice for those workers during the immigration debate.?

Vanessa Jean Louis, Rev. Jesse Lee Patterson, the founder of the South Central L.A. Tea Party, Charles Butler, and Kevin Martin, a BALA member and Breitbart contributor, will be on the program to discuss the rally that Breitbart News will cover.

J. Christian Adams, a former Justice Department official who is now at the Election Law Center, will be on the show to discuss the Zimmerman verdict. Breitbart's Lee Stranahan will join the program live from Sanford, Florida.

Breitbart's Michael Patrick Leahy will be on the program to discuss his?exclusive report filed on Sunday about an emergency meeting the Virginia GOP Central Committee will hold on Monday to discuss the crisis engulfing Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell. The Republican governor has come under fire for potentially violating ethics laws by not reporting gifts from the CEO of Star Scientific, who was pitching his company's health products to the state of Virginia while giving McDonnell and his family members gifts that totaled in excess of $150,000.

Shaun Kenney, one of the editors of the influential Bearing Drift blog that broke the story about McDonnell's possible resignation last week, will also be a guest on the program to update listeners on the situation.?

Breitbart's Liz Sheld will also be on the program to discuss her reporting on the militant jihadist group Boko Haram, which has denied a truce and has vowed to continue?slaughtering Christians in Nigeria.

Bannon hosts the weekly three-hour broadcast that helps set the next week's news cycle.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BigJournalism/~3/sFUg_As_W8w/story01.htm

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Texas Republicans finally pass new abortion limits

Opponents and supporters of abortion rights rally in the State Capitol rotunda in Austin, Texas on Friday, July 12, 2013. The Texas Senate convened Friday afternoon to debate and ultimately vote on some of the nation's toughest abortion restrictions, its actions being watched by fervent demonstrators on either side of the issue. (AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa)

Opponents and supporters of abortion rights rally in the State Capitol rotunda in Austin, Texas on Friday, July 12, 2013. The Texas Senate convened Friday afternoon to debate and ultimately vote on some of the nation's toughest abortion restrictions, its actions being watched by fervent demonstrators on either side of the issue. (AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa)

Sen. Sylvia Garcia, D-Houston, left, throws up her hands as she leaves the Senate Chamber with Sen. Wendy Davis, D-FortWorth, right, after the Texas Senate passed an abortion bill, Friday, July 12, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill will require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Sen. Wendy Davis, D-FortWorth, sits at her desk after the Texas Senate passes an abortion bill, Friday, July 12, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill will require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

A bloodied anti-abortion rights protester is surrounded by Texas state troopers outside the Senate Chamber after the Texas Senate passes an abortion bill, Saturday, July 13, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill will require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Abortion rights advocates fill the rotunda of the State Capitol as the Senate nears the vote on Friday night, July 12, 2013. Texas senators were wrapping up debate on sweeping abortion restrictions Friday night and were poised to vote on a measure after weeks of protests. (AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa)

(AP) ? Republican lawmakers passed a bill that would give Texas some of the nation's most restrictive abortion laws and force most of its clinics to close, leading Democrats to promise a fight over the contentious measure in the courts at the ballot box.

More than 2,000 demonstrators filled the Capitol building in Austin to voice their opposition to the bill, including six protesters who were dragged out of the Senate chamber by state troopers for trying to disrupt the debate. The Republican majority passed the bill unchanged just before midnight, with all but one Democrat voting against it.

"Today the Texas Legislature took its final step in our historic effort to protect life," said Gov. Rick Perry, who will sign the bill into law in the next few days. "This legislation builds on the strong and unwavering commitment we have made to defend life and protect women's health."

Democrats promised a legal challenge to the measure, which will ban abortions after 20 weeks, require doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital and require all abortions to take place in surgical centers. Only five out of Texas' 42 existing abortion clinics meet the requirements to be a surgical center, and clinic owners say they can't afford to upgrade or relocate.

"There will be a lawsuit. I promise you," Dallas Sen. Royce West said on the Senate floor, raising his right hand as if taking an oath.

Democrats proposed 20 amendments to the bill, including making exceptions in cases of rape and incest and allowing doctors more leeway in prescribing abortion-inducing drugs. But Republicans would have none of it.

The bill is one of many championed in Republican-led states this year by anti-abortion groups set on challenging the U.S. Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade ruling, which established a woman's right to get an abortion until the point in which a fetus could viably survive outside the womb. A fetus is generally considered viable at 22 to 24 weeks.

Texas falls under the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which has shown a willingness to accept more stringent limits on abortions.

By passing the new restrictions, Republicans pleased the Christian conservatives who make up the majority of primary voters. But they inspired abortion rights supporters to protest at the state Capitol in numbers not seen in Texas in at least 20 years.

Demonstrators packed normally boring committee hearings to voice their anger over the abortion bill and managed to disrupt key votes. They finished a lengthy filibuster by Democratic Sen. Wendy Davis, of Fort Worth, by jeering for the last 15 minutes of the first special legislative session, effectively killing the bill.

That's when Perry called lawmakers back for round two. But opponents said the fight is far from over and used the popular anger to register and organize Democratic voters.

"Let's make sure that tonight is not an ending point, it's a beginning point for our future, our collective futures, as we work to take this state back." Davis told 2,000 adoring supporters after the bill passed.

The Texas Republican Party, meanwhile, celebrated what they consider to be a major victory that makes Texas "a nationwide leader in pro-life legislation."

"As Democrats continue to talk about their dreams of turning Texas blue, passage of (the bill) is proof that Texans are conservative and organized and we look forward to working with our amazing Republican leadership in the Texas Legislature as they finish the special session strong," a party statement said.

Friday's debate took place before a packed gallery of demonstrators, with anti-abortion activists wearing blue and abortion-rights supporters wearing orange. Security was tight, and state troopers reported confiscating bottles of urine and feces as they worked to prevent another attempt to stop the Republican majority from passing the proposal.

Those arrested or removed from the chamber included four women who tried to chain themselves to a railing in the gallery while singing, "All we are saying is give choice a chance." One of the women was successful in chaining herself, leading to a 10-minute recess.

Sen. Glen Hegar of Katy, the bill's Republican author, argued that all abortions, including those induced with medications, should take place in an ambulatory surgical center in case of complications.

Democrats pointed out that childbirth is more dangerous than an abortion and there have been no serious problems with women taking abortion drugs at home.

Cecile Richards, the daughter of former Gov. Anne Richards and president of Planned Parenthood, said Texas Republicans and abortion opponents won this political round ? but it could cost them down the road.

"All they have done is built a committed group of people across this state who are outraged about the treatment of women and the lengths to which this Legislature will go to take women's health care away," she said.

The dedication of those activists will be tested during the 2014 elections. Democrats have not won a statewide seat in Texas since 1994, the longest such losing streak in the nation.

___

Follow Chris Tomlinson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cltomlinson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-07-13-Abortion%20Restrictions-Texas/id-3a4ca1d879cd4bc590564dd964a10a72

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Do Women Make Better Senators Than Men?

Five women are gathered around the dining-room table from Sen. Barbara Mikulski?s childhood home. It?s the centerpiece of her hideaway, an unmarked retreat in the U.S. Capitol, and, like the hideaway itself, it?s a symbol of the distance all of them have traveled. The shelves and walls display testaments to Mikulski?s long career: photographs, clippings, replicas of the space shuttle. One highlight is a picture of ?Buckboard Barb? Mikulski in a cowboy hat and colorful Mexican-style vest, standing with former Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison during a visit to Texas. Another is a series of photos that starts with two women and ends with 20, a visual display that is striking less for its drama than for its incrementalism. The modern history of women in the Senate is one of slow, hard-fought gains across three decades that have at last given them real clout?or perhaps we should say the potential for real clout, since they serve in a Congress famous for gridlock, not accomplishments.

?This room, probably when Barbara Mikulski came in, was one of those rooms where there were cigars and a bunch of guys,? Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said during a recent discussion in the hideaway.

And now? ?No cigars,? said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.

?No cigars and a lot of hardworking women,? agreed Murray.

Five senators in any small room will set the atmosphere crackling with authority and power, and that was true here despite the conspicuous absence of testosterone. You don?t get to become or stay a senator without sharp political-survival skills, and the cool self-assurance that you belong in one of the world?s most exclusive clubs. Most of the women also believe they make special contributions to the Senate?in the issues they highlight, in their collegial style, and in the close-knit network they have formed, despite their differences.

The group?s most arguable contention is that women have a particular talent for working with others. If you ask them what they bring to the Senate, almost all of them say things like this: more collaboration, less confrontation; more problem-solving, less ego; more consensus-building, less partisanship. Those are fixed perceptions, not just among the senators but, research shows, among voters as well. And there is plenty of evidence, in the form of deals made and bills passed, that women know how to get things done. That?s especially true now that women chair eight full committees and many subcommittees. But are they really better at this than men? Historians and researchers say there are too few of them, and their arrival on the scene has been too recent, to draw any conclusions.

Sixteen Democrats and four Republicans make up the Senate women?s caucus. They span the ideological spectrum from San Francisco-area liberals Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer to tea-party favorites Deb Fischer of Nebraska and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire. The age spectrum runs from Feinstein, 80, to Ayotte, 45. Mikulski, elected in 1986, is the longest-serving woman in Senate history. The most measurable aspect of the ever-increasing presence of women, and so far the most significant, is their impact on national policy?from making sure federal researchers included women in clinical trials, to the current show of force on sexual assaults in the military. Onetime ?women?s issues? such as health, education, child care, abortion, and pay equity are now prominent on the congressional docket. ?If you made a list and flipped back a couple of decades, that list would be an agenda for outside advocacy groups,? says Ruth Mandel, director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers. ?Those issues are now inside. And they?re inside because there are women inside.?

Another hallmark of the women is that they have re-created among themselves a bygone world, one in which senators drank together in the offices of their leaders or the Senate secretary; in which their families lived in Washington, and their kids played and went to school together, Democrats and Republicans alike. The women do it in part through their famously private dinners, begun 20 years ago to create what Collins calls a ?safe space? for women to talk about their problems and triumphs, their children, their parents, and their passions. Held every couple of months at the Capitol, in restaurants, or at their homes, they are for senators only?no press, no staff, no leaks, and, until recently, no men. That changed in April when President Obama, acting on a suggestion from Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., invited them all to dinner at the White House. ?We set our sights very high,? Boxer says.

The members have thrown showers for women who are getting married or adopting children. They socialize with their families at each other?s homes. They run together and discuss how to juggle a Senate career and the responsibility of raising young children. Mikulski recently invited all 19 of her female colleagues to her office to update them on developments regarding sexual assaults in the military. Feinstein, elected in 1992, often takes new senators to lunch to advise them on how to run a Senate office. ?We?re not a clique. We?re not a sorority. We?re not a club,? she says. ?But it?s very easy to talk to women. That?s a real plus.?

Don?t men in the Senate bond with each other? They do, the women concede, but usually at the gym, with less conversation, and in smaller, self-selected, less inclusive groups. ?It?s who they choose to be with, rather than saying, ?I need to understand who this person is that I don?t know well,? ? Murray says.

Assistant Senate Historian Katherine Scott confirms that the women have something unusual going on. ?The Democrats and Republicans come together, and they actually know each other pretty well?and they?re proud of that,? she says. ?They?ve tried to establish this relationship outside of the institution as a way to make them more effective members within the institution.?

It?s easy to include everyone?easy to make reservations, some of the women joke?when your whole group totals 20. If there were 80 women in the Senate, as there are men, they might often end up in small groups of like-minded people, just like the men. But there?s also the intriguing possibility that more women could lead to a more functional Senate.

WIELDING THE GAVEL

There was a time when bipartisan partnerships?usually among men?produced results. The late Massachusetts Democrat Edward Kennedy often worked with Utah Republican Orrin Hatch, most notably on the State Children?s Health Insurance Program. Arizona Republican John McCain and Wisconsin Democrat Russell Feingold are known for their law aimed at reforming the campaign finance system. A bipartisan ?Gang of 14,? including three women, successfully averted a judicial-confirmation crisis in 2005. But today?s Senate is in a paralytic state on most issues, from jobs, judges, and guns to climate change, student loans, and the national debt.

That?s not to say some men aren?t trying to make things work better. Aspiring deal-makers in today?s Senate include McCain, South Carolina Republican Lindsey Graham, New York Democrat Chuck Schumer, Virginia Democrat Mark Warner, and Tennessee Republican Bob Corker (who is freshman Massachusetts Democrat Elizabeth Warren?s mentor, at her request). An all-male ?Gang of Eight? negotiated its way to a 68-32 passage of the Senate?s major achievement this year, a sweeping immigration-reform bill. And Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia (conservative Democrat) and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania (conservative Republican) produced a gun background-check bill that won wide praise. Still, it?s a sign of these polarized times that the Manchin-Toomey compromise failed in the Senate, and the House is balking at taking up the Senate immigration bill.

The depressing state of affairs gives congressional women an opening to make the case that more of them could mean less stasis. Part of their argument is that their caucus lacks such provocateurs as Republicans Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, who make a point of standing out and not sparing their colleagues. ?They really don?t have among the women the equivalent of a Ted Cruz in either party. So there is a difference in style,? says former Senate Budget Committee aide Steve Bell, who worked on the Hill for years. The only possible exception, he says, is Boxer.

That judgment is based in part on Boxer?s outspoken advocacy for abortion rights and environmental protection, and most recently on her outburst in May when Republicans boycotted an Environment and Public Works Committee meeting on Gina McCarthy, Obama?s nominee to head the Environmental Protection Agency. Among other things, Boxer?who chairs the committee?said her colleagues were holding McCarthy hostage to their ?pro-polluter fringe philosophy? and advised them to ?get out of the fringe lane.?

Yet for the past two years, Boxer has worked with polar political opposites James Inhofe of Oklahoma and David Vitter of Louisiana to shape and pass a $109 billion transportation bill and a $12 billion water-projects bill, and they and their aides have nothing but nice things to say about working with Madam Chairman on that legislation. ?There?s a sweet spot there. You have to find it as chairman,? Boxer says. ?I?m not telling you I?ll find it on climate change. I have found it on infrastructure.?

The women have found plenty of ?sweet spots? in their roles as chairwomen. Michigan?s Debbie Stabenow, who heads the Agriculture Committee, hammered out farm bills priced at nearly $1 trillion each with Republicans Pat Roberts of Kansas in 2012 and Thad Cochran of Mississippi this year (the glow of success faded fast; the House killed this year?s bill and never took up last year?s). While the complex farm bill always requires coalition-building, Stabenow has clear bragging rights in at least one respect. In 2011, when the super committee was asking every House and Senate committee to recommend budget cuts, she says she reached out to her Republican counterpart in the House and they produced the only bipartisan, bicameral proposal on Capitol Hill.

Mikulski found common ground with Hatch over the idea of a women?s history month (the West, he told her, has a lot of pioneering women). That led to a more substantive partnership on modernizing the Food and Drug Administration. More recently, as chairwoman of the Appropriations Committee, she worked with Alabama Republican Richard Shelby to turn out a six-month spending bill that softened the effects of the sequester and averted a government shutdown in March.

This year?s budget didn?t draw any Republican votes in committee or on the floor, but Democrats nevertheless credit Murray for her leadership as chairwoman of the Budget Committee. To produce the first budget in three years, she had to wrangle committee Democrats ranging from Manchin to self-described socialist Bernie Sanders of Vermont. ?I went to every member. I held a lot of meetings. I listened to what people needed,? she says. Her talents were no match, however, for the intransigence of the 2011 super committee, which never came up with a way to avoid the sequester. ?I was the only woman on that committee. It was a short lifetime. It was a very difficult challenge,? she says. ?The divisiveness was so large between the House and Senate at that time, it was impossible to get together.?

Murray is close to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, and along with Stabenow is part of the party?s seven-member Senate leadership. She recently presided over a better-than-expected Democratic cycle in her second stint as chairwoman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Murray and North Carolina Republican Elizabeth Dole (back in 2005-06) are the only women who have ever served in that capacity in either party. Feinstein and Ayotte also are among the women who have taken on non-stereotypical roles. Feinstein is hugely influential as chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, in particular as a defender of the administration?s drone and data-collection programs. Ayotte, elected in 2010, quickly joined defense hawks Graham and McCain to become a chief critic of Obama on the deadly attacks on U.S. personnel in Benghazi, Libya, and other foreign policy issues. In a New York Times rating last month of Sunday talk-show appearances of senators since 2010, Feinstein was the top woman with 20, and Ayotte was second with 11.

Some of the strongest bipartisan relationships are among the women themselves. Ayotte says she has ?a very good working relationship on behalf of our state? with Democrat Jeanne Shaheen. And Gillibrand remembers the support she received from three Republican women?as well as Louisiana Democrat Mary Landrieu?when she was trying to help 9/11 first responders who had inhaled toxins at Ground Zero and now were ill and even dying. Landrieu, drawing from her Hurricane Katrina experience, advised Gillibrand on how to get other senators to care about the issue. Maine Republican Olympia Snowe worked with the New Yorker on how to cover the cost. Snowe, Collins, and Alaska?s Lisa Murkowski went into the GOP caucus every week, Gillibrand says, and asked, ?Why aren?t we standing with first responders?? She credits their advocacy and advice with getting the bill passed.

Mikulski says women have made particular efforts to visit the states of their ranking Republican committee and subcommittee partners to get familiar with their constituents. The list includes Stabenow?s trip to Roberts?s Kansas, Boxer?s visit to Vitter?s Louisiana, and Mikulski?s travel to Shelby?s Alabama. Then there was Mikulski?s trip to that Houston rodeo with Hutchison when they were chairwoman and ranking member of an Appropriations subcommittee. The self-described ?urban gal? from Baltimore, laughing at the memory, says a tall Texan ?hoisted? her onto a buckboard. Hutchison ?was on a Palomino holding a flag. And we circled the Astrodome together to ?God Bless America.? ? Hutchison?s inscription on the photo commemorating the day reads, ?To a great sport.?

A search by the Senate historian?s office for reports of men making similar trips in recent years did not turn up anything. But there?s no conclusive evidence that these trips or others with similar opportunities for bonding are limited to women?or that the women are correct in their insistence that in general, women are better at building consensus. Kathleen Dolan, a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee), says there are reasons for Senate collegiality that are unrelated to gender, among them the fact that so many of the women are Democrats and ?the institutional incentives are more focused on collegiality.? That is, unlike in the House, any one senator or a minority of 40 can gum up the works, so negotiation and accommodation are?or should be?the norm.

Researchers say women?s life experiences and personalities may give them a little extra strength in that area. Still, ?that?s not where you?re going to find the real impact of diversifying,? says Michele Swers, author of Women in the Club, a 2013 book about Senate women. ?The main impact is in the policies they?re pushing.?

INTO THE MAINSTREAM

Swers offers statistical as well as anecdotal evidence that being a woman affects the way senators look at policy questions, what priorities they set, and the types of solutions they propose. There are countless examples of that female perspective at work. The issues are as volatile as sexual assaults in the military and as quiet as improving coverage of autism treatment for the children of troops. The autism amendment ?didn?t really get any press,? Gillibrand says, and senior Republicans opposed it on the floor last fall. But it passed 66-29 with all 17 women then in the Senate voting yes.

In two recent examples from the immigration debate, Minnesota Democrat Amy Klobuchar sponsored a successful amendment to protect undocumented victims of elder abuse. Hawaii Democrat Mazie Hirono, along with Murray and Murkowski, pushed to balance a new preference for immigrants with desirable skills and education. Hirono said bias against women in some countries has blocked their access to education and careers, and without changes, the proposed reform ?essentially cements unfairness against women into U.S. immigration law.? Many senators acknowledged she had a point, but her amendment was part of a package that did not make it to a vote.

The 2010 Affordable Care Act is a strong example of why women need to be in the room. Four women sat on the Finance Committee at that time?Stabenow, Snowe, Washington Democrat Maria Cantwell, and Arkansas Democrat Blanche Lincoln, who lost her seat later that year. ?The four of us were significant over and over again,? Stabenow says, on issues such as school-based health clinics and mental-health care as well as women-specific concerns such as maternity care, which spurred a viral exchange over whether insurance plans should be required to cover it. (Arizona Republican Jon Kyl: ?I don?t need maternity care.? Stabenow: ?Your mom probably did.?) Stabenow says she?s now advocating for the child-care tax credit in weekly discussions of the committee?s latest big project, tax reform.

The women of the Senate, including Hillary Rodham Clinton while she was there, have also been longtime champions of the women of Afghanistan and the Middle East. They pressed for women to be included in the provisional government in Kabul. They broke away from official congressional itineraries to meet with women who otherwise would have been ignored, in Afghanistan, Egypt, and elsewhere. Boxer says Afghan women have come to see all the Senate women in their offices. ?I think they know we have their back,? she says.

The highest-profile crusade uniting the women these days is their effort to improve how the military handles sexual assaults. The sheer size of the women?s contingent on the Armed Services Committee?seven members?has made them a formidable, aggressive force in questioning military brass and shaping legislation (one senator, North Carolina Democrat Kay Hagan, even headlined a press release ?Hagan Questions Top Military Leaders on Sexual Assault?). The large number of women also has given rise to multiple approaches to the problem?particularly the split between Democrats Gillibrand, who wants military prosecutors to handle the cases, and Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri, who wants to keep them in the chain of command.

Gillibrand minimizes those differences, noting that the Senate women have agreed on 90 percent of the path forward. Her amendment failed in committee, but she is still hoping to get 51 votes for it on the Senate floor. She?ll have a cheerleader from afar in Snowe, who was on the phone with NationalJournal as Gillibrand was learning that the committee would reject her amendment. ?That is really regrettable,? said Snowe, who retired in January. She said she got the law tweaked to address the same problem back in 1997, though it kept the responsibility within the chain of command. ?Obviously, it?s not working,? she says. ?Here we are 16 years later. We continue to fight yesterday?s battles?even last century?s.?

Women have had their share of victories over the years, as Snowe acknowledged in a farewell speech reflecting on a career that began in the House in 1979. ?That was a time in America when child-support enforcement was viewed as strictly a woman?s problem, a time when pensions were canceled without a spouse?s approval, a time when family and medical leave wasn?t the law of the land, and a time when, incredibly, women were systematically excluded from clinical medical trials at the National Institutes of Health?trials that made the difference between life and death,? she said. Snowe and former Democratic Rep. Pat Schroeder, cochairwomen of the Congressional Caucus for Women?s Issues, were in the forefront of changing all that.

But there was still more to be done. Hutchison, who took office in 1993, recalls trying to make sure health insurance plans covered mammograms (?which, amazingly, has been a question?) and partnering with Mikulski in the mid-1990s for a law allowing homemakers to contribute to IRAs (Hutchison says she told House Republicans in charge of revenue bills that it was ?a travesty that we haven?t dealt with this.? They found the money to make it happen.) In her farewell speech, she talked of working with Clinton on Vital Voices, a global partnership to encourage female leaders in emerging economies; of passing the Feinstein-Hutchison Breast Cancer Research Stamp bill that raised $72 million for research; and of teaming with Feinstein to create a national Amber Alert system to aid the rescue of abducted children.

The traditions, and the evolution, continue. Feinstein, now one of three women on the Judiciary Committee, was the only one on the panel during confirmation hearings in 2005 for Chief Justice John Roberts and in 2006 for Justice Samuel Alito. She took her role very seriously. ?I have a special responsibility to find out whatever I can about his views on women?s rights,? Feinstein said of Roberts, in Swers?s account of the episode. Feinstein did the same for Alito and cited their positions on abortion in opposing both of them.

That ?special responsibility? was not unique to Feinstein. Boxer recalls her 10-year tenure in the House as a time when women carried ?on their back? every issue that was thought at the time to relate solely to women, such as child care and reproductive health. ?In those years, we did have a much larger constituency than just our House district,? she says. ?Women all over the country would look to us on some of these issues of gender equality.? A similar dynamic continues as women achieve more ?firsts.? Murray heard from female veterans all over the country when she became chairwoman of the Veterans? Affairs Committee in 2011. ?It really opened our eyes? to the need for women?s health services at veterans centers, she says.

One major difference now: ?Women?s issues,? a phrase Murkowski says she never sees in her mind without quote marks around it, have gone mainstream. When Stabenow was a county commission chairwoman and opened the first shelter for victims of domestic violence in Lansing, she got calls accusing her of trying to break up the family. Now there?s a federal Violence Against Women Act broadly supported by men, and acknowledgment that ?women?s issues? concern everyone. In fact, Swers?s analysis of the 107th and 108th Congresses (2001 to 2005) showed that those issues ?routinely constitute at least one-third of the Senate agenda,? and almost every senator sponsored such bills. ?It?s very true that more men step up today,? Feinstein says. ?That is the big point: Women?s issues have become everyone?s issues.?

That?s eased the pressure on the Senate?s women to speak for all women and also to prove they are not preoccupied with women?s issues, a stereotype that some of them say is worrisome and some of them say they try to avoid. It remains the case that women are most often primary caregivers in their families, whether for children or elderly relatives, and they bring that experience to the front lines of legislating. ?We all have to be generalists in the U.S. Senate. We all have to be advocates for our state,? says Wisconsin Democrat Tammy Baldwin. But she also says, ?We can?t ignore the real-life experience that we bring to these jobs.? In her case, that has meant not only being the first openly gay person elected to the Senate, but also a woman who cared for the grandmother who raised her when she was in her 90s and in failing health. In the case of North Dakota Democrat Heidi Heitkamp, it means being a survivor of breast cancer.

The issues traditionally associated with women often involve spending, regulation, and abortion rights, making them an awkward fit with the Republican agenda of social conservatism and cutting taxes, spending, and regulation. The disconnect may be at least partly why there have never been more than five Republican women in the Senate at one time. But GOP gains may be inevitable, given the numbers? steady upward creep.

The new generation is epitomized by two mothers of young children: Ayotte, who says, ?It?s kind of absurd that it took women coming to Congress? to force the inclusion of women in clinical trials, and Gillibrand, who is cooking up a women?s economic-empowerment agenda that combines her own ideas and those of others into a marketable, promotable package. The chief elements are a minimum-wage increase, paid family leave, equal pay for equal work, affordable day care, and universal prekindergarten.

Scanning that list, it?s tempting to say the more things change, the more they stay the same. But a closer look shows that?s not the case. The family-leave proposal builds on the unpaid leave now available because of the efforts of earlier Capitol Hill pioneers. The minimum wage is a nontraditional ?women?s issue? that Gillibrand put on her list because she says nearly two-thirds of those earning minimum wage are women. Then there?s Obama. The first law he signed was the Lilly Ledbetter Act making it easier for women to sue for equal pay. Universal pre-K, meanwhile, was a key proposal in the president?s most recent State of the Union address. The foundation for progress on these issues has been laid, but will Congress act? That will be a stiff test of their collegiality?and their clout.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/women-better-senators-men-073956094.html

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Texas Democrats question abortion restrictions

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Democrats in the Texas Senate on Friday questioned whether proposed abortion restrictions are constitutional and whether they would make it more difficult for women in the state to obtain health care.

Democrats grilled the Republican author of a bill that has prompted fervent demonstrations and put Texas at the center of the nation's abortion debate. Following Friday's debate, the Senate was scheduled to vote on the tough abortion restrictions and could send the bill to Republican Gov. Rick Perry, who has said he will sign it.

As senators debated, they could clearly hear hundreds of protesters outside of the chamber in the Capitol rotunda cheering, chanting and singing, "We're not going to take it anymore."

The circus-like atmosphere in the Texas Capitol marked the culmination of weeks of protests, the most dramatic of which came June 25 in the final minutes of the last special legislative session when a Democratic filibuster and subsequent protest prevented the bill from becoming law. Abortion-rights advocates dressed in orange Friday, some carrying gynecological devices and signs, while anti-abortion activists wore blue and held images of fetuses and Bible verses.

House Bill 2 would require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, allow abortions only in surgical centers, limit where and when women may take abortion-inducing pills and ban abortions after 20 weeks. Only five out of 42 existing abortion clinics meet the requirements to be a surgical center, and clinic owners say they can't afford to upgrade or relocate.

Sen. Glen Hegar of Katy, the bill's Republican author, argued that all abortions, including those induced with medications, should take place in an ambulatory surgical center in case of complications.

Democrats pointed out that childbirth is more dangerous than an abortion and there have been no serious problems with women taking abortion drugs at home. They also planned to introduce numerous amendments to add exceptions for cases of rape and incest and to remove some of the more restrictive clauses.

Sen. Rodney West, a Dallas Democrat, asked why Hegar was pushing restrictions that federal courts in other states had suspended as possibly unconstitutional.

"There will be lawsuit. I promise you," West said, raising his right hand as if taking an oath.

The measures under consideration Friday mirror restrictions passed in Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, Alabama, Kansas, Wisconsin and Arizona. And lawmakers in North Carolina are considering a measure that would allow state health officials to apply standards for ambulatory surgical centers to abortion clinics.

Passing the law in Texas would be a major victory for anti-abortion activists in the nation's second most-populous state. A lawsuit originating in Texas would also likely win a sympathetic hearing at the conservative 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Other Democrats questioned the intent of the bill, and whether it was intended to regulate abortion clinics out of existence.

"What would concern me is the political aspect of a political movement across this country ... this rush to pass this for political purposes," said Sen. John Whitmire, a Houston Democrat. He said it was clear the bill was part of national conservative agenda attempting to ban abortion and infringe on women's rights one state at a time.

Whitmire also pressed Hegar on why the Texas Medical Association, Texas Hospital Association and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology opposed the bill. He asked Hegar how he could ignore these experts.

Hegar said he's heard from "numerous exerts and doctors" who support the restrictions. "And what do we do if they are right and we don't pass this legislation?" he added.

The bill could shut all but five abortion clinics in Texas and would be a win long-eyed by conservatives who make abortion a key campaign issue, but the raucous debate has also given Texas Democrats newfound momentum. The Republican majority is expected to ultimately pass the bill, with Democrats left to do little more than enter into the legislative record material that could help defeat it in federal court.

Troopers thoroughly checked the bags of people entering the gallery, which holds almost 500 spectators. Senate Sergeant-At-Arms Rick DeLeon said no props ? including speculums and coat hangers ? would be allowed into the Senate gallery, per decorum rules.

The Department of Public Safety said jars suspected to contain urine and feces were among the items that were confiscated. Officers also took paint, glitter, confetti and feminine hygiene products.

The leader of the chamber's Democrats, Sen. Kirk Watson of Austin, said he intervened to stop troopers from confiscating tampons from women seeking to watch the debate, but DPS did not confirm that.

Each spectator was issued a copy of the rules of decorum, which stipulate there can be no demonstrations or attempts to disrupt the chamber's work. The Texas Constitution gives the Senate's leader, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, the authority to jail those who break those rules for up to 48 hours, no court necessary.

Democrats successfully blocked the bill in the regular legislative session. During the first special session, the Senate didn't take up the bill until the final day. That allowed Fort Worth Sen. Wendy Davis to use a filibuster to delay a vote. When Republicans rushed to try to pass the bill in the session's final 15 minutes, angry protesters began shouting and screaming from the gallery. Dewhurst could only watch with frustration as a half-dozen state troopers tried to remove more than 450 people.

Democrats believe Republicans have overreached in trying to appease their base and alienated suburban women, a constituency that helped President Barack Obama win re-election.

Sen. Dan Patrick, a chief proponent of the bill, said that if debate goes on too long this time, Republicans will move to cut off debate.

"I'm not going to let it go on forever tonight," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Will Weissert and Jim Vertuno contributed to this report. Follow Chris Tomlinson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cltomlinson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-democrats-abortion-restrictions-220405551.html

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