Saturday, February 9, 2013

Michigan tribes lawyer up for off-reservation casinos - Indianz.Com

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"In 1991, Port Huron voters had a real shot at becoming an economic heavyweight, but by a handful of votes rejected what could have been the very first off-reservation casino in Michigan. In 1993, after years of battling, the ?compact? between Michigan and its tribes was settled. The tremendous economic impact generated by gaming opened the door for the 1996 approval of three casinos in Detroit. With Port Huron voters? 2001 approval, Bay Mills spent the few years failing to get Congress to make its proposed casino site in Port Huron ?reservation land.? In November 2011, Bay Mills took another run with its ?new legal theory? declaring its casino site in Vanderbilt ?reservation land.? The state shut it down within weeks. Now it was the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians? turn. Sault Ste. Marie tried the same legal play with its proposed Lansing casino, declaring the Lansing site ?reservation land.? Two weeks ago, the Michigan Attorney General?s Office was in federal court to shut down the Lansing casino before it had a chance to open." Get the Story:
Cliff Schrader: Port Huron missed a bet with '91 casino gambling proposal (The Port Huron Times Herald 2/8)

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Source: http://www.indianz.com/IndianGaming/2013/025933.asp

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Friday, February 8, 2013

Earth-like planets next door? Prospect could point to 9.6 billion more

A new study calculates that the nearest Earth-like planet may be only 13 light-years away ? and argues there may be more habitable planets out there than we thought.?

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / February 6, 2013

This artist's conception provided by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics shows a hypothetical planet with two moons orbiting in the habitable zone of a red dwarf star. Earth-like worlds may be closer and more plentiful than anyone imagined. Astronomers reported Wednesday.

David A. Aguilar/Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics/AP

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The nearest potentially habitable, Earth-like planet may be a scant 13 light-years away ? close enough that any hypothetical, tech-savvy inhabitants there could start enjoying the second season of "The Sopranos" right about now.

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Indeed, there should be at least three Earth-size planets orbiting in the habitable zones of stars within 33 light-years of Earth, according to a new analysis of data from NASA's Kepler mission.

That would put detailed studies of such planets ? and the hunt for signatures of life on them ? well within the reach of a new generation of space telescopes, including the James Webb Space Telescope, currently slated for launch in October 2018.

Launched in March 2009, Kepler is monitoring some 158,000 stars across the constellations Cygnus and Lyra?for signs of planets. The ultimate goal is to detect Earth-like planets orbiting sun-like stars.

Along the way, however, the mission has also been gathering statistics on the size and type of planets orbiting different stars.?Based on those data, the team conducting the new study concludes that some 6 percent of the smallest, coolest types of stars in the galaxy ? red dwarfs ? host planets with a mass similar to Earth's that are also in habitable zones.?

Up to 80 percent of the stars in the galaxy are thought to be red dwarfs. If 6 percent have an Earth-like planet, that means?the galaxy could host between 9.6 billion and 19.2 billion potentially-habitable Earths?around these stars alone.?

The results reinforce a growing recognition that our solar system, with its larger, hotter star, "is quite rare," says John Johnson, an astronomer at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena who studies extrasolar planets. "It's quite remarkable that the vast majority of habitable planets throughout the galaxy are likely around these red dwarfs."?

The results also "highlight just how quickly the field of extrasolar planets is blooming," he adds.

In 2000, astronomers had only detected 33 planets, all gas giants the size of Saturn or larger. They have now found 3,300, when Kepler's planet candidates are included.?

The new study, conducted by Harvard University graduate student Courtney Dressing and astronomer David Charbonneau at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., casts a new eye on the red dwarfs previously cataloged by the Kepler team.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/rgLo33ZT_h0/Earth-like-planets-next-door-Prospect-could-point-to-9.6-billion-more

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Arizona woman 'felt like a prostitute'

An Arizona woman charged with killing her lover in 2008, gave testimony in the case on Wednesday. She described the relationship as primarily physical. If she is convicted she could face the death penalty.?

By Staff,?Reuters / February 6, 2013

Defendant Jodi Arias describes her relationship with Travis Alexander as she testifies in her murder trial on Wednesday. Arias is accused of stabbing and slashing Alexander, slitting his throat and shooting him in the head in June 2008.

AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Charlie Leight

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An Arizona woman?charged with stabbing and shooting her lover to death - and whose graphic testimony has gripped viewers across the?United States?- described in court a relationship based around sex that left her feeling "like a prostitute."

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Lawyers for Jodi Arias, who could face the death penalty if convicted, argue she acted in self-defense when she killed her lover. He was found in the shower of his?Phoenix?valley home, shot in the face, stabbed 27 times and with his throat slit.

"I just felt ... a little bit, I hate to put it this way, but I felt a little bit used," Arias, a petite, bespectacled woman?with long brown hair, told the court on Wednesday in a calm, measured tone, describing a relationship she said was based around sex.

"He gets a hotel room, I show up, we hang out, we have sex ... He's not really mentally present. I'm getting a lot of attention, but only while we're engaging in sexual activity, and then we check out and he takes off. I kind of felt like a prostitute, sort of," the 32-year-old told the court in testimony that has been relayed widely on news broadcasts and livestreamed on the Internet.

Arias, dressed in a dark jacket and wearing glasses, was taking the stand for a third day on Wednesday at the Maricopa County Superior Court in?Phoenix?where she is on trial accused of murdering 30-year-old?Travis Alexander?in 2008.

Her counsel is arguing she killed Alexander after years of emotional abuse and mistreatment. In her testimony she described a sexual relationship with Travis that was "missing the emotional part, the mental connection, being on the same page."

On the second day of testimony on Tuesday, Arias described meeting Alexander at an insurance convention in?Las Vegas?in fall of 2006, at a time when she was in another relationship.

Describing their first kiss in response to questions from defense attorney?Kirk Nurmi, she said: "He got right in my face, maybe four inches, five," adding, "He licked his lips and said 'I wish you didn't have a boyfriend.'"

Alexander had been dead for five days when he was found with a slit throat, a bullet wound in his head and 27 stab wounds,?the Arizona?Republic?newspaper reported. His death was connected to Arias after sexually explicit photos were found on the memory card of his camera.

She could face the death penalty if convicted of first degree murder. Testimony is continuing.

(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/_pe2cu7OM1Y/Arizona-woman-felt-like-a-prostitute

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NTSB: 787 battery approval should be reconsidered

A Boeing 787 arrives Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., following a flight from Texas. The Federal Aviation Administration gave Boeing permission to relocate the plane, which was at Meacham Airport for painting when the planes were grounded last month by battery problems. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

A Boeing 787 arrives Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., following a flight from Texas. The Federal Aviation Administration gave Boeing permission to relocate the plane, which was at Meacham Airport for painting when the planes were grounded last month by battery problems. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

A Boeing 787 jet flies in past the company's giant manufacturing plant Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., following a flight from Texas. The Federal Aviation Administration gave Boeing permission to relocate the plane, which was at Meacham Airport for painting when the planes were grounded last month by battery problems. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

This slide shown on a video screen during a news conference at the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, shows a comparison of an exemplar battery with the Japan Airlines Boeing 787 battery. The NTSB provided an update on their investigation into the Jan. 7 fire that occurred on a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 at Logan International Airport in Boston. (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt)

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Chair Deborah Hersman speaks during a news conference in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, to provide an update on the NTSB's investigation into the Jan. 7 fire that occurred on a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 at Logan International Airport in Boston. (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt)

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Chair Deborah Hersman speaks during a news conference in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013, to provide an update on the NTSB's investigation into the Jan. 7 fire that occurred on a Japan Airlines Boeing 787 at Logan International Airport in Boston. (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt)

(AP) ? The government should reassess its safety approval of the Boeing 787 lithium ion batteries, the nation's top accident investigator said Thursday, casting doubt on whether the airliner's troubles can be quickly remedied.

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating last month's battery fire in a Japan Airlines 787 "Dreamliner" while it was parked in Boston. The results so far contradict some of the assumptions that were made about the battery's safety at the time the system won government approval, said the board's chairman, Deborah Hersman.

The investigation shows the fire started with multiple short-circuits in one of the battery's eight cells, she said. That created an uncontrolled chemical reaction known as "thermal runaway," which is characterized by progressively hotter temperatures. That spread the short-circuiting to the rest of the cells and caused the fire, she said.

The findings are at odds with what Boeing told the Federal Aviation Administration when that agency was working to certify the company's newest and most technologically advanced plane for flight, Hersman said. Boeing said its testing showed that any short-circuiting was contained within a single cell, preventing thermal runaway and fire, she told reporters at a news conference.

Boeing's testing also showed the batteries were likely to cause smoke in only 1 in 10 million flight hours, she said. But the Boston fire was followed nine days later by a smoking battery in an All Nippon Airways plane that made an emergency landing in Japan. The 787 fleet has recorded less than 100,000 flight hours, Hersman noted.

The plane that caught fire in Boston was delivered to Japan Airlines less than three weeks before the fire and had recorded only 169 flight hours over 22 flights.

"There have now been two battery events resulting in smoke less than two weeks apart on two different aircraft," she said. "This investigation has demonstrated that a short-circuit in a single cell can propagate to adjacent cells and result in smoke and fire. The assumptions used to certify the battery must be reconsidered."

Investigators are still trying to determine why the first battery cell short-circuited, but the board's findings appear to raise doubts about the thoroughness of FAA's safety certification of the 787's batteries and whether Boeing can remedy the problems with the addition of a few quick safeguards. FAA typically delegates testing of new aircraft designs to the manufacturer, while overseeing that the tests meet the agency's requirements. The agency also relies to some degree on the expertise of the manufacturer's engineers, especially in the case of a cutting-edge plane like the 787.

Following the Japan Airlines fire at Logan International Airport, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood and FAA Administrator Michael Huerta ordered a review of the 787's design, certification, manufacture and assembly. That review is still underway.

"We must finish this work before reaching conclusions about what changes or improvements the FAA should make going forward," LaHood and Huerta said in a joint statement. "The leading experts in this field are working to understand what happened and how we can safely get these aircraft back into service."

The same day as the ANA emergency landing, FAA officials ordered the only U.S. carrier with 787s ? United Airlines, which has six of the planes ? to ground them. Aviation authorities in other countries swiftly followed suit. In all, 50 planes operated by seven airlines in six countries are grounded.

The groundings have become a nightmare for the company, which has about 800 Dreamliner orders from airlines around the world.

The 787 is the first airliner to make extensive use of lithium batteries. Aircraft makers view the batteries, which are lighter, recharge faster and can store more energy than other types of batteries of an equivalent size, as an important way to save on fuel costs. The Airbus A350, expected to be ready next year, will also make extensive use of lithium ion batteries. Manufacturers are also looking to retrofit existing planes, replacing other types of batteries with lithium ion.

But lithium batteries in general are more likely to short-circuit and start a fire than other batteries if they are damaged, if there is a manufacturing flaw or if they are exposed to excessive heat.

In 2007, the FAA issued special conditions that Boeing had to meet in order to use lithium ion batteries in the 787, because at that time the agency's safety regulations didn't include standards for such battery systems.

The 787 relies to a greater extent than any previous airliner on electrical systems, as opposed to hydraulic or mechanical ones. The batteries help run those electrical systems and also are used to start a power-generating engine in the rear of the aircraft.

The batteries are made by GS Yuasa of Japan. Japanese aviation investigators probing the cause of the ANA battery failure have also found there was thermal runaway.

Investigators have ruled out mechanical damage or external short-circuiting as possible causes of the initial, internal battery short-circuiting, Hersman said. Investigators and technical experts are now looking for evidence of flaws inside the batteries like pinches, wrinkles or folds, she said.

"We are looking at a number of scenarios," Hersman said, including state of charge of the battery, its manufacturing processes and the design of the batteries.

"We haven't reached any conclusions at this point," she said. "We really have a lot of work to do."

___

The National Aviation Safety Board http://www.ntsb.gov

___

Follow Joan Lowy at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-07-Boeing%20787-NTSB/id-5ebdb0a05eda48df8544771a1495f588

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Exposure to Smog in Early Pregnancy Linked to Complications ...

los angeles Exposure to Smog in Early Pregnancy Linked to Complications

WEDNESDAY, Feb. 6 (HealthDay News) ? Women exposed to elevated levels of ozone air pollution in the first three months of pregnancy may be at increased risk for complications such as preeclampsia and premature birth, a new study suggests.

Mothers with asthma may be most vulnerable, according to the report published in the Feb. 6 online edition of the journal BMJ Open.

Preeclampsia occurs when a woman develops high blood pressure and protein in the urine after the 20th week of pregnancy. Left untreated, it can cause serious complications. Premature birth is delivery before 37 weeks of pregnancy, the study authors noted in the report.

For the study, David Olsson, of the department of public health and clinical medicine at Umea University in Sweden, and colleagues looked at data from nearly 121,000 single-baby pregnancies in Stockholm between 1998 and 2006, as well as air pollution records for the city during that time. Preeclampsia occurred in 2.7 percent of the pregnancies and 4.4 percent of them resulted in a premature birth, the investigators found.

There was no association between levels of vehicle exhaust exposure and pregnancy complications, nor between any air pollutants and low birth weight among the babies, the study authors noted in a journal news release.

However, the researchers did find evidence of a link between exposure to ozone air pollution during the first three months of pregnancy and the risk of preeclampsia and premature birth. The risk for each rose by 4 percent for every 10 micrograms per cubic meter rise in exposure to ozone during the first trimester.

About one in 20 cases of preeclampsia was linked to ozone exposure during early pregnancy, according to the report.

The study also found that mothers with asthma were 10 percent more likely to develop preeclampsia and 25 percent more likely to have a premature birth than those without asthma.

Although the study found an association between first-trimester exposure to high ozone levels and preeclampsia and premature birth, it did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development has more about preeclampsia and eclampsia.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Exposure to Smog in Early Pregnancy Linked to Complications

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/02/06/exposure-to-smog-in-early-pregnancy-linked-to-complications/

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Thursday, February 7, 2013

Evernote Business Rolls Out To 26 New Markets, Evernote Names ...

Evernote has expanded its Evernote Business product in Europe, adding 26 new markets where companies can now leverage the cumulative knowledge and contribution of every employee. To help oversee the rollout, including managing the product, sales and support team, the company has named Ken Gullicksen as its Chief Operating Officer.

Having been announced in August 2012, but debuted in December of that year, Evernote Business has been moving around the world at a pretty rapid pace. Prior to today, it was available only in France, Germany, Switzerland, the UK, Canada, Japan, and the United States. Today, those throughout the European Union, Norway, and Iceland join the group.

Evernote says that Australia and New Zealand will be added next week, making the product available in more than 30 countries.

Already, more than 2,000 businesses have signed up for Evernote Business and the company expects 50 additional countries will have access in the first half of this year, with markets in EMEA, Latin America, and Asia Pacific being added ?in the coming months.?

If you?re not familiar with Evernote Business, priced at $10 per user per month, this business-focused service expands Evernote?s standard and premium offerings with Business notebooks for separating personal and work documents. It also includes a Business Library for collecting said Notebooks shared by individuals. Team sharing is also allowed with flexible permission settings, along with related notes discovery, a centralized Admin Console, and higher storage allowances.

To date, Evernote says that it has 50 million users ? two-thirds of which are using the service to increase their workday productivity. Interestingly enough, 70 percent of its users reside outside of the US, something Evernote recognizes and believes represents tremendous growth opportunity for Evernote Business.

It is up to Gullicksen to help continue the growth. As the COO, not only is he managing Evernote Business, but also investor relations, corporate development, sales and global support. Before, he was the company?s?Vice President of Corporate Development for Evernote.?Prior to joining Evernote, he led the Silicon Valley venture round as a general partner at Morgenthaler Ventures and also served on the company?s Board of Directors.

While Gullicksen is responsible for sales, it?s important to note that it didn?t exist until last year, when Evernote Business launched. Prior to that, the company didn?t sell any ads in its product.

When asked about the new COO, Phil Libin, the company?s CEO, says:

Ken has played a key role in Evernote?s strategy and execution including heading up our five acquisitions to date and the successful rollout of Evernote?s China-based service Yinxiang Biji. As COO, Ken will be instrumental in continuing to foster strategic initiatives, building on the momentum we?re seeing with Evernote Business and developing efficient services to support our entire global operations.

The five acquisitions Libin refers to? Skitch, Penultimate, Notable Meals, Minds Momentum, and Readable.

For Gullicksen, he believes that the biggest challenge companies like Evernote face is how it can discover the knowledge of individuals and groups within an organization. Evernote Business appears to be on a mission to enable every employee to collect their own thoughts and insights while also fostering discovery.

As Evernote expands its service around the world and helps people become more productive, one must wonder how this plays into its eventual IPO. We do know that it won?t be happening until at least 2015, according to Libin. The company has every intention to try convert its free users into paid subscribers before it goes public and through this rapid adoption of Evernote Business, it?s most likely the perfect way for that to happen.

Evernote Business is available for Evernote for Mac, iOS, Android and Windows Desktop. Starting today, Related Notes will be displayed in the Mac client while Evernote Clearly will show on Chrome and Firefox, and Evernote Web Clipper for Chrome.

Here?s Evernote?s introductory video about its Business product:

Photo credit:?Oli Scarff/Getty Images

Source: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/02/07/evernote-rolls-out-evernote-business-to-26-new-markets-in-europe-and-names-new-coo-to-oversee-growth/

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Catholic bishops conflicted over gays, immigration

The nation's Roman Catholic bishops are in a difficult position as the debate over immigration reform gets underway: The immigrant-built American church, known for advocating a broad welcome for migrants and refugees, could end up opposing reform because it would recognize same-sex partners.

Proposals by President Barack Obama and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus include the same-sex partners of Americans among those who would be eligible for visas. The Human Rights Campaign and other gay advocates welcomed the recognition, arguing current laws unfairly treat people in gay or lesbian relationships "as strangers." The idea has the backing of the National Council de la Raza and other liberal Latino groups.

But Catholic bishops, with the support of evangelicals and other theological conservatives, have sent a letter to Obama protesting his proposal. In a sign of the sensitivity of the issue, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops would not provide a copy of the statement, saying the signatories agreed not to make the letter public. Sister Mary Ann Walsh, a spokeswoman for the bishops, would say only that recognition of gay couples in the president's reform proposals "jeopardizes passage of the bill."

Galen Carey, public policy officer for the National Association of Evangelicals, which represents 40 denominations and has been lobbying for new immigration laws, said, "Our view is immigration reform is not the place to have this discussion." The theologically conservative Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod also signed the Catholic bishops' letter.

"The issue of immigration on its own is so controversial, so polarizing," said the Rev. Samuel Rodriguez of the evangelical National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference. He was in the Las Vegas audience last week when Obama presented his plan. "Let's not play politics with 11 million undocumented immigrants."

It is far too early to know how much of a factor gay relationships will become in what is expected to be a complicated and emotional debate. The plan unveiled last week by eight leading Democratic and Republican senators did not mention same-gender partners. Many other major religious groups lobbying for reform, such as The Episcopal Church, either support gay marriage or don't make homosexuality a focus. In a conference call this week with reporters, White House Domestic Policy Council director Cecilia Munoz was asked whether Obama would support a bill that didn't acknowledge same-sex partners. Her only response: "The president's position on that is very clear."

Still, endorsements from traditional denominations may carry more significance in the current political climate, in which conservative-leaning lawmakers are worried about political damage from backing a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants.

"The bishops' support, I think, is going to be critical for swinging moderates in the House to support this bill," said Stephen Schneck, a political scientist at Catholic University of America and chair of the anti-abortion Democrats for Life, who was part of the Catholics for Obama re-election effort.

It seems unlikely the bishops would accept any provision for same-sex partners? even for an issue as important to the church as immigration. In their drive for greater orthodoxy among Catholics, bishops have made preserving traditional marriage a priority. Last week, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone, who leads the bishops' marriage efforts, said the struggle against gay marriage is a gift from God "and by overcoming it we may achieve spiritual greatness." He made the comments in an interview with The Catholic Herald, a news outlet in Britain.

The bishops' stand against Obama's health care law provides some indication of their thinking when they view a core moral teaching in conflict with a long-held social justice goal.

For decades, the bishops had advocated for improved access to health care, especially for the poor. But church leaders concluded that the president's plan, known as the Affordable Care Act, would provide financing for ending pregnancies. The administration and Democratic supporters of the law insisted the bishops were wrong, and said no taxpayer money would fund abortion coverage. But the bishops ultimately opposed the legislation.

Yet, immigration seems even more critical than health care to the church.

Americans church leaders have spent decades lobbying for revisions that would keep families together and fulfill what the church considers the duty of all countries, especially wealthier ones, to do as much as possible to help the poor and persecuted. The church and Catholic groups run a network of aid programs for migrants, refugees and illegal immigrants, taking positions that recognize the country's right to protect its borders, but that still fall "to the left of the Democratic Party," Schneck said.

This position is rooted in papal and Gospel teachings so extensive that evangelicals often borrow the theological framework for their own advocacy. In a 2003 joint plea for immigration reform, called "Strangers No Longer," U.S. and Mexican bishops stated, "Regardless of their legal status, migrants, like all persons, possess inherent human dignity that should be respected."

The issue is of special historic importance to the American Catholic church, which was built by waves of Irish, Italians, Poles and others. The immigrant presence in the pews is now growing as American-born white Catholics drop out in significant numbers. Researchers estimate that a third of the 66 million U.S. Catholics are Latino.

"This is an issue that has been a huge priority for the church for a really long time," said Kristin Heyer, a professor at Santa Clara University in California who studies immigration and Catholic social thought. "The wider Catholic community, in addition to the bishops, has mobilized in a major way."

Ultimately, the controversy could split Catholics, in much the same way that Catholics divided over health care. Despite enormous pressure from the bishops, the Catholic Health Association, a trade group that represents hospitals, provided critical backing for the president's health care legislation. Surveys have found that large majorities of lay Catholics back same-sex marriage or civil unions.

Given the importance of Latinos to the U.S. church, political observers wonder how bishops could explain their opposition to Hispanic parishioners.

Kim Daniels, an attorney and director of Catholic Voices USA, a conservative-leaning lay group that defends church teaching, has been urging Catholics across the political spectrum to drop their differences and get behind immigration reform. Still, she said, "being Catholic in the public square means standing up for all our issues."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/catholic-bishops-conflicted-over-gays-immigration-184526146.html

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