March 15, 2012

Where There is No Sex } Fruit Flies Become Alcoholic


In this undated image provided by the University of California San Francisco, a male fruit fly drinks alcohol-laced food from from a tube.
In this undated image provided by the University of California San Francisco, a male fruit fly drinks alcohol-laced food from from a tube.   (AP Photo/University of California, San Francisco, G. Ophir)
(NEWSER) – Entomology as country song: Researchers say male fruit flies denied sex drown their sorrows in alcohol, reports the BBC. Or more precisely, boy flies who get some action turn up their noses at food dosed with alcohol, while boys who get rejected are far more likely to indulge. Researchers think it's because the booze triggers a "reward" chemical in the brain to compensate for the "reward" they would have gotten through sex. Yes, humans have a similar chemical.
How did they find this out? The scientists put some male fruit flies in a box with females who might only be called Rush Limbaugh's favorite descriptor. Things happened. Others went in boxes with females who had already mated and had no interest in doing so again. Then they gave each set of males a choice of normal food or spiked food, and the more-frustrated flies kept the bar open all night. The study appears in Science.

http://www.newser.com/


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Glaad is Targeting 36 Commentators That Appear on the Media Talking Trash About LGTB



Jim Daly. (Andy Cross, Denver Post file photo)

The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation today targeted 36 conservative commentators it considers anti-gay and inappropriate interview subjects for media unless journalists provide additional "perspective on (their) opinions."
The GLAAD Commentator Accountability Project launched today, the website states, "aims to educate the media about the extreme rhetoric of over three dozen activists who are often given a platform to speak in opposition to LGBT people and the issues that affect their lives.”

Among those GLAAD lists as activists are several affiliated with Colorado Springs-based Focus on the Family, including President and CEO Jim Daly, education analyst Candi Cushman and Family Research Council President Tony Perkins.

The GLAAD site said it encourages individuals to alert the alliance "when the anti-LGBT activists appear on local or national news."
"Hate is not an expert opinion," said GLAAD spokesman Herndon Graddick.
The GLAAD site further states: "We will show that the commentators who are most often asked to opine on issues like marriage equality or non-discrimination protections do not accurately represent the 'other side' of those issues. They represent nothing but extreme animus towards the entire LGBT community."
Focus on the Family spokesman Gary Schneeberger called GLAAD's Commentator Accountability Project an attempt "to stifle freedom of speech and freedom of religion by trying to intimidate the media.”


"What Focus on the Family's analysts and experts bring to the national discussion in their media appearances are reasoned, passionate and compassionate insights that help families make sense of, and make their mark in, the world around them," Schneeberger said in an e-mail to the Post. "Our views on issues like same-sex marriage and the sanctity of human life are mainstream Christian positions — and in most cases, majority Christian positions."
Other names on GLAAD's watch list are: Gary Bauer, David Barton, Brian Brown, Matt Barber, Michael Brown, Alan Chambers, Brian Camenker, Chuck Colson, Bill Donohue, Bob Emrich, Lou Engle, Joseph Farah, Bryan Fischer, Maggie Gallagher, Jim Garlow, Robert George, Ken Hutcherson, Harry Jackson, Peter LaBarbera, Scott Lively, Albert Mohler, Kevin McCullough, Jennifer Roback Morse, Penny Nance, Christopher Plante, Glenn Stanton, Mat Staver, Peter Sprigg, Rick Scarborough, Frank Turek, Bob Vander Plaats, Don Wildmon and Tim Wildmon.

Electa Draper: 303-954-1276 oredraper@denverpost.com 



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Donald Trump JR Says He is No Poacher

  

  BY      This is a follow up on the story we ran yesterday about Trump
and his catch

 


Donald Trump’s kids are having a rough week. The Donald Junior and Eric have spent the past few days defending themselves after photos surfaced of a lavish hunting trip to Zimbabwe last year. In response to the posed pictures of fresh joy-kills — an elephant, crocodile, kudu, civet cat and water buck, to name a few — PETA blasted the “grisly photo opportunity” for the “two young millionaires.”
Trump Jr. hasn’t apologized, insisting on Twitter that he did nothing wrong: “I don’t apologize to cater to public opinion when I did nothing wrong. To do so would be to sell myself out.”
Honesty. Rare honesty. And in a bit of terrific timing for Ben Harvey and Dave Rubin, the hosts of The Six Pack aired a brief conversation with Trump Jr. just days before the controversy ensued. Trump Jr. makes for a fascinating interview, touching on everything from the clown show that is the Republican nomination, Rick Santorum being progressive … for 1742, and, fitting for the top LGBT-themed podcast out there, how his stance on marriage equality differs from his father’s.
Harvey, a man who apparently can predict the near future, brought up Trump Jr.’s affinity for hunting. “I’m kind of a closet redneck,” Trump Jr. said. “I shoot competitively, I’m an avid fly fisherman, big time hunter, bow hunter, rifle hunter, so I do all of that. That surprises a lot of people. I sort of end up in some redneck circles every once in a while. And I mean that in the positive sense of the word … I try to do what I can to decompress and get out of the New York City life in what little free time I have and try to expose my kids to that. Because I think the city’s great but I think it can also get you in a lot of trouble growing up. So the outdoors has always been very good for me that way.”

Click here to listen to the Trump Jr. interview on The Six Pack

More gems from the chat:
• On the idea of gay marriage: “I’m totally for it. One of my best friends growing up was gay.. it’s never been an issue for me … I think there was a time in my life, probably in college, that I wished every guy was gay because it meant more woman for me!”
• On abortion: “Honestly for me, abortion, I don’t get it. I don’t even understand how it’s a political issue. I don’t understand how there is one issue for voters for that. I don’t understand how you can tell someone what they can or can’t do. And I’m sort of the same way with [gay marriage]. I just can’t buy into the abortion argument. I wish the Republicans would drop it as part of their platform.”
• On The Donald’s politics: “In terms of my fathers political views.. in the grand scheme of things there’s other things he’d be concerned about first, given the state of the world and our economy … I think part of it, and perhaps the shame of being a conservative, is you almost have to have those kind of stances to win any kind of primary. And then you have to sell out and become a moderate in the middle just like you have to do if you’re on the liberal side of the political spectrum.”
• On Rick Santorum: “The guy’s a freakin’ joke.”





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Who Took and sold Pic of Whitney Houston at the funeral



 
Queen of the Night (song)
Image via Wikipedia
















In her interview with Oprah Winfreyon Sunday night, WhitneyHouston‘s sister in law Pat said she didn’t care who took the picture of her best friend lying in an open coffin and sold it to the National Enquirer. But the photo has upset a lot of people. Who took it? Who sold it to the Enquirer? Forget that the Enquirer did something grievously of no taste. We know what they are. But who could have done this?
Sources at the Whigham Funeral Home in New Jersey say they know, and they have an employee who saw the person take the picture. The person they’re pointing the finger at is Raffles van Exel, the hanger on I told you about in this column a couple of weeks ago. Van Exel, who has aliases of Raffles Benson and Raffles Dawson, was at the two private viewings of Whitney’s casket held at the Whigham Funeral Home. The first viewing was on the Friday night before the memorial service. The second one was on Sunday morning before the burial.
The people at Whigham noticed van Exel right away. Even though he’s not a member of the Houston family, he traveled with them on the private plane from Los Angeles to New Jersey. He was the only non family member who accompanied Whitney’s sister in law/manager and newly appointed executor Pat Houston in her car to Whitney’s memorial and funeral and to the viewings. According to one source, he even had his own bodyguard with him, which was more than a little unusual. A source from Whigham’s says when the picture appeared on the cover of the Enquirer, they told the Houstons of their suspicions. “They didn’t do anything ab0ut it,” says a source. “They’re protecting him. How come they haven’t gotten him out of their circle?”
The Whighams people are not happy about the Raffles connection. While conducting another funeral in another part of town, of the funeral directors says she was spat upon by a stranger. The funeral home is concerned that fans think they allowed the National Enquirer picture to be taken. They did not. “The Houston family invited everyone into that room. We had no role in that. We were told their security would handle everything. They didn’t give us responsibility for that.” About 35 people came to the first viewing. The Wighams didn’t know everyone. But they know none of their people were involved. Only one of their employees says they witnessed Raffles van Exel take the picture of Whitney in her coffin.
The burial, by the way, did not include $500,000 worth of jewelry. “It was costume jewelry,” says the funeral director. “Please…”
Calls and emails to van Exel have gone unreturned. His voice mail box is full. He answered one of my emails, asking what I wanted, and then didn’t respond again. A second email was replied to, with a blank message. But it’s not the first time van Exel has gone underground.
The famous R&B singer George Benson (“Give Me the Night,” “Turn Your Love Around”) has his own story about Raffles. Around 2005, he says, his lawyer had to send van Exel a cease and desist letter warning him not use the name Benson or describe himself as Benson’s son. George Benson has four living sons, and three deceased. Benson says that around 2004-2005 van Exel had ingratiated himself into Benson’s mansion in Engelwood, New Jersey.
“He was there for a year on or off,” Benson told me. One day, Benson says, van Exel called him and told him to come home; he thought there’d been a robbery. When Benson returned to the house, he discovered $25,000 in cash was missing. He’d taken out of the bank to pay for home repairs. By the time he made the discovery, van Exel had vanished. “We never saw him or heard from him again,” Benson recalls. Without tangible proof, he couldn’t press charges with the local police. van Exel, as I reported in my original story, has sometimes been sued under the name Raffles Benson. forbes.com

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David Beckham Big Revelation } His American Accent


David Beckham reveals American accent

 English soccer star David Beckham has been living in the US since he signed for LA Galaxy back in 2007 and he has revealed how he is developing Americanisms. David claims that he finds himself using American terms and sayings, especially around his children.

 

Beckham explained, "I catch myself calling my kids 'dude' every once in a while, so there are a few words creeping in. And using American words like elevator instead of lift." David then went on to reveal how his children are all starting to develop their own unique taste in style and fashion.
David Beckham
He added, "They're at the age when they want to wear their own things. You've got the oldest, Brooklyn, and he'll wear his soccer shirts and a T-shirt. Romeo is the fashion one, so he'll go in and pick up skinny jeans and a vintage T-shirt and a funny hat.”
Beckham continued, "Cruz loves Justin Bieber, so anything he's got Cruz wants, like the big high-tops with skinny jeans. They all have their own style." How sweet to see the Beckham children growing up as individuals.
Which one of the Beckham children do you think has the best style?
It is the end of nude David Beckham




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Does This Trio Mixes? A Pope, Cuba and NBC

Classic car in Havana, Cuba, July 9, 2006. [© AP Images]

 

  • Classic car in Havana, Cuba, July 9, 2006. [© AP Images]Classic car in Havana, Cuba, July 9, 2006. [© AP Images]
Isbel Diaz Torres
When they said their goodbyes, the NBC journalists and technicians gave me a lot of things that they didn’t need to take back, including this little mug.
HAVANA TIMES March 12 — When the previous Pope visited Cuba, I was able to earn $750 dollars. That was in 1998, so you can imagine what that money meant for a young Cuban biology student who was living in a Havana dorm.
Along with two other friends, I worked as a translator and an assistant for NBC, though back then I was unaware of its being a giant telecommunications company owned by the General Electric Corporation.
Though I was a member of the Young Communist League, I didn’t stop for one moment to find out what was supposed to be my relationship with the Pope (a figure about whom I’d never thought twice) or a capitalist corporation the size of NBC.
This little circle of my college friends was pretty “apathetic” when it came to such political issues, instead we spent the subsequent weeks in fierce debates about what we were going to do with all that money, which I ended up using to buy my first computer.
Notwithstanding, it was certainly an unforgettable experience. I learned first-hand about the technical quality of the Americans’ equipment and their lack of professional ethics – to cite just two examples.
One day a small group of us went up on top of the roof of the Santa Isabel Hotel in Old Havana to film a live procession. The journalist who was supposed to make the report, when seeing the statue of Christ of Havana across the bay and some people walking towards that place, asked me about the statue.
I told him the few things I knew about sculpture and he immediately turned to the camera and said something like “for the first time in nearly forty years, Cubans are being allowed access the Christ of Havana…”
I was flabbergasted to see how this veteran reporter, his name was Ike, could twist reality like that.
The other case was a young female journalist who seemed concerned mainly about her glamorous hair. Her parents were Cuban immigrants in Florida, so in her hotel room she hung a large sign that read “We will not stop until the Cuban people are free.”
That was something that struck me as kind of funny since she didn’t seem like putting up much of a fight with all that hairspray on. The point was that since she spoke Spanish, she didn’t require my services; she translated her interviewees herself.
When one of her interviewees was talking about poor housing conditions, he said “we settled for a shelter.” However she mistook the word “shelter” (Spanish: albergue) for hamburger, and from there gave a whole report on hunger and homelessness.
As for me, a simple worker, I had no right to an opinion, so I retained that enlightening experience for my own personal consumption. Today, though, I can attest to the bad practices that journalists practice daily both inside and outside of Cuba.
They concerned themselves little with the Pope himself. We went to the Plaza and shot what we could of the Mass, but the closest we got was the moment when he came to the Havana Cathedral. All of the NBC journalists were in a corner shouting excitedly over the sight of the Holy Father.
It was truly absurd to discover myself surrounded by all these people shouting “Oh my God…it’s the Pope, it’s the Pope!” when all I could see was the “popemobile.”
I was able to confirm that mass hysteria is contagious and that it’s recommendable to remain vigilant, lest we be dragged too far away from our own true selves.




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US Dept. Scrapped a Plan For Fingerprints FBI Searches


This is a follow up on Foreign Students Being Sexually Abused in The US– This story appeared at adamfoxie* yesterday (Just click on the link above to review the story). .

Despite dozens of allegations of neglect and sexual abuse over the years, the U.S. State Department has scrapped a plan to require FBI-based fingerprint searches for people hosting foreign high school exchange students, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.
  • In 2011, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton ordered a review of the J-1 Summer Work Travel program, which included criminal groups arranging for students to work in strip clubs.
    By Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP
    In 2011, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton ordered a review of the J-1 Summer Work Travel program, which included criminal groups arranging for students to work in strip clubs.

By Manuel Balce Ceneta, AP

In 2011, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton ordered a review of the J-1 Summer Work Travel program, which included criminal groups arranging for students to work in strip clubs.

The federal agency in recent years considered but dropped a plan to require FBI background checks similar to what's used by the Boy Scouts and Girl Scoutsbecause it wasn't "feasible," according to the State Department documents.
By not doing so, the State Department has sent the wrong message, especially at a time when cases of mistreatment and sexual abuse continue to surface, advocates said.
The Exchange Visitor Program brings close to 30,000 high school students to the United States each year. Foreign students live with a host family for a year and attend U.S. schools. It's supposed to be a learning experience for the students, but over the years, dozens of students have been abused, according to State Department records, advocates and court documents.
The agency received 43 allegations of sexual abuse since the beginning of the 2010-2011 school year, State Department spokesman Mark Toner said Tuesday.
"From the State Department's point of view and theSecretary of State's point of view, even one child abused under these programs is one child too many. That is why we've undertaken a number of reforms to strengthen the program," Toner said in an email.
In recent years, the agency has adopted several rules designed to safeguard students in the high school program, including requiring all sponsors to photograph the exterior of the house, the kitchen and student's bedroom. Host families also must provide outside character references — previously, family members and sponsors could be such references.
Yet the State Department failed to adopt other critical rules at the time, including a plan for a pilot program with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children that would have used FBI fingerprint checks that are performed by youth organizations that include the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts. It would have ensured a more in-depth, nationwide criminal background check.
Danielle Grijalalva, executive director of the Committee for Safety of Foreign Exchange Students, said she has found dozens of cases of sexual abuse over the years and forwarded the complaints to the State Department. Yet the agency has done little to investigate them, she said.
"The State Department is watching exchange agencies like the Catholic Church watched its (pedophile) priests," she said.
Advocates place blame on the way the agency relies on designated sponsors — companies that facilitate the program by arranging places for the students to live — to perform background checks on host families.
Last year, the State Department took steps to sever its relationship with one sponsor after the company placed a student "with a host family whose criminal background check revealed a murder conviction," according to agency memos. One document from last year said a review by the State Department found that 15 of its 39 "largest fee-charging" sponsors were in "regulatory noncompliance," though it didn't say what rules were violated.
The agency asked the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of State for an independent review of its Youth Programs Division, and the OIG determined in September 2011 "that the Bureau had fully and satisfactorily responded to the recommendations and closed out the review," Toner said.
"The Department has made significant reforms and continues to pursue new ways in which we can safeguard international student exchange participants," he said.
Critics say more must be done.
Andrea Leavitt is a California attorney who represented four exchange students who said they were sexually abused in Arkansas. Doyle Meyer Jr. served four years of a six-year prison sentence in that case.
"There is a huge, glaring, gaping hole in the regulations in what must be done when there's an allegation of child abuse," Leavitt said.
That's because allegations of abuse aren't usually reported immediately to law enforcement or child protective services, she said.
"Most often we see the inclination by the foreign exchange sponsoring agency, camps, schools and churches is to bury it and discredit the kid," she said. "The cover-ups often result in more victims and escalation in the nature and severity of the abuse by the perpetrator."
Leavitt would like to see a federal law that requires officials, employees and agents of entities that are licensed by the government or receive financial benefits from the government to report an allegation to law enforcement before running it up the company's chain of command.
There should be a mandatory jail sentence and no plea bargains when people don't first report the matter to law enforcement by email or fax within 24 hours of hearing an allegation, she said.
"There's too much witness tampering, too much wagon circling by the entities to protect them from liability and penalties over the protection and best interests of the victims," she said.
The State Department's exchange programs have had problems in the past.
An earlier AP investigation found serious abuses in a program that allows foreign college students to live and work in the United States for up to four months. The problems in that cultural exchange, the J-1 Summer Work Travel program, included organized criminal groups arranging for participants to work in strip clubs. Others received little money for working long hours at menial jobs or were crammed into overcrowded apartments and charged exorbitant rent.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton ordered a full review of that program last year and changes are being made.
Another measure would have prohibited single adults without a school-aged child living in the home from hosting exchange students.
Currently, sponsors are supposed to make sure host families undergo a background check — a rule that took effect in 2005. That doesn't always happen. Some of the state and local background checks don't tap into the national crime database and sometimes someone with a criminal background can escape detection, according to State Department records.
Exchange students also have ended up living with convicted criminals because program coordinators lie about housing arrangements. In one such case, Edna Burgette of Scranton, Pa., was sentenced to three months in jail on state charges in Pennsylvania and probation on federal charges in 2010 after working as an international coordinator for a program sponsor.
Federal court records said she lied about housing arrangements for five students and was paid a $400 fee and a $20-a-month stipend for each one. One of those students was sent to live in a house with a convicted drug felon and at least two others were sent to live with people who had no means to support them because they were on public assistance themselves, according to records in U.S. District Court in Scranton.
In Columbia, South Carolina, the AP found a case in which three exchange students — all teenage girls — were placed by the sponsor in roach-infested mobile homes.
Two of the girls were placed in the same South Carolina home with little food and with a single mother who forced them to babysit, according to Gina Barton, who later allowed one of the girls to move in with her. Barton said they were denied bathing facilities at times and were permitted only rare phone calls to family in Poland, and then were instructed to say nothing about the living conditions.
One of the students took pictures of the house and sent them to her parents in Poland, who complained to the company that arranged the trip. It took weeks before that girl was removed by the sponsor and placed in another home, but the company left the other girl behind. Barton heard about the second girl's case and arranged for the student to move in with her.
No charges were ever filed in the case.
Barton said the student told her about a third girl who came over with her and was living in a mobile home where the host family was openly using drugs and threatening her. She was removed from "dangerous living conditions" — but only after she repeatedly complained to the company and the State Department, Barton said.
"We were shocked," she said.
The company that sponsored the trip has gone out of business, but has since resurfaced under another name, Barton said.
The State Department needs to conduct extensive background checks of not only host families, but of sponsors, she said.
"If they don't, they are constantly going to place the kids in harm's way," she said. usatoday.com




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