Friday, November 30, 2012

The Smartphone World Needs Microsoft

I admit it: When I read the news that Apple's share of U.S. smartphone sales skyrocketed with the launch of the iPhone 5 to surpass Android, I felt a momentary note of satisfaction. According to data from Kantar Worldpanel, in the last 12 weeks, Android gobbled up 46.7 percent of smartphone sales while the iPhone nabbed 48.1 percent

Source: http://ectnews.com.feedsportal.com/c/34520/f/632000/s/26186bce/l/0L0Stechnewsworld0N0Crsstory0C767260Bhtml/story01.htm

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andyhearn70: enabler modestia: Travel and leisure: Car Rental For ...

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Lockheed confident about F-35 contract before year-end

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Lockheed Martin Corp President Marillyn Hewson said on Thursday that talks with the Pentagon about a fifth batch of F-35 fighter jets were going well and an agreement was likely before the end of the year.

"Those negotiations are progressing well," Hewson told an investor conference hosted by Credit Suisse, her first major presentation to Wall Street investors since being named Lockheed president and chief operating officer earlier this month.

"I do feel confident that we're going to get to closure on Lot 5 this year," she said.

Hewson said Lockheed was also making progress in discussions with the Defense Department to secure additional funding for work on the sixth batch of F-35 jets.

Lockheed Chief Financial Officer Bruce Tanner said the two sides had "closed a lot of our differences" during recent talks, adding that Hewson had played a key role in negotiations with the Pentagon on the contract.

Details of the expected agreement were not immediately available, but sources familiar with the negotiations said they expected it to include a reduction in the cost for each F-35 fighter jet from the fourth production contract, although the number of jets to be ordered will not increase.

The Pentagon's chief weapons buyer, Frank Kendall, told Reuters on Wednesday that the two sides were "getting close" to an agreement on the fifth production contract.

He said he had "a very positive meeting" on Tuesday with Hewson about a range of issues, including the $396 billion F-35 program, the Pentagon's largest weapons program.

Hewson will become Lockheed's CEO in January, succeeding Christopher Kubasik, who was forced out after admitting to having an affair with a subordinate.

Lockheed, the Pentagon's largest contractor, and its suppliers are already building the fifth batch of F-35 planes under a preliminary contract, but the two sides have been struggling since last December to finalize the terms of the deal.

Hewson's increased engagement in the F-35 negotiations has helped defuse tensions that had mounted between the company and the Pentagon over the past year, said Loren Thompson, a defense consultant with Virginia-based Lexington Institute who has close ties to Lockheed.

In September, Air Force Major General Christopher Bogdan, who is moving up to head the F-35 program next week, said ties between Lockheed and the U.S. government were "the worst" he had ever seen in his years working on big acquisition programs.

Hewson told analysts earlier this month that the F-35 program would be one of her top priorities in her new job. "We won't miss a beat on F-35," she said at the time.

Agreement on the terms of the fifth F-35 contract would free up additional funding for early work on a sixth set of planes, which the company has been funding on its own for some time.

Lockheed warned investors last month that it faced a potential termination liability of $1.1 billion on that sixth batch of planes, unless it received additional funding by year-end.

Lockheed received some initial "long-lead" funding for advanced procurement of materials for the planes, but that money ran out a while ago.

The Pentagon has refused to release any more money for the sixth batch of planes until the two sides resolve their differences and sign a contract for the fifth batch.

(Reporting By Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and John Wallace)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lockheed-confident-f-35-contract-reached-end-153959940--finance.html

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Robotic equivalent of a Swiss army knife: Reconfigurable robot a step toward something that can become almost anything

ScienceDaily (Nov. 30, 2012) ? The device doesn't look like much: a caterpillar-sized assembly of metal rings and strips resembling something you might find buried in a home-workshop drawer. But the technology behind it, and the long-range possibilities it represents, are quite remarkable.

The little device is called a milli-motein -- a name melding its millimeter-sized components and a motorized design inspired by proteins, which naturally fold themselves into incredibly complex shapes. This minuscule robot may be a harbinger of future devices that could fold themselves up into almost any shape imaginable.

The device was conceived by Neil Gershenfeld, head of MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms, visiting scientist Ara Knaian and graduate student Kenneth Cheung, and is described in a paper presented recently at the 2012 Intelligent Robots and Systems conference. Its key feature, Gershenfeld says: "It's effectively a one-dimensional robot that can be made in a continuous strip, without conventionally moving parts, and then folded into arbitrary shapes."

To build the world's smallest chain robot, the team had to invent an entirely new kind of motor: not only small and strong, but also able to hold its position firmly even with power switched off. The researchers met these needs with a new system called an electropermanent motor.

The motor is similar in principle to the giant electromagnets used in scrapyards to lift cars, in which a powerful permanent magnet (one that, like an ordinary bar magnet, requires no power) is paired with a weaker magnet (one whose magnetic field direction can be flipped by an electric current in a coil). The two magnets are designed so that their fields either add or cancel, depending on which way the switchable field points. Thus, the force of the powerful magnet can be turned off at will -- such as to release a suspended car -- without having to power an enormous electromagnet the whole time.

In this new miniature version, a series of permanent magnets paired with electromagnets are arranged in a circle; they drive a steel ring that's situated around them. The key innovation, Knaian explains, is that "they do not take power in either the on or the off state, but only use power in the changing state," using minimal energy overall.

The milli-motein concept follows up on a paper, published last year, which examined the theoretical possibility of assembling any desired 3-D shape simply by folding a long string of identical subunits. That paper, co-authored by Cheung, MIT professor Erik Demaine, alumnus Saul Griffith, and former Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory research scientist Jonathan Bachrach, proved mathematically that it was possible for any 3-D shape to be reproduced by folding a sufficiently long string -- and that it's possible to figure out how to fold such a string, and the exact steps needed to successfully reach the desired endpoint.

"We showed that you could make such a universal system that's very simple," Cheung says. While he and his colleagues have not yet proved a way of always finding the optimal path to a given folded shape, they did find several useful strategies for arriving at practical folding sequences.

Demaine points out that the folding of the shape doesn't have to be sequential, moving along the string one joint at a time. "Ideally, you'd like to do it all at once," he says, with each of the joints folding themselves to the desired configuration simultaneously so that the loads are distributed.

Other researchers, including some at MIT, have explored the idea of fashioning reconfigurable robots from a batch of separate pieces that could self-assemble into different configurations -- an approach sometimes called "programmable pebbles." But Gershenfeld's team found that a string of subunits capable of folding itself into any shape could be simpler in terms of control, power and communications than using separate pieces that must find each other and assemble in the right order. "You can just pass signals down the chain," Knaian says.

It's part of an overall approach, Gershenfeld explains, to "turning data into things." In an article in the current issue of the magazine Foreign Affairs, he describes a technology roadmap for accomplishing that, and its policy implications. He and his colleagues have established a global network of more than 100 "fab labs" that provide community access to computer-controlled fabrication tools. Today, the design information is contained in an external computer rather than in the materials being manufactured, but the research goal is to digitize the materials themselves so that they can ultimately change their own shape, as the milli-motein does.

Hod Lipson, an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and computing and information science at Cornell University, says, "This result brings us closer to the idea of programmable matter -- where computer programs and materials merge to form a new kind of matter whose shape and function can be programmed -- not unlike biology. Many people are excited today to learn about 3-D printing and its ability to fabricate any shape; Gershenfeld's group is already thinking about the next episode, where we don't just control the shape of objects, but also their behavior."

The milli-motein is part of a family of such devices being explored at size scales ranging from protein-based "nanoassemblers" to a version where the chain is as big as a person, Gershenfeld says. Ultimately, a reconfigurable robot should be "small, cheap, durable and strong," Knaian says, adding that right now, "it's not possible to get all of those." Still, he points out, "Biology is the existence proof that it is possible."

The MIT researchers' work could lead to robotic systems that can be dynamically reconfigured to do many different jobs rather than repeating a fixed function, and that can be produced much more cheaply than conventional robotics.

The development of the milli-motein was supported by the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Maximum Mobility and Manipulation and Programmable Matter projects.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The original article was written by David L. Chandler.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/IU_HhUYDock/121130132743.htm

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Managers delighted their stores sold winning lottery tickets

DEARBORN, Mo./FOUNTAIN HILLS, Arizona (Reuters) - Managers of a Missouri gas station and an Arizona food store expressed delight on Thursday that they may have handed tickets to the two prospective multi-millionaire winners of a record $587.5 million Powerball lottery jackpot.

The two winning tickets were sold at the gas station and sandwich shop in the tiny farming town of Dearborn, Missouri, about 30 miles north of Kansas City, Missouri, and the food store in Fountain Hills, Arizona, on the outskirts of Phoenix.

Dearborn, population 500, reveled in its sudden place in the spotlight.

"It was a total surprise," said Don Palmer, a customer at the Trex Mart convenience store, which sold the Missouri winning ticket. "Nothing ever happens in Dearborn."

Although the identities of the ticket-holders were not immediately announced, they picked the winning numbers announced at the drawing on Wednesday night: 5, 16, 22, 23, 29, and the Powerball number 6.

They will share an estimated $385 million before taxes if they opt to take it as a lump sum, the Multi-State Lottery Association said.

Alternatively, the $587.5 million can be paid out as an annuity over three decades, the association said.

The Missouri lottery said it would announce the name of its winner on Friday morning at the high school in Dearborn. The Arizona Lottery said its winner had not yet come forward.

Some customers and employees at the Missouri convenience store, and residents of Dearborn, said they had heard the name of the winner, a man in his early 50s who lives in town. But Missouri Lottery would not confirm the name, and no one was home at the address listed as his residence.

Kristi Williams, a clerk at the Trex Mart, said she and another employee high-fived each other when they learned the morning after the drawing that one of the two winning tickets had been purchased there.

Store manager Chris Nauerz, who was working on Wednesday when the lucky ticket was purchased, called the news "shocking." He said the station got a mix of customers - residents of Dearborn, and truck drivers passing through on nearby Interstate 29.

"It's pretty crazy to think somebody locally could possibly be a millionaire," Nauerz said. "And the fact that I may have even handed over the ticket is even wilder."

'ALMOST AS GOOD AS ME WINNING'

The popular lottery - which is played in 42 states, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Virgin Islands - had not had a winner for two months.

After no one won the top prize in Saturday's drawing, the pot grew by about $263 million to $587.5 million amid a national frenzy to buy tickets.

Bob Chebat, the manager of the store in Arizona where the second lucky ticket was purchased, said customers bought 986 tickets on Wednesday and that there was a good chance he had sold the winning ticket.

"It's almost as good as me winning," Chebat said.

"People say all the time that I'll throw you a million if I win, and no one ever has. ... I guess we'll see what happens now."

Mary Neubauer, a spokeswoman for the Iowa Lottery, where Powerball is based, said people from around the world called hoping for a chance to play but were told they had to be in a participating location to buy a ticket.

One of the states that does not offer Powerball, California, decided on Thursday to participate. The state lottery commission voted unanimously to join Powerball in April 2013.

"Our customers were pretty clear that they wanted us to bring Powerball to California," state lottery director Robert O'Neill said in a statement.

The previous Powerball top prize of $365 million was won in 2006 by ConAgra slaughterhouse workers in Nebraska. The largest-ever U.S. lottery jackpot, the $656 million Mega Millions drawing, was shared by three winning tickets last March.

(Additional reporting by Colleen Jenkins, David Bailey and Mary Slosson; Writing by James B. Kelleher; Editing by Phil Berlowitz and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/managers-delighted-stores-sold-winning-lottery-tickets-015750148.html

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

How infidelity helps nieces and nephews

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A University of Utah study produced new mathematical support for a theory that explains why men in some cultures often feed and care for their sisters' children: where extramarital sex is common and accepted, a man's genes are more likely to be passed on by their sister's kids than by their wife's kids.

The theory previously was believed valid only if a man was likely to be the biological father of less than one in four of his wife's children ? a number that anthropologists found improbably low.

But in the new study, University of Utah anthropology Professor Alan Rogers shows mathematically that if certain assumptions in the theory are made less stringent and more realistic, that ratio changes from one in four to one in two, so the theory works more easily.

In other words, a man's genes are more likely to be passed by his sisters' children if fewer than half of his wife's kids are biologically his ? rather than the old requirement that he had to sire fewer than a quarter of his wife's kids, according to the study published online Nov. 28 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

"Imagine a mutation that encourages its bearers, if they are men, to be helpful and invest resources in the children of their sisters," Rogers says. "If that man lives in a society where most of his wife's children were fathered by other men, then this gene may not be in many of his wife's children. A man really doesn't know if any of his wife's kids were fathered by him, but he knows he and his sister have the same mom. So this gene may, in fact, be in more of his sisters' children."

"Thus, over time, the frequency of this gene increases because men are increasing the survival and fitness of their sisters' children ? the ones more likely to carry the gene," he adds.

The new study "shows that it is much easier than we thought for your niece to be a closer relative than your wife's daughter," Rogers says.

The research was funded by the University of Utah.

Why Men Help their Sisters' Kids: Theory and Debate

"Men invest in children in many ways; they care for them, feed them and leave them resources when the men die," Roger says. "But in some human societies, these are the children of sisters rather than those of wives. For decades, anthropologists have wondered why."

Extramarital mating is common in some cultures, including in central Africa and South America, he says, but not in the U.S. or other Western societies where infidelity, as prevalent as seems, much is less common by comparison.

"In some societies it is expected; it isn't seen as cheating," Rogers says. "And it isn't really just about promiscuity. Even where extramarital sex isn't common, women get divorced and remarried and have households with offspring from several men."

Rogers says: "In many societies where extramarital mating is the norm, men may not share genes with the children of wives. There is less doubt about relatedness to sisters' children. This suggests an interesting hypothesis: perhaps natural selection has shaped this practice, by encouraging males to direct investment toward genetic relatives."

"There was great enthusiasm for this idea during the 1970s, until a problem came to light," he continues. "Simple calculations suggested that the explanation collapses unless men father fewer than about one in four of their wife's children. Many have doubted that the number ? the paternity threshold number ? could really be this low."

Rogers' new study shows it is much easier than that for the idea to be true ? for natural selection to favor men who help their sisters' kids. He shows the theory holds true if men father fewer than half their wife's kids rather than fewer than one-quarter of those kids ? something much more likely to happen in reality.

The study shows this mathematically by relaxing assumptions previously made as part of the uncle-caretaker theory.

Rogers says it isn't enough to take into account the probability of paternity ? the odds that a child's biological father also is his mother's husband. The new study shows that if the assumptions made in old studies are relaxed, another parameter also must be measured: "the probability a brother and sister had the same biological father. The higher that probability, the more closely related a man is to his sister and his sister's kids."

Making Old Assumptions More Realistic

Rogers examined four assumptions made in previous studies and changed them to be more realistic. In this more realistic theory, men are more likely to share genes with their sister's children than under the old theory.

The first two assumptions of the existing theory were that "women are equally receptive to extramarital affairs and that each has an infinite number of paramours," says Rogers. "These assumptions both lower estimates of relatedness between men and the children of their sisters. Relaxing either assumption increases our estimate of the fitness payoff to men who invest in children of sisters."

[Rogers notes the theory applies to a man's sisters' children, but not to his brothers' children "because your brother has no more confidence than you do about the paternity of his wife's children. Sisters are a better bet, because they know who their kids are."]

"Previous calculations assume every woman in the population is equally promiscuous," Rogers says. "If you relax that assumption and instead assume some women are more promiscuous than others, it means men are more likely to share genes with their sisters' children."

"The earlier theory also assumed women each woman had an infinite number of boyfriends," instead of a range from one to infinity, he adds. "It made the math simple ? and it gave you a wrong answer."

The new study showed mathematically that a man's relatedness to his sister's kids increases if his wife has fewer rather than more extramarital partners and if she allocates sex ? and thus having children ? unevenly among them.

A third problem with previous studies is that they assumed resources given to any child were equally valuable. Rogers says that didn't account for the fact that giving your wife's kids twice as many resources isn't necessarily twice as good ? once the kids have what they need ? but may be only half again as good for them. So the man may be better off also giving resources to his sisters' kids.

"The old model didn't account for that, and because of that, it biased things in favor of the wife's children. When the nieces and nephews share fewer genes, they end up getting zero resources rather than some reduced share, as they should."

The fourth problem with most previous calculations was that they didn't account for a simple reality: "The best thing for a man to do depends on how his wife is going to respond," Rogers says. "If wives punish their husbands one way or another for delivering goods to their nieces and nephews, it's not just the husband deciding what is best for the husband. Women have an active role in all of these decisions and that role was ignored in the previous model."

Another study published recently took that into account, making it easier to understand how natural selection might favor men who invest in their sisters' offspring.

Rogers believes that natural selection and genetics ultimately contributes to people helping their relatives in most cultures, even if the primary motivation may be tax breaks for those who provide cash gifts to relatives rather than passing on one's genes.

"People are nice to relatives all over the world, and I think selection has something to do with that," he says.

###

University of Utah: http://www.unews.utah.edu/

Thanks to University of Utah for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125553/How_infidelity_helps_nieces_and_nephews

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Book Club: Religion In Storytelling

Our December book club pick is off and running and with a name like "American Dervish" we knew there would be some conflicting thoughts about Religion hard at work. And indeed Hayat is confused about his heritage. Our community noticed.

community

You may have noticed that we didn't get to chat over video today. Due to a team emergency we've rescheduled for tomorrow, exact same time, exact same topics. So, join us Thursday at 4pm ET when we'll be discussing Hayat's confliction with his religion, as well as his relationship with Mina.

We can't wait to hear your thoughts on this book.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/28/book-club-religion-in-sto_n_2207077.html

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Mayor to announce plans for homeless day center downtown

Timothy J. Gibbons

Jacksonville Mayor Alvin Brown wants to put a homeless day center at the City Rescue Mission?s downtown location, an announcement that could be made as early as Thursday.

A number of details still have to be worked out about the site, including what type of staffing would be needed, how much space the center would need, what improvements have to be made to the building and who would pay for it all.

Still, a day center would fit in well with the mission?s long-term focus on helping homeless people with chemical dependencies, Executive Director David Bugher said.

?If we can be helpful in this way, we?d be very happy,? he said.

City Hall would not confirm if it had picked a site or when it might make an announcement. Spokesman David DeCamp would only say the city was ?making progress.?

Several people involved with homeless advocacy issues, though, said they expect a news conference Thursday.

Setting up such a center ? which only would be open during the day and would provide access to things like showers, washing machines and service providers ? has long been a goal of Brown. He promised during the campaign for the office to set up a center by year?s end.

?A day center is one of the key strategies from a national model for ending homelessness,? said Carolyn Hillhouse-Jones, who handles homeless issues for the 39-church Interchurch Coalition for Action, Reconciliation and Empowerment, known as ICARE. ?It?s not the only strategy, but it?s an important piece.?

ICARE has long pushed for a day center and it was to that group that Brown made his promise.

Such a center has practical benefits as well as humanitarian ones, Hillhouse-Jones said, including cutting down on misdemeanor arrests and helping homeless people know more about programs that can help.

The success of the center will be judged on two criteria, said Dawn Gilman, executive director of the Emergency Services and Homeless Coalition of Northeast Florida: Does it increase people connecting with services and does it decrease arrests?

Brown reiterated last month that he still was aiming for a December opening, although his office acknowledges that having a site up and running by then will be difficult.

The administration ran into some opposition last month when residents of the Springfield neighborhood heard the city was looking at the nearby old Armory building as a site for the center. At a meeting of community residents, Brown promised the center would be downtown, but not near the historic neighborhood.

City Rescue Mission, which has been around since 1946, fits that desire, as does the organization?s experience in dealing with homeless-related issues, something advocates say is key to success.

During the decades it has been operating, Bugher said, the mission has focused on helping homeless people deal with the root causes of their situation; the day center would widen the number of people it can help do so.

?We want that day center to be used to help more people gain self-sufficiency,? Bugher said. ?We?re not interested in having a day center make homelessness more comfortable.?

?

Timothy Gibbons: (904) 359-4103

Source: http://jacksonville.com/news/premium/metro/2012-11-28/story/jacksonville-announce-plans-homeless-day-center-downtown

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Google hustles Android 4.2.1 onto Nexus devices to give you December back

Android 4.2 bug omits December from the People app

With the rollout of a major OS upgrade like Android 4.2, we can imagine it's easy to forget something, but Google's omission of the entire month of December in the People app was certainly a doozy. The beauty of the Nexus program is that Google can rectify little issues like that post-haste, however, and Mountain View has now rolled out Jelly Bean 4.2.1, a small update that adds back that all-too-important month. So far, Nexus 4 and 10 users have reported getting the update, according to XDA Developers, though there's no evidence yet of any other fixes. Check your Nexus device (or the source) to see if it's arrived in time for, you know.

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Comments

Via: Talk Android

Source: XDA Developers (forum)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/27/google-hustles-android-4-2-1-onto-nexus-devices/

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Men's Basketball: Idaho vs Washington State , 11/28/12 7:00 PM PT

2012-2013 SCHEDULE

Overall
3-3

Conf.
0-0

Home
3-0

Away
0-1

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Date Opponent / Event Location Time / Result
11/06/12 vs. Saint Martins ^ Pullman W, 62-50
CBE Hall of Fame Classic Host Round
11/10/12 vs. Eastern Washington TV Pullman W, 88-69
11/14/12 vs. Utah Valley TV Pullman W, 72-49
11/16/12 at Pepperdine Malibu, Calif. L, 58-56 (OT)
CBE Hall of Fame Classic Championship Round
11/19/12 vs. Kansas TV Kansas City, Mo. L, 78-41
11/20/12 vs. Texas A&M TV Kansas City, Mo. L, 55-54
11/24/12 vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff TV Pullman W, 66-38
11/28/12 vs. Idaho TV Pullman 7:00 p.m. PT
12/01/12 vs. Portland TV Pullman 7:30 p.m. PT
12/05/12 vs. Gonzaga TV Pullman 8:00 p.m. PT
12/09/12 vs. Fresno State TV Pullman 12:00 p.m. PT
12/13/12 vs. Jackson State TV Pullman 7:00 p.m. PT
Cougar Hardwood Classic
12/21/12 vs. Buffalo TV Seattle 7:30 p.m. PT
12/29/12 vs. Idaho State TV Kennewick, Wash. 3:00 p.m. PT
01/05/13 vs. Washington * TV Pullman 6:30 p.m. PT
01/09/13 at Stanford * TV Stanford, Calif. 7:00 p.m. PT
01/12/13 at California * TV Berkeley, Calif. 1:00 p.m. PT
01/16/13 vs. Utah * TV Pullman 6:30 p.m. PT
01/19/13 vs. Colorado * TV Pullman 7:00 p.m. PT
01/23/13 at Oregon * TV Eugene, Ore. 6:30 p.m. PT
01/26/13 at Oregon State * TV Corvallis, Ore. 2:00 p.m. PT
01/31/13 vs. Arizona State * TV Pullman 8:00 p.m. PT
02/02/13 vs. Arizona * TV Pullman 7:00 p.m. PT
02/07/13 at USC * TV Los Angeles 8:30 p.m. PT
02/09/13 at UCLA * TV Los Angeles 7:00 p.m. PT
02/13/13 vs. Oregon State TV Pullman 7:00 p.m. PT
02/16/13 vs. Oregon TV Pullman 4:00 p.m. PT
02/20/13 at Arizona State * TV Tempe, Ariz. 7:00 p.m. PT
02/23/13 at Arizona * TV Tucson, Ariz. 12:00 p.m. PT
03/03/13 at Washington * TV Seattle 12:30 p.m. PT
03/06/13 vs. UCLA TV Pullman 6:30 p.m. PT
03/09/13 vs. USC * TV Pullman 3:30 p.m. PT
Pac-12 Tournament
03/13/13 TBD Las Vegas TBA

There Are No Upcoming Events

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Schedule Key

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Home Event

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Official Website of Washington State University Athletics | Bohler Athletic Complex | PO Box 641602 Pullman, WA 99164-1602 | 1.800.GO.COUGS

Source: http://www.wsucougars.com/sports/m-baskbl/sched/wast-m-baskbl-sched.html

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