Monday, September 17, 2012

Timeliness- I chose this article because it gave me an idea on what the Princeton Press was all about.
                         The Gamble

The Princeton University Press cannot give away the ending of its forthcoming book on the 2012 presidential election. But it does plan to give away the beginning.
The press has a novel approach to marketing The Gamble — a forthcoming book by political scientists John Sides of George Washington University and Lynn Vavreck of the University of California at Los Angeles that intends to bring a data-intensive, social science perspective to the upcoming campaign showdown between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The Princeton press is planning to make the first two chapters of the book available in electronic form, at no cost, in time for the national party conventions at the end of the summer.
“One of the challenges of university press publishing is our [timetable], because the reviewing process can be a little longer,” says Chuck Myers, the executive editor for political science, law and American history at the press. “We’re trying to find ways of getting books about contemporary issues out faster.”
This is the first time the press has made chapters of one of its titles available prior to publication of the whole work. Princeton, along with many of university presses, have embraced digital “shorts” — chapters or small chunks of published books — as a way to entice buyers who might not think it worthwhile to purchase the whole work. But doling out electronic nuggets of a forthcoming book in advance is a new strategy that Princeton hopes will insinuate into the national election narrative a take that is both academic and timely.   
The Princeton press is hoping that by making the initial chapters of The Gamble — the first, an exposition of the political landscape in the run-up to the election; the second, an account of the Republican primary battles — available as the race is still unfolding, the press and its authors will be able to help shape the narrative of the election as it is happening rather than merely providing hindsight after the fact.
“This is an effort to be proactive,” says Myers, "to take the analysis of really smart scholars and make it part of the discussion as the election campaign is unfolding.”
Journalists do a good job covering day-to-day storylines of the campaign trail, but social scientists are trained to bring a level of analytical rigor that transcends the daily dramas of the news cycle, says Sides, one of the book’s co-authors. Unfortunately, they tend to work more slowly, he says. And the peer-review process applied by university presses generally delays the publication of academic analysis until after it has become, well, academic.
In this case, Myers secured permission from the Princeton press’s editorial board to have the first chapters peer-reviewed on truncated timetables — 2 to 3 weeks rather than the typical 3 to 4 months — and published to coincide with the election cycle. The plan is to publish the first two chapters by the end of August, the second two chapters in October or November, and the final, finished edition of the book (in print and electronic format) in spring of next year.
It’s a strategic approach — designed to create hype for the book while contributing a social science-tinged backdrop to the horse race coverage, Myers explains. “The idea behind this is this will build buzz and conversation that will benefit the book when we publish it as a whole,” he says.  
Myers said that while casual news readers will probably still rely on newspaper and magazine accounts, he hopes Sides and Vavreck’s take will at least shape the thinking of the reporters who are writing those stories.
At the same time, the accelerated publication schedule will challenge the authors by bringing their deadlines more closely into line with mainstream writers, says Sides.
One of the challenges of elevating the analysis above the level of instant-punditry is taking the time to figure out exactly what the data are saying, he says. And sometimes a trenchant interpretation takes a while to gestate. “It’s not a lot different from any kind of science project — where you spend time stumbling around blind alleys, investigating a hypothesis that didn’t turn out to be true,” says Sides.
“By working quickly we have less time to really work on that,” he continues. “And yeah, it raises the possibility that could we make a mistake. Certainly that’s something we need to be considerate of.”  
For now, the e-chapter advances are an experiment rather than a full-on strategic turn. If the experiment is successful, the Princeton press might try doing the same on similarly timely topics, such as war, says Myers. But he is not certain what it could portend for the disaggregation of university press content in general. In this case, the e-chapters will probably cease to be available once “The Gamble” comes out in full form, Myers says.
One of the possible hazards of breaking apart academic press books and selling them chapter-by-chapter, like songs in iTunes, is damaging the sales of the full books, says Jennifer Crewe, associate director of the Columbia University Press.
It could prime readers to buy the full book, says Crewe, but it could just as easily persuade them not to — or slake their thirst just enough to make buying the rest of the book seem unnecessary.

Like the readers of the early chapters of The Gamble, Myers says the Princeton press expects to acquire perspective on the effects of this editorial Gamble in real time. “From my standpoint it is both an experiment in using new technology in virtually every stage of the creation of this book,” he says, “and also a bet on two authors I have a lot of confidence in.”
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/06/12/timeliness-mind-princeton-press-plans-roll-out-new-book-e-chapters
Prominence

Prep football's return to prominence could be 2012




Quiz Fairfield Prep football head coach Tom Sheaand he'd tell you a 5-5 season was not good enough in 2011.
He'd point to at least two occasions where his squad could have stolen a close game against an upper-echelon SCC opponent.
"At Shelton we dropped a touchdown pass, we screwed up a special teams play on Thanksgiving," he said Saturday after Prep's scrimmage against Fairfield Ludlowe. "That could've been a 7-3 year right there very easily."
Yet, Shea also knows his team was what his team's record was last year, and he has designs on changing that in 2012.
Shea hopes his third year at Prep will be his best yet. Prep has an 80-man varsity roster members and another 40 or so freshmen.
"We've had to cut some, which you don't like to do," Shea said. "But three years ago everyone was quitting so we're in a good place."
Prep's gotten bigger and stronger and the Southern Connecticut Conference may have weakened with Hand and Xavier both losing talented seniors from their state championship squads.
Offensively, Prep wants to run. Shifty back Joe McBride -- who blew out his knee last year against Xavier -- suffered a setback and will not be able to play for Prep this year.
"He's worked hard, he's broken hearted, I'm broken hearted for him," Shea said. "It's just a darn shame."
But Dillon Ryan rushed for more than 700 yards and Shea also expects sophomores John Moten, and Joe Ganim to also contribute at halfback
Chris Golger will be one of Prep's few two-way starters at fullback and linebacker. Matt Montani and Ta'Von Givens-Hunter will aid Golger at fullback.
"We've got a group there who are pretty hard-nosed kids," Shea said.
Golger also started as a junior, and was one of Prep's leaders in tackles in 2011. He is one of Prep's captains.
Two of Prep's captains are offensive linemen, seniors John Meyers and Anthony Dileo. Meyers is Prep's center and Dileo will be its right tackle, and those two have inspired the Jesuits to improve its offseason workouts.
"People are learning to work how we expect them to work," Shea said. "The attitude has been very good from this group."
From that hard work, Shea's seen his linemen get stronger. Technically they need to improve, but Shea knows that will come.
"They have a ways to go," Shea said. "The technique is tough, when they get fatigued, they stand up and
they're easy targets. But they're working hard ... and they're certainly a lot stronger than they've been in the past."
Strecker Backe, who started a game against Notre Dame-West Haven in 2011, should be Prep's quarterback come Sept. 14 against Wilbur Cross, but Shea was not yet willing to name a starter. Backe's been challenged by juniors David Ryan and Anthony Johnson.
Shea knows a win
over the Governers-- in New Haven, no less -- will not only kick his squad's season off on the right foot, but is essential if the Jesuits are to fulfill
2012's goals. Prep
was pummeled by Hand on opening night a year ago.
"If we want to have a good season we have to beat them," Shea said. "We beat them pretty handily last year ... they have a lot of talent, it's up at their place ... we weren't ready for
primetime last year and we ran into a buzzsaw at Hand and got chewed up."
And beating Hand, Xavier, West Haven or Notre Dame-West Haven-- in Shea's mind-- is what separates where Prep is and where it wants to be.
"We've beaten
teams that were smaller than us and we've beaten teams that are OK," Shea said. "We've got to now step up and beat an elite team ... and if we don't,
we're going to be 4-6 or 5-5."
http://www.fairfieldcitizenonline.com/sports/article/Prep-football-s-return-to-prominence-could-be-2012-3838806.php
Food truck proximity restrictions ‘an unconstitutional use of government power’


"Street vending is, and always has been, a part of the American economy and a fixture of urban life. Thanks to low start-up costs, the trade has offered countless entrepreneurs—particularly immigrants and others with little income or capital—opportunities for self-sufficiency and upward mobility. At the same time, vendors enrich their communities by providing access to a wide variety of often low-cost goods and by helping to keep streets safe and vibrant."
This is the introduction to Streets of Dreams: How Cities Can Create Economic Opportunity by Knocking Down Protectionist Barriers to Street Vending, a report produced by the Institute for Justice as part of its National Street Vending Initiative. The Institute for Justice is a Virginia-based civil liberties law firm that "advocates in courts of law and public opinion to vindicate the right to earn an honest living." Today, the Institute sent a letter to the Las Vegas Mayor and City Council stating that a proposed ordinance that would create proximity restrictions between food trucks and restaurants is unconstitutional.
"Simply put, protecting established businesses from competition is an illegitimate use of government power," states the letter. It also references the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution as a protector of the rights of Las Vegas mobile vending entrepreneurs to operate free from arbitrary and protectionist regulation. "Las Vegas should reject protectionist efforts and instead enact clear, simple, legal, and modern laws that focus exclusively on protecting the public's health and safety."
Complaints from some Downtown restaurant operators have spurred City Council to consider updating its regulations regarding mobile food vendors. That action, to be reviewed at the next City Council meeting on August 15, would force food trucks to park at least 300 feet away from any licensed brick-and-mortar restaurant.
"The proposal before you will do nothing but restrict healthy economic activity and hit those on the first rung of the economic ladder the hardest—those with neither the time nor the resources to fight back politically," states the Institute's letter to the Council. "In these still-difficult economic times, Las Vegas should be fostering entrepreneurship and honest enterprise—not regulating it out of business."
http://www.lasvegasweekly.com/news/2012/aug/10/food-truck-proximity-restrictions-are/

 Coaches Conflict Following Giants-Bucks Game

            Conflict- I chose this article because it was explaining the conflict between two coaches at a football game. 


East Rutherford, NJ (written by Mike Garafalo/USA Today) -- After a wild fourth quarter that included 32 points, 385 total yards, two go-ahead touchdowns for the New York Giants and a near-comeback by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the big story was the final play: a kneel down to end the game.
And the screaming match between coaches Tom Coughlin and Greg Schiano that ensued.
Coughlin was upset with Schiano because Bucs linemen bulldozed the middle of the Giants offensive line and knocked over quarterback Eli Manning after the Giants had sealed their 41-34 victory with an interception. The code between players is that's usually not a full-contact play.
"We do what we're coached," Buccaneers defensive tackle Gerald McCoy said. "I'll leave it at that."
Apparently, Schiano didn't get that unwritten rule book.
"I don't know if that's not something that's done in the National Football League, but what I do with our football team is we fight until they tell us the game is over," said the former Rutgers coach, who is in his first year as an NFL head coach. "There's nothing dirty about it. There's nothing illegal about it. You crowd the ball. It's like a (quarterback) sneak defense. We try to knock it loose. But there's nothing illegal about it."
The Giants disagreed, at least with Schiano's contention that it wasn't a dirty play.
"That was a first," Manning said. "Obviously, I think it's a little bit of a cheap shot. We're taking a knee, we're in a friendly way and they're firing off, and that's a way to get someone hurt."
Said right guard Chris Snee: "It's just unfortunate this is what we have to talk about when you have a great fourth-quarter game between two teams, and all you're talking about is really a bush-league play at the end. Fortunately, nobody got hurt. Guys are throwing helmets into knees. It's the end of the game. They might do that in college, but we don't do that here."
Fox cameras caught Coughlin seeming to yell, "What was that all about?" as he approached Schiano for the postgame handshake. Schiano's head blocked Coughlin's lips from the camera's view for the rest of the confrontation, though Coughlin turned back to shake his counterpart's hand.
"You don't do that in this league," Coughlin said. "You jeopardize not only them, you jeopardize the offensive line, you jeopardize the quarterback.
"Thank goodness we didn't get anybody hurt that I know of."
Said Giants center David Baas, "All I'm saying is you win or you lose with class."
Schiano initially tried to dismiss questions about the confrontation in his postgame news conference.
                           "That's between Coach and I," he said. "We had some stuff we had to hash out, I guess."



http://www.wltx.com/sports/article/202158/4/Coaches-Conflict-Following-Giants-Bucks-Game 

Thursday, September 13, 2012



Oregon man sues orthodontist for leaving braces on 11 years



A 22-year-old Oregon man has sued an orthodontist for leaving his braces on for 11 years, resulting in straight but rotten teeth, The Oregonian newspaper reports.
Devin Bost, of Portland, claims he suffered serious tooth decay and periodontal disease from having worn braces from ages 7 to 18 while he lived in Eugene, Ore. Two to three years is normal for braces.
Some of Bost's teeth will need to be replaced with implants, but others cannot be because they have rotted to the jaw, said his attorney, David Hollander.
The lawsuit states that Bost, whose mother is a medical doctor, "received an urgent phone call" in June 2008 from orthodontist Brad Chvatal's office "that he needed to have the braces removed immediately."
The paper writes, "As for how Bost could spend most of elementary school and all of middle school and high school years with braces, Hollander is still trying to sort the details out."
"We aren't really sure what happened," he said.
Bost is seeking $185,000 -- $35,ooo for dental bills and $15,000 for pain and suffering.
Chvatal told The Oregonian he could not have treated Bost until 2002, when he was licensed as an orthodontist. He has been licensed with the Oregon Board of Dentistry since 1997. He declined to comment on the case, citing patient privacy laws.
The president of the American Association of Orthodontiststold ABC News that it was "extremely unusual" for somebody to wear braces for 11 years and that he "could not think of an instance where that would be the case."

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2012/08/oregon-man-sues-orthodontist-for-leaving-braces-on-11-years/1#.UFc2fmh8seE

Isaac Drenches Gulf Coast and High Water Cuts Off Many.


NEW ORLEANS — Seven years to the day that Hurricane Katrina and levee failures unleashed a deluge of devastation on the Gulf Coast, Hurricane Isaac brought its own distinctive mode of destruction on Wednesday, drenching the coast not with a quick blow but with an unremitting smothering.

It pummeled the Mississippi Coast with relentless roundhouse jabs, while pinning southern Louisiana under a saturating rainfall. On its crawl up from the coast, Isaac dumped more than a foot of rain in some places and shoved before it a violent storm surge that would soon bring back the terrible old images of 2005: people marooned on rooftops, rescue workers breaking into attics with axes and the rescued clutching what little they had left.
The worst-hit part of the coast was Plaquemines Parish, La., the finger of land that follows the Mississippi River from Orleans Parish out into the Gulf of Mexico, and the place where both Isaac and Katrina first made landfall.
Fears that a locally built gulf-side levee would be overtopped by Isaac’s massive surge were well founded. Many of those on Plaquemines Parish’s east bank who ignored Monday’s order to leave were forced into their attics when the gulf poured in, filling up the bowl between the levees with up to 14 feet of water.
Dozens of people had to be pulled to safety by rescue workers and neighbors. As of Wednesday evening, water was beginning to creep up the west bank of the parish as well, prompting officials to go door to door to evacuate what is effectively the bottom two-thirds of the parish.
“We’ve never seen anything like this, not even Katrina,” said a visibly rattled Billy Nungesser, the parish president, in a briefing to reporters.
The same theme was repeated everywhere, by Kim Duplantier, a school principal whose home in Plaquemines had survived multiple hurricanes but was filled to ruin with water on Wednesday; by the mayor of Grand Isle, La., a coastal community that was flooded and cut off from the mainland; and by A. J. Holloway, the mayor of Biloxi, Miss., who now wishes he had ordered people to leave.
The skepticism with which Gulf Coast residents, including Mr. Holloway, viewed Isaac — which was downgraded from a Category 1 hurricane to a tropical storm by midafternoon on Wednesday — proved treacherous.
“I really didn’t anticipate this,” said Mr. Holloway, as he wheeled his sport utility vehicle to the edge of Highway 90, a cozy coastal road usually filled with carloads of beachgoers and casinogoers but now a steadily swelling river. “There’s a lot more water than I would have thought.”
In New Orleans, the decision by most residents to stay did not turn out to be disastrous. Trees were down across the city, and streets flooded, and three-quarters of the city was without power, as it will be for several days for more than 600,000 across the state, until the wind dies down enough for utility workers to come in. But despite a few nervous moments, the city’s all but finished $14.5 billion flood protection system seems to have worked.
Outside the city, severe flooding was widespread as Isaac sat defiantly on the coast. The National Hurricane Center expected the storm to drop up to 25 inches of rain in some areas. Officials said Wednesday night that they were working to evacuate up to 3,000 people from floodwaters in St. John the Baptist Parish, about 30 miles west of New Orleans. Tornado warnings were also in effect in several Mississippi counties.
Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana said Wednesday that more than 4,000 people were in shelters across the state, and that 5,000 members of the National Guard had been deployed to help in response efforts. What is perhaps most remarkable about the storm is that there are still no reported fatalities in the United States, especially considering the degree to which it caught gulf residents by surprise.

“Initially, the storm only being a tropical storm instead of a hurricane, many people, especially the people who live down there, didn’t have a whole lot of concern,” said Deano Bonano, an aide to a parish councilman, referring to the town of Lafitte outside the levee. By Wednesday afternoon, the bayou that splits the town was rising so rapidly that scores, if not hundreds, of people were facing potentially days of being cut off from the world.
“I think everyone was surprised by this,” said Denny Mecham, the executive director of the new Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art in Biloxi, which was inches from taking in water. “They try to prepare you, but for people who are used to a Cat. 3 or Cat. 5, this doesn’t seem like much,” she said. “Everyone was saying, ‘We’ll be open by Thursday morning.’ Well, this is not how this one is turning out.”
The same calculus was relied upon in Plaquemines (pronounced PLAK-uh-men) Parish, whose residents are almost by definition hardy and self-reliant. Shrimpers, oystermen, ranchers and workers in the oil patch live together on this stretch of coastline divided by the Mississippi River nearly from head to foot, and they have been through it all: multiple hurricanes, the worst of the BP oil spill and a preference for occupations that are not generally associated with comfort and security. The parish was largely walled out of the federal levee system, much to the anger of the residents. They know what that means.
“We knew it was a matter of time,” said Ms. Duplantier, 44, who moved with her husband to the now-submerged community of Braithwaite so they would have space to keep their horses, pigs, dogs, goats and cats. “We just figured we’d ride it out and see how long it would last. But we did not think in our wildest dreams that a Cat. 1 would do this.”
She evacuated, and her husband and her parents stayed behind to look after the animals. But they spent much of Wednesday watching the water rise, and were reached by boat after eight hours of being stranded. They had figured, she said, that “this was not the big one.”
Until it was. Solutions to getting the water out of the east bank of Plaquemines, which could take days to drain, are not straightforward. The Army Corps of Engineers is rounding up portable pumps from Baton Rouge and elsewhere that can pump floodwaters into the Mississippi, but such pumps are slow.
Mr. Nungesser, with the support of Mr. Jindal, said that the plan was to punch holes in the gulf levee to speed up the draining, as they did after Hurricane Gustav in 2008, and that a team could begin doing that as early as Thursday afternoon.
And still Isaac trudged on, drenching the towns of the north bank of Lake Pontchartrain on Wednesday night and heading at an agonizing 6 miles per hour in the direction of Baton Rouge. Officials warned that the risks were far from over, as flooding was a threat not only along the coast but in mid-Louisiana, upstate Mississippi and the drought-starved regions north. On Wednesday afternoon, Isaac was flooding towns farther inland with its unceasing rain, and was far from finished with southern Louisiana and the Gulf Coast.
“There is another half of the storm to go for most people who have already begun to experience it,” W. Craig Fugate, the administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said on a conference call with reporters. “For some folks in the path, the event and the weather haven’t even begun. We are still way early before this is all over.”