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McGovern-G.O.P. Alliance a Sign of Shift on Afghanistan

An unusual groundswell of support from House Republicans for a Massachusetts liberal’s measure is a stark example of changing sentiments on Afghanistan.

Representative Jim McGovern, Democrat of Massachusetts, offered an amendment to the annual defense authorization bill specifying that combat operations involving United States forces in Afghanistan be completed by the end of 2013, and “the accelerated transition of military and security operations by the end of 2014.” More than half of the House Republican caucus, 120 in all, supported Mr. McGovern’s effort, and the amendment passed by 91 votes.

Compare that with a 2009 House vote on a McGovern amendment requiring that the Pentagon report to Congress on an exit strategy for American military forces in Afghanistan by the end of that year. Just seven House Republicans voted for it. They included skeptics on the Afghan war like Walter B. Jones Jr. of North Carolina and Ron Paul of Texas, who had made a military pullback part of his 2008 bid for the Republican presidential nomination. Mr. McGovern’s amendment failed by 71 votes.

Four years later, a wide range of Republicans from across the nation, including six from Texas, 11 from Florida and four of five Kentuckians, joined all but nine Democrats in voting for Mr. McGovern’s amendment. It was the most Republican support any amendment by him has ever received on the House floor.



Q&A: Moving an iPhoto Library

Q.

I have iPhoto ’11 on my MacBook and it’s taking up a huge amount of disk space. Can I store the photos on an USB external drive to free up space on the laptop?

A.

Apple’s iPhoto can work with picture libraries stored on external drives. Before you move things around, it is a good idea to back up your collection to discs or a regular backup drive just to be safe.

Next, quit iPhoto if it is open. Once you have a compatible hard drive connected to the laptop, open your Home folder on the Mac (or press Shift-Command-H) and then open the Pictures folder.

Select the iPhoto Library folder and drag it to the external drive. After the folder is finished copying, go back to the iPhoto Library on your Mac and add the word “old” to the file name. Next, hold down the Option key, open iPhoto and select the library file you just moved to the external drive. Make sure everything looks O.K. before deleting the old iPhoto Library on the laptop.



Q&A: Moving an iPhoto Library

Q.

I have iPhoto ’11 on my MacBook and it’s taking up a huge amount of disk space. Can I store the photos on an USB external drive to free up space on the laptop?

A.

Apple’s iPhoto can work with picture libraries stored on external drives. Before you move things around, it is a good idea to back up your collection to discs or a regular backup drive just to be safe.

Next, quit iPhoto if it is open. Once you have a compatible hard drive connected to the laptop, open your Home folder on the Mac (or press Shift-Command-H) and then open the Pictures folder.

Select the iPhoto Library folder and drag it to the external drive. After the folder is finished copying, go back to the iPhoto Library on your Mac and add the word “old” to the file name. Next, hold down the Option key, open iPhoto and select the library file you just moved to the external drive. Make sure everything looks O.K. before deleting the old iPhoto Library on the laptop.



The Early Word: Arms for Syrian Rebels

In Today’s Times:

  • Concluding that President Bashar al-Assad of Syria has used chemical weapons against rebel forces, the Obama administration has decided to give small weapons and ammunition to the rebels, a move that has long been the goal of those promoting a more aggressive American response to the Syrian civil war, Mark Mazzetti, Michael R. Gordon and Mark Landler report.
  • The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that human genes may not be patented, a decision that will affect the course of genetic research, Adam Liptak reports. The ruling is likely to reduce the cost of genetic testing for some health risks, including breast cancer.
  • With hundreds of references to marriage in federal regulations on subjects like Social Security and immigration, the Obama administration faces the complicated, sensitive task of determining how vigorously to change that language should the Supreme Court overturn the ban on federal benefits for same-sex couples, Michael D. Shear reports.

Washington Happenings:

  • President Obama will host a Father’s Day luncheon at the White House on Friday for a group of fathers and their children. Later, he will honor the W.N.B.A.’s 2012 champions, the Indiana Fever.