Friday, 31 October 2014

Internet groups denounce Rifi call to ban digital drug sites


BEIRUT: A coalition of Arab tech and Internet freedom organizations Friday denounced a call by Lebanese Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi to ban websites that offer so-called "digital drugs," saying such a measure would be legally baseless.


"Lebanese have become accustomed to waking up to peculiar initiatives regarding censorship on certain websites, which started with the blocking of gambling sites without referring to any legal grounds or applicable laws," a joint statement by four groups read.


"The request made Thursday by ... Rifi, is [suspicious], if not ridiculous, where he asked the General Prosecutor to take actions towards banning digital drugs websites and to take the appropriate legal action," read the statement signed by the Arab ICT Organization, the Professional Computer Association of Lebanon, the Lebanese Internet Freedom Alliance, and the Arab Internet Freedom Alliance.


“Digital Drugs,” better known as binaural beats, are audio track that can be bought online. The phenomenon has received mixed reports from doctors and specialists, with some claiming that the digital drug may have detrimental effects on its users, while others claim that it may yield certain benefits.


The tunes are used “as a way of achieving a simulated mood or experience using a technique that involves playing two different tones simultaneously in order to alter brainwaves,” according to I-Doser, a leading online producer of binaural brainwave doses.


When sounds of slightly different frequencies are played through each ear, the brain perceives a third "phantom" beat, which alters the brain. This phenomenon was discovered in 1839 by the German physicist Heinrich Wilhelm Dove.


"Lebanese people already have plenty of miseries to live with, and now they face an additional obsession to be worried about where their Internet freedom is at risk," the statement continued.


It added that no legal framework exists to block such website, and called for awareness campaigns to educate youth about digital drugs rather than impose censorship.



US urges Middle East travelers to be vigilant after jihadist threat


No good reason to refuse Iranian aid: Hezbollah MP


There is no good reason for Lebanon to refuse Iran's offer of badly needed military aid to the Army, Hezbollah MP Ali...



In New Hampshire, Two Different Tales Of Scott Brown's State Jump



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





The very close U.S. Senate race in New Hampshire could come down to where Republican challenger Scott Brown is from. While detractors say the former Massachusetts Senator crossed the state line in search of a Senate seat, an unusually large number of New Hampshire voters are originally from out of state themselves.



Obama Tries To Rally Women Voters As Midterms Near



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





President Obama makes the case for economic policies that would benefit women amid hopes that women will turn out for Democrats on Election Day.



Kicking Off Military Family Month

Throughout our history, members of our military have put their lives on the line to defend our country and preserve our security. While this requires a tremendous personal sacrifice, it is also important to recognize the unyielding love and support that their families provide every step of the way to make this sacrifice possible. As a proud military mom myself, I know that when you have a family member who is in the military, the whole family serves too.


Last week, I visited the Center for the Intrepid at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas, where I had the opportunity to see firsthand how state-of-the art rehabilitation equipment like the FlowRider and zero-gravity treadmills are being incorporated into an innovative rehabilitation process for our wounded soldiers — it is truly remarkable. I also met with service members and military spouses stationed in San Antonio to discuss the challenges that are an inherent part of military life, such as constant relocation and missing family milestones due to deployments.


We have asked a lot of service members and their families over the past decade. They have sacrificed so much on behalf of our country. I am proud to be part of an Administration that has supported our troops, veterans, and their families in historic ways. In April, First Lady Michelle Obama and I announced the unveiling of the Veterans Employment Center, an innovative tool to help veterans and spouses find career opportunities. As of this summer, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have adopted the Military Children’s Interstate Compact, which eases some of the burdens of transitions for military connected kids. And today, in honor of their service, President Obama signed a proclamation to establish November 2014 as Military Family Month.


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Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Oct.31, 2014


Police arrest 4 over Beirut bus robberies


Police arrest four men who picked up passengers in a bus and then robbed them at gun point, the Internal Security...



Thursday, 30 October 2014

Kennedy: Are We Ready For Big Tobacco-Style Marketing For Marijuana?



Low-dose pot-infused cookies, called the Rookie Cookie, sit on the packaging table Sept. 26 at The Growing Kitchen, in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreational pot use last year.i i



Low-dose pot-infused cookies, called the Rookie Cookie, sit on the packaging table Sept. 26 at The Growing Kitchen, in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreational pot use last year. Brennan Linsley/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Brennan Linsley/AP

Low-dose pot-infused cookies, called the Rookie Cookie, sit on the packaging table Sept. 26 at The Growing Kitchen, in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreational pot use last year.



Low-dose pot-infused cookies, called the Rookie Cookie, sit on the packaging table Sept. 26 at The Growing Kitchen, in Boulder, Colo. The state legalized recreational pot use last year.


Brennan Linsley/AP


There has been a lot of talk recently about marijuana legalization — increasing tax revenue for states, getting nonviolent offenders out of the prison system, protecting personal liberty, possible health benefits for those with severe illnesses. These are good and important conversations to have, and smart people from across the ideological spectrum are sharing their perspectives.


But one key dimension of the issue has been left out of the discussion until now: the marketing machine that will spring up to support these now-legal businesses, and the detrimental effect this will have on our kids.


Curious how this might work? Look no further than Big Tobacco. In 1999, the year after a massive legal settlement that restricted certain forms of advertising, the major cigarette companies spent a record $8.4 billion on marketing. In 2011, that number reached $8.8 billion, according to the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. To put it into context, the auto industry spent less than half of that on advertising in 2011, and car ads are everywhere.


At the same time, despite advertising bans, these notoriously sneaky tobacco companies continue to find creative ways to target kids. Data from the 2011 National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that the most heavily marketed brands of cigarettes were also the most popular among people under 18.


This is not a coincidence, and gets to the very core of Big Tobacco's approach: Hook them young, and they have a customer for life. Why do we think the legal marijuana industry will behave differently from Big Tobacco? When the goal is addiction, all bets are off.



In Colorado, where there are new rules governing how legal marijuana is advertised in traditional media, there are still many opportunities to market online and at concerts, festivals and other venues where kids will be present. Joe Camel might be retired, but he's been replaced by other gimmicks to get kids hooked — like snus and flavored cigarettes. The marijuana industry is following suit by manufacturing THC candies, cookies, lollipops and other edibles that look harmless but aren't. Making marijuana mainstream will also make it more available, more acceptable and more dangerous to our kids.


Addiction is big business, and with legal marijuana it's only getting bigger.


Not surprisingly, Big Tobacco is also getting on the marijuana bandwagon. Manufacturers Altria and Brown & Williamson have registered domain names that include the words "marijuana" and "cannabis." Imagine how much they will spend peddling their new brand of addiction to our kids. We cannot sit by while these companies open a new front in their battle against our children's health.



Why is this an issue? There is a mistaken assumption that marijuana is harmless. It is not. Marijuana use is linked with mental illness, depression, anxiety and psychosis. It affects parts of the brain responsible for memory, learning, attention and reaction time. Developing brains are especially susceptible to all of the negative effects of marijuana and other drug use. In fact, poison control centers in Colorado and Washington state have seen an increase in the number of calls regarding marijuana poisoning. This isn't a surprise — with legal marijuana comes a host of unintended consequences.


I've spent the past several years after leaving Congress advocating for a health care system that treats the brain like it does any other organ in the body. Effective mental health care, especially when it comes to children, is critically important.


Knowing what we now know about the effects of marijuana on the brain, can we really afford to ignore its consequences in the name of legalization? Our No. 1 priority needs to be protecting our kids from this emerging public health crisis. The rights of pot smokers and the marijuana industry end where our children's health begins.


I'm not alone in my concerns about this trend toward legalization. Even Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has said that marijuana legalization in his state was "reckless," and reaffirmed his opposition to it during his campaign for re-election. He also said he will "regulate the heck" out of it. For that, I applaud his leadership and courage.


Alaska, Oregon and the District of Columbia have legalization ballot measures up for a vote this fall. I hope common sense will prevail, and they choose a better path than making addiction the law of the land.


At the end of the day, legalizing and marketing marijuana is making drug use acceptable and mainstream. Just as Big Tobacco lied to Americans for decades about the deadly consequences of smoking, we can't let "big marijuana" follow in its footsteps, target our kids and profit from addiction.


Patrick J. Kennedy, is a former United States congressman from the state of Rhode Island.



The Devastating History of Midterm Elections


History tells us that midterm elections are bad — sometimes very bad — for the party that controls the White House. President Obama and the Democrats are pushing for voter turnout in the final days before next Tuesday's midterm election. But they are also bracing for what could be a rough night of ballot counting.


The worry for any president during the midterm is that the past may be prologue.


It's a trend that began as early as the Civil War, and is firmly established in the era of the modern presidency.


Here are some notable Presidential midterm setbacks and disasters:



President Franklin D.Roosevelt is seen identifying himself to the election board in Hyde Park, N.Y. in 1938. Republicans picked up a whopping 81 seats in the U.S. House that year.i i



President Franklin D.Roosevelt is seen identifying himself to the election board in Hyde Park, N.Y. in 1938. Republicans picked up a whopping 81 seats in the U.S. House that year. AP hide caption



itoggle caption AP

President Franklin D.Roosevelt is seen identifying himself to the election board in Hyde Park, N.Y. in 1938. Republicans picked up a whopping 81 seats in the U.S. House that year.



President Franklin D.Roosevelt is seen identifying himself to the election board in Hyde Park, N.Y. in 1938. Republicans picked up a whopping 81 seats in the U.S. House that year.


AP


1938


Big losses for FDR in the U.S. House amid weariness over economy and New Deal doubts.


On the eve of that year's midterm elections, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt urged the nation to pull together, as war loomed in Europe. His distinctive voice cracked on radio sets across the country.


"Remember that in these brave days in the affairs of the world, we need internal unity, national unity. For the sake of the nation, that is good advice."


But it was advice voters ignored. Republicans picked up 81 seats in the U.S. House. One columnist noted that the GOP elephant had emerged from the doghouse it had occupied since the depression.


1950


Harry Truman suffers through a big GOP night 6 years into his presidency.


This newsreel from that year captures the mood — it was a record turnout for a midterm. The president voices optimism over his Democratic Party's chances as he votes in his hometown of Independence, Mo. But the opposition party carries the day.



U.S. President Ronald Reagan quiets a cheering crowd at a Republican rally in November, 1986.i i



U.S. President Ronald Reagan quiets a cheering crowd at a Republican rally in November, 1986. Douglas C. Pizac/AO hide caption



itoggle caption Douglas C. Pizac/AO

U.S. President Ronald Reagan quiets a cheering crowd at a Republican rally in November, 1986.



U.S. President Ronald Reagan quiets a cheering crowd at a Republican rally in November, 1986.


Douglas C. Pizac/AO


1986


President Reagan campaigns for the GOP saying it's a clear choice. Voters choose Democrats, giving that party control of the U.S. Senate.


Reagan framed the coming midterms in his sixth year in office by describing the voters' overwhelming importance. The choice, he said, was "whether to hand the government back to the liberals or to move forward with the conservative agenda into the 1990s."


Voters went with the Democrats, taking control of the U.S. Senate away from the GOP.


1994


Clinton is drubbed in the year of the Republican revolution.


President Clinton also felt the voters wrath in his first midterm in 1994.


The GOP captured the U.S. House, Senate AND the majority of governorships in what was dubbed the "Republican Revolution." This was the year of the Contract with America which Congressman Newt Gingrich and the GOP used to great effect.


Clinton reacted to the defeat saying "the American people believe, a majority of them... that a divided government may work better than a united government."


The frustrated president then couldn't resist adding, "As you know I disagree with that."


1998 and 2002


The exceptions.


There are occasional exceptions to the general rule that the White House takes a beating in midterms. Clinton in 1998 and President George W. Bush in 2002 are notable recent examples.


2006


Discontent over Iraq war leads to Bush's midterm "thumpin'."


After the September 11 attacks, President Bush's approval ratings soared into the 90s. By 2006, after years of a difficult and controversial war in Iraq, his ratings had tumbled to 40% and lower in some polls. The GOP lost 30 seats and control of the House as Nancy Pelosi became Speaker. Democrats captured the Senate as well.


Bush put it this way in a news conference: "Look this was a close election. If you look at race by race it was close." But he then acknowledged, "the cumulative effect however was not close, it was a thumpin'."



President Obama at a Wisconsin rally in 2010.i i



President Obama at a Wisconsin rally in 2010. Morry Gash/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Morry Gash/AP

President Obama at a Wisconsin rally in 2010.



President Obama at a Wisconsin rally in 2010.


Morry Gash/AP


2010


Enter the Tea Party and a Revitalized GOP.


This was President Obama's first midterm test. The newly prominent Tea Party and a GOP pushback after passage of Obamacare resulted in a change of course by voters. GOP gains were huge. Democrats lost the House.


"Some election nights are more fun than others, some are exhilarating, some are humbling," the president said in what was a huge understatement for the man who celebrated his own historic election two years earlier. This one, he said, was a "shellacking."


Let's all work together for the American People.


There's something else that presidents tend to say after a humiliating midterm — that they've gotten the message. It usually comes in some variation of this, as spoken by President George W. Bush after GOP losses in 2006.


"You know if you focus on the big picture, which in this case is our nation, and issues we need to work together on, you can get stuff done."


History also tells us something about just how well that works out.



The Billionaire Who Remade Retirement Living On A Massive Scale



Gary Morse, with wife Sharon, in 1999. Morse transformed a mobile home park in Florida into The Villages, a retirement community of more than 100,000 residents.i i



Gary Morse, with wife Sharon, in 1999. Morse transformed a mobile home park in Florida into The Villages, a retirement community of more than 100,000 residents. Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel hide caption



itoggle caption Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel

Gary Morse, with wife Sharon, in 1999. Morse transformed a mobile home park in Florida into The Villages, a retirement community of more than 100,000 residents.



Gary Morse, with wife Sharon, in 1999. Morse transformed a mobile home park in Florida into The Villages, a retirement community of more than 100,000 residents.


Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel


Gary Morse, a visionary property developer, transformed a Florida mobile home park into the nation's largest retirement community. The billionaire died Wednesday at the age of 77.


Under Morse's direction, The Villages, northwest of Orlando, redefined retirement living. It's a community that is remarkable most of all for its size. It is home to nearly 100,000 residents living in dozens of communities, spread over an area the size of Manhattan.


In a state known for diversity, The Villages, according to the 2010 census, is more than 96 percent non-Hispanic white. And there are twice as many Republicans as Democrats living there, a fact not lost on those running for national office — like former vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin. In 2008, tens of thousands of residents turned out for her in a huge rally.


Nearly four years later, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney burst into song, holding an impromptu sing-along in The Villages of "America the Beautiful."


The people who live in The Villages say the attention from politicians is nice, but there's something else, they say, that makes the place special.


Bill Gottschalk, president of the homeowners' association, sums it up in two words: "the lifestyle." What drew him to The Villages, he says, was the golf, the recreation and the active town centers. "The entertainment at the town squares was just outstanding."



In the early 1980s, when Morse took over the community from his father, it was a mobile home park known as Orange Blossom Gardens. Over the years, he transformed it into The Villages, upgrading from mobile homes to homes built on the site.


Morse was a prominent Republican fundraiser, giving millions of dollars over the years to candidates like George W. Bush, for whom he was a member of the Electoral College.


You didn't see Morse around The Villages much and he rarely gave interviews. Gottschalk never met him, but he still feels the loss. "I believe that one of the best things that Gary leaves behind is a wonderful community that we call home," he says.


The Villages continues to be a family-run business; Morse's children are now in charge of what the company calls "Florida's friendliest retirement hometown."



West Wing Week: 10/31/14 or, "Giving and Sharing"

This week, the President continued to address the ongoing federal response to Ebola, worked to spur the growth of manufacturing and boost preparedness for natural disasters, and invited some of our youngest scientists and oldest veterans to the White House.


Obamas Head To Connecticut As Tight Governor's Race Nears Close



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





Incumbent Dannel Malloy and Republican rival Tom Foley are neck and neck; the race is so close that both the president and first lady will visit the state in the next few days. NPR's Melissa Block talks to Hartford Courant political reporter Daniela Altimari about the race.



The Campaign That Seems More Crime Drama Than Congressional Race



Congressman Michael Grimm is facing a 20-count federal indictment but despite the charges, Grimm stands a decent chance of being reelected in New York.i i



Congressman Michael Grimm is facing a 20-count federal indictment but despite the charges, Grimm stands a decent chance of being reelected in New York. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption



itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Congressman Michael Grimm is facing a 20-count federal indictment but despite the charges, Grimm stands a decent chance of being reelected in New York.



Congressman Michael Grimm is facing a 20-count federal indictment but despite the charges, Grimm stands a decent chance of being reelected in New York.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


A congressional race that sounds like the plot of a crime movie is playing out in Staten Island, N.Y. Republican Congressman Michael Grimm went undercover as 'Mikey Suits' when he was an FBI agent. Now Grimm is the one facing a 20-count federal indictment. But despite the charges, Grimm stands a decent chance of being reelected next week.


Grimm's troubles began in January, when he threatened to throw a TV reporter off a balcony with the camera rolling. Grimm didn't like getting questions about a federal investigation into his finances. And it wasn't a hollow threat: Grimm is a former Marine who still looks the part. He has since apologized, most recently at a debate on Tuesday night.


"I'm a U.S. Marine and I'm tenacious," Grimm said. "Doesn't mean you should act inappropriately. But I doubt there's anyone in the audience who hasn't said something they regretted. That's why you apologize."


Then there are the federal charges hanging over Grimm's head: 20 of them, including tax evasion and perjury, tied to the Manhattan restaurant he owned before he went to Congress. Grimm denies the charges. But that doesn't stop his opponent from bringing them up at every opportunity.


"The people of this district deserve better," said Domenic Recchia, the Democratic nominee. "After January, if [Grimm] wins, he's gonna have to worry about his trial. He's gonna be worried about defending himself. His number one priority is staying out of jail. My number one priority is the people of this district."


Recchia was able to raise a lot of money from Democrats who sensed a rare chance to win a seat on Republican turf. But the race is not playing out the way they hoped. A poll in September showed Grimm ahead by four points. And interviews with Grimm's constituents suggest that many are still giving him — not federal prosecutors — the benefit of the doubt.


"The man is a decent man," says Staten Islander Joe Magnani, "and he's getting railroaded by a bunch of bums." Grimm's constituents also give him high marks for helping Staten Island residents in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. And it's not just his record that's attractive to some of his constituents. "Michael Grimm could put his shoes under my bed anytime with those beautiful blue eyes," said one woman who identified herself only as 'Jeanie.'


Staten Island is the last Republican bastion in New York City — especially the neighborhoods on the east and south shore, a suburban-style sprawl of single family homes and strip malls. It's literally the only congressional district out of 13 in the city that's held by the GOP.


"If you go around, you see all the yard signs. 80, 90% for Grimm," says resident Dennis Semenza. "I'm not saying he's perfect. But all in all, he's better than this guy who's running against him."


Recchia is a former New York City councilman. He's at a bit of a disadvantage with Staten Islanders because he lives in Brooklyn, in a small chunk of the district that is not on the Island. Recchia has also hurt himself on the campaign trail. When a reporter asked about his foreign policy experience, Recchia talked about running a foreign exchange program at a local school.


The district has its share of Democrats, too — mostly in Brooklyn, and at the north end of Staten Island, near the ferry terminal. But even there, voters don't seem thrilled with Recchia.


"I'm not very impressed with his campaign, or the way he speaks," says Michael Califra. "But he's the guy. He's the nominee. So I'm gonna vote for him." Or as Brian Nelson put it: "In a case like this, you go with the least of the evils."


Whether Grimm wins or not, the next Congress will convene in Washington in the new year. And Grimm will be due back in Brooklyn in February to stand trial.



Mr. October


Madison Bumgarner just wrapped up one of the greatest individual postseasons in baseball history. From his shutout in the do-or-die wild card game against the Pirates on October 1 to his five scoreless innings of relief in last night’s championship clincher versus the Royals, the Giants starting pitcher went 4-1 with a 1.03 earned run average over the course of the month. In the World Series, he pitched 21 innings and gave up only a single run. His career World Series ERA is 0.25, a Major League record.


Last night he was also likened to a horse what had to a be a record number of times, both by the announcers—“he’s a workhorse”—and by his manager Bruce Bochy, who repeatedly deployed equine metaphors—“we rode him,” “he’s a fine horse pitcher,” “the sheen of his mane held steady into the late innings,” etc.*—while discussing his dominance following the Giants’ Game 7 win. It was kind of weird, honestly. This all could have something to do with the fact that Bumgarner owns some 20 horses that he tends to in the offseason, or that he might slightly resemble a horse himself. He at least doesn’t not resemble a horse, relative to your average ballplayer. [*last two quotes not direct]


Anyway, whatever. He’s a damn fine pitcher, and last night he joined truly elite tier of the game’s starters if he wasn’t one of them already, and he won the World Series for the Giants as much as any one player can singlehandedly win something for their team. It's going to be a blissful next few months on the farm.


This degree to which Bumgarner was “the difference” for the Giants in the World Series was far more impressive than his record ERA. Baseball is, essentially, designed to prevent any single player from having an overlarge impact on their team’s success. In football and basketball, the ball can be put in the hands of a star player at the discretion of the offense. A particular running back or shooting guard truly can win for a team, or mean the difference between making the playoffs and finishing last in the league. In baseball, each and every player is given their turn. The most dominant hitter doesn’t get any more at bats than the weakest. However great a starting pitcher may be, he doesn’t even take the field for 80% of his team's games. Because of this, a balanced roster is ultimately more important in baseball than in any other sport; a team’s success is truly the success of an entire team.


But in this 2014 World Series, that didn’t really feel like it was the case. For the first time since Pedro Martinez's Red Sox, who didn't even win it all when he was at the peak of his powers in the late '90s, maybe it wasn't the case.


The Giants won this year because they had Madison Bumgarner and the Royals didn’t. It’s rare to be able to explain a season's outcome in a game as complicated and compartmentalized as baseball with such a simple statement, but that is the case.


But what makes it even more impressive is that Bumgarner was so dominant in a postseason—and in particular in a World Series—that was defined by parity more than anything else, both between teams and within rosters. The Giants and Royals had no business making it to the World Series. The Giants were a wild card team hampered by injuries. The Royals were a wild card team that… well, they were the Royals. That these two teams made it through their respective leagues—and in the case of the Royals, without losing a single game—served as the most definitive proof we’ve yet seen that baseball is totally and completely unpredictable. The fact that "anything can happen" has never seemed so true.


But despite this, at the center of this, was the most predictable phenomenon that the game has seen in recent memory, and that was that Madison Bumgarner was going to dominate. In a series that featured two rosters full of scrappy upstarts and no real star players, it felt like Bumgarner, now a historically great pitcher, existed on a different plane from everyone else. His placid, workmanlike demeanor in the face the rest of both teams' energetic rah-rah spirit made it seem like he was playing a different game entirely.


After last night’s Game 7 began, it seemed like a foregone conclusion that they Royals were going to win. Riding the momentum of a decisive Game 6 victory, the energy in Kansas City felt irrepressible, even through the TV screen. The Giants carved out two runs on two sacrifice flies in the top of the second inning, but the Royals immediately answered with two of their own in the bottom half of the inning. It felt like the stadium, the game of baseball, and the world itself were all conspiring in the Royals' favor, like a magnet was pulling everything in Kaufmann Stadium toward this one ultimate outcome.


But then Bumgarner came in and it was just over. His mere presence on the mound obliterated this seemingly undeniable momentum, swiftly and mercilessly. When he made it out of his first inning, the fifth, after allowing a runner to reach second with one out, that was it. That was the Royals chance, and there had to be a part of everyone watching that suspected that this was the case and that Bumgarner was going to go on to finish the game unblemished and win the series for the Giants. That’s exactly what happened and it wasn’t the least bit surprising, even though he was working on only two days’ rest. It was so predictable that it would have been boring if not for the fact that he was making history.


So what does all this mean for MadBum? Only 25-years-old, he's already pitched four complete seasons, all of them all-star caliber, and has never registered an ERA above 3.37. He's a three-time World Series champion, and in those World Series he's pitched 36 innings and given up only one run. He's won a World Series MVP. Again, he's only 25.


Is this the most impressive resume of any young pitcher in the game? If so, does it mean one could argue that he's the best young pitcher in the game? Clayton Kershaw is a year older, has pitched two more complete seasons, and has already won two—and after this year, three—Cy Young awards. He's been more consistently dominant in the regular season than Bumgarner, but his postseason ERA is 5.12. This year he blew a six-run lead against the Cardinals in Game 1 of the National League Division Series, and gave up three runs over six innings in a Game 4 loss that ended the Dodgers' year. How much should this factor into the Best Pitcher in the Game discussion? Isn't the postseason what really matters? Kershaw's dominance in the regular season has been great, but it's not close to as impressive as only giving up one run in 36 World Series innings pitched.


So what's the truer test of a pitcher's greatness: making the Rockies look like Little Leaguers in June, or completely derailing the collective will of an entire underdog-rooting nation, away from home, in the one single game that decides the entire season? There is no more difficult situation to enter than the one Madison Bumgarner stepped into last night, on two days' rest, and he retired the Royals suddenly fledgling hitters as if by rote. Kershaw may have the regular season accolades, but if you're trying to win a World Series, if you need to "ride" one pitcher, at this point it's hard to imagine choosing anyone over Madison Bumgarner. When you think about it, this should be all that matters. Just ask the Royals.



Thomas Menino, Boston's Longest-Serving Mayor, Dies At 71



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.i i



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday. Lisa Poole/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Lisa Poole/AP

A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.


Lisa Poole/AP


Boston's longest-serving mayor, Thomas Michael Menino, who held the job for more than two decades until stepping aside earlier this year, has died. He was 71.


"At just after 9 a.m. this morning the Honorable Thomas M. Menino passed into eternal rest after a courageous battle with cancer. He was surrounded by his devoted wife Angela, loving family and friends," Menino spokeswoman Dot Joyce said in a statement.


Menino, who was diagnosed with cancer just a month after leaving office, "rode the support of minority communities, labor and others to election in 1993 after serving as acting mayor, ending decades of Irish domination in city politics," according to The Associated Press.


The Boston Globe called him "an old-school politician whose own smarts owed more to the streets than the college classroom."




"'Visionaries don't get things done,' he once said, crisply separating himself from politicians who gaze at distant horizons and imagine what might be. Leaving to others the lofty rhetoric of Boston as the Athens of America, he took a decidedly ground-level view of the city on a hill, earning himself a nickname for his intense focus on the nuts and bolts of everyday life: the urban mechanic."




Member station WBUR in Boston reports:




"He could be hard-nosed in pushing for what he felt was needed, including times during his last term, when he was determined to wield the power of his office, even if from a wheelchair.


"Nowhere was that more obvious than during one of the darkest weeks in Boston's history.


"On April 15, 2013, twin explosions near the finish line of the Boston Marathon claimed the lives of three people, crippled and maimed dozens more, sending scores to Boston-area hospitals, including the Brigham and Women's where Menino himself was a patient.


"Days later, after being wheeled to the podium by his son Tommy Jr., Menino valiantly stood up, joining President Obama, Gov. Deval Patrick and 2,000 other mourners at a memorial service at The Cathedral of the Holy Cross."





Lebanese Army commander visits martyr’s family in Metn


Extension session likely to happen next week


Speaker Nabih Berri will likely call for a session to extend Parliament’s mandate next week, now that Christian...



What You Missed: Cooking with Sam Kass in the White House Kitchen

Yesterday, Executive Director of Let’s Move! and White House Senior Advisor for Nutrition Policy Sam Kass joined DC Public Schools’ student Maurice Morris, and thousands of classrooms via livestream from around the country for a special inside look into the White House kitchen.


read more


Michael Menino, Boston's Longest-Serving Mayor, Dies At 71



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.i i



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday. Lisa Poole/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Lisa Poole/AP

A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.



A 2009 photo of Boston Mayor Tom Menino, who served for 20 years before stepping down this year. He died on Thursday.


Lisa Poole/AP


Boston's longest-serving mayor, Thomas Michael Menino, who held the job for more than two decades until stepping aside earlier this year, has died. He was 71.


"At just after 9 a.m. this morning the Honorable Thomas M. Menino passed into eternal rest after a courageous battle with cancer. He was surrounded by his devoted wife Angela, loving family and friends," Menino spokeswoman Dot Joyce said in a statement.


Menino, who was diagnosed with cancer just a month after leaving office, "rode the support of minority communities, labor and others to election in 1993 after serving as acting mayor, ending decades of Irish domination in city politics," according to The Associated Press.


The Boston Globe called him "an old-school politician whose own smarts owed more to the streets than the college classroom."




"'Visionaries don't get things done,' he once said, crisply separating himself from politicians who gaze at distant horizons and imagine what might be. Leaving to others the lofty rhetoric of Boston as the Athens of America, he took a decidedly ground-level view of the city on a hill, earning himself a nickname for his intense focus on the nuts and bolts of everyday life: the urban mechanic."




Member station WBUR in Boston reports:




"He could be hard-nosed in pushing for what he felt was needed, including times during his last term, when he was determined to wield the power of his office, even if from a wheelchair.


"Nowhere was that more obvious than during one of the darkest weeks in Boston's history.


"On April 15, 2013, twin explosions near the finish line of the Boston Marathon claimed the lives of three people, crippled and maimed dozens more, sending scores to Boston-area hospitals, including the Brigham and Women's where Menino himself was a patient.


"Days later, after being wheeled to the podium by his son Tommy Jr., Menino valiantly stood up, joining President Obama, Gov. Deval Patrick and 2,000 other mourners at a memorial service at The Cathedral of the Holy Cross."





Calling All Makers: Announcing the First-Ever White House 3D-Printed Ornament Challenge

Here at the White House, planning for the 2014 holiday season is already in full swing! The house is buzzing with activity as preparations for the most festive time of the year are underway.


Once again, President Obama and the First Lady will welcome tens of thousands of visitors from around the country to tour the holiday decorations – and those that can’t make it in person will have the chance to explore the décor online. From Christmas trees and garlands to lights and ornaments, the holidays will be filled with wonder, delight, and excitement.


And this year, for the first time ever, we’re inviting makers and innovators around the country to participate in the White House 3D-Printed Ornament Challenge!


The Challenge, in partnership with the Smithsonian, invites makers, artists, designers, engineers, and anyone interested in 3D modeling and 3D printing to design a winter holiday-inspired ornament. Starting today and running until November 5, 2014, people can head over to Instructables to submit their design and for more details about the Challenge.


A selection of the winning ornament designs will be 3D printed and displayed in the White House during the holiday season; featured on the Smithsonian’s state-of-the-art 3D data platform, 3d.si.edu; and will join a small collection of White House ornaments in the political history division of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.


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Advance Estimate of GDP for the Third Quarter of 2014

Economic growth in the third quarter was strong, consistent with a broad range of other indicators showing improvement in the labor market, rising consumer sentiment, increasing domestic energy security, and continued low health cost growth. Since the financial crisis, the U.S. economy has bounced back more strongly than most others around the world, and the recent data highlight that the United States is continuing to lead the global recovery. Nevertheless, more must still be done to boost growth both in the United States and around the world by investing in infrastructure, manufacturing, and innovation; and to ensure that workers are feeling the benefits of that growth, by pushing to raise the minimum wage and supporting equal pay.


FIVE KEY POINTS IN TODAY’S REPORT FROM THE BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS


1. Real gross domestic product (GDP) grew 3.5 percent at an annual rate in the third quarter of 2014, according to the advance estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. The strong growth recorded in each of the last two quarters suggests that the economy has bounced back strongly from the first-quarter decline in GDP, which largely reflected transitory factors like unusually severe winter weather and a sharp slowdown in inventory investment. In the third quarter, net exports made a large positive contribution to growth, while consumer spending and business investment grew at a somewhat slower pace than the previous quarter.



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NDU, USJ cancel elections over political tensions


BEIRUT: Notre Dame University Thursday suspended student council elections after a fistfight erupted the day before between students of rival political parties, while Saint Joseph University announced that their vote has been canceled due to the country’s general climate.


“We have decided to stop the elections until we study situation further and make a final decision,” NDU’s Vice President for Public Affairs Souheir Matar told The Daily Star.


The scuffle broke out between student supporters of the Lebanese Forces and rival Free Patriotic Movement when members of the latter group held up banners that called for a change to the election law, two days before a student council vote was scheduled to take place.


The FPM students also reportedly played speeches of party leader Michel Aoun over a loudspeaker.


LF students, agitated over what they viewed as a provocation, confronted their rivals before a brawl ensued.


Matar said those involved in the fighting represented but a tiny faction of the student body.


“Among the 7,500 students at NDU, 20 to 30 students can easily distort the university’s image,” he said.


“But I would like to stress that we are not at all against political activism,” he said. “We work to teach students about political culture and to have a critical and logical approach to politics.”


Separately Thursday USJ released a statement announcing that its board of directors had decided in a meeting Wednesday to “suspend student council elections for the current academic year.”


“The board considers the political and security situation in the country, which have repercussions inside the campus, to be unsuitable for organizing such elections,” the statement said.


The tense climate will prevent students from “positively practicing the values of democracy and citizenship,” the administration argued.


Campus violence during student elections in Lebanon are common at most universities. Army soldiers are usually dispatched at university entrances during student elections to help maintain security.


LF leader Samir Geagea Thursday denounced the violence at NDU, but also criticized the principle of canceling elections.


“What happened yesterday is not political activism and does not suit our society and people,” Geagea posted on his Twitter account.


"Despite the delicacy of the situation [in the country], we should keep the social and political life inside universities," he added.



ISF cracks down on car jacking in the Bekaa


BEIRUT: The Internal Security Forces detained a notorious thief wanted for theft and kidnapping in the Bekaa Valley, according to a statement from the ISF Thursday.


“There has been a recent increase in car theft and kidnapping by force of arms in the Bekaa province, whereby militants kidnap the drivers, harm them physically, only to steal their money and prized objects before dumping them in desolate areas,” the statement said.


In an attempt to crack down on the perpetrators, the ISF detained a suspect, identified by his initials D.A, in the village of Brital.


The suspect, 29, attempted to flee a checkpoint in Brital before being detained by area police. According to the statement, the suspect was driving a stolen Mercedes.


In the car, policemen found a hand grenade and about half a gram of cocaine.


After interrogation, the perpetrator admitted to participating in 18 car thefts and kidnappings in the Bekaa Valley. The statement also said that 12 warrants had been previously issued against the same suspect for the crimes of looting, theft, the formation of a theft gang, firing an unlicensed weapon and possession of drugs.


The ISF is currently carrying out investigations in an attempt to clamp down on other suspects who also participated in looting in the Bekaa.



Negligence, poverty behind extremism in north Lebanon: Rifi



BEIRUT: The factors responsible for the emergence of fundamentalism in north Lebanon are “frustration, negligence, oppression, poverty and provocation,” Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi said Thursday.


“Then how about a combination of all these elements, as it is the case in Bab al-Tabbaneh, Tripoli’s old souks and the northern Bekaa?,” he said, referring to the northeastern town of Arsal.


He made the remarks before walking into a Cabinet meeting at the Grand Serail in downtown.


Tripoli and other parts of northern Lebanon witnessed deadly clashes over the weekend between Islamist militants and the Army.


Fighting ended Monday after the Army seized the last militant stronghold in Bab al-Tabbaneh, and has since been carrying out massive raids in search of gunmen.


Over 200 suspected militants have been arrested across the north since the fighting broke out late-Friday. At least 42 people were killed in the battle, including 11 soldiers and eight civilians.


It was the worst bout of violence in Lebanon since a five-day battle between the Army and Islamist militants in Arsal left 19 soldiers and dozens of militants dead.


Rifi called on the government to invest in development projects in the north, believing it would help pacify the region.


“It is the right time for the state to come back to these areas in the framework of development, services and welfare,” Rifi said.



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Lebanese University contract professors challenge Cabinet decree



BEIRUT: Contract professors at the Lebanese University Thursday called on the Shura Council to suspend the implementation of a decree that the Cabinet passed in July to resolve their work status.


"We call on the Shura Council to suspend the work on the dossier of employment that includes mistakes as many officials have said,” the professors said in a statement, criticizing the decision that they said failed to grant employment for all teachers working on contract at the university.


“We place our rights in your hands because the council is a trusted institution among the Lebanese and has always issued fair decisions.”


In its statement, the contract professors also asked for the university not to be subject to political pressure and grant contract teachers their right in employment.


In July, Lebanese ministers unanimously voted in favor of a decree to appoint deans to the LU council and hire a little over 1,000 contract professors as full-time lecturers, leaving hundreds others on contract.



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Tunisia's Secularists Victorious In Parliamentary Vote



Supporters of the secular Nidda Tounes (Tunisia Calls) party celebrate their victory in parliamentary elections before the elections were official earlier this week in Tunis.i i



Supporters of the secular Nidda Tounes (Tunisia Calls) party celebrate their victory in parliamentary elections before the elections were official earlier this week in Tunis. Hassene Dridi /AP hide caption



itoggle caption Hassene Dridi /AP

Supporters of the secular Nidda Tounes (Tunisia Calls) party celebrate their victory in parliamentary elections before the elections were official earlier this week in Tunis.



Supporters of the secular Nidda Tounes (Tunisia Calls) party celebrate their victory in parliamentary elections before the elections were official earlier this week in Tunis.


Hassene Dridi /AP


Tunisia's main secularist party has won a decisive victory against Islamists in parliamentary elections, grabbing 85 seats, or just under 40 percent in the 217-seat assembly, according to official results.


The Nidda Tounes (Tunisia Calls) party bested the ruling Islamist Ennahda party, which secured just 69 seats. Ennahda swept to power in the first such elections after the 2011 'Arab Spring' uprising in the North African country.


The New York Times reports:




"Nidaa Tounes is a new party, formed in 2012 and led by the 87-year-old statesman Beji Caid Essebsi, who gathered businessmen, leftists, trade unionists and former members of the Ben Ali government to provide a counterweight to the Islamists.


"The party did not win enough seats in ... the assembly to form a government on its own, and it will be forced to seek coalition partners, a process that could mean lengthy negotiations with smaller parties. One new liberal democratic party, Afek Tounes, won 15 seats and is a likely partner. But several other smaller parties that might have been natural coalition partners fared badly in the elections."




As NPR's Eleanor Beardsley reported in January, despite the rivalry between secularists and Islamists, the two sides had agreed to sit down and hammer out the country's new constitution.


At the time, Eleanor noted simmering discontent with the ruling Islamists: "The inexperienced party was inept at governing. The economy got worse. And people say the trash doesn't even get picked up. And the Islamist-led government was accused of letting radical Salafi Muslims wreak havoc. Many in the secular camp were outraged last year when two secular politicians were gunned down in broad daylight, allegedly by Salafis."



Lebanon's water resources in great danger: environment minister



BEIRUT: The future of Lebanon’s water sources is bleak with the drought season expected to increase and rainfall to decrease due to climate change, Environment Minister Mohammad Machnouk said Thursday.


“Climate change, as everyone knows, has become a major threat to Lebanon's water resources as well as the communities and sectors which are all struggling to cope with the negative consequences,” Machnouk said during the opening of a ministry-sponsored workshop titled: "Water and climate change: understating the meaning and funding projects.”


“Although Lebanon's emissions of carbon dioxide constitute a small portion of the total global emissions, the country is greatly suffering from consequences of climate change on its economy, society, and stability.”


“Such repercussions will only get worse with the increasing water scarcity. It is expected that rainfall will decrease by 45 percent by the year 2090 and that Lebanon will go through an additional 18 days of drought.”


Lebanon is approaching the annual rainy season, badly needed as the country reels under a severe water crisis, the worst in 10 years.


Machnouk said the ministry had adopted several projects to assist the country to adapt to climate change including the implementation of a pilot project to collect rainwater from the roofs of greenhouses and store it to ensure water availability for irrigation during droughts.


Moreover, the ministry is planning on educating farmers on means to preserve rainwater as well as to launch studies about the effect of climate change on water resources.


He also said that the ministry continued to release studies evaluating the environmental impact of water-related projects.



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