Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Your Privacy Is Our Priority: Microsoft Launches New Online Privacy Awareness Campaign

privacy_priority_msftWith “Don’t Get Scroogled,” Microsoft went for shock and awe in its fight against Google by arguing that the search giant can’t be trusted with your personal information. Today, Microsoft is launching a far more restrained campaign: an online safety and security resource center, a privacy quiz and a new TV ad that proclaims that “your privacy is [Microsoft's] priority.” Unlike “Scroogled,” which takes some cheap shots against Microsoft’s competition, this new campaign takes a more general and positive approach.?The campaign, Microsoft’s general manager for Internet Explorer Ryan Gavin says in today’s post, is meant “to help people learn more about the tools and technologies Microsoft provides that give them have greater control over personal information as they browse the web and use their favorite Microsoft devices.” For Microsoft, of course, this is also an opportunity to highlight features like the default “Do Not Track” settings in Internet Explorer 10, it’s Personal Data Dashboard and Bing’s privacy settings. Not everything Microsoft does in this space is new, of course. Every other browser also features an “incognito mode” in some form or another and Microsoft, of course, isn’t the only company to enable “Do Not Track” in its browser (Google and Mozilla also do so). It’s still unclear whether advertisers will ever fully support this feature anyway. Microsoft clearly believes that it has an advantage against Google when it comes to people’s perception of how trustworthy the company is. A recent Ponemon survey that looked at how consumers’ perception of how trustworthy companies are, Microsoft outranked Google. As #17 on this list, however, Microsoft was still ranked well behind American Express, HP, Amazon, IBM, Verizon, Disney and other major companies, with Mozilla – which is relatively unknown as a mainstream brand – coming in as #20.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/vUXXdZeq6Vc/

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Monday, April 22, 2013

bloggervalley: AdSense Adds Link Unit Ad Previews For Higher ...

Google recently updated their Adsense link units to include thumbnails in the ad pages? in order to improve publishers' performance. From now on link unit ad pages will show previews of advertisers' landing page in addition to the usual text links. Tests conducted by Google showed thumbnail images generated higher CTR (Click-Through Rates), leading to increased publisher revenue and more conversions for advertisers.

This update is available to all publishers except publishers in any of these countries:

  • Austria, Brazil, China, Germany, Indonesia, Mexico, Pakistan, Philippines, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland and Turkey.
and publishers in any of these site verticals:
  • Arts & Entertainment, Astrology & Divination, Biographies & Quotations, Body Art, Bollywood & South Asian Film, Cards & Greetings, Casual Games, Celebrities & Entertainment News, Christmas, Clip Art & Animated GIFs, Computer & Video Games, Crafts, Dating & Personals, Email & Messaging, Family-Oriented Games & Activities, Hair Care, Homemaking & Interior Decor, Humor, Maps, Mathematics, Men's Interests (Mature), Music Streams & Downloads, Online Games, Online Goodies, Online Image Galleries, Online Video, Photo & Video Software, Skins Themes & Wallpapers, Time & Calendars and Webcams & Virtual Tours.

Source: http://bloggervalley.blogspot.com/2013/04/adsense-adds-link-unit-ad-previews-for.html

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Source: http://jeansstderek.typepad.com/blog/2013/04/bloggervalley-adsense-adds-link-unit-ad-previews-for-higher-ctr.html

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Boston Bomber Suspects Had Attended Cambridge Mosque, Officials Say

A mosque in Cambridge, Mass., confirmed Saturday that Dzhokhar Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the Chechen-born brothers suspected in the Boston marathon attacks, infrequently attended services at the small center that was a 10-minute walk from their apartment.

"In their visits, they never exhibited any violent sentiments or behavior. Otherwise they would have been immediately reported to the FBI," said the statement from the Islamic Center of Boston. "After we learned of their identities, we encouraged anyone who knew them in our congregation to immediate report to law enforcement, which has taken place."

Anwar Kazmi, a member of the mosque's board of trustees, told a USA Today reporter that 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who died early Friday morning after a shootout with police, was an infrequent attendee for about a year-and-a-half, while 19-year-old Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, who was captured hiding in a boat in Watertown on Friday night, attended only once.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Tamerlan Tsarnaev was kicked out of the mosque three months ago after he interrupted a Friday prayer service to argue with the imam. The imam leading the service had enraged Tsarnaev by talking about Martin Luther King Jr. A congregant told the newspaper that Tsarnaev shouted, "you cannot mention this guy because he?s not a Muslim!?

Imam Suhaib Webb, of the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, the city's largest mosque, said in an interview that he had recently heard of the incident. "That's a sign right there that his views aren't mainstream," Webb said.

The Cambridge mosque leaders' theology is not extremist, he said. Webb's mosque has the same owners but separate administration from the Islamic Society of Boston. Webb said he never met the brothers and had not found their names on his mosque's membership list.

Reports previously quoted friends of the brothers saying they had attended the mosque, but Saturday was the first time the mosque confirmed their association.

"Right now, our focus will remain on grieving for the victims and their families, praying for a speedy recovery for the injured, and offering what support we can to all in need," the statement said.

Friends and family have described Tamerlan Tsarnaev as becoming more strident in his religious views in recent years. Federal authorities are investigating a six-month trip he took in 2012 to Chechnya and Dagestan, Muslim-majority regions in Russia and home to militant separatist movements. Reports have painted Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev as also being interested in Chechen independence movements.

The investigation is ongoing into the motivation behind the crimes.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/20/boston-bombers-mosque-cambridge_n_3125192.html

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Tsarnaev Brothers: For Bombing Suspects, Question May Be Who Led Whom

BOSTON -- Tamerlan Tsarnaev ranted at a neighbor about Islam and the United States. His younger brother, Dzhokhar, relished debating people on religion, "then crushing their beliefs with facts."

The older brother sought individual glory in the boxing ring, while the younger excelled as part of a team. Tamerlan "swaggered" through the family home like a "man-of-the-house type," one visitor recalls, while Dzhokhar seemed "very respectful and very obedient" to his mother.

The brothers, now forever linked in the Boston Marathon bombing tragedy, in some ways seemed as different as siblings could be. But whatever drove them to allegedly set off two pressure-cooker bombs, their uncle is certain Dzhokhar was not the one pulling the strings.

"He's not been understanding anything. He's a 19-year-old boy," Ruslan Tsarni said of his brother's youngest child, who is clinging to life in a Boston hospital after a gunbattle with police. "He's been absolutely wasted by his older brother. I mean, he used him. He used him for whatever he's done. For what we see they've done. OK?"

Criminologist James Alan Fox says the uncle's intuition is justified. In cases like this, he says, it is highly unusual for the younger participant ? in this case, a sibling ? to be the leader.

"I would be surprised," says Fox, a professor of Criminology, Law and Public Policy at Boston's Northeastern University. "Very surprised."

Whatever their fraternal pecking order, when the bullets began flying in Watertown on Thursday night and 26-year-old Tamerlan went down, his younger brother ran him over ? dragging him for about 30 feet ? before ditching the car and fleeing on foot. After a 24-hour manhunt that shut down most of the Boston metropolitan area, police cornered the gravely wounded Dzhokhar hiding in a boat in a backyard, only blocks from where his brother bled out.

Officials said Dzhokhar was in serious condition Saturday, unable to communicate. So, at least for now, investigators and the public are left with only enigma.

The ethnic Chechen family came to this country in 2002, after fleeing troubles in Kyrgyzstan and then Dagestan, a predominantly Muslim republic in Russia's North Caucasus. They settled in a working-class part of Cambridge, where the father, Anzor Tsarnaev, opened an auto shop.

He returned to Dagestan about a year ago.

Luis Vasquez went to high school with Tamerlan and later helped coach Dzhokhar's soccer team at Cambridge Rindge and Latin. With the father gone, Vasquez said, the older brother assumed a kind of paternal role, at least where the girls in the family were concerned.

"He was very protective of his (younger) sister, Bella," Vasquez said. "He would keep an eye out, making sure she's good, making sure she's not having a hard time."

Vasquez chalked it up to "his culture" and "what his family expected out of him."

David Mijares, who trained in boxing with Tamerlan in high school and later coached the younger brother in soccer, agreed that his friend felt pressure to take his father's place.

"He had to be a man at a very early age," says Mijares. "That would be, in my opinion, a huge reason for who he was, all serious and no nonsense."

John Pinto said the pair were frequent patrons at his Midwest Grill, just a couple of blocks from their house. When they walked in, he said, Tamerlan was always in the lead.

"I think the big brother is more the command guy, boss," Pinto said, puffing out his chest for emphasis.

That said, Dzhokhar was very much his own man. While he would tag along to Tamerlan's boxing practices, the younger brother was into wrestling.

In one of his tweets, he complained that his mother was trying to arrange a marriage for him, as she'd done for his sisters.

"she needs to (hash)chillout," he tweeted on July 12. "i'll find my own honey."

Tamerlan preceded his brother at the prestigious Cambridge Rindge and Latin High School, which counts celebrities Matt Damon and Ben Affleck among its alumni. But he does not appear to have been a standout student and athlete whose reputation Dzhokhar would have felt pressure to live up to.

"To be perfectly honest, I did not know he HAD an older brother from the start," said classmate Alexandros Stefanakis, who played pickup basketball games and hung out with Dzhokhar outside school.

Anne Kilzer of Belmont would go to the Tsarnaev home for regular facials from the boys' mother, Zubeidat. She said the older brother was a "macho guy," whereas Dzhokhar seemed more cerebral.

The few times that Tamerlan was there, he would wave his mother off when she tried to introduce him. "He sort of swaggered through," she said. "Sort of a man-of-the-house type."

In a blog entry, Kilzer's daughter, Alyssa, suggested that the mother became increasingly religious as their acquaintance progressed. For instance, she began wearing a hijab, the traditional Muslim headscarf.

"She started to refuse to see boys that had gone through puberty, as she had consulted a religious figure and he had told her it was sacrilegious," Alyssa Kilzer wrote. "She was often fasting. She told me that she had cried for days when her oldest son, Tamerlan, told her that he wanted to move out, going against her culture's tradition of the son staying in the house with the mother until marriage."

She said the mother also expressed some rather strident views about the U.S. government. But it was difficult to know who was influencing whom in the household.

"During this facial session she started quoting a conspiracy theory, telling me that she thought 9-11 was purposefully created by the American government to make America hate Muslims," Alyssa Kilzer wrote. "`It's real,' she said. `My son knows all about it. You can read on the internet.'"

Kilzer didn't say to which son the mother was referring. Kilzer, who is studying in Scotland, could not immediately be reached.

Tsarni told The Associated Press from his home in Maryland that a deep rift opened between him and his sister-in-law, but that he tried to maintain a relationship with the boys. However, that effort began to fall apart several years ago, he said, when Tamerlan "started carrying all this nonsense associated with religion, with Islamic religion."

When he asked his older nephew why he wasn't in school, he said Tamerlan gave an enigmatic answer. "Oh, I'm in God's business," the young man replied.

Tamerlan would throw out foreign words like "jihad" and "Inshallah" ? Arabic for "God willing" ? without really understanding their meaning, he said. Though Tsarni is himself Muslim, he said he does not worship at a mosque.

The uncle was surprised when he learned that Tamerlan had gotten married to an American woman ? a "good Christian family girl," who his nephew said was about to convert to Islam.

In February, Alexander Podobryaev, who lives a couple of houses from the Tsarnaevs, exchanged pleasantries with Tamerlan as they shoveled snow. He says the man pointed to a woman in a black Muslim headscarf and identified her as his wife.

Others began noticing signs of Tamerlan's increasing agitation.

One of the brothers' neighbors, Albrecht Ammon, said he had a bizarre encounter with Tamerlan in a pizza shop about three months ago. The older brother argued with him about U.S. foreign policy, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and religion.

He said Tamerlan referred to the Bible as a "cheap copy" of the Quran, and that many of this country's wars "are based upon the Bible ? how it's an excuse to invade other countries."

"He had nothing against the American people," Ammon said. "He had something against the American government."

Dzhokhar, on the other hand, was "real cool," Ammon said. "A chill guy."

An elder at the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, the largest mosque in New England, said Tamerlan occasionally attended Friday prayer services at the mosque in the past year and a half.

About three months ago, around Martin Luther King Day, Tamerlan stood up and interrupted the imam during the sermon, said Anwar Kazmi, a board member of the Islamic Society. The imam compared the slain civil rights leads to the Prophet Muhammed, drawing objections from Tamerlan, Kazmi said.

Mosque leaders later sat down with Tamerlan and discussed his rant, said Kazmi, who said Tamerlan returned to future services and had no further outbursts.

While his older brother was railing about religion and world politics, Dzhokhar seemed more interested in the HBO series "Game of Thrones" and other television shows.

"Breaking Bad taught me how to dispose of a corpse," he tweeted on Jan. 16, referring to the popular AMC series about a dying chemistry teacher who turns to cooking methamphetamine to leave a nest egg for his family.

He did tweet about religion, but they were hardly the words of a hard-core zealot.

"This night deserves Hennessy a bad b---- and an o of weed," he wrote on Nov. 17. "the holy trinity"

On Nov. 29, he wrote: "I kind of like religious debates, just hearing what other people believe is interesting and then crushing their beliefs with facts is fun." And on Jan. 15: "I don't argue with fools who say Islam is terrorism it's not worth a thing, let an idiot remain an idiot."

However, he acknowledged in another message around Christmas that the "Brothers at the mosque either think I'm a convert or that I'm from Algeria or Syria."

Fox said it's not unheard of for the younger person in a crime team to be the dominant personality. But he said it's rare.

"In this case, the older brother is the one that seems to have become religious and drawn to Islam," Fox said. "The older brother dropped out of school ... whereas the younger brother, it was all positives."

But, he said, "the age factor is critical here."

Tamerlan was a fairly gifted boxer, but he preened about fighting prowess that often fell far short. His younger brother seemed content to be part of a team.

Marvin Salazar was two years older than Dzhokhar when they attended Community Charter Schools of Cambridge, where they played intramural soccer together. He was impressed by the younger boy's smarts and drive, but noted that while Dzhokhar was very fast, he wasn't the kind of kid who needed to showboat and score goals.

"I remember he told me he liked to play midfield," the 21-year-old said. "He's the guy who sets everybody up for the plays. He's one of the most important people."

He was also on his high school wrestling team.

Tamerlan once said he had no American friends. His brother had lots of them, but fellow students at UMass-Dartmouth say he also hung out with some Russian speakers.

On March 14, 2012, Dzhokhar tweeted: "a decade in america already, i want out" That same day, he added, "im trying to grow a beard"

Dzhokhar became naturalized last September, federal officials told the AP. His older brother had a green card but may have been thwarted in his quest for U.S. citizenship by an assault charge, his father told The New York Times.

If Tamerlan recorded his thoughts, they have not yet surfaced ? at least publicly. His brother left a trail on the Internet, although in an Aug. 7, 2012 tweet, he called himself a "heavy sleeper and a great liar"

In March, Dzhokhar tweeted: "Evil triumphs when good men do nothing." A week and a half earlier, he reminded his followers, "Never underestimate the rebel with a cause."

The day of the bombing, he wrote: "There are people that know the truth but stay silent & there are people that speak the truth but we don't hear them cuz they're the minority"

Tsarni is confident authorities will find that Tamerlan was his younger brother's "mentor."

"Dzhokhar, of course, was looking up at him," he said.

But their body language the day of the bombings seems to suggest at least a partnership of equals.

In one of the now infamous photos the FBI released to the public in hopes of tips, the older brother has his head down, the visor pulled low over his face as if he's trying to hide. Dzhokhar, by contrast, has his white baseball cap turned backward, revealing his entire face, his chin is thrust confidently into the air.

___

Associated Press videojournalist Joseph Frederick contributed to this report.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/20/tsarnaev-brothers_n_3125550.html

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Box office out of this world for Cruise's 'Oblivion'

By Pamela McClintock, The Hollywood Reporter

Tom Cruise's sci-fi pic "Oblivion" opened to $38.2 million at the domestic box office to come in No. 1 after a better-than-expected performance and despite a B- CinemaScore. Overseas, the Universal pic continued to please, grossing $33.7 million in its second weekend for an international cume of $112 million and worldwide total of $150.2 million.

The movie marks the actor's best North American opening outside of the "Mission: Impossible" franchise, not accounting for inflation.

Directed by Joseph Kosinski ("Tron: Legacy"), "Oblivion" co-stars Morgan Freeman, Olga Kurylenko, Andrea Riseborough, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Melissa Leo. Peter Chernin and Dylan Clark produced. The pic cost Universal and Elliot Inc. at least $120 million to produce.

Adult male moviegoers fueled "Oblivion," making up 57 percent of the audience.

Cruise's track record domestically has been mixed. "Jack Reacher" debuted to $15.2 million in December on its way to earning a so-so $80 million in North America. Conversely, "Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol," opening to $29.6 million in December 2011, turned into a box-office monster, grossing nearly $700 million worldwide.

PHOTOS: 30 groundbreaking sci-fi films

Sci-fi is a familiar genre for Cruise, who starred in "War of the Worlds" and "Minority Report," both directed by Steven Spielberg.

Set in 2077, 60 years after Earth has been destroyed by aliens, "Oblivion" follows one of the last humans stationed on the planet as he uncovers a troubling secret.

Universal decided to get a jump on the beginning of the crowded summer box office by opening "Oblivion" now. The studio has gone aggressively after males by advertising during major sporting events including the NCAA's March Madness.

Speaking of sports, Legendary and Warner Bros.' Jackie Robinson biopic "42" continued to score strong numbers in its second weekend, declining a slim 34 percent to come in No. 2 with $18 million. The baseball drama's 10-day domestic total is $54.1 million.

Paramount's "G.I. Joe: Retaliation" jumped the $300 million mark in its fourth weekend, thanks to stellar $33 million opening in China. The sequel has grossed $111.2 million domestically and $211.7 million internationally for a worldwide cume of $322.9 million. In China, the pic outpaced the first film by a four-to-one margin.

Expanding nationwide over the weekend, Derek Cianfrance's indie drama "The Place Beyond the Pines," starring Bradley Cooper and Ryan Gosling, placed No. 6 in North America. The film, from Focus Features and Sidney Kimmel, took in $4.7 million for a total $11.4 million.

PHOTOS: Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman at "Oblivion" premiere

Below are the top 10 estimates for the April 12-14 weekend at the domestic box office.

Title, weeks in release/theater count, studio, three-day weekend total, cume.

  1. "Oblivion," 1/3,783, Universal, $38.2 million
  2. "42," 2/3,250, Warners/Legendary, $18 million, $54.1 million
  3. "The Croods," 5/3,435, Fox/DreamWorks Animation, $9.5, $154.9 million
  4. "Scary Movie 5," 2/3,402, The Weinstein Co., $6.3 million, $22.9 million
  5. "G.I. Joe: Retaliation," 4/3,175, Paramount, $5.8 million, $111.2 million
  6. "The Place Beyond the Pines," 4/1,542, Focus/Sidney Kimmel, $4.7 million, $11.4 million
  7. "Evil Dead," 3/2,823, Sony/TriStar/FilmDistrict, $4.1 million, $48.5 million
  8. "Olympus Has Fallen," 5/2,638, FilmDistrict, $4.5 million, $88.1 million
  9. "Jurassic Park," 3/2,330, Universal, $4 million, $38.5 million
  10. "Oz The Great and Powerful," 7/2,504, Disney, $3 million, $223.8 million

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/21/17849781-tom-cruises-oblivion-obliterates-competition-with-38-milllion-box-office?lite

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After shipwreck, Costa Concordia gets the musical treatment

The 2012 Costa Concordia cruise ship sinking is the loose inspiration for a new Bollywood-style musical to be filmed in Italy this summer.

By Nick Squires,?Correspondent / April 17, 2013

The luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia leans on its side after running aground in the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Jan. 2012.

Gregorio Borgia/AP/File

Enlarge

It was one of the most dramatic maritime disasters in modern times, but the Costa Concordia tragedy has now inspired a Bollywood-style musical.

Skip to next paragraph Nick Squires

Italy Correspondent

Nick Squires has been?based in Rome since 2008, from which he covers Italy, the Vatican, and surrounding countries, from Greece to the Balkans. Educated at Oxford University, he spent two years working at a newspaper in Hong Kong before joining the BBC World Service in London. He then spent eight years based in Sydney, from where he covered Australia and traveled on assignments to the South Pacific, East Timor, and Papua New Guinea.

Recent posts

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In an initiative that may seem insensitive to some, an Indian film company will start shooting the movie in Italy over the next few weeks.

The film has no name yet, but it will be loosely based on the plight of the Costa Concordia, the luxury cruise ship which partially sank after ploughing into rocks off the tiny island of Giglio in January 2012.

Thirty-two people lost their lives in the accident, including a 5-year-old girl.

Basing an all-singing, all-dancing film on the tragedy may see ghoulish, but those behind the movie insist it will be done tastefully.

?It will be only loosely based on the sinking of the Costa Concordia,"?says Stefania Ippoliti of the Tuscan Film Commission, which is helping with the project.?"It?s about a group of people who are stranded on an island after a shipwreck.?It will be very light in tone, nothing like the actual disaster. It?s going to be a romantic comedy, not a tragedy.?

Location scouts are expected to arrive soon, with filming to start at the end of May or in early June.

It will be filmed somewhere in the Tuscan archipelago of islands ? not on Giglio itself, because of local sensitivities and the fact that the island has in effect become a giant naval shipyard, as a multi-national team of engineers works to refloat the wreck of the Concordia and tow it off to be scrapped on the Italian mainland.

Location scouts will instead look at some of the other islands in the archipelago ? possibly nearby Elba, where Napoleon was sent into exile, or tiny Capraia and Pianosa.

The film is to be made by?Sri Mishri Productions, a company based in Chennai in the southern Indian province of Tamil Nadu.

It won?t in fact, be a ?Bollywood? movie because that denotes movies made in Hindi by the film industry based in Mumbai, the city once known as Bombay.

Instead?it is part of a Tamil language genre of movies known as ?Kollywood," a nickname that combines Hollywood and Kodambakkam, a neighborhood in Chennai.

Perhaps surprisingly, the concept of Kollywood-meets-the-Concordia has been welcomed by at least one survivor.

Benji Smith, an American who was on his honeymoon on the Concordia when it went down, thinks it is a ?wonderful? idea.

?As long as the story is told well, I think each storyteller should choose the narrative structure and medium that communicates most clearly with their audience,? he says.

Mr. Smith, a computer scientist from Boston, is himself a storyteller ? he wrote a book about the sinking of the cruise liner in which he described how he and his new wife, classical musician Emily Lau, thought they were going to die on the night of the accident.

The book, "Abandoned Ship: An Intimate Account of the Costa Concordia Shipwreck," was self-published in January, just days before the one-year anniversary of the tragedy.

Preliminary hearings are currently taking place in a court in Grosseto, Tuscany, for the former captain of the ship, Francesco Schettino, who is expected to be sent to trial on charges of abandoning ship and manslaughter.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/VEQIBX_16VU/After-shipwreck-Costa-Concordia-gets-the-musical-treatment

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Thursday, April 11, 2013

U.S. tries to cool Korean standoff

South Korean army soldiers patrol along a barbed-wire fence near the border village of the Panmunjom, in Paju,??
Warships might not sail, more missile tests might be postponed, potentially provocative photos of bombers will stay under wraps: After a muscular, even aggressive early response to North Korea?s nuclear saber-rattling, the United States has shifted into a more cautious mode, eager to avoid giving Pyongyang any excuse for further escalation, officials say.

The White House, the Pentagon and the State Department ?are looking very carefully? at American words and pending actions ?to make sure that they can?t be misread, or that the likelihood of them being misread is low? as well as ?to not give the North Koreans fodder for escalation, excuses to take action,? according to an administration official familiar with the U.S. strategy.

?There?s not a formal review going on,? and ?we are not going to withhold or postpone any step that we consider necessary for the safety of the American people,? the official, who requested anonymity, told Yahoo News.

?But those things that could be not necessary? We?re giving those a closer look,? the official said. That means assessing ?our ship deployments, missile tests? to make sure they don?t unnecessarily raise the temperature in the already heated standoff.

The most obvious sign of this new approach out of Washington was Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel?s decision late last week to postpone the test launch of an InterContinental Ballistic Missile that had been scheduled for Tuesday.

"We recognized that an ICBM test at this time might be misconstrued by some as suggesting that we were intending to exacerbate the current crisis with North Korea," a defense official said Monday on condition of anonymity. "We wanted to avoid that misperception or manipulation."

The administration's initial response had several goals.

It aimed to reassure South Korea and Japan about the strength of the U.S. commitment to their security, in part to ensure that South Korea did not do anything rash. There also was the need to deter North Korea and impress upon its young new supreme leader, Kim Jong Un, the seriousness of the situation. And it aimed to avoid turmoil on global markets while making it clear to China that its client state and neighbor had overreached.

So Obama ordered warships to the waters off the Korean peninsula, highlighted the beefed-up missile defense plans and, in an unprecedented move, disclosed that B-2 and B-52 bombers took part in a regular U.S.-South Korean military exercise, dropping dummy munitions. The Pentagon released photographs of those warplanes, sending a "Hey, we can bomb the crap out of you" message to the North, the first official said.

But the American response seemed to change late last week.

In the rhetorical battle, American officials have stuck more closely to a familiar refrain: Rather than respond in detail to every North Korean action, every angry message from Pyongyang, they have emphasized that the Stalinist regime is only isolating itself more and hurting its people. That joint U.S.-South Korea exercise is still underway, but you don't hear quite so much about it.

?It?s been conscious,? the first official said. ?The lowering of the profile of the military, going from showing pictures of stealth bombers to canceling this missile test, it?s all part of an overall attempt to stay lower key.?

The White House has denied it escalated the crisis. And the official emphasized that Washington only aimed "to show our rock-solid commitment to our allies in the region."

But "it's been clear that the North Koreans have decided that they have an interest in going tit-for-tat with us, raising the temperature," the official said. "We have no desire to see this escalate any further."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/u-working-escalate-north-korean-standoff-094001335--politics.html

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Stocks in the News: F, AA, JCP - Crista Huff - Townhall Finance ...

Welcome to John Ransom?s Stocks In The News, where the headline meets the trendline.???

Stock number one is: ???????

Ford Motor Company, (SYMBOL: F) and the headline says:

Ford Focus Tops Global Car Sales?????

The Ford Focus, manufactured by Ford Motor Company, topped 2012 auto sales as the world looks for smaller passenger cars.? Runners-up were the Toyota Corolla and the Ford F-Series pick-up trucks.? Ford CEO Alan Mulally is the driver behind the company?s effort to compete more effectively around the world.?????????

Earnings per share fell in 2012, and are expected to be down a fraction again in 2013, due to economic woes in Europe, a glut on the car market in South America, and margin pressures in China.??????????

Ford stock has been trading sideways for three years.???

Our Ransom Note trendline says: STAY ON THE SIDELINES.????

F Chart

F data by YCharts

Stock number two is:? ??????

ALCOA Inc., (SYMBOL: AA) and the headline says:??????????

Alcoa Handily Beats First Quarter Earnings Estimates???????

Alcoa Inc., the largest U.S. aluminum producer, beat Wall Street estimates today with their first quarter earnings.? Analysts expected 8 cents per share, and Alcoa delivered 11 cents per share, excluding one-time gains.? The company has shifted its manufacturing focus toward more profitable products and solutions, filling an increased demand from? the aerospace and auto industries.?

Source: http://townhall.com/columnists/cristahuff/2013/04/10/stocks-in-the-news-f-aa-jcp-n1562983

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Dozens killed, hundreds injured in earthquake in Iran

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) ? Iranian state TV says a powerful earthquake in a sparsely populated area in the south of the country has killed 30 people and injured 650.

TV said Tuesday's magnitude 6.1 earthquake centered on the town of Kaki did not damage the nuclear plant at Bushehr, a city on the Persian Gulf some 96 kilometers (60 miles) away.

The quake was felt across the Gulf in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

Iran sits on several seismic faults and suffers frequent earthquakes.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-says-30-killed-earthquake-south-160047821.html

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Monday, April 8, 2013

6 Americans, doctor killed in Afghan attacks

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) ? Militants killed six Americans and an Afghan doctor in a pair of attacks in Afghanistan on Saturday, the deadliest day for the United States in the war in eight months.

The violence ? hours after the U.S. military's top officer arrived for consultations with Afghan and U.S.-led coalition officials ? illustrates the instability plaguing the nation as foreign forces work to pull nearly all their combat troops out of the country by the end of 2014.

The attacks came just days after insurgents stormed a courthouse, killing more than 46 people in one of the deadliest attacks of the war, now in its 12th year.

Three U.S. service members, two U.S. civilians and the doctor were killed when a suicide bomber detonated a car full of explosives in the south, officials said. The explosion occurred just as a coalition convoy drove past another caravan of vehicles carrying the governor of Zabul province.

Another American civilian was killed in a separate insurgent attack in eastern Afghanistan, the U.S. military said in a statement.

It was the deadliest day for Americans since Aug. 16, when seven American service members were killed in two attacks in Kandahar province, the birthplace of the Taliban insurgency. Six were killed when their helicopter was shot down by insurgents and one soldier died in a roadside bomb explosion.

The latest attacks occurred just hours after U.S. Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, landed in Afghanistan for a visit aimed at assessing the level of training that American troops can provide to Afghan security forces after international combat forces complete their withdrawal.

The two American civilians killed included at least one U.S. State Department employee, according to a U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of a formal announcement. Several other Americans and Afghans, possibly as many as nine, were wounded, the official said.

The U.S. Embassy in Kabul confirmed that Americans were involved in an attack in Qalat, the capital of Zabul province, which is next to Kandahar and shares a volatile border with Pakistan.

"There are American and Afghan casualties," the embassy said in a statement. "We are still investigating the incident and cannot confirm details at this time."

Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi claimed responsibility for the attack in Zabul and said the bomber was seeking to target either a coalition convoy or the governor.

"We were waiting for one of them," Ahmadi said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "It was our good luck that both appeared at the same time."

The deaths bring the number of foreign military troops killed this year to 30, including 22 Americans. A total of six foreign civilians have died in Afghanistan so far this year, according to an AP count.

Provincial Gov. Mohammad Ashraf Nasery, who was driving to an event at a nearby school in Qalat, said the explosion occurred in front of a hospital and a coalition base housing a provincial reconstruction team, or PRT. International civilian and military workers at the PRT train Afghan government officials and help with local development projects.

Nasery, who survived the attack, said the car bomb exploded as his convoy was passing the hospital. He said the doctor was killed, and two of his bodyguards and a student from the school were wounded.

"The governor's convoy was at the gate of the school at the same time the (coalition) convoy came out from the PRT," said provincial police chief Gen. Ghulam Sakhi Rooghlawanay. "The suicide bomber blew himself up between the two convoys."

Nasery said he thought his convoy was the intended target.

"I'm safe and healthy," he told the AP in a telephone interview.

Insurgents have stepped up attacks around the country in recent weeks as Afghanistan enters what could be one of the most critical periods following the U.S. invasion in late 2001 that ousted the Taliban.

The majority of U.S. and coalition forces are expected to begin a significant drawdown in the latter part of this year, leaving Afghan forces in charge of security across the country within months. Afghanistan also is gearing up for a presidential election next spring, and the Taliban have not yet accepted an offer to engage in peace talks in the Gulf state of Qatar.

There currently are about 100,000 international troops in Afghanistan, including 66,000 from the United States. The U.S. troop total is scheduled to drop to about 32,000 by early next year, with the bulk of the decline occurring during the winter months.

While there has been no final decision on the size of the post-2014 force, U.S. and NATO leaders say they are considering a range of between 8,000 and 12,000 ? most of them trainers and advisers.

The Taliban have already sought to disrupt the political process as Afghanistan's various ethnic groups prepare to field candidates to run in the presidential elections. President Hamid Karzai is banned by the constitution from seeking a third term.

The Taliban have increasingly targeted Afghan government officials in recent attacks, including an assault on Wednesday on a courthouse and government offices in western Farah province. Forty-six people were killed, including two judges, six prosecutors, administration officers and cleaners working at the site.

The Taliban have said civilians working for the government or the coalition are legitimate targets, despite a warning from the United Nations that such killings may violate international law.

They also have been staging complex attacks in Kabul and other urban areas. On March 14, the Afghan intelligence service seized a massive truck bomb packed with 7,257 kilograms (8 tons) of explosives on the eastern outskirts of Kabul. The truck apparently was going to be used in an attack on a NATO facility in the capital.

___

Quinn reported from Kabul. AP National Security writer Robert Burns traveling with Dempsey contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/6-americans-doctor-killed-afghan-attacks-145000153.html

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Cthulhu fhtagn! Indescribably terrifying microbes named for Lovecraft monsters.

Eldritch scientists at the University of British Columbia have named?Cthulhu macrofasciculumque?and?Cthylla microfasciculumque,?a pair of sightless, writhing, unfathomable horrors twisting and groping through the ensanguined interiors of half-mad termites,?for the unspeakably hideous abominations of the adjective-crazed pulp writer.

By Eoin O'Carroll,?Staff / April 5, 2013

This incomprehensibly horrifying scanning electron microscope image shows Cthulhu macrofasciculumque, a symbiotic protist that resides in the hindgut of a termite. The scale bar is 10 micrometers.

PLOS ONE

Enlarge

Suckling unnamable ichor as they slither through the viscous, shrieking madness of the intestinal tracts of lunatic termites, a pair of incomprehensibly monstrous single-celled organisms have been named after the creations of the early 20th century science fiction pulp writer, H.P. Lovecraft. ?

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A University of British Columbia?press release quotes Erick James, a biologist a whose impious explorations into the forbidden have unwittingly revealed a terrifying vista of dread.

??When we first saw them under the microscope they had this unique motion, it looked almost like an octopus swimming,? said James.?

Described in the current edition of the scientific journal PLOS ONE,?Cthulhu macrofasciculumque?is?named for Cthulhu, the towering cosmic entity with an octopus head and dragon wings who first appeared in Lovecraft's 1926 short story, "The Call of Cthulhu."?The microbe's length is about a fifth of the width of a human hair ? an unutterably degenerate human hair ? and it has up to 20 flagella, lash-like protrusions that help it swim.?Cthylla microfasciculumque is named for?Cthulhu's secret daughter. It is slightly smaller, with only five flagella.

In addition to saturating the collective unconscious of mankind with the latent madness of unfathomable cosmic eons,?both organisms play an important role in breaking down wood cellulose in the hindgut of the?Reticulitermes virginicus?termite.

The gut of a termite is a veritable Cyclopean nightmare corpse-city seething with microorganisms, their squirming, tentacle-like flails a kaleidoscope of polypous perversion.

?The huge diversity of microbial organisms is a completely untapped resource,? said James in the oozing, fetid??press release. ?Studying protists can tell us about the evolution of organisms. Some protists cause diseases, but others live in symbiotic relationships, like these flagellates in the intestines of termites.?

Cthulhu macrofasciculumque and?Cthylla microfasciculumque are not the only otherworldly horrors with Lovecraftian names. First described in 1994, the?Pimoa cthulhu spider is native to redwood forests in?Mendocino and Sonoma counties in California, where it waits until stars are ready so that it may rise again and bring the Earth beneath its terrible sway.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/-5EwEDivK7E/Cthulhu-fhtagn!-Indescribably-terrifying-microbes-named-for-Lovecraft-monsters

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Wall Street falls for week as jobs data disappoints

By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks ended their worst week this year with losses on Friday after a weaker-than-expected jobs report undermined confidence in the economy and first-quarter earnings growth.

The jobs data, which showed employers hired at the slowest pace in nine months, was the latest in a series of disappointing economic reports.

Companies begin to report quarterly earnings next week, which is likely to be another concern for investors in light of recent economic data. Analysts' estimates for earnings growth in the first quarter have fallen since late last year, according to Thomson Reuters data.

"I think earnings season could be less than stellar again. Given market performance to date, we could see some softness in the market because we've generated some healthy returns already," said Natalie Trunow, chief investment officer of equities at Calvert Investment Management, which has about $13 billion in assets.

Stocks had been rallying on the Fed's promise to keep providing stimulus and on mostly improving U.S. economic data. The S&P 500 is up 8.9 percent since the start of the year.

The S&P 500 was down 1 percent for the week. All but three of the S&P 500's 10 industry sectors posted declines.

The government's job report showed 88,000 jobs were added in March, less than half economists' average forecast of 200,000. The unemployment rate dipped to 7.6 percent from 7.7 percent, largely due to people dropping out of the work force.

Among recent weak data, a report Monday showed U.S. factory activity grew at the slowest rate in three months in March.

The S&P's biggest percentage decliner was network gear maker F5 Networks Inc , which dropped 19 percent to $73.21 a day after forecasting quarterly earnings and revenue well below Wall Street's expectations.

The Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> was down 40.86 points, or 0.28 percent, at 14,565.25. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> was down 6.70 points, or 0.43 percent, at 1,553.28. The Nasdaq Composite Index <.ixic> was down 21.12 points, or 0.66 percent, at 3,203.86.

For the week, the Dow declined 0.1 percent while the Nasdaq dropped 1.9 percent. The Russell 2000 index <.toy> fell 3 percent for the week, its worst weekly decline since June.

Several of F5's competitors were also sharply lower, with Juniper Networks off 3.1 percent at $17.55 and Citrix Systems down 1.2 percent at $68.90.

Airline stocks were hit after J.P Morgan Securities cut its revenue expectations for U.S. airlines by 2 percent to 3 percent for 2013 and 2014 and said it expects monthly revenue per available seat mile to turn negative for some airlines, partly due to the federal government's automatic spending cuts.

Delta Airlines Inc fell 2.4 percent to $14.39 and United Continental Holdings was off 0.1 percent at $29.27.

S&P 500 earnings are expected to have risen just 1.6 percent in the first quarter from a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters data, down from a 4.3 percent forecast in January.

Earnings grew 6.3 percent in the fourth-quarter, which was better than a late projection by analysts.

Volume was roughly 6.4 billion shares traded on the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and the NYSE MKT, compared with the average daily closing volume of about 6.36 billion this year.

Decliners outpaced advancers on the NYSE by about 15 to 14 and on the Nasdaq by roughly 5 to 3.

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Kenneth Barry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-futures-signal-dip-ahead-payrolls-093338504--finance.html

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Thousands of Palestinians protest in West Bank

Palestinian mourners carry the bodies of Amer Nasser, top, and Naji Balbisi during their funeral in the West Bank town of Anabta, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Nasser and Balbisi were killed during clashes with Israeli security forces yesterday. (AP Photo / Nasser Ishtayeh)

Palestinian mourners carry the bodies of Amer Nasser, top, and Naji Balbisi during their funeral in the West Bank town of Anabta, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Nasser and Balbisi were killed during clashes with Israeli security forces yesterday. (AP Photo / Nasser Ishtayeh)

A Palestinian stone-thrower lays on the ground during clashes with Israeli forces, not pictured, in the West Bank city of Hebron, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Demonstrations first erupted across the West Bank on Tuesday over the death of a Palestinian prisoner who died from cancer. The prisoner, 64-year-old Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, was serving a life sentence for a 2002 foiled bombing of a busy Jerusalem cafe. After Abu Hamdiyeh died, the Palestinians blamed Israel for the death, saying he was not given proper medical care. Israel says the prisoner was treated by specialist doctors in hospital. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

Palestinian members of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades attend the funeral of Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh in the West Bank city of Hebron, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Demonstrations first erupted across the West Bank on Tuesday over the death of a Palestinian prisoner who died from cancer. The prisoner, 64-year-old Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, was serving a life sentence for a 2002 foiled bombing of a busy Jerusalem cafe. After Abu Hamdiyeh died, the Palestinians blamed Israel for the death, saying he was not given proper medical care. Israel says the prisoner was treated by specialist doctors in hospital.(AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

An Israeli border police officer throws a sun grenade towards Palestinian protesters, not pictured, during clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Demonstrations first erupted across the West Bank on Tuesday over the death of a Palestinian prisoner who died from cancer. The prisoner, 64-year-old Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, was serving a life sentence for a 2002 foiled bombing of a busy Jerusalem cafe. After Abu Hamdiyeh died, the Palestinians blamed Israel for the death, saying he was not given proper medical care. Israel says the prisoner was treated by specialist doctors in hospital. (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)

Palestinian police escort the body of Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh during his funeral in the West Bank city of Hebron, Thursday, April 4, 2013. Demonstrations first erupted across the West Bank on Tuesday over the death of a Palestinian prisoner who died from cancer. The 64-year-old prisoner, Hamdiyeh, was serving a life sentence for a 2002 foiled bombing of a busy Jerusalem cafe. After Abu Hamdiyeh died, the Palestinians blamed Israel for the death, saying he was not given proper medical care. Israel says the prisoner was treated by specialist doctors in hospital. (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)

(AP) ? Thousands of outraged Palestinians took to the streets of the West Bank on Thursday, joining funeral processions and demonstrations after two protesters were killed by Israeli troops and a Palestinian prisoner died of cancer in Israeli custody.

The unrest clouded an upcoming visit by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and underscored the difficult task he faces as he tries to restart peace talks in the coming months.

The demonstrations were among the largest in the West Bank in months, and came amid rising violence. But officials on both sides urged calm, and by nightfall, the situation appeared to be quieting down.

Israeli troops had been on heightened alert since Maysara Abu Hamdiyeh, a 64-year-old prisoner, died Tuesday from throat cancer. The Palestinians have blamed Israel for not giving him proper treatment.

Tensions rose further Wednesday when two Palestinian youths were killed in the northern West Bank after throwing firebombs toward Israeli troops. In an apparent show of solidarity with Abu Hamdiyeh, militants in the Gaza Strip fired rockets into Israel for three straight days, drawing Israeli retaliation, in the greatest challenge yet to a cease-fire reached in November.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said Israel was responsible for the violence, claiming it was trying to divert attention from a four-year standstill in peace efforts.

"It seems that Israel wants to spark chaos in the Palestinian territories," he said. "From the beginning, we have said we want stability and calm. Despite that, Israel on every occasion is using lethal force against peaceful young protesters, and peaceful demonstrations are being suppressed with the power of weapons. This is not acceptable at all."

In the most serious unrest, thousands of people took part in a funeral procession for Abu Hamdiyeh in Hebron.

The issue of Palestinian prisoners is deeply emotional in Palestinian society. Nearly every Palestinian family has a member or close acquaintance who has spent time in an Israeli prison, and the 4,500 Palestinians being held by Israel are seen as heroes standing up to Israeli occupation. Israel says the prisoners are criminals and terrorists. Abu Hamdiyeh had been serving a life sentence for involvement in an attempt to carry out a suicide bombing in a crowded Jerusalem restaurant a decade ago.

Mourners carried Abu Hamdiyeh's body through the streets of the town, while chanting anti-Israel slogans and burning U.S. flags. Masked gunmen fired into the air, while Abu Hamdiyeh was given a full military burial.

Several hundred people later clashed with Israeli troops, hurling stones and firebombs toward forces who responded with tear gas and rubber-coated bullets to disperse the crowd. Several people were taken away in ambulances, but no serious casualties were reported.

In the northern West Bank, hundreds of people turned out for funeral processions for the two youths, aged 17 and 19, who were killed late Wednesday. The Israeli army said it opened fire after a military checkpoint was attacked with firebombs. The funeral march remained peaceful, in part because of Palestinian security forces standing nearby.

Smaller clashes were reported at several locations elsewhere in the West Bank, but the unrest appeared to be quickly contained.

While Israeli officials frequently express concern of a new Palestinian uprising starting, both sides have an interest in keeping things under control.

Israel clearly does not want a return to the days of the uprising a decade ago, when Palestinian suicide bombers frequently attacked major cities. Israel also has come under increasing international criticism for its settlement policies in the West Bank and faces pressure to improve conditions for Palestinians under its control at a time when peace efforts are not moving. A heavy military crackdown could draw additional criticism.

The Palestinians suffered heavy casualties and damage in the previous bout of fighting and seem to have little desire for renewed hostilities. They are eager to capitalize on the international anger toward Israeli settlements and could see this support dissipate if major violence and attacks on Israeli targets were to resume.

"The Palestinians have an interest in controlling the violence, and that is a mutual interest that we have so we don't see it spinning beyond that," said Maj. Peter Lerner, an Israeli military spokesman. Nonetheless, he said the Palestinians were playing a "very dangerous game."

"You know where you begin with this violence. You don't know where it ends and that, for us, is a red light, something that we have to follow very closely," he said.

With Kerry expected in the region Sunday, the Palestinians accused Israel of undermining the visit. He plans to meet with both sides in search of a formula to restart peace talks. U.S. officials have said he will largely be listening to each side for fresh ideas on how to break four years of deadlock. A breakthrough may be tough to achieve, partly because hard-line West Bank settlers hold key positions in Israel's new government, and many of them resist granting concessions to the Palestinians.

"The Israeli government is responsible for the escalation and its dangerous consequences on the American efforts that aim to resume negotiations," said Nabil Abu Rdeneh, a spokesman for Abbas.

Abbas has refused to negotiate while Israel continues to build settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, which the Palestinians claim for a future state. He says the settlements, now home to more than 500,000 Israelis, make it ever more difficult to partition the land and that continued construction is a sign of bad faith.

Israel, which captured the areas in the 1967 Mideast war, has refused to halt settlement construction and says negotiations should begin without any preconditions.

Abbas governs in the West Bank, while the rival Hamas movement controls the Gaza Strip. Abbas hopes to establish an independent state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza. Hamas' rule over Gaza, seized from Abbas' forces six years ago, is a major complicating factor since the Islamic militant group opposes peace with Israel.

Early Thursday, Gaza militants fired rockets toward Israel for a third straight day. The rockets, and an Israeli airstrike Wednesday, have strained a cease-fire brokered by Egypt in November after eight days of heavy fighting. Israeli leaders have warned that their patience is growing thin and threatened tougher retaliation if the rocket fire continues.

Hamas, which has close ideological ties with Egypt's Islamic rulers, also has an interest in keeping things quiet. The group has been working to halt the rocket fire, which is believed to have been carried out by radical, al-Qaida-inspired groups that oppose any accommodation with Israel.

Even so, the Israeli military said Thursday it had moved a battery of its new Iron Dome rocket-defense system to the southern resort town of Eilat.

Eilat is located near Egypt's Sinai Desert, where al-Qaida-linked groups have staged attacks against Israel.

___

AP photographer Bernat Armangue and Nasser Shiyoukhi contributed to this report from Hebron, West Bank.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-04-04-ML-Israel-Palestinians/id-cfd74aa054d7483b824d5d0dcd493ad0

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Prostate cancer treatment study changing the way doctors practice

Apr. 3, 2013 ? A study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine recommends a dramatic shift in the way doctors treat metastatic prostate cancer.

"These results have changed the way I treat patients," said Ian M. Thompson Jr., M.D., director of the Cancer Therapy & Research Center at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and senior author on the international study.

Hormone therapy in hormone-sensitive prostate cancer has been shown to help extend the lives of patients, but it causes a range of unpleasant side effects in men like moodiness, hot flashes, bone loss and sexual dysfunction. To give patients relief, doctors have, in some cases, "pulsed" the therapy -- giving it to men for a time and then stopping it until the signs of prostate cancer activity reappear, then starting the hormone therapy again until the cancer appears to be under control.

The study shows that the continuous therapy helps men more. Men with less advanced metastatic prostate cancer who received the "pulse" or intermittent hormone therapy died an average of two years sooner than those on continuous therapy. The study results first drew attention when they were announced last summer at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

After that, prostate cancer survivor Floyd Balter switched from pulse to continuous therapy.

"Last year Dr. Thompson told me about the study results," said Balter, 78. "I said, 'Let's do it.'"

Surviving 17 years beyond a diagnosis where he'd been given two years to live, Balter said he's determined to watch his grandchildren grow for as long as possible.

"I want to live as long as I can," he said. "I can live with the side effects. They're a pain but I can tolerate them."

In the study results, if men with more extensive disease are included in the group, survival was more modest, extended by an average of 7 months, "which is longer than any other intervention," said Dr. Thompson, director of the CTRC. Often advances in cancer treatments will only extend life by an average of two or three months, he noted.

"I can now give a patient the option of putting up with some side effects in order to spend several more months or even years with his grandchildren," Dr. Thompson said. "I can tell you they are happy to have that choice."

Also, Dr. Thompson pointed out, because of the increase in PSA testing, most men who are diagnosed with metastatic prostate cancer present with disease that is still minimal.

The study followed 1,535 men with metastatic prostate cancer for a median of almost 10 years. It was led by SWOG, an international network of research institutions. The significance of the results, adding months if not years to the lives of many men, means every physician with prostate cancer patients should take them into account, Dr. Thompson said.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Maha Hussain, Catherine M. Tangen, Donna L. Berry, Celestia S. Higano, E. David Crawford, Glenn Liu, George Wilding, Stephen Prescott, Subramanian Kanaga Sundaram, Eric Jay Small, Nancy Ann Dawson, Bryan J. Donnelly, Peter M. Venner, Ulka N. Vaishampayan, Paul F. Schellhammer, David I. Quinn, Derek Raghavan, Benjamin Ely, Carol M. Moinpour, Nicholas J. Vogelzang, Ian M. Thompson. Intermittent versus Continuous Androgen Deprivation in Prostate Cancer. New England Journal of Medicine, 2013; 368 (14): 1314 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1212299

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/04Tt_yWAGhc/130404092833.htm

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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Fracking: Challenges and opportunities

Fracking: Challenges and opportunities [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sheryl Weinstein
973-596-3436
New Jersey Institute of Technology

A technology vital for tapping much-needed energy or one that's environmentally destructive? That's the question a panel of experts will explore at the Technology and Society Forum session on fracking April 10, 2013 from 3 4:30 p.m. in the Campus Center Ballroom. The NJIT Technology and Society Forum is free and open to the public.

Fracking, short for hydraulic fracturing, injects fluid underground at high pressure to fracture rock formations in order to extract previously inaccessible oil and gas. Opponents point to the negatives, including groundwater contamination, risks to air quality, and migration of toxic chemicals to the surface.

The panel looking at both sides of fracking will be chaired by Michel Boufadel, NJIT professor of civil and environmental engineering and director of the university's Center for Natural Resources Development and Protection. Boufadel's wide range of environmental research includes assessing effects of the the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska and the BP Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf of Mexico.

Panelist Fred Baldassare is a senior geoscientist at ECHELON Applied Geoscience Consulting as well as the owner of the practice. He has been a leader in applying isotope geochemistry to identification of the source and type of gases in soils, aquifers and other geologic features of the Appalachian Basin.

Tracy Carluccio is assistant director of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network (DRN), a nonprofit whose staff and volunteers work throughout the entire Delaware River Watershed. DRN is engaged in environmental advocacy, volunteer monitoring, stream-restoration assistance and educational initiatives.

Daniel Soeder is a scientist with the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory in West Virginia. His research interests include geology, energy and environmental issues related to unconventional fossil fuel resources such as shale gas, oil shale, enhanced oil recovery, and the geological sequestration of carbon dioxide.

###

For more information, contact Jay Kappraff, 973-596-3490. Co-sponsors of the event are NJIT Technology and Society Forum Committee, Albert Dorman Honors College, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Sigma Xi. NJIT welcomes attendees from Essex County College, Rutgers-Newark, and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.

Visit the NJIT Technology and Society Forum on the Web. Previous Forum presentations are available at http://itunes.njit.edu; search for "Technology and Society Forum."

NJIT, New Jersey's science and technology university, enrolls more than 9,558 students pursuing bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in 120 programs. The university consists of six colleges: Newark College of Engineering, College of Architecture and Design, College of Science and Liberal Arts, School of Management, College of Computing Sciences and Albert Dorman Honors College. U.S. News & World Report's 2011 Annual Guide to America's Best Colleges ranked NJIT in the top tier of national research universities. NJIT is internationally recognized for being at the edge in knowledge in architecture, applied mathematics, wireless communications and networking, solar physics, advanced engineered particulate materials, nanotechnology, neural engineering and e-learning. Many courses and certificate programs, as well as graduate degrees, are available online through the Division of Continuing Professional Education.


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Fracking: Challenges and opportunities [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sheryl Weinstein
973-596-3436
New Jersey Institute of Technology

A technology vital for tapping much-needed energy or one that's environmentally destructive? That's the question a panel of experts will explore at the Technology and Society Forum session on fracking April 10, 2013 from 3 4:30 p.m. in the Campus Center Ballroom. The NJIT Technology and Society Forum is free and open to the public.

Fracking, short for hydraulic fracturing, injects fluid underground at high pressure to fracture rock formations in order to extract previously inaccessible oil and gas. Opponents point to the negatives, including groundwater contamination, risks to air quality, and migration of toxic chemicals to the surface.

The panel looking at both sides of fracking will be chaired by Michel Boufadel, NJIT professor of civil and environmental engineering and director of the university's Center for Natural Resources Development and Protection. Boufadel's wide range of environmental research includes assessing effects of the the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska and the BP Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf of Mexico.

Panelist Fred Baldassare is a senior geoscientist at ECHELON Applied Geoscience Consulting as well as the owner of the practice. He has been a leader in applying isotope geochemistry to identification of the source and type of gases in soils, aquifers and other geologic features of the Appalachian Basin.

Tracy Carluccio is assistant director of the Delaware Riverkeeper Network (DRN), a nonprofit whose staff and volunteers work throughout the entire Delaware River Watershed. DRN is engaged in environmental advocacy, volunteer monitoring, stream-restoration assistance and educational initiatives.

Daniel Soeder is a scientist with the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory in West Virginia. His research interests include geology, energy and environmental issues related to unconventional fossil fuel resources such as shale gas, oil shale, enhanced oil recovery, and the geological sequestration of carbon dioxide.

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For more information, contact Jay Kappraff, 973-596-3490. Co-sponsors of the event are NJIT Technology and Society Forum Committee, Albert Dorman Honors College, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Sigma Xi. NJIT welcomes attendees from Essex County College, Rutgers-Newark, and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.

Visit the NJIT Technology and Society Forum on the Web. Previous Forum presentations are available at http://itunes.njit.edu; search for "Technology and Society Forum."

NJIT, New Jersey's science and technology university, enrolls more than 9,558 students pursuing bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in 120 programs. The university consists of six colleges: Newark College of Engineering, College of Architecture and Design, College of Science and Liberal Arts, School of Management, College of Computing Sciences and Albert Dorman Honors College. U.S. News & World Report's 2011 Annual Guide to America's Best Colleges ranked NJIT in the top tier of national research universities. NJIT is internationally recognized for being at the edge in knowledge in architecture, applied mathematics, wireless communications and networking, solar physics, advanced engineered particulate materials, nanotechnology, neural engineering and e-learning. Many courses and certificate programs, as well as graduate degrees, are available online through the Division of Continuing Professional Education.


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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-04/njio-fc040313.php

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Can Washington get vets off the streets? Tens of thousands homeless despite billions in spending

Jim Seida / NBC News

"I had seen some stuff that I probably would have never seen before in life had I not been in Marine Corps, some good stuff and some stuff I just don't care to think about anymore," said Iraq War veteran Eric Swinney, seen here outside his room at Grand Veterans Village in Phoenix.

By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

Despite funding that has reached $5.8 billion annually and a slew of innovative community partnerships, the Obama administration is lagging in its goal to end homelessness among veterans ? or, as federal veterans' leaders like to say, ?drive to zero? ? by the end of 2015.

If the current rate of progress is maintained, roughly 45,000 veterans would still be without homes when the deadline passes -- a big improvement since the drive was launched but also evidence of how difficult it is to eradicate the problem.


"I don?t truly think you can end homelessness,? said John Scott, who heads the Phoenix office of U.S. Vets, a national, nonprofit service provider to homeless and at-risk veterans that receives some federal funding. ?Things happen that can precipitate homelessness for anyone, and it can happen quite rapidly. However, we can effect change in veterans who have been chronically homeless.?

Scott, a former Marine Corps sergeant, was a keynote speaker at the November 2009 summit where Veterans Administration Secretary Eric Shinseki proclaimed that he and President Obama were "personally committed to ending homelessness among veterans within the next five years.? (The VA now cites the end of 2015 as its target.)

That crusade thus far has housed 12,990 veterans, an average of 361 per month. At the last count, which took place in January 2012 and was released in December, some 62,000 veterans still were homeless, meaning the campaign would need to average about 1,300 per month to meet its mark.

?While there may have been those who did not think ending veteran homelessness was possible (when Shinseki made his 2009 vow), it brought much needed attention to the matter," Scott said. ?And it has, in turn, created many new funding opportunities for veterans experiencing homelessness.?

Scott hammers at the problem in a state VA officials hold out as a shining prototype, where in 2012 veterans accounted for just 13 percent of the adult homeless population ? down from 20 percent in 2011. He oversees a tangible symbol of that drive, a former Howard Johnson hotel refurbished into apartments meant to shelter more than 130 homeless veterans. It?s called Grand Veterans Village.

Flashbacks, panic attacks
Manning the community?s gas grill most days is Iraq veteran Eric Swinney, who arrived there in early March. Originally from Mississippi, the former Marine?s barbecued specialties include ribs, chicken and pork chops. He doesn?t talk much about his brief homeless stretch. But his spiral seems fueled by what he saw in Iraq ? and what he sees in his nightmares.

?I picked up heads, legs. I picked up blown-up hips from two blocks away, from the roofs of houses. Numerous, numerous occasions. Iraqi people parts,? said Swinney, 26. The human pieces were ripped away and strewn during firefights or suicide-bomber blasts.

Jim Seida / NBC News

Smoking and joking on the second floor of what used to be a Howard Johnson's in Phoenix, Iraq War vets Zeb Alford, left, Trent Stubbs, center, and Swinney pass the time at Grand Veterans Village.

?I have this one image, every time I sleep, of picking up the head of an Iraqi.? In his room at Grand Veterans Village, the flashback wakes him often, he said, leaving him soaked in perspiration.

Nothing new, though. Swinney began feeling what he calls ?mental anguish? before leaving Iraq in 2008. From there, his descent reads like a manual on post-traumatic stress disorder: foreboding and booze and bad luck. ?Every time something happened that reminded me of Iraq, I would just go get me a bottle and start drinking.? Then, a DUI arrest in Georgia. Then, panic attacks, which left him unable to hold any of his six or so post-war jobs.

He tried to physically flee that internal storm, moving to Phoenix last June: ?A new change, a new climate.? He got an apartment. He got a job as a security guard. But when his car was stolen on Super Bowl Sunday, he had no ride to work. The rent money ran dry. He lost his room. ?Ever since I left the Marine Corps, stuff just keeps happening.?

During his eight months in Phoenix, however, Swinney also had been visiting the local VA center, meeting with caseworkers. When he became homeless, they steered him to U.S. Vets, to Scott and to Grand Avenue. There, his rent is covered by U.S. Vets. Next, Swinney will be paired with local experts who "are going to assist him with some of the trauma he's brought back from war," Scott said.

The plan is to have Swinney find his financial footing and, eventually, move into a more permanent apartment where he will be responsible for the lease.

'Daunting challenge'
That federal-community safety net ? housing wrapped around social services, in dozens of cities ? is precisely why VA officials remain outwardly confident they can meet Shinseki's 2015 objective.

"Yes, we know it?s an aggressive goal. But we work hard at this every day to try to achieve it. Because for us, it?s really just not acceptable to have anybody on the streets with the capabilities and the opportunities that are around now," said Vincent Kane, director of the VA National Center on Homelessness Among Veterans.

"With the focus, the attention and the commitment we're putting to this as a health-care system, [VA has] the best opportunity now than at any other point in the history of our program" to hit that mark, Kane said.

One program making a dent is HUD-VASH, run jointly by the VA and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Under that plan, veterans receive housing vouchers and access to case management and clinical services. Since 2008, Congress has appropriated $350 million to HUD-VASH, which has handed housing vouchers to more than 47,000 veterans and their families, according to HUD.

Armed with such initiatives, "we believe we are going to quicken the pace" to house all veterans, Kane said. "We know it?s a daunting challenge.

Nightmares and all, Swinney plans to be one of the success stories in that intended final tally of zero. He is a proud man, and thankful for his service, no matter where it has taken him five years after leaving Iraq.

"I hate when people feel entitled to stuff. Being a Marine helped me in a lot of ways. Yes, it had its drawbacks. But what it all boils down to is we?re average Americans, like everybody else. We just had more dangerous jobs," he said. "Nobody owes me anything."

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'By the Grace of God:' How workers survive on $7.25 an hour

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