Κυριακή 31 Μαρτίου 2013

GOP SENATOR: It's 'Inevitable' That A Republican Presidential Candidate Will Support Gay Marriage

Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) said Sunday that he thought it was "inevitable" a future Republican presidential candidate would offer support for same-sex marriage. 

"I think that’s inevitable. There will be one and he will receive bipartisan support — or she will. So I think that the answer is yes," Flake said on NBC's "Meet the Press."

When host Chuck Todd asked Flake about his own views on gay marriage, Flake said those hadn't changed. Republican Sen. Rob Portman made news earlier in March by becoming the first sitting Republican Senator to offer support for gay marriage

"I can't," Flake said, when asked if he could ever imagine shifting his views. "I tell you, in the past I’ve supported repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. I’ve supported the [Employment] Nondiscrimination Act. But I hold to the traditional definition of marriage."

Watch the clip below, via NBC:

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Violin Science: Stradivari, Guarneri Aimed To Mimic Human Voice, Soprano Study Suggests

By: Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer
Published: 03/29/2013 11:12 AM EDT on LiveScience

Virtuosos who describe the singing voice of a violin may be on to something. The great violin makers, such as Stradivari and Guarneri, may have designed violins to mimic the human voice, new research suggests.

The research, described in the current issue of Savart Journal, found the violin produced several vowel sounds, including the Italian "i" and "e" sounds and several vowel sounds from French and English.

Study author Joseph Nagyvary, an emeritus biochemistry professor at Texas A&M University, previously proved that the violin masters Stradivari and Guarneri del Gesù had soaked their wood in brine and borax to fight a worm infestation that swept through Italy in the 1700s. Those chemicals treatments led to the unique sounds that violin makers have struggled to reproduce.

But he had also long argued that the great violin masters were making violins with more humanlike voices than any others of the time. [25 Amazing Facts from Science]

"It has been widely held that violins 'sing' with a female soprano voice," Nagyvary said in a statement.

To test that claim, Nagyvary recorded Metropolitan opera singer Emily Pulley singing a series of vowel sounds. He then compared those sounds with a 1987 recording of virtuoso Itzhak Perlman playing a scale on a 1743 Guarneri violin.

"I analyzed her sound samples by computer for harmonic content and then using state-of-the art phonetic analysis to obtain a 2-D map of the female soprano vowels. Each note of a musical scale on the violin underwent the same analysis, and the results were plotted and mapped against the soprano vowels," Nagyvary said in a statement.

The two "voices" could be mapped on the same scale, with the violin creating several English and French vowel sounds, as well as two Italian vowel sounds.

The findings suggest that makers of Guarneri and Stradivarius violins of the 1700s were striving to imitate the human voice in their instruments. Guarneri violins now routinely sell for between $10 million and $20 million.

The new analysis could also provide a more objective way to rate violin quality.

"For 400 years, violin prices have been based almost exclusively on the reputation of the maker — the label inside of the violin determined the price tag," Nagyvary said in a statement. "The sound quality rarely entered into price consideration, because it was deemed inaccessible. These findings could change how violins may be valued."

Follow Tia Ghose on Twitter @tiaghose. Follow LiveScience @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.


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Republican Party Faces Growing Division In Once-Solid South

Given what the Republican Party is and where America’s demographics are heading, it is unclear whether the Grand Old Party can successfully pivot to the center without jeopardizing its socially conservative evangelical base.


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HBO Talks 'Game Of Thrones' Piracy

How does HBO feel about having the most pirated show on TV?


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What It's Like To Share A Stranger's Home

Extra BeddingALL WE KNOW of Maya S. is the back of her head. Her thumbnail indicates she is blonde with a bun and a floral-print shirt. There are no photographs of her face in the apartment even though it’s otherwise lived-in, cozy. Just as her Airbnb ad described it. When I borrow a pair of mittens that hang from her coatrack, I hope to whomever that she doesn’t accidentally catch me wearing them around the neighborhood, masquerading as Maya S. on the cobbled streets of Copenhagen.

We touch other things around the apartment too, not just the mittens: a DVD set of My So-Called Life, knit blankets she hadn’t left out for our use, shampoos and conditioners in languages we can’t read. We flip through her coffeetable books and watch her copy of Party Monster during an unanticipated snowstorm. I marvel over the magnetic strip on her kitchen wall that holds all of her gravity-defying knives, and once I use her shoddy internet connection to email her: “How much for the mirrored Michael Jackson Bad magnet?” She writes back, “I’m glad you like it, but I love it too much to sell. Sorry!” I love it too, and am also sorry.

Maya S. has a shower I would never think to call a shower. Here, there are no glass doors or mounted showerheads. Instead, it goes like this: Enter the tile-floored bathroom. Unfold the shower curtain — which hangs from a circular rod on the ceiling — until both the door and the toilet are hidden from view. Stand in front of the sink, where you stood earlier to wash your hands and where you’ll stand later to apply your makeup. Find the handheld showerhead, which dangles limply from the wall. Apply water as needed. Our first few days, we consult with one another on how to best avoid drowning Maya’s foreign elixirs and spare toilet paper rolls but soon it becomes intuitive, like how else would one shower?

We share Maya’s life, even though we’ve never met her.

Many things go this way — lighting the stove, restarting the wireless router, making the coffee. There is no abundance of empty outlets; when we need one we have to be very particular about what deserves to be unplugged and what doesn’t. But by Day 3, we know where the wireless signal is strongest (the intersection where hallway meets living room, on the right-hand side) and which room is most suitable for blow-drying our hair (the bedroom).

Coming home after a long day of walking and shopping and drinking becomes a routine we quickly adapt to. This key opens that gate, and this one opens the door facing the courtyard, and this last one lets us into our third-story apartment. Her third-story apartment, we know, but for now it’s ours. We have rituals: Take off the shoes, turn on the lights, adjust the heat. Then we put away our bounty — dishware shoved in suitcases, goat cheese thrown in the refrigerator, bottle of wine in hand. One of us opens the wine and readies the DVD player while the other cooks, then we gather on the couch and screen the night’s selection from Maya’s collection of DVDs. Each of us has our own blanket to warm our feet.

The two of us are used to living together, just not here. In college we shared bedrooms and once we got places of our own, we shared our couches with one another — hers in Chicago, mine in Brooklyn. In Copenhagen, we share morning coffee and long walks along Nyhavn and beers in dark taverns where everyone smokes indoors. We share meals of cheese and bread, falafel from the restaurant down the street, and train rides we don’t know how to pay for. We share the not-shower and the floating knives and the coffeetable books. We share Maya’s life, even though we’ve never met her.

We do try to meet her, though. Maya tells us she is staying in Copenhagen, in someone else’s home, while we have our visit. By Day 5, we have stared at her bookshelves and closets and lotions long enough to decide that we like her and want to experience her Denmark. We ask her out to a drink and she politely declines, referring us to a bar she likes in the neighborhood instead. We drink in every bar on our street before we fly back to our respective lives.

A year later, I will search deep in my inbox for information on Maya’s apartment that was ours for 10 days and find that it is no longer listed. Perhaps she’s moved or grown tired of sharing her life with people like us.

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Apple's "iPad Mini" Trademark Application Rejected by Patent Office


may have to settle for just trademarking ipadIn January, the U.S. Patent
Office
rejected
Apple’s attempt to trademark “iPad Mini,”* releasing
the official letter today. The office called the term "iPad mini"
“merely descriptive” because “the prefix ‘I’ denotes ‘internet’”
and “[t]he term ‘pad’ refers to a ‘pad computer’ or ‘internet pad
device,’ terms used synonymously to refer to tablet computers, of
‘a complete computer contained in a touch screen.’” Apple has
trademarked dozens of
names
, from “AirDrop” to “Xserve.” AppAdvice.com
notes
Apple still has issues to resolve with the trademark of
“iPad” in China and “iPhone” in Mexico and Brazil, where a local
firm is selling something it calls the
IPHONE
.


You can read the full patent office’s rejection letter
here
.


More Reason on intellectual
property


*iPad, by the way, is trademarked

Mark Kelly: Background Checks Are Crucial, But NRA 'Right' On Mental Health Records

Legislation that doesn't address universal gun background checks would be a "mistake," Mark Kelly said Sunday on Fox News, adding that efforts should also be made to keep guns from the mentally ill.

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley (R) is crafting a bill that wouldn't include such background checks, but Kelly, the husband of former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), expressed skepticism.

"I think any bill that does not include a universal background check is a mistake," he said. "It's the most common sense thing we can do to prevent criminals and the mentally ill from having access to weapons."


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Meet Mitch McGary, The Unicycle-Riding Freshman Who's Taking The NCAA Tournament By Storm

mitch mcgary michigan

Mitch McGary has been one of the breakout stars of the NCAA Tournament. The 20-year-old freshman has averaged 17.5 points and 11.5 rebounds during Michigan's Final Four run.

Towards the end of Michigan's blowout over Florida, the game got so out of hand that the CBS announcers brought up this fun fact: Mitch McGary can ride a unicycle.

We did some digging, and it turns out that he's something of a renaissance man.

He can, indeed, ride a unicycle. He told M Magazine (an on-campus publication) earlier this year that he has been riding one for about eight years. A few months ago, he posted this photo (presumably from the high school) of him riding one:

mitch mcgary unicycle

In that Q&A with M Magazine he also revealed that he wants to be a financial advisor if a career in pro sports doesn't work out.

Perhaps the oddest revelation from that Q&A: He once worked at a fireworks store.

McGary is equally as interesting on the court. His emergence has been the single biggest reason why Michigan has been so good in March. He gives their guard-centric offense a different dimension.

He suffers from ADHD, and his transition to college hoops was slowed by that disorder, the Detroit News report. But he seems to have it all figured out, and he's peaking at the right time.

In the run-up to the Final Four next weekend, we'll be hearing a lot about this guy.

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J.D. Tuccille Discusses Culture War on HuffPost Live


WarriorsRemember the 1990s, when Pat
Buchanan went mano a mano with Barney Frank in a duel to
the death over the drection of American society? No, neither do I.
Yet the supposed "culture war" between liberals and conservatives
keeps resurfacing as a concept, if only as a convenient way to
frame evolving views on social issues in a partisan red/blue way
sufficiently simplified so that even political journalists and
government officials can understand. I
appeared on HuffPost Live
as part of a panel discussing just
where the so-called culture war has taken us. Mostly, in a
direction of greater tolerance and personal liberty, I would say,
on social issues from gay marriage to guns. On economics ... well
... that's up in the air.


On the panel, hosted by Ricky Camilleri, I was joined by Mark
Glaze, Director, Mayors Against Illegal Guns, Matt Lewis of The
Daily Caller
and The Week, and Vickie Henry, Senior
Attorney at the Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders.


Barack Obama Is Looking Relaxed At The NCAA Tournament

President Barack Obama was in attendance at Saturday's regional final of the NCAA tournament in Washington D.C. between Syracuse and Marquette.

He looked relaxed wearing his Under Armour jacket and with his leg up on the wall. He was seated with NCAA president Mark Emmert (far left) and the president's personal aide, Reggie Love (left). The CBS commentators identified the man on the right as  the president's brother-in-law, Craig Robinson, head coach of the Oregon State men's basketball team. But it is not clear if that is him ...

President Barack Obama

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