Friday, March 29, 2013

University of Washington to Offer Its First Ever Online-Only Degree ...

I'm all for exploring innovative ways to extend affordable access to quality higher education, especially for students who find their vocation in low-paying (if much needed) professions. But I'm really not confident that online-only degrees are they way to go.

The University of Washington will offer a new low-cost online bachelor?s degree completion program in early childhood and family studies. Pending final approval, the program will start in the fall.

[...] The Early Childhood and Family Studies degree, which is the first online-only bachelor?s completion program to be offered by the UW, will prepare individuals to work in child care, preschools, social and mental health services, parent and family support, and arts organizations.

So, um, the UW's first ever online-only bachelor's degree will be granted in program training people in a profession that consists mostly of face-to-face interpersonal interaction? I mean, if distance learning is so magical, why train preschool teachers at all? Wouldn't it be cheaper and more effective to just hand all the toddlers iPads and let them teach themselves?

The UW online degree costs $160 per credit ? which is about equivalent to $7,000 for a year of full-time study ? regardless of where students live.

No doubt that's cheaper, sure. But in every sense of the word. And it's not just the students (and their students) who might not get the value out of this that they expect. If the UW is selling a degree for $7,000 a year (and with relaxed admission requirements), won't that devalue the degrees of students paying almost twice the price? Top schools like the UW stand to cheapen their brand if they're not careful.

The program will be administered by UW Educational Outreach, which received a Next Generation Learning Challenges grant partially funded by the Gates Foundation, to help offset costs of developing the degree. The grant includes offering several core classes in early childhood education free to the public, as Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) on the Coursera platform.

What a great humanitarian Bill Gates is, promoting education reforms that in no way generate profits for the industry on which he built his fortune. (But then, all those libraries Andrew Carnegie built sure did use a lot of steel, so I guess I shouldn't be too cynical.)

I don't mean to come off as a Luddite. There's a place in higher education for online learning. But let's be clear: The main advantage of MOOCs is that they're cheaper. Not better, or for the most part, not even just as good. Just cheaper.

And if our public policy solution to the crisis in higher education funding is focused on making college cheaper, well, in the end, chances are we'll get what we pay for.

Source: http://slog.thestranger.com/slog/archives/2013/03/29/university-of-washington-to-offer-its-first-online-only-degree

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To Hold Senate Majority, Democrats Turning to Moderates

When Ashley Judd announced she wasn?t running for the Senate, Republicans greeted the news with glee, sending out a list of 10 other Democratic recruits uninterested in running against Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.?But privately, leading Democratic officials were also cheering. Most viewed the liberal actress?s decision as good news for their chances in Kentucky, allowing a more-moderate candidate, such as Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes, to run instead.

The efforts to woo a moderate Democrat to defeat McConnell are part of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee?s plans to compete in the most inhospitable territory for Democrats -- for open seats in Georgia, South Dakota, West Virginia, and?possibly, even?in Kentucky against the powerful and well-funded Senate minority leader. Facing a challenging political landscape in 2014, the party is close to landing credible candidates in all of those states.

The DSCC doesn?t divulge details about its recruitment strategy, arguing that many of the media reports about its preferred candidates are hogwash. But it?s clear that, in the spirit of former Chairman Chuck Schumer, it is playing an active role behind-the-scenes to ensure that electable Democrats emerge as nominees.

Already the committee is boasting that Georgia is their best pickup opportunity; the field of Republican candidates there for the seat of retiring Sen. Saxby Chambliss currently looks underwhelming. Moderate Rep. John Barrow, one of the few Democrats who could put the seat in play, now sounds as open as ever to running.

In West Virginia, party officials are excited about the looming candidacy of lawyer Nick Preservati, a first-time candidate who is planning to distance himself from national Democratic positions on energy and run in the mold of popular Sen. Joe Manchin. Preservati has family ties to the coal industry, which could defang attacks from Republicans eager to tie the nominee to the White House?s environmental regulations.

And in South Dakota, party officials are working to avoid a potential primary between two well-known Democrats: U.S. Attorney Brendan Johnson, the son of Sen. Tim Johnson, and former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, who proved her bipartisan appeal, winning statewide elections to the House from 2004 to 2010. The committee won?t talk about what it?s doing, but South Dakota Democratic Party Chairman Ben Nesselhuf saidhe expects the party to coalesce behind one Democrat and avoid a messy primary.

?It?s [finding] a candidate who?s in line with their state and will do what?s best for the people of their state,? said Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spokesman Justin Barasky. ?The main point is that Democrats know how to win in red states.?

To be sure, Democrats start out as underdogs in all four of these red-state races and may end up struggling to compete in any of them. But given that Republicans need to net six Senate seats to take the majority, even one upset victory behind enemy lines would be crucial.

That?s what made the prospect of the party rallying behind Judd so at odds with the committee?s strategy.?The DSCC was publicly noncommittal about her potential candidacy, even after meeting with her and without any other candidates actively looking to run.?In the run-up to the 2012 election, the committee never hesitated to telegraph its support for favored candidates, even if they faced the prospect of a primary. And only after Judd announced she wasn't running before the committee released a radio ad blasting McConnell -- a signal they expect to aggressively contest the race, but with Grimes or a moderate candidate better suited to the Kentucky electorate.

The Democratic activity in deeply conservative states stands in contrast, at least for now, to the lack of GOP movement against three Democratic senators in battleground states. Sens. Al Franken of Minnesota, Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, and Mark Udall of Colorado have no announced Republican opponents ? even though all represent states where Obama won less than 53 percent of the vote in 2012.

"The DSCC is getting used to having tough cycles in terms of the map," Barasky said, "but if you look at the math, the path to six for [Republicans] is daunting."?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hold-senate-majority-democrats-turning-moderates-101122083--politics.html

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Outsourcing Up, But Also Hiring in U.S. - IT Business Edge

Expect a surge in outsourcing this year, according to a new study from accounting and consulting firm BDO USA.

It found 63 percent of tech companies plan to outsource or manufacture products offshore this year, up from 35 percent in 2011 ? but manufacturing makes up a big chunk of that. Still, that?s the highest rate since it began the surveys in 2008.

Its findings are based on a poll of 100 U.S. technology chief financial officers, Fox Business notes.

At the same time, 43 percent plan to boost hiring in the United States. Thirty percent said they will be hiring in research and development this year, up from 23 percent last year and 22 percent in 2011.

According to Aftab Jamil, partner and director of the technology and life sciences practice at BDO USA:

?While the drive to remain competitive has led technology companies to maintain outsourcing contracts, many are working in tandem to grow their U.S. work force to develop new and innovative products and solutions in the U.S. while outsourcing traditional 'back office' operations.?

Meanwhile, HfS Research reports that IT outsourcing, while able to cut costs and standardize processes, is failing to deliver on the goals of providing innovation and access to analytics as well as transforming organizations.

Phil Fersht, founder and CEO, writes in his Horses for Sources blog that IT outsourcing isn?t expected to get much better, though some companies are bringing some IT work back to the United States. Low-end work is outsourced, high-end work is retained. And Ferscht told me that companies might be totally happy with that -- that they don?t want to spend more on functions such as help desk and systems maintenance and may accept less-than-stellar service in those areas.

Writes Fersht:

?Ambitious CIOs these days like to focus their time on ecommerce,?mobility, ?Big Data? and?cloud strategies, and will engage IT?consultants with projects?when they need some high-end help, but most aren?t expecting their outsourcer to do that kind of work for them. ??

The only way for service providers to move up the value chain, he says, is to provide services to meet defined business goals.

?Simply put, IT provides a supporting utility to help achieve these business outcomes that clients want to buy, which would ideally be accessible in the cloud where business users can access their services wherever they want. The focus then shifts from providing widgets, to the actual provision of value, where providers start working with their clients to achieve business results, as opposed to creating simply?a low-cost environment.?

Source: http://www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/charting-your-it-career/outsourcing-up-but-also-hiring-in-u.s..html

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MLB: Interleague intrigue, all the time

By BEN WALKER

AP Baseball Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 4:50 a.m. ET March 28, 2013

On a windy morning at spring training, a trio of Philadelphia Phillies catchers met behind the batting cage for a chat.

The topic? Interleague matchups, right from the opening night of Major League Baseball.

"We were just talking about that in batting practice that it's a little weird to face the American League so early," All-Star Carlos Ruiz said. "But it's a different schedule this year."

It sure is.

Josh Hamilton and the Los Angeles Angels visit the Cincinnati Reds in an opener that's hardly traditional. Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera and the Detroit Tigers finish the season against the Marlins in Miami, where they can't play a designated hitter, an AL-only allowance.

Derek Jeter and the New York Yankees cross over to the National League each month, then host World Series champion San Francisco in late September.

Add up the scattered AL vs. NL matchups, it's like a mini-World Series most every day.

Blame the Houston Astros. Their shift from the NL Central division to the AL West left 15 teams in each league, creating all this havoc.

Opening day is on Sunday in Houston where Texas comes to town.

That's followed by Angels-Reds on Monday. A few days later, the NL's Philadelphia plays its home opener against the AL's Kansas City Royals.

"It is very strange," Cincinnati manager Dusty Baker said. "This (interleague play) usually doesn't happen until June or July.

"What it does is it increases your workload on scouting, advance reports and things like that. You don't have a lot of familiarity on those teams."

Meanwhile, a lot of big names are settling into new settings.

Hamilton left Texas for the Angels, teaming with Albert Pujols and Mike Trout in a most fearsome lineup. Zack Greinke got $147 million to pitch for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Brothers Justin and B.J Upton wound up together in Atlanta's outfield.

The Toronto Blue Jays, out of the postseason since winning their second straight World Series in 1993, made the boldest moves. They traded for reigning Cy Young winner R.A. Dickey, Jose Reyes, Josh Johnson and Mark Buehrle and signed Melky Cabrera.

"Talent alone doesn't win," Blue Jays manager John Gibbons cautioned.

Especially if those stars are sidelined.

New Mets captain David Wright, Hanley Ramirez and Mark Teixeira were hurt at the World Baseball Classic. Curtis Granderson and Chase Headley are out, Johan Santana and Jeter might go on the disabled list and Alex Rodriguez's future is in doubt.

Several top players are on the mend, though.

All-time saves leader Mariano Rivera begins his farewell tour after missing most of last year with a knee injury. John Lackey and Victor Martinez were absent for the entire season and Jose Bautista, Troy Tulowitzki and Carl Crawford finished on the disabled list.

Stephen Strasburg wasn't active at the end, either. The Washington Nationals shut down their rookie ace so he wouldn't pitch too many innings, and fizzled in their first playoff appearance.

There'll be no limits on Strasburg or the Nationals this year.

"We're all really excited to see him all year," 20-year-old Washington star Bryce Harper said.

In the meantime, teams are trying to figure out how to prepare for this unique season. Previously, Astros manager Bo Porter said, it was easy to plan for blocks of interleague games.

"A lot of times, a National League team would call up a DH-type guy during that segment of their schedule," he said. "Now, that's hard to do because you're going to have interleague taking place the entire course of the season. It definitely changes roster construction."

Porter already has his pitchers in the cage, working on their bunting. But it's too soon for Justin Verlander and the Detroit pitchers to pick up a bat.

"We'll have to hit some, but it's a catch-22 because I don't want Verlander breaking his finger," Tigers manager Jim Leyland said.

As for his AL Central champions closing on the road against the Marlins, "whatever is good for baseball," the 68-year-old Leyland said.

"We have a designated hitter in the All-Star game, instant replay. Things change and if it is good for the game, I am all for it," he said.

The Tigers, Boston, Toronto and Seattle each play at NL parks in September, leaving them a hitter short.

"It's definitely an advantage for the National League," Leyland said. "I think eventually they'll go uniform."

Interleague play started in 1997, and it was a novelty in the first few seasons. But with more matchups this year, the schedule appears unbalanced.

Reds manager Baker is hoping for an early edge when Pujols arrives.

"In the case of us playing the Angels, does Albert not play? Does he DH? I wouldn't mind if Albert just spectated," he said. "He'd be a mean pinch hitter. He's probably greasing his glove right now."

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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HBT Extra: Not just the East's beasts

??HBT Extra: With another season under the belt of Stephen Strasburg and Bryce Harper, Craig?Calcaterra says the Nationals are primed not only to become the best team in the NL East, but also the best in baseball.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/46899065/ns/sports-baseball/

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Rapper Gucci Mane denied bond in assault case

ATLANTA (AP) ? Gucci Mane has been denied bond on charges stemming from a fan's accusation that the rapper hit him in the head with a champagne bottle at an Atlanta nightclub.

A fan says the rapper, whose real name is Radric Davis, hit him in the club's V.I.P. area March 16 while he tried to take a picture with Gucci Mane. The fan, James Lettley, says he needed 10 stitches.

Davis was in custody on a charge of aggravated assault with a weapon and appeared in court Wednesday.

The rapper's attorney, Drew Findling, tells WSB-TV (http://bit.ly/XdhFoP ) that Davis' criminal history made it difficult for a judge to set bond. Fulton County jail records show Davis has been arrested 10 times since 2005.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rapper-gucci-mane-denied-bond-assault-case-131949635.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Bill Bryson: 'Science is fundamentally amazing' ? video

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127437/Bill_Bryson___Science_is_fundamentally_amazing______video

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Mar 25 - The Chinese Program, Huron University College

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Political Behaviour Research Group, PBRG, presents Jeffery Mondak, University of Illinois
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Department of Physiology and Pharmacology Special Seminar
Dr. Penny MacDonald
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Education's Faculty Seminar Series - Dr. Alan Edmunds
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Hollywood's Trainer Harley Pasternak, BA '97
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Political Behaviour Research Group, PBRG, Presents David Redlawsk, Rutgers University
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Source: http://events.uwo.ca/cgi-bin/events.pl?CalendarName=WesternEvents&EventID=5915&Date=2013/3/25

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UK police search Berezovsky property

LONDON (AP) ? British police said Sunday that experts in hazardous materials are searching a property after the death of Boris Berezovsky, the self-exiled Russian tycoon who went from Kremlin kingmaker to fiery critic after a bitter falling out with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Police said a 67-year-old "believed to be" Berezovsky was found dead at the property in Ascot, a town 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of London on Saturday. Thames Valley police say his death is being treated as "unexplained."

Police said Sunday they have set up a cordon and that officers are conducting the search "as a precaution" and there is no risk to neighbors. The BBC described the site as Berezovsky's home.

"It is important we take all necessary measures to ensure a full and thorough investigation can be carried out," Supt. Stuart Greenfield said in a statement.

Berezovsky ? who had survived a number of assassination attempts ? amassed a fortune through oil and automobiles during Russia's chaotic privatization of state assets following the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Once a member of Russian President Boris Yeltsin's inner circle, Berezovsky fell out with Yeltsin's successor, Putin, and fled Britain in the early 2000s to escape fraud charges that he said were politically motivated.

He became a strident and frequent critic of Putin, accusing the leader of ushering in a dictatorship, and accused the security services of organizing the 1999 apartment house bombings in Moscow and two other Russian cities that became a pretext for Russian troops to sweep into Chechnya for the second war there in half a decade.

In recent years, the one-time Kremlin powerbroker-turned-thorn in Putin's side fended off legal attacks that often bore political undertones ? and others that bit into his fortune.

Russia repeatedly sought to extradite on Berezovksy on a wide variety of criminal charges, and the tycoon vehemently rejected allegations over the years that he was linked to several deaths, including that of slain journalist Anna Politkovskaya and ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko.

Berezovsky won a libel case in 2010 against a Kremlin-owned broadcaster that aired a show in which it was suggested he was behind the poisoning of Litvinenko, who had fled Russia with Berezovsky's help after accusing officials there of plotting to assassinate political opponents.

He took a hit with his divorce from Galina Besharova in 2010, paying what was at the time Britain's largest divorce settlement. The figure beat a previous record of 48 million pounds ($73.1) and was estimated as high as 100 million pounds, though the exact figure was never confirmed.

Last year, Berezovsky lost a multibillion-pound High Court case against fellow Russian Roman Abramovich and was ordered to pay 35 million pounds ($53.3 million) in legal costs.

Berezovsky had claimed that Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea Football Club, cheated him out of his stakes in the oil group Sibneft, arguing that he blackmailed him into selling the stakes vastly beneath their true worth after he lost Putin's good graces.

But a judge threw out the case in August, ruling that Berezovsky was a dishonest and unreliable witness, and rejected Berezovsky's claims that he was threatened by Putin and Alexander Voloshin, a Putin ally, to coerce him to sell his Sibneft stake.

It also recently emerged that Berezovsky ran up legal bills totaling more than 250,000 pounds in just two months of a case against his former partner, Elena Gorbunova, with whom he had two children and who claimed the businessman owed her millions.

Earlier this week, The Times of London newspaper reported that Berezovsky was selling property ? including an Andy Warhol portrait of the former Soviet Union leader Vladimir Lenin ? to settle his debts and pay expenses owed to lawyers.

______

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-police-search-berezovsky-property-095924976--finance.html

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Insight: Desperate for bailout, Cyprus plays risky geopolitical game

By Peter Apps and Henning Gloystein

LONDON (Reuters) - As it tries to play Russia off against Europe to salvage its economy, Cyprus has embarked on a high-stakes poker game that could see almost everyone lose.

Its banks shattered by exposure to Greek debt, the island state urgently needs a way of bailing out its financial system.

Cypriot policymakers hope they can begin to monetise as yet undeveloped offshore gas fields and position themselves as a vital source of energy for Europe.

However, such income is still years away and delusions of becoming the Qatar of the eastern Mediterranean in the 2020s may prompt Cyprus to overplay its hand now.

In the coming days, Nicosia may have to choose between a European bailout that punishes savers - including both ordinary Cypriots and much richer Russian investors - and a deal with Moscow with as yet unknown strings attached.

At worst, it could emerge with its financial system - by far the biggest contributor to the economy - in ruins along with relations with its closest allies.

"Cyprus has always been complicated," said James Ker-Lindsay, a senior fellow at the London School of Economics and expert on the 50-year-old conflict between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. "But this is by far the most complex it has been.

"They are in trouble. They may not want to make these decisions, they know they have to."

The implications go well beyond Cyprus. Images of shuttered banks and queues at cashpoints could spark bank runs elsewhere in Europe, endangering the stability of the single currency.

In the background, a long-simmering conflict between the Greek Cypriots in the south and the Turkish Cypriots in the north of the divided island worries the rest of the region.

Greek Cypriot officials hoped speeding up gas exploration would help them out of a financial hole. But in doing so, they have raised tensions with the Turkish Cypriots who want a joint approach and a share of the revenue.

Turks and Greeks, Israelis and their neighbors are all discovering potential reserves along their disputed borders.

In Washington and Brussels, there are fears that increasing strains between Cyprus and Turkey could lead to confrontation.

"Cyprus may set the tone for the rest of the eastern Mediterranean," says Eric Thompson, director of strategic studies at the Centre for Naval Analyses, a U.S. government-funded agency that advises the U.S. military.

"It is where the financial crisis and the gas issues come together. And it is also where they become immediately militarized."

STILL BETTING ON EUROPE

So far, some 200 billion cubic meters of natural gas worth $80 billion at current prices have been discovered in the Aphrodite gas field in Cypriot waters, although the figures still have to be audited.

That would be enough to cover around 40 percent of the European Union's annual gas consumption. Cyprus hopes to start exporting in 2018, but energy analysts say extracting the gas will prove more costly and slower than Nicosia thinks, and Cypriot supplies may run into a global glut, with shale gas plentiful by then in North America, Russia and even Europe.

Successive Cypriot governments have viewed closer ties with Europe as central to their strategy to hold back Turkey and prosper as a bigger regional player.

Working closely with Israel, they aimed to sell eastern Mediterranean gas to a Europe keen to wean itself off dependency on sometimes politically unreliable supplies from Russia.

Cypriot officials say European firms were deliberately prioritized over Asian and other rivals in granting new drilling rights, with the newly elected government of President Nicos Anastiades keen to lean further towards Europe.

That, one official told Reuters last week, could extend to easier access to Cypriot military bases for any European military operations.

Many western states have used the island as a logistics hub to support operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Former colonial power Britain retains two sovereign bases there but refrained from using them for air strikes on Libya in 2011 out of sensitivity to Cypriot opposition.

The bases are also a listening post for eavesdropping on communications around the Middle East, although intelligence satellites have made such outposts less important.

Until news of Saturday's bailout broke, most Greek Cypriots would have endorsed ever closer European relations.

But with the initial bailout terms - which would have seen even the smallest savers lose more than six percent of their deposits - denounced as a little better than robbery, anger at the EU and Germany in particular has soared.

Having committed billions to bailing out other fringe euro zone economies, northern European taxpayers have little appetite for more. That is especially true for Cyprus which Slovakian Finance Minister Peter Kazimir told reporters has a business model based on "low taxes, network of lawyers and accountants, as well as hidden ?shadow' companies".

Worried by what it sees as an increasingly assertive Russia, some believe Germany is hoping a bailout will ultimately reduce Moscow's influence on the island and elsewhere in Europe.

If recent days are anything to go by, however, it may have had the opposite effect.

Cyprus is not the first indebted European island to turn to Moscow in hope of help in a financial storm. Iceland did so in 2008 as its currency and banking system imploded, angering allies who saw the NATO member as trying to sell itself out to Russian interests barely a month after the Georgia war.

In the event, Russia did not bite, preferring to leave the struggling country to the International Monetary Fund and European Union. Cyprus, however, has long had closer ties with Moscow based on business interests, a shared antipathy towards Turkey and similar Orthodox Christian faith.

WHAT PRICE FROM MOSCOW?

No sooner had news of the bailout terms broken on Saturday than rumors began to circulate suggesting that Russia - and gas giant Gazprom in particular - might offer an alternative deal.

Gazprom denies any such plan. But a host of ideas are now circulating in Moscow and Nicosia, many of them complex and involving gas fields, Cypriot banks and real estate.

Russia could certainly be attracted by access to Cypriot gas, tightening its grip on European supply.

A strategic relationship with Cyprus could make it harder for Western states to use the bases for any military action in Syria, and even offer the Kremlin an alternative Mediterranean port should ally Bashar al-Assad lose his civil war.

Whether such a deal would work as well for Cyprus, however, is another question. Barred from NATO by a Turkish veto, the island was officially "unaligned" during the Cold War but has shown little appetite to be a direct Russian satellite.

A bailout from Moscow might solve the immediate banking crisis but greater Russian sway over Cypriot banks could scare off their Russian clients. Many moved money to Cyprus precisely to avoid unreliable Russian banks, rapacious tax officials and the reach of the Russian state itself.

Fed up with bailing out Mediterranean states and perhaps confident they can ring fence collapse in Cyprus - which makes up less than 0.2 percent of the Eurozone economy - European powers may decide they can afford to let Cyprus fail.

How bad a Cypriot bankruptcy might be for the rest of Europe is, as yet, far from clear.

Earlier this week, one London-based fund described the Cyprus bailout as the euro zone's "Franz Ferdinand moment", comparing it to the assassination of an Austrian archduke in Sarajevo that sparked world war in 1914.

"That might be an overstatement," said Fiona Hill, a former senior official on the U.S. National Intelligence Council and now head of the Europe Programme at the Brookings Institution.

"But it's a very serious situation. You went to bed on Friday night thinking that the Eurozone would survive and woke up on Saturday (after the bailout) wondering how it can."

(Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein and Oleg Vukmanovic; Editing by Paul Taylor)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-desperate-bailout-cyprus-plays-risky-geopolitical-game-181648410--finance.html

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