Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Global stocks down, dollar at five-week low ahead of Fed

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks fell and the dollar hovered near a five-week low on Monday ahead of the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting, which will be closely watched for clues on when the U.S. central bank will begin to slow its bond-buying program.

The U.S. government's monthly jobs report due at the end of the week was also keeping investors on edge, particularly because the Fed has made the unemployment rate key to its decision on paring economic stimulus.

On Wall Street, stocks dipped broadly, with all three major indexes moving lower.

"I think today we saw some better-than-expected economic data in Europe and here, and that's got people concerned that we are going to see a withdrawal of QE," said Stephen Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Equity Management LLC in San Francisco, referring to the Fed's Quantitative Easing program.

"There's a concern that whatever the FOMC says or does will lead to a dramatic reaction in the market, much like we saw in June."

Until recently, investors have interpreted average or weak economic data as a sign the Fed will continue to stimulate the economy and put a floor under stock prices. However, the prospect of a slightly less accommodative Fed in the near future has increased the market's need for a stronger economy.

An industry group on Monday reported a fall in contracts to purchase previously owned U.S. homes in June, after they hit a more than six-year high in May, suggesting that rising mortgage rates were starting to dampen home sales. The data, however, was still better than expected.

In addition to the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England also meet this week. The ECB and the BOE are expected to repeat or refine their "forward guidance" that borrowing costs will remain extraordinarily low as long as growth is sub-par and inflation poses no threat.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average ended down 36.86 points, or 0.24 percent, at 15,521.97. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 6.32 points, or 0.37 percent, at 1,685.33. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 14.02 points, or 0.39 percent, at 3,599.14.

With just three trading days left in the month, the S&P 500 is set to post its best monthly performance since October 2011. The Nasdaq's advance makes July so far the best month in a year and a half.

The U.S. payrolls report on Friday is expected to show 185,000 jobs were added in July and a dip in the jobless rate to 7.5 percent. A strong report would support the case for the Fed to start rolling back its stimulus in September and help the dollar.

European shares finished the day largely unchanged, with a fall in bank stocks offsetting gains spurred by two giant mergers, in the media and pharmaceuticals sectors, which added to a flurry of M&A activity in recent weeks.

The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares closed up 0.07 percent. The benchmark index has risen 9 percent since late June.

Publicis and Omnicom announced plans to merge into the world's biggest advertising group in a $35.1 billion deal. In the pharmaceuticals sector, U.S. group Perrigo agreed to buy Ireland's Elan.

The MSCI index of world stock markets fell 0.5 percent.

DOLLAR STRUGGLES

The dollar was 0.4 percent lower against the yen at 97.83 yen, up 0.1 percent against the euro, while the dollar index was little changed after touching a five-week low of 81.785.

Traders said the dollar's small recovery from its low on Monday was an adjustment of positions ahead of the Fed statement. A selloff had over the last three weeks left it down 1.7 percent for the month.

"The dollar faces a lot of key event risk in the week ahead with the release of the U.S. Q2 GDP report and the latest FOMC policy meeting on Wednesday, followed by the release of the U.S. employment report for July on Friday," said Lee Hardman, currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi.

In debt markets, German Bund futures edged back into negative territory in thin trade and euro zone periphery bonds eased. But investors refrained from placing big bets.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes fell 6/32 in price, their yield edging up to 2.587 percent from 2.57 percent late on Friday. Ten-year yields have ranged from around 2.43 percent to 2.63 percent in the last two weeks, after hitting two-year highs of 2.76 percent on July 8.

DELICATE CHINA

Commodities markets also struggled, although concerns about supply disruptions kept oil off three-week lows. Nervousness ahead of Chinese manufacturing data on Thursday hit copper earlier in the day.

With investors bracing for another round of disappointing economic news from China, Asian markets were generally weaker.

Japan's Nikkei dropped 3.3 percent to a four-week low. Investors' jitters were compounded by a stronger yen, which is negative for exporters. Also hurting stocks were concerns that plans to increase the country's sales tax - its most significant fiscal reform in years - could be watered down.

(Reporting by Nick Olivari in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler, Dan Grebler and Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/japanese-stocks-knocked-lower-firmer-yen-004859737.html

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Bret Bielema, former UW coach, has another Arkansas fan

Madison - This video possesses no journalistic value.

But. I. Could. Not. Resist.

Enjoy.

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      Source: http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/sports/217320881.html

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      Saturday, July 27, 2013

      Facebook: On Its Way to ?Classic Growth Stock?? Asks Firsthand?s Landis

      Shares of?Facebook?(FB) are up $6.37, over 24%, to $32.88, and as high as $34 at one point, after?the company last night beat?Q2?expectations on a surprisingly high amount of mobile advertising revenue.

      Catching people?s attention in the report was mobile revenue that rose 51% to $819 million, making up 41% of company revenue, a higher proportion than many expected. As I noted last night, Facebook bull?Dan Niles?with AlphaOne Capital told?CNBC?s?Maria Bartiromo?that the company has, in his opinion, the best position in monetizing use of smartphones and tablets of any of the big Internet advertising shops, better than?Google?(GOOG) and?better than?Yahoo!?(YHOO). It is a big transformation for a company that had almost no revenue from mobile when it went public a year ago, Niles observed.

      This morning I talked with another Facebook bull manager,?Kevin Landis, who runs the closed-end Firsthand?Technology Value Fund (SVVC), and owns 600,000 shares of Facebook, or about $20 million with today?s jump. Landis had been an onwer of Facebook from before last May?s disastrous IPO, and continued to defend the company and stock in interviews I had with him since.

      Today he took a humble, non-boasting victory lap. Landis has consistently endorsed the view that Facebook?s ability to know about you is valuable to advertisers, but he also noted that Google and privately held?Twitter have something to offer advertisers. He owns a million privately traded shares of Twitter and about 6,000 shares of Google.

      Last night Facebook convinced people they have a strategy for mobile usage. It has seemed for a long time that Twitter was much more suited to use on a mobile device, because it?s short, it?s just a link, you can click on it when you?re on the go. I think now for Facebook holders, all those people who have been accumulating the stock the last couple of years, they have to wonder what do they now own, and why do they own it? Probably, it becomes much more of an earnings story now. Does this go on a run like Apple (AAPL) went on, where it just steadily gets better and better? The story gets better, I mean? Does it become the classic growth stock, where the only argument is, ?It?s too expensive?? Every 90 days, that ?too expensive? argument tends to get a little weaker if the company keeps performing. Like with Netflix (NFLX) and LinkedIn (LNKD) ? they are horribly expensive, but they work. I think when you get into the upper atmosphere of market cap, it?s then that people start to ask, How high is up? That happened to Apple. It could be starting to happen for Google. But Facebook would have to appreciate quite a bit to get into that upper stratum of market cap. So, I wouldn?t worry as much about valuation for Facebook at the moment. As far as what happens to their mobile progress, you just have to ask yourself, ?In two to three years, are people going to spend more ad dollars on Facebook or Google?? Actually, that might be a rhetorical question. Is it more important to know what someone?s looking for, or is it more important to know all about them? The move to mobile makes relevance go from pretty important to utterly important, and so the answer is probably both, you want to know what they?re looking for, and who they are. As an advertiser, I want to send you something that?s about an interest you?ve already expressed. Are you more likely to give up that info by type of search, or by type of Twitter feed, or by things you post about on Facebook? All three are feasting on the old ad style. I?m still getting the old print edition of Vanity Fair, and I have to tell you, it?s chocked full of big, expensive ads.

      Source: http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2013/07/25/facebook-on-its-way-to-classic-growth-stock-asks-firsthands-landis/?mod=BOLBlog

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      SIGGRAPH 2013 wrap-up

      SIGGRAPH 2013 wrapup

      As we noted at the the end of the show last year, SIGGRAPH certainly delivers on the eye candy. From graphics demos to display tech and both 3D printing and motion capture, this is one trade show that offers a glimpse into the present and future of the industry when it comes to visual goods. Highlights include major component news from NVIDIA and Samsung while Dell's 32-inch 4K display and the latest Disney Research project certainly nabbed our attention. The show ends today until we descend upon Vancouver next summer, but a gallery chock full of sights from the show floor and a roundup of the past few days should tide you over until then.

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      Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/25/siggraph-2013-wrap-up/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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      Friday, July 26, 2013

      NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day

      Old 07-25-2013, 07:01 AM ? #1

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      NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day


      CHICAGO ? College football is changing. Conferences have been realigned, a playoff system is being implemented, and rules are forever being tweaked, both for the integrity of the game and its players.

      Player safety has been a recurring trend in these rule changes. The NCAA?s new targeting rule, which goes into effect for the 2013 season, is one of them. The rule change was an especially a hot topic at Wednesday?s Big Ten media session at the Chicago Hilton.

      ?Player safety is on everyone?s mind right now,? Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz said. ?It was 30, 35 years ago [too]. It?s respect for the game.?

      The rule, which will result in automatic ejection and a 15-yard penalty at the discretion of the referee officiating the game, comes into effect if a player hits too high on his opponent?s chest, uses the crown of his helmet for the hit, or creates helmet-to-helmet contact while tackling.

      read more: NCAA targeting rule highlights Big Ten media day - The Daily Iowan


      It's coming gents, they're gonna' try it out at the collegiate levels, get comfortable with it and then bring it to the NFL. How ironic, the ESPN Tackle/Hit of the Year Award went to Jadeveon Clowney (SC) vs Michigan in the Outback Bowl ... no 'targeting' there, just a solid hit but he would have been gone for a game-an-a-half under the new rules ... .

      We're all gonna' be saying, "We remember when ... " by the time they're done with this.

      SloMotion is offline ? Reply With Quote

      Source: http://blackandgold.com/college/59058-ncaa-targeting-rule-highlights-big-ten-media-day.html

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      Thursday, July 25, 2013

      The Fascinating Vampire Squids of Law

      130722_JURIS_DeathOfLawFirms2

      A partner at Weil, Gotshal and Manges. Are big firms like Weil really dying out?

      Photo by Suzanne Kreiter/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

      As Rolling Stone just helpfully reminded us, even the best-intentioned magazine narrative can be undone by an overly provocative sales hook. The New Republic?s latest cover piece avoids the Rolling Stone trap of a cover image whose ironic message overwhelms the story?s point entirely. In fact, TNR?s photo of Bob Odenkirk as smarmy Breaking Bad lawyer Saul Goodman plays directly into the crowd-pleasing hook that TNR uses to hype its big cover story this week about the death of Big Law. But there?s the rub: A simple, valid business yarn gets hijacked by narrative tricks that amount to a greater journalistic sin than trying to humanize the Boston Marathon bombing suspect.

      Let?s start with what?s good about the story by TNR senior editor Noam Scheiber. By describing hard economic times in Big Law?the elite, global law firms that serve huge corporate clients?Scheiber just might convince a few English majors not to bother taking the LSATs. In case they?ve missed the dozens of earlier opportunities to learn that a costly law degree does not automatically entitle them to a life of wealth and comfort, Scheiber?s vivid tale of one firm?s bloodletting over?what else??compensation should steer a few idealistic paper chasers into more productive and surefire pursuits, like developing smartphone apps or Colorado pot farming. Scheiber correctly notes an oversupply of pricey legal talent in a down economy has led to a market resembling ?some grand psychological experiment involving rats in a cage with too few crumbs.?

      But this is where the story breaks bad. From the cover lines and title (?Big Law in Free Fall,? ?The Last Days of Big Law?) to an outlandishly flimsy nut graf (claiming just one in 10 top firms will survive the imminent apocalypse, or so says ?one common hypothesis? that then never gets explained or examined), the story looks at one sore throat and proclaims it a cancer pandemic. Its prognosis on the death of the mid-sized full-service firm echoes a forecast made so many times it has lost all credibility.?Then the piece takes yet another giant step into journalism hell by shooting readers through a time warp that conveniently skips the past 30 or so years of Big Law business history. Big Law has been declared dying for decades. Pieces touting the death of Big Law have been written for decades. Unfortunately, ?Big Law Still Really, Really Dying,? while arguable (except where it?s still really, really profitable), doesn?t sell copy.

      From the start, we?re introduced to a dreamscape vision of American law as it was practiced until, supposedly, the end times arrived this week. In this professional paradise of ?benevolent paternalism,? hushed voices, and plush red leather, clients throw money at lawyers who pamper their young and feast on intellectually and financially rewarding work that seemingly has no end. If the ?Cravath model? of up-or-out competition to make partner proves too daunting, there?s the alternative ?Chicago model? of moving in a straight line from summer clerkship through the associate ranks to the promised land. The trite phrase ?white shoe? to describe the elite firms makes three appearances. Nowhere does the layman learn that this Mad Men of Law motif withered in most firms and cities in the 1970s and ?80s, and that traditionalists have long since given up squawking about the loss of collegiality and professionalism.

      But here, suddenly, law turns into a crass business. People are self-interested and mean to each other! Cost-cutting corporations are super-serious about no longer handing law firms a blank check. Partners stomp on the fingers of those beneath them on the ladder to the top, new mommies work long hours, hustle matters more than sheer smarts, and pay linked to performance makes people behave badly. Worst of all, the 2008 financial collapse ushers in previously unheard-of lawyer layoffs. Lawyers, Scheiber announces, can be greedy. ?No relationship in the legal profession is more fraught,? he intones, ?than the one between partners and their money.? Film at 11.

      Scheiber is careful, of course, to insert a wink here and there to show that he knows this isn?t exactly breaking news, or even new in the slightest. But then he resumes hyping it all as a previously undiscovered tsunami that?s just about to crest. In the rush to prove the point, he tells us little or nothing about past overbuilding binges gone bad, from the collapse of Finley Kumble in 1987 to the implosion of firms a dozen to 15 years later that bet too heavily on bubbles in technology and finance, and then either folded entirely or culled the legal herd by dozens or hundreds.

      Perhaps even more relevant would have been the gradual but remarkable expansion of these businesses at the top of the pyramid, redefining large again and again, to the point that today?s 2,000-lawyer, multibillion-dollar-grossing machines are quadruple the size of the largest firms of just a couple of decades ago. Accompanying that growth is a constant, looming tension: to grow through acquisition or organically, by merging and hiring talent with ?books of business? or by recruiting and training talent in a long-range game of forecasting demand several years down the road.

      All along, corporate legal officers?the clients (and often former partners) of the law firms?have vowed to clamp down on extravagant hourly fees and legal bills that outstrip any business rationale. For some reason, though, they never reach the client-driven nirvana that Scheiber touts, of outsourced research and dramatically pruned invoices, simply because legal bills, compared at least to banker fees, amount to rounding errors when corporations need outside counsel to do their deals and defend them in bet-the-company litigation. In both flush times or crises, the fees flow.

      There?s a simple reason a story about natural business cycles and incremental, decades-spanning change invariably turns into a tale of impending doom and radical transformation: the journalist?s impulse to hype. It?s tough to interest a general audience, even one as wonky as the New Republic?s, in a story about the business of law. A little razzamatazz is forgivable.

      But there?s a deeper instinct at work here, as well. Let?s call it the Vampire Squid meme. It?s been four years since Matt Taibbi called Goldman Sachs ?a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money,? but it might as well have been last week for that quote?s staying power. Scheiber?s story lacks such instant branding, but it?s striving for it. Look at how the magazine?s Laura Bennett distills the story, in a Q&A with cover model Odenkirk:

      ? basically it?s about the moral decay of white-shoe law firms in the post-recession era, their descent into hotbeds of backstabbing and greed.

      This is crowd-pleasing stuff: the grade-grubbing, argumentative kid in class who got too rich too soon but shows up at the high school reunion divorced, drunk, and ?between jobs.? Feel better about yourself now? It?s a feel-good story for those of us who are heartened to hear the news that ?Big Law Still Really, Really Dying.?

      At least the Odenkirk-as-Goodman cover makes us laugh instead of cringe. And if it means that the world has at least one less starry-eyed law student, then it will have achieved some good, too.

      Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2013/07/death_of_big_law_new_republic_s_claim_is_grossly_exaggerated.html

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      Wednesday, July 24, 2013

      Man United humbled again in Japan

      Manchester United forward Shinji Kagawa shoots the ball against Yokohama Marinos defender Yuta Narawa during United's 3-2 loss in Japan. Source: TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA / AFP

      MANCHESTER United stumbled to a 3-2 defeat against Japan's Yokohama Marinos in their second loss in three games under new manager David Moyes.

      The English champions fell behind after only a minute but they recovered to lead 2-1 heading into the second half thanks to Jesse Lindgard's strike and a Yokohama own goal.

      But Fabio Aguiar headed the scores level before Yoshihito Fujita's winner three minutes from time removed further gloss from United's pre-season Asian tour.

      "We had a chance to finish off the game at 2-1 and had a great chance to make it 3-1, and we thought we had chances after that as well but we didn't take them. So it was a tough game," said Moyes.

      "It was the first time that I got a chance to see Shinji (Kagawa) playing. He had a great chance to score, but overall I was pleased to get him," added the Scot.

      So far under Moyes, United have lost 1-0 in Bangkok and won 5-1 in Melbourne, and they got off to a horror start in hot and humid conditions in Yokohama.

      The game was just a minute old when Brazilian striker Marquinhos latched on to a poor clearance from United custodian David de Gea to fire the hosts in front from inside the box.

      The setback stung the Premier League champions and talented Belgian teen Adnan Januzaj nearly put them level with a crisp strike which was just off-target.

      Januzaj, 18, then got back to head a chance off the line but it was new signing Wilfried Zaha who orchestrated United's opener when he drifted past his man into the box.

      The ex-Crystal Palace man's low cross caused mayhem and it was Lindgard on hand to net his third goal in two games, after Saturday's brace against the A-League All-Stars.

      Yokohama handed United the lead when Januzaj, United's reserve team player of last season, fired a free-kick which came off the unfortunate Masakazu Tashiro and over the line.

      But the hosts were back on terms after the break when de Gea failed to deal with a corner and Brazilian defender Fabio Aguiar's header moved the score to 2-2.

      Kagawa drew a huge cheer when he came on just after the hour-mark, and United's Japanese playmaker nearly raised the roof when he got clear -- but his shot failed to beat the 'keeper.

      Ashley Young hit one into the side-netting but it was Yokohama who had the final word when Fujita swept home the winning goal in the 87th minute.

      Moyes, facing the stiff challenge of following Alex Ferguson's 27-year, trophy-laden reign, now leads his team west for a game against Japan's Cerezo Osaka on Friday.

      ?

      Source: http://www.foxsports.com.au/football/manchester-united-humbled-again-in-japan-against-yokohama-marinos/story-e6frf423-1226684034310?from=public_rss

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      Tuesday, July 23, 2013

      AT&T to introduce 300MB and 2GB Mobile Share plans on July 26th (updated)

      AT&T Mobile Share

      AT&T's Mobile Share plans have sometimes been too expensive for customers who only need a little data. The carrier will soon be more accommodating, however: it's adding both 300MB and 2GB tiers on July 26th. The $20, 300MB pack costs half as much as the 1GB plan, and is intended mostly for basic phone users. We've reached out for more details on 2GB pricing, but it's not hard to see this new tier slotting neatly between the 1GB and 4GB offerings. Both new plans should represent better bargains for frugal customers, although they won't do much for bandwidth lovers -- Lumia 1020 customers will likely want some extra headroom.

      Update: AT&T tells us that the 2GB plan will cost $50, plus $45 for each smartphone.

      Filed under: , , ,

      Comments

      Source: AT&T

      Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/22/att-to-introduce-300mb-and-2gb-mobile-share-plans-on-july-26th/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

      Shane Larkin Shannon Guess Richardson Darren Daulton Andrew Wiggins James Gandolfini funeral Nelson Mandela Dead Dylan Redwine

      US Defense Department offers key spectrum to cellular carriers

      Soldiers using a smartphone

      The US Department of Defense values its wireless spectrum more than many government agencies, and it has been reluctant to lose those airwaves to private providers through government auctions. It just had a change of heart, however: the Pentagon tells the NTIA that it's now willing to free up spectrum in the 1,755MHz to 1,780MHz range. The proposal would have the military shift much of its wireless use into nearby 1,780MHz to 1,850 MHz bands, while moving other tasks into frequencies between 2,025MHz and 2,110MHz. Problem solved? Not quite, unfortunately -- NAB members use the 2GHz range for TV, and they're more than a little worried about interference. The military's suggestion should kickstart negotiations, though, and carriers are optimistic that there will eventually be a deal that gives them the bandwidth they crave.

      Filed under: , ,

      Comments

      Source: Wall Street Journal

      Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/TRmSXkZzlFY/

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      Monday, July 22, 2013

      NFL camp preview: NFC players on the hot seat (The SportsXchange)

      Copyright ? 2006-2013 - Saints News and Saints News Radio are "unofficial" New Orleans Saints fansites and are not affiliated with the New Orleans Saints and NFL. Images and articles used on these sites are used under the fair use provision of the Copyright Act for purposes of comment, criticism, and news reporting.

      Source: http://www.saintsnews.net/2013/07/22/nfl-camp-preview-nfc-players-on-the-hot-seat-the-sportsxchange/

      denver post Scandal denver broncos new england patriots Zayn Malik miss america 2013 Oscar Nominations

      Two 2000 NBA title rings Kobe Bryant gave to his mom dad sold at auction on Saturday Joe Bryants ring fetched 174184 whil...

      SbB LIVE FROM LA (Jul 21, 2013 @ 5:13am ET)

      8:00 PM: Former astronaut Buzz Aldrin tweeted on Saturday: "44 years ago today Neil (Armstrong) took this photo of me at Tranquility Base on the moon. We all miss you Neil."

      7:45 PM: A New York Mets fan at Citi Field just missed getting smacked in the face by a flying bat that flew out of the hands of Anthony Recker during Saturday's game against the Phillies.

      7:30 PM: Minnesota Twins owner Jim Pohlad said on Friday that he doesn't plan on firing manager Ron Gardenhire during the season: "I'm not going to put Gardy out of his misery. I don't think he's miserable. He's got a great job and we love him."

      7:15 PM: About 900 people attended Friday's funeral of Jon Richardson, son of Carolina Panthers owner Jerry Richardson & former president of Bank of America Stadium. Among those attending were Roger Goodell, Jerry Jones & Robert Kraft.

      7:00 PM: Ben Volin of the Boston Globe notes that New York Giants safety Will Hill became the fourth member of the 2008 Florida Gators BCS title team to be suspended for violating NFL drug policies.

      6:45 PM: Siohvaughn Funches-Wade, ex-wife of Miami Heat player Dwyane Wade, sat outside Chicago's Daley Center on Friday holding a sign that read: "NBA Miami Heat star, mother of his children on the streets".

      6:30 PM: Arizona State University president Michael Crow disagrees with allowing for-profit Grand Canyon University to move up to NCAA Division I this season: "We are against using athletics as a mechanism to make profits. It's contrary to what we're trying to do."

      6:15 PM: Charles Barkley said on Friday about the Philadelphia 76ers' prolonged search for a coach: "I think that's one of the silliest things that I've seen in sports in a long time .... To not have a coach under contract by now, I think that's a joke. I don't know what they're waiting on."

      6:00 PM: Hay Beautiful, a horse scheduled to compete in a race at Meadowlands Racetrack Friday night, had to be euthanized after suffering serious injuries in a trailer accident on Interstate 80 near Parsippany, New Jersey.

      5:45 PM: Pittsburgh Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said in a radio interview Friday about the team's first-half season success: "Don't bark if you're not going to bite. And we're in a position now where we can bite .... We've been able to show other people we're a team of action."

      5:30 PM: St. Louis Cardinals outfielder Matt Holliday has been placed on the 15-day disabled list with a right hamstring strain.

      5:15 PM: NASCAR announced Friday it is suspending the use of aerial cameras after 10 people were injured when a Fox Sports cable snapped during a race in Charlotte two months ago.

      5:00 PM: Baltimore Orioles pitcher Kevin Gausman tweeted on Saturday about last year's movie theater shootings in Aurora, Colorado: "One year ago my hometown Aurora was victim of a terrible tragedy. My prayers are with the victims families. #5280Strong #NeverForget"

      4:45 PM: MLB.com notes that as of Saturday morning, the Seattle Mariners have homered in 23 straight games. The MLB record streak is 27 games set by the 2002 Texas Rangers.

      4:30 PM: Fans at Wrigley Field for Friday's Pearl Jam concert had to deal with a 2 1/2 hour rain delay, which led to the show not ending until 2 a.m. Saturday morning.

      Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=54207

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      Mexican Small-Town Mayor Killed by Police Chief

      [unable to retrieve full-text content]

      Source: www.nytimes.com --- Monday, July 22, 2013
      Prosecutors in southern Mexico have arrested the police chief of the small town of Aquila for allegedly shooting the Mayor to death following an argument. ? ? ? ? ...

      Source: http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2013/07/22/world/americas/ap-lt-mexico-mayor-killed.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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      Sunday, July 21, 2013

      Loki reigns over Marvel Studios Comic-Con panel

      This publicity photo released by Walt Disney Studios shows Chris Evans as Captain America from Marvel?s ?Captain America: The Winter Soldier? as the production commences principal photography in preparation for the April 4, 2014 film release. (AP Photo/Walt Disney Studios/Marvel, Zade Rosenthal)

      This publicity photo released by Walt Disney Studios shows Chris Evans as Captain America from Marvel?s ?Captain America: The Winter Soldier? as the production commences principal photography in preparation for the April 4, 2014 film release. (AP Photo/Walt Disney Studios/Marvel, Zade Rosenthal)

      (AP) ? Thor's evil brother, Loki, took over the Marvel Studios presentation at Comic-Con on Saturday.

      Lights flashed inside the San Diego Convention Center's largest exhibition hall, and Tom Hiddleston, dressed as Loki, commanded the stage. He called Hall H "a meager palace of Midgard" before showing footage from "Thor: The Dark World."

      It opened with an epic battle scene, in which Thor takes down a massive monster, reducing him to a pile of rubble with one swing of his hammer.

      The cast of "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" shared footage from that film. It also opened with a dynamic fight scene: Captain America battling a dozen assailants in a glass elevator.

      Other highlights included the introduction of the "Guardians of the Galaxy" cast, which includes Chris Pratt, Zoe Saldana and Djimon Honsou.

      Mixed martial-artist Dave Bautista said he fought hard for the role of Drax.

      "It's something I wanted more than anything I've ever wanted in my life," the tattooed bodybuilder said. "When I got the job, I broke down and cried like a little baby."

      "Avengers" director Joss Whedon made a surprise appearance at the panel, where he offered an early look at the sequel.

      A teaser trailer for "Avengers: Age of Ultron" ended with an image of the title character.

      Kevin Feige, head of Marvel Studios, says "Guardians" is the company's attempt to push the Marvel cinematic universe in new directions beyond "The Avengers" franchise that might not be familiar to the casual fan. The film takes place on the other side of the universe, for the most part, he says, and features non-humanoid characters that will require computer-generated images to pull off.

      "It's a very important movie for us for expanding the definition of what a Marvel Studios movie can be the way 'Iron Man' 1 was a very important movie for us," Feige said in an interview earlier Saturday.

      "People didn't know if Marvel could do it by themselves. They didn't know if Iron Man was an A-list character. People called Iron Man a B-list character then. We had a lot to prove there. With 'Guardians' they don't call it anything because they don't know what the heck it is. There's very little recognition. It's got its own fan base as all the titles do, but that's not why we're making it. We're making it because we want to do something very different."

      ___

      AP Music Writer Chris Talbott in San Diego contributed to this report.

      ___

      Online:

      http://comic-con.org

      ___

      Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

      Associated Press

      Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-07-21-Comic-Con-Marvel/id-966dcca188364a2c9ca27ceaa82da988

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      Hong Kong in Monochrome in the 1950?s Chinese photographer...

      Lomography

      Hong Kong in Monochrome in the 1950?s

      Chinese photographer Fan Ho was in his early 20?s when he started shooting the streets of Hong Kong in the 50?s. When the region was running through its fast-paced transition, Ho chose to slow it down by patiently waiting for the perfect subjects and moments to capture. Decades, awards and publications later, the waiting has paid off.

      45e1d44587-djke882-638699shyya0-dopwnn1

      #FFFFFF

      10

      Source: http://lomographicsociety.tumblr.com/post/56004615091

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      The-Awesomest-7-Year-Postdoc or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Tenure-track-faculty-life

      Scary myths and scary data abound about life as a tenure-track faculty at an ?R1? university. Scary enough to make you wonder: why would any smart person want to live this life?

      As a young faculty member at Harvard, I got asked such questions a lot. Why did you choose this career? How do you do it? And I can?t blame them for asking, because I am scared by those myths too. I have chosen very deliberately to do specific things to preserve my happiness, lots of small practical things that I discovered by trial and error.

      So when asked by graduate students and other junior faculty, I happily told them the things that worked for me, mostly in one-on-one meetings over coffee, and a few times publicly on panels. Of course, I said all these things without any proof that they lead to success, but with every proof that they led me to enjoy the life I was living.

      Most people I talked to seemed surprised. Several of my close friends challenged me to write this down, saying that that I owed it to them. They told me that such things were not done and were not standard. That may be true. But what is definitely true, is that we rarely talk about what we actually do behind the scenes to cope with life. Revealing that is the scariest thing of all.

      I?ve enjoyed my seven years as junior faculty tremendously, quietly playing the game the only way I knew how to. But recently I?ve seen several of my very talented friends become miserable in this job, and many more talented friends opt out. I feel that one of the culprits is our reluctance to openly acknowledge how we find balance. Or openly confront how we create a system that admires and rewards extreme imbalance. I?ve decided that I do not want to participate in encouraging such a world. In fact, I have to openly oppose it.

      So with some humor to balance my fear, here?s goes my confession:

      Seven things I did during my first seven years at Harvard. Or, how I loved being a tenure-track faculty member, by deliberately trying not to be one.

      • I decided that this is a 7-year postdoc.
      • I stopped taking advice.
      • I created a ?feelgood? email folder.
      • I work fixed hours and in fixed amounts.
      • I try to be the best ?whole? person I can.
      • I found real friends.
      • I have fun ?now?.

      I decided that this is a 7-year postdoc.

      In 2003, at a party, I met this very cool guy. He was on the job market for faculty positions and had just gotten an offer from MIT Sloan. I was on the job market too, and so we instantly hit it off. I had recently completed my PhD in computer science from MIT; it had already felt so hard, just proving myself as worthy enough. I also had a 4 year old kid and a little toddler. I really wondered how I?d emotionally survive tenure-track, assuming anyone would even offer me the job. So I asked him. How did he feel about doing the whole tenure track thing? Having to prove oneself again after the whole PhD experience? The answer changed my life, and gave me a life long friend.

      He looked at my quizzically, and said ?Tenure-track? what?s that? Hey, I?m signing up for a 7-year postdoc to hang out with some of the smartest, coolest folks on the planet! Its going to be a blast. And which other company gives you 7 year job security? This is the awesomest job ever!?

      In 2004 when I came to Harvard as a junior faculty, I wrote it on my desk.
      This-is-a-7-year-postdoc.
      I type it in every day. For all seven+ years I have been at Harvard. No joke.

      It is an incredibly liberating point of view. If I?m not here for tenure, then there are a bunch of things I do not need to do. For example, I don?t need to spend my seventh year travelling doing the tenure talk circuit (I did not do this), or make sure I invite and get to know personally exactly 18 folks who might be my letter writers, or be on organizing committees so everyone important knows me well, or try to get nominated for awards as fast and as young as possible (I just turned 42). Frankly most of this is not possible to actually do!

      But the sad part is seeing how completely miserable people will allow themselves to get trying to do it. I don?t like being miserable. And why should I be? When I?m surrounded by some of the smartest and coolest folks in the world! Just brainstorming with the faculty and students at Harvard is an incredible experience, and being friends with them is icing on the cake. And to be paid to do that for 7 years? Heck, no industry job was offering me that kind of job security! I figured 7 years is a long time. Enough time to make a detailed plan for my next career.

      I decided that this was a great job, that I was going to take it with both hands, and that I was going to enjoy my 7 years to the fullest. And I took explicit steps to remind myself of this decision every day.

      I stopped taking advice.

      I hate to say this, but people lie. Even with the best intentions. If you ask them what is important to succeed as a junior faculty member, people will tell you everything they did that they think helped them succeed. Plus everything they wish they had done. And all the things their friend did too. They deliver you this list without annotation, a list which no single person could ever accomplish. And while this list sends you into shock, followed by depression, followed by a strong desire to quit (because heck I?m never gonna be able to do all that) ? the truth is that that is the last thing this person wants. They want you to succeed! And so with the best of intentions, they advise you on how to fail.

      An extreme case of this happened to me in my early years, when I went to a Harvard event for junior women faculty. To make a long story short, several senior women got up and explained how we needed to do all the things the male junior faculty were doing, but then also do a whole second list of extra things to compensate for the fact that there is huge implicit bias against women in letters and assessments. And there I was, with two young kids, already worried how I was going to have to be twice as productive as the men in order to compete with half as many working hours. And these women were telling me I?d have to be four times as good as the men per hour to survive! These women had the best of intentions. But I came back to my office, lay on the couch, and decided to quit. Then I remembered rule 1: I am not here for tenure, so none of the advice actually applies to me. Since then I just refuse to go to these sorts of events, and there are plenty of gender-neutral versions of that experience. Instead I run a therapy couch for those male and female junior faculty who attend.

      The second problem is that people gave me advice in the form of lists. Example lists I got: give invited talks in many big places, publish lots of journal articles, join prominent conference committees so you get to know senior people personally, volunteer in University committees to get to know Harvard faculty who might be on your tenure case, etc.

      It is easy to give (and receive) advice that is a list, even when the things on the list are not the most important to do. No one said to me, ?Hey, my advice is to win the McArthur grant. Then you?ll get tenure for sure.? Frankly, that?s much surer advice than the list. Just harder to swallow. Given that any time spent on a list item is time not spent on research (and many of these list items are super time consuming), I don?t feel like a lot of advice I got was sound.

      Finally, it doesn?t help that computer science (and university faculty in general) suffers from an extreme lack of diversity. People claim to care about about work-life balance, while only really understanding and practicing workaholism. Most people I know are incapable of giving advice I can follow, without getting a divorce or giving up my kids for adoption. Unfortunately that?s still true.

      I created a ?feelgood? email folder

      I have an email folder named ?feelgood?. It?s a little silly, but effective. Every time I tell my colleagues about this one, they first laugh, and then seriously consider making one for themselves. Here?s what?s in it:

      The eloquent and touching email my MIT advisor wrote to our group about how proud he was to see one of his students choose to go into academia. The email from the Harvard faculty member who offered me the job, and then went on and on saying how excited she was that I was joining. The first paper acceptance I got. The first award I got. The random email I got from a famous professor who I totally idolize (oh my god, they know my name!). The junior faculty member who said they?d save my emails and reread them every time they felt down. The student who told me I should be awarded a degree in psychology, because I let them vent and cry on my couch and that apparently made all the difference. The email from the Turing award winner who thought my promotion was good but not surprising (could?ve fooled me!). The photo my husband sent me while I was traveling at a conference, of how my 6-year old daughter tried to help her dad by packing lunch for her 3-year old brother (unsuccessfully of course). Some seriously funny emails my faculty buddy sent me to cheer me up. Basically pointers to moments when I felt happy.

      One of the hardest things for me about this job is that there are so many ways to get rejected, and those linger a lot longer than the feeling of success when something good happens. Grant rejections, harsh paper reviews, bad teaching reviews ? all ways of having someone reject your results without acknowledging the huge amount of hard work that went into this not-quite-perfect outcome. Even in a 7 year postdoc, it is still hard.

      People advised me, ?Don?t take it personally?. Yeah. In the bin of not-useful-advice for me. I put in the work and I care about it. It is emotionally taxing and that is personal. The very idea that we can?t admit that openly is ridiculous. Anyways, that?s when I take 15 minutes and browse though my ?feelgood? folder. And a little bit of that feeling of happiness comes back. Just reading the emails transports me back to those different moments. Its fleeting, but effective. And its real. Good things happened to me, and I have no reason to think that good things won?t happen to me again in the future. Helps me counter the feeling of rejection, and move constructively towards a fix.

      The feelgood folder is just one of my many ?patches? (and thank you Netflix for streaming BBC Masterpiece and Bollywood). As far as I can tell, other seemingly-perpetually-positive faculty have coping mechanisms too; some write blogs, some go grab a beer, others hit the gym. And not all coping mechanisms are graceful. I?ve cried alone in my office and I?ve sobbed a couple times in senior faculty?s offices. Its life. Not being emotional, not being frail, not being human ? these are parts of the scary image of the faculty member. Luckily, I?m in a 7 year postdoc! Far lower standards.

      I work fixed number of hours and in fixed amounts

      Not long after I joined Harvard in 2004, the then President Larry Summers publicly told the world his opinion of why women do not seem to succeed to the top. One of the several hypotheses he put forth was that they weren?t willing to put in the 80 hours/week that was expected of faculty.

      That week I went home and tried to calculate it out. After all how many hours did I ?work at work?? Mind you, I had a toddler and a 4 year old, so I felt I was working *all* the time. Here?s my calculation:

      Ideal scenario: On days where I picked up my kids from daycare, I was fully at work 9-5 and then if all went well I could maybe squeeze in another two hours 10-12pm (while effectively being ?on? non-stop from 7am-midnight, and having kids in 9-6pm daycare). On days where I could stay late at work, I would work 9am-9pm straight but then spend no time with family. On weekends (when there is no daycare, only two overworked parents) I couldn?t manage anything work related but we?d shop, cook, clean, in preparation for the next week. And this ideal case still means being awake and ?on? from 7am to midnight, all 7 days.

      So the generous calculation is: (2pickupdays * 10 hours) + (3latedays * 12 hours) = 56!!

      When I did this calculation, I realized that I was basically getting in about 50 hours/week on a good week! And if I wanted to get to 60 hours/week I?d need to have 12 job-only productive hours per weekday, and if I wanted to get to the 80 hour/week that would mean ~11 hour work days all 7 days of the week. That?s crazy, and *completely* unreasonable. With that expectation, the only way to survive would mean one of us quitting having a career, and the other quitting being a parent.

      And at that point I decided that 50 would just have to be enough.

      But of course less hours mean you get to do less work. And that?s hard to accept for the uber-ambitious person that I am, surrounded by lots of uber-ambitious colleagues and hence lots of peer pressure to take on ever more work. So eventually I came up with an easier solution. I decided on a priori ?fixed amounts? in which I was allowed to agree to do things. Once the quota is up, I have to mandatorily say no.

      • I travel at most 5 times a year. This includes: all invited lectures, all NSF/Darpa investigator or panel meetings, conferences, special workshops, etc. Typically it looks something like this: I do one or two invited lectures at places where I really like the people, I go one full week to a main conference, I do maybe one NSF/Darpa event, and I reserve one wildcard to attend something I really care about (e.g. the Grace Hopper Conference, or a workshop on a special topic). It is *not easy* to say no that often, especially when the invitations are so attractive, or when the people asking are so ungraceful in accepting no for an answer. But when I didn?t have this limit I noticed other things. Like how exhausted and unhappy I was, how I got sick a lot, how it affected my kids and my husband, and how when I stopped traveling I had so much more time to pay real attention to my research and my amazing students.
      • I have a quota for non-teaching/research items. Just like the travel, I have a fixed number of paper reviews (usually 10), fixed number of graduate and undergraduate recruiting or mingling events, and fixed number of departmental committees I am allowed to do each year. I also do one ?special? thing per year that might be time consuming, e.g. being on a conference senior program committee, or being on an NSF/DARPA panel, or being on a junior faculty search committee. But only 1 per year. As soon as I sign up for that one, all present and future opportunities are an automatic no (Makes you think a lot before you say ?yes?, no?). Plus, there are things that are really important to me that don?t get enforced externally. Like making time to meet other women in computer science, and doing a certain amount of outreach to non-Harvard audiences. If I?m not careful, I end up with no time for these less promoted events. And if I end up with no time for these, I end up a very bitter person. I have a quota to prevent me from accidently getting bitter.
      • I also have a weekly hard/fun quota There are things that for some reason are super hard, or bring out your worst procrastination habits. For me, that?s grant reports and writing recommendations. There are also things that are really fun. For me, that?s making logos and t-shirts and hacking on my website. If I can do 1 hard thing per week, and 1 fun thing per week, then I declare victory. That was a good week, by a reasonable measure of goodness.
      • I aim to raise kids as an equal 50-50 partnership. This is a big one and I don?t want to make this seem obvious ? the idea below was born after a long time of growing arguments and anger and resentment, which neither of us are eager to remember. Moving on though, we now happily tell our method to all parents.

      The basic idea is simple. We play zone-defense during the week: only one parent has childcare at a time. I do five days morning drop off (7-9am) and two days evening pickup (6-10pm), my husband does three days evening pickup and no drop offs. When you are on kid duty, all responsibilities are yours (feeding, bathing, where did the gloves go, yes I understand you want to cry inconsolably right now for no reason). But all rules are yours too; the other parent has to stay clear out of it and no comments allowed. When you are off kid duty, you can schedule the time as you please, stay late at work or take a tennis class or go drinking with buddies. No questions asked.

      I mostly work those days or schedule work-related social events on those evenings. This tag-team parenting also means we don?t all get together as a family during the week usually. So we decided: no job related work on the weekends. No reading or writing email, no reading grants and papers, no preparing lectures, no conference calls. The weekend is either for getting organized at home or just spending time together. We also carved out a chunk of our budget to get household help 3 times a week, to create more time for us on the weekends to be together as a family. Finally, if you want to break the rules, then you have to trade: for every evening I cover for him, he has to cover an evening that week for me. For every weekend I travel, I have to give him a weekend day off. No free lunch.

      The nice thing about the fixed amounts approach is that it made equality easier to approach in a house with two alphas. My husband worked for industry, but his job had the same expectations of working all the time, traveling all the time, and pretending that nothing else exists. This helped us limit how much our careers (or kids) were allowed to encroach on our lives as a whole. But I also adher to this pretty strictly for other reasons. I need rest!

      I stop working late Friday night and I don?t open my email client until Monday morning. My students have adapted. They know not to put me in unreasonable situations like trying to submit a paper last minute. My kids have adapted too. They like the idea that Tuesday is mommy rules and Wednesday is daddy rules. They know the weekend is theirs. My colleagues I?m not exactly sure about. I?m afraid they don?t quite realize how few hours I am willing to give to the job. Oh well, I guess they know now.

      People want you to do everything all the time, and they impress you that the world will collapse if you don?t. But there are times I wish the world would just bloody collapse! Because the amount of stuff people keeping adding to the ?must be done? list is outrageous. It is also stunning how little thought society has given to raising kids with two working parents. People in my work community constantly schedule important work events on evenings and weekends, with no apology or offer of childcare. People in my city government think that affordable public education ages 5-12 until 3pm is sufficient, and the rest doesn?t need organized effort or collective funding. Yet somehow we declare victory with Title IX? Ridiculous.

      So in spite of all the practical ways I counter these issues, it still makes me very angry and frustrated. Which brings me to the next point.

      I try to be the best ?whole? person I can.

      It was the end of a month where a lot of things had gone haywire: rejected grants, a poorly prepared problem set that should have never seen the light of day, a sick kid whose fever I tried to mask with Tylenol and send to school, and so on. It was all bad, and I was embarressed and depressed. I was doing poorly on every account, in front of people who quite reasonably expected so much more from me. As I was having this nervous breakdown moment and feeling very isolated, I called one of my old friends just to chat. Unaware of my condition, she told me a story about her uncle who had a smart young daughter, and how he takes off work at 3pm to take her to be part of a special math Olympiad, and how he goes with her on weekends for classes at a community college, and how he is doing everything within his power to provide his daughter access to the best opportunities.

      And in that moment it suddenly dawned on me what was taking me down. We (myself included) admire the obsessively dedicated. At work we hail the person for whom science and teaching is above all else, who forgets to eat and drink while working feverously on getting the right answer, who is always there to have dinner and discussion with eager undergrads. At home we admire the parent who sacrificed everything for the sake of a better life for their children, even at great personal expense. The best scientists. The best parents. Anything less is not giving it your best.

      And then I had an even more depressing epiphany. That in such a world I was destined to suck at both.

      Needless to say it took a lot of time, and a lot of tears, for me to dig myself out of that hole. And when I finally did, it came in the form of another epiphany. That what I can do, is try to be the best whole person that I can be. And that is *not* a compromise. That *is* me giving it my very best. I?m pretty sure that the best scientists by the above definition are not in the running for most dedicated parent or most supportive spouse, and vice versa. And I?m not interested in either of those one-sided lives. I am obsessively dedicated to being the best whole person I can be. It is possible that my best whole is not good enough for Harvard, or for my marriage; I have to accept that both may choose to find someone else who is a better fit. But even if I don?t rank amongst the best junior faculty list, or the best spouses list, I am sure there is a place in the world where I can bring value.

      Because frankly, my best whole person is pretty damn good.

      I found real friends

      I found friends at work who think I?m special just the way I am (and I avoid the others). My work friends are awesome, but not ?perfect?. They are *not* senior people in my field. These are folks I ?gel? with. These are folks who think I have good ideas, regardless of this year?s crop of paper acceptances and rejections. These are folks whose ideas I like, making every coffee conversation worth it. In my awesomest-7-year-postdoc, I am here to have an awesome time. So what better way than to spend it with people I truly have fun with!

      In our community there is a lot of pressure to network and impress the perfect friends, e.g. senior faculty in your field who will sit on your grant panels, review your papers, and eventually write your tenure letters. These people are supposed to tell you your worth. Yikes! Good thing I wasn?t on tenure-track! When I started out, it was hard to simply walk up to such people and say, hey, instantly like me without any proof beyond my graduate thesis. Exposing myself to groups of people I didn?t know and had no reason to trust, just so they could shoot me down, didn?t seem like an effective way to learn. Plus, I get enough anonymous feedback as it is. Often it isn?t clear to me that the expert reviewers in my field have made a sincere effort to understand what it is I am trying to do, if I am saying it poorly. Four years later with some work under my belt, and a clearer idea of who I was, I did make many good friends in my field. But they will never replace my first friends who thought I was special from the start and who believed (on some inexplicable faith) that I would do good things.

      My most valuable and constructive professional criticism has come from these friends ? friends who were not in my field, but were in my ?court?. These friends are the ones who read my proposals and papers for my first four years at Harvard. Even though they weren?t from my field, they caught 90% of the bugs in any argument or writing I did. They cared about me personally, so they put in a lot of time and effort to deliver honest critical evaluations of my work and my decisions, in a language I could understand. They helped me deal with the inevitable rejections and insults. These people were instrumental to my success, when I had few accomplishments and little experience to recommend me. These are the people who will still instantly care about whatever I care about at that moment, and give me their valuable time. These are the people who will proofread this article.

      I get by with a little help from my friends?

      I have fun ?now?

      In 2012 when I got tenure, people came up to me and said ?Congratulations. Now you can do all the things you?ve always wanted to, take risk, take an easier pace, and have fun?. My answer was: ?I?ve always done what I wanted to?. And its true. But its not because I have extra courage. Rather, by demoting the prize, the risk becomes less. People will say: you can do xyz after you get tenure. But if I am not here for tenure, then that doesn?t apply! I don?t have to worry about being so brave. I?m allowed to have fun now.

      I have fun doing research I like at my natural balance for risk tolerance (even if it?s a 7-year-postdoc, I can?t take or handle unbounded risk in research). I take 1-month long vacations in the summer without touching my email (and I?ve ignored the advice that my away message would make people stop taking me seriously). My lab goes on an annual ski trip (the first trip was four years ago, and my lab?s productivity doubled that year). I enjoy working hard, but not at the expense of my principles or my personal judgment of what is actually important. Fun is essential to my research. It is essential to me wanting to have this career.

      A faculty member once told me that when people are miserable and pushed to their limits, they do their best work. I told them that they were welcome to poke out their own eyes or shoot a bullet through their own leg. That would definitely cause huge misery and might even improve their research. Ok, yeah, I only thought about saying that.

      Conclusion

      Many who consider, or even try, the tenure-track faculty life feel like they don?t fit the stereotype. For some, the stereotype is so far, that one feels like an alien. The two options I hear most are getting burned out (by trying to live up to the rules) or opting-out (because one can?t play the game by the rules). I guess my hope is to add one more option to the list, which is covering your ears and making up your own rules.

      I am not saying this approach or this list is a recipe for success. As one of my wise colleagues said, we know very little about what makes people actually succeed. Rather this is the recipe by which I have, and I am, having fun being in academia. And if I?m not having fun, I will quit and do something else. There are lots of ways to live a meaningful life.

      I realize that my own case is special in many ways. It is a rare privelege to get a tenure-track faculty position at a place like Harvard. And engineering is a discipline with many reasonable career alternatives. And very, very few mothers get to raise kids with a feminist husband. Nevertheless, it seems to me that at all levels of academia, almost regardless of field and university, we are suffering from a similar myth: that this profession demands ? even deserves ? unmitigated dedication at the expense of self and family. This myth is more than about tenure-track, it is the very myth of being a ?real? scholar.

      By my confession, I hope to at least make some chinks in the armor of that myth. Maybe even inspire others to find their own unorthodox ways to cope with the academic career track, and to share them. And maybe, just maybe, I can inspire my senior colleagues to have an honest discussion about what expectations and value systems we are setting up for young faculty. I know that I do not want to participate in encouraging a world anchored by that myth. In fact, I have no choice but to openly oppose it. Because I can?t live ? I can?t breathe ? in that world.

      So. Tenure. What?s that? Here?s to another 7 years! And then we?ll see.

      Other Things to Read

      Many of the ideas in this article were inspired by discussions I had with friends and things I?ve read. There have been some really terrific articles on this subject. Here?s a few that I find really useful. I often revisit them.

      Uri Alon: Work-life Balance in Science: A Theory Lunch Video
      (~30 minutes, parts 1-4, especially part 4 ?Sunday at the Lab? spoof song)
      The Alon lab has put together an excellent set of Materials for Nuturing Scientists.

      Anne-Marie Slaughter: Why We Still Can?t Have It All, The Atlantic, July 2012

      Ivan Sutherland: Technology and Courage, Perspectives, Sun Microsystems Inc, April 1996.

      Kate Clancy: On being a Radical Scholar, Scientific American Blog, October, 2011

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      Source: http://rss.sciam.com/~r/sciam/basic-science/~3/7GKdkZ4f3Ro/post.cfm

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