Friday, June 21, 2013

Jack White, Kitty, Joe Jonas win at O Music Awards

(AP) ? Jack White, Kitty and Joe Jonas are among the winners of the O Music Awards.

The off-kilter 24-hour awards show hosted by the MTV family of networks wrapped up Thursday night. White won the analog genius award. Kitty was named best web-born artist, Jonas won best artist Instagram and Yoko Ono took the digital genius award.

MTV, CMT and VH1 hosted 24 hours of performances from artists like Asher Monroe, Gavin DeGraw and Atlas Genius in New York, Los Angeles and Nashville. Andrew WK also set a record by drumming continuously for 24 hours with assistance from Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and others.

And fans voted to give the band Darling Parade the opportunity to perform during MTV's Video Music Awards weekend in August. Other winners included Avicii and Linkin Park.

___

Online:

http://mtv.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-06-20-Music-O%20Music%20Awards/id-88f5cf55c2b6495d9af2232be18f629f

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Midair scare: FAA probes near-miss between jets over New York City

5 hours ago

A near-miss between two aircraft over New York City is being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration.

The FAA said in a statement issued Thursday that a Delta Airlines Boeing 747 arriving at Kennedy Airport ?lost the required amount of separation? with a Shuttle America Embraer E170 leaving LaGuardia Airport.

?The two aircraft were turning away from each other at the point where they lost the required separation. Both aircraft landed safely,? it added.

In the incident, which happened at 3:45 p.m. on June 13, the Delta flight missed its approach and ended up traveling in the same direction as the Shuttle America plane, NBCNewYork.com reported.

A source told the NBCNewYork.com that the planes came as close as 100 feet to each other, but the FAA would not confirm that.

NBC's Jay Blackman contributed to this report.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2d97c7af/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctravel0Cmidair0Escare0Efaa0Eprobes0Enear0Emiss0Ebetween0Ejets0Eover0Enew0E6C10A40A7714/story01.htm

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Markets are roiled by prospect of early Fed exit

NEW YORK (AP) ? There was no let-up in the flight from stocks and bonds as traders reacted to news that the Federal Reserve could end its massive bond-buying program as next year and as China's manufacturing slowed.

The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 353 points, or 2.3 percent, to 14,758 points Thursday.

The Dow has lost 560 points in the past two days, wiping out its gains from May and June.

The Standard & Poor's 500 dropped 40 points, or 2.5 percent, to 1,588. The Nasdaq fell 78 points, or 2.3 percent, to 3,364 points.

The price of gold dropped and bond yields rose sharply.

Stocks fell across the board. Twenty stocks fell for every one that rose on the New York Stock Exchange. Trading was very heavy at 4.8 billion shares.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-roiled-prospect-early-fed-exit-201549383.html

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Snail trail reveals ancient human migration

June 20, 2013 ? Geneticists from The University of Nottingham have used snails to uncover evidence of an ancient human migration from the Pyrenean region of France to Ireland.

Dr Angus Davison, Reader in Evolutionary Genetics at the University, and PhD student Adele Grindon, found that snails in Ireland and the Pyrenees are genetically almost identical, despite being thousands of miles apart. And -- as snails aren't renowned for their speed -- the simplest explanation is that snails hitched a ride with human migrants approximately 8,000 years ago.

The research is published in journal PLOS ONE on 19 June.

From France to Ireland

Dr Davison said: "There is a very clear pattern, which is difficult to explain except by involving humans. If the snails naturally colonised Ireland, you would expect to find some of the same genetic type in other areas of Europe, especially Britain. We just don't find them.

"There are records of Mesolithic or Stone Age humans eating snails in the Pyrenees, and perhaps even farming them. The highways of the past were rivers and the ocean -- as the river that flanks the Pyrenees was an ancient trade route to the Atlantic, what we're actually seeing might be the long lasting legacy of snails that hitched a ride, accidentally or perhaps as food, as humans travelled from the South of France to Ireland 8,000 years ago.

"The results tie in with what we know from human genetics about the human colonisation of Ireland -- the people may have come from somewhere in southern Europe."

The flora and fauna of Ireland

Despite being close geographically, Ireland is home to many plants and animals which aren't found in Britain.

Dr Davison said: "You would think that anything that gets to Ireland would go through Britain, but it has been a longstanding mystery as to why Ireland is so different from Britain. For these snails, at least, the difference may be that they hitched a ride on a passing boat."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/LufOxMAJE5I/130620084633.htm

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Obama renews calls for nuclear reductions

BERLIN (AP) ? Appealing for a new citizen activism in the free world, President Barack Obama renewed his call Wednesday to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear stockpiles and to confront climate change, a danger he called "the global threat of our time."

In a wide-ranging speech that enumerated a litany of challenges facing the world, Obama said he wanted to reignite the spirit that Berlin displayed when it fought to reunite itself during the Cold War.

"Today's threats are not as stark as they were half a century ago, but the struggle for freedom and security and human dignity, that struggle goes on," Obama said at the city's historic Brandenburg Gate under a bright, hot sun. "And I come here to this city of hope because the test of our time demands the same fighting spirit that defined Berlin a half-century ago."

The president called for a one-third reduction of U.S. and Russian deployed nuclear weapons, saying it is possible to ensure American security and a strong deterrent while also limiting nuclear weapons.

Obama's address comes nearly 50 years after John F. Kennedy's famous Cold War speech in this once-divided city. Shedding his jacket and at times wiping away beads of sweat, the president stood behind a bullet-proof pane and addressed a crowd of about 4,500, reading from paper because the teleprompter wasn't working.

It was a stark contrast to the speech the president delivered in the city in 2008, when he summoned a crowd of 200,000 to embrace his vision for American leadership. Whereas that speech soared with his ambition, this time Obama came to caution his audience not to fall into self-satisfaction.

"Complacency is not the character of great nations," Obama insisted.

"Today," he said, "people often come together in places like this to remember history, not to make it. Today we face no concrete walls or barbed wire."

The speech came just one week shy of the anniversary of Kennedy's famous Cold War speech in which he denounced communism with his declaration "Ich bin ein Berliner" (I am a Berliner). Obama, clearly aware that he was in Kennedy's historic shadow, asked his audience to heed the former president's message.

"If we lift our eyes as President Kennedy calls us to do, then we'll recognize that our work is not yet done," he said. "So we are not only citizens of America or Germany, we are also citizens of the world."

Obama spoke repeatedly of seeking "peace with justice" around the world by confronting intolerance, poverty, Middle East conflicts and economic inequality.

But even before his speech, White House aides were drawing attention to his call for nuclear reductions, casting it as the centerpiece of his address.

"Peace with justice means pursuing the security of a world without nuclear weapons, no matter how distant that dream may be," Obama said.

"We can ensure the security of America and our allies and maintain a strong and credible strategic deterrent while reducing our deployed strategic nuclear weapons by up to one-third," he said.

Signaling a new effort to pick up his delayed environmental agenda, Obama also issued a call to tackle climate change, an issue he has promised to make a priority since his 2008 presidential campaign.

"Peace with justice means refusing to condemn our children to a harsher, less hospitable planet," he said.

He said the U.S. has expanded renewable energy from clean sources and is doubling automobile fuel efficiency. But he said that without more action by all countries, the world faces what he called a grim alternative of more severe storms, famine, floods, vanishing coastlines and displaced refugees.

"This is the future we must avert," he said. "This is the global threat of our time."

Among those in the audience, Doro Zinke, president of the Berlin-Brandenburg trade union federation, said she heard nothing unexpected in Obama's speech.

"I think he's really got to deliver now," she said.

But others gave him credit for just coming to Berlin, five years into his presidency.

"The most important message here was that he came to Berlin and spoke to us and the world," said Catharina Haensch, a Berliner born in the communist east of the city who now works for the Fulbright Commission. "Even If it looks like he isn't able to fulfill all of his promises, you've got to keep on hoping."

Obama and his wife, Michelle, attended an official dinner hosted by Merkel and her husband, Joachim Sauer, at the Schloss Charlottenburg palace to cap their day.

In his earlier speech, the president said he intends to seek negotiated cuts to deployed nuclear weapons with Russia, thus steering away from any unilateral U.S. reductions. Moreover, Obama said he would work with NATO allies to seek "bold reductions" in U.S. and Russian tactical weapons in Europe. Obama could face objections among NATO countries where many strongly oppose removing U.S. nuclear weapons because they worry that the Russians have a far greater number of tactical nuclear weapons within range of their territory.

In Washington, reaction was mixed.

Rep. Adam Smith of Washington state, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, welcomed Obama's announcement, saying that reducing nuclear weapons "will improve our national security, while maintaining our nuclear triad and our ability to deter and respond to any perceived or real nuclear threat.

But Rep. Michael Turner, R-Ohio, also a member of the Armed Services Committee, accused Obama of appeasement in endorsing further reductions in nuclear weapons, saying the president "seems only concerned with winning the approval of nations like Russia, who will applaud a weakened United States."

Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, said Secretary of State John Kerry called him on Tuesday and reassured him that any further reductions in nuclear weapons would not be done unilaterally. Rather, the cuts would be part of treaty negotiations subject to a Senate vote.

Corker criticized Obama's move without additional modernization of the arsenal.

"The president's announcement without first fulfilling commitments on modernization could amount to unilateral disarmament," Corker said. "The president should follow through on full modernization of the remaining arsenal and pledges to provide extended nuclear deterrence before engaging in any additional discussions."

The president discussed non-proliferation with Russian President Vladimir Putin when they met Monday on the sidelines of the Group of 8 summit in Northern Ireland. During Obama's first term, the U.S. and Russia agreed to limit their deployed weapons to 1,550 as part of the New START Treaty.

In Moscow, Russian foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said that plans for any further arms reduction would have to involve countries beyond Russia and the United States.

"The situation is now far from what it was in the '60s and '70s, when only the U.S.A. and the Soviet Union discussed arms reduction," Ushakov said.

Alexei Pushkov, head of the Duma's foreign affairs committee, told the Interfax news agency the president's proposals need "serious revision so that they can be seen by the Russian side as serious and not as propaganda proposals."

Obama's calls for cooperation with Moscow come at a time of tension between the U.S. and Russia, which are supporting opposite sides in Syria's civil war. Russia also remains wary of U.S. missile defense plans in Europe, despite U.S. assurances that the shield is not aimed at Moscow.

Germany's foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, is a strong advocate of nuclear disarmament and has long called for the removal of the last U.S. nuclear weapons from German territory, a legacy of the Cold War. The Buechel Air Base in western Germany is one of a few remaining sites in Europe where they are based.

Under an agreement drawn up when they formed a coalition government in 2009, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and Westerwelle's Free Democratic Party agreed to press NATO and Washington for the nuclear weapons to be withdrawn, but did not set any timeframe.

Nuclear stockpile numbers are closely guarded secrets in most nations that possess them, but private nuclear policy experts say no countries other than the U.S. and Russia are thought to have more than 300. The Federation of American Scientists estimates that France has about 300, China about 240, Britain about 225, and Israel, India and Pakistan roughly 100 each.

___

Associated Press writers Frank Jordans and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-renews-calls-nuclear-reductions-142815744.html

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Samsung selling well, but not grabbing people?s attention

Advertisement

Which kind of mobile phone do you use the most? graph of japanese statisticsDespite Samsung being one of the best-selling smartphones in Japan, as this survey from goo Research, reported on by japan.internet.com, into mobile phone and smartphone upgrades (the 8th time this survey has been conducted) revealed.

Demographics

Between the 3rd and 5th of June 2013 1,054 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 51.6% of the sample were male, 0.4% in their teens, 7.5% in their twenties, 24.4% in their thirties, 33.9% in their forties, and 33.9% aged fifty or older. Although not stated, looking at the demographics it suggests a mobile phone-based questionnaire; Q1?s ?none? is perhaps people with tablets only?

I?d have to go with being not interested in any in Q1SQ2. I went to a mobile shop a couple of days ago, and nothing feels right in my hand ? either too big, too chunky, too slippery, too textured!

Research results

Q1: Which kind of mobile phone do you use the most? (Sample size=1,054)

Q1SQ1: Which carrier do you use this mobile phone on? (Sample size=1,049)

NTT docomo 45.2%
au by KDDI 27.6%
SoftBank 24.0%
Willcom 3.1%
E-Mobile 0.1%

Q1SQ2: Which mobile phone maker are you currently paying most attention to? (Sample size=1,049)

? Previous
Feb 2013
This time
Apple 17.8% 16.3%
Sharp 11.6% 11.3%
Sony 6.5% 8.9%
Panasonic 5.3% 4.1%
NEC (including Casio) 4.3% 3.0%
Samsung 1.6% 3.1%
Fujitsu (including Toshiba) 4.7% 2.9%
Kyocera (including Sanyo) 1.2% 1.7%
HTC 0.7% 1.1%
LG 0.1% 0.5%
Motorola 0.3% 0.2%
Nokia 0.3% 0.1%
Japan Wireless 0.0% 0.1%
Mitsubishi 0.0% 0.0%
Pantech 0.1% 0.0%
Huawei 0.0% 0.0%
Other 0.6% 0.8%
Don?t know 44.9% 45.8%
Read more on: goo research,upgrade

Permalink

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/eImncLnDG9k/

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Lawmakers float bill for Medicare to cover obesity treatment

By Yasmeen Abutaleb

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A day after the American Medical Association classified obesity as a disease, U.S. lawmakers introduced bipartisan bills in the Senate and House of Representatives that would require Medicare to cover more obesity treatment costs.

The Treat and Reduce Obesity Act, spearheaded in the Senate by Tom Carper, a Democrat from Delaware, and Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska Republican, would aim to curb costs for obese patients by requiring Medicare to cover treatments such as prescription drugs for weight management, and make it easier to receive weight-loss counseling.

Representatives Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican, and Ron Kind, a Democrat from Wisconsin, introduced the companion legislation in the House.

There is no immediate word on when action might be taken on the bills. Medicare, the federal healthcare program for the elderly and the disabled, covered almost 50 million people in 2012, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

"As a physician, I have personally seen the impact of obesity on people's health and spiraling health care costs," Cassidy said in a statement. "This legislation would help empower physicians to use all the tools in their arsenal to combat this epidemic."

More than a third of adults are obese and about seven in 10 are overweight, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Obesity accounts for nearly $200 billion a year in medical spending, more than 20 percent of national healthcare costs, according to a 2012 report in the Journal of Health Economics.

The legislation would also enable the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to allow more providers to offer intensive behavioral counseling for obese patients, as well as require CMS to emphasize the service to its beneficiaries.

Aides said the Congressional Budget Office has not provided an estimate on how much the bills will cost.

On Tuesday the AMA, the largest association of physicians and medical students in the United States, said it hoped its decision would help "change the way the medical community tackles this complex issue.

Obesity is often associated with heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and some cancers, according to the CDC.

"If we continue to stand idly by while more and more people become overweight and obese, for the first time in our country's history our children will live shorter lives than we adults do," Carper said.

(Editing by Ros Krasny and Matthew Lewis)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawmakers-float-bill-medicare-cover-obesity-treatment-212305295.html

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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

JFK Eternal Flame to Burn in Ireland (ABC News)

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Brazil protesters keep up pressure on government

SAO PAULO (AP) ? Thousands of demonstrators flooded into a square in Brazil's economic hub, Sao Paulo, on Tuesday for the latest in a historic wave of protests against the shoddy state of public transit, schools and other public services in this booming South American giant.

Sparked earlier this month by a 10-cent hike in bus and subway fares and organized via social media, the nationwide protests are giving voice to growing discontent over the gap between Brazil's high tax burden and the low quality of public infrastructure, echoing similar mobilizations in Turkey, Greece and other parts of the globe where weariness with governments has exploded in the streets.

On Tuesday, thousands of people marched on Sao Paulo's City Hall building, where a small group fought police in an attempt to force their way in. Another protest sprang up in the working class Rio de Janeiro suburb of Sao Goncalo.

After an estimated turnout of 240,000 people in 10 cities Monday, the protests are turning into the most significant in Brazil since the end of the country's 1964-85 military dictatorship, when crowds rallied to demand the return of democracy.

Bruno Barp, a 23-year-old law student at Tuesday's demonstration in Sao Paulo, said he had high hopes for the growing movement.

"The protests are gaining force each day, there is a tremendous energy that cannot be ignored," Barp said as demonstrators poured into the central plaza, which was aflutter with banners and echoing with chanted slogans. "All Brazilians are fed up with the government and the poor services we receive, everyone is ready to fight for a change."

Although demonstrations in recent years generally have tended to attract small numbers of politicized participants, the latest mobilizations have united huge crowds around a central lament: The Brazilian government provides woeful public sector even as the economy is modernizing and growing.

The Brazilian Tax Planning Institute think tank found the country's tax burden in 2011 stood at 36 percent of gross domestic product, ranking it 12th among the 30 countries with the world's highest tax burdens.

Yet public services such as schools are in sorry shape. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development found in a 2009 educational survey that literacy and math skills of Brazilian 15-year-olds ranked 53rd out of 65 countries, behind nations such as Bulgaria, Mexico, Turkey, Trinidad and Tobago, and Romania.

Many protesting in Brazil's streets hail from the country's growing middle class, which government figures show has ballooned by some 40 million over the past decade amid a commodities-driven economic boom.

They say they've lost patience with endemic problems such as government corruption and inefficiency. They're also slamming Brazil's government for spending billions of dollars on sports stadiums in advance of hosting next year's World Cup soccer tournament and the 2016 Olympics, while leaving other needs unmet.

The government spent nearly $500 million to renovate Maracana stadium in Rio for the World Cup even though the venue already went through a significant face-lift before the 2007 Pan American Games. City, state and other local governments are spending nearly $12 billion on projects for the Olympics in Rio.

A cyber-attack knocked the government's official World Cup site offline, and the Twitter feed for Brazil's Anonymous hackers group posted links to a host of other government websites whose content had been replaced by a screen calling on citizens to come out to the streets.

Maria do Carmo Freitas, a 41-year-old public servant from Brasilia, said she was excited about the protests even though she hadn't taken part in Monday's march.

"I'm loving it. It's been a long time since we Brazilians decided to leave our comfort zone to tell our leaders that we're not happy about the way things are going," said Freitas. "We pay too much in taxes and we get bad services in exchange, bad hospitals, bad public education, public transportation is terrible."

An organization advocating for lower bus fares initiated the protesting last week, but demonstrations have since ballooned with no centralized leadership. Groups of Brazilians also staged small protests Tuesday in other countries, including Portugal, Spain and Denmark.

Tuesday's march in Sao Paulo started out peacefully but turned nasty outside City Hall when a small group lashed out at police and tried to invade the building.

Different groups of protesters faced off against one another, with one chanting "peace, peace" and trying to form a human cordon to protect the building while another group tried to clamber up metal poles to get inside. At one point, one person tried to seize a metal barrier from another who was trying to use it to smash the building's windows and doors.

Vandalism and violent clashes with police similarly marred the end of Monday's mostly peaceful march in Rio, which left the city's downtown stinking of tear gas. That march attracted some 100,000 people, ending with a small splinter group doing an estimated $1 million in damage to the historic state legislature building. Another mass protest is planned for Rio on Thursday.

The protests have raised questions about the country's readiness to host the coming high-profile events including a papal visit to Rio and rural Sao Paulo next month. Brazil is playing host this week to the Confederations Cup, which is seen as a warm-up for next year's World Cup.

Police and military had spent the past year pacifying hillside slums in Rio to prepare for the events, even as the grievances were apparently growing among the country's middle class.

President Dilma Rousseff, a former leftist guerrilla who was imprisoned and tortured during the dictatorship, hailed the protests, even though her government has been a prime target of demonstrators' frustrations.

"Brazil today woke up stronger," she was quoted as saying in a statement released by her office.

"Those who took to the streets delivered a message to society as a whole and most of all to levels of government," Rousseff said. "The massive size of yesterday's protests proves the energy of our democracy, the force of the voice of the street and the civility of our population."

She didn't propose any concrete answers to protesters' demands. Some cities have lowered bus fares seeking to quell outrage, so far without any apparent effect.

Brazilians have long tolerated pervasive corruption, which is widely seen as the cost of doing business, or simply living in Brazil. But the billions of dollars in public funds being spent on the coming sporting events have many people questioning the government's priorities.

Gilberto Carvalho, Rousseff's general secretary, said the protests reflect the new demands of a richer Brazil.

"The impression is that we have overcome some obstacles, but society wants more," Carvalho said.

The office of the United Nations' High Commissioner for Human rights said it "urged the Brazilian authorities today to exercise restraint in dealing with spreading social protests in the country and called on demonstrators not to resort to violence in pursuit of their demands."

The U.N. body added in its Tuesday release that it "welcomed the statement by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff that peaceful demonstrations are legitimate."

Human Rights Watch called on the government of Sao Paulo to make good on its promise to investigate the use of force by police against protesters. Images of police attacking protesters during a rally last Thursday helped spark the record turnouts at Monday's demonstrations, which were held in Sao Paulo, Rio, Brasilia, Belo Horizonte, Curitiba, Vitoria, Fortaleza, Recife, Belem and Salvador.

___

Associated Press writers Jenny Barchfield in Rio de Janeiro, Marco Sibaja in Brasilia and Jill Langlois in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/brazil-protesters-keep-pressure-government-203417104.html

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Criterium Races through Roswell April 28 - Sports - Roswell, GA Patch

Register for the Roswell Mayor?s Ride now, or stop by the event to enjoy a day of special events and activities.

The 12th Annual Historic Roswell Criterium returns on Sunday, April 28 with an expanded race course in the heart of historic Roswell, according to information provided by organizers.?

The schedule of events includes:

  • a recreational bicycle ride,
  • kids bicycle rodeo,
  • 11 bicycle races,
  • Moncrief Heating & Air Kids' Zone,
  • Vendor Village and Expo,
  • and two New Belgium Beer Gardens.

The Historic Roswell Criterium, which began in 2002, has established itself as the largest pro/am criterium in the Southeast and second largest single-day race in the United States. It has surpassed 750 total race registrations for the day, according to a recent press release.

For the first time in 12 years, the Historic Roswell Criterium will introduce a new race course. The criterium loop will be extended to 1.2 miles in length, now including Heart of Roswell Park as the southern-most turn of the race route.? The long straightaway on Canton Street passes many of the popular restaurants and shops in Historic Roswell where spectators will enjoy a prime viewing experience.

"All the merchants and restaurants in the area are excited to be part of a longer course for the races. The Historic Roswell Criterium is a showcase for cycling and a showcase for Roswell. It has become an open house for merchants and restaurants to shine in front of thousands of people. Roswell is becoming an event destination," said Sally Johnson, president of the Historic Roswell Merchant?s Association and organizer of Alive After 5 Roswell, which starts back up for the summer beginning this week, Thursday, April 18.

The challenging four corners of the course will require each of the 75-150 cyclists in each race to use high speeds and precise skills to navigate the turns. The start/finish line will remain on Canton Street in front of the Fickle Pickle Restaurant.

Race Day Schedule and Activities:

Race day, April 28, will kick off with the Roswell Mayor?s Ride, a recreational ride to showcase the city of Roswell. The event, organized by Bike Roswell, is suitable for all ages and abilities and is the perfect way to begin the day of bicycling fun in Roswell. There are three ride options:

  • a family six mile ride
  • 20-mile ride
  • and a 42-mile ride

All of the rides begin at 8 a.m. from Roswell Area Park. Advanced registration is open at BikeReg.com, $30 per individual, $75 per three-person family, $80 for a four-person family and $10 per each family member beyond four. The six-mile family ride is free.

Beginning at 10 a.m. are the 11 races, with categories for Juniors (ages 10-14 and 15-18), Masters (ages 35 and over) and different levels of amateur men and women racers. The men?s and women?s professional races (Men?s Pro 1/2 and Women?s Pro 1/2/3) at the end of the day will feature some of the best cyclists in North America.

The Historic Roswell Criterium continues for a fourth season as part of the USA CRITS Speed Week Series. This racing series has a combine prize purse of more than $120,000 for eight days of racing in Georgia and South Carolina. Advance registration fees for all adult races range from $45 to $50.

Two junior races return this year for up-and-coming pros of tomorrow. Registration is $30 for boys and girls ages 10-14 and 15-18. For younger children on bicycles and tricycles, it will be the 12th year for the annual Kids Races and Rodeo. The Kiwanis Club of Historic Roswell Safety Rodeo begins at 3 p.m. (registration begins at 2 p.m.) next to the Roswell United Methodist Church and is free for children six to 12 years of age with a signed waiver. All Rodeo graduates are then invited to participate in Kids Races at 5 p.m.?

An expanded Vendor Village and Expo will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. along Canton and Webb streets at the south end of the bicycle race course. Some of the professional teams will park official support vehicles in this area so that fans can easily take photos and receive athlete autographs. The Moncrief Heating & Air Kids' Zone will be part of the Expo and will be open until 5 p.m. One New Belgium Beer Garden will be located on Elizabeth Way this year, with a second location at the north end of Canton Street next to Woodstock Street. Throughout the day, spectators should look for restaurant and shop specials in Historic Roswell. ??

"The Historic Roswell Criterium has become so much more than just a day of bicycle races in our community. It is a tradition that focuses on fitness, family, food and fun," said Roswell Mayor Jere Wood. "It?s a great springtime showcase for our city. This event is special because people of all ages can enjoy a variety of activities throughout the day and explore Historic Roswell."

Sponsors for the 12th Annual Historic Roswell Criterium include Moncrief Heating and Air, city of Roswell, New Belgium Brewing Co., Maxxis, NALLEY Automotive Group, Children?s Orthopaedics of Atlanta, Kiwanis Club of Historic Roswell, North Georgia Cycling Association, and USA CRITS Speed Week Series.

For details on registration for races, kids rodeo and all event information, visit the criterium website. For advance registration for the Roswell Mayor?s Ride, click here.

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Source: http://roswell.patch.com/groups/sports/p/criterium-races-through-roswell-april-28

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Is a two-track Europe already here?

European leaders have long rejected the idea that the EU is developing into a region of haves and have-nots. But a look at the news today suggests it's happening just the same.

By Sara Miller Llana,?Staff writer / June 13, 2013

Protesters shout slogans during a rally outside the Greek state television ERT headquarters during a 24-hour general strike in Athens, on Thursday, June 13, 2013. Greece's fragile governing coalition failed to reach a compromise Wednesday about the closure of the state-run ERT broadcaster.

Kostas Tsironis/AP

Enlarge

The question of a two-track Europe, or one that becomes a union of insiders and outsiders, of winners and losers, has loomed as the continent struggles out of its debt crisis.

Skip to next paragraph Sara Miller Llana

Europe Bureau Chief

Sara Miller Llana?moved to Paris in April 2013 to become the Monitor's Europe Bureau?Chief. Previously she was the?paper's?Latin America Bureau Chief, based in Mexico City, from 2006 to 2013.

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The notion has been rejected by a host of European leaders and thinkers. But this week?s news in Europe already shows how well underway it already is.

Take the Europe page of the BBC?s website this morning.

One photo featured Greeks congregating for a strike, after their state broadcaster was unexpectedly shut down in a cost-savings measure. Another captured Germans congregating, but this time it is dignitaries in Berlin inaugurating the reconstruction of King Frederick the Great?s palace.

Greeks were caught off-guard after their public broadcaster ERT went black around midnight on Tuesday. The new anchor?s last words: ?The riot police are moving toward the transmitters to switch them off.... This is official information we have.?

The move is the first of a series of planned closures this year in Greek institutions to reduce national debt and secure bailout funds from the EU.

ERT was founded in 1938 with an educational, non-commercial mission, writes our correspondent in Athens. For many rural Greeks, it?s the only channel they can access.? But Prime Minister Antonis Samaras called ERT "the symbol of waste and lack of transparency.?

On the same day that Greeks woke up to find their state channel black, Germany?s President Joachim Gauck laid the first stone for the reconstruction project of what was once, as the BBC puts it, one of the world?s grandest buildings.

The rebuilding of King Frederick the Great's palace, which housed the kings of Prussia from 1701, will cost about 600 million euros funded largely by taxpayer money.

The fa?ade of the opulent building, some of which dated to the 15th century, will be recreated, while inside the modern remake will preserve Germany?s cultural identity with pieces of art and other historic gems.

The building was damaged in World War II and then completely dynamited in 1950 by communists, who then rebuilt the Palace of the Republic.

The diverging fates of the continent have dismayed some. Greeks have angrily compared the rise of Germany today to the imbalances that grew in the 1930s. Many consider that unfair and historically wrong.

But as Germany is able in a positive way to recapture lost history from the 20th century, what Greeks are experiencing now is a more unfortunate echo of that era, at least in one way: It's the first time ERT has been off the air since World War II, points out the AP.

When Nazi troops marched into Greece's nearly deserted capital on April 27, 1941, radio announcer Costas Stavropoulos of the Hellenic Broadcasting Corp. announced the grim news. He urged his countrymen and women not to listen to future Nazi radio transmissions and signed off with the Greek national anthem. It was the only time the state broadcaster ? also known as ERT ? had ceased to operate from its birth three years earlier. That is, until Tuesday, when Prime Minister Antonis Samaras' government shut ERT down and fired its 2,500 employees to prove to Greece's international lenders that he was serious about cutting the country's bloated public sector. Its TV and radio signals went dead early Wednesday.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/YxuIQjrveZU/Is-a-two-track-Europe-already-here

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