Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Mexico top presidential contender can't name books

FILE - In this Nov. 27, 2011 file photo, Enrique Pena Nieto, former governor of Mexico state and presidential candidate for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI, waves to supporters during a rally in Mexico City. Pena Nieto, the leading contender for Mexico's presidency, has raised criticism for his inability to name three books that influenced him during a book fair over the weekend of Dec 3-4. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 27, 2011 file photo, Enrique Pena Nieto, former governor of Mexico state and presidential candidate for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, PRI, waves to supporters during a rally in Mexico City. Pena Nieto, the leading contender for Mexico's presidency, has raised criticism for his inability to name three books that influenced him during a book fair over the weekend of Dec 3-4. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte, File)

(AP) ? Oops!

Politicians north of the border aren't the only ones struggling with gaffes this campaign season.

Mexico's leading presidential contender floundered in confusion for about four minutes when the audience at a book fair asked him to name three books that had influenced him. He was able to correctly name only one he has read "parts of:" the Bible.

Former Mexico State Gov. Enrique Pena Nieto holds a comfortable lead in opinion polls for Mexico's July 1 presidential election, but his appearance was reminiscent of the campaign-denting moment that Texas Gov. Rick Perry suffered at a Republican debate in November. The GOP hopeful said he couldn't remember one of the three government agencies he pledged to eliminate if he were president. "Oops!" he finally admitted.

The floundering by Pena Nieto, a strikingly handsome man married to a television actress, fed into the images critics have tried to spin around him: telegenic but hollow.

"I have read a number of books, starting with novels, that I particularly liked. I'd have a hard time recalling the titles of the books," Pena Nieto said during a question-and-answer session at the weekend book fair in the western city of Guadalajara.

Pena Nieto said that as an adolescent, he had been influenced by the Bible, and had read "parts of" it.

He then rambled, tossing out confused title names, asking for help in recalling authors and sometimes mismatching the two.

He said he liked "La Silla del Aguila, a novel whose title roughly translates as "The Presidential Chair." But he said it was written by historian Enrique Krauze, one of Mexico's most famous historians. It was actually written by Carlos Fuentes, the country's most famous novelist.

That was about as close as the former governor came to correctly identifying a book he has read in the past decade.

"The truth is that when I read books, the titles don't really sink in," he said after several minutes.

Pena Nieto is the leading hope of the former ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, to return to the presidency it held for 71 years without interruption before losing the 2000 elections to conservative Vicente Fox.

Television images of Pena Nieto's struggles ignited glee among PRI critics on Twitter.

Several referred to him as "the Justin Bieber of the PRI," referring to Bieber's difficulty in naming all seven continents during a television appearance in November.

But Bieber was at least able to work out the answer with some prompting from host David Letterman.

Pena Nieto couldn't. He looked to his aides for help and drew laughter from the audience, saying at least twice "I can't remember the title." He mentioned he had read a political thriller by Jeffrey Archer.

Several demonstrators showed up at party headquarters in Mexico City on Monday to symbolically give him books on Mexican history.

"It's really very shameful that a person wants to be president and doesn't know a single book," said Hugo Giovanni Aguirre, a university law student.

Pena Nieto accepted the gaffe in Twitter posts Monday, apparently hoping that good grace would calm the controversy.

"I'm reading some tweets about my error yesterday, some are very critical, others are even funny. I thank you for all of them," he wrote. Later, he tweeted "Freedom of expression is a central pillar of democracy. Criticism of those of us who aspire to or hold political office is fundamental."

But efforts to smooth over the issue were not helped when Pena Nieto's teenage daughter Paulina re-tweeted a comment that described people gloating over the gaffe as "the bunch of idiots who form part of the proletariat and only criticize those they envy."

Pena Nieto quickly apologized on his own Twitter account for the message, whose classist tone doesn't sit well in a country where deep social and economic inequality remains very much alive.

Mexicans were angered in August when a middle class woman stopped for driving erratically was seen on videos bullying a cop, insulting his mother and calling him a "crappy wage slave."

"Paulina's re-tweet was an emotional reaction to my error," Pena Nieto wrote. "It was definitely excessive and I publicly apologize for it." He later added "I have had a talk with my children about respect and tolerance."

The daughter's account was later reactivated, and she posted a tweet saying "it was an impulsive act on my part after reading some tweets that insulted my father ... I learned a big lesson today." In another tweet, she wrote, "I apologize with all my heart ... I recognize what I did was wrong and I am sorry."

Mexican intellectuals were aghast at the whole thing, though some took into account Pena Nieto's explanation that he had been too busy in politics to have time to read.

"I myself, and I suppose all of us ... have moments when we forget authors, we forget books," historian Lorenzo Meyer told a local radio station. "We can't jump on Pena Nieto because he forgets his writers."

"But I believe that a deep knowledge of Mexican history is fundamental for someone who wants to be president," Meyer added.

Members of Pena Nieto's party had their own moments of fun mocking former president Fox, a fountain of verbal flubs who angered U.S. blacks by saying Mexicans took jobs "not even" blacks want, and who prompted hilarity by mispronouncing the name of Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges during a speech before one of Spain's most important literary gatherings.

"This thing with Pena Nieto touches a nerve that is still very sensitive," Meyer said.

While the other political parties piled on the criticism of Pena Nieto, they weren't immune to literary confusion.

Former Finance Secretary Ernesto Cordero, a contender for the top nomination of President Felipe Calderon's National Action Party, said in a radio interview Monday that Pena Nieto's gaffe raised "serious doubts" about his qualifications. But he then misidentified the author of what he described as one of his three favorite books, mixing up her first name with that of another writer.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-05-LT-Mexico-Political-Gaffe/id-1c7c0cc4bde441d288787bc2c61747ac

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Global winds could explain record rains, tornadoes

ScienceDaily (Dec. 5, 2011) ? Two talks at a scientific conference this week will propose a common root for an enormous deluge in western Tennessee in May 2010, and a historic outbreak of tornadoes centered on Alabama in April 2011.

Both events seem to be linked to a relatively rare coupling between the polar and the subtropical jet streams, says Jonathan Martin, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences.

But the fascinating part is that the change originates in the western Pacific, about 9,000 miles away from the intense storms in the U.S. midsection, Martin says.

The mechanism that causes the storms originates during spring or fall when organized complexes of tropical thunderstorms over Indonesia push the subtropical jet stream north, causing it to merge with the polar jet stream.

The subtropical jet stream is a high-altitude band of wind that is normally located around 30 degrees north latitude. The polar jet stream is normally hundreds of miles to the north.

Martin calls the resulting band of wind a "superjet."

Jet streams in the northern hemisphere blow from the west at roughly 140 miles per hour, and are surrounded by a circular whirlwind that looks something like a tornado pushed on its side. The circulating wind at the bottom of the jet stream blows from the south. On the north side, the circulating winds turn vertical, lifting and cooling the air until the water vapor condenses and feeds precipitation.

A superjet and its circulating winds carry roughly twice as much energy as a typical jet stream, Martin says. "When these usually separate jet streams sit atop one another, there tends to be a very strong vertical circulation, which produces clouds, precipitation and tornadoes under the right conditions."

And because the circulating wind in a superjet moving across the U.S. south picks up moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, "the superjet gives a double-whammy -- more moisture, and more lifting, producing that intense rain."

That was the case in May 2010, when 10 to 20 inches of rain fell around Nashville.

Andrew Winters, who is now a graduate student studying with Martin, latched onto the Tennessee flood as the topic of his senior undergraduate thesis in 2010. "It had a lot of interesting aspects, brought an anomalous amount of moisture into the southeast, and that hefty amount of rain," Winters says.

And that super-strong jet stream "could be traced back to conditions in the western Pacific, almost a week earlier," Winters says.

Martin and Winters describe their work in talks Dec. 6 and 7 at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.

Studies of the Tennessee floods, the Alabama tornados, and an odd October storm in Wisconsin showed "that when the subtropical jet is pushed poleward under the influence of strong thunderstorms in the western Pacific, it seems to result in these intense storms in the U.S. midsection," Martin says. "It's a really fascinating global connection that occurs seven to 10 days later."

Martin also suggests the altered position of the subtropical jet stream may be linked to global warming.

"There is reason to believe that in a warmer climate, this kind of overlapping of the jet streams that can lead to high-impact weather may be more frequent," Martin says.

That idea can be tested, Martin adds.

"Historic weather data should tell us whether there has been a change in the frequency of these overlapping events, and whether that might be linked to a change in high impact-weather events. It's an interesting lead that could help us understand one possible mechanism by which a warmer climate could lead to an increase in severe weather," he says.

Although hurricanes can be tracked for a week or more as they cross the Atlantic Ocean, weather phenomena seldom last so long, Martin says. "If the subtropical jet stream is rearranged and superposed on top of the polar jet stream, it might be the mechanism that allows for this very long delay, a disturbance that can have discernible effect on severe weather thousands of miles downstream, and a week or more later."

Martin says that if the new analysis survives further study, it could contribute to severe weather forecasting.

Though severe weather was forecast a day or two in advance of the deadly tornado outbreak in the Southeast this April, "most tornado forecasts are made 12 or at most 24 hours in advance. That saves lives. But if we get the idea five or six days in advance that we should watch the position of the jet streams, we could say, 'Hey, we have a pretty exciting week coming up, we have to be on high alert.'"

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111205170101.htm

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Is Nevada recovering? Depends on who you ask (Providence Journal)

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Michael Jackson doctor files appeals notice in LA

The doctor sentenced to four years behind bars for causing Michael Jackson's death has filed a notice that he intends to appeal the conviction.

Conrad Murray signed a one-page document that was filed in Los Angeles on Friday seeking all records and transcripts from the case. The filing does not indicate the basis on which Murray will argue to overturn his conviction or sentence.

The 58-year-old was sentenced Tuesday to four years in jail for his involuntary manslaughter conviction, but the term will be automatically cut in half.

Murray's challenge will be heard by a state appeals court in Los Angeles, assuming he files an opening brief at a later date.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor blasted Murray's conduct on Tuesday, calling him a disgrace to the medical profession.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45530847/ns/today-entertainment/

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Video: Clinton meets Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar



>>> now, we go to a place we hardly ever see, myanmar . it's been one of the most isolated repressive regimes on earth. that may not be changing. and because of that, u.s. secretary of state hillary clinton is on an extraordinary visit there, meeting some extraordinary people , including a nobel prize recipient who recently captured the attention of the world. nbc's ian williams is there.

>> reporter: until just a few weeks ago, this would have been inconceivable. the u.s. secretary of state in myanmar tonight meeting tzu chi . now planning to run for parliament. hillary clinton is the highest ranking u.s. visitor in more than 50 years. here to judge for herself reforms that are bringing unexpected change after decades of repressive military rule. sensorship has been eased, prisoners released, and restrictions on protests have been lifted. the changes and clinton's visit are generating enormous hope here.

>> i hope that it is a good visit.

>> reporter: the changes are all the more remarkable when you consider it's only been a year since tzu chi was released from house arrest where she spent 15 of the last 22 years. clinton met the leaders of what has been regarded as a pariah state . and embrace further reform.

>> i told the leadership that we will certainly consider the easing and elimination of sanctions as we go forward in this process together.

>> reporter: they met in the isolated almost surreal new capital built from scratch in the middle of nowhere . its vast eight-lane highway is almost deserted. until recently it was off limit toss westerners. there have been promises of reform here in the past, but myanmar 's leaders may not have decided that bringing their isolated and impoverished country in from the cold really is in their best interest. ian williams , nbc news.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45516636/

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

ZTE Warp (Boost Mobile)


With the Galaxy Prevail?($149.99, 4 stars), Samsung brought a really solid Android smartphone?over to Boost Mobile. The Samsung Transform Ultra?($229.99, 4 stars) improved upon the Prevail and added a nice, physical QWERTY keyboard. Now ZTE is throwing its hat in the ring with the $199.99 ZTE Warp. It brings a large, 4.3-inch display to Boost's low-cost lineup, but it doesn't have quite the level of build quality we loved about those Samsung phones.

Design and Call Quality
The ZTE Warp measures 5.1 by 2.7 by .5 inches (HWD) and weighs 4.9 ounces. The back is made of textured, soft-touch black plastic that looks like a fingerprint. There are silver plastic buttons on the right and left sides of the phone, and the small bit of detail on the front is all shiny black plastic. The 4.3-inch glass capacitive touch LCD has 480-by-800-pixel resolution, and it looks good when you turn the brightness level up a few notches. Unfortunately, it looks like the LCD is set further back than we see in most devices, which makes the screen much more reflective and smudge-prone than normal. This never prevented me from using the phone properly?I had no trouble browsing the Web?but I did find myself needing to clean the screen a lot more often than usual.

The Warp is a dual band EV-DO Rev. A (850/1900 MHz) device with 802.11b/g Wi-Fi. It connected to my WPA2-encrypted Wi-Fi network without a problem. Reception is average, and call quality is good overall. Voices sound rich and clear in phone's earpiece. Calls made with the phone are also clear and easy to understand, with good background noise cancellation. The speakerphone sounds fine, but it's just a touch too low to use outdoors. Calls sounded somewhat thready through a?Jawbone Era?Bluetooth headset ($99, 4.5 stars), but voice dialing worked well. Battery life was good at 6 hours 36 minutes of talk time.

Pricing, Performance, and Apps
On October 6, Boost began charging an additional $5 monthly for its unlimited data and messaging services on Android-powered devices. That means that plans now start at $55, which are reduced by $5 every 6 months you pay your bill on time, until you reach $40. Existing $50 Monthly Unlimited customers with Android can keep their current price plan as long as they don?t let their account expire. Considering that Boost uses Sprint's nationwide network, these are pretty incredible prices compared with the rates on the major carriers, which can easily cost $100 and up.

The Warp runs the latest version of Android, 2.3.5 Gingerbread, and ZTE has done almost nothing to modify it. There's not much bloatware or preinstalled apps, aside from Mobile ID. Mobile ID allows you to install "ID packs" on your phone that include applications, ringtones, wallpapers, and widgets. It isn?t for diehard Android purists, but some users may like it.?

The Warp is powered by a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S2 MSM8655 processor, the same as the Samsung Transform Ultra. Both phones benchmarked similarly. The scores don't come near those of the latest dual-core Android devices, but Boost doesn't carry any of those. This phone should be just fine for most needs aside from high-end gaming.

All of the standard Android apps are here. There?s Google Maps Navigation for free voice-enabled, turn-by-turn GPS directions. The phone syncs email, calendars, and contacts for Gmail and Microsoft Exchange accounts, and works with many other popular email accounts. The Warp's standard screen resolution offers maximum app compatibility in the Android Market, so you also shouldn't have much trouble running any of the 250,000+ available third-party apps.

Multimedia, Camera, and Conclusions
There?s a 2GB microSD card preloaded in the slot beneath the battery cover; my 32GB and 64GB SanDisk cards worked fine as well. There's an additional 2.6GB of internal memory available. The standard 3.5-mm headphone jack means you can use the Warp with just about any pair of wired headphones. Music sounds great, both over wired earbuds as well as through?Altec Lansing BackBeat?Bluetooth headphones ($99, 3.5 stars). The music player is stock Android, and I was able to play AAC, MP3, OGG, and WAV files, but not FLAC or WMA. Standalone video support is also pretty good. The Warp was able to play DivX, H.264, and MPEG-4 files at resolutions up to 720p, though it doesn?t support XviD.

The camera is a low point. It's a 5-megapixel shooter with an LED flash. Shutter speeds are painfully slow?it takes an average of 2.1 seconds to snap a photo?and the photos aren't worth the wait. The camera captures decent detail, but colors are so washed out that photos almost look hazy. And the video camera isn't any better. Recorded videos max out at VGA (640-by-480 pixels) resolution, and they play back at a choppy 13 frames per second.

If you're a Boost user looking to upgrade to a smartphone, the ZTE Warp is a good choice. If you can get past the overly-reflective screen and poor cameras, it becomes even better. But if you can't, the Samsung Transform Ultra gets you a nice physical keyboard along with a screen that's easier to see. Phones like the?Motorola Photon 4G?($199.99, 4.5 stars) on Sprint offer faster dual-core processors, along with nicer displays, but Sprint's monthly rates are much higher than Boost's. The?Motorola Triumph?($299.99, 4 stars) on Virgin Mobile is another good option, though the same unlimited pricing plan on Virgin costs $60 as compared with Boost's $55, and it doesn't come with Boost's shrinkage bonus.

Benchmarks
Continuous talk time: 6 hours 36 minutes

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Meanwhile, in Huntsman-world ... (Politico)

I'm not sure I have adequate words to describe this audio recording posted to the Jon Huntsman daughters' YouTube account. It's a 2012-themed song, set to the tune of "SexyBack," calling the rest of the Republican field a "circus act" and featuring a clip of Mitt Romney calling for abortion to be "safe and legal."

Readers may recall that Jon Huntsman said Tuesday that Herman Cain should consider getting out of the 2012 race to allow other candidates to "stay focused on the issues that really do matter for the American people."

Continue Reading

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1211_69510_html/43769055/SIG=11ms8pii1/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/69510.html

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