Friday, March 29, 2013

Bombs at five Iraqi Shi'ite mosques kill 19

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Car bombs hit five Shi'ite mosques in Baghdad and the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk just after prayers on Friday, killing 19 worshippers and injuring another 130.

Ten years after the U.S. invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, Iraq is still grappling with political turmoil and Sunni Islamist insurgents linked to al Qaeda, who are stepping up attacks on Shi'ite targets and security forces.

Friday's blasts hit Shi'ite mosques in southeast and north Baghdad while another tore the front off a mosque in Kirkuk, an ethnically mixed city of Arabs, Kurds and Turkman 170 km (100 miles) north of the capital.

"We were listening to the cleric's speech when we heard a very strong explosion. Glass scattered everywhere and the roof partially collapsed," said Mohammed, a victim wounded in the Kirkuk blast, his shirt still covered in blood.

Police and health officials said the attacks in Baghdad killed 16. Three more died in Kirkuk, where the blast left a jumble of concrete wreckage in the mosque and on the street outside.

Attacks in Iraq are still less common than during the Sunni-Shi'ite slaughter that erupted at the height of the last war, when insurgents bombed the Shi'ite al-Askari shrine in Samarra in 2006, provoking a wave of retaliation by Shi'ite militias.

Al Qaeda's local wing, Islamic State of Iraq, has vowed to keep up attacks and security officials say insurgents are regrouping in the deserts of western Iraq, invigorated by the war Sunni rebels are waging in Syria over the border.

Al Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for a wave of bombings and suicide attacks earlier this month that killed around 60 people on the 10th anniversary of the U.S. invasion.

Sunni Islamists see Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Shi'ite-led government as oppressors of the country's Sunni minority and are targeting Shi'ites to try to trigger the kind of inter-communal mayhem that killed thousands in 2006-7.

Washington has tied the militant al-Nusra Front fighting in Syria to al Qaeda's Iraqi branch and has designated the group as a foreign terrorist organization.

Iraq's government says it takes no sides in the Syrian war but its interests are often aligned with those of Shi'ite Iran. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday pressed Maliki to stop Iranian flights taking arms over Iraqi airspace to Syria.

(Reporting by Omar Mohammed and Baghdad newsroom; Writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Patrick Graham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bombs-kill-17-five-iraqi-shiite-mosques-120650239.html

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Samsung Galaxy S 4 mini will reportedly go on sale shortly after GS 4

Samsung Galaxy S 4 mini will reportedly go on sale shortly after GS 4

Not too long after the Samsung Galaxy S 4 was announced, we started hearing whispers of a "miniature" version of the device -- which makes sense, given the Galaxy S III had a smaller sidekick of its own. Today, however, Bloomberg reported the unannounced device is indeed coming soon after the flagship makes its appearance at the end of April. If it follows a similar pattern to its bite-sized predecessor, it likely will be offered in Europe as a lower-cost alternative to the Galaxy S 4. The device is rumored to offer a dual-core 1.6GHz processor, a 4.3-inch display and 8MP camera. Sadly, no official details were given, but we've reached out to Samsung officials for comment and will update when we receive word.

Update: Samsung pinged back with the following comment, which doesn't do much towards confirming or denying whether or not the GS 4 mini is indeed on the horizon. A spokesperson informed us: "We have not announced the product mentioned in the Bloomberg story."

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Via: SamMobile, 9to5Google

Source: Bloomberg

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/28/samsung-galaxy-s-4-mini/

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More than White House tours: Sequester hurts nationwide

Forget the cancellation of White House tours.

We asked Yahoo News readers to tell us how the deep automatic federal spending cuts known as the sequester are affecting their lives right now. And readers responded.

"We are cutting our spending and living more frugally because it looks like an $800 per month pay cut will be heading our way," wrote James Ferguson of Aberdeen, Md., whose wife works for the Department of Defense and faces furlough.

The sequester went into effect on March 1 after Congress and President Barack Obama failed to reach a major deficit-reduction deal. Some $85 billion in cuts were triggered, to be spread evenly across domestic and defense spending.

Obama has warned that the sequester could imperil the nation's slow economic recovery. Some conservative lawmakers have welcomed the cuts, saying it's a needed down payment on the type of cuts necessary to reducing the federal deficit.

A few respondents who emailed us or submitted entries through the Yahoo! Contributor Network said the impact of the cuts are far overblown. But the majority of those who reached out to Yahoo News were worried about furloughs for themselves or their spouses.

Readers also shared other concerns. Cassandra Friederichs told us that she and her husband, both veterans, are preparing for tuition assistance cuts; several readers looking for work explained how they are bracing for cuts in unemployment assistance; federal sales executive Carol Smouse said her office phones have stopped ringing as clients avoid their business; and one active-duty National Guardsman expressed outrage over facing a furlough because he also works as a civilian. Several respondents voiced concern about families with a disabled relative who may find their assistance cut.

Here are excerpts from some of the many submissions we received. Please note that some respondents requested their names be redacted due to concerns about their employment or military status:

Husband prepares to find part-time work for furlough day

Since 2006, my husband, Mac, has worked for the Department of Defense ...

Wendy Lunko and her husband, MacWith the sequester, however, he has already been told that everyone in his division will participate in furloughs. Of course, since everything in the government is related to politics, the furloughs will be one day each week, through the rest of the fiscal year, rather than allowing employees to opt for a 22-consecutive-day furlough, which would allow them to receive short-term unemployment. ...

I am very thankful I work full-time, as it means that while we still need to tweak our budget a bit, we will still have additional income. Mac is also exploring options for a part-time job, but until he is told exactly what day will be his furlough day, he cannot do too much. While I admire his work ethic and his willingness to take on a second job, I know that it will mean I'll get to spend less time with him. ...

I generally think we need less government spending, yet the sequester makes no real sense to me. I think the cuts are rather politically motivated, and are overly dramatic to attract attention, like ending the White House tours.

?Wendy Lunko, Pennsylvania

Diabetic woman faces April reduction in unemployment benefits

Last week, I received a notification from the unemployment office that due to the sequestration cuts, "the federal government has directed us to reduce your EUC payments by 10.7% beginning that first week in April. We (state) have no control over these cuts in benefits and no ability to waive or reduce the level of cuts."

The 10.7% reduction may not seem like a lot to you, but [it] is to me. After my employer of 12 years closed their doors, I have been actively looking every day for the last 8 months for a job to no avail. After rent & utilities, I can barely manage to put food on my table. Not a good diet when you are a diabetic. I have cut down on my expenses. I've already sold my car, cut off my home phone, switched to basic cable TV/Internet, switched to a prepaid cellphone plan. I can no longer afford to pay for (COBRA) health insurance. Without health insurance, I can no longer afford to buy the diabetic testing supplies or medications recommended for controling this pre-existing condition.

?Connie Miller, New York

Sequester is not a big deal

Way overblown. Their budget is less but they still have same or more money to spend versus last year just the budget was reduced for this year. Any qualified business manager could handle this. ... They need to reduce spending. Politics.

?Bob

Camp Lejeune, N.C., local worries about community

I believe the sequester will affect my personal income. I work at Johnston Community College in Smithfield, N.C. We had a budget meeting soon after the sequestration took effect, and I asked our comptroller if the college would be affected by those budget cuts.

Stephen Link at Johnston Community CollegeThe answer: "Not likely in this budget year." Of course, "certainly not" would have been more preferable.

Since we are in close proximity to Camp Lejeune (in Jacksonville) and even closer to Seymour Johnson [Air Force Base] (in Goldsboro), we will be seeing effects of spending cutbacks through areas other than a paycheck.

Am I really worried for myself? No. Am I worried about the overall effect that this can have on our local economy? Certainly. My belief is that these troubles will touch all employees of local, state, and federal governments. The net result will extend the recession, cause higher crime, and possibly launch us back into an economic depression like this generation has never seen.

?Stephen Link, North Carolina

Border Patrol agent faces furlough and end of overtime

I am a Border Patrol Agent and very soon my fellow Agents and I will be facing massive cuts. Beginning April 7th, we will no longer be able to work overtime as well as facing one furlough day each pay period (every two weeks). The overtime is a necessity in order for Agents to maintain border security during shift changes as well as other things that may happen during a shift which may include tracking groups and filling out paperwork. We also work in very extreme conditions. During the summer, temperatures can reach up to 125 degrees while we work shifts up to ten hours. We also track groups through the mountains and desert never knowing what can be waiting for us. When April 7th comes, we will be losing approximately 40% of our annual income. Agents who came from all over the country to work in the southwest will now be unable to pay for their homes, student loans, etc. It seems like this is a joke to our government while they try to play the blame game. There are a lot of hard working agents out there who have sacrificed a lot in order to help secure our borders.

?Border Patrol agent, El Centro, Calif.

No White House tour and a cut to unemployment benefits

Congress' decision to let $85 billion in across-the-board, indiscriminate spending cuts directly impact my family's well-being in Chicago.

My daughter, an eighth-grader, was supposed to take the class trip to Washington, D.C., this summer. Because of the sequester, she and her classmates won't see the White House. The financial cuts prompted the White House to cancel tours.

My husband, who has been unemployed or non-scheduled from his job at the Illinois Department of Employment Security for the past six months, will be hit with a 10-percent cut to his benefits. That's almost $200 less from his already very slim unemployment check. If he does not get his IDES job back soon, our family would be cut off from the medical and dental insurance benefits and we'll be forced to sign up for a more expensive plan under COBRA.

President Barack Obama's decisions?instead of improving the lives of middle-class families?hurt their well-being at their core. I am not sure that a Republican president would have done a better job getting our nation to balance its finances; unfortunately, at present, we do not have an alternative.

?Irene Lankin-Duffy, Chicago, Ill.

Department of Defense employee faces furlough after 30 years of service

I will be furloughed one day a week for 22 weeks. I have been a federal employee for over 30 years. It saddens me that Washington could not resolve and compromise to avoid sequester cuts. I don?t wear a suit to work or work in D.C. Many of my civilian counterparts provide many hours of work away from home to support National Defense.

Several of my co-workers responded when asked to go to Japan and help after the tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster. How are our dedication and many years of loyal service repaid? ...

[Update: This reader shared a DOD email update with Yahoo News informing employees that furlough notices have been delayed for ?approximately 2 weeks? to allow the department to analyze the impact of ?continuing resolution legislation on the Department?s resources.?]

?Federal employee, Hampton Roads, Va.

Active-duty National Guardsman faces furlough in civilian-military gray area

This is my twelfth scheduled workday in a row, so this weekend is a little more eagerly awaited than most. What had not been eagerly awaited was my furlough letter, advising me that in 30 days, I will be subject to 22 mandatory days off for the remainder of this fiscal year?effectively a 20% cut in pay. ... I haven?t told you who my employer is yet, have I? It?s the U.S. Air Force. ...

Long story short, I have military skill training qualifications and uniform, but a DoD civilian paycheck. Then, one weekend a month and two weeks a year, I show up at the same base, in my same uniform, in my same work area and get paid by the Air Force according to my military rank for my reserve duties. ...

I?m not exceptionally concerned whose fault the sequester is. I?m concerned that because I live in the gray area of military and civilian status, that I can still be sent to war, but I can?t get a full week?s paycheck because of the sequester.

?Technical sergeant, U.S. Air Force, Nevada National Guard motor vehicle operator, Reno, Nev.

Sequester doesn't go far enough

It's become a comically regular occurrence for members of both the legislative and executive branches of the U.S. government to make dire predictions of catastrophic shutdowns every time significant cuts to the federal budget are mentioned.

The most recent of these cuts (and one of the few to actually get through the legislative process) is the by now well-known sequestration measure. ...

For those who say these cuts are unsustainable, I respond by pointing out that neither is having a debt-to-GDP ratio of more than 100 percent. For those who say it's a step in the right direction, I say it's not even that. The deficit in 2023 will still be greater than it is now, even if the sequester cuts manage to stay in place. Sure, these cuts are better than none, but they're really just a fraction of a drop in the bucket.

?Ryan Hurley, Cincinnati, Ohio

Mylinda Elliott

Louisiana woman worries about the disabled and her paycheck

I live in Lake Charles, La., where I work for a nonprofit that helps families that have a member with a disability. Although I have not been directly affected by the sequestration yet, we are all holding our breath. Many of the programs that help our families are supported by funds we are being told will be cut.

If we lose funding, it will be funding for wages?more specifically my wages. ...

In the past year, I have worked with several families with a member with a disability to get Social Security. The cuts to the Social Security Administration may not cut their check, but will curtail the hours an office will be open, and close some offices. This will make it harder on families. It will take longer for me to be able to assist them. I will be able to reach fewer families.

?Mylinda Elliott, Lake Charles, La.

Maryland man?s wife faces furloughs totaling $800/month

We are cutting our spending and living more frugally because it looks like an $800 per month pay cut will be heading our way. The government is forcing my wife to take one day off per week, totaling four days per month, which comes to approximately $800 a month of lost income for our family. I am a full-time real estate agent; that is 100 percent commissioned salary. My wife's income was our steady, reliable income until the sequester. I am currently searching for part-time employment on top of my full-time position to supplement the income cut. ...

I also have often thought of the local businesses and restaurants that thrive off of the 30,000-plus APG employees who eat lunch every day in these establishments, and who shop and buy groceries and gas all around the proving ground. All of these businesses will be affected as well. Across the board, within the DoD, everybody will be taking off at least one day a week. This will ripple across the local economy.

What can be done to help or fix this situation? How about we start these budget cuts from the top down?

?James Ferguson, Aberdeen, Md.

Federal sales executive says phones have stopped ringing

Working in sales, your job is on the line every time you fail to meet quota, 3 months in a row of failing to achieve it means you will be put "on notice" and will be required to bring in enough sales to meet quotas, or be terminated. Now that the sequester is going into effect, our Federal customers do not want to meet with us. The dozens of emails we would get every day have stopped coming, our phones are not ringing, and we are not selling. ...

Because of my job uncertainty, I kept my current car and had the transmission replaced, rather than buy a new car. I would have rather bought a new car, mine is now 10 years old, but I was too afraid to take on a car payment when I could end up out of work at any time. My coworkers are all making similar decisions. We are nervous and unwilling to take on financial obligations when our future is so uncertain.

I know we all wonder what we will do.

?Carol Smouse

Military couple prepares for tuition assistance cuts

I am relying on the Tuition Assistance that used to be offered to the military to finish school a little earlier than planned so that I can find a job and help my daughter grow up in a middle-class home. My fiance and I are both denied the right to have that Tuition Assistance that we were both PROMISED upon signing our contracts to serve our countries. ...

I am not angry that they are making cuts because that is what needs to be done, but I am angry at where they are deciding to make those cuts. Why does Obama get paid what he does? Why do the Congressmen, that keep delaying things and making these budgets go past [their deadlines], get paid [as much as] they do? If my fiance were to do the things that Congress does, he would be FIRED!

?Cassandra Friederichs

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/stories-sequester-yahoo-news-readers-respond-151156262--politics.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

As Venezuelans mourn, election set for April

CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela will hold a presidential election on April 14, officials said on Saturday, as acting President Nicolas Maduro tries to benefit from an emotional outpouring for his late mentor, Hugo Chavez, and win his own term in office.

Maduro, a physically imposing former union leader who served as foreign minister and vice president under Chavez, has vowed to keep Chavez's self-styled socialist revolution alive.

He will likely face off against Henrique Capriles, 40, the centrist governor of Miranda state. Capriles, who lost to Chavez in a vote last October, thanked Venezuela's opposition coalition on Saturday for backing him as its candidate, but stopped short of explicitly accepting the nomination.

Opinion polls have shown Maduro as the likely winner, but Chavez's opponents said they wanted a chance to end "Chavismo" at the voting booth.

"We want change. We are tired of the Chavez era. It's been 14 years," said Yesenia Herrera, 33, a cook at a Chinese restaurant in an affluent quarter of Caracas.

Maduro was sworn in as acting president in Congress on Friday and handed the red, yellow and blue presidential sash.

"I asked (the election authority) to comply with legal and constitutional obligations and immediately call elections," Maduro, 50, told Congress as he cemented his position as heir-in-waiting.

Chavez was immensely popular among the poor and they have vowed to back Maduro. Millions have filed past his casket to pay their last respects and were still visiting him on Saturday.

The Supreme Court has ruled Maduro does not need to step down in order to campaign, but the move was denounced by opponents as a violation of the constitution and a "fraud."

As Maduro spoke in Congress, residents of some wealthy neighborhoods of Caracas banged pots and pans in a traditional form of protest. At one building in a wealthy corner of Caracas, people drank wine and whisky around a swimming pool, rejoicing at Chavez's demise. They toasted each other, "Happy goodbye, Chavez, we will not miss you!"

HERO OR AUTOCRAT?

Chavez was a hero to millions of mostly poor supporters for using Venezuela's oil wealth to finance heavy social spending, but he was seen as an autocrat by his opponents. He died on Tuesday at age 58 after a two-year battle with cancer.

"The excluded and invisible, the 'losers' of savage capitalism, were made visible and victorious with Chavez," Information Minister Ernesto Villegas said on Twitter.

Jose Vielma Mora, the governor of Tachira state, called Chavez a "liberator."

"He liberated us from transnational companies and stood up to imperialist countries," he said. "We will be with Chavez forever."

Like communist leaders Lenin, Stalin and Mao, Chavez's remains are to be embalmed and put on display "for eternity."

An eclectic cast of celebrities, leftist and center-right presidents attended Chavez's state funeral on Friday. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a close ally, broke with protocol to kiss the coffin, while Oscar-winning actor Sean Penn was also in attendance.

It is likely to be a particularly bitter election campaign in the OPEC heavyweight nation, which boasts the world's largest proven oil reserves.

The opposition had accused the government of trampling on the constitution during its handling of Chavez's battle with cancer, and is furious Maduro was allowed to take on the job of caretaker president while he campaigns for the job.

"This transgression is unprecedented in the history of the republic," opposition lawmaker Maria Corina Machado said on Twitter.

Capriles called it an abuse of power.

"To become president, the people have to elect you," he said on Friday. "No one elected Nicolas president."

(Reporting by Simon Gardner, Daniel Wallis, Andrew Cawthorne, Terry Wade, Deisy Buitrago, Marianna Parraga, Pablo Garibian, Diego Ore, Patricia Velez and Ana Isabel Martinez; Editing by Eric Beech and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/venezuelans-mourn-chavez-election-set-mid-april-003501503.html

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Why the mid-market is the mother-in-law of outsourcing

I want the best SaaS platform, some great BPO and a bunch of data scientists...

When is comes to outsourcing, dealing with the middle-market has been somewhat akin to dealing with the mother-in-law: ?can be awkward to deal with, very hard to please, and always has complex demands on your patience and resources. ?However hard you try, defining and delivering a solution that can deliver the outcomes you both want seems like the impossible nirvana.

However, as the wise ones among us have now discovered, winning over the mother-in-law goes a whole long way to achieving future happiness. ?What?s more, those of you who have avoided addressing the mother-in-law?s demands will soon regret it?

However which was you look at it, many of today?s middle-market firms are going to be the F1000 of the future. ?What?s more, most are seeking technology and sourcing solutions that can drive nimbleness and cost-effectiveness, as they simply do not have the prodigious people and technology resources within their IT, finance, HR, marketing and supply chain operations to manage their evolving needs.?In fact, many of them can?t afford the top talent to run their operations, and those providers which can deliver it are already in high-demand.

Let?s examine what 399 enterprises had to say about their mission-critical objectives driving both ITO/BPO decisions in today?s market. ?It?s already becoming abundantly?clear that high-end businesses today, unlike their mid-market counterparts, are focused primarily on cost-reduction when outsourcing, as opposed to investing in new solutions and?capabilities that providers could (and really should) bring to the table:

Click to Enlarge

Why aren?t today?s providers winning over their mothers-in-law to grease the wheels for their future success?

So? if most the providers are promoting their wondrous capabilities in terms of talent, technology and analytical capability, why aren?t they targeting those clients who actually?want?those capabilities: ?the middle-market firms?

Providers are set up for high-end enterprise deals, not the mid-market. Sadly, most of today?s leading outsourcing providers are geared up for big, bloated enterprise deals, where the economics of labor arbitrage are simple, and selling cost-reduction is a much, much easier than selling business outcomes. ?What?s more, the providers themselves are not structured to sell aggressively to the mid-market ? they tend to have limited sales talent and they want their A-team delivery teams concentrated on their A clients. ?When you talk to their sales heads, they?ll likely be able to tell you, pretty much, how the entire F1000 shapes up in their pipelines, but when it comes to the next few thousand firms, they?ll have little insight or visibility.

High-end buyers want to get smaller and drive out cost, not invest in new solutions. Moreover, the $10bn+ enterprises want to get rid of cost ? they know they have hoards of talent, but their main motivation today is to get leaner and more flexible, to standardize processes and (if we are so bold to surmise) become smaller. ?Today?s enterprises want to grow their top lines, not their bottom-lines. ?This is why today?s outsourcing industry is so fixated on labor arbitrage, FTE-cost models and achieving basic operational success.

Middle-market solutions require business platforms, based on industrialized tech platforms and processes. ?We?ve talked about this for a few years now, but it?s taking an age to evolve. ?Where are the platform partnerships between the Netsuites, the Workdays, the SFDCs with the BPOs? ?Why haven?t we seen a ?middle-market FAO solution? between a mid-market SaaS accounting provider and a leading F&A BPO provider? ?While there have been a few mutterings of hope, we are yet to see a single enterprise-scale SaaS/BPO platform engagement?that we can write about.

The Bottom-line: ?The leading SaaS vendors don?t ?get? BPO and the leading BPOs don?t want to invest in SaaS

Having spent the best part of ?my earlier career as an analyst studying apps and packaged software, before being subjected to the horrors of the BPO business, it?s as clear as daylight where enterprise solutions need to be focused ? on the middle-market enterprises who want solutions that can be industrialized for the high-end enterprises of the future.

SaaS providers are blind to ADP?s success. However, one thing is very apparent ? while SAP and Oracle quickly realized they needed to preserve their license revenue when clients signed BPO deals (both have?practices?dedicated purely to this cause), the likes of Workday, Salesforce.com and Microsoft Dynamics have shown little-to-no appetite to understand the?opportunities?a BPO channel can provide. ?Like, haven?t they noticed how ADP has become the world?s leading SaaS/BPO provider, with more then $10bn in annual income?

IT-BPO providers only looking to invest in niche tuck-in areas. Sadly, too many buyers are too focused on their quarterly balance sheets to focus really long-term on their operations; their operations heads are focused on preserving their empires with a few snips here and there to the operating budget. ?In addition, providers are also focused on their quarterly balance sheets and find it so much easier to pander to the needs of today?s F1000? not tomorrow?s. ?While we?ve seen a few niche acquisitions where providers are adding platform capability in process niches, such as Accenture/Octagon, Genpact/Jawood,?Capgemini/VWA and Infosys/McCamish, we?re yet to see any of them really attack the mid-market with horizontal solutions that can infiltrate thousands of organizations, such as in Finance, HR and CRM.

The train is leaving the station? but who is going to jump on? ?As the existing high-end business opportunities slowly shrivel up, the new logos are springing up in the mid-tier. ?The winners of today will only be the winners of tomorrow of they can truly invest and build the solutions today?s mothers-in-law are craving. ?Those who have ignored the mothers-in-law are already in trouble? Hope springs eternal :)

Source: http://www.horsesforsources.com/mid-market-change-game_030913

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PFT: Chargers sign Nowak for four seasons

SunLifeGetty Images

When it comes to obtaining public funding for an NFL stadium, the best approach is to not approach the voters directly.? In Miami, the plan making its way through the legislature would, if successful, result in a public referendum.

Thus, getting the bills passed has been much easier than the voter-circumvention strategy employed elsewhere, such as Minnesota.

Via the Associated Press, three legislative committees in Florida have approved a bill that would guarantee $3 million per year for 30 years to help pay for an upgrade of SunLife Stadium, which is owned by Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.? If the bill becomes law, the voters will then become involved.

Some lawmakers nevertheless oppose the effort.? ?The NFL is conning us, vote against this madness,? Rep. Bill Hager, a Republican representing Delray Beach, told the AP.

Nationwide, the trend among voters is to reject such measures.? In Miami, current polling conducted not by the Dolphins indicates that opposition is significant.

That?s why the Dolphins need to make an extra-big splash in free agency this year.? They need to create the kind of excitement that will increase supporters of the effort and motivate them to show up and cast ballots at the appropriate.

Still, unless and until the Dolphins have the leverage that comes from a potential relocation of the franchise, the locals will remain ambivalent, at best.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/09/chargers-continue-special-teams-spree-with-nick-novak-deal/related/

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Are Congress and Obama moving toward a budget deal?

As the public's patience with partisan politics wears thin, signs in Washington indicate possible movement toward bipartisan budget decision-making. The House passed a bill which would fund government programs through this fiscal year on Wednesday. The Senate is expected to pass a similar measure soon. Also on Wednesday, President Barack Obama invited Republican Senators to dinner.?

By David Lawder,?Reuters, Richard Cowan,?Reuters / March 6, 2013

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., leaves the Jefferson Hotel after a dinner meeting hosted by President Barack Obama for a few Republican Senators in Washington, Wednesday.

AP Photo/Cliff Owen

Enlarge

Legislation easily passed the?U.S. House of Representatives?on Wednesday to avert another partisan budget battle and a possible government shutdown, as President?Barack Obama?also opened new lines of communication with Republicans.

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By a vote of 267-151, the House passed a measure to fund government programs until the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. The Democratic-controlled?Senate?is expected to pass a similar bill next week.

Without such legislation, federal agencies would run out of money on March 27.

The bill to continue funding the government without last-minute drama came as Obama?took the unusual step of inviting Republican senators to a dinner on Wednesday night at a Washington hotel a few blocks from the?White House?that lasted about an hour and a half.

An administration official told Reuters Obama?was hoping to take advantage of a lull in a series of budget crises to launch a dialogue with Republican lawmakers, which he hopes will lead to a broad deficit-reduction deal.

While the dinner was not intended to be a negotiation, it was an opportunity for Obama?to correct the record on a perception among some Republicans that he is unwilling to consider some difficult spending cuts that are unpopular with his fellow Democrats in?Congress.

Those could include cuts to programs that include the Social Security pension system and?Medicare?for the elderly.

Discussion at the dinner was expected to concentrate on budget issues, the official said. Obama?will discuss his other legislative priorities, including immigration reform, gun control and tackling climate change, at meetings on Capitol Hill next week.

In another bipartisan gesture, Republican?Senate?Minority Leader?Mitch McConnell?said that at his suggestion, Obama?will join Republicans for a lunch on Capitol Hill on March 14.

Obama is also due to meet with congressional Democrats next week, the?White House?said.

The administration and lawmakers offered few details about the dinner, which the?White House?paid for.

"The president greatly enjoyed the dinner and had a good exchange of ideas with the senators," a senior administration official told reporters.

Asked how the soiree had gone, Senator?John McCain?told journalists outside the hotel, "Just great. Fantastic."

Attendees included Senators?Lindsey Graham,?Bob Corker, and?Kelly Ayotte. Graham drew up the guest list, the?White House?said.

The meetings between the president and lawmakers, whether or not they produce results, depart from what has been an at best a stand-offish relationship between Obama?and Republicans in?Congress.

They suggest that Obama?and Republicans are getting the message that public patience with Washington is wearing thin. This has become apparent as Americans read of inconveniences they may soon confront at airports and elsewhere as a result of across-the-board cuts to the federal budget that kicked in on Friday after lawmakers and the?White House?failed to agree on an alternative.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/U2gpOIvVvFI/Are-Congress-and-Obama-moving-toward-a-budget-deal

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Senate confirms Brennan as CIA Director

Senator Rand Paul's nearly 13 hour filibuster may have started a conversation about U.S. drone policy, but it didn't stop John Brennan from becoming CIA director.

Senators voted to 63 - 34 to elevate President Obama's top counter-terrorism adviser at the White House to lead the Central Intelligence Agency after Paul, R-Ky., dropped his opposition to a vote Thursday afternoon.

Paul had mounted the filibuster because he wanted assurances that the government would not target a non-combatant American citizen in the U.S. under the secret legal justification it uses to kill suspected terrorists overseas with armed drone strikes.

Related: Rand Paul Wins Praise From GOP and Liberals

Those assurances came from Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday in the form of a one line letter.

"It has come to my attention that you have now asked an additional question: 'Does the President have the authority to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on American soil?'" wrote Holder. "The answer to that question is no."

After that letter was produced, Paul voted with 85 other senators to end debate. Paul later opposed Brennan's nomination. But his filibuster did have an effect. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who had appeared ready to allow Brennan's nomination to proceed on Wednesday, was among 16 Republicans who opposed cutting off debate on Thursday. McConnell also opposed Brennan's nomination.

Democrats Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Jeff Merkley of Oregon opposed Brennan along with Independent Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

Related: Eric Holder's Letter to Rand Paul

Paul appeared for the first time on the Senate floor since he concluded his marathon filibuster of John Brennan that went from Wednesay into Thursday morning, said he was "very pleased" to get a response to his questions from Holder and he believes the "entire battle was worthwhile."

"It's taken awhile but we got an explicit answer," Paul said this afternoon. "I'm pleased what we did and to me I think the entire battle was worthwhile."

Paul read Holder's letter on the floor of the Senate and said his filibuster was successful not only because it got an answer to a specific question but it also led to a discussion over the use of drones in the nation.

Related: McCain and Graham Blast 'Ridiculous' Filibuster

"I consider it to be our duty to stand up and fight for something that we all believe in and that's the protections that the bill of rights are yours. When you are accused of something you get your day in court," Paul said. "So I am very pleased to have gotten his response back from the Attorney General of the United States."

Paul said he hopes Americans will "see this battle that we've had in the last 24 hours as something that is good for the country."

Read More: John Brennan

From ABC's Z. Byron Wolf and Sunlen Miller

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rand-paul-claims-victory-senate-211806807.html

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German publishers' anti-Google campaign is about paid content hopes, not just copyright

?

Why do European publishers hate Google so much? Maybe it's fear, maybe it's legitimate concerns over market share. Or maybe it's about trying to build a paid content business model online.

Germany's Bundestag on Friday?passed?"ancillary copyright" legislation which?forces search engines and aggregators to pay for republishing content, although a crucial last minute exemption allows the publishing of "individual words or short excerpts", allowing Google News to continue parsing stories (lawyers may disagree what constitutes "short").

The?legislation?(PDF, in German) like last?month's Franco-Google entente?- was designed to make Google pay for linking to news content. But the general consensus is that this provision will?let Google off the hook, and the search engine has welcomed the removal of "the most damaging" parts of the law - while still criticising its existence in the first place.?

Publishers' paid content hopes

However, if you delve into the German publishers' legal action you'd discover another motive altogether: to make it easier for consumers?to buy their content online.

A statement?welcoming the ruling from the Brussels-based pressure group European Publishers Council (EPC)?might shed some light: "The EPC believes that this law will help establish a market for aggregator content," reads the statement. "New?innovative business models can now be built based on legally-licensed content."

So by providing a legal framework and definition for content-licensing, publishers have a better chance of building paid content platforms. The EPC is apparently working towards a technical solution called the Rights Reference Model under the banner of the Linked Content Coalition (LLC) to make that possible

According to the same statement: "The RRM brings together for the first time all the?different licensing models and languages for all kinds of content: text, images, video,?music, for example.

"This project seeks to solve the problem and address the criticism?that it is often difficult to work out how to use online content legally ? for individuals,?businesses and for automated tools."

The publishers want to standardise descriptions of how a piece of content can be used, how long for and, crucially, how to pay for it, so aggregators know exactly where they stand.

Publishers will still have to come up with the business model - but the RRM will provide an infrastructure to help them do that.?

But will it work?

The description from the RRM's website provides a better idea of what is on the cards - a system similar to banking sector's International Banking Number: "The IBAN allows transactions to take place between banks all over the world despite each bank having their own internal systems.

"The LCC work will enable a similar level of functionality for accessing, using and sharing all kinds of digital content whether that be text, music or film, for example."

There is, however, no guarantee the RRM solution will work, or that aggregators have any interest in adopting it.

However, it hints that some publishers at least have learned a valuable lesson from the music and film industries: It's better to make it easier to access your content legally (and probably for a fee) than try to stop it getting on to the web in the first place.?

Yet the law has to get past the Germany's upper house, the Bundesrat, where Social Democrats and Green hold sway, both of whom oppose the law. "No one except for a few big publishers wants this law," says Green member Tabea R?ssner (via NYT) ?Certainly no one in the online world."

If you liked this article you can sign up to receive free weekly newsletters from the site by clicking here

Source: http://www.themediabriefing.com/article/2013-03-04/germany-newspapers-Google

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Oceans still flowed during 'Snowball Earth'

Jessica Robertson / USGS

This polar bear was photographed making ts way on sea ice off the Beaufort Sea in September 2008. A new study says that when ice possibly swathed the entire world in the "Snowball Earth" days, oceans underneath may have nevertheless surprisingly churned, potentially helping to provide life with vital nutrients.

By Charles Q. Choi
LiveScience

When ice possibly swathed the entire world, the oceans underneath may have nevertheless surprisingly churned, potentially helping to provide life with vital nutrients, new research suggests.

?For decades, scientists have proposed that the planet may once have been a "Snowball Earth," with geological evidence suggesting ice reached all the way to the equator at least twice during the Neoproterozoic era (about 635 million to 750 million years ago) in stints lasting millions of years. The ice sheets blanketing Earth were not completely solid ? there were likely many holes or thin patches around warm spots such as volcanoes ? but in many other places, ice may have been more than a half-mile thick.

During these Snowball Earth periods, it is also thought that ancient life may have begun its drive toward explosive diversity. However, until now, little was done to model how water and nutrients might have flowed in the ice-capped oceans in which this primordial life dwelled. Past research did suggest that oceans might have flowed sluggishly due to ice shielding the waters from wind, and such relatively stagnant water would not have been as conducive to driving the developing diversity of primordial life in the oceans. But such studies failed to account for geothermal heat from the planet that could potentially drive ocean mixing, researchers said.

Snowball Earth oceans
To simulate oceans during Snowball Earth times, a group of scientists developed a high-resolution 3-D model of the oceans and continents during the Neoproterozoic. The simulation accounted for weak geothermal heat and about 3,300 feet (1 kilometer) of ice covering the land and oceans. The findings are detailed in the March 7 issue of the journal Nature.

Surprisingly, the researchers found the oceans were not stagnant pools during a Snowball Earth ? rather, they were quite dynamic. [50 Amazing Facts About Earth]

"It's counterintuitive," said team member Daniel Schrag, a geologist at Harvard University. "Our assumption, and I think everyone else's, was that when you had ice keeping winds from mixing the oceans, you would end up with relatively stagnant oceans."

Geothermal heat would cause water at the ocean bottom to rise, triggering the kind of convection seen in pots of boiling water. In fact, water temperature and saltiness would have effectively been uniform across all depths nearly everywhere, a pattern completely different from that expected during any other period in Earth's history, researchers said.

"The ocean today is much more stratified ? you have warm, buoyant water on top and cold, dense water on the bottom, and it resists mixing, although it does mix because of tides and winds," Schrag said. "In the snowball ocean, everything almost has the same density, so it takes much less energy to mix the oceans, and it turns out to mix very well."

Ocean mixing
In addition, powerful currents would have wrapped around the equator, and strong upwelling would have existed along the coasts. Unstable flows at the equator would have caused eddies that in turn would have generated jet streams reminiscent of those seen in the atmosphere of Jupiter, the researchers added. This circulation, including that of warm water, suggests melting rates near continents may have been as much as 10 times larger than previously estimated.

"You really have to think about Snowball Earth as being like a different planet," Schrag told OurAmazingPlanet. "Some criticisms people have made about the Snowball Earth hypothesis are based on assumptions of how the Earth worked that depend on how Earth works today. I think these findings are another nice example of how Snowball Earth was a very different planet, even though it's this planet. When you cover Earth with ice for so long, it changes many things you think are fundamental, including ocean circulation."

And all this churning might have helped provide life under the ice with a regular flow of nutrients.

"The ice-covered ocean was a pretty hard place to live ? it's not a booming ecosystem," Schrag said. "This model makes us think harder about how nutrients would have mixed in the snowball, how oxygen and carbon might mix. It suggests there was really quite vigorous ocean-mixing."

Future research should investigate ancient rocks to look for evidence to test their model, Schrag added.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet?@OAPlanet, Facebook?and Google+.

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

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/06/17213469-oceans-still-flowed-during-snowball-earth-study-says?lite

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Carrie Fisher Confirms Leia's Return to Star Wars Episode VII

Source:

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Apple slumps as Citi cuts estimates, target

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Apple Inc. /quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl AAPL -0.44% saw its shares slump nearly 1% to $427.25 in early trades on Wednesday after Citigroup cut its estimates and price target on the company, citing its belief that iPhone and iPad sales are slowing. In a note to clients, Citi's analysts said "indications of reduced demand to Apple's suppliers contribute to our existing concerns that end-demand for 10" iPad and iPhone 5 in particular is softening, reflecting share loss by Apple in both the tablet market and the smartphone market." The firm lowered its estimates for Apple's March and June quarters, and cut its price target on the stock to $480 from $500. It left its rating on the shares as neutral.

/quotes/zigman/68270/quotes/nls/aapl

US : U.S.: Nasdaq

Volume: 7.34M

March 6, 2013 11:19a

Market Cap

$404.87 billion

Source: http://feeds.marketwatch.com/~r/marketwatch/marketpulse/~3/-l5P2CKFXkw/story.aspx

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Monday, March 4, 2013

Video: Baby orangutan born at Atlanta Zoo



>>> finally, i haven't been around a ton of newborns, but i have watched enough movies to know there can be a lot of crying, a lot of moodiness. this little guy is in a league of his own. he is an orangutan at the atlanta zoo . look at that face. after a team of vets performed a c-section on his mom over a month ago, he has been taken care of by the team at the zoo. he gets daily visits to see his mom. not living permanently together. it's an interesting arrangement. cutie patootie, they have yet to name the baby.

>> cutie patootie has a nice ring to it.

>> unless he goes on to play football, oh, cutie patootie down the middle.

>> don't like the sound. harrison. which you suggested yesterday.

>> definitely nothing to think about.

Source: http://www.today.com/video/today/51024878/

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Winners of the 2012 F1000Prime Faculty Member of the Year Awards

Winners of the 2012 F1000Prime Faculty Member of the Year Awards [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Eleanor Howell
press@f1000.com
44-020-763-19129
Faculty of 1000: Biology and Medicine

Following the success of last year's inaugural Faculty Member of the Year Awards, a panel of F1000 judges has presented one member from each of the 32 F1000Prime Faculties with an award to mark their significant contribution in 2012. Four Faculty Members have been presented with an award for a second year running, marking their exceptional contribution to the F1000Prime service: Andrew K Groves (Developmental Biology), Ferdinando Boero (Ecology), Kent Berridge (Neuroscience) and John A Lowe III (Pharmacology & Drug Discovery).

The global F1000Prime Faculty consists of over 5,000 peer-nominated expert scientists and clinical researchers, assisted by 5,000 associates. Eight Nobel Prize winners, 81 Fellows of The Royal Society, 12 Lasker Prize winners, 146 members of the National Academy of Sciences, and 104 Members of the Institute of Medicine belong to the Faculty.

Faculty Members are acknowledged experts who recommend the most important published articles for inclusion in F1000Prime. They review the articles, write brief commentaries, and assign a star rating. Associate Faculty Members (AFMs) are appointed by Faculty Members and assist them in the recommendation process. They also scan the tables of contents of all the major general and specialist journals to ensure that the literature in their topic area has been adequately covered. With the hard work and dedication of the Faculty, the core F1000Prime directory now includes over 130,000 article recommendations.

Commenting on this year's awards, Jane Hunter, Faculty of 1000 Managing Director said: "F1000Prime continues to grow and improve - 2012 saw our busiest year ever, and we are grateful for the support of our many Faculty Members from around the world who, collectively, made this possible. The announcement of our awards is our chance to celebrate and recognize the 32 Faculty Members, one from each Faculty, who worked especially diligently on our behalf in the past 12 months. Their energy and generosity makes the extraordinary contributions of this year's Faculty Member of the Year Award winners all the more remarkable."

###

To find out more about Faculty of 1000, please contact Eleanor Howell. For more information, visit http://f1000.com.

About F1000Prime

F1000Prime is an in-depth directory of the top articles in biology and medicine, as recommended by our Faculty of over 5,000 expert scientists and clinical researchers, assisted by 5,000 associates. The service covers over 40 disciplines and more than 3,500 journals. Articles are rated and expert commentaries explain their importance.

Appendix F1000Prime Faculty Members of the Year 2012

Anesthesiology & Pain Management
Roberta L Hines (USA)

Cardiovascular Disorders
Gad Cotter (USA)

Cell Biology
Ronen Zaidel-Bar (Singapore)

Chemical Biology
Justin Chalker (USA)

Critical Care & Emergency Medicine
Jean-Charles Preiser (Belgium)

Dermatology
Mark B Faries (USA)

Developmental Biology
Andrew K Groves (USA)

Diabetes & Endocrinology
Fatma Ferda Verit (Turkey)

Ecology
Ferdinando Boero (Italy)

Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Philip Rosenthal (USA)

Genomics & Genetics
Norman Johnson (USA)

Hematology
Nelson J Chao (USA)

Immunology
Richard L Stevens (USA)

Infectious Diseases
Susan E Coffin (USA)

Microbiology
Oded Beja (Israel)

Nephrology
David Goldsmith (UK)

Neurological Disorders
Anirban Basu (India)

Neuroscience
Kent Berridge (USA)

Oncology
Neyssa Marina (USA)

Ophthalmology
Michael A Singer (USA)

Otolaryngology
Zachary M Soler (USA)

Pharmacology & Drug Discovery
John A Lowe III (USA)

Physiology
Bruno Stieger (Switzerland)

Plant Biology
Vitaly Citovsky (USA)

Psychiatry
George E Woody (USA)

Public Health & Epidemiology
Carlos Medicis Morel (Brazil)

Research Methodology
Riekie de Vet (Netherlands)

Respiratory Disorders
Alice Turner (UK)

Rheumatology & Clinical Immunology
Tim Cundy (New Zealand)

Structural Biology
Vladimir Uversky (USA)

Urology
Howard Goldman (USA)

Women's Health
Steven S Witkin (USA)


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Winners of the 2012 F1000Prime Faculty Member of the Year Awards [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 4-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Eleanor Howell
press@f1000.com
44-020-763-19129
Faculty of 1000: Biology and Medicine

Following the success of last year's inaugural Faculty Member of the Year Awards, a panel of F1000 judges has presented one member from each of the 32 F1000Prime Faculties with an award to mark their significant contribution in 2012. Four Faculty Members have been presented with an award for a second year running, marking their exceptional contribution to the F1000Prime service: Andrew K Groves (Developmental Biology), Ferdinando Boero (Ecology), Kent Berridge (Neuroscience) and John A Lowe III (Pharmacology & Drug Discovery).

The global F1000Prime Faculty consists of over 5,000 peer-nominated expert scientists and clinical researchers, assisted by 5,000 associates. Eight Nobel Prize winners, 81 Fellows of The Royal Society, 12 Lasker Prize winners, 146 members of the National Academy of Sciences, and 104 Members of the Institute of Medicine belong to the Faculty.

Faculty Members are acknowledged experts who recommend the most important published articles for inclusion in F1000Prime. They review the articles, write brief commentaries, and assign a star rating. Associate Faculty Members (AFMs) are appointed by Faculty Members and assist them in the recommendation process. They also scan the tables of contents of all the major general and specialist journals to ensure that the literature in their topic area has been adequately covered. With the hard work and dedication of the Faculty, the core F1000Prime directory now includes over 130,000 article recommendations.

Commenting on this year's awards, Jane Hunter, Faculty of 1000 Managing Director said: "F1000Prime continues to grow and improve - 2012 saw our busiest year ever, and we are grateful for the support of our many Faculty Members from around the world who, collectively, made this possible. The announcement of our awards is our chance to celebrate and recognize the 32 Faculty Members, one from each Faculty, who worked especially diligently on our behalf in the past 12 months. Their energy and generosity makes the extraordinary contributions of this year's Faculty Member of the Year Award winners all the more remarkable."

###

To find out more about Faculty of 1000, please contact Eleanor Howell. For more information, visit http://f1000.com.

About F1000Prime

F1000Prime is an in-depth directory of the top articles in biology and medicine, as recommended by our Faculty of over 5,000 expert scientists and clinical researchers, assisted by 5,000 associates. The service covers over 40 disciplines and more than 3,500 journals. Articles are rated and expert commentaries explain their importance.

Appendix F1000Prime Faculty Members of the Year 2012

Anesthesiology & Pain Management
Roberta L Hines (USA)

Cardiovascular Disorders
Gad Cotter (USA)

Cell Biology
Ronen Zaidel-Bar (Singapore)

Chemical Biology
Justin Chalker (USA)

Critical Care & Emergency Medicine
Jean-Charles Preiser (Belgium)

Dermatology
Mark B Faries (USA)

Developmental Biology
Andrew K Groves (USA)

Diabetes & Endocrinology
Fatma Ferda Verit (Turkey)

Ecology
Ferdinando Boero (Italy)

Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Philip Rosenthal (USA)

Genomics & Genetics
Norman Johnson (USA)

Hematology
Nelson J Chao (USA)

Immunology
Richard L Stevens (USA)

Infectious Diseases
Susan E Coffin (USA)

Microbiology
Oded Beja (Israel)

Nephrology
David Goldsmith (UK)

Neurological Disorders
Anirban Basu (India)

Neuroscience
Kent Berridge (USA)

Oncology
Neyssa Marina (USA)

Ophthalmology
Michael A Singer (USA)

Otolaryngology
Zachary M Soler (USA)

Pharmacology & Drug Discovery
John A Lowe III (USA)

Physiology
Bruno Stieger (Switzerland)

Plant Biology
Vitaly Citovsky (USA)

Psychiatry
George E Woody (USA)

Public Health & Epidemiology
Carlos Medicis Morel (Brazil)

Research Methodology
Riekie de Vet (Netherlands)

Respiratory Disorders
Alice Turner (UK)

Rheumatology & Clinical Immunology
Tim Cundy (New Zealand)

Structural Biology
Vladimir Uversky (USA)

Urology
Howard Goldman (USA)

Women's Health
Steven S Witkin (USA)


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-03/fo1b-wot030413.php

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Obama campaign releases list of top fundraisers (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/288599305?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Gate placement a concern for NASCAR after crash

AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) ? NASCAR will look at the placement of gates at its tracks after a Nationwide Series car crashed through the fence at the Daytona 500 and injured more than two dozen fans.

Steve O'Donnell, NASCAR's Senior Vice President of Racing Operations, said on Saturday that the gate where rookie Kyle Larson's car hit the fence was locked, but that pieces of the car still went through the fence.

He said the safety elements of Larson's car appeared to work, but the section that the engine is tethered to sheared off and sent pieces of the car flying into the stands.

O'Donnell also said two of the injured fans are still at the hospital, but that everyone else has been released.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-02-CAR-NASCAR-Daytona-Crash/id-77b855dd4f114d43ba9f732f6265a4b9

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Smearing Gun Permit Holders By Omission (Powerlineblog)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/288623950?client_source=feed&format=rss

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