Thursday, February 28, 2013

From eggs to film: A Japanese-American studio head

Kevin Tsujihara, poses for photos in a screening room at the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif., Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013. On Friday, Feb. 28, 2013, the 48-year-old father of two, who grew up making deliveries as the son of egg distributors, will become the CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment. The third-generation Japanese-American will be the first Asian-American to head a Hollywood studio.(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Kevin Tsujihara, poses for photos in a screening room at the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif., Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013. On Friday, Feb. 28, 2013, the 48-year-old father of two, who grew up making deliveries as the son of egg distributors, will become the CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment. The third-generation Japanese-American will be the first Asian-American to head a Hollywood studio.(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Kevin Tsujihara, poses for photos in a screening room at the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif., Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013. On Friday, Feb. 28, 2013, the 48-year-old father of two, who grew up making deliveries as the son of egg distributors, will become the CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment. The third-generation Japanese-American will be the first Asian-American to head a Hollywood studio.(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

In this Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013, photo, Kevin Tsujihara, CEO of the Warner Bros., talks to an Associated Press reporter during an interview at the Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, Calif. On Friday, Feb. 28, 2013, Tsujihara, 48, who grew up making deliveries as the son of egg distributors, will become the CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment. The third-generation Japanese-American will be the first Asian-American to head a Hollywood studio. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

(AP) ? There isn't much "Hollywood" about Kevin Tsujihara.

He spends most of his time in back-room meetings, away from the red carpets and spotlights for which the city is known. There are few photos of him online, and a few weeks ago, someone created the first page for him on Wikipedia.

But, on Friday, the 48-year-old father of two, who grew up making deliveries as the son of egg distributors, will become the CEO of Warner Bros. Entertainment. The third-generation Japanese-American will be the first Asian-American to head a Hollywood studio.

And Warner Bros. isn't just any studio. It is one of the world's largest entertainment companies and the fount from which recent Oscar winner "Argo" sprang. Sprawled over 35 sound stages and other buildings, the studio got its start in 1923. It's the home of Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, whose modern hits include the multibillion-dollar franchises "Harry Potter" and "The Dark Knight."

Tsujihara's rise at Warner Bros., and his appointment as CEO, is a testament to his hard work, humility and willingness to take risks. It's also a sign of the progress Japanese-Americans have made in the last 70 years.

During World War II, Tsujihara's parents, like thousands of Japanese families living in the U.S., were branded by the federal government as traitors and forced to live in internment camps. They had their property confiscated and had to rebuild from scratch when the war was over. The Tsujihara family's struggle lends deeper meaning to Kevin's accomplishments.

"The one thing I kind of regret and am sad about is that I couldn't share this with my dad," Tsujihara said during an emotional moment in his office on the studio lot. "He would be shocked. I think my dad would think it's not even in the realm of possibility. Not because he didn't think I was great. But I don't think he thought these opportunities would exist for us."

Last month's appointment of Tsujihara came as a surprise. Although he was in the running to replace Barry Meyer as chief executive, he wasn't exactly the front-runner.

Most observers believed the job would go to one of two colleagues with whom Tsujihara shared the office of the president ? Warner Bros. Pictures president Jeff Robinov or Warner Bros. Television Group president Bruce Rosenblum. Robinov had overseen production of the hugely successful "Dark Knight" series. Rosenblum helped turn the studio into Hollywood's largest producer of TV shows. Meanwhile, Tsujihara had been in charge of driving consumption of movies on disc and in digital formats during a difficult transition period for the film industry.

Hollywood trade publications suggest that Tsujihara was the top choice in the end because he maintained a humble demeanor and didn't campaign for the job. It also didn't hurt that he gets along well with Jeff Bewkes, the CEO of parent Time Warner Inc.

With the parent company increasingly betting its future on the value of its content, rather than the way it's delivered, a digital strategist would seem logical anywhere but in Hollywood, where relationships with directors and actors are given primacy.

Tsujihara said his relative status as an outsider helped him challenge the status quo at a time when the industry began suffering from the collapse of DVD sales. His kind of out-of-the-box thinking is apparent in some of Warner Bros.' recent experiments. The company began selling "Argo" by way of digital download while Oscar buzz was at its hottest, weeks before the movie's release on DVD. Warner Bros. also took the lead in holding back rentals at $1.20-per-night kiosks like Redbox until a month after DVDs went on sale, in order to nudge people toward purchasing downloads, discs, or movie tickets.

"I think part of what was really helpful was I never came from this industry, I never had aspirations to work in this industry. And so I questioned everything," Tsujihara said. "I had a perspective that I wasn't afraid to speak my mind because I didn't think this was where I'd end up."

Tsujihara grew up making deliveries for his parents' egg distribution business in Petaluma, Calif., a community of 58,000 north of San Francisco that once was known as "The Egg Capital of the World."

One summer his father made him take a job on a farm where he had to clean up chicken excrement and sort eggs on a conveyor belt.

The youngest of five siblings ? all with American-sounding first names like Phyllis and Sidney ? Tsujihara grew up speaking English at home, even though his parents could speak Japanese.

His father Shizuo was on the phone working around the clock, sometimes playing host to egg farmers and buyers at a home office equipped with an egg shed.

"You get a lot of your work ethic more from watching people versus them telling you how to work," he said.

Apart from the work, Tsujihara had a relatively carefree childhood. His junior high school history teacher, Stephen Lamb, remembers him being a smart student who could concern himself with things other than school. The young Tsujihara wrote in Lamb's yearbook, "Number one, the Giants are going to win the pennant, number two, pro wrestling is real, and number three, roller derby is real."

"He told me he was going to come and collect his $20 when the Giants won," said Lamb, a lifetime Cardinals fan. "He was a neat kid to have around. Everybody liked him."

In high school, his father urged him to take up golf, even though the luxury came later in life for him.

"My parents wanted me to feel as American and to fit in with everyone else as much as possible," he said.

It was only later in life that Tsujihara realized the sacrifices his parents had made. His father, who died in 2003, served as a translator helping the U.S. military during the war, while his family lived in an internment camp. His uncle Kazuo enlisted in the famous 442nd regiment of Japanese American soldiers who fought for the U.S. in Europe. Although the family had been farming peaches, grapes and olives in the Fresno, Calif., area before the war, they resettled in Petaluma after leaving the internment camps.

After Tsujihara graduated from the University of Southern California with an accounting degree in 1986, he got a job as a manager at Ernst & Young's entertainment division working on audits, mergers and acquisitions. One of his major clients was Warner Bros.

After a few years, he was admitted into the MBA program at Stanford. It was then that he decided to learn more about his Japanese roots. He studied Japanese for a year, and took a summer internship at the Long Term Credit Bank of Japan in Tokyo. Looking Japanese but lacking fluency in the language led to some awkward moments for Tsujihara, convincing him he'd be better off making a living in America.

After receiving his MBA in 1992, some former USC classmates asked Tsujihara to write a business plan for a tax preparation business. He wrote it up and the friends talked him into running the company.

He based the business, QuickTax, in the city of Commerce, a grey, industrial suburb of Los Angeles. He opened retail outlets next door to storefronts of a popular check-cashing business, Quik Check. He spent his nights in the spare bedroom of one of his business partners until he could afford a tiny apartment in nearby Long Beach with a fold-out Murphy bed.

After a few years of struggles, Tsujihara sold the company at a loss to the check-cashers. The experience was "really embarrassing," he said. He felt ashamed to lose the money of friends and family.

"Sometimes failing is the best thing in life," he said. "I think it's very humbling and it's a good thing."

Around that time, his wife-to-be Sandy, a Japanese-American friend of the family who grew up in a neighboring town, told him she wouldn't move down from San Francisco to be with him unless they got married, and he wouldn't get married unless he had a job. So he tapped contacts at Warner Bros. he had made while working at E&Y, looking for work.

He started in 1994, overseeing the studio's interest in theme park operator Six Flags. Gradually he tacked on more responsibilities, coming to direct the company's efforts distributing movies on discs and over digital formats and helping to guide strategy. In 2005, Tsujihara became president of the studio's newly created home entertainment unit overseeing movies and video games.

Over the years, he's gained a reputation for being a savvy-yet-personable businessman. He's helped brainstorm key company strategies. He pushed the studio to be the first to sell movie discs compatible with UltraViolet, a system of recording disc purchases in online lockers so they can be played over the Internet. The fledgling system has had its hiccups, but Tsujihara believes it's a way to transition consumers from disc purchases to digital ones ? and return the industry to growth in the next few years.

Even amid all the deal-making, Tsujihara has never lost sight of his roots. In 2006, filmmaker Kerry Yo Nakagawa sent him a rough cut of "American Pastime," a low-budget movie about Japanese American internees who played baseball inside the camps. Tsujihara took it home for Christmas and showed it to his mother, Miyeko ("Mickey"), who is 85. She was deeply moved. He brought Warner Bros. in as a distributor and helped the movie get seen in more theaters and on TV networks such as ESPN Classic. The studio even set up a night for the Dodgers pro baseball team to promote the film.

"He moved mountains for this movie," Nakagawa said. "If we didn't have a friend like Kevin, it probably wouldn't have found a distributor."

For Nakagawa, Tsujihara's promotion ranks way up there with other big Japanese-American firsts ? like the first congressman, Sen. Daniel Inouye, or the first to board a shuttle into space, Lt. Col. Ellison Onizuka.

"It gives me tremendous, tremendous pride," Nakagawa said.

Even so, people who study the portrayal of Asians in movies and TV shows say they don't expect Tsujihara's appointment will result in a big change on screen.

In recent years, a handful of TV shows have already embraced Asians in big roles, such as Mindy Kaling of Fox's "The Mindy Project," and Steven Yeun of AMC's "The Walking Dead." But many decisions about casting and storylines will be made long before they reach Tsujihara's desk.

Mike Le, a spokesman for Racebending.com, a website that advocates for diversity, said diversity "isn't something that just happens because you have an Asian CEO."

As for Hollywood's executive ranks, according to studies they are less racially diverse than the rest of corporate America. A 2010 survey of Fortune 500 companies by U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey found that 1 in 20 executives in the media and entertainment business were minorities, compared to 1 in 10 overall.

A separate study in 2012 by the nonprofit group, Leadership Education for Asian Pacifics Inc., found that just 2 percent of the executive officers at Fortune 500 companies were of Asian or Pacific Islander descent, a group that makes up 5.2 percent of the U.S. population.

Steve Tao, a TV producer at J.J. Abrams' Bad Robot, said Tsujihara's appointment proves there's been progress in the industry. A group he chairs called the Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment encourages Asian-Americans to take up acting, writing and producing and helps provide training, contacts and opportunities. He said the appointment shows there are more Asian-Americans in executive ranks, ready to take on leadership roles.

"It just happened that Kevin was the most qualified," Tao said. "It's the way diversity is supposed to work."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-28-Warner%20Bros-CEO/id-f714765e8e4544498af225a8aaa8f763

Tribeca to open with documentary on the National

NEW YORK (AP) ? The Tribeca Film Festival will open with a documentary about the National, along with a performance by the Brooklyn band.

The festival announced Thursday that "Mistaken for Strangers," which documents the National on tour, will premiere April 17. The film is directed by Tom Berninger, brother to lead to singer Matt Berninger.

Tribeca's Chief Creative Officer Geoff Gilmore called the film "a highly personal and lighthearted story about brotherly love."

The band will perform following the film's premiere. In 2011, Tribeca also paired a movie and concert with Elton John performing after Cameron Crowe's music documentary "The Union."

The Tribeca Film Festival runs April 17 through April 28. It will next week announce the feature film slate for its 12th annual festival.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tribeca-open-documentary-national-190533799.html

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Watch: Veteran Uses Mind to Move Bionic Arm

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Meet The Entirely E-Ink 3G Smartphone That Could Cost As Little As A Dumbphone

fndroid02It takes a lot to stand out at a trade show the size of Mobile World Congress. But here’s one device that caught my eye today: an e-ink smartphone.?Unlike Yota Phone, the Russian startup that’s using e-ink as a second screen to augment the back of a powerful high end smartphone in a bid to stand out in the uber crowded Android space, this prototype device has just the one screen. A single e-ink screen on the front of the device — so it’s a true e-ink phone. It’s also a true smartphone. There were two prototypes on show at Eink‘s stand, both with a 1GHz chip inside and one (the white one) with a 3G chip in it. The other had Edge connectivity. The phones run Android but, as you’d expect, the OS has been simplified with a custom UI that strips back the functionality to focus on the applications that make sense for a fully e-ink smartphone — such as a reader app, a dialer and email. The UI also includes a web browser since certain types of webpages can be viewed on an e-ink screen. It won’t support video of course but text-based sites can still be read. The black prototype device (pictured below) also includes a backlight for reading in the dark. Both screens are capacitive, but as you’d expect with e-ink the refresh rate can be a little slow. Ghosting on the screen from past renders can be removed by shaking the device. The technology can support both portrait and landscape orientation so the e-ink smartphone could be turned on its side to switch the orientation to more of an e-reader sized width. Both devices felt incredibly lightweight. Why do you want an only e-ink phone? Price for one thing. Battery life for another. Not to mention visibility in bright sunlight. Put all those factors together and this could be the perfect device for some emerging markets where electricity is at a premium. The prototypes are proof of concept at this point but Giovanni Mancini, director of product management for E-ink — the company which makes the screen — said the Chinese OEM which has made the prototypes,?Fndroid, is talking to telcos and could launch a device this year. So how much would this e-ink smartphone cost? Mancini said the device maker would set the price but in his view it would be comparable with

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/a14dGABDbCQ/

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Association of National Advertisers joins those opposing Dayton's ...

The Association of National Advertisers is asking Gov. Mark Dayton and legislators to drop a proposal to tax advertising services.

As part of his overall budget, Dayton wants to expand the sales tax to include some services, including advertising. With the larger base of taxable items, the overall state sales tax would then drop from 6.875 percent to 5.5 percent. Dayton says this makes the tax fairer and more sustainable.

But a growing number of groups who would be affected by the proposed new tax are asking to be exempted.

In a statement, ANA Group Executive Vice President Dan Jaffe said:

"A new tax on advertising services would be extremely harmful to businesses, media and consumers in the State of Minnesota.? Particularly with today?s challenging economy, it would be counterproductive to make it substantially more expensive for businesses to communicate efficiently with consumers."

The Star Tribune's CEO also has attacked the advertising tax, and the paper has suspended newsroom union contract negotiations while the state tax discussions go on.

The ANA letter to state officials said the proposed advertising tax is? economically unsound and would result in double taxation:

"Advertising is not an end product, such as a bar of soap.? Rather, advertising is a communications process, which helps produce the sale of the bar of soap, which is already subject to the state sales tax.? Since a portion of any tax on the intermediate advertising process is likely to be passed along to consumers, there would be at least double taxation for most products or services purchased in the state."

Source: http://www.minnpost.com/political-agenda/2013/02/association-national-advertisers-joins-those-opposing-daytons-business-sale

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Dell Latitude 6430u


Road warriors who prefer travelling with a light footprint will find plenty to dig about the Dell Latitude 6430u, a Windows 8-equipped business ultrabook that deftly blends style and performance. Starting at $899 (our unit as configured had a sticker price of $1,327.79 list), the Latitude 6430u's fantastic keyboard, external optical drive, and exceptional battery life make it an ultrabook worthy of serious consideration.


Design and Features
Measuring 0.82 by 13.31 by 9.04 inches (HWD), the Latitude 6430u's svelte frame weighs 3.91 pounds, landing between the former business ultrabook Editor's Choice Lenovo ThinkPad Carbon X1 (2.93 pounds) and the Asus S46CA-XH51 (4.35 pounds). While its all-black chassis suggests a strictly business affair, it's also decked out in a soft-touch paint whose smooth texture makes for a pleasant tactile sensation while setting the system apart from other business systems. The black finish is complemented by a silver-finished magnesium alloy wrapping around the system's corners, which makes for an overall elegant look.

The Latitude 6430u's 14-inch display has a maximum resolution of 1,366 by 768. While it's not quite as high as the Lenovo X1 Carbon's 1,600-by-900 resolution, it's nevertheless easy on the eyes, and the matte screen does a good job of delivering bright colors and crisp text. It's also good enough for 720p video, and since the Latitude 6430u comes bundled with a bus-powered external DVD burner that connects via eSATA cable, users can enjoy movies when they're not crunching numbers. The Latitude 6430u's built-in speakers are surprisingly loud, and despite its somewhat flat bass response, movies and music alike can easily be heard in small- to medium-size rooms. Sure, you won't be getting any noise complaints from your downstairs neighbors, but as far as ultrabooks go, the Latitude 6430u belts out decibels at admirable volume levels.

Typing on the Latitude 6430u's chiclet-style keyboard is a lovely experience, and despite the system's thin profile there's no noticeable flexing. With its spill-proof design, backlighting, and exemplary key travel, it has everything that one could want in a keyboard. As a rule of thumb, when accident-prone, coffee-drinking users who have difficulty seeing in the dark can type on an ultrabook with ease, it's generally understood that we're working with an excellent keyboard. Ditto for the trackpad, whose smooth quality and responsiveness is complemented by its full support of Windows 8 gesture controls. Two sets of right- and left-click buttons are located at the top and bottom edges of the trackpad, with the top pair designed to be used in conjunction with the black pointing stick lodged in the center of the keyboard. The pointing stick is useful for business users that prefer the traditional pointing stick and have tried and failed to retrain themselves to use a trackpad.

Port selection on the Latitude 6430u is average. The right side of the system houses a USB 3.0 port and an Ethernet port. The right side, meanwhile, sports a VGA port, another USB 3.0 port, and a combined mic/headphone jack. The rear of the system features a full-size HDMI port and a combined eSATA / USB 3.0 port on opposite ends of the system's cooling vents, the latter of which can be used with the bundled external optical drive.

The Latitude 6430u's 128GB solid-state-drive (SSD) comes with minimal bloatware, which is helpful since there's only 74GB of free space when you take it out of the box. Aside from Microsoft Office Starter 2010 and CyberLink's Media Suite burning software, not much else bogs down the system when you boot it up for the first time. It does, however, feature Intel vPro Technology, an IT-friendly set of security and manageability capabilities. The Latitude 6430u also comes with a business-class three-year warranty for basic hardware service.

Performance
Dell Latitude 6430u The Latitude 6430u's combined 1.8GHz Intel Core i5-3427U CPU and 8GB RAM yielded solid performance on our benchmark tests. Its PCMark 7 score of 5,006 points outperformed other business-class systems, save for the Lenovo X1 Carbon (5,149 points), leaving others like the HP HP Elitebook Folio 9470m (4,699 points) in the dust. It also churned out a competitive Cinebench R11.5 score of 2.58 points, surpassing that of the Lenovo X1 Carbon (2.25 points) and nipping on the heels of the HP Folio 9470m (2.62 points) and the Lenovo ThinkPad X230t (3.09 points).

Though it's geared toward business, the Latitude 6430u also has the chops for moderate media creation. It completed our Handbrake video-encoding test in a brisk 1 minute 22 seconds, or half the time of the HP Folio 9470m (2:44). Similarly, its performance in our Photoshop CS6 test (5:08) outflanked the HP Folio 9470m (5:51) by a sizable margin. The Latitude 6430u's integrated Intel HD Graphics 4000 GPU churned out strong scores in our 3DMark 11 tests (1,254 points in Entry-level settings; 228 points in Extreme settings), once again outgunning the HP Folio 9470m (1,083 points and 211 points, respectively). Unsurprisingly, the Latitude 6430u fell in line with the rest of its class by failing to break the 30 frames-per-second (fps) playability barrier in our high-end gaming tests.

Dell Latitude 6430u

Unlike most ultrabooks, the Latitude 6430u's 60WHr battery can be popped out of the chassis. Even better, it lasted an impressive 7 hours 40 minutes on our battery rundown test, clocking in at over two hours longer than the HP Folio 9470m (5:36). If you're on the market for a system that can last an entire workday on a single charge, the Latitude 6430u is the way to go. Even better, it gives you the option of using a spare battery if you need to surpass the eight hour-mark without hovering by a power outlet.

The Dell Latitude 6430u is a great choice for those who want productivity for work without having to settle for a drab business-as-usual ultrabook. It comes with an external optical drive, sports an excellent keyboard, and boasts terrific battery life. While the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon is still a superb business ultrabook that weighs a pound less, the Latitude 6430u's extra features justify its additional bulk, and it consequently snatches the crown by virtue of its larger port selection, removable battery, and inclusion of an HDMI output, It's a very close call, but at the end of the day the Latitude 6430u rightfully earns our Editors' Choice for business ultrabooks.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS:

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the Dell Latitude 6430u with several other laptops side by side.

More laptop reviews:
??? Dell Latitude 6430u
??? HP EliteBook 2170p
??? Asus Zenbook Prime Touch UX31A-BHI5T
??? Toshiba Satellite C875-S7340
??? Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet 2
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/6xMslWYePj4/0,2817,2416013,00.asp

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Pa. gov's filing defends antitrust suit vs. NCAA

FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2011 file photo, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett makes remarks during a news conference after a Penn State Board of Trustees meeting in State College, Pa. Corbett argued in a court document filed late Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 that the NCAA has been trying to use his antitrust lawsuit against it over the Penn State penalties in the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal to combat what he describes as a groundswell of public criticism. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 10, 2011 file photo, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett makes remarks during a news conference after a Penn State Board of Trustees meeting in State College, Pa. Corbett argued in a court document filed late Monday, Feb. 25, 2013 that the NCAA has been trying to use his antitrust lawsuit against it over the Penn State penalties in the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal to combat what he describes as a groundswell of public criticism. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

(AP) ? Gov. Tom Corbett argued in a court document filed late Monday that the NCAA has been trying to use his pending antitrust lawsuit against it over the Penn State penalties in the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal to combat what he describes as a groundswell of public criticism.

Corbett said the judge should not grant the NCAA's request to dismiss the case, saying college sports' governing body made a factual error when it said the penalties were voted on by the university's trustees.

Corbett, who as governor is a trustee, said the NCAA's motion to dismiss the lawsuit he filed in January "appears to have been written more to advance the NCAA's broader agenda, and to combat the recent groundswell of public criticism against the embattled organization, than to raise legal issues appropriate to a motion to dismiss."

The NCAA, in a court filing three weeks ago, said antitrust law did not apply and a consent agreement between it and Penn State was "exceptionally unlikely" to cause other schools to raise tuition, cut scholarships or charge more for branded jerseys. It said Corbett lacked standing to sue and called his action an attempt to drag the federal courts into an intra-state political dispute.

NCAA spokeswoman Emily Potter said Monday the NCAA stood by its previous statements.

The Republican governor's lawsuit asks the judge to throw out all the penalties, including a massive fine, a four-year bowl ban and the loss of football scholarships.

"It is laughable to claim that a $60 million fine, coupled with the gutting of one of the most lucrative programs at one of the nation's largest universities, is 'noncommercial activity,'" Corbett argued.

He claims that the consent agreement has harmed students, business owners and others and that the NCAA penalties are likely to result in higher tuition and make it more difficult for football players to find scholarships.

"The NCAA wrongly claims that its arbitrary decimation of the PSU football program is no different than its enforcement of rules regulating player eligibility or uniforms ? which do enhance collegiate competition ? although PSU was not found to have violated a single NCAA rule and the NCAA's own president insisted that the consent decree was not an enforcement action," Corbett's lawyers wrote.

Corbett said the Penn State case is the first time the NCAA has injected itself into criminal conduct already in the justice system, "let alone into offenses that did not involve cheating, academic fraud, recruiting violations or other conduct designed to give athletic programs an unfair competitive advantage."

He also took a swipe at the NCAA regarding recent revelations in a booster scandal at the University of Miami.

"It is ironic that the NCAA attempts to maintain a pious tone throughout its brief ... in light of its recent revelations about its own misconduct while investigating the University of Miami," the Corbett filing said.

Sandusky, a former defensive coordinator at Penn State, a college football powerhouse, was convicted last summer of sexually abusing several boys, some on campus. He is serving a 30- to 60-year state prison sentence. He is appealing and maintains his innocence.

The consent agreement between the NCAA and Penn State was signed a few weeks after Sandusky was found guilty of 45 criminal counts. Penn State is not a party to Corbett's antitrust lawsuit or to the NCAA's lawsuit filed last week against Corbett and three state officials over a newly enacted state law that is designed to keep the $60 million within the state.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-02-25-Penn%20State-Abuse/id-a6c78313f5b0449ab4c1a911a3993260

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Lawmakers dispute records for private gun sales

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A dispute over whether to require record keeping for private gun sales is holding up a compromise between Republican and Democratic senators over expanding background checks for firearms transactions, one of President Barack Obama's top gun control priorities, people familiar with the private talks said Sunday.

Two GOP and two Democratic senators have been looking for a compromise on requiring more of the checks, currently required only for transactions by federally licensed dealers. Private transactions at gun shows, online and elsewhere are not covered by the system, which is designed to keep firearms from criminals, people with serious mental problems and others.

The senators have been bargaining quietly over ways to expand the checks to private sales. But Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., a conservative who has taken a leading role in the talks, has opposed requiring record keeping for private transactions because of a concern it could lead to a national registry of gun owners, which is vehemently opposed by the National Rifle Association and other gun rights groups.

Democrats say keeping records of private sales is the only way to ensure the checks are performed, and say fears of the creation of a federal gun registry are unfounded. They have offered to have gun manufacturers or other private entities, not the government, keep those records.

The talks were described by a Senate aide and a lobbyist who spoke on condition of anonymity because the senators' talks are private and considered extremely politically sensitive.

The other senators participating in the bargaining are liberal Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., moderate Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and moderate Mark Kirk, R-Ill.

An agreement involving the influential Coburn could be pivotal because it could pave the way for other Republicans to support a background check bill.

Coburn said Sunday that he opposed keeping records on "legitimate, law-abiding gun owners."

"All they have to do is create a record keeping and that will kill this bill," he said on "Fox News Sunday."

The bargainers are close to agreement on other parts of the background check compromise, including carving out exemptions for sales between close relatives and for people who have already been cleared to receive concealed carry permits. They are also working toward creating an appeals process for veterans initially denied guns because they have been treated for traumatic stress disorder.

Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., of the Senate Judiciary Committee is hoping his panel can begin writing gun control legislation this week, but that is considered likely to slip until the following week. His panel is expected to approve legislation on background checks and stiffer federal penalties against illegal gun trafficking.

It is unclear whether there will be enough votes to approve two other Obama priorities: bans on assault weapons and magazines carrying more than 10 rounds of ammunition.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lawmakers-dispute-records-private-gun-132918542.html

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Doing good is good for you: Volunteer adolescents enjoy healthier hearts

Feb. 25, 2013 ? Giving back through volunteering is good for your heart, even at a young age, according to University of British Columbia researchers.

For their study, published February 25 in the journal JAMA Pediatrics, researchers from UBC's Faculty of Education and Department of Psychology wanted to find out how volunteering might impact physical health among adolescents.

"It was encouraging to see how a social intervention to support members of the community also improved the health of adolescents," says Hannah Schreier, who conducted this research during her doctoral studies at UBC.

Researchers split 106 Grade 10 students from an urban, inner-city Vancouver high school into two groups -- a group that volunteered regularly for 10 weeks and a group that was wait-listed for volunteer activities. The researchers measured the students' body mass index (BMI), inflammation and cholesterol levels before and after the study. They also assessed the students' self-esteem, mental health, mood, and empathy.

The volunteer group of students spent one hour per week working with elementary school children in after-school programs in their neighborhood. After 10 weeks they had lower levels of inflammation and cholesterol and lower BMIs than the students who were wait-listed.

"The volunteers who reported the greatest increases in empathy, altruistic behaviour and mental health were the ones who also saw the greatest improvements in their cardiovascular health," says Schreier, now a postdoctoral fellow at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of mortality in Canada and the United States. The first signs of the disease can begin to appear during adolescence. Previous studies show that psychosocial factors, such as stress, depression and wellbeing, play a role in the disease.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of British Columbia.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Hannah M. C. Schreier. Effect of Volunteering on Risk Factors for Cardiovascular Disease in AdolescentsA Randomized Controlled TrialVolunteering and Cardiovascular Disease Risks. JAMA Pediatrics, 2013; : 1 DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2013.1100

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/depression/~3/t9hBPGyOioE/130225162229.htm

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Video: Jennifer Lawrence looks for Al Roker on red carpet

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50939213/

Mississippi bigots freak out over local paper?s coverage of 1st gay wedding in county (Americablog)

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Creepy Art on Cat Body | Hi5ing

While tattooing may be thousands of years old the ancient art has certainly has come a long way. Everyone seems to be rushing to get tats and there is a definite following for people who are into body art. The tattoo has blessed some of today?s biggest names in entertainment.

The Sphinx cat is known for naturally being hairless and, despite the fact that they look like? lets just say they are not the prettier of all cats, have always been sought after for people who love cats, but have allergies.

Some women and men came up with the craziest ideas for their tattoos with their pet. See the artistic, bizarre and outrageous tattoos that cat adorn their bodies with. I?ve never seen such unusual tattoos before. Some people express themselves in the creepiness way with their pets. A lot of these crazy tattoos and piercings look really gross.

Tattoos have been around for as long as anyone can remember. It is hard to imagine how most of these people are able to eke out a living. The p###y cat is not as dumb as it used to be. It has groomed its outer appearance with the fast pacing world.

Inside this post, you will see the results of such weird body art on cat body. We have added some fun by attaching some wild, and crazed ink shots of those body parts.

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tattoos on cats08 562x800 Creepy Art on Cat Body

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Source: http://www.hi5ing.us/2013/02/24/creepy-art-on-cat-body/

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Insight: Cancer drugs proving worth earlier in testing

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Michael Weitz was out of options. The Californian had endured chemotherapy, radiation and surgery but his lung cancer still spread to his bones and brain.

With time running out, the emergency room physician entered a Phase I study - the earliest stage of human testing for a new medicine - of crizotinib. The drug works for about 4 percent of advanced lung cancer patients with a mutated form of a protein called ALK.

"Once I knew that I had that mutation, I knew that I had an exciting new chance," said Weitz, now 55, who is cancer-free after three years of taking the drug now sold by Pfizer as Xalkori after an unusually swift development process.

It typically has taken a decade and $1 billion to bring a new treatment to market. But in the last two years a handful of cancer drugs - including Onyx Pharmaceutical Inc's Kyprolis for multiple myeloma, Roche's Zelboraf for melanoma, and Pfizer's Xalkori - were approved in about half that time because of improved genetic screening, more definitive Phase I trials and the dire need for new, effective treatments.

"We hope to be able to shave years off the time it takes to get final approval and save hundreds of millions of dollars per drug," said Robert Schneider, director of translational cancer research at New York University Cancer Institute. "We're going to see this as a sea change over the next five years."

Weitz's story is a dramatic example of how personalized medicine is advancing 10 years after researchers sequenced the human genome, enabling drugs to target specific genetic variations. The emerging trend is likely to bring more effective treatments to desperate patients faster, increase the number of annual drug approvals and cut research costs through earlier and more reliable data. It will also help drugmakers identify ineffective therapies sooner, although it may not necessarily lead to lower priced medicines.

There are some concerns about the faster approval process but most agree that the benefits of a potentially life-saving drug outweigh the risks. "The accelerated development of new drugs can be a double-edged sword," said Mace Rothenberg, head of oncology for Pfizer. "As you move more quickly some questions may be unanswered."

He said those answers can come from trials conducted after drugs are approved, and the Food and Drug Administration often requires post-marketing studies following expedited approvals

Historically, Phase I trials did little more than reveal the dose of an experimental drug that could safely be tolerated before larger studies determined clinically meaningful benefit. But advances in genetic screening and an improved understanding of the biology of cancer are enabling researchers to identify patients most likely to benefit from specific cancer treatments.

"You can see positive signals much more quickly, and clinically you can spare patients for whom the drug is not likely to work," said Dr. Michael Davies, assistant professor in the department of melanoma medical oncology at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.

Richard Scheller, head of research and early development for Roche's Genentech unit, which has produced most of the company's top-selling cancer medicines, said, "you can cut a couple of years out of the clinical trial process by basically doing your pivotal trial straight from Phase I."

Drugmakers who have benefited from the expedited approval process declined to discuss how much money was saved from the industry average for drug development.

FDA'S NEW "BREAKTHROUGH" DESIGNATION

With impressive enough early results, health regulators are more willing than ever to accept early or midstage trials as adequate proof of safety and effectiveness, rather than insisting on larger, more expensive and time-consuming pivotal Phase III studies that have been a standard requirement.

"The drugs are simply better," Dr. Richard Pazdur, director of the Office of Hematology and Oncology Products in the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said of the new targeted cancer medicines.

With older highly toxic chemotherapy drugs, he said, "many of the discussions we had at the agency dealt with whether we should approve the drug or not. With some of these newer drugs, the issue is how fast we can approve them, not whether they should be approved," Pazdur said.

The FDA has come up with a new breakthrough designation for drugs it views as a substantial improvement over existing therapies. With the designation - five have been awarded so far with 12 more drugs currently under consideration - the agency works more closely with drugmakers to identify approval requirements and work out commercial manufacturing issues.

DRAMATIC RESPONSE

Key to faster approval is that drugs are becoming more narrowly targeted as researchers better understand the pathways of cancer - a series of biochemical steps that fuel the growth of cancer cells. The aim of the treatments is to block the culprit proteins, or biomarkers, within a pathway.

"It's much easier for us to offer patients in Phase I studies the real possibility of a dramatic response," said Paul Sabbatini, an oncologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Now far fewer patients need to be tested in order to get definitive results in early trials because they are selected only if their tumors contain proteins or gene mutations that the experimental drug is targeting. Patients typically learn about these studies from their doctors or websites such as ClinicalTrials.gov.

"What we're looking at many times is Phase I data where we're seeing levels of response that we haven't seen before in patients that have exhausted most of the therapies in a disease," said FDA's Pazdur.

Scheller estimated that cancer researchers are working on 50 different targets that could yield effective future therapies.

NYU's Schneider, a co-founder of the biotech company ImClone, said historically perhaps only 3 percent of oncology drugs that began Phase I trials went on to be approved. With new diagnostic tools and targeted drugs, he said, "one would hope that 10 or even 15 percent of drugs might be approved for the right patient populations in the next five years."

Roche's Zelboraf and Pfizer's Xalkori both were developed along with companion diagnostic tests to identify the specific gene mutations in patients that the drugs were designed to target. They proceeded relatively rapidly through clinical trials.

The company said development of Zelboraf, which costs $56,000 for a six-month course of treatment, was the fastest conducted by Genentech and Roche. The clinical trial process took less than five years.

Pfizer's Xalkori took just over four years to develop. Had it been tested in the traditional manner among the general lung cancer population rather than on those with the specific ALK mutation, it would likely have been dismissed as a failure or required further research to try to glean which subgroup of patients were helped by the drug that costs $115,000 a year.

FINDING FAILURES FASTER

In the past, large pharmaceutical companies were reluctant to develop drugs for limited patient groups, preferring to search for medicines to treat ailments such as high cholesterol and arthritis that could be taken by a large swath of the population and become huge money-makers.

Pfizer Chief Executive Ian Read has embraced the newer personalized approach. Noting recent advances in genetic understanding, Read said: "We can get clearer results earlier. That will clearly speed up our development, as you saw with Xalkori."

The recent advances may also grant a long-held wish of drugmakers - identifying failed drugs faster.

"It's much better to find that out in Phase I than half a billion dollars later in Phase III," Genentech's Scheller said.

"If you have a targeted therapy and you don't see activity in your first 10 or 20 patients that have your particular diagnostic marker or particular biomarker that you're looking for, forget it, we're through, project ends," Scheller said.

Even with all the recent successes, many hurdles remain. Researchers have yet to figure out why drugs that work by spurring the immune system to fight cancer, such as Bristol-Myers Squibb's Yervoy, have long-lasting effects on some patients and not others. And they need to figure out why cancer often comes back even when targeted therapies worked.

"We need to know why these drugs stop working sometimes," said Sloan Kettering's Sabbatini. "If we understand the cause, we could preemptively combine drugs, or at the first sign of (disease) progression, understand what is the most logical next step as we learn more about the pathways."

But as long as the United States does not have price controls for medicines as Europe does, and the FDA does not consider economics in its approval decisions, quicker, less expensive development may not translate into lower prices.

"I would hope it would bring down the cost of drugs, but whatever the market bears is what the market will get," Schneider said.

(Reporting by Bill Berkrot and Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Jilian Mincer, Edward Tobin and Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-cancer-drugs-proving-worth-earlier-testing-064332072--finance.html

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This Week's Top Downloads

This Week's Top DownloadsEvery week, we share a number of downloads for all platforms to help you get things done. Here were the top downloads from this week.

This Week's Top Downloads

Sunrise for iPhone May Be the Last Calendar App You Ever Use

Sunrise for iPhone is more than just a calendar app, it's puts important information about your day front and center, including appointments you have to make, friends' birthdays and events, the day's weather, and more. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

7+ Taskbar Tweaker Adds Tons of Extra Taskbar Settings to Windows 7 and 8

Windows: Ever wish you could tweak the taskbar's shortcuts, or add other features Microsoft forgot about? 7+ Taskbar Tweaker adds a ton of extra settings and shortcuts to the Windows taskbar, and it works in Windows 7 and 8. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

SwiftKey 4 Brings "Flow" Gesture Typing, Improved Word Prediction, Faster Corrections, and More to Android

Android: SwiftKey 4, the latest version of one of our favorite Android keyboards, is finally available. In addition to its new "Flow" swipe-to-type features, SwiftKey 4 also comes with better word prediction that learns from your day-to-day use, tons of themes, better word correction, over 60 languages, and more. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

Any.Do Moment Offers a Quick, Simple Overview of Your Daily To-Dos

Android/iOS: Any.Do is one of your favorite to-do apps, and today the service has updated its iOS and Android apps to include Any.Do Moment, a quick and fun overview of your day, all of the things you have on your list, and quick-response buttons to tick off whether you're done it already, want to keep it on your list for today, or will get to it later. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

Haze Is a Gesture Friendly, Visually Rich Weather App for iPhone that Doesn't Skimp on Features

iOS: Haze is a weather app that looks simple at first blush, but behind its minimal, color-coded UI is a weather of weather information, all easily available using a few simple gestures that will give you current coditions, the forecast, hourly changes, and much more. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

Grid Preview Brings a New, Image-Focused Layout to Google Reader

Chrome: Google Reader is still one of the best ways to get through your mass of blogs, but it's never been the prettiest way to read. The Grid Preview extension for Chrome makes browsing through those blogs a little nicer with an image-focused grid layout. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

Mokriya Craigslist Is a Beautiful, Officially-Licensed Craigslist App for iPhone and Android

iPhone/Android: If you buy or sell on Craigslist, download this officially-licensed Craigslist app for your mobile device and keep up with listings on the go. Mokriya Craigslist sports a pretty and easy-to-use interface, along with features like advanced search and, for the premium version, alerts, bookmarking listings, and streamlined ad posting. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

UberHype for Android Puts Great New Music on your Phone, Anywhere You Are

Android: Whether you're a fan of music streaming and discovery site The Hype Machine or you just enjoy finding and listening to great new music, UberHype for Android is a must-have. The app brings all of the music available at The Hype Machine to your Android phone, and makes it easy to search for, stream, save, and share great new music, anywhere you go. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

BUDGT Is a Simple Budget-Tracking App that Easily and Quickly Manages Your Expenses

iOS: You won't find a shortage of budgeting apps for the iPhone that can help you manage your expenses in all kinds of ways. BUDGT takes a different approach, and its simplicity makes it easy to enter in expenses, track your budget, and get out of the app as quickly as possible. More ?


This Week's Top Downloads

Colornote Notepad Takes and Saves Notes, Puts them on Your Home Screen for Easy Access

Android: There are plenty of note-taking apps for Android, but Colornote Notepad has a few unique features that make it easy and fun. The app itself makes taking, saving, and organizing notes easy, but you can put your notes on your home screen as widgets for easy access?grocery lists, shopping lists, and to-dos are all one-tap away, and you can use the widgets to open them in the app, or cross items off without even leaving your home screen. More ?


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zwdHWKo5fyM/this-weeks-top-downloads

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Report: U-M defensive line coach leaving for Oklahoma

Michigan appears to be down a defensive line coach.

Jerry Montgomery, according to a report Saturday on Scout.com, has accepted a job at Oklahoma. He replaces Jackie Shipp, who was fired earlier this month after 14 seasons with the Sooners.

A Michigan athletic department spokesman said U-M does not have a comment on the report. Oklahoma also isn't offering comment, according to the Daily Oklahoman.

Montgomery, an Iowa graduate, has been on Brady Hoke's staff for two seasons.

Source: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130223/SPORTS0201/302230384/1131/rss17

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Democrats claim win, GOP says not so fast

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Reusse: SW Minnesota State coach toughs it out on the court and off

This is Tim Miles' first season coaching the Nebraska men's basketball team. Recently, he had a speaking appearance in Omaha and was on the road back to Lincoln when he started a cellphone conversation with Brad Bigler.

"There were some things Brad's team was doing defensively that I wanted to ask him about,'' Miles said. "We got into the conversation and I missed Lincoln. It's not easy to miss Lincoln -- with eight exits -- in Nebraska, but I blew by it by about 20 miles.''

Miles' interest in breaking down defense with Bigler was intriguing for a few reasons: Tim is coaching in the Big Ten and Brad in Division II at Southwest Minnesota State. Tim was the Southwest coach from 1997 to 2001, and Brad was his point guard much of that time.

So, this was the mentor kicking around defensive concepts with the prot?g?.

"He's the son of a coach,'' Miles said. "His dad, Mark, is one of those solid-as-a-rock guys. When Brad talks about basketball, he traces everything back to his father.''

Mark Bigler coached his son at Fort Madison, a small town in southeastern Iowa. He is now the coach at Davenport West, one of the state's large schools.

Brad was recruited to Southwest State by Perry Ford. Before he got to Marshall, Minn., Ford left for Augustana (S.D.) and Miles was hired from Mayville (N.D.) State as his replacement.

"Brad was 5-foot-10 and maybe 140 pounds, but he played with as much resolve as anyone,'' Miles said. "What's the saying? 'Cool water runs deep.' That was him. No matter what situation we put in him, he always made plays.

"He had amazing strength as a person. And we've seen that through these tragedies.''

The tragedies have been chronicled nationally and regionally:

In July 2011, Brad, his mother, Diane Bigler-Hagenow, and three companions were kayaking on Hawk Creek near the Minnesota River. Diane was the enthusiastic kayaker, but the group ran into trouble with a rapids and she drowned.

On July 28, 2012, Brad's wife, Heather, was driving to the family cabin in Starbuck, with Brad in the passenger's seat, with their 5-month-old son, Drake, and Heather's mom in the back. The vehicle was smashed by a drunk driver and Drake died.

"I know it's tough every day for them, but not many of us could handle things like this the way Brad and his family have done," Miles said. "When you mention resiliency, Brad talks about what type of person his mother was, about what he still takes from his father, and now from Heather.''

Miles was on the phone late Saturday afternoon, after his Nebraska team had upset Iowa 64-60 in Lincoln. The fact a Big Ten coach would return a message after a big victory to talk about a former player and now a D-II coach ... that says something about these men.

Bigler and his Mustangs were in St. Paul playing Concordia on Friday night. Southwest held on for a 71-69 victory. The Mustangs then lost the regular-season finale Saturday night in Mankato, falling 85-75 to Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference regular-season champion Minnesota State.

"The ratings came out and we were ninth in the region ... but we're fifth in the South Division,'' Bigler said. "This conference is so tough.''

The Mustangs finished with 16 assists against Concordia -- a tick above the season average. Assists are a go-to statistic for Bigler.

"We take pride in setting up teammates,'' he said. "If we have an offensive philosophy, that's it: move the ball, set up your teammates.''

Miles coached Southwest State to its best season, in 2000-01 -- earning a trip to the Division?II Elite Eight in Bakersfield, Calif. Bigler was a point guard. Miles left for North Dakota State and Greg Stemen took over as the coach.

Bigler was in his sixth year as an assistant in August 2009, when Stemen told his staff in confidence that he was about to take a job in business.

"I didn't even tell Heather,'' Bigler said. "She was pregnant and we were moving into a new home. I didn't want to give her more to worry about.''

On Sept. 30, 2009, Stemen resigned and Bigler became the interim coach. He was 30 ... and secured the job full-time when the Mustangs reached the 2010 NSIC title game.

Thirty years old seems young for a Division?II job?

"Maybe, but Brad was one of those guys,'' Miles said. "You knew he was going to be a coach, and he'd be good at it right away.''

Patrick Reusse can be heard 3-6 p.m. weekdays on 1500-AM. ? preusse@startribune.com

Source: http://www.startribune.com/sports/192768301.html

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Williams scores 46 to lead New Mexico past CSU

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) ? With 9 minutes left, New Mexico guard Kendall Williams trudged to the bench with a career-high 28 points ? and four fouls.

While he caught his breath, No. 22 Colorado State built a six-point lead over the 16th-ranked Lobos.

Moby Arena was rocking and the Rams were rolling, about to extend the nation's third-longest home winning streak to 28 games.

Williams had other things in mind ? and 18 points left to score.

"Luckily, some shots went in," said the junior guard from Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., who finished with a career-best 46 points ? almost double his previous career high of 24 ? in leading New Mexico to a 91-82 win Saturday.

Williams set a Mountain West Conference record with 10 3-pointers and his 46 points were the most in the 47-year-old arena, topping the 44 scored by Portland State's Freeman Williams on Nov. 29, 1975.

"He should be hands-down player of the week, I would think," Lobos coach Steve Alford deadpanned.

Williams helped the Lobos overcome that 70-64 deficit at the 6-minute mark by hitting a trio of 3-pointers, a dunk and seven free throws down the stretch as New Mexico outscored the Rams 27-12.

"He got on a roll today," Alford said. "And it was a 40-minute roll."

Actually, it was a 33-minute roll. He spent seven minutes on the bench in foul trouble.

"That's what's really impressive," Alford said. "He sat about a four-minute stretch there in the second half and still scores and does what he does. It's pretty amazing. But he did a great job in that last six minutes not picking up that fifth" foul.

Center Alex Kirk added 19 points and 10 rebounds for the Lobos (23-4, 10-2), who increased their lead in the conference race to two games over the Rams (21-5, 8-4).

Colton Iverson had 26 points and 15 boards for the Rams, who looked like they were going to move into a first-place tie atop the standings after taking a 70-64 lead at the 6-minute mark.

Williams' treys highlighted a 14-2 run that gave New Mexico a 78-72 lead before the Rams sent the Lobos to the line over the final two minutes.

"Well, that was a special night to watch," Alford said. "I told him that. I said I never had a 10-3 game, I never got to 46. Forty-two was the most I ever scored and eight 3s was the most I ever made in a game."

"There's not too many one-ups you can get on Coach Alford, especially in scoring," Williams said. "I might be on top of the world for the rest of the weekend."

Williams' previous career best was 24 points against Indiana State and New Mexico State earlier this season.

"The players kept feeding me the ball," said Williams, who had 15 family members, including his grandmother, in the stands. "It was really just a team effort, some of the shots I hit were tough. But if the teammates didn't put me in position and the coaches didn't put me in position, I wouldn't have had quite the night I had."

The Rams blamed themselves for Williams' big game.

"We had no answer for him," Rams coach Larry Eustachy said. "... He was completely unstoppable. I want to see film on how many of those shots were contested."

His bet is that not many were.

The Rams, who gave up 45 points to Air Force's Michael Lyons a week earlier, left Williams open early on while locking down Tony Snell, who scored 10 points Saturday after getting 23 in their first meeting last month.

"He hadn't been shooting well this year," Dorian Green said. "We gave him some uncontested looks, let him get hot. Guys are too good in our league to do that."

"We gave him open looks early," Wes Eikmeier added. "He got hot and then he was feeling it the rest of the night."

Green (20) and Eikmeier (22) gave the Rams three 20-point scorers in their losing effort. Eikmeier scored 11 straight to put the Rams ahead 55-50.

The Lobos quieted the crowd with a 12-6 run to regain the lead at 62-61, but Williams, less than a minute after returning to the lineup, was whistled for his fourth foul and took a seat at the nine-minute mark.

"I was real mad," Williams said. "My emotions were high, but (assistant coach Craig) Neal came over while Coach Alford was doing his thing and calmed me down and says, 'You're going to have to bring it home, kid. Don't foul and get the shots that you need.' And that's exactly what I did."

The Rams were coming off a two-point loss at UNLV on Wednesday night that snapped their six-game winning streak, which began after a 66-61 loss to the Lobos in Albuquerque last month.

They hadn't lost at home since Nov. 11, 2012, to Southern Miss., which was coached at the time by Eustachy, who took the Rams job last offseason.

Williams' 10th 3-pointer ? in 13 tries ? broke the conference mark of nine set by several players, most recently UNLV's Chace Stanback against Central Arkansas on Dec. 28, 2011. It was a difficult shot from the right corner.

"Why not? Just throw it up there, had hit a few already," Williams said. "With the hoop the size it was tonight and the rhythm I was feeling, it just felt like I had to throw that one up."

___

Follow Arnie Melendrez Stapleton on Twitter: http://twitter.com/arniestapleton

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/williams-scores-46-lead-mexico-past-csu-011006077--spt.html

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College basketball: No. 6 Cal women win 12th in a row, routing Oregon 77-55

Just about everything went right for fourth-ranked Stanford on Friday night in an easy-as-it-gets 90-53 Pac-12 victory over defenseless Oregon State.

Even Chiney Ogwumike's desperation toss as she tumbled out of bounds touched nothing but net with 11:26 left in front of 3,430 fans at Maples Pavilion.

Ogwumike got her 21st double-double of the season with 19 points and 12 rebounds in only 28 minutes. The junior All-American had a career-high 11 free throws and added four blocks on a night four Stanford players scored in double figures.

"This was a really special game," Ogwumike said. "We've been waiting for a time everyone steps up at the same time."

Taylor Greenfield made four of five 3-pointers on her way to tying a career-best 18 points. Senior forward Joslyn Tinkle ended with 11 points to become the school's 34th player to get at least 1,000 career points.

The victory allowed Stanford (25-2, 14-1 Pac-12) to keep pace with Cal atop the conference standings. The Beavers (9-18, 3-12) dropped their ninth in a row, and the Cardinal extended its win streak to 10.

Cal 77, Oregon 55: Layshia Clarendon scored 14 points and the sixth-ranked Bears won their school record-tying 12th straight game.

Afure Jemerigbe added 13 points for the host Bears (24-2, 14-1 Pac-12), who early on looked somewhat ragged offensively with starting point guard Brittany Boyd sitting out because of a strained

groin.

Jemerigbe came in averaging just 7.0 points, so her offensive contribution was big with Boyd out of the lineup.

"Brittany is a great player," Jemerigbe said. "She pushes the ball and makes the game a lot easier. With Brittany out, I knew I had to step up."

Jordan Loera and Ariel Thomas led Oregon (4-23, 2-13) with nine points each.

Men

Saint Louis 65, Butler 61: Mike McCall had 18 points and Kwamain Mitchell scored 10 of his 12 in the second half to help the visiting Billikens (21-5, 10-2 Atlantic 10) rally past the No. 15 Bulldogs (22-6, 9-4).

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/other-sports/ci_22651618/college-basketball-no-6-cal-women-win-12th?source=rss

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