Saturday, March 30, 2013

Indian Gaming > Kickapoo Tribe ready to debut expansion of casino ...

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The Kickapoo Tribe of Texas will be unveiling a major casino expansion this spring. The tribe is more than doubling the size of the gaming floor at the Lucky Eagle Casino. The tribe is also adding a 249-room hotel to the facility. "The current facility was not large enough," general manager Robin Miller told KXAN-TV. "It's a very exciting time for both the tribe and the casino with the expansion." The casino only offers Class II games. The state has refused to negotiate a Class III gaming compact. Get the Story:
The legacy of Texas' lone legal casino (KXAN-TV 3/28) Related Stories:
Alabama-Coushatta Tribe seeks restoration of gaming rights (3/19)

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Source: http://www.indianz.com/IndianGaming/2013/026168.asp

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Cyprus readies capital controls to avert bank run

By Michele Kambas and Costas Pitas

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Cyprus is finalizing capital control measures on Wednesday to prevent a run on the banks by depositors anxious about their savings after the country agreed a painful rescue package with international lenders.

Cypriots have taken to the streets of Nicosia in their thousands to protest against a bailout deal they fear will push their country into an economic slump and cost many their jobs.

European leaders said the deal averted a chaotic national bankruptcy that might have forced Cyprus out of the euro.

With banks due to reopen on Thursday, Finance Minister Michael Sarris said he expected the control measures to be ready by noon (1000 GMT) on Wednesday: "I think they will be within the realms of reason," he said, without going into details.

"Banks will open on Thursday ... We will look at the best way to limit the possibility of large sums of money leaving, and not imposing punitive conditions on the economy, businesses and individuals," Sarris said in a Cyprus television interview.

The central bank governor said earlier that "loose" controls would apply temporarily to all banks. Earlier, the finance minister said they could be in place for weeks. Banks have been shut since final bailout talks got under way in mid-March.

Russia, whose citizens have billions of euros in Cypriot banks, cautioned Nicosia against imposing onerous controls on healthy banks.

"If there are such measures, this will not foster trust but only provoke additional problems for participants, depositors," Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, in South Africa for a summit of the BRICS emerging powers group, told reporters late on Tuesday.

State-controlled Russian bank VTB has a subsidiary in Cyprus, Russian Commercial Bank, which has not been affected by the bailout deal.

Siluanov cautioned that Russian willingness to restructure and extend a 2.5 billion euro loan to Cyprus in 2011 would depend on the island's decision on capital controls.

"We will discuss (restructuring of the loan) in the context of the decisions the parliament adopts," he said. "We are prepared to discuss within these parameters."

POPULAR ANGER

The terms of the 10-billion euro ($13-billion) rescue with the European Union, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank have stirred popular anger within Cyprus at the country's partners in the EU, notably Germany, the bloc's main paymaster and fiercest advocate of austerity.

On Tuesday, up to 3,000 high school students protested at parliament, in the first major expression of popular anger since the bailout was agreed in the early hours of Monday morning in Brussels. The deal largely side-stepped parliament, and has triggered opposition calls for a referendum.

"They've just got rid of all our dreams," said one student, named Thomas.

Outside the central bank, about 200 employees of the country's biggest commercial lender, the Bank of Cyprus, demanded the resignation of central bank governor Panicos Demetriades, chanting "Hands off Cyprus" and "Disgrace".

Dimos Dimosthenous, a veteran Bank of Cyprus employee, said: "The bank is being driven to closure. That will be the end."

A Bank of Cyprus official said its Chief Executive Yiannis Kypri had been fired by the central bank.

It follows the appointment of a special administrator to run the bank, which is being restructured as part of the bailout deal, and an offer to resign by its chairman, Andreas Artemis.

ACCOUNTS FROZEN

Under the terms of the bailout, the second largest lender, Cyprus Popular Bank, is to be shut down, and accounts of under 100,000 euros will be moved to the Bank of Cyprus. Bigger accounts at both banks will be frozen.

Government officials have estimated that these larger depositors, many of them wealthy foreigners including Russians, could lose around 40 percent of their cash.

On Wednesday, the government was appointing special crisis teams of economic experts to advise ministers.

Many Cypriots say they do not feel reassured by the bailout deal, however, and are expected to besiege banks as soon as they reopen after a shutdown that began over a week ago.

The long closure of the banks has hurt business, according to Andreas Hadjiadamou, president of the Cyprus Supermarkets Association, who said consumer confidence had "hit the floor".

Maria Benaki, who runs a family silverware business on Nicosia's biggest shopping street, said she had not had a customer in days.

"The situation is dire," she said. "What will happen at the end of the month when I need to pay my bills?"

(Additional reporting by Agnieszka Flak in Durban, Douglas Busvine and Steve Gutterman in Moscow, Laura Noonan and Karolina Tagaris in Nicosia; Writing by Giles Elgood and Matt Robinson; Editing by Will Waterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyprus-readies-capital-controls-avert-bank-run-090603283--finance.html

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Grand Millennium Dubai to participate in Arabian Travel Market ...

According to General Manager Peter Mansourian, the facility combines both the flexibility of apartment living with the amenities of an adjacent five-star hotel, offering a cost effective package for visitors and residents alike.

"Both business and leisure travelers are increasingly expecting more from their accommodation, and the full refurbishment of our apartments will give us a competitive advantage in the market," he said, pointing out the options included 81 one-bedroom, 37 two-bedroom and 20 studio apartments.

In addition, new food and beverage attractions at the Grand Millennium Dubai will be highlighted on the hotel's stand at ATM as the property widens its culinary reach with "EXIT36" Arabic restaurant the hotel's latest addition.

Outside catering for corporate and private functions is also one of the services that the Grand Millennium Dubai is expanding on "With more hotels opening up in Dubai, we ensure that we constantly strive to deliver best practice which is reflected in every aspect of our operation" said Mr. Mansourian.

Located just off the Sheikh Zayed Road, the Grand Millennium is conveniently accessible from the Mall of the Emirates and the Ibn Battuta Mall, as well as within easy reach of the city's prime business and leisure attraction including the beach and golf courses. The 343-room five star hotel features a range of award-winning restaurants and bars, a beautiful rooftop pool, superb spa and health club with nine-treatment rooms, state-of-the-art meeting rooms, a magnificent ballroom and exceptional banquet facilities.

Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/grand-millennium-dubai-reveal-news-arabian-335176

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Georges St-Pierre Joins Captain America: The Winter Soldier

UFC Welterweight Champion Georges St-Pierre is joining the cast of Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Latino Review has learned. He will play a villain named Batroc the Leaper, who, according to his Wikipedia entry, has no superhuman abilities, but is physically strong and agile.

In the comics, Batroc first crossed paths with Cap during one of his missions to steal an item for a terrorist organization.

St-Pierre recently defended his title against Nick Diaz at UFC 158 on March 16. He'll probably have a fight scene or two in the movie and then return to his primary profession.

Just last Friday, it was revealed that Robert Redford is in talks to play a high-ranking S.H.I.E.L.D. official, reportedly, named Pierce. Given that Marvel likes to sign actors up for multiple movies, there's a possibility he may show up in Marvel's other superhero movies.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier is directed by Joe and Anthony Russo and is scheduled for release on April 4, 2014.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927115/news/1927115/

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Google Reader Who? Feedly Became Top News App On iPhone, iPad & Android This Week; New App Now Awaiting Approval

feedly-logoWhere are the users headed following news of Google Reader's shutdown? To Feedly, it seems. We already heard the company announce it had passed half a million new users, but more importantly, Feedly is now winning on mobile, too. According to new U.S. App Store and Google Play data, Feedly is leaving competitors like NewsBlur and Reeder far behind. Even though Google Reader will remain for a few months more, Feedly became the number one news app across all three top mobile platforms (iPhone, iPad and Android) this week. It even climbed into the "Top Overall" section within all three stores.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/i81gTtlKG1U/

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Friday, March 22, 2013

19 miners trapped by quake are rescued

Agencja Gazeta / Reuters

Families react to the news Wednesday that 19 miners were rescued after a small earthquake trapped them some 2,000 feet below the surface at the Rudna copper mine in southern Poland.

By Wojciech Zurawski and Adrian Krajewski, Reuters

POLKOWICE, Poland -- Nineteen miners were pulled alive and well from a copper mine in southern Poland on Wednesday after a small earthquake trapped them almost 2,000 feet below the surface late Tuesday.

It took seven hours to tunnel through collapsed rock to reach the miners, who were working at the Rudna copper mine in southern Poland when a small tremor trapped them there at 10:09 p.m. local time (5:09 p.m. ET) on Tuesday.

Kacper Pempel / Reuters, file

KGHM Polkowice-Sieroszowice copper ore mine is seen in Polkowice in this July 29, 2011, file photo. Nineteen miners were trapped there Tuesday night after an earthquake caused a collapse. All were saved.

Two were treated for minor injuries, while the others, shaken up and covered with grime after a grueling night, were on their way home.

Families of the miners, who gathered near the site, cheered when the mine's operator, KGHM, announced that all 19 were alive and were slowly being taken out through a hole dug by the rescuers.

"This was the biggest accident in KGHM history," chief executive Herbert Wirth told Reuters. "Never in our history has it happened that 19 miners were trapped with no contact."

The Rudna mine is about 250 miles southwest of the Polish capital, Warsaw.

After the quake on Tuesday, workers on the surface lost contact for several hours with the trapped miners because communication lines into the shafts had been severed.

The mine is in the Silesia region, near Poland's borders with Germany and the Czech Republic. It has been in operation since 1974. State-controlled KGHM is Europe's second-biggest copper producer.

Poland has large numbers of mines, mostly in the heavily industrialized Silesia region. In 2006, a gas explosion at a coal mine in the region killed 23 miners.

Related:

At least 21 dead in China mining accident

Video: Russia mine explosion claims at least 10 lives

PhotoBlog: Peru miners rescued after six days

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/20/17382432-19-miners-saved-after-earthquake-traps-them-deep-underground?lite

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

'Pharoah's Magicians': Egypt's TV puts a spell on you, warns Islamist ...

We?ve heard of the jinx of the Sphinx, mystic curses from the lands of Ancient Egypt and the odd sprinkle of magic over all things mysterious.

But recent claims from a prominent Egyptian preacher?have perhaps reached new heights.

Beware, viewers watching Egyptian satellite channels ? warns preacher?Safwat Hegazy ? for you could be ?watching Pharaoh?s spell? at work.

This week, Hegazy called on the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip not to watch the channels because they were ?Pharaoh?s magicians.?

?Pharaoh (Ramses II) had only one Haman but now there are 1,000 Hamans in Egypt,? Hegazy said in reference to Haman, who along with Pharaoh, were believed by Muslims to have rejected Prophet Moses? call to worship God.

During the speech, delivered at a conference called ?The Palestinian Cause in the Shadow of the Arab Spring,? the preacher criticized Egyptian magazines and dailies that accused Hamas of targeting and killing Egyptian forces during the ?terrorist? Rafah attack.

?We in Egypt do not believe what is published in newspapers,? he said, the Egyptian daily al-Masry al-Youm reported.

Recently, members of Islamist groups in Egypt have spoken out against the many televised news talk shows and presenters that appear to be overtly against the country?s Islamist rule.

?Quality assurance in Egyptian media is direly needed across the board,? Dr H.A. Hellyer, of the Brookings Institution and specialist on Egyptian politics told Al Arabiya English on Monday.

?The irony is, however, that the government that Hegazy directly supports has not taken such reforms seriously at all. If anything, the state media has simply switched allegiances, and pro-Islamist independent media has hardly been leading the way in non-polarizing news,? Hellyer added.

Meanwhile, ties between Gaza and Egypt were shaken after an Aug. 5 attack last year in which gunmen in the Sinai Peninsula, next to Gaza, killed 16 Egyptian soldiers. The incident raised new worries about the smuggling of weapons and militants through border tunnels, and Egypt is investigating whether the assailants had ties to Gaza.

Hegazy also criticized attempts to topple Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood?s rule saying, ?Even if the revolution falls, Islam will not fall and President Mursi will not fall and (will stay until) the end of his term.?

Hegazy added that Arab Spring revolutions ?will succeed? and that Jerusalem will be the capital of the Islamic Caliphate. This was similar to a comment he made last year.

?Peace with Israel is not a strategic option. There will be no peace and no surrender. The Palestinian land will be freed despite the Jews? [will],? he said.

Previous quirks

Last year, before Islamist Mursi took office, Hegazy caused uproar while he was rallying for Mursi.

In a speech, he said if Mursi became president, Egypt?s new capital would no longer be Cairo; it would be Jerusalem.

?Our capital shall not be Cairo, Mecca or Medina. It shall be Jerusalem with God?s will. Our chants shall be: ?millions of martyrs will march towards Jerusalem?,? prominent preacher?Safwat Hagazy said, according to the video aired by Egypt?s religious Annas TV in June 2012.

?The United States of the Arabs will be restored on the hands of that man [Mursi] and his supporters. The capital of the [Muslim] Caliphate will be Jerusalem with God?s will,? Hegazy said, as crowds listening to him cheered, waving the Egyptian flags along with the flags of the Islamist Hamas group, which rules the Gaza Strip.

?Tomorrow Mursi will liberate Gaza,? the crowds chanted.

More recently, Hegazy also kicked up a fuss when he told Al Arabiya earlier this month that that Shiite Islam ?will never exist in Egypt.? He had been commenting on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad?s recent visit to Egypt.

?Any country?s intervention in another country to spread its own doctrine means either that this country has a new religion to spread or that it believes the old religion is more valid,? he said.

Hegazy claimed the International Union of Muslim Scholars?has researched Shiite Islam within the Sunni world, alleging that ?the research includes numbers that refer to what Iran does to turn Sunnis to Shiites.?

?Were there Shiites in Egypt 20 years ago?? he asked rhetorically, before claiming that there were no Egyptian Shiites in 1973 and slamming Shia Islam as ?blasphemous? and ?wrong.?

Source:? AL ARABIYA

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/03/83048/pharoahs-magicians-egypts-tv-puts-a-spell-on-you-warns-islamist-preacher/

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

The Real Housewives of Atlanta Recap - Kenya's Amusement Park

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Will We Kill Off Today's Animals If We Revive Extinct Ones?

WASHINGTON, D.C.?The rebirth of an extinct frog species may come from the freezer, not the stomach. The gastric brooding frog, when it existed on Earth, swallowed its eggs, transformed its stomach into a womb and vomited up its young once sufficiently grown. But the frog disappeared from the mountains of southern Australia shortly after it was discovered in the 1970s, persisting only as a few frozen specimens in the bottom of a scientist's freezer.

The cells in those tissues should have been ruptured by the swelling ice crystals that formed within and around them. But some of the cells remained reasonably intact, according to paleontologist Michael Archer of the University of New South Wales in Australia, who is attempting to resurrect the species via his Lazarus Project. He and his colleagues transplanted the nucleus of that cell and others like it into hundreds of eggs from a closely related species. "Last February we saw a miracle starting to happen," Archer announced for the first time to the crowd at the TEDx De-Extinction event on March 15 at the National Geographic Auditorium. "One of them began to divide." (Archer?s group has not published the work yet.)

While tadpoles may be a long way off, let alone a viable frog, the southern gastric brooding frog might be the first species brought back from the dead permanently. The first de-extinction happened in 2003, although it lasted all too briefly.? Scientists coaxed a clone of an extinct ibex from Spain to birth from a special hybrid goat. But the cloned bucardo bore a third lung and couldn't breathe properly, dying within 10 minutes.

Although this early effort failed, the growing cohort of resurrection projects raises a central question: Does extinction mean forever, anymore? If not, do we have an obligation to bring species back? "If it's clear that we exterminated these species, we not only have a moral obligation to see what we can do about it but a moral imperative to do something if we can," Archer argued. The new science of synthetic biology aims to make it possible for him to fulfill that moral imperative.

Sixth extinction
Humans have killed off many species, both iconic and common. A lighthouse keeper's cat Tibbles?aided by a few feral cats perhaps?caught and killed nearly every single Stephens Island wren just as they were discovered by science in 1900. Hungry sailors ate the Steller's sea cow to death within a century of its discovery. The Xerces Blue butterfly disappeared with the sand dunes from San Francisco in the 1940s as that city swelled. The American chestnut, once the most abundant tree in eastern North America, succumbed to a fungal blight imported from Asia by humans.

"As a human species, we have been amazingly efficient at making things extinct," noted conservation scientist Kate Jones of University College London at the TEDx DeExtinction event.

As the extinction rate swells thanks to habitat loss, over-hunting and human-induced climate change, the world may be on pace to lose half of all species by the end of this century?a reality dubbed the sixth extinction because it would represent the sixth mass die-off of life in Earth's history. Of course, the other five were caused by climatic, planetary or astronomic events.

The de-extinction effort is being led by a group of scientists and others, ranging from synthetic biologist George Church of Harvard Medical School to environmental gadfly Steward Brand of the Long Now Foundation and its Revive & Restore project. They have banded together to see if new genetic tools might enable them to bring back even more species, as Archer is attempting to do with the gastric brooding frog. Their first target is the passenger pigeon, which once was so abundant it darkened the skies of eastern North America.

A similar bid by scientists in South Korea to revive the woolly mammoth?an even more scientifically challenging feat because it has been extinct for thousands of years?may garner the most attention, however. And no need to stop there; extinct human species, like the Neanderthal, could be revived as well, or even sabre-tooth cats?although species that have been extinct for more than a few thousand years are unlikely to be found preserved with enough DNA intact to permit their restoration. ?(Say goodbye to Jurassic Park.)

As the bucardo example shows, however, de-extinction will be no easy feat. For the bucardo, scientists will not only need to get a female clone to survive, they will also need to find a Y chromosome to make a male bucardo and then stitch that into the cloned DNA. Another approach, championed by Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology, is to forego cloning and instead create stem cells from the ancient DNA. That would then enable Lanza or other scientists to create sperm or egg cells that bear the DNA of endangered or extinct species?and can provide the genetic code to restore or resurrect them.

Going from DNA to a stem cell of some kind, that is then coaxed into becoming a sperm or egg cell, and finally grows into a mammoth, however, is a process still beyond even the most advanced genetic science. "You cannot realistically change one or 10 percent of a genome and have that go to term," Lanza noted in an interview with Scientific American, which is the reason for multiple implantations when attempting to impregnate. But "this is the beginning. It's not going to stop."

Furthermore, as paleogenomicist Beth Shapiro of the University of California, Santa Cruz, reminded the TEDx audience, creating an embryo is just the first step in bringing any extinct species back. There is also the mammoth challenge of restoring the world?or at least the ecosystems?that the elephant relatives inhabited, among other hurdles. And given the perilous plight of still extant elephant species, humanity has yet to show that it can manage the survival, let alone the revival, of a pachyderm.

Keep it cool
Still, there are lessons to be learned from the mammoth, not least the importance of cold. The Arctic "is the best place for the long-term preservation of DNA," Shapiro said. "It's cold and it's been cold for at least the last million years."

Just as mammoth DNA has waited in the Siberian tundra, preserved by constant cold temperatures, the cold of the San Diego's frozen zoo may be the key to ensuring that today's biodiversity makes it through the next few centuries of the Anthropocene intact. This ark, maintained at a steady -197 degrees Celsius, holds the cells of 503 mammals, 170 birds, 70 reptiles and 12 amphibians and fish?out of an estimated 10 million animal, plant, microbe and fungal species on the planet. The collection displays a bias toward charismatic megafauna and thus against the uncharismatic microfauna that keep the planet alive. The cold Svalbard seed vault in Norway performs the same function for crops?species that, despite their importance to us, have dwindled in biodiversity as genetic engineering has created specialized variants that now dominate the landscape.

Some conservationists also pour cold water on the very idea of de-extinction, worrying that it could enable the extinction of yet more species by diverting funds from proven efforts to sustain them, such as protected areas, intensive management of small surviving populations, even advertising campaigns to reduce the consumption of endangered species. We might bring the mammoth back while letting its relatives slip away. "At this moment, brave conservationists are risking their lives to protect forest elephants from armed poachers," noted biologist David Ehrenfeld of Rutgers University at TEDx. "And we're talking in this safe auditorium about bringing back the woolly mammoth?" Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kill-off-todays-animals-revive-extinct-ones-150100685.html

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Samsung's latest Chromebook now supports Netflix courtesy of HTML5 streaming

Samsung's latest Chromebook now supports Netflix courtesy of HTML5 streaming

Samsung's most recent Chromebook released last fall may get the job done for those who rely mostly on websites and web apps, but there have still been some gaps in the web-based services it supports -- like Netflix. That's changed today, though, with Google announcing that it has collaborated with Netflix and Microsoft to enable HTML5 video streaming on the ARM-based Chromebook (Google had previously said Netflix support was coming, but provided few specifics). That notably also makes it the first instance of Netflix using HTML5 for streaming instead of Silverlight, although there's no indication of it spreading to other devices just yet. As far as Chromebook users are concerned, all you have to do is go to the Netflix website and log in to get started.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/VWXYlq7uhN8/

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What ovarian cancer can teach us about medicine, as a whole ...

The New York Times has a story on problems with the treatment of ovarian cancer that holds lessons for many aspects of modern medicine. The big issue here: Local doctors, even local specialists, might not have the information necessary to properly treat patients who come in with problems those doctors don't have a lot of experience with. And those doctors don't always refer patients to people with more expertise. In a world with constantly changing information, how do you get that information to the people patients are most in contact with? In a world with more and more evidence available, how do you change traditions in the medical community that apply treatments based on "what my teachers did" and "what I've always done"? Big questions here, not a lot of answers.

Source: http://boingboing.net/2013/03/12/what-ovarian-cancer-can-teach.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

As big as Bieber? N. Korea troops mob dictator Kim

North Korea released images of its leader Kim Jong Un inspecting two military units near the border with the south on Thursday. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

They could have been teenage girls at a Justin Bieber concert. But this adoring crowd was made up of North Korean troops and the star of the show was Kim Jong Un.

The?world's only hereditary communist dictator was shown on state television Friday being mobbed by chanting soldiers. At some points, they were seen jumping on the spot while keeping their hands in the air.


Kim was filmed at a lookout post, surveying the scene with binoculars, and also on a naval vessel.

One group of soldiers was so overcome with apparent emotion that they charged into the sea to continue praising him. Kim waved them away from his boat.

The portrayal of Kim as a much-loved military leader came after North Korea threatened Thursday that it could?launch a "pre-emptive nuclear attack" on its enemies. That warning came a few hours before the United Nations Security Council voted unanimously to impose new sanctions on the isolated state over its recent nuclear bomb test.

The troops' apparent joy was in marked contrast to the daily lives of millions in North Korea.?

After cancelling all non-aggression agreements with South Korea, North Korean officials continue to maintain that the country could carry out a preemptive nuclear strike against the U.S.

According to the CIA?s World Factbook, North Koreans risk arrest and imprisonment when crossing the border into China "to escape famine, economic privation, and political oppression."

Human Rights Watch?accuses?North Korea?s government of continuing "to systematically violate the rights of its citizens, including by depriving large sectors of its population of food, applying collective punishments and forced labor and interning more than 200,000 people in sub-human conditions in political prison camps where they are denied their basic humanity."

Related:

UN passes sanctions despite North Korea threat of 'pre-emptive nuclear attack'

Analysis: North Korea threat of nuclear attack predictable but worrisome

North Korea's propaganda poets stay true to their muse despite world's laughter

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/08/17236805-bigger-than-bieber-north-korea-troops-mob-kim-jong-un?lite

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Apple (again) mulling shifting production of iPhone and iPad chips to Intel

Paul Otellini and Steve Jobs (Intel wafer)

A report Wednesday revives the old rumor that the world?s leading chip maker, Intel, is working on a strategic deal to manufacture processors that power Apple?s iPhones, iPads and iPods.

What?s different this time around, though, is the timing: Intel?s?CEO Paul Otellini is on his way out and with CEO search still underway, the semiconductor giant could be poised to take its relationship with Apple to the next level.

The gist of the report is that Apple could contract Intel as a foundry, meaning the chip giant would tap its world-class manufacturing expertise to produce iPhone and iPad processors, as designed in-house by Apple, rather than persuade Tim Cook & Co. into adopting Intel?s own mobile Atom?x86 chip architecture, which hasn?t made much inroads yet?

Reuters?has the scoop:

Intel said last week it will open up its prized manufacturing technology to make chips designed by fellow chipmaker Altera ? snagging its first sizeable customer in a contract manufacturing, or ?foundry?, business expected to grow.

That has spurred talk of an Apple deal. A source close to one of the companies says Intel and Apple executives have discussed the issue in the past year but no agreement has been reached.

Intel, of course, has been a major supplier of processors for Mac notebooks and desktops since 2005.

Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy told the news gathering organization the company is ?in constant discussions with Apple,? though he wouldn?t comment on negotiations about a potential foundry relationship.?With persisting rumors of Apple looking to distance itself from Samsung due to ongoing litigation, anything is possible.

If Apple is to take its lucrative chip making contract elsewhere, the company doesn?t really have much choice. There are only a few semiconductor makers that can meet Apple?s exacting standards in terms of volume, yields and advanced process technologies used to fab power-savvy mobile chips.

iPad mini keynote (Phil Schiller, A6x slide 001)

Samsung, which currently builds Apple?s in-house designed processors for iDevices at its sophisticated Austin, Texas plant, is one of them. The other oft-rumored potential partner is?Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC).

Reuters notes that?Intel?s chip-manufacturing technology ?is at least two years ahead? of TSMC?s or Samsung?s foundry, making talk of Intel-fabbed device silicon highly probable.

After Intel upped its capital spending budget by $2 billion to $13 billion this year, speculation grew that Apple could ink a deal to use Intel?s leading process technology to make better chips for its iPad and iPhone.

Doing so could help Apple end its foundry relationship with Samsung, which has become a fierce competitor with its own smartphones and tablets.

Shifting production of iPhone and iPad chips to Intel could be an additional $4.2 billion revenue opportunity for Intel in 2015, with a gross margin of around 50 percent, according to Macquarie analyst Shawn Webster.

Interestingly enough, TSMC Chairman and CEO?Morris Chang recently said his company has received a ?very large volume? order from an unspecified customer, prompting watchers to speculate that the mysterious buyer could be Apple.

It has also been reported that the Taiwanese foundry is looking to fab?a next-gen processor for a ?breakthrough? Apple device on its upcoming cutting-edge 16nm FinFET process. At any rate, looks like Samsung will be the big loser, even if Apple is only looking to diversify its chip suppliers.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zipadblog/~3/yeuAoYjghj8/

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Mexico stymies Arizona offense in 1-0 win

? Putting on Mexico's jersey for the first time was everything Yovani Gallardo ever imagined. Even better, he felt healthy when he did it.

Gallardo struck out the side, albeit with a pair of walks in between, in Mexico's 1-0 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday night.

"It's a feeling I can't explain," Gallardo said. "You put on that jersey that says Mexico, it explains where you're from and the passion I have. It's an honor, a dream come true."

Gallardo's further participation in the World Baseball Classic was put in doubt over the weekend when the right-hander was scratched from his start Sunday against Chicago because of a slight groin strain.

Though he still needs the final go-ahead from the Brewers coaching and training staff, Gallardo expects to be able to pitch as planned Friday when Mexico opens WBC pool play against the Team USA.

"For me, the main goal was to make sure I was healthy," said Gallardo, the Milwaukee Brewers' Opening Day starter the past three seasons. I wasn't worried about it going into it. Yet again you always have that in the back of your mind because you've been treating it for five days. It felt fine."

Gallardo struck out Adam Eaton swinging and Cliff Pennington looking but then walked Paul Goldschmidt on four pitches. He also walked Jason Kubel, but bounced back to strike out Eric Chavez and complete his 24-pitch outing.

"My mechanics got away from me for those two batters but then I got out of it," Gallardo said.

Arizona starter Ian Kennedy went three scoreless innings, allowing two hits and a walk with three strikeouts. Kennedy has allowed only one unearned run on four hits over five spring innings.

"It's one of those things coming into this you don't know who you're going to face," Kennedy said. "I didn't know anyone on their roster or their team except Adrian Gonzalez and (Jorge) Cantu. It's a spring training game for me but it was different facing another country."

Humberto Cota drove in Luis Garcia on a sharp single to right in the fifth off Brad Ziegler for the game's only run.

NOTES: Arizona LHP Tyler Skaggs allowed three hits in three innings with a walk and three strikeouts. He had given up seven runs in his first 2 1/3 innings across two outings. . Diamondbacks OF Cody Ross will be out two to three weeks with a lower left leg strain. He'll be able to throw and hit but not run. . Arizona 2B Aaron Hill was out of the lineup again with a sore left hip flexor. . RHP Trevor Cahill takes the mound on Wednesday against RHP James Shields and the Kansas City Royals. . Mexico plays the Los Angeles Dodgers in an final exhibition on Wednesday.

The Associated Press

Source: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/mar/05/mexico-stymies-arizona-offense-in-1-0-win/

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"Are You Working With a Realtor?" - Sarasota Real Estate

If you have ever been to an open house or inquired about a property for sale you have probably been asked by the agent, "Are you working with a Realtor?"?This is one of the most important questions an agent can ask a potential buyer. Here are 3 reasons why agents ask this question.

1. Agents are required to adhere to our Code of Ethics.?

Standard of Practice 16-9
REALTORS?, prior to entering into a representation agreement, have an affirmative obligation to make reasonable efforts to determine whether the prospect is subject to a current, valid exclusive agreement to provide the same type of real estate service.

Ethical agents don't want to ?poach? someone else's client. We often invest a lot of time, energy and money into our clients before making a dollar. It isn't fair for an unethical agent to convince a prospect to ditch their current Realtor in hopes of stealing them.?If it isn't working out with the agent that is representing you then terminate the relationship and hire someone else. ?

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2. The Realtor lacks any moral fiber and actually gets a kick out of stealing another Realtor's client.?

Yes, there are agents out there who don't mind stealing prospects. Real estate is a tough industry. According to?Salary.com?the average real estate agent makes?$37,589?a year (remember that the next time you want us to charge a lower commission rate or throw some money in the transaction). Sometimes agents try to take short cuts.?


3. We aren't big fans of working for free.?
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Do you work for free? Probably not.?Maybe for a good cause or every once in awhile, but it is tough to pay your bills when you regularly work for free.?

We often get contacted by people who want us to show them a property or retrieve property information for them even though they are already have a Realtor. This is usually a case of the person not knowing how agents work. I have had extremely intelligent clients get a little confused how the real estate industry operates. That is ok. They just need to be educated on how we are compensated.?

Everything we do for a buyer or seller is at our cost. Essentially, we work for free, hoping to close a sale and earn a fee for our work. For a more elaborate explanation read - How Are Realtors Paid?

I actually have had people want me to show them a property or send them information about a home because their Realtor was busy and didn't want to disturb them. This cracks me up. If your agent is too busy to do their job then you need to find another one.?

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Source: http://www.luxurysarasotarealestate.com/blog/are-you-working-with-a-realtor.html

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Family: CA woman denied CPR wanted no intervention

Shown is the main gate of Glenwood Gardens in Bakersfield, Calif., Monday March 4, 2013, where an elderly woman died after a nurse refused to perform CPR on her last week. The central California retirement home is defending one of its nurses who refused pleas by a 911 operator to perform CPR on an elderly woman, who later died. "Is there anybody that's willing to help this lady and not let her die," dispatcher Tracey Halvorson says on a 911 tape released by the Bakersfield Fire Department aired by several media outlets. (AP Photo/Gosia Wozniacka)

Shown is the main gate of Glenwood Gardens in Bakersfield, Calif., Monday March 4, 2013, where an elderly woman died after a nurse refused to perform CPR on her last week. The central California retirement home is defending one of its nurses who refused pleas by a 911 operator to perform CPR on an elderly woman, who later died. "Is there anybody that's willing to help this lady and not let her die," dispatcher Tracey Halvorson says on a 911 tape released by the Bakersfield Fire Department aired by several media outlets. (AP Photo/Gosia Wozniacka)

A man walks near the main gate of Glenwood Gardens in Bakersfield, Calif., Monday March 4, 2013, where an elderly woman died after a nurse refused to perform CPR on her last week. The central California retirement home is defending one of its nurses who refused pleas by a 911 operator to perform CPR on an elderly woman, who later died. "Is there anybody that's willing to help this lady and not let her die," dispatcher Tracey Halvorson says on a 911 tape released by the Bakersfield Fire Department aired by several media outlets. (AP Photo/Gosia Wozniacka)

A car passes through the gate of Glenwood Gardens in Bakersfield, Calif., Monday March 4, 2013, where an elderly woman died after a nurse refused to perform CPR on her last week. The central California retirement home is defending one of its nurses who refused pleas by a 911 operator to perform CPR on an elderly woman, who later died. "Is there anybody that's willing to help this lady and not let her die," dispatcher Tracey Halvorson says on a 911 tape released by the Bakersfield Fire Department aired by several media outlets. (AP Photo/Gosia Wozniacka)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? An elderly woman who died after a nurse at her elder home refused to provide CPR had chosen to live in a facility without medical staff and wanted to pass away without life-prolonging intervention, her family said Tuesday.

Lorraine Bayless' family said in a statement to the Associated Press that they do not plan to sue the independent living facility where the 87-year-old woman died last week.

A nurse refused to cooperate with a 911 dispatcher who was pleading for someone to start CPR. Her response has prompted multiple state and local investigations at Glenwood Gardens in Bakersfield.

Bayless did not have a "do not resuscitate" order on file at the home, city fire officials have said.

During the dramatic 7-minute, 16-second exchange, the dispatcher insisted the nurse perform CPR or find someone willing to do it. She declined.

Glenwood Gardens is an independent living facility, and company officials say no medical staff is employed there. The woman who identified herself as a nurse was working at the facility as a resident services director, the company said in a release.

"We understand that the 911 tape of this event has caused concern, but our family knows that mom had full knowledge of the limitations of Glenwood Gardens and is at peace," the statement read.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-05-US-No-CPR-Woman-Dies/id-c49a05f0125447b4888f91d3c13b6d9d

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A Unique Pearing | Food & Drink | Gambit New Orleans News and ...

The shifting seasons can inspire creative twists on recipes. Local late winter and early spring produce is available, allowing flavor combinations you cannot find fresh at any other time. In this asparagus soup, a winter fruit and a spring vegetable herald the season's transition.

??Along with a host of vitamins, asparagus also contains chromium, a mineral often used in weight loss supplements. Pears and their juice ? a low-allergen food with a hefty dose of vitamin C ? often are the first fruits and juices fed to infants.

??This simple, nuanced soup is ideal for light lunches, picnics, brunches or to round out a delicate meal. Aside from spices and salts, it contains only four ingredients. Fewer ingredients used multiple ways make for more complex preparation techniques. Because so few ingredients are used, the quality of each is important.


Pear Asparagus Soup

Recipe by Russ Lane. Serves 2-3.

1 bunch asparagus

1 pear, quartered (Taylor's Gold or Bosc recommended), stem and seeds removed

1/2 clove garlic, finely chopped and crushed into a paste

1/8 cup Balsamic Vinegar

Pinch each rosemary and curry powder

Salt and white pepper to taste

Prepare: Remove woody bottoms from asparagus and discard, then trim their tips and reserve. Using a vegetable peeler, peel the tough outer layer of the remaining stalks and save the shavings for another use.

??Dice peeled asparagus stalks to 1/2-1/4 inch dice. Dice three-quarters of the pear to a similar size. Slice the pear's remaining quarter to about the size of the asparagus tips. Finely dice the garlic and smear it on the cutting board with the edge of the knife, or crush into a paste with a mortar and pestle.

Make soup base: Boil water in a small saucepan and add asparagus tips, boiling until bright green, about 2 minutes. Remove asparagus with a slotted spoon and run under cold water to cool. Set tips aside. Reduce heat to simmer and cook diced asparagus stalks and pear for 8-10 minutes or until asparagus is easily pierced with a fork. Pour asparagus, pear and cooking water into a blender or bowl and let cool.

Garnish: While the asparagus/pear mixture cools, clean out the saucepan and combine vinegar, rosemary and curry powder, stirring over medium-low heat. Add pear slices and cook, stirring occasionally, until vinegar evaporates and reduces to glaze the pear.

Finishing touches: In a blender or food processor, blend cooled asparagus/pear/water until frothy and smooth. Pour into bowls or refrigerate for later use. Garnish with asparagus tips and glazed pear. Add salt and white pepper to taste.

??Serve at room temperature.

Per serving: calories, 83; total fat, 0.1 g; cholesterol, 0 mg; sodium, 5.3 mg; potassium, 137 mg; total carbohydrate 19.8 g (dietary fiber, 2.8 g, sugars 8.6 g); protein, 2.4 g

Source: http://www.bestofneworleans.com/gambit/a-unique-pearing/Content?oid=2157887

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Bomb at Shi'ite mosque kills 45 in Pakistan

KARACHI (Reuters) - A suspected suicide bomber attacked Shi'ite Muslims as they were leaving a mosque in Pakistan's commercial capital on Sunday, killing at least 45 people, in another signal Sunni militants are escalating sectarian attacks.

"It's like doomsday to me. I was watching television when I heard an explosion and my flat was badly shaken," said Mariam Bibi.

"I saw people burning to death and crying with pain. I saw children lying in pools of their own blood and women running around shouting for their children and loved ones."

Senior city official Hashim Raza said at least 45 people had been killed and 149 wounded in the blast in Pakistan's biggest city.

Military offensives and U.S. drone strikes against the Taliban in Pakistan have reduced the number of suicide attacks on government and military targets over the past year.

But Sunni groups, most prominently the al Qaeda-linked Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), have escalated attacks against Shi'ites, who they believe are non-Muslims.

With a few hundred hard-core cadres, the LeJ aims to trigger sectarian violence that would pave the way for a Sunni theocracy in U.S.-allied Pakistan, say Pakistan intelligence officials.

Its immediate goal, they say, is to stoke the intense Sunni-Shi'ite violence that has pushed countries like Iraq close to civil war.

Bombings targeting Shi'ites have killed nearly 200 people in Quetta alone since the start of the year, and residents of the city say they are under siege by LeJ death squads who seem to act with impunity.

"BLIND EYE" ACCUSATIONS

The bloodshed has prompted human rights group to accuse the Pakistani government, which receives billions of dollars in American aid, of turning a blind eye to the bombings.

While the military have launched major offensives against Taliban fighters they have not taken similar action against Sunni sectarian groups.

In 2012, sectarian attacks and clashes climbed by 47 percent to 208, according to the Pak Institute For Peace Studies, a prominent Pakistani think tank.

While the Quetta carnage grabbed world attention, a Reuters inquiry into a lesser known spate of murders in Karachi suggests the violence is taking on a volatile new dimension as a small number of Shi'ites fight back.

Pakistan's Western allies have traditionally been fixated on the challenge posed to the nuclear-armed state by Taliban militants battling the army in the highlands on the Afghan frontier.

But a cycle of tit-for-tat killings on the streets of Karachi points to a new type of threat: a campaign by LeJ and allied Pakistani anti-Shi'ite groups to rip open sectarian fault-lines in the city of 18 million people.

Pakistani intelligence agents say the LeJ has become a major security threat in Pakistan, which is also struggling with a fragile economy, dilapidated infrastructure and widespread poverty.

Shi'ites make up to 20 percent of Pakistan's 180 million people so they are a big target.

"I heard an ear-splitting explosion and reached the spot and saw blood, burned and dead bodies. Fire and smoke everywhere. I felt like I was standing in Beirut," said Nasir Ali, referring to the Lebanese capital, which was gripped by a civil war.

Shi'ite frustrations are rising with each blast. Shi'ites fired weapons in the air on Sunday night in Karachi, a bustling metropolis plagued by ethnic and political violence and crime.

"The explosion was so massive it jolted the entire area," said witness Ali Reza. "Two flats and nearby shops caught fire after the explosion and balconies of various buildings collapsed."

Another witness, Muhammad Kazim, said women and children who were shopping nearby were wounded.

(Additional reporting by Matthew Green; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Robin Pomeroy and Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bomb-attack-kills-25-karachi-pakistan-police-163626213.html

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Indian steel-project protestors killed by bomb blasts

BHUBANESWAR, India (Reuters) - At least three people protesting against plans for a $12 billion steel project by South Korea's POSCO in southeastern India were killed by crude bombs on Saturday, police said.

Police said those killed in the village of Patna in Odisha state were probably making the bombs themselves, but a protest group spokesman said the dead activists were victims of an attack by supporters of the steel project.

"We strongly condemn this barbaric and inhuman killing of innocent villagers and strongly demand the arrest of the culprits immediately," said Prashant Paikary, a spokesman for POSCO Pratirodh Sangram Samiti, which is spearheading protests.

Another protester was critically injured, police said.

POSCO, the world's fifth-biggest steelmaker by output, signed a pact with the state government in 2005 for a 12 million metric ton-a-year (1.1023 tons) plant on 1,600 hectares (4,000 acres) of land.

Odisha, formerly called Orissa, has already acquired half the land and has been acquiring more despite local protests.

The latest incident came days after media reports the government might resume taking over land from farmers in a few days.

"We are trying to proceed in a peaceful manner. We do not want violence in the area" said a senior Posco official, who did not want to be named.

(Reporting by Jatindra Dash; Editing by Jason Webb)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/indian-village-posco-protesters-killed-bomb-blasts-213531231--finance.html

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Australian Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn, Conservative Open To Reform, And Maybe Next Pope

VIENNA -- Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn is a soft-spoken conservative who is ready to listen to those espousing reform. That profile that could appeal to fellow cardinals looking to elect a pontiff with widest-possible appeal to the world's 1 billion Catholics.

His nationality may be his biggest disadvantage: Electors may be reluctant to choose another German speaker as a successor to Benedict XVI.

A man of low tolerance for the child abuse scandals roiling the church, Schoenborn himself was elevated to the its upper echelons of the Catholic hierarchy after his predecessor resigned 18 years ago over accusations that he was a pedophile.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE: As the Roman Catholic Church prepares to elect a successor to Pope Benedict XVI, The Associated Press is profiling key cardinals seen as "papabili" ? contenders to the throne. In the secretive world of the Vatican, there is no way to know who is in the running, and history has yielded plenty of surprises. But these are the names that have come up time and again in speculation. Today: Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn.

___

Multilingual and respected by Jews, Muslims and Orthodox Christians, Benedict XVI's friend and former pupil was one of the cardinal electors in the 2005 papal conclave that chose the German as head of the Catholic church. A scholar who is at home in the pulpit, Schoenborn also is well connected in the Vatican ? and appears willing to make it his home, if reluctantly.

Asked if he would like to succeed Benedict on news of the pontiff's plan to step down, he said: "my heart is in Vienna, my heart is in Austria ? but naturally with the whole Church as well."

Such reticence is not unusual for a prince of the church known for a quiet management style focused on steering the Austrian church around controversy.

That has not always been possible. The austere Schoenborn owed his own elevation to the scandal involving his predecessor, Hans Groer, who was accused of abusing young boys.

Appointed Vienna's archbishop in 1995, Schoenborn initially stayed silent. But he showed courage three years later, personally apologizing "for everything that my predecessors and other holders of church office committed against people in their trust."

In a measure of his dislike of confrontation, he fired his reform-minded vicar, Helmut Schueller, in 1998 by shoving a dismissal letter under Schueller's door.

Yet, while grappling with the pornography scandal roiling the church in 2005, he took on the Vatican.

"It's sad that it took so long to act," he said of Rome's reluctance to investigate the wrongdoing, saying later of the scandal: "The church is greater than its human weaknesses."

He went further than that as cases of sexual abuse continued rocking the church, calling for a re-examination of priestly celibacy in 2010 ? only to roll back in typical style shortly after, by having his spokesman issue a denial that he was questioning the rule on priests not marrying.

While accepting the possibility of evolution, Schoenborn criticized certain "neo-Darwinian" theories as incompatible with Catholic teaching, writing in a 2005 New York Times editorial, that "any system of thought that denies or seeks to explain away the overwhelming evidence for design in biology is ideology, not science."

Ideologically, his tenure has been marked by a turn away from inner-church reform. Instead he has focused toward respect for Catholic dogma ? while understanding those who fall by the wayside.

"It is not easy for the church to find the right path between the ... protection of marriage and family on the one hand and ... compassion with human failings," he said in 2004, alluding to church opposition to ? but his personal understanding of ? divorce. His audience, at a funeral Mass for Austrian President Thomas Klestil, included both his widow and his divorced wife.

Later, however, he made clear that he backed the sanctity of marriage, telling an Austrian weekly shortly after Benedict's resignation that its indissolubility "can be traced back to the instructions of Jesus" and thus could not be changed.

He spoke out about bending church dogma in response to pressure in the same interview, saying: "If Christ communicated a teaching that we believe is true and brings salvation to humanity, then nobody gains if that teaching is falsified, even if he were to gain in popularity by doing so."

Born Jan. 22, 1945, into an aristocratic Bohemian family, Schoenborn's destiny appeared to have been influenced by his heritage ? 19 of his ancestors were priests, bishops or archbishops.

After joining the Dominican order in 1963, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1970 by Cardinal Franz Koenig. Like most Austrians, Schoenborn idolized Koenig for his social engagement and courage to speak out on controversial issues ? but was initially eclipsed by Koenig's overwhelming personality.

In the late 1960s, when Koenig played tennis in Schoenborn's hometown of Schrunns, Schoenborn "always fought to be Koenig's ball-boy," said Schoenborn confidant Heinz Nussbaumer in a telling reflection of the later relationship between the two churchmen.

Because of Koenig's strong persona, Schoenborn "had a difficult start," said Nussbaumer, publisher of a Catholic weekly. "But later he was able to develop his own personality."

His reputation as a scholar ? and bridge-builder to Orthodox Christians ? began with a dissertation on icons even before he became a theology professor at the Catholic University of Fribourg, Switzerland in 1975. Fluent in French and Italian, proficient in English and Spanish, he is well-connected in the Vatican, as reflected by his role as a cardinal elector for Benedict.

He built on his image as an ecumenist with visits to the patriarchs of Russia and Romania and met with Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei 11 years ago, on the first trip of a Catholic church leader to the Islamic republic since the 1979 revolution.

Normally above the fray of international politics, he spoke out sharply in 2002 about President George W. Bush's inclusion of Iran with prewar Iraq and North Korea as part of the "the axis of evil."

"In the best case it's naive," he said, contending such comments could "alienate Iran's moderate factions."

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/02/australian-cardinal-christoph-schoenborn-conservative-open-to-reform-and-maybe-next-pope_n_2799177.html

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Saturday, March 2, 2013

Private groups respond to asteroid scare

NASA is slated to get some help in the search for potentially hazardous asteroids, which is probably a positive thing considering the space-rock drama that unfolded earlier this month.

On Feb. 15, a fireball exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, damaging thousands of buildings and wounding 1,200 people. Hours later, the 130-foot-wide (40 meters) asteroid 2012 DA14 missed Earth by just 17,200 miles (27,700 kilometers), coming closer than the ring of geosynchronous satellites circling our planet.

While astronomers had predicted 2012 DA14's close flyby, the Russian fireball caught them (and the residents of Chelyabinsk) completely off guard. The powerful explosion highlights the need for more intensive asteroid-detection efforts going forward, many researchers say.

The "meteor explosion over Chelyabinsk is a wake-up call that the Earth orbits the sun in a shooting gallery of asteroids, and that these asteroids sometimes hit the Earth," former astronaut Ed Lu, chairman and CEO of the nonprofit B612 Foundation, wrote in a blog post after the fireball. "We have the technology to deflect asteroids, but we cannot do anything about the objects we don?t know exist." [Russian Fireball: All You Need to Know (Video)]

NASA-backed ground-based searches have spotted the vast majority of potentially dangerous near-Earth objects to date. But the B612 Foundation aims to join the hunt soon, and a pair of asteroid-mining firms hope their efforts also help keep our planet safe from marauding space rocks.

Undiscovered asteroids

Mapping out the orbits of near-Earth asteroids is a big job. Astronomers think 1 million or more such space rocks are out there, and just 9,700 have been identified to date.

The good news is that NASA already has a handle on the biggest, most dangerous asteroids ? the ones at least 0.6 miles (1 km) wide, which might end human civilization if they hit us. Researchers have now identified roughly 95 percent of the 980 behemoths thought to cruise through Earth's neighborhood, and none of them pose an impact risk for the foreseeable future.

But the numbers get worse as the asteroids get smaller. Scientists have detected less than 30 percent of the 4,700 or so 330-footers (100 m) that come uncomfortably close at some point in their orbits. Such space rocks could destroy an area the size of a state if they slammed into Earth.

And less than 1 percent of asteroids the size of 2012 DA14 or bigger have been identified, B612 officials say. These space rocks can cause severe damage on a local scale, as the 1908 "Tunguska event" shows.

That year, a 130-foot-wide object exploded over Siberia's Podkamennaya Tunguska River, flattening roughly 825 square miles (2,137 square km) of forest. [Asteroid 2012 DA14's Close Flyby (Photos)]

A civilian space telescope

What's really needed to make a dent in these numbers is a dedicated asteroid-hunting space telescope that would scan the sky in infrared light from a Venus-like orbit, said B612 co-founder and chair emeritus Rusty Schweickart.

Such a spacecraft could peer outward at Earth's neighborhood without having to contend with the sun's overwhelming glare, allowing many more space rocks to be detected.

Over the years, a variety of different studies and advisory groups have recommended that NASA mount such a mission, Schweickart told SPACE.com. But the agency hasn't had the funding to get it done, so the B612 Foundation decided to take action.

"We looked at the situation and said, 'Look, this is really the most important missing element, and it does not look as though ? given the chemistry in Washington and the priorities that NASA has and the total circumstance ? that this was going to get done anytime soon,'" said Schweickart, who is a former Apollo astronaut. "So we looked at that and said, 'Why don't we take that on?'"

The result is B612's infrared Sentinel space telescope, which the group plans to launch toward a Venus-like orbit in 2018.

In about 5 1/2 years of operation, Sentinel should detect 500,000 near-Earth asteroids, including the rest of the mountain-size space rocks and more than 50 percent of the 130-footers, B612 officials have said. The goal is to find big, dangerous asteroids several decades before they may hit us, giving humanity enough lead time to mount a?deflection mission.

Private funds will pay for the Sentinel mission, which will likely end up costing around $450 million.

Asteroid miners join in

Sentinel won't be the only civilian space telescope scanning for incoming space rocks, if an asteroid-mining firm's plans work out.

Planetary Resources, which counts Google execs Larry Page and Eric Schmidt among its financial backers, says its fleet of prototype asteroid-prospecting spacecraft should aid in the search as well. The company aims to launch the first of these telescopes, known as Arkyd-100s, in 2014 or 2015.

The technology Planetary Resources develops to characterize and mine space rocks will also help protect Earth "by giving us the infrastructure to routinely and swiftly interact with and move asteroids, like 2012 DA14, which could someday pose a threat to Earth," company co-founder and co-chair Peter Diamandis said in a statement.

Planetary Resources' asteroid-mining rival, Deep Space Industries, is planning to launch its own prospecting craft, known as Fireflies, beginning in 2015. Fireflies could examine potentially dangerous asteroids up close, gleaning insights about their composition that may be vital to deflection efforts, company officials say.

"Placing 10 of our small Firefly spacecraft into position to intercept close encounters would take four years and less than $100 million," Deep Space CEO David Gump said in a statement. "This will help the world develop the understanding needed to block later threats."

Follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall?or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook?and?Google+.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asteroid-hunt-private-groups-join-search-dangerous-space-191806767.html

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Infinnet Corp Announces SiAlpha: First Online Quantitative Investing ...

Calgary, Canada, Feb. 27, 2013 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- (http://www.myprgenie.com) -- Infinnet Corporation, an emerging global financial knowledge company is pleased to announce the launch of its new quantitative investment system SiAlpha, the Science of Investing.(TM)

Important technological developments have often emerged from two or more seemingly unrelated sciences learning and sharing from one another. Advancements resulting in space travel, new drug discovery, the Internet, and wireless communication to name a few have resulted from the merger of multiple scientific disciplines.

Likewise SiAlpha, the company's proprietary Quantitative Value and Momentum Investing?system has incorporated knowledge from the fields of physics, mathematics and economics to create an unequivocal investment analysis system.

And now this Science will be shared with individual investors?and money managers on SiAlpha.com in the form of risk analysis and trading signals. The company's application of Quantitative Investing represents a technique typically used by only the most sophisticated and technically advanced hedge funds.

"This is pioneering event for investors. We are first to provide individual investors direct access to quantitative investing which till now has been exclusively used by the most successful hedge funds," stated Dr. Hatim Zaghloul, Chairman of the Board.

The SiAlpha system successfully identifies low risk-to-reward opportunities in over 2500 North American publicly listed medium and large cap companies and exchange traded funds (ETFs) including all of the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and TSX Composite index companies. These opportunities are the result of supply and demand imbalances which are likely to cause short-term price movement in the stock.

The SiAlpha.com website provides investors a free snapshot analysis. On-demand detailed quantitative reports on these companies and ETF's are available for one-time fee or premium paid subscription.?

SiAlpha provides a simple positive or negative rating for each company or ETF based on the probability and duration of price movement in the immediate, short and medium-term. Generating a positive signal only when there is a higher than 50% probability of the stock price rising by more than twice the potential downside risk or potential loss.

"We are able to develop a portfolio of companies with uncorrelated risk using the highest positive SiAlpha ranked companies. Therefore constructing an optimal risk adjusted portfolio which can provide relatively high rate of return with lower risk. To us, it is the holy grail of investing!" commented Suhail Ahmad, Founder & CEO.

The company's management has successfully used SiAlpha algorithm to select investments for its own portfolio over the past three years to achieve an outstanding average compounded annual growth rate of 46% during the 2010 to 2012 period and significantly outperforming the market indices.

The company plans to license variations of these services to interested brokerage houses to help them provide a value added service to their clients.?SiAlpha system will be available to fund managers to help them manage their portfolio risk and improve their investment performance.

Hatim Zaghloul, , 9172312723

Source: http://globenewswire.com/news-release/2013/02/27/526782/10023404/en/Infinnet-Corp-Announces-SiAlpha-First-Online-Quantitative-Investing-Service.html

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