Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Inhabitat's Week in Green: P1 hybrid supercar, asteroid attack lasers and mosquito inoculators

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week's most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us -- it's the Week in Green.

DNP Inhabitat's Week in Green tktktk

Coffee is what fuels us in the morning -- but it turns out that a cup of Joe can do much more than perk up sleepy office workers; this week a truck that runs entirely on coffee set a world record for the highest speed ever attained by a java-powered vehicle. That isn't the only green car news that broke this week -- with the Geneva Motor Show fast approaching, we've been keeping an ear to the ground for the latest from Switzerland. McLaren is set to officially unveil its 903-horsepower P1 hybrid supercar at the Geneva show, and Volkswagen will show off its new XL1 plug-in hybrid, which gets a whopping 261 miles to the gallon. Volvo, meanwhile, just launched the world's first car with external airbags to help protect pedestrians from serious injuries. But if you prefer bikes over cars, then you'll want to check out Bicycled Bikes, a unique set of bikes that are manufactured in Spain from upcycled car parts.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/BOBGSwezW18/

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ASUS FonePad official: 7-inch tablet with phone functionality, priced at $249 (hands-on)

ASUS FonePad official 7inch tablet with phone functionality, priced at $249 for 16GB handson

We already knew ASUS was prepping a product called the FonePad, a 7-inch tablet with built-in phone functionality (yes, just like the new Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0). Well, ASUS just formally unveiled it here at Mobile World Congress, which means we've got a few more details to share than we did previously. First off, the speculation about its specs was all true: this does indeed have an Intel processor -- a 1.2GHz Atom Z2420, to be exact -- along with 1GB of RAM, a PowerVR SGX540 GPU, Android 4.1 Jelly Bean and an HSPA+ radio. What's more, the 4,270mAH battery is said to get up to nine hours of runtime, which would put this in the same league as other Atom tablets we've tested recently.

In terms of hardware features, the FonePad has a smooth metal back (available in gray and gold), making it drastically different in appearance from the similarly sized Nexus 7. 'Round back you'll find a panel where all the usual antennae are, and hidden underneath are both the micro-SIM slot and the microSD reader. That microSD slot, by the way, supports 32GB cards, which should come in handy considering this has just 16GB of built-in storage. Additionally, the tablet has a 1.2-megapixel front camera, attached to a 7-inch, 1,280 x 800 IPS display.

The FonePad will be available in Europe for £179 / €219. Here at MWC, ASUS also confirmed a US dollar price of $249, though we had heard rumblings it wouldn't actually be sold there. It arrives in March, but the specific on-sale date hasn't been revealed yet. We're hoping to test one ourselves soon enough, but until then, stay tuned for the usual round of hands-on shots.

Update: Our hands-on photos and video are in! Enjoy!

Gallery: ASUS FonePad

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/25/asus-fonepad-announced/

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

NCAA's crimes leave victims, too

Updated?Feb 22, 2013 1:17 PM ET

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We act like no one gets hurt while the NCAA and its volunteer media enforcement staff unethically uphold rules of amateurism that have long outlived their effectiveness, integrity and morality.

It?s OK for the University of Miami to get screwed. The Canes deserve it. For years "The U" got away with winning football games and championships by providing opportunities to arrogant, preening athletes from the wrong Florida zip codes, with the wrong SAT scores and (allegedly) holding the wrong what-is-in-it-for-me attitude.

Yeah, screw U. That?s our mindset.

The fact the NCAA collaborated with an incarcerated, convicted ponzi schemer (Nevin Shapiro) ? a congenital liar looking for infamy so he could make a behind-bars movie/book $core ? and funneled him and his lawyer money to make its case against Miami is completely irrelevant.

No one feels sorry for Miami. It must hang for what we believe it got away with that others did not. It must hang to protect an institution (amateurism) that we know is outdated and immoral. The U must hang even though we know the institution (NCAA) building the gallows, tying the noose and rendering the verdict is every bit as criminal as The U.

This mindset says something frightening about all of us, the witnesses, and our society at large. Among other things, it says we don?t recognize the human consequence. The U is not a human. It?s an institution, like hundreds of others, voluntarily participating in the NCAA?s shamateurism scam.

However, within these institutions there are human beings suffering.

The unscrupulous tactics used to hang The U are not new or an aberration. It?s standard operating procedure. Awash in television money and in bed with the mainstream media for half a century, the NCAA has been crushing its subjects without fear for decades. This is the worst kind of dictatorship, one that is supported by the media not out of fear, but out of an irrational and biased belief the NCAA is right and just.

Trust me, it?s not. It?s like any other institution drunk on power and wealth.

How else do you explain the NCAA?s treatment of Todd McNair?

He is not an institution. He?s not a millionaire head coach such as Jim Calhoun, Kelvin Sampson or Bruce Pearl. McNair was the USC running backs coach during the Reggie Bush era. McNair earned a good living at USC, raking in around $200K to $250K per year as one of the best recruiters in college football.

A former NFL running back, McNair connected with Bush. They were close. McNair, along with then-head coach Pete Carroll, was part of the process of helping Bush choose an agent when the All-American left USC.

As you know, members of the NCAA?s volunteer media enforcement staff unearthed evidence that two wannabe marketing agents financially supported Bush?s parents in San Diego while Reggie starred in Los Angeles. This financial support cost Bush his Heisman Trophy and justified the NCAA severely sanctioning USC.

You may also know it eventually cost McNair his job. Based on the word of Lloyd Lake, a convicted drug dealer and repeat felon, the NCAA concluded McNair knew of Bush?s dealings with Lake and another associate, the two wannabe marketing agents. McNair was hit with a one-year show-cause, meaning a school that wanted to employ McNair would have to convince the NCAA it had a damn good reason for hiring McNair. Show-cause is basically a death penalty for a coach.

McNair hasn?t coached in three years. He has a rather impressive resume. He played in the NFL. He coached for the Cleveland Browns before coaching at USC. He was regarded as one of the top recruiters in college football.

McNair made a good living in the NFL and as a coach. But he was never an NFL star. He is not financially set. Like most other grown men, he has family that depend on him. He?s 47. His career stopped on a dime. He?ll likely never be a head coach.

Based on the flimsy ?testimony? of Lloyd Lake. Really?

Please go to this web site ncaainjustice.com and examine the evidence used to convict McNair. Its lack of credibility is absolutely breathtaking. It?s so hard to believe that a judge in Los Angeles said the NCAA demonstrated ?ill will? and ?hatred? toward McNair. Judge Frederick Shaller, a USC grad, said the NCAA had a ?reckless disregard for the truth.?

At some point, it is likely that Judge Shaller or some other judge will make available to the public and media the emails exchanged between NCAA members involved in the demolition of McNair?s coaching career. The emails are believed to be highly embarrassing for the NCAA. The NCAA is fighting frantically to keep the emails sealed. The NCAA doesn?t want you to fully grasp its lack of ethics.

McNair is suing the NCAA for libel and defamation. In a few years, he?ll probably reach a settlement with the NCAA. He?d rather earn a living and take care of his family coaching football. His life has been destroyed so that the NCAA can pretend there?s some value in amateurism.

Do we have to pretend? People are getting hurt. This scam needs to end. The NCAA enforcement staff leaks ?information? about excessive phone calls/text messages and illicit relationships with street agents to its most trusted members of the volunteer media enforcement staff (this doesn't include CBSSports.com's Dennis Dodd, who's done a good job of writing about McNair's situation). The volunteers cobble together a story and sit back and wait for the NCAA to use its unethical tactics to rubber stamp the salacious stories printed in the media.

It?s all done to protect the honor of amateurism! Meanwhile, everyone involved in the scam asks for (and likely receives) a pay raise.

But The U and the kids with the wrong zip codes, SAT scores and attitude are the low-character bad guys. OK.

Source: http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo?i=7d77c4b1ee2c968b9ed2b5b55e7abc4a

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R&R Golf Cars closes shop, employees and customers seek answers

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. -

Chris Sharp, of Indio, got the news on Wednesday that he along with more than 20 employees at the 3-year-old business R&R Golf Cars in Rancho Mirage were being laid off.

"The owner came up and said we're closing the doors. We went bankrupt. We're done," said Sharp.

Sharp tells us the business closed shop only a week after he was promoted from delivery to parts manager.

"There's a lot of pissed off customers and a lot of angry employees. They have no communication. Everyone's confused on about what's going on out here," said Sharp.

Many of them showed up on Thursday in search of answers from the owner Rory Royston, 23. They also involved the sheriff's department while they could only watch as inventory was loaded up and towed away to be locked down in storage.

"They had trucks lined up. You couldn't even drive in here last night. You couldn't drive in here this morning. They were loading up the golf carts," said Christian Reyes, an employee at neighboring business Patios Plus.

A sign posted on the door reads that the business is closing and "current customers will recieve a call next week."

"They were angry. They wanted to know where their stuff was. They have people's golf carts that they paid for. And they rightfully should get some answers and they don't have that," said Reyes.

We called Royston. He says he laid off nearly two dozen employees at his Rancho Mirage show room and Palm Desert service department, admitting that his business went under and he's filing for bankruptcy.

It was a shock to some, however others felt it coming.

"I've been calling it that they were going out of business just because you couldn't order parts for weeks," said Geoffrey Benedetto, a former employee.

"He tried to grow too fast. He's a young owner, he's really young. He's 23 years old and he owns a multi-million dollar company. I just think he wanted to grow faster than he was able to do and kind of lost track of things," said Sharp.

Royston tells us he's working to "restructure so everyone gets paid."

Meanwhile, customers and vendors say they want their carts and their money.

"I hope that Rory does the right things and all the customers out here are happy and get taken care of and they don't have to deal with losing 10s of thousands of dollars," said Sharp.

Employee Jarvin Aivaz says he will personally help Royston deliver the carts without pay to their rightful owners on Friday.

Royston tells us he did the best he could as a young business owner, but unfortunately failed and hopes to bounce back.

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Source: http://www.kesq.com/news/R-R-Golf-Cars-closes-shop-employees-and-customers-seek-answers/-/233092/19031936/-/lkrxoj/-/index.html

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Case dismissed against former soccer coach accused of sexual assault

Anne Cook

Anne is the Internet Managing Editor for UpNorthLive.

Read?more: Local, Crime, Legal, Todd Johnson, Todd Johnson Charges Dropped, Mason County, Mason County Soccer Coach, Mason County Central, Mason County Soccer Coach Sexual Assault, Sex Crimes Charges Dropped

A Mason County Judge has dropped the case against Todd Johnson, the former Mason County Soccer coach accused of molesting a student. &nbsp/&nbspupnorthlive.com photo

MASON CO. -- The judge has dropped the case against the former Mason County Central soccer coach.

According to the Mason County Prosecutor, the woman who Todd Johnson was accused of sexually assaulting testified that her comment to police was a lie.

The investigation initially indicated the Johnson had a sexual relationship with the girl starting when she was 13 years old. While testifying in court, the girl said she felt pressured into saying that.

The judge dismissed the case based on a lack of indication that he had committed a sexual crime based on the testimony.

'); FB.XFBML.parse(commentsPlaceholder[0], function () { if (bI.getQueryString('gotocomments') === '1') { $('.gotoCommentSection').trigger('click'); } }); }); }); bI.fb.appInit('127788850570963'); Comments are the sole responsibility of the person posting them; they are not reflective of the views or opinions of Barrington Broadcasting, TV 7&4, its directors or employees. If you believe a comment violates the Barrington Terms of Use, please flag it above.

Source: http://www.upnorthlive.com/news/story.aspx?id=863765

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Soccer-Bradford long for happy ending to fairytale Cup run

BRADFORD, England, Feb 19 (Reuters) - An excited youngster stocked up on flags for his Wembley trip and the players spoke of fairytales as Bradford City prepared for the last chapter in a giant-killing run that has lifted the gloom around the club.

A fourth-tier team featuring a former supermarket shelf-stacker, a cancer survivor and players released by top clubs are hoping to beat a Premier League outfit for the fourth time this season when Bradford take on Swansea City in Sunday's League Cup final.

"It's going to be the biggest game we've played in our lives," right back Stephen Darby told Reuters on Tuesday.

"Over the last few years the football club hasn't had a lot to shout about but it's going to be a massive day for everyone, it's great for Bradford City and the people of Bradford."

The Bantams are the first fourth-tier side to reach a major English cup final for 51 years and will be making only their second Wembley appearance - the previous one being the 1996 third-tier playoff final.

After several miserable seasons since relegation from the Premier League in 2001, including two spells in administration, the feat of a fourth-tier team beating Arsenal, Wigan Athletic and Aston Villa en route to Wembley is the stuff of dreams.

The club, whose only major silverware is the 1911 FA Cup, is also probably best known for tragedy rather than glory after a 1985 fire at its Valley Parade ground killed 56 fans.

It is not just the football club that has lived under black clouds. The West Yorkshire city has been harder hit than many by the economic downturn, it has higher-than average crime rates and is also still remembered for race riots in 2001.

"Bradford is known for bad things like riots. There are no shops, there's a lot of negative," fan Julia North said after giving her 12-year-old son Liam money to get the club's claret and amber flags.

"It's great there's now something positive."

Thrilled Liam added: "It means the whole world to me. When we beat Villa (in the semi-final) I just went mental."

There is a buzz around the city with stalls selling anything from paper masks with the face of manager Phil Parkinson to T-shirts emblazoned 'Bradford City Giant Killers Marching on Wembley Way'.

One pub near the train station was advertising being open from 0430 on Sunday for anyone wanting ale or food before heading south while the local newspaper is printing cut-out-and-keep posters of the players.

FINANCIAL SECURITY

The cup run will provide the club with a cash injection of more than two million pounds ($3 million) - an amount that would pay one of the Premier League's top earners around eight weeks' wages but for Bradford that should mean long-term financial security.

"It's the owners' job and my job to make sure this extra revenue is used to keep improving the structure of the club and make sure our supporters have got a football club in years to come that is going to flourish," said Parkinson.

"That is really important. Much as we are all going to enjoy this weekend, on the back of that it does give us revenue which we wouldn't have expected to make so we are going to have to use it very wisely."

Lying mid-table in the fourth tier, with 44 points from 31 games, Bradford are punching well above their weight with a group of players who have made up for their lack of big transfer fees with a huge show of determination and a slice of luck.

There are no household names, only the likes of striker James Hanson who used to work in a local supermarket and headed the goal that booked the place in the final or Reading reject Carl McHugh who almost never made it as a professional.

Their most experienced player is probably goalkeeper Matt Duke, who made Premier League appearances for Hull City and who has recovered after being diagnosed with testicular cancer five years ago.

Victory over Swansea would earn Bradford a place in the Europa League, their first continental appearance since the now defunct Intertoto Cup in 2000, and a concept that some players could not get their heads around.

"It would be crazy, it would be mental but it would be unbelievable for the club," said McHugh who is taking 111 friends and family with him to Wembley.

"We're going to be underdogs. It's going to take Swansea having an off day and us being right at the top of our game and having a little bit of luck to win it."

The lack of expectation is what forward Alan Connell reckons has been the key to Bradford's successful cup run and that could help them against Swansea.

"I honestly haven't even thought about winning it. It's all a bit of a fairytale," he said.

"Being the underdogs has helped us, we're just very relaxed and very disciplined as a team. We've got a game against 11 players, let's go and play."

($1 = 0.6475 British pounds) (Editing by Tony Jimenez)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/soccer-bradford-long-happy-ending-fairytale-cup-run-205722542--sow.html

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Monday, February 18, 2013

California Gov. Jerry Brown wants local control for school districts

Jerry Brown is pushing an appealing idea: Local control for local schools.

Bucking a national trend, the governor wants to back the state away from making schools account for their spending and for punishing them if their students lag in achievement.

But, perhaps surprisingly, school officials aren't jumping up and down about the proposal.

Elsewhere, education is becoming more results-driven, with everyone from Uncle Sam down to the smallest startup charter school demanding more and more evidence, usually through test scores, that they're getting enough bang for their buck.

The governor wants none of that -- but it's unlikely he will get his way and free schools entirely from state oversight. Brown is proposing that school districts tie their plans for student achievement to their budgets. The 58 county offices of education would have the responsibility of approving those plans.

"A central authority should only perform those tasks which cannot be performed at a more immediate or local level," Brown said in his State of the State address.

"We are moving more authority, accountability and responsibility down to the local level," said H.D. Palmer, spokesman for the state Department of Finance.

The governor would free schools from line-item reviews in Sacramento over how they spent specific pots of money, and wants the state not to punish schools whose students are failing. Instead, Brown puts his faith in the power

of the people -- to turn local school board members out of office if their schools don't perform.

Many school officials like the possibility of reducing accounting and paperwork.

"I really appreciate that," said Scott Laurence, superintendent of the San Mateo Union High School District. He'd like more leeway in using funds in ways the district determines best serves students.

But he worries that without specific state demands, schools won't always pay as much attention as they should to various student needs.

In fact, Brown's proposal sounds like it would take schools back 70 years, when local districts answered only to themselves and their voters. What prompted the state legislators to create 60-odd educational programs -- focusing on migrant children, gifted and talented students, English-language learners, arts, counseling and more -- was that schools weren't meeting perceived needs.

"They have forced school districts to pay attention to groups of students that haven't been a major emphasis for school districts," Laurence said.

What's more, the state Supreme Court has ruled that the state has a constitutional obligation to ensure that all students have basic equality of opportunity in education. "That's a non-delegable role," said John Affeldt, managing attorney of Public Advocates, a public-interest law firm that has sued the state on various school-equity issues.

That said, Affeldt too thinks the state is overly focused on specific kinds of achievement. "I think the pendulum probably has swung too far to narrow the whole focus of our educational venture around performance."

And while he advocates pushing the pendulum back, he said, "we can't swing it all the way back to the 1950s."

Brown may not want to tell districts how to spend money, but state legislators could have other ideas. "The Legislature has never shown any evidence they believe in local control," said Ron Bennett, president of School Services Inc., which advises most of the 1,000 school districts in the state on state education finance and law.

But whatever Sacramento decides, it will retain the role of enforcer of the federal No Child Left Behind Act, which demands that schools receiving federal aid attain minimal levels of proficiency. The state jumps in with advisers and money -- up to $100,000 per school -- when districts have large numbers of failing students. Nearly half of California's 1,000 school districts fall into that category, called "program improvement" by the federal government.

Even as school officials concede that it is cumbersome to answer to higher authorities, they point out that student achievement has steadily grown in the decade since the state beefed up its academic oversight. In addition, a laissez-faire accountability system could make comparisons among school districts tricky.

If each district chooses how it wants to look at accountability, said Mike Nebesnick, director of educational accountability for San Jose Unified, "I don't think they're going to be lined up."

Brown stands behind the principle of "subsidiarity," which he said is violated "when distant authorities prescribe in minute detail what is taught, how it is taught and how it is to be measured."

But as much as educators may like flexibility, they worry mostly about funding. Californians have to demand an increase in per-pupil funding, said Wesley Smith, superintendent of the Morgan Hill Unified School District. "We are still 48 out of 50 in per-pupil funding. California students deserve more."

Contact Sharon Noguchi at 408-271-3775. Follow her at Twitter.com/noguchionk12.

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/ci_22611678/california-gov-jerry-brown-wants-local-control-school?source=rss_emailed

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Up to 10 inches of snow forecast in Mass.

Janet S. Carter / The Free Press via AP

Snow flurries shroud Washington Street in Kinston, N.C., on Saturday.

By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

Whiteout conditions in the Detroit area on Saturday caused pile-ups involving dozens of cars and trucks that closed several highways, including Interstates 75 and 94, all part of a weather system that brought winter storm warnings for parts of Massachusetts.

The largest crash was on Interstate 75, NBC station WDIV reported, citing police in Woodhaven, but I-94 also was closed temporarily. There were reports of injuries but no fatalities in the 44-vehicle crash on I-75, the Detroit Free Press reported.

The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning for eastern Massachusetts, including the Boston area, and Rhode Island through 7 p.m. ET Sunday. Up to 10 inches of snow accumulation was possible for some areas on Sunday, the weather service said.


The culprit is a large dip in the jet stream that brought colder-than-average temperatures to the eastern U.S., weather.com reported -- resulting in freeze warnings for parts of northern Florida.?That was combined with a low-pressure system heading north that was expected to be off New England Sunday morning.

Snow was falling in the Carolinas, but that was expected to end Saturday night, weather.com said. Maine could get more than 6 inches. Snow also was possible across Connecticut.

Weather.com said there was high degree of uncertainty about the snowfall total: "A slight jog in the track of the low to the east or west could result in less or more snow for the locations in New England highlighted above."

Much of New England just finished digging out after a historic winter storm that dumped 30 inches of snow on parts of Massachusetts and even more in Connecticut.

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Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/16/16987468-snow-snarls-detroit-interstates-winter-storm-warning-for-new-england?lite

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Enjoy Technical Writing ? My Presentation at TCWorld India ...

Come 22 February (Friday this week), I am talking about ?WordPress for Technical Documentation? at TCWorld India Conference 2013, in Bangalore.

An introduction to the topic is:

?Product owners are realizing that they need to have community based documentation for their products, rather than a traditional help file. The documentation is evolving from merely a ?help file? to huge knowledge bases. For example over last few years, we have seen the paradigm shift towards:

  • User Generated Content
  • Role Based Access to Topics
  • Custom Content Types
  • Statistics and Analysis to track user behavior
  • Rating, Feedback and Filtering Topics for Different Parameters
  • Social Media Integration
  • Custom Reports

I will also talk briefly about a case study where I am implementing WordPress to develop the support center of a huge LMS marketplace.?

This is interesting in the sense that it has challenged technical writers to explore different horizons for documentation tools.

The location: http://conferences.tekom.de/tcworldin13/bangalore/venue/

The program: http://conferences.tekom.de/tcworldin13/program/

I will share my experience of other sessions, in following posts.

Source: http://enjoytechnicalwriting.com/2013/02/16/my-presentation-at-tcworld-india-conference-2013-wordpress-for-technical-documentation/

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

UAE mulls law changes to boost Emirati jobs

The UAE is considering changes to its labour law to attract more citizens into the private sector, local media reported on Saturday, to lessen the burden of a bloated public sector in case of a fall in oil prices.

Many Emiratis prefer to work in the public sector, where working hours are shorter, holidays longer and pay tends to be higher, while foreign workers, who account for the majority of the oil-rich Gulf state's population, fill most private sector positions.

To prepare for any future downturn in oil prices and to avert political discontent, leaders in the UAE and other Gulf states are taking steps to rebalance their employment structures.

Labour Minister Saqr Ghobash will present the government with a review of the current labour law "shortly", the local al-Khaleej newspaper reported on Saturday, citing unnamed sources.

The review would include proposals to bring private and public sector salaries into line, as well as increasing private sector holidays, it said.

"The aim is to reach a compromise that will do justice to Emirati employees and at the same time will satisfy businessmen and company owners, so that Emiratisation be a real addition, rather than seen as a burden or that it becomes too costly," al-Khaleej reported.

Just over 11 percent of the UAE's estimated 8.3 million people are citizens, and most of the rest are foreign workers.

The jobless rate among Emiratis is put officially at 14 percent. UAE citizens are conferred generous benefits, receiving free government education, health care and assistance in housing.

At a forum earlier this week, the UAE's prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, told hundreds of officials that finding jobs for its citizens was one of the government's top priorities.

His deputy Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahayan said the Ministry of Labour had been tasked with adjusting working hours and days of the private sector to make them more appealing to Emiratis.

While the government can afford to pay high public sector salaries and unemployment benefits and to bear the cost of hiring foreigners while oil prices are high, it knows its finances could be strained in the long term if oil prices fall.

Source: http://www.arabianbusiness.com/uae-mulls-law-changes-boost-emirati-jobs-489745.html

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Bob Finnan's NBA notes: Rumors of Dan Gilbert being interested in Indians aren't going away

Given the chance, Cavaliers majority owner Dan Gilbert might follow in the footsteps of his fellow Detroit entrepreneur, Michael Ilitch Sr.

Ilitch is founder and owner of Little Caesars Pizza. He also owns the Detroit Red Wings and the Detroit Tigers. He was in negotiations to purchase the Detroit Pistons, as well, before he backed out of talks.

Rumors won't go away that Gilbert is interested in buying the Indians. However, a well-placed source said the Tribe isn't for sale.

Gilbert, a billionaire, purchased the Cavs from the Gund family for a reported $375 million in 2005. He already owns several minor sports teams in the Cleveland area, including the Lake Erie Monsters, Cleveland Gladiators and Canton Charge.

The Dolan family purchased the Indians from the late Richard Jacobs for a reported $320 million in 1999. It's unknown what the Indians would be worth today, but it would likely be in excess of $500 million.

The Dolans have not placed a for sale sign in front of Progressive Field, but insiders seem to think it could happen in the near future.

Stay tuned.

Strong words

Don't expect agent David Falk to join the John Wall fan club any time soon.

In a recent interview with Washington Post columnist Mike Wise, Falk weighed the pros and cons of the Wizards point guard to Cavs point guard Kyrie Irving. Continued...

Before we go any further, rarely does an agent talk about a player like this, especially on the record. Perhaps, Falk has some kind of ax to grind.

However, everything Falk says is true, in my opinion. Wall was the No. 1 selection in the 2010 NBA draft, while Irving was the top pick in 2011.

"(Wall) doesn't have a feel for the game," Falk said. "You can develop your jump shot all you want, but if you don't know how to play more than an up-and-down game by the time you're about 20 as a point guard, the chances of learning are very slim. I don't see it happening."

Falk said Wall is a bigger, stronger, faster and is a better athlete than Irving.

"Now, who's a better player?" he asked. "Kyrie Irving.

"John Wall will never be as good as Kyrie Irving was in his first week in the NBA. You want to know the reason why just nine teams have won an NBA title in 40 years? Because if both of them came out today, 99 percent of all general managers would still take John Wall instead of Kyrie Irving. They'd take the athlete over the ballplayer. And they'd be wrong."

LBJ's tear

Heat forward LeBron James became the first player in NBA history to score at least 30 points and shoot at least 60 percent from the field in six consecutive games. His streak ended last Thursday when he scored 39 points against the Oklahoma City Thunder. He launched a 3-pointer with 1:03 to play in the blowout win. Had he not taken that shot, he would have finished 14 of 23 from the field (60.8 percent). However, after the miss, he ended 14 of 24 (58.3 percent), thus ending his streak.

"He's playing at a different level," Irving said. "It just shows what a great player like that can do over the course of his career. He's made so many changes every year and continually gotten better."

Irving, who will be playing for the Eastern Conference All-Star team on Sunday night in Houston, wouldn't say how he wants to improve. Continued...

"I'm not sure yet," he said. "We'll see after the season. I'll go into coach's office and he'll tell me. I always have it in the back of my mind, but I just don't tell anyone."

There's no question where he needs to get better: Defense. The same thing happened to James, who was mediocre on defense early in his career. He decided after his third year that he needed to get better on defense and became one of the league's best defensive players. Perhaps, the same thing can happen for Irving.

Irving had better skills than James when the pair came to the Cavs. But what Irving doesn't have is being built like a Mack truck. The 6-foot-8, 250-pound James still dishes out punishment. The 6-3, 191-pound Irving takes it.

Rumor mill

-- Irving isn't the only weak defender on the Cavs. Half the team doesn't get it on defense. Unless that changes, it could eventually cost Coach Byron Scott his job. Gilbert desperately wants the team to hang its hat on the defensive end. Scott talks a good game, but the results have not been there.

-- The Celtics and Clippers have discussed a trade that would send future Hall of Famer Kevin Garnett to Los Angeles for guard Eric Bledsoe and center DeAndre Jordan, league sources told Yahoo! Sports. Perhaps that's what Garnett was talking about when he said this week that this would be his last All-Star appearance. Garnett has two years and $23.5 million remaining on his contract after this season. "Y'all don't know what I know," he said. You're right, KG. We don't. Even if he was traded, that wouldn't prevent him from going to the All-Star Game. The Clippers probably wouldn't deal those two players for Garnett, according to ESPN. The 6-11 Garnett, who has a no-trade clause in his contract, could retire after this season.

-- If Garnett is dealt, it might make sense to move Celtics forward Paul Pierce, as well, before Thursday's trade deadline. GM Danny Ainge needs to revamp that team and shed some of its high-priced stars. Some quality youth needs to be added.

-- Lakers GM Mitch Kupchak insists he won't trade center Dwight Howard. Howard could bolt from the Lakers this summer in free agency. If he decides to leave, Kupchak could get involved in a sign-and-trade at that time. It doesn't appear as if Howard has meshed with Lakers stars Kobe Bryant or Steve Nash.

-- Howard's agent, Dan Fegan, has joined forces with Happy Walters at Relativity Sports. It could evolve into a powerful union.

-- Forward/center Nerlens Noel is no longer being considered the No. 1 pick in the 2013 NBA draft. The 6-11, 216-pounder tore his left ACL last week and will miss the rest of his freshman season at Kentucky. ESPN insider Chad Ford now thinks Kansas swingman Ben McLemore could be the top pick. He said McLemore continues to show upside as a jump-shooter and elite athlete. If he enters the draft, Noel might not drop past No. 5. Noel had 12 blocks in a recent game against Ole Miss. Wonder what Cavs GM Chris Grant would do if Noel is still on the board when it's time to make their first pick? Continued...

---

Information for the NBA notebook was gathered by personal interviews and from other beat writers around the league.

Source: http://news-herald.com/articles/2013/02/16/sports/nh6562806.txt

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Meteors Blazing Across Cuba, San Francisco, Japan, What?s Happening?

Russia, Kazakhstan, Japan, Australia, Cuba, South Africa, Morocco, Germany, Switzerland, northern Italy, Netherlands, Belgium, UK, all report fireballs blazing across the sky low in the atmosphere, in the last two days. Can this be a coincidence with the passage of large Asteroid DA14, which apparently passed by Earth safely in the same time period? The coincidence seems just too extraordinary! What if all these cosmic events which impacted or almost impacted Earth, were connected and therefore no coincidence, despite what the "experts" say?


First, a few facts: In Cuba, a scenario similar to that in Russia?s Ural region apparently unfolded. ?On the same day, February 15, 2013, as Asteroid DA14 passed by Earth safely,? residents in the central region of Cuba reported that an object had fallen from the sky. It exploded with a great noise, which shook houses and broke windows. This was learned from witnesses on local television. The town in the province of Cienfuegos, witnesses described a very bright light that grew to a large size comparable to that of a bus, before exploding low in the sky.

Oddly, mainstream media has reported on other fireball-meteors around the world but tends not to mention Cuba?s experience, which was second only to the disaster in the Urals of Russia.

A huge fireball was reported by a number of witnesses over Belgium, Netherlands and Germany on February 13, 2013. The sight usually is said to have lasted from 10 to 20 seconds. There were two separate parts to the fireball, witnesses said. Apparently this one was part of Soyuz rocket, but what a coincidence that it happened on the day when all the other fireballs crossed the skies! A Soyuz rocket was launched but on February 11th. Scientists and authorities are still trying to unravel this one.

An exploding fireball was also reported over the sky of Japan on February 14, 2013, and was captured on video. A fireball is also on video over San Francisco on February 15 and was covered by CBS news.

Regarding the Russian meteorite hit, I reported that it was ten tons, which was what officials said; now some reports think this object weighed fifty tons. A relatively small hole in circumference in a frozen Ural lake is said to be the meteorite?s last resting place. Some people feel the hole is so small, it might indicate a missile rather than the huge meteorite created it. However, the meteor is said to have split into nine fragments as it streaked for impact over Earth.

The Russian meteor is the largest reported since 1908, when a meteor hit Tunguska, Siberia. Yesterday?s meteor entered the atmosphere at 40,000 mph. Energy released by the impact was in the hundreds of kilotons. The meteor, which was about one-third the diameter of Asteroid ?DA14, which apparently passed by Earth safely, was brighter than the sun. Its trail was visible for about 30 seconds, so it was a grazing, shallow impact.

So, now let?s look at the possibility that all these cosmic events which impacted or almost impacted Earth, were connected and therefore, they are not coincidences, despite what the "experts" say:
?

Question One: ?Did UFO occupants blow up DA14 to protect Earth, and what is falling to Earth are its fragments? If so, why didn?t they divert it earlier so as no fragments would hit Earth, either?

Question Two: ?Did the human ?breakaway civilization? or its military wing Solar Warden (as reported by computer hacker Gary McKinnon), blow up DA14? Why didn?t they do something earlier?

Question Three:? If you think Questions One and Two are far-fetched, what if NASA blew up DA14 or part of it, in order to divert it? Yes, they say they have it spotted now heading away from Earth, but NASA has lied before.

?There was an ?expert? on CBS News who seemed to try to put us into a Valium-like state of complacency who said, ?This happens all the time.?

?No, it does NOT.

He also stated that asteroids and meteors are no problem anyway because, "NASA would just land on them and place a small charge which would divert their trajectory away from Earth.?

My recent article with information from NASA itself, illustrates the folly of this ?expert?s? statement. http://www.ufodigest.com/article/killer-asteroids-what-us-worry

http://www.ufodigest.com/article/comets-2013-2013-be-what-2012-was-not

The U.S. has landed a probe on an asteroid but we have not ?landed on asteroids? every day and not with a manned craft, at least, according to NASA. To set off a ?small charge? and change a trajectory is, in my opinion, not very realistic. As usual, the attempt has been made to lull the ?common people? into a state of a nearly comatose lack of awareness.

Question Four: Is it merely that Earth is passing through an extra heavy debris field? If so, why don?t they simply let us know via mass media? DA14, the big asteroid, would be traveling, therefore, with a whole swarm of smaller meteors (also considered mini-asteroids).

Does NASA know that we are passing through a particularly thick debris field or can they only see DA14 because the smaller fragments are too small to be viewed?

One more strangeness: The area around Chelyabinsk, Russia, as well as Chelyabinsk itself, was once off limits to foreigners and the world?s media because it was Russia?s nuclear center. Chelyabinsk was where top secret nuclear research took place, from the 1940s onward. A serious nuclear catastrophe happened in 1957 at the fuel reprocessing plant near the city which caused deaths. The entire province was verboten to all foreigners until 1992. A British medical team did gain entrance following a two-train rail explosion in the mid-1980s.

Out of all this confusion, I do believe one thing is clear: The multitude of fireballs blazing across Earth skies on February 14th and 15th, are NOT unconnected from Asteroid DA14, which came so close to Earth on February 15, if it still exists. Maybe we can figure this out when DA14 is said to be returning in 2110!

?Join me in Exo-Trekking! Free online newsletter, sign up: info@earthchangepredictions.com

Source: http://www.ufodigest.com/article/meteors-blazing-across-cuba-san-francisco-japan-what%E2%80%99s-happening

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

iPad Case Review: TheCover by Graphique de France for iPad Review

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.mobiletechreview.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Board=news&Number=44219

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U.S. economy set to build housing jobs, Goldman Sachs says

Housing-related job growth is expected to accelerate this year and in 2014 as the market heats up, though employment will remain below peak levels for up to another nine years, according to a research note from Goldman Sachs analysts.

Employment growth related to residential investment will accelerate to 25,000 to 30,000 jobs per month, compared with an average gain of about 14,000 per month over the past year, according to Goldman Sachs. Such growth is good for a wide variety of workers. Residential-investment-related employment includes contractors, remodelers, manufacturers, furniture-store employees, real-estate agents and others.

Persistently low interest rates and increasing household formation are supporting demand. Indeed, construction spending is rising, as are trends for home prices and home-builder sentiment. Meanwhile, public home-building companies /quotes/zigman/1496092 /quotes/nls/itb ITB have seen their shares skyrocket over the past year.

It?s clear that the housing market is finally boosting overall U.S. economic growth. Fixed residential investment added to economic growth in 2012 for its first annual contribution since 2005. View charts about housing growth. As residential-investment output continues to grow, it?s expected that firms will increasingly turn to new workers. After all, paying overtime can be expensive, and current construction workers? hours are already above levels at the start of the recession.

But there?s a big jobs hole to fill, and even as growth accelerates, residential investment-related employment won?t hit bubble-peak levels for another seven to nine years, Goldman Sachs analysts estimated. Currently, there are about 6.6 million jobs in residential-investment related industries, down 2.6 million from a 2006 peak. Just looking at residential-construction employment, which accounts for almost one-third of the residential-investment-related category, currently there are 1.4 million fewer jobs than the peak level. Non-construction residential-investment-related employment accounts for the remainder of the residential-investment-related category, and these industries are down 1.2 million jobs from the peak.

?Ruth Mantell

Follow Ruth on Twitter @ruthmantell

Follow The Tell blog on Twitter @thetellblog

Source: http://blogs.marketwatch.com/thetell/2013/02/12/u-s-economy-set-to-build-housing-jobs-goldman-sachs-says/?mod=WSJBlog

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Fugitive ex-LA cop charged with murder of officer

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) ? A fugitive ex-Los Angeles police officer was charged Monday with murdering a Riverside officer in a potential death penalty case, but hundreds of tips triggered by a $1 million reward failed to end the manhunt.

Christopher Dorner was also charged with the attempted murder of another Riverside officer and two Los Angeles Police Department officers, Riverside County District Attorney Paul Zellerbach said.

The LAPD officers and the Riverside officers were fired on in two separate shootings early Thursday after Dorner, 33, became the target of a manhunt following the killing in Irvine of a former LAPD captain's daughter and her fiance the previous weekend.

"By both his words and conduct, he has made very clear to us that every law enforcement officer in Southern California is in danger of being shot and killed," Zellerbach said at a news conference guarded by four officers armed with rifles.

Authorities obtained a no-bail arrest warrant, which allows Dorner to be apprehended anywhere, Zellerbach said.

Meanwhile, U.S. border inspectors warned that the search for Dorner has created unusually heavy traffic backups at California border crossings into Mexico.

Baja California state police agents were given photographs of Dorner and warned to consider him armed and extremely dangerous.

Authorities said they were investigating more than 700 tips after offering a $1 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Dorner, who is believed to have written a Facebook rant against those he held responsible for ending his LAPD career five years ago, when a department board determined that he falsely claimed another officer had kicked a suspect.

"Some people are from his past, some people think they saw him yesterday, some think they have information about where he will be," police Lt. Andrew Neiman said.

Police and city officials believe the reward, raised from both public and private sources, will encourage the public to stay vigilant.

"Now it's like the game show 'Who Wants to be a Millionaire,'" said Anthony Burke, supervisory inspector for the U.S. Marshals regional fugitive taskforce. "Instead of one contestant, we've got 100,000, and there's only one question you have to answer. All they have to answer is where he's at, and we can take it from there."

Meanwhile, LAPD resources remained strained as the department deployed 50 protection details to guard officers and their families who were deemed possible targets.

The charges filed in Riverside County did not include the Irvine killings.

Monica Quan, a former LAPD captain's daughter, and her fiance were found shot dead Feb. 3 in a car in the parking structure of their condominium. Dorner was named as the suspect in those killings on Wednesday.

A federal agent who requested anonymity because of the ongoing investigation said officials had determined a call telling Quan's father, Randal Quan, that he should have done a better job of protecting his daughter was a prank.

The violence escalated early Thursday in Riverside County, when police say Dorner got into a shootout with police in Corona, grazing an LAPD officer's head with a bullet before escaping. Authorities believe Dorner then used a rifle to ambush the two Riverside police officers, killing one and seriously wounding another. The slain officer was identified as Michael Crain, 34.

Late last week, the manhunt focused on the Big Bear area of the San Bernardino Mountains, where authorities found Dorner's burned-out truck with weapons and camping gear inside.

A greatly reduced force of 30 deputies searched there for the fifth day on Monday.

___

Abdollah reported from Los Angeles. AP writer Elliot Spagat contributed to this report from San Diego. Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LATams.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fugitive-ex-la-cop-charged-murder-officer-211145013.html

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi hands in resignation after winning 2013 Afcon title

The Super Eagles won the continental title by beating Burkina Faso on Sunday, but their boss has promptly left his post, claiming he was doing what he felt was "right"

Nigeria coach Stephen Keshi has announced his resignation from the post just a day after their 2013 Africa Cup of Nations triumph.

The trainer's future had been subject to speculation throughout the tournament, and he has now revealed that he gave the Nigerian Football Federation (NFF) his notice shortly after the final win over Burkina Faso.

"I did what I feel is right by resigning," he told Metro FM.

"I gave the NFF a letter last night [Sunday] after the celebrations."

The 51-year-old made 51 appearances for the Super Eagles as a player, and has held coaching posts with the Togolese and Malian national teams.

Source: http://www.goal.com/en-au/news/5082/africa-cup-of-nations/2013/02/12/3744314/nigeria-coach-stephen-keshi-hands-in-resignation-after

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Every Apple Product Supposedly in the Works

Did you hear the latest rumor about Apple's "explorations" into a Dick Tracy-like smartwatch that'll soon be attaching itself to everybody's wrists? It's coming soon. Or never. But it's just another one of an avalanche of products Apple is rumored to have in the works. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/46lLPXYVwgM/every-apple-product-supposedly-in-the-works

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'The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born' | Morocco World News

By Mounir Beniche

Morocco World News

Meknes, Morocco, February 11, 2013

After transcending the myth of fear, many Arab countries have revolted against undemocratic regimes calling for their freedom and rights. Such an awakening has lead to the fall of some regimes and major changes in others. However, has what is the so-called the Arab Spring reached its goals?

After two years, we still see more tensions, rivers of blood, daily protests and recently political assassinations. Our horizon of expectations is shocked when we still see violent demonstrations, states? and people?s security at stake.

The post-Arab Spring ,which is supposed to be an alternative and an era of building trust between the state and people signing a new contract based on democratic values, is losing its aura. What?s happening now looks like a nightmare. Young people?s dream of embracing a new horizon, in which there is the reign of law and responsive state institutions, is shaken when scenes of chaos and disorder are still the most dominant in media coverage.

Morocco, unlike other neighboring counties, has chosen another path: change within stability. Some political analysts have seen such path as the Moroccan exception and a wise choice to not jeopardize Moroccan stability. Such a perspective hasn?t been welcomed by other political activists who are calling for more radical changes.

After conducting a democratic election and the victory of the PJD, the Islamist party, most Moroccans were delighted to have such a choice that raised in its electoral campaign a slogan targeting despotism and corruption among those in power. However, after one year most Moroccans still see no real changes. Corruption is increasing despite the efforts in the media to raise public awareness about the problem, young people with college degrees calling for jobs are badly beaten daily near the parliament, the gap between the rich and the poor is getting larger, and no real reform has occurred in the educational system, etc.

The head of the government, Abdilah Benkirane, in his frequent discourses talks about crocodiles and ghosts without mentioning them by names. He considers them the resistors of change and democracy. Hence, is such discourse tenable and practical, especially from a man who is in power and he is elected democratically? If the head of the government can?t name the cat by its name, what about the lay men and women?

Benkirane should, rather, be bold and brave enough to speak the truth and to make Moroccans, who trust his party and voted for change and democracy, aware of who these people are. Democracy building is a task based on clarity, engagement and mutual trust. Better to face people with the bitter truth than to soothe them with unforgivable excuses. Political leadership requires responsibility and taking the right decisions in due time regardless of the possible consequences. The democratization of Morocco is a process that is in need of more sacrifice and courage.

This process should involve also the opposition which seems to be divided and scattered. Worse of all, some of it is not leading even a real internal democracy. We hear daily in local newspapers about undemocratic deeds in their internal elections, subdivisions, alliances and conspiracies amidst free-floating accusations. The so called historical parties whose ex-leaders sacrificed themselves for this nation challenging all the dire conditions are now running after their own benefits and egocentrism.

The rationale behind honing in on such a political landscape, that is framing Morocco after the democratic spring, is to put us under the microscope of the bitter reality; admitting that the real waves of change are still downloading. In a nutshell, we can state as the Ghanaian author Ayi Kwei Armah wrote in his novel THE BEAUTIFUL ONES ARE NOT YET BORN .

?Mounir Beniche is a contributor to Morocco World News from Meknes

The views expressed in this article are the author?s own and do not necessarily reflect Morocco World News? editorial policy

? Morocco World News. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, rewritten or redistributed

Source: http://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2013/02/77951/the-beautiful-ones-are-not-yet-born/

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Pope to leave behind a Church in crisis

AFP - Pope Benedict XVI will leave behind a Catholic Church grappling with crises from child abuse scandals involving priests to confronting radical Islam as well as struggling to find its place in an increasingly secular Western world.

German cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who will step down at the end of this month after an eight-year pontificate, was elected pope on April 19, 2005 at a time when anger at clerical abuse was at its height in parts of Europe and North America, shaking the faith of many ordinary Catholics.

In 2008, he became the first pope to express "shame" over the abuse and to meet victims.

But he was criticised for failing to realise the scale of the problem during his previous 24-year career as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the main doctrinal body of the Church.

Widely seen as an ultra-conservative, the first German pope in history has proved in many ways more flexible and modern than his Polish predecessor.

He was the first pope to speak about the possibility of using a condom, although only in the very specific case of a sex worker with AIDS.

In a book of interviews that came out in 2010 entitled "Light of the World" he said this could be a first step towards a "more humane sexuality".

He has also avoided giving moral lessons and has spoken -- often in a very personal way -- on matters of faith.

Benedict focused his papacy on restoring the Catholic Church's identity, improving the coherence of its message and pushing for a respectful dialogue with other faiths and with atheists.

He has seen himself as a source of stability amid lingering uncertainties following the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s and the pontificate of John Paul II, which was marred by the late pope's long illness and his hugely conservative outlook.

Nicknamed "God's Rottweiler" in Germany for his strictness while at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Benedict began stamping his authority on the Church even before becoming pope.

As pope, he preferred to be surrounded by prelates who were loyal to the faith and he was always distant from the intrigues of the Curia, which eventually caught up with him last year.

The "Vatileaks" scandal in which hundreds of confidential papal memos were leaked to the press by his once loyal butler Paolo Gabriele revealed serious tensions in the Vatican, particularly between conservatives and progressives, advocates of transparency and of secrecy.

A reserved man, people who have met him say Benedict is attentive and hospitable in person.

He has been keen to communicate through new media, becoming the first ever pope with a Twitter account.

He has said he believes the Church will be marginalised if it does not keep up with the times.

At the same time, he has also said Christianity will only remain credible in the modern world if it is demanding.

A smaller and more confident Church is preferable to a vague community of faith, he has said.

Concerning internal reforms, he has ruled out any change on the rule of priestly celibacy.

He also opened the door to conservative Anglicans opposed to the ordination of women and gay people.

At the same time, he increased dialogue with Orthodox believers and with Protestants.

Initially shunned by Muslims over some misunderstood and controversial comments linking the religion to violence, he multiplied his appeals in recent years for a peaceful coexistence between the world's two great monotheistic religions.

He has however been less of a diplomat than his predecessor John Paul II, calling for greater openness in China and peace in the Middle East with little tangible effect.

Source: http://www.france24.com/en/20130211-pope-leave-behind-church-crisis

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University of Florida reports 2012 US shark attacks highest since 2000

...GAINESVILLE Fla. Shark attacks in the U.S. reached a decade high in ...The U.S. saw an upturn in attacks with 53 the most since 2000. There ... Those two areas are sort of hot spots in the world Western Australia...Eighty unprovoked attacks occurred worldwide slightly more than 2011....

GAINESVILLE, Fla. Shark attacks in the U.S. reached a decade high in 2012, while worldwide fatalities remained average, according to the University of Florida's International Shark Attack File report released today.

The U.S. saw an upturn in attacks with 53, the most since 2000. There were seven fatalities worldwide, which is lower than 2011 but higher than the yearly average of 4.4 from 2001 to 2010. It is the second consecutive year for multiple shark attacks in Western Australia (5) and Reunion Island (3) in the southwest Indian Ocean, which indicates the localities have developed problematic situations, said George Burgess, director of the file housed at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus.

"Those two areas are sort of hot spots in the world Western Australia is a function of white shark incidents and Reunion is a function most likely of bull shark incidents," Burgess said. "What I've seen in all situations when there's been a sudden upswing in an area is that human-causative factors are involved, such as changes in our behavior, changes in our abundance, or an overt shark-attracting product of something that we're doing."

Eighty unprovoked attacks occurred worldwide, slightly more than 2011. Four attacks were recorded in South Africa, three of which resulted in death, which is higher than its recent average of one fatality per year. Australia had an average year with 14 attacks and two fatalities, despite the media attention regarding incidents in Western Australia that resulted in a government-sanctioned culling hunt for endangered white sharks.

"The concept of 'let's go out and kill them' is an archaic approach to a shark attack problem, and its opportunities for success are generally slim-to-none," Burgess said. "It's mostly a feel-good revenge like an 'eye for an eye' approach when in fact you're not likely to catch the shark that was involved in the situation. The shark that was involved in th
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Page: 1 2 3

Related biology news :

1. Rice University lab show how blood vessels regroup after stroke
2. Sustaining Coastal Cities Conference at Northeastern University
3. In a fight to the finish, Saint Louis University research aims knockout punch at hepatitis B
4. University-developed omega-3-rich ground beef available soon
5. Aarhus University builds research station in North Greenland
6. National Academy of Inventors honors 3 University of Houston professors
7. Clemson University researchers to study oil and gas operations impact on Gulf Coast pelicans
8. Israel Prize awarded to Tel Aviv University biochemist
9. Clemson University researchers: What happens to peaches when the chill is gone?
10. Vitamin D holds promise in battling a deadly breast cancer, Saint Louis University researchers say
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Source: http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-news-1/University-of-Florida-reports-2012-US-shark-attacks-highest-since-2000-28824-1/

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Army refuses to release investigation details - Health & Fitness - The ...

ADAM ASHTON | Staff writer ? Published February 11, 2013 Modified February 10, 2013

Army leaders insist they have fixed flaws in Madigan Army Medical Center?s behavioral health department that resulted in the misdiagnoses of hundreds of patients. But they have refused to release reports that could substantiate their findings and shed light on what happened at the Army hospital last year.

The latest in a long string of denials and non-disclosures happened last week when Secretary of the Army John McHugh visited Joint Base Lewis-McChord. He called a press conference Monday to announce the completion of an Army-wide behavioral health investigation that stemmed from the Madigan reports, but he declined to share it.

McHugh said a task force review had generated 24 findings and 47 recommendations, but he would not release them and described only one. He signed a memo intended to bolster Army wellness programs and left open the door to release more information later.

?It is my intent to make major portions of that document available,? he told reporters. ?I?m not here to design any kind of cover up or not put out those data points, and I?ll make those available to you.?

Later in the week, the Army rejected a Freedom of Information Act request filed by The News Tribune and The Seattle Times seeking the Madigan investigations ? a request that the newspapers made in September.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., called the slow release of information ?frustrating.?

?We still don?t have all the information we need,? she said Friday. ?We are going to have to keep pressing the military to get it.?

The newspapers requested Army investigations that centered specifically on Madigan. The Army in November issued a ?partial denial? of the requests, contending the reports were ?pre-decisional? and would be used in a broader review of Army programs.

The newspapers appealed the denial in January, pointing to multiple corrective actions the Army had already announced in August, including the reinstatement of Madigan commander Col. Dallas Homas.

In its rejection of the newspapers? appeal issued last week, the Army found that the Madigan reports should remain exempt from public disclosure requirements in the Freedom of Information Act because they contain confidential material that shaped Army decisions.

It again called the Madigan reports ?pre-decisional? because they include findings that were intended to nurture ?frank and open? internal discussions. Releasing the information also could inhibit candor in future investigations, or confuse the public, an Army attorney wrote in the FOIA denial.

McHugh summarized the behavioral health findings in a telephone call to Murray, a member and former chairwoman of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee. She expects to receive a briefing on the report, and hopes to persuade the Army at least to release more information about its behavioral health findings and recommendations.

Michelle Earl-Hubbard, a Seattle attorney for the Allied Law Group who specializes in open government, said the military ?is not known for openness and accountability.?

The Army?s denial of the newspapers? FOIA requests fits that tendency, she said.

?It is unfortunate in this latest matter, so important to the public and members of our military, the Army is continuing this practice of secrecy and denial. Its citation of the FOIA exemptions at issue appears to be a violation of the law in both spirit as well as letter, particularly at this stage of the investigation,? she said.

The most recent FOIA denial came from the Army?s Office of General Counsel, which reports to the Army secretary, undersecretary and assistant secretaries in the Pentagon.

Officers at Lewis-McChord last week said they were working to release more information that could resolve local questions about the behavioral health investigations.

?We take all FOIA requests seriously,? said Col. Dave Johnson of Lewis-McChord?s I Corps. ?We do our due diligence to try to run them down.?

McHugh?s public information officer, Maj. Chris Kasker, said on Friday that the Army secretary intends to release the Army-wide report.

?The Secretary of the Army not only plans to release the Army Task Force on Behavior Health Report once it?s finalized, but to share with soldiers and their families issues the Army has identified and the ways we intend to fix them. But at this point, it?s a working document, and many of details are still being reviewed and validated. This is too important an issue not to take the time to get right.?

TREND OF SECRECY

The Army?s refusal so far to release more detailed information about its findings at the hospital south of Tacoma has similarities with an incident from 21/2 years ago. Complaints at Madigan surfaced in May 2010 from Oregon National Guard members who felt they were mistreated after returning from a deployment to Iraq.

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., demanded answers, and five Army generals promised a thorough report.

The News Tribune filed a FOIA request for the reports that fall and received documents that were almost entirely blacked out. The Army refused to describe what was wrong at the hospital, citing a ?quality assurance? exemption in the Freedom of Information Act that it said was applicable to medical investigations.

The Army Medical Command also wouldn?t allow Col. Jerome Penner, Madigan?s commander at the time, to discuss how the hospital changed its practices as a result of the inquiry.

The denials contrast with reports the Army issued in 2007 describing its investigation into complaints of mistreatment of wounded service members at Walter Reed Army Medical Center near Washington, D.C. That investigation resulted in testimony before Congress and the publication of reports calling for changes at military hospitals.

REMARKS SIGNAL END

This time, the Army said the problems were isolated to a forensic psychiatry team that operated only at Madigan.

That team consisted of psychologists who had the final say on diagnoses during medical disability reviews. Sometimes, they changed diagnoses in such a way that patients lost benefits for combat-related ailments such as post-traumatic stress disorder. An Army inspector general obtained a report that showed a Madigan doctor encouraging his colleagues to consider the long-term costs to taxpayers of a PTSD diagnosis.

The forensic psychiatry program was once cited as an example of ?best practices? in Army medicine. In November, the Army announced it gave new diagnoses to 267 patients who passed through the program; 150 of them learned they had PTSD.

In August, Army Vice Chief of Staff Gen. Lloyd Austin sought to settle the controversy by announcing that the forensic psychologists didn?t do anything wrong, but that the Army would nonetheless terminate the widespread application of their services.

?What we found is that the forensic methods are not the right ones for the United States Army disability evaluation system,? he said at the time. ?We learned (Madigan) officials acted in accordance with the standard of practice for civilian disability evaluations. But we also learned that while the evaluation may be fair and appropriate, it?s simply not optimal for the unique cases that the Army diagnoses and reviews. We?ve fixed that.?

His remarks signaled the end of the Army?s investigation, and the beginning of the newspapers? requests for a more detailed account.

Adam Ashton: 253-597-8646 adam.ashton@ thenewstribune.com

Source: http://www.theolympian.com/2013/02/11/2418437/army-refuses-to-release-investigation.html

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Northeast digs out from blizzard, storm brewing in Plains

BOSTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Northeast started digging itself out of a blizzard that dumped up to 40 inches of snow with hurricane force winds, killing at least nine people and leaving about half a million customers without power.

Airports slowly cranked back to life on Sunday, rare travel bans in Connecticut and Massachusetts were lifted, but roads throughout the region remained treacherous, according to state transportation departments.

As the region recovered, another large winter storm building across the Northern Plains was expected to leave a foot of snow and bring high winds from Colorado to central Minnesota into Monday, the National Weather Service said.

South Dakota was expected to be hardest hit, with winds reaching 50 miles per hour, creating white-out conditions. The storm was expected to reach parts of Nebraska, North Dakota, Wyoming and Wisconsin.

Friday and Saturday's mammoth storm stretched from the Great Lakes to the Atlantic and covered several spots in the Northeast with more than 3 feet of snow. Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts took the brunt of the blizzard.

Hamden, Connecticut, had 40 inches and nearby Milford 38 inches, the National Weather Service said.

Amtrak said it planned to run a limited service between New York and Boston on Sunday and a regular Sunday schedule from New York to the state capital in Albany.

However, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority and Connecticut Transit said service would remain suspended Sunday.

Stratford, Connecticut, Mayor John Harkins told WTNH television on Saturday snow had fallen at a rate of 6 inches an hour and even plows were getting stuck.

The storm dropped 31.9 inches of snow on Portland, Maine, breaking a 1979 record, the weather service said. Winds gusted to 83 miles per hour (134 km per hour) at Cuttyhunk, New York, and brought down trees across the region.

The storm contributed to at least five deaths in Connecticut and two each in New York state and Boston, authorities said. A motorist in New Hampshire also died when he went off a road, but authorities said his health may have been a factor in the crash.

The two deaths in Boston were separate incidents of carbon monoxide poisoning in cars, an 11-year-old boy and a man in his early 20s. The boy had climbed into the family car to keep warm while his father cleared snow. The engine was running but the exhaust was blocked, said authorities.

There were also road rescues along the Long Island Expressway from Friday night to Saturday morning, some using snowmobiles. A baby girl was delivered early Saturday by emergency services personnel in Worcester, Massachusetts.

About 5,800 flights were canceled Friday and Saturday, according to Flightaware, a flight tracking service. Boston's Logan International Airport reopened late on Saturday, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, and Long Island MacArthur Airport were both expected to reopen on Sunday morning. Both were closed on Saturday.

By early Sunday, utility companies were reporting roughly 500,000 customers still without electricity across the nine state region after the wet heavy snow brought down tree branches and power lines. About 277,000 were in Massachusetts.

(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Wisconsin, Scott Malone in Boston, Kevin Gray in Miami, Ellen Wulfhorst in New York, Ian Simpson in Washington, Jason McLure in Maine, Dan Burns in Connecticut, and Dan Lovering and Zach Howard in Massachusetts; Writing by David Bailey; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blizzard-hammers-northeast-nine-dead-700-000-lose-031347041.html

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