Friday, May 31, 2013

Report Critical of Stockton's City Manager, Finance Department - KTXL

Judge Allows Stockton to File for Bankruptcy

File photo

STOCKTON-

A grand jury report says it was a lack of reliable information and lack of project oversight that led to Stockton having to file for bankruptcy. They make many recommendations to the city, including forming new audit and budget systems, and provide finance training for current department staff and council members.

According to the report released Thursday, the San Joaquin County Grand Jury found ?evidence of inadequate information presented to the City Council by a former city manager; lack of project oversight; unilateral control and manipulation of projects by a former city manager without City Council knowledge or approval; poor accounting of the various transactions involving the Events Center; lack of reliable information between city staff and the City Council; and, a financial system that is inadequate for the accounting needed.?

The group looked at Stockton?s current financial situation, and also what information the city council knew, or didn?t know, the effectiveness of the City Auditor, the finance department and prevalence of financial training for council members and the mayor.

Read the whole report here.

The grand jury report criticizes Stockton?s Finance Department, stating the department?s software and computer hardware was more than 20 years old. ?The inability to manage and extract information makes it difficult to prepare timely financial reports in a format that is easily understood by elected officials and the public.?

They recommend the department prepare a training program for all finance department staff to improve their knowledge and account skills.

The report also chastised the lack of communication between the city manager and city department heads, and the general council about the financial health of Stockton; specifically alerting the council about which departments of the city were or were not adhering to their budget limits.

In addition, the current grand jury report reconfirms an earlier report in 2006 that the then-city manager failed to provide information about the true cost of the Events Center to council members. This incident, and the increasing costs of building the Events Center, led to a growing mistrust between the city manager position and council members, according to the grand jury.

In conclusion, the grand jury report made it clear the responsibility is on the mayor and city council to know what is going on in their city. ?A Mayor and City Council that prefers to not ask questions or demand complete and accurate information from its management, or to remain uneducated about the intricacies of the city?s financial structure and operations can be more easily swayed by staff recommendations that are not in the public?s best interest.?

Read the whole report here.

Source: http://fox40.com/2013/05/30/report-critical-of-stocktons-city-manager-finance-department/

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Veteran justice's retirement is end of an era for state Supreme Court (Star Tribune)

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Md. governor criticizes policies of national GOP

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley on Thursday blamed the nation's economic troubles on "trickle-down politics" advocated for decades by Republicans and on the "disastrous presidency" of George W. Bush.

"Trickle-down economics has been an abject failure for 99 percent of Americans," O'Malley, a potential Democratic presidential contender in 2016, said in an address on economic policies that benefit the middle-class. "If we want to deliver better results, if we want to strengthen our middle class and if we want to expand middle-class opportunity once again, then we have to be willing to make better choices."

He argued that President Barack Obama has been forced to clean up from the "disastrous presidency of George Bush the younger," where he said "spending jumped off the tracks with no revenues to support it."

"Kerosene was put on the fires of tax cuts that disproportionately benefit the very, very wealthiest of our society," O'Malley told a crowd at the Center for American Progress Action Fund in Washington. But he also said Democrats deserved some blame for being complicit with some Republican policies and for "going along with some of the falsehoods" suggesting that tax cuts can lead to job creation.

The governor participated later in the day in a panel discussion at the headquarters of the AFL-CIO. The speaking engagement, coupled with a trip to Israel last month and recent appearances in states that hold early presidential primaries or caucuses, come as the governor publicly mulls entering the race to succeed Obama and is working to introduce his policies and record to audiences outside of Maryland.

State Republican Party chairwoman Diana Waterman issued a statement after the speech challenging O'Malley's depiction of Maryland as a good place for business.

"The huge divide between the political class in Annapolis and community leaders have left us with outrageously high taxes, a hostile regulatory environment, and thousands of people who are closing shop or leaving the state for greener pastures. This 'progress' he likes to boast about will be a tough sell to voters in Iowa and tax-wary New Hampshire," she said.

The governor and former Baltimore mayor spent most of the Thursday morning address touting what he says was the state's success in lifting up the middle class and encouraging education, research and development and civil rights. He touted the state's record on civil rights, specifically noting the passage of same-sex marriage legislation and a state version of the Dream Act, which permits immigrants living in the country illegally to pay in-state tuition at public colleges and universities.

"On the other hand, things like inequality, things like discrimination, exclusivity, intolerance, disparity, division ? these are the things that weaken the potential of our innovative economy," he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/md-governor-criticizes-policies-national-200937979.html

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Re-creating the original colors of treasured ivory carvings from the ancient past

May 29, 2013 ? The fabled ivory carvings from the ancient Phoenician city of Arslan Tash -- literally meaning "Stone Lion" -- may appear a dull monochrome in museums today, but they glittered with brilliant blue, red, gold and other colors 2,800 years ago, a new study has confirmed after decades of speculation. It appears in the ACS journal Analytical Chemistry.

Ina Reiche and colleagues explain that these carvings are rare, housed in museums like the Louvre, and art experts regard them as the most beautiful ivory carvings of the era. Experts long believed that the lion heads, amulets and other objects were brightly colored, rather than the bland beiges and whites that remain today. But until recently, there was no adequate way to test the ivories for traces of pigment without damaging these priceless objects.

The scientists describe how a non-destructive testing technology brought to life traces of red, blue and other pigments -- and gold gilding -- allowing re-creation of the long-vanished colors that decorated the original ivories. In addition to contributing to a new understanding of the Phoenician carvings, the technology could be used to glimpse the original paintings on other objects, the authors note. Those include the Elgin Marbles, the classical Greek marble sculptures that originally were part of the Parthenon and other buildings on the Acropolis in Athens.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Ina Reiche, Katharina M?ller, Marie Alb?ric, Oliver Ulrich Heinz Paul Scharf, Andrea W?hning, Aniouar Bjeoumikhov, Martin Radtke, Rolf Simon. Discovering vanished paints and naturally formed gold nanoparticles on 2800 years old Phoenician ivories using SR-FF-microXRF with the Color X-ray Camera. Analytical Chemistry, 2013; : 130513030719004 DOI: 10.1021/ac4006167

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/uJgI8YuT8yc/130529111331.htm

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Casio Slim XJ-A256


The Casio Slim XJ-A256 is the top-of-the-line model in Casio's Slim series of lightweight data projectors. Like the Casio Slim XJ-A246 and the rest of the Slim and Signature lines, it features the company's hybrid LED-laser light source, which features a long-lasting, mercury-free lamp. It has the key connectivity choices for a portable data projector, and in our testing showed good data image quality.

The XJ-A256 is rated at 3,000 lumens, and the projector has WXGA (1,280 by 800) native resolution, as opposed to the WXGA (1,280 by 800) resolution of the XJ-A246. Casio's hybrid light engine is the same we've now seen in a couple of generations of Slim and Green Slim projectors. Instead of producing red, green, and blue using a standard lamp and a color wheel, it generates red with LEDs, blue with lasers, and green by shining blue laser light on a phosphor. Its optical system directs the red, green, and blue light to the DLP chip, and out the front lens.

The projector's LED lamp is designed to last up to 20,000 hours, far longer than typical projector bulbs?and it's mercury free. The projector (including the bulb) is backed by a generous 3-year warranty, though it's likely the bulb will last the life of the projector.

The Slim is appropriately thin, measuring 1.7 by 11.7 by 8.3 inches and weighing 5.0 pounds, and sports a sleek, futuristic look. The projector lacks manual lens sliders or wheels; you can change focus or use the generous 2x zoom either with the remote or from touch-sensitive nubbins on the projector itself. It has automatic keystone correction, though you can also keystone-correct using the remote.

Ports include VGA; one port that doubles as audio-in and audio-out; HDMI; serial; and a USB type A port, from which you can run presentations computer free from a USB thumb drive. You can attach the included wireless LAN adapter to connect with WiFi-enabled Android, iOS, and Windows Mobile smartphones and computers (PC or Mac) running MobiShow software, so you can run a presentation from these devices as well.

Data Testing
I tested the projector from about eight feet away from our test screen, where it projected an image about 60 inches, measured diagonally. The image held up well when exposed to a fair amount of ambient light.

I tested data image quality using the DisplayMate suite with the room darkened. Image quality was a little above average for a data projector. It did well in our text testing; white-on-black type was readable, if a bit blurred, down to the smallest size. In Graphics mode, some colors looked dull; for example, yellows tended to look a bit mustardy. I saw a mild green tinting in some images with white or gray backgrounds. Colors were brighter and more vivid in Standard mode, although the tinting increased somewhat. Switching from a VGA to an HDMI connection had little effect on image quality, which is good enough for any typical business presentation.

Video

Video was of a quality suitable for showing shorter clips as part of a presentation. Some images were on the pale side, with details in brighter areas a little washed out. The XJ-A256 suffered from the rainbow effect that we frequently see in single-chip DLP projectors, in which little red-green-blue flashes appear to people sensitive to it, especially in scenes with high contrast between dark and light areas. Though it wasn't unusually severe with this projector, it was obvious enough to me that it would likely be distracting to people who are sensitive to it.

Audio was of decent quality and of good volume for a 1-watt speaker, loud enough to fill a smallish room.

For slightly less than you'd pay for the Casio XJ-A256, the Casio Slim XJ-A246 provides the same feature set and resolution. Its rated brightness is lower (2,500 lumens, and its data image quality wasn't quite as good as that of the XJ-A256.

The Epson PowerLite 1776W Multimedia Projector and the Editors' Choice Epson PowerLite 1761W Multimedia Projector are similar in form and features to the Casio Slim projectors. At less than four pounds, they're even lighter than the XJ-A256, and they have similar connection choices. They both have good data image quality, and better video quality than the XJ-A256. Their 4,000-hour lamp life doesn't come close to the Slim line's 20,000 hours, and they also lack 3D capability.

The Casio Slim XJ-A256 does well as the high-end model of Casio's thin-and-light projector series, offering 3,000 lumens of rated brightness, WXGA resolution, and connectivity choices including HDMI, USB type A, and Wi-Fi. Its data image quality is above par, and its video quality is passable. It is 3D capable, and its lamp should last the life of the projector. Though there are some fine choices in lightweight WXGA data projectors are available for much less money, the XJ-A256's cost savings from not having to change bulbs every few years could make up at least part of the price difference over time.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/4yoeyuTRuZY/0,2817,2419696,00.asp

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

#sci4hels - What makes one a "killer" (science) journalist of the future?

It is only four weeks till the World Conference of Science Journalists commences in Helsinki, and our #sci4hels panel has been hard at work, for months now, at preparing for the event. We had discussions on Twitter (account, list, hashtag), set up the Google + and Facebook pages, and put together a website/blog. Over the past few months, we also engaged the community with our questions. The first question was about the need for specialization (also see), which also feeds into the question of a need for specialized skills, like coding (see this and this). The second question was "What does a new science journalist do to get noticed? How do you get people to read your work, give you assignments, follow you on Twitter, and generally just know who you are?" This provoked a lively discussion on Twitter. The third question, upon noticing that all the panelists are female (and many of the upcoming science writers are, too), was a discussion about breaking the glass ceiling in the media organizations. We all pitched in together for the Question #4: How Should Science Journalists Deal with Breaking News?. The final, fifth question was: "What is the obligation of a science journalist when it comes to education?" Obviously, we covered a very broad range of topics. But now we need to focus. We'll only have 90 minutes in Helsinki, and the attendees will come to hear and learn from "killer" science journalists of the future, hoping to get some advice on how to join their ranks and become one of those "killers", successful in the fast-shifting world of modern media. On Thursday we will publish our final post and open it up for discussion. Here, I want to make some quick, broad, Big Picture thoughts of my own. What are the characteristics of a "killer science journalist of the future"? Understanding that being in print, on radio, or on TV is sweet, still pays better, and still carries a cache with some audiences, but that this picture is changing fast. These 20th century types of one-way broadcast media are rapidly losing audiences, while new generations are essentially using only the Web for information, education and entertainment. Thus, it is smart to focus primarily on the online world, while still occasionally getting some money from the old media when possible. Understanding that the currency of reputation in the new ecosystem is trust. As the readers rely less and less on the banners on top of the page and more and more on the names in the bylines, it is essential to build one's own personal reputation and not to rely entirely on the institutional reputation of the media outlet for which one writes. Understanding that, for one to gain the currency of trust in an online world, one has to constantly use the currency of trust - the hyperlink. A killer science journalist of the future profusely peppers one's articles with links. Every place in the article that makes a statement should contain a link. Every such spot that does not have a link automatically is a red flag for the modern reader. What is the author trying to hide? Is the originator of information not credited properly? If information is gained from a document, the document should be linked. If it comes from an article or a blog post, it should be linked. If it comes from a scientific paper, that paper should be linked. If there is a two-sentence quote, presumably taken out of an hour-long interview, it is important to link to the complete interview - transcript or audio or video recording. Every link is a gain of trust. Every lacking link is a loss of trust. Digital natives understand this almost instinctively. Modern online journalism is in many way just like science, including the importance of proper citation and credit for the past ideas on top of which one builds one's new edifice. There is no expectation that most readers will actually click on the links. The links are there as a proxy, a sign to the readers that the author has done the due diligence of actually doing the necessary research and finding the relevant sources (what quotes used to do in the old media, but now have the opposite effect online), and generally understands the way the Web requires proper credit of all sources of information. In cases of controversial statements, a small proportion of readers may click on links (even if they are behind paywalls - some readers will have access) and tell the other readers in the comments if the links actually support the statements in the text. Understanding that the new media ecosystem is an open system. An open system is much stricter and faster in enforcing both the traditional journalistic ethics and the additional online ethics, and much harsher and faster at meting punishment on transgressors of such ethics than the old-style, closed ecosystem. Feedback is instantaneous, and often devastating. The best way to deal with criticism is complete transparency, humble admission of errors, and civil countering of incorrect information if such is presented in the feedback. A digital native does not take harsh feedback personally, is used to harshness of online comments, shrugs it off but does not ignore the feedback - understanding that it is always a learning experience that helps one get better at the job. It is also understood that responding to feedback and involving the readers in the learning process is one way of getting better, earning trust, and gaining good reputation. Understanding that self-promotion is not a dirty word the way it was in the 20th century. With a glut of information, and glut of overall online communication, it is necessary for the author to be seen and heard above the din. The only way to do this is to have the link circulate widely online, especially on social media. For the link to appear on social media in the first place, the author has to place it there first. If the piece is accurate, well documented, and well written, it will be spread around. For the link posted by the author to be seen, the author has to have sufficient number of people to send it to, particularly people who already trust and respect the author. Thus, building and nurturing one's own community of friends, colleagues and readers, and being a part of other people's similar circles, reciprocating the goodwill, is essential. This is the essence of the principle of horizontal loyalty (or "Friends In Low Places"). Understanding that all of the above is still not enough. Doing it all correctly, diligently discovering information, linking to all the sources, not stealing ideas from bloggers and then linking only to traditional sources, being humble, respectful and transparent, and generally making a coherent article day after day, week after week, is still not enough. One day soon, everyone will be doing it technically correctly. How does one get noticed in such an environment then? Yes, sometimes you'll have to write a dull article for money. Perhaps too often. But the pieces that will really take off - and the pieces that will bring the reputation and trust, not just traffic - are pieces that are written with passion. So, follow your own curiosity and find your passion. Find your own obsession and turn it into your beat. Become a Go-To expert on the topic of your obsession. Ditch the boring old inverted pyramid (it was invented due to space limits of paper, something that vanished online) and start writing in an exciting way. Or, if your passion is not any narrow topic, then your expertise - or your signature stuff, something for which people will keep coming back over and over again to check your work - may be something else: absolutely beautiful writing, or amazing visuals, or stunning art or photography, or video, or animation, or hand-coded interactive infographics, or whatever makes you excited. If you are excited, your readers will be excited, too. They will support you, tell their friends about you, and make you successful in the process. As long as the basic journalistic ethics and the additional online ethics are met, it is this added passion that will make the difference between successful writers and those who are...not so much... Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sci4hels-makes-one-killer-science-journalist-future-145100139.html

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Tax overhaul: Looking to IRS scandal for momentum

FILE - In this May 17, 2013 file photo, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. The storm engulfing the Internal Revenue Service over agents targeting conservative political groups could provide a much-needed boost to members of Congress working to simplify an outdated tax code that is so complicated most Americans hire someone fill out their returns. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

FILE - In this May 17, 2013 file photo, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. The storm engulfing the Internal Revenue Service over agents targeting conservative political groups could provide a much-needed boost to members of Congress working to simplify an outdated tax code that is so complicated most Americans hire someone fill out their returns. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

FILE - In this April 17, 2013 file photo, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont. is seen on Capitol Hill in Washington. The storm engulfing the Internal Revenue Service over agents targeting conservative political groups could provide a much-needed boost to members of Congress working to simplify an outdated tax code that is so complicated most Americans hire someone fill out their returns. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

(AP) ? The storm engulfing the Internal Revenue Service could provide a boost for lawmakers who want to simplify U.S. tax laws ? a code that is so complicated most Americans buy commercial software to help them or simply hire someone else to do it all.

Members of Congress from both political parties say the current uproar ? over the targeting of conservative political groups ? underscores that overly complex tax provisions have given the IRS too much discretion in interpreting and enforcing the law.

"This is the perfect example of why we need tax reform," said Rep. Tim Griffin, R-Ark., a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee. "If you want to diminish and limit the power of the IRS, you have got to reduce the complexity of the tax code and take them out of it."

There are still formidable obstacles to completing a major tax overhaul this year or next. Democrats and Republicans start off with opposite views on whether the government should levy more taxes and on who should pay what share. The two sides also don't trust one another, making it difficult to envision agreement on which popular tax breaks to keep and which to scrap.

Most taxpayers pay someone to do their taxes or they buy commercial software to help them file. In a report earlier this year, national taxpayer advocate Nina E. Olson ranked complexity as the most serious problem facing both taxpayers and the IRS. People simply trying to comply with the rules often make inadvertent errors and overpay or underpay, she said, while others "often find loopholes that enable them to reduce or eliminate their tax liabilities."

The IRS scandal has little, if anything, to do with most everyday taxpayers, yet some lawmakers hope the attention will help galvanize support for the first major tax overhaul since 1986.

A little over two weeks ago, the IRS revealed that agents assigned to a special team in Cincinnati had targeted tea party and other conservative groups for additional, often burdensome scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status. The targeting lasted more than 18 months during the 2010 and 2012 election campaigns, hindering the groups' ability to raise money, according to a report by the agency's inspector general.

The ensuing storm has cost two top IRS officials their jobs, and a third has been placed on paid administrative leave. Investigations by Congress and the Justice Department are underway.

The IRS was screening the groups' applications because agents were trying to determine their level of political activity. IRS regulations say that tax-exempt social welfare organizations can engage in some political activity but the activity cannot be their primary mission. It is a vague standard that agents struggled to apply, according to the inspector general's report. Lawmakers in both parties have complained for years that overtly political groups on the left and right have taken advantage of the rules, allowing them to claim tax-exempt status and hide the identities of their donors.

"There are countless political organizations at both ends of the spectrum masquerading as social welfare groups in order to skirt the tax code," said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. "Once the smoke of the current controversy clears, we need to examine the root of this issue and reform the nation's vague tax laws pertaining to these groups."

Baucus' counterpart in the House, Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp, said he, too, thinks the scandal could boost efforts to simplify the tax code.

"The complexity of the law didn't require the IRS to target people for their political beliefs," said Camp, a Michigan Republican. But, he added, "I think giving the IRS less discretion is going to be important, and that's what a simplified code would do."

Camp and Baucus have been working for months on the herculean task of simplifying a tax code that has undergone about 5,000 changes since 2001. At nearly 4 million words, Camp likes to say the code is "10 times the size of the Bible with none of the good news."

Their committees have held dozens of hearings over the past two years and the two chairmen have started a website, taxreform.gov, where they solicit ideas from readers on how to change the laws. Camp has created bipartisan working groups of Ways and Means committee members to develop options for simplifying the various sections of the tax code. He has published several preliminary proposals.

Some Republicans hope to use an upcoming debate over increasing the federal government's borrowing authority to trigger action on tax change. The government is expected to reach the limit of its borrowing authority by early fall, raising the possibility of another debt standoff like the one in 2011 that brought it to the brink of default.

Details are fluid, but congressional aides have been working on mechanisms to streamline the process of passing a tax package, in exchange for raising the debt ceiling, perhaps guaranteeing floor votes on bills approved by the tax-writing committees in the House and Senate. Camp and Baucus chair those committees.

President Barack Obama, however, has said he won't negotiate over raising the debt ceiling.

Obama has called for an overhaul of corporate taxes, and he laid some groundwork to accomplish that in his latest budget proposal. The president has also said he wants to do comprehensive tax reform as part of a broad budget deal that cuts spending and reformulates entitlement programs. Such a grand bargain has proven elusive.

Camp and Baucus say they are open to a process that links tax reform to the debt ceiling. But Baucus warns, "I don't want to be part of something that's political or partisan. But I do want to be part of something that's practical and pragmatic that looks like it's going to advance the ball."

Baucus, who has been in the Senate since 1978, announced in April he won't run for re-election in 2014. He said he will focus much of his remaining time in the Senate trying to steer a tax package through Congress.

Camp says he is committed to passing a tax bill out of his committee by the end of the year. There is no guarantee the full House would take up the bill, but Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, has signaled his support for the effort by reserving the prestigious bill number HR 1 for a tax overhaul measure.

Lawmakers in both parties are convinced that simpler, easier-to-understand tax laws would spur economic activity. But there are significant partisan differences.

The Republican recipe calls for reducing or eliminating tax breaks that benefit targeted taxpayers, and using all the additional revenue to reduce overall rates for everyone. At the end of the day, the tax system would raise about the same amount of money, but businesses could focus on being more efficient instead of trying to take advantage of targeted tax breaks, supporters say.

Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress also want to reduce or eliminate various tax breaks. Overall income tax rates would be lower, but the wealthy would pay more each year because they would lose certain exemptions, deductions and credits.

Choosing which tax breaks to scale back is a big hurdle. For all of the work Camp and Baucus have done building support for the idea of tax reform, they have yet to answer hard questions about which breaks to scrap.

That's because Americans like their credits, deductions and exemptions ? the provisions that make the tax law so complicated in the first place. In exchange for lower tax rates, would workers be willing to pay taxes on employer-provided health benefits or on contributions to their retirement plans? How would homeowners feel about losing the mortgage interest deduction?

Those are among the three biggest tax breaks in the tax code, according to congressional estimates. Together, they are projected to save taxpayers nearly $300 billion this year.

"We're going to have to come to that," Baucus said. "Those are very big important questions and we're going to tackle them."

___

Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-28-IRS-Tax%20Reform/id-749b6c478a9344d8b3547504a1f23154

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Anguish from Japan's sex slave legacy unsettled

OSAKA, Japan (AP) ? More than 70 years ago, at age 14, Kim Bok-dong was ordered to work by Korea's Japanese occupiers. She was told she was going to a military uniform factory, but ended up at a Japanese military-linked brothel in southern China.

She had to take an average of 15 soldiers per day during the week, and dozens over the weekend. At the end of the day she would be bleeding and could not even stand because of the pain. She and other girls were closely watched by guards and could not escape. It was a secret she carried for decades; the man she later married died without ever knowing.

Tens of thousands of women had similar stories to tell, or to hide, from Japan's occupation of much of Asia before and during World War II. Many are no longer living, and those who remain are still waiting for Japan to offer reparations and a more complete apology than it has so far delivered.

"I'm here today, not because I wanted to but because I had to," Kim, now 87, told a packed audience of mostly Japanese at a community center in Osaka over the weekend. "I came here to ask Japan to settle its past wrongdoing. I hope the Japanese government resolves the problem as soon as possible while we elderly women are still alive."

The issue of Japan's use of Korean, Chinese and Southeast Asian women and girls as sex slaves ? euphemistically called "comfort women" ? continues to alienate Tokyo from its neighbors nearly 70 years after the war's end. It is a wound that was made fresh this month when the co-head of an emerging nationalistic party, Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto, said "comfort women" had been necessary to maintain military discipline and give respite to battle-weary troops.

His comments drew outrage from South Korea and China, as well as from the U.S. State Department, which called them "outrageous and offensive."

Hashimoto provided no evidence but insisted that Tokyo has been unfairly singled out for its World War II behavior regarding women, saying some other armies at the time had military brothels. None of them, however, has been accused of the kind of widespread, organized sexual slavery that has been linked to Japan's military.

Historians say up to 200,000 women from across Asia, including China, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Burma, Hong Kong and Macau, as well as the Netherlands, were forced to provide sex for Japanese soldiers.

To many people, even within Japan, Hashimoto's comments suggest that even after all these years, Japanese leaders don't want to fully acknowledge wartime wrongs and are out of touch with the sentiments not only of their neighbors and the international community, but also many of their own citizens.

"It's not a problem of the past. It's a continuing problem that involves people who are still alive," said Koichi Nakano, a Sophia University political science professor. "Japan is perceived as merely waiting for them to die while looking the other way and dragging its feet. That looks bad from a humanity point of view."

According to a survey conducted over the weekend by the conservative Sankei newspaper and FNN television, more than 75 percent of Japanese said Hashimoto's sex slave remarks were inappropriate, while support for his party slumped to 6.4 percent ? nearly half what it was last month.

The comments come amid rising concerns in the region over the nationalistic shift in Japan's political leadership under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who has suggested he wants to revise Japan's past apologies for its wartime aggression and change its pacifist constitution.

In 1993, Japan officially apologized to "comfort women" in a landmark statement by then-Chief Cabinet Secretary Yohei Kono, acknowledging "immeasurable pain and incurable physical and psychological wounds."

But Kim and other women want a full apology approved by parliament and official compensation from the government. Tokyo has resisted that, saying war reparations with South Korea were dealt with in treaties restoring relations after the war. In 1995, Tokyo created a fund using private donations as a way for Japan to pay former sex slaves without providing official compensation.

The fund provided 2 million yen ($20,000) each to about 280 women in the Philippines, Taiwan and South Korea, and funded nursing homes for Indonesian victims and medical assistance to about 80 former Dutch sex slaves.

In South Korea, 207 women formally came forward and were recognized as eligible recipients. But only a fraction actually accepted the money because of criticism of the private fund. Instead they receive support from the South Korean government and a support group.

In Japan, public sentiment has become less compassionate in recent years toward Asian victims of the country's wartime aggression. References to "comfort women" once in school history textbooks have disappeared.

Much of the debate over "comfort women" still focuses on what role the government at the time played in organizing brothels, and if ? or to what extent ? the women were coerced. The Kono statement says the military was involved directly or indirectly in the establishment and management of front-line brothels and transfer of women, and that many women were in many cases "recruited against their own will through coaxing and coercion."

Nobuo Ishihara, who was then deputy Cabinet secretary, said in March 2006 that interviews with 16 South Korean women in Seoul led to the conclusion that there was coercion though there were no official documents showing so.

"After interviewing the 16 comfort women, we came to believe that what they were saying could not be fabrication. We thought there was no doubt they were forced to become comfort women against their will," Ishihara said. "Based on the investigation team's report, we, as the government, concluded that there was coercion."

The government investigation also found that many of the Dutch victims were selected from concentration camps and forcibly sent to brothels, while those in the Philippines and Indonesia were raped at battlefronts, kidnapped and forced to provide sex under confinement.

Hashimoto, 43, sought to calm the uproar Monday, telling a packed news conference that he personally didn't condone using "comfort women," which he labeled a violation of human rights.

But he repeatedly insisted that Japan's wartime government did not systematically force girls and women into prostitution, although he acknowledged that some may have been deceived and coerced. He said the historical record isn't clear, which is similar to Abe's view that there is no proof the women were coerced as a result of a state order. He said historians from both Japan and South Korea should settle the matter.

Hashimoto acknowledged that this murkiness probably is the key stumbling block in Japan's ties with South Korea.

Chuo University historian Yoshiaki Yoshimi, one of Japan's most respected experts on "comfort women," criticized the Japanese government for taking an extremely narrow interpretation of what constitutes coercion.

He said documents show "comfort women" recruited in Japan were mostly adult professionals, although many had been sold into the sex industry by their poor families. However, in Asian countries invaded by Japan, there was no consideration of the rights of minors or the right to quit, which he said should constitute coercion by international standards.

"Neither Prime Minister Abe nor Mayor Hashimoto has tried to look at how those girls and young women were abused. Their view is worlds apart from the international view," he said.

Kim was dragged across Asia, from Hong Kong to Singapore and Indonesia, until the end of the war in 1945. She was freed in Singapore and returned home in 1946. She later was married but ? like most former sex slaves ? was never able to reveal her past to anyone but her mother ? until decades later.

"Even as I returned to my homeland, it never was a true liberation for me," she told listeners at the community center. "How could I tell anyone what had happened to me during the war? It was living with a big lump in my chest."

She finally broke her silence several years after her husband died in 1981. Later she joined a group of women seeking official recognition as victims of Japan's sex slavery.

Kim has since traveled around the world to tell her story and participates in weekly protests in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul.

Kim and another former sex slave, 84-year-old Kil Won-ok, had been seeking a meeting with Hashimoto for some time when he made his comments this month. He then offered to meet with them, but they canceled, saying they didn't perceive that he was remorseful and didn't want to be used by him to rehabilitate his image. Instead, they spoke to the public in Osaka.

"We won't be around much longer," Kil said. "But we have to tell you our stories because we don't want the same mistake repeated again."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/anguish-japans-sex-slave-legacy-unsettled-004721195.html

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Sen. McCain makes trip to Syria to visit rebels

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Sen. John McCain, a proponent of arming Syrian rebels, quietly slipped into Syria for a meeting with anti-government fighters Monday.

Spokeswoman Rachael Dean confirms the Arizona Republican made the visit. She declined further comment about the trip.

The visit took place amid meetings in Paris involving efforts to secure participation of Syria's fractured opposition in an international peace conference in Geneva.

And in Brussels, the European Union decided late Monday to lift the arms embargo on the Syrian opposition while maintaining all other sanctions against Bashar Assad's regime after June 1, British Foreign Secretary William Hague said following the meeting.

Two years of violence in Syria has killed more than 70,000 people. President Barack Obama has demanded that Assad leave power, while Russia has stood by Syria, its closest ally in the Arab world.

McCain has been a fierce critic of Obama administration policy there while stopping short of backing U.S. ground troops in Syria, but he supports aggressive military steps against the Assad regime.

Gen. Salem Idris, chief of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian Army, accompanied McCain across the Turkey-Syria border. McCain met with leaders of the Free Syrian Army from across the country, who asked him for increased U.S. support, including heavy weapons, a no-fly zone and airstrikes on Syrian government and Hezbollah forces, according to The Daily Beast, which first reported the senator's unannounced visit.

The White House declined to comment late Monday.

A State Department official said the department was aware of McCain crossing into Syrian territory on Monday. Further questions were referred to McCain's office.

Last Tuesday, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted to provide weapons to rebels in Syria, as well as military training to vetted rebel groups and sanctions against anyone who sells oil or transfers arms to the Assad regime. McCain is a member of the committee.

__

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Paris contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sen-mccain-makes-trip-syria-visit-rebels-185202901.html

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Pencil in Head for 15 Years Found Inside German Patient

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Why Efforts to Bring Extinct Species Back from the Dead Miss the Point

Cover Image: June 2013 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

A project to revive long-gone species is a sideshow to the real extinction crisis


wooly mammoth

Image: Yvetta Fedorova

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?We will get woolly mammoths back.? So vowed environmentalist Stewart Brand at the TED conference in Long Beach, Calif., in February in laying out his vision for reviving extinct species. The mammoth isn't the only vanished creature Brand and other proponents of ?de-extinction? want to resurrect. The passenger pigeon, Caribbean monk seal and great auk are among the other candidates?all species that blinked out at least in part because of Homo sapiens. ?Humans have made a huge hole in nature in the last 10,000 years,? Brand asserted. ?We have the ability now?and maybe the moral obligation?to repair some of the damage.?

Just a few years ago such de-extinction was the purview of science fiction. Now it is so near at hand that in March, Brand's Long Now Foundation, along with TED and the National Geographic Society, convened an entire conference on the topic. Indeed, thanks to recent advances in cloning and the sequencing of ancient DNA, among other feats of biotechnology, researchers may soon be able to re-create any number of species once thought to be gone for good.

That does not mean that they should, however. The idea of bringing back extinct species holds obvious gee-whiz appeal and a respite from a steady stream of grim news. Yet with limited intellectual bandwidth and financial resources to go around, de-extinction threatens to divert attention from the modern biodiversity crisis. According to a 2012 report from the International Union for Conservation of Nature, some 20,000 species are currently in grave danger of going extinct. Species today are vanishing in such great numbers?many from hunting and habitat destruction?that the trend has been called a sixth mass extinction, an event on par with such die-offs as the one that befell the dinosaurs (and much else) 65 million years ago. A program to restore extinct species poses a risk of selling the public on a false promise that technology alone can solve our ongoing environmental woes?an implicit assurance that if a species goes away, we can snap our fingers and bring it back.

Ironically, the de-extinction conference immediately followed the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) meeting in Bangkok, which underscored just how devastating the trade has been. Reports released to coincide with the meeting revealed that between 2002 and 2011, the African forest elephant population declined by 62 percent from poaching; that fishing kills at least 100 million sharks a year?many of them members of imperiled species; and that between 2000 and 2012, an average of 110 tigers a year were killed (as few as 3,200 of the cats remain in the wild). Poachers slaughter 30,000 African elephants every year for their ivory?the highest kill rate since the 1980s. At this rate, the species could disappear in two decades. So could Africa's rhinos, prized for their horns.

Already conservationists face difficult choices about which species and ecosystems to try to save, since they cannot hope to rescue them all. Many countries where poaching and trade in threatened species are rampant either do not want to give up the revenue or lack the wherewithal to enforce their own regulations. Against that backdrop, a costly and flamboyant project to resuscitate extinct flora and fauna in the name of conservation looks irresponsible: Should we resurrect the mammoth only to let elephants go under? Of course not.

That is not to say that the de-extinction enterprise lacks merit altogether. Aspects of it could conceivably help save endangered species. For example, extinct versions of genes could be reintroduced into species and subspecies that have lost a dangerous amount of genetic diversity, such as the black-footed ferret and the northern white rhino. Such investigations, however, should be conducted under the mantle of preserving modern biodiversity rather than conjuring extinct species from the grave.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=bdc4e2f60be89851d3b87923e4cc5461

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Baseball statistics - Spokesman.com - May 27, 2013

May 27, 2013 in Sports

Through Friday?S Games

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American?League

TEAM?BATTING

AB R H HR RBI Avg.
Detroit 1674 251 478 51 246 .286
Baltimore 1683 242 456 66 233 .271
Texas 1633 226 441 62 212 .270
Cleveland 1623 239 430 62 229 .265
Kansas City 1550 190 409 28 184 .264
Los Angeles 1665 218 436 56 208 .262
Boston 1661 239 434 52 235 .261
Tampa Bay 1582 226 409 52 213 .259
New York 1583 204 395 59 186 .250
Toronto 1611 209 398 62 197 .247
Houston 1617 190 398 48 179 .246
Minnesota 1542 194 376 35 186 .244
Seattle 1618 ?

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American?League

TEAM?BATTING

ABRHHRRBIAvg.
Detroit167425147851246.286
Baltimore168324245666233.271
Texas163322644162212.270
Cleveland162323943062229.265
Kansas City155019040928184.264
Los Angeles166521843656208.262
Boston166123943452235.261
Tampa Bay158222640952213.259
New York158320439559186.250
Toronto161120939862197.247
Houston161719039848179.246
Minnesota154219437635186.244
Seattle161817439153169.242
Oakland167422440347210.241
Chicago154517037151162.240

INDIVIDUAL?BATTING

ABRHHRRBIAvg.
MiCabrera Det18839731457.388
Loney TB1471951322.347
AGordon KC1893065630.344
CDavis Bal16631561645.337
Mauer Min1722858214.337
Machado Bal2093370528.335
Pedroia Bos1923464224.333
Longoria TB1803559929.328
JhPeralta Det1682455420.327
Infante Det1622752317.321
AJones Bal2023564832.317
TorHunter Det1822957121.313
Brantley Cle1732554224.312
SPerez KC1511247115.311
Altuve Hou1781955221.309
LCain KC1492446122.309
Donaldson Oak1762354628.307
Trout LAA19337591035.306
Morneau Min1772054231.305
Rios CWS17829541027.303
Kinsler Tex1622449720.302
Lowrie Oak1731952321.301
Markakis Bal2002860527.300
Nava Bos1372641629.299
Moreland Tex16422481024.293
HKendrick LAA1881955726.293
Berkman Tex1472143428.293
CSantana Cle1472943818.293
Cano NYY18926551334.291
Morales Sea1711749522.287
McLouth Bal1513443411.285
Beltre Tex19028541029.284
MeCabrera Tor1902054217.284
Seager Sea1762250623.284
SSmith Oak1522143521.283
Trumbo LAA19527551132.282
Bautista Tor14628411127.281
VWells NYY16924471024.278
Fielder Det1702347941.276
AlRamirez CWS171194719.275
KJohnson TB1362037825.272
AJackson Det1513341211.272
Andrus Tex1963053017.270
Swisher Cle1502440616.267
Dirks Det1351936515.267
Hosmer KC1561841112.263
MarReynolds Cle16027421240.263
Napoli Bos1832748736.262
Butler KC1561740530.256
Overbay NYY1571540727.255
Gardner NYY1772445418.254
Encarnacion Tor18127461338.254
Pujols LAA1852647829.254
Plouffe Min1341734417.254
ACabrera Cle1702343421.253
JCastro Hou1511738412.252
Zobrist TB1712343329.251
NCruz Tex17219431134.250
Stubbs Cle1521738315.250
Ellsbury Bos2052651116.249
Morse Sea16117401018.248
Dominguez Hou1621840522.247
Smoak Sea150153738.247
AEscobar KC1871846318.246
Kipnis Cle1602239724.244
ColRasmus Tor1521937720.243
Moss Oak1482236625.243
De Aza CWS1732542718.243
ISuzuki NYY147153528.238
Konerko CWS1611638519.236
Jennings TB1743141516.236
Hardy Bal1881944929.234
CPena Hou1502435310.233
Carter Hou1622337923.228
VMartinez Det1741139222.224
Arencibia Tor17020381124.224
DavMurphy Tex1481533620.223
Francoeur KC1441532110.222
Hamilton LAA1852141616.222
Wieters Bal1601835726.219
Doumit Min1331629317.218
YEscobar TB1451531417.214
Ackley Sea150163218.213
Cespedes Oak1372229923.212
Keppinger CWS162934114.210
Willingham Min1412029823.206
Middlbrooks Bos1741835821.201
Dozier Min1321526112.197
Moustakas KC1441225412.174
ADunn CWS15718251125.159
Hicks Min1401822416.157

TEAM?PITCHING

ERAHERBBSOShSv
Texas3.51386166141391516
New York3.59413168116372419
Chicago3.64357166152362416
Kansas City3.65385161121330411
Detroit3.8038417813345039
Boston3.86392187183446310
Oakland4.04420198132362311
Cleveland4.1738019416640379
Seattle4.42414208123388511
Baltimore4.42416211164326216
Tampa Bay4.46386206152385510
Los Angeles4.52457221178349311
Minnesota4.7146720912225719
Toronto4.86444231174328111
Houston5.3949125418630619

INDIVIDUAL?PITCHING

IPHBBSOWLERA
Buchholz Bos73492773701.73
FHernandez Sea70581272532.07
MMoore TB55342654802.29
Iwakuma Sea65451161512.37
AniSanchez Det64551780542.38
Shields KC73551569252.47
Sale CWS64441561522.53
Kuroda NYY61501439632.67
Cobb TB59531454522.73
Darvish Tex67422291722.84
McAllister Cle56511739432.89
Ogando Tex50431937423.08
ESantana KC6359952343.14
Lester Bos66521852613.15
Masterson Cle76592776733.20
DHolland Tex60561454323.30
Peavy CWS52421358523.31
CWilson LAA64593260433.39
Sabathia NYY66721556433.43
Vargas LAA66672442433.43
Quintana CWS52461539313.48
Guthrie KC59612032523.49
Griffin Oak58541644433.59
Scherzer Det62441375603.61
Fister Det5560943513.62
Verlander Det59602169543.66
Tillman Bal59572148423.68
Milone Oak64641255453.80
Pettitte NYY49491539433.83
BNorris Hou56642035443.86
Correia Min5866922443.90
DPhelps NYY50441849323.96
Axelrod CWS52521428234.13
Colon Oak5456430424.31
Dickey Tor62532853454.50
Harrell Hou56633032354.63
Dempster Bos56492967254.69
Diamond Min45571021344.96
Price TB55651449145.24
Hammel Bal57652242625.37
Hellickson TB64591850225.37
Morrow Tor52591840235.50
PHughes NYY47581342235.51
RHernandez TB49541645255.73
Parker Oak55632540265.76
Buehrle Tor61681840135.90
WDavis KC46672236335.91
JSaunders Sea58732229356.09
Blanton LAA57931336176.19
Worley Min49821525157.21

National?League

TEAM?BATTING

ABRHHRRBI5/8Avg
San Fran164421544337203.269
Colorado166123644562227.268
St. Louis158622542336211.267
Milwaukee156718740547180.258
Cincinnati164823242051219.255
Los Angeles151515638431147.253
Arizona164619541745182.253
Philadelphia158316939240159.248
Chicago159818339549173.247
San Diego156018738542173.247
Atlanta155920938263203.245
Pittsburgh158418738247180.241
New York152018634747180.228
Washington156216435542159.227
Miami158212835024119.221

INDIVIDUAL?BATTING

ABRHHRRBI5/8Avg
Votto Cin1804065823.361
Segura Mil1782662720.348
Tulowitzki Col1462549938.336
YMolina StL1731657222.329
CGomez Mil1662454620.325
Scutaro SF1792558111.324
Aoki Mil1772757412.322
Goldschmidt Ari17531561238.320
Braun Mil1592650930.314
DMurphy NYM1763155422.313
Craig StL1752354335.309
SMarte Pit1883558517.309
CGonzalez Col17641541230.307
Denorfia SD1451944215.303
AGonzalez LAD1521146430.303
Posey SF1521946628.303
Beltran StL16622501029.301
CCrawford LAD1632849513.301
DWright NYM1602548628.300
GParra Ari1872956412.299
Sandoval SF1872456834.299
MCarpenter StL1753752315.297
Choo Cin1743751919.293
DeJesus ChC1472543516.293
FFreeman Atl1312138328.290
McCutchen Pit1763351625.290
Phillips Cin1872954842.289
Harper Was14329411223.287
BCrawford SF1662447523.283
Alonso SD1681947627.280
MYoung Phi1611745110.280
Jay StL1622945423.278
WRosario Col1442140927.278
Gyorko SD1662346516.277
Pence SF1902752723.274
Bruce Cin1942653631.273
Utley Phi1582143725.272
AEllis LAD129935210.271
Fowler Col1703046818.271
SCastro ChC2002354321.270
JUpton Atl16335441428.270
Pollock Ari1502140416.267
Kemp LAD1772147217.266
Span Was1781847011.264
Desmond Was1781947620.264
Holliday StL1673444628.263
Rollins Phi1861949317.263
Howard Phi1641843625.262
ASoriano ChC1681844415.262
Kozma StL1501639117.260
Pagan SF1812947222.260
Ethier LAD1511239415.258
ECabrera SD1862648316.258
DBrown Phi1681843825.256
Belt SF1462237622.253
Revere Phi140163505.250
Rizzo ChC18522461031.249
Rutledge Col1572638513.242
Polanco Mia168144007.238
Frazier Cin1602038629.238
Pierre Mia149183516.235
YBetancourt Mil1551436826.232
Prado Ari1942145413.232
Simmons Atl1692339518.231
Cozart Cin1742340520.230
Duda NYM1401832815.229
Buck NYM15023341132.227
Lucroy Mil1331030319.226
LaRoche Was1541834721.221
Dobbs Mia139143017.216
Ruggiano Mia1531933719.216
RTejada NYM1651735010.212
MMontero Ari1521429314.191
Alvarez Pit1431727822.189
Uggla Atl1512628917.185
Weeks Mil1542026310.169
Espinosa Was1411023312.163
BUpton Atl152122347.151
IDavis NYM147142149.143

TEAM?PITCHING

ERAHERBBSOShSv
St. Louis3.09386145118381815
Pittsburgh3.22347153163394721
Arizona3.29404161136367415
Cincinnati3.32387161126394614
Atlanta3.38381156120330315
Washington3.50404165120332415
Colorado3.71429177134309311
Chicago3.75361173150353010
Los Angeles3.88383174150368511
San Fran4.03416193154388614
Miami4.0442819315634216
Philadelphia4.1740019514334138
San Diego4.22399194169296211
Milwaukee4.46430202128328011
New York4.4940320114731727

INDIVIDUAL?PITCHING

IPHBBSOWLERA
Kershaw LAD73421872521.35
Corbin Ari62431851701.44
Zimmrmnn Was7455946821.71
SMiller StL57381562531.74
Harvey NYM70411774501.93
Wood ChC60371939422.24
Wainwright StL7264669632.38
Lee Phi73611355522.48
AJBurnett Pit70492585352.57
Strasburg Was64512162252.66
Locke Pit53392232412.73
Minor Atl58441251522.78
Feldman ChC55461944442.80
Cahill Ari64512444352.81
Bumgarner SF65491763422.89
Lynn StL61432466712.95
HBailey Cin58501555233.09
Medlen Atl63602347153.16
Latos Cin65621655403.17
Samardzija ChC64502272263.25
Leake Cin55621538423.25
Marquis SD55452832623.27
KKendrick Phi66641842433.29
Slowey Mia57581243153.30
Ryu LAD63572260523.30
Fernandez Mia49391846223.31
Maholm Atl61552048643.38
Arroyo Cin66631238543.39
JDe La Rosa Col56532034633.40
WRodriguez Pit5044937523.40
JGarcia StL55571543523.58
GGonzalez Was59432657323.66
Miley Ari54522041333.67
Villanueva ChC56471639133.72
Lohse Mil55601037153.76
Zito SF51621631333.91
Nolasco Mia61571450353.96
Teheran Atl5058930313.99
Chacin Col48441728334.10
Stults SD60611738444.22
McCarthy Ari64761039234.36
Hamels Phi63562457174.45
Gallardo Mil58642143344.50
Sanabia Mia51632428364.56
Kennedy Ari61582350234.70
Lincecum SF61582764344.75
Hefner NYM51452037054.76
Niese NYM54612731354.80
Estrada Mil58601754424.94
Hudson Atl56571544434.98
MCain SF63551956325.12
Garland Col52661526355.19
Haren Was5064836455.54
Volquez SD55612536355.76
Gee NYM45611733256.04
EJackson ChC53612252176.11
WPeralta Mil52691931356.45

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