Saturday, March 30, 2013

Hillsboro family flees home after fire breaks out in utility room ...

A Hillsboro family escaped without injury from their burning home Wednesday night after a fire broke out in the home's utility room, Hillsboro Fire & Rescue reported.

The fire, which started about 7:30 p.m., caused an estimated $8,000 damage to the duplex at 851 N.W. 229th Ave.

Firefighters said Aaron Hanson, his wife and four children aged three to eleven were at home. Hanson and his wife smelled smoke and found flames in the utility room.

Investigators are checking the utility room and appliances to determine the cause of the fire.

?Tom Hallman Jr.

?

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/washingtoncounty/index.ssf/2013/03/hillsboro_family_flees_home_af.html

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Ethanol Debate Has Glimpse of Bipartisanship

The top Republican and Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee are finally on the same page about a controversial energy policy after reading from two completely different playbooks the last four years.

Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., and ranking member Henry Waxman, D-Calif., are both undecided about what Congress should do about the renewable-fuels standard, a federal mandate established in 2005 that requires increasingly large amounts of biofuels each year to be blended with gasoline.

?I don?t have an immediate solution. I don?t have the answer,? Upton said in a recent interview in his office. ?But we?re going to have thoughtful hearings, first a couple of white papers. We?re going to see where people are. I have confidence that we?ll have a solution by going regular order.?

So will Waxman, who has vehemently disagreed with Upton on everything from the Keystone XL pipeline to greenhouse-gas regulations, be working with him on this? ?I?d like to think Henry would be on board,? said Upton, noting the two jointly released the first of a series of white papers on the mandate last week.

In a recent interview in Waxman?s corner office in the Rayburn Office Building, the usually opinionated California liberal was noncommittal. ?I?m not going to take a position on this issue,? he said. ?I?m looking forward to working with [Upton]. Let?s explore it. Let?s get the options. Let?s get input. And then let?s sit down together.?

The geographical and parochial interests shaping the debate over the biofuels mandate put Waxman and Upton on the same side of one of the most controversial issues Congress is poised to take up this year. The mandate is facing criticism from an informal?and unusual?coalition that includes the American Petroleum Institute, the Grocery Manufacturers Association, the National Chicken Council, and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

While they?re not willing to admit it, both lawmakers seem open to reforming the policy, which has come under intense scrutiny from Republicans and Democrats alike in the wake of last summer?s record-setting drought that sent corn prices souring. Refineries that are required to blend biofuels with gasoline often use corn-produced ethanol to meet the mandate. Apart from providing fuel in the form of ethanol, corn also serves as a key feedstock to the poultry, pork, and cattle industries. More advanced biofuels made from products other than corn are not coming to market as quickly as the 2005 law had envisioned. On top of these concerns, the original intent of the standard?to wean America off foreign oil?has been trumped by the boom in oil and natural-gas production around the country in the last five years.

Waxman?s chief concerns, according to sources knowledgeable about his position, center on the impact corn-based ethanol could have on efforts to tackle global warming. Some reports have found that gasoline blended with corn-based ethanol is no better at reducing greenhouse gas emissions than gasoline alone. He is also aware of the legal liability automakers could incur if engines are unable to run using blends with more ethanol.

Waxman has never been a big fan of corn ethanol. He voted against the energy bill in 2005 that initially created the mandate but supported a 2007 measure that strengthened the mandate?s goal of promoting advanced biofuels such as cellulosic ethanol, which don?t use corn and have lower carbon footprints.

Waxman may also be getting an earful from a powerful opponent of the standard: Chevron. Waxman?s newly redrawn district includes, for the first time since he came to Congress in 1975, a refinery. Chevron bills the facility, located along the coast near the Los Angeles International Airport, as the largest refinery on the West Coast. The facility spans 1,000 acres and employs 1,100 people, according to Chevron?s website. When National Journal Daily asked about the refinery in the interview, Waxman laughed, smiled broadly, and simply said: ?Yeah.? He said he hasn?t met (yet) to talk with Chevron about the biofuels mandatey.

?I?m not anti-oil,? Waxman said. ?I?m happy there is a refinery in my district that is producing a product that is very much needed. That doesn?t mean I?m going to agree with them on everything.? He quickly added: ?We?re going to need fossil fuels for the foreseeable future. I?d like us to start moving away as quickly as possible and make our portfolio of energy resources more than just fossil fuels.?

The background of Upton?s stance on the policy is equally nuanced. Along with 207 other Republicans, he supported the creation of the mandate as part of the 2005 bill and also the measure two years later that strengthened it. Republican President Bush signed both those bills into law.

Sources familiar with Upton?s thoughts on the policy now say the Republican is more inclined to oppose it, given the Republican Party?s growing hostility to federal mandates and the resurgence in oil and natural-gas production that?s helped get the U.S. closer than ever to the elusive goal of energy independence.

Upton has another concern to keep in mind: Ensuring that any movement on the standard doesn?t divide his conference, which is already splintered on a host of other issues. Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., who works closely with Upton as the chairman of the House Environment and Energy Subcommittee, is a big proponent of ethanol (Illinois produces the third-highest amount of ethanol in the country). ?Yes, I know there are real hard feelings on all sides of the issue: oil and gas side to the corn folks,? Upton said.

For the next couple of months, expect Upton and Waxman to be reading quietly from the same playbook as they roll out white papers on the standard. The real test of how long this bipartisanship will last will come when the hearings?and actual debate?begin in the committee.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ethanol-debate-glimpse-bipartisanship-195915918--politics.html

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

China's Xi tells Africa he seeks relationship of equals

By Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala and George Obulutsa

DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) - China's new president told Africans on Monday he wanted a relationship of equals that would help the continent develop, responding to concerns that Beijing is only interested in shipping out its raw materials.

On the first stop on an African tour that will include a BRICS summit of major emerging economies, Xi Jinping told Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete that China's involvement in Africa would help the continent grow richer.

"China sincerely hopes to see faster development in African countries and a better life for African people," Xi said in a speech laying out China's policy on Africa, delivered at a conference center in Dar es Salaam built with Chinese money.

Renewing an offer of $20 billion of loans to Africa between 2013 and 2015, Xi pledged to "help African countries turn resource endowment into development strength and achieve independent and sustainable development".

Africans broadly see China as a healthy counterbalance to Western influence but, as ties mature, there are growing calls from policymakers and economists for a more balanced trade deal.

"China will continue to offer, as always, necessary assistance to Africa with no political strings attached," Xi said to applause. "We get on well and treat each others as equals."

But gratitude for that aid is increasingly tinged with resentment about the way Chinese companies operate in Africa where industrial complexes staffed exclusively by Chinese workers have occasionally provoked riots by locals looking for work.

Countering concerns that Africa is not benefitting from developing skills or technology from Chinese investment, Xi said China would train 30,000 African professionals, offer 18,000 scholarships to African students and "increase technology transfer and experience".

"ALL-WEATHER FRIENDS"

"The Sino-Tanzania relationship has endured a lot," said Tanzania's Kikwete, whose nation built close ties with China in the early years after independence from the British in 1964. "Now we have become all-weather friends."

China built a railway linking Tanzania and Zambia in the 1960s and early 1970s.

The two leaders witnessed the signing of trade and other deals, including plans to co-develop a new port and industrial zone complex, a loan for communications infrastructure and an interest free loan to the government. No details were given on the size of the loans or the industrial projects.

Xi's next stop is South Africa for a BRICS summit on Tuesday and Wednesday where he could endorse plans for a joint foreign exchange reserves pool and an infrastructure bank.

Those proposals respond to frustrations among emerging markets at having to rely on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, which are seen as reflecting the interests of the United States and other industrialized nations.

Nigeria's central bank governor, Lamido Sanusi, wrote in the Financial Times this month that the trade imbalance between China and Africa was "the essence of colonialism" and cautioned the continent was vulnerable to a new form of imperialism.

China is keen not to be perceived as an imperial master.

"The legacy of (the) West is the feeling that Africa should thank them, and that Africa should recognize that it is not as good as the West," Zhong Jianhua, China's special envoy to Africa, said before Xi's trip. "That is not acceptable."

Lu Shaye, head of the Chinese Foreign Ministry's African affairs department, said it was the West which was only interested in African resources, not China.

"What have Western countries done for Africa in the 50 years since independence? Nothing. All they have done is criticize China and that is unfair," he told a Hong Kong television station, in remarks carried on the ministry's website.

Xi's African tour ends in Republic of Congo, from where China imported 5.4 billion tonnes of oil last year, just 2 percent of its total oil imports, but potentially the source of a lot more.

(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Writing by Edmund Blair and Richard Lough; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chinas-xi-tells-africa-seeks-relationship-equals-195044515.html

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Computer game technologies are helping protect Europe's ...

Motion capture technologies usually employed by the film and computer games industries are being used to digitally archive some of Europe?s traditional, and in some cases endangered, sports.

Engineers from Ireland, Spain, UK, Switzerland and Greece will use motion capture technologies to create a digital archive of playing styles and techniques used in various regional games. ?This is the first time that the technology has been used to archive sporting techniques like this.

According to the organisation of academics and engineers, CLARITY, such a system is needed to preserve the sporting styles due to the threat from mainstream sports like soccer.

The project, called Re-Play, will first capture the playing styles of the Irish sports Gaelic Football and Hurling, and the Basque sport of Pelota.

The motion capture data will be not just be used to build an archive of playing styles but will be used to teach younger generations how to play the games.

20 March 2013; A major European motion capture technology project to preserve, promote and develop culturally important sports has been developed in Ireland through a unique collaboration between scientists, sporting bodies, cultural organisations and athletes. Launched at Croke Park, Dublin, Re-Play, a €2million project, funded by EU Framework Programme 7, will capture the styles of play and skills unique to Gaelic and Basque Games and develop 3D interactive software that will be used to educate future generations about these culturally significant sports. At the launch is Pádraig Breheny, DCU and Galway hurler. Dublin City University, Glasnevin, Dublin. Picture credit: Ray McManus

A major European motion capture technology project to preserve, promote and develop culturally important sports has been developed in Ireland through a unique collaboration between scientists, sporting bodies, cultural organisations and athletes. Launched at Croke Park, Dublin, Re-Play, a ?2million project, funded by EU Framework Programme 7, will capture the styles of play and skills unique to Gaelic and Basque Games and develop 3D interactive software that will be used to educate future generations about these culturally significant sports. At the launch is P?draig Breheny, DCU and Galway hurler. Dublin City University, Glasnevin, Dublin. Picture credit: Ray McManus

According to CLARITY the Re-Play project will first record these sports due to their popularity and cultural importance

?Re-Play will initially focus on two families of traditional sports, Gaelic and Basque that are integral to the fabric of their communities and have remained popular in spite of the competition from other more widespread sports.?

In Ireland the project is being supported by the Gaelic Athletics Association (GAA), the national body that promotes traditional Irish sports. The GAA is Ireland?s largest sporting organisation, and has over 1 million members worldwide.

P?raic Duffy, Director General of the GAA, said, ?Sport is the most universal and accessible of cultural pursuits. The GAA has played an important role in facilitating and shaping Ireland?s social and cultural heritage for generations. We are proud to be part of this important project and it will enable multiple modes of training, coaching and knowledge sharing that will contribute to the increased participation and preservation of our traditional sports into the future.?

Along with creating its own archive of sporting techniques CLARITY is working to ?put these technologies within reach of every club in Ireland or the Basque regions.? Using emerging technologies and low-cost sensors the organisation hopes to allow players from across Ireland and the Basque regions of Spain and France to contribute their own motion data to the project.

Professor Noel O?Connor, Principal Investigator with CLARITY, said, ?The continued development of sensor web technology allows us to undertake projects of this scale and diversity in a cost-effective way. Our goal at the end of this project is to create novel 3D software that can be used in every club and community centre across Ireland to allow the user to practice new and basic skills and to emulate their national or local heroes in the chosen sport. This project will also recover techniques of past players from archive footage allowing us to unearth forgotten skills and help us analyse the evolution of the sport.?

According to CLARITY efforts are also being made to apply this technology to other traditional sports outside of Europe;

?The project team will also be seeking out opportunities for the Re-Play project results to be applied to other traditional sports and games across the world that share the same cultural significance and are at risk from mainstream sports.?

Picture credit: Ray McManus

Source: http://sociable.co/gaming/computer-game-technologies-are-helping-protect-europes-endangers-sports/

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

IBM 186 | How to Know if You Are Living Your Purpose | Internet ...

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purposeBy creating a business that is in line with your Single Motivating Purpose, you?ll enjoy more fulfillment and boost your profits. But how do you know if you are living your purpose? How do you know if you have built a business that is in line with what is most important to you?

As entrepreneurs, we can get so busy managing our business that we lose site of the ?why? that originally motivated us. In this episode we present a way of checking in with yourself, to see if you are still on the right path.

Use the nine questions we offer, to find out if you are indeed living your purpose.

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Right-click here to download the MP3

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In This Episode

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  • How to get rid of competitive, jealous feelings once and for all
  • Why value creation is required in order to fulfill your purpose
  • Why one company was willing to let go of 25% of the revenue to follow their purpose
  • Why procrastination may or may not be related to your purpose

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Items of Interest

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Breakthrough

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Today is my last day at my day job.

It hasn?t happened the way I thought it would, but it?s happening! The income isn?t coming from the internet business I built, though some small revenue is coming from that. Instead using the principles that I learned from the Academy I have branched into being a consultant for some very select groups.

Next week I start a podcast to help reach more of that group, and I?m so pumped about taking action in another area as well.

Just want to say a public thanks to Jeremy and Jason. Your course has helped me make a lifelong dream come true.

Shawn McAfee

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Quick Tip


Delivering Happiness by Tony Hsieh

While this book is a couple years old, it?s been the perfect book to read in a time when we are re-calibrating our Single Motivating Purpose. Zappos is an example of a modern-day company that is living its purpose. Delivering Happiness gives you the inside look at how they do it.

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Action Guide

  1. ?Download?Are You Living Your Purpose
  2. Spend 30-45 minutes answering the questions included in the guide

?

What do you think?

Is there a time when you were not in line with your purpose? How did you know? How did you bring your business back in line with your purpose?

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Categories: New Podcast, Podcast

Source: http://internetbusinessmastery.com/ibm-186-internet-business-living-your-purpose

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'Great Gatsby' to open Cannes Film Festival

(AP) ? The Cannes Film Festival has an American flavor this year, with a Hollywood icon heading the jury and a quintessential U.S. literary figure opening the event: The Great Gatsby.

Organizers said Tuesday that the film "The Great Gatsby," with Leonardo DiCaprio in the title role and directed by Australian Baz Luhrmann, will open this year's Cannes festival ? in 3D, no less.

Luhrmann stressed the film's French connection, saying in a statement that author F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote "some of the most poignant and beautiful passages" of "The Great Gatsby" at a French Riviera villa not far from Cannes. Tobey Maguire and Carey Mulligan also star in Luhrmann's version of the 1925 novel.

Steven Spielberg is heading the jury at the Cannes festival this year, which runs May 15-26.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-12-France-Cannes%20Film%20Festival/id-b1e2d46f061b492e9801f8132e1fc287

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Callaghan Innovation a positive change | infonews.co.nz New ...

ExportNZ says Callaghan Innovation, the new Crown Entity that is aiming to increase both public and private investment in research to grow more innovative exports, should ensure it is focused on business needs.

Executive Director of ExportNZ, Catherine Beard says while investment in fundamental research remains important, we also need our scientists and researchers to focus on near-term business requirements that are customer led.

?If we want to boost our exports and develop more internationally competitive companies we need to focus on innovation and have a valuable point of difference,? Catherine Beard said.

?Scientists that can get alongside business to help turbocharge an innovative culture will be helping to grow our exports.? Ensuring our exporters to have a unique point of difference and can compete at the top end of the market is important.? In a relatively high cost manufacturing environment this is the only way we will stay globally competitive.

?The proof of success will be increased investment in R & D from the private and public sectors (currently low by international standards), leading to increasingly high-value exports and increased collaboration between our science and business talent.?

Source: http://www.infonews.co.nz/news.cfm?id=103214

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Teen Fiction: Vigilante Green

This is a regular column featuring original poetry and fiction by and for teens, provided by Figment, the online community writing site for young readers and writers.

On an ordinary Friday afternoon, Gracie Jones declared war.

War on corsages, limos, and rent-a-tuxes. War on glitter, up-do's, and mall-bought makeovers. War on the idea of a single king and queen to be crowned the rulers of a dancehall monarchy.

War on Prom.

One week to go.

One week until she'd take arms against the tyranny of an age old high school tradition.

She'd make the most of guerilla preparation, while the pretty boys asked pretty girls to be their dates, and the plainer girls stayed hopeful.

The battle began with a dress, and hers had to shine with the colors of revolution.

"Green," Gracie thought, "It had to be green."

But not just any green, vigilante green.

Dress picking was meant to be quick and painless. Gracie didn't need sequins or shimmery fabric, just something simple. Not a single store in twelve malls had simple, and nobody'd heard of vigilante green. Everything was sequined, everything shimmered, everything sucked. So, Gracie turned to sewing.

Betsey Ross sewed the American flag, Gracie Jones would stitch her own prom dress. And it would be perfect.

By the time she'd finished, her dress looked more patchy than perfect, but the patches gave it charm.

***

On Monday morning, the siege began. Gracie dragged her black chucks through white halls slathered in pink posters put up by the prom committee. Sequined, shimmery posters. The colors of oppression. "The tyrants," Gracie thought.
Gap-toothed Tyler, passed Gracie a note in History class. She didn't read it till lunch. How dare he interrupt the chapter on the French Revolution.

"Vive la Prom," he'd said. "Yay, or Nay?"

Gap-toothed Tyler wasn't aware of Gracie's revolution, he was only aware of Gracie. He hung on every word she'd said in history, fell in love with her in French class, and hadn't stopped falling since.

He'd gone almost four years, stuck in the study buddy zone, until he passed the note. Prom would change everything, he thought. She'd be his queen and he'd be the luckiest guy in his high school.

He'd hoped to see her open the note, watch the apples of her cheeks royal flush with girlish delight, and hear a thundering "Yes" escape her lips. She left class without so much as a word.

He didn't see how ever so slightly green she turned when she read his note. She was Gracie Bonaparte, the spirit of a teenage Joan of Arc. She walked alone, she worked alone. Unless, he wanted to run errands of course.
"I abstain. Meet @ Party Smart after school. Need your help."

Gap-toothed Tyler gap-tooth grinned at her text. He'd help her with errands and she'd hand him her heart. Plain, simple, effective. His battle began at Party Smart.

***

She bought 250 plastic tiaras, and 250 paper crowns. Gap-toothed Tyler footed the bill. Gracie smiled at him as he lugged two garbage bags of nonsense across the parking lot to his car.

He drove her home twenty minutes in the opposite direction of his house. He didn't care. He enjoyed the drive. Gracie thought his car smelled like old Twizzlers. He'd had a stash under the front seat for months now. He offered her one, she took it, and ate the whole thing just to be polite. He'd always known she was a lady, underneath her punk rock tank tops and green military jackets.

Gap-toothed Tyler parked outside Gracie's house underneath a broken street lamp. Gracie said the flickering made her feel like a moth on the nights she'd sit outside and look at the stars. Gap-toothed Tyler wanted to kiss her even though she smelled like old Twizzlers. She got out with her crowns and tiaras in hand before he could try.

"What about prom?" he asked.

"I'm going as Robin Hood, you can come along if you agree to the role of Little John," she said.

Gap-toothed Tyler flashed a gummy grin.

"Sure! Pick you up at 6," he said.

Gracie didn't tell Gap-toothed Tyler about her plan. Not yet, but soon.

Gap-toothed Tyler went home happy. Gracie went home hopeful.

***

It rained on prom day. A great sign for Gracie. Prom committee Kyle was out with the flu. Gracie volunteered to hang the net of balloons over the gym for him. Gracie was good with her hands and not afraid of heights so getting the gig was simple. After school, she brought a bag of balloons, along with her crowns and tiaras and dumped them all together in the net over the gym. The prom committee didn't know about the crowns and tiaras. Vive la revolution.

Gap-toothed Tyler picked up Gracie at six. She was the prettiest Robin Hood he'd ever seen. She thought he made a handsome little John. They both kept that a secret. Gracie gave Gap-toothed Tyler a CD. "Robin Hood and Little John" was the only song. She told him to give it too the DJ. Gap-tooth Tyler would do whatever she asked.

Gracie stole the "Prom King and Queen" vote box when no one was watching. She found the entrance to the stage, snuck past the band, and waited till they stopped playing. Gap-toothed Tyler paid the DJ to put on "Robin Hood and Little John".

When the music started, Gracie cried "Vive la revolution" and set the vote box on fire in front of everyone. There wouldn't be a king or queen this year. There would be five-hundred. Gracie ran off stage and pulled the line to the net with her many colored balloons. The balloons floated beautifully in their own time, while the paper crowns and plastic tiaras fell into the open hands of her senior class.

Vive la Revolution.

Gracie and Gap-toothed Tyler walked out with applause at their backs. Cheers from the pretty boys, and pretty girls on the dance floor and the plainer boys and plainer girls on the bleachers. They'd be in the principal's office on Monday. Maybe they'd get suspended, maybe they wouldn't. They didn't care, they were bold, ballsy, and green. Vigilante green.

***

Gap-toothed Tyler drove Gracie home. He parked in the driveway and sat with her under the flickering street lamp so they could watch the stars. He pulled an old bag of candy out of his pocket. Him and Gracie talked and chewed until their teeth turned licorice red. When Gracie kissed Gap-toothed Tyler, he turned licorice pink.

She didn't mind that he tasted like old Twizzlers.

Vive la revolution.

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/11/teen-fiction-vigilante-gr_n_2857434.html

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Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 5:30PM ET

Join the Engadget HD Podcast live on Ustream at 530PM ET

It's Monday, and you know what that means; another Engadget HD Podcast. We hope you will join us live when the Engadget HD podcast starts recording at 5:30PM. If you'll be joining us, be sure to go ahead and get ready by reviewing the list of topics after the break, then you'll be ready to participate in the live chat.

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Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/3qUtiDS7L2o/

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Samsung teases phone-shaped phone ahead of Galaxy S4 event

A Phone!!!

Samsung's quite the tease lately. It's launched a campaign of bizarre teaser trailers for the upcoming Galaxy S4, but so far these have been devoid of any real information about the device. Today it's stepping things up a notch, publishing the image above on its Twitter and Facebook channels alongside a message promoting the Mar. 14 "Unpacked" event where we're all expecting to meet the Galaxy S4.

It's the outline of a phone. A phone-shaped phone. It looks a bit like the Galaxy S3, as well as a purported Galaxy S4 design that leaked out of China this morning. We're left wondering what's happened to the earpiece on this model, though.

If nothing else, the image might suggest that Samsung's sticking with the curvy "nature-inspired" design language for its 2013 handset. We'll find out for sure on Thursday evening, when Samsung unveils the Galaxy S4 in New York City.

Source: Twitter, Facebook



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/-0YvKaacC-k/story01.htm

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Tartan Kilts Set to Launch in Toronto - Franchising.com

Men In Kilts, a window cleaning franchise, makes its way across Canada and into Toronto.

Toronto, Ontario (PRWEB) March 11, 2013 - Men In Kilts, Canada?s largest full-service window cleaning, gutter cleaning, siding cleaning, and pressure washing company, announced their recent opening in Toronto. Having already established themselves in Canada and expanding fast into the US, Men In Kilts has plans to be in every major market by 2017.

Men In Kilts CEO, Tressa Wood says, ?Toronto was the next big Canadian market we wanted to hit. We were thrilled when Sentwali Lewis and Darcy Longpre came to us wanting to start up the Toronto franchise. We could not have picked two more dynamic owners for this market. They have a real passion and dedication to delivering a top notch service experience.?

Lewis and Longpre come from diverse backgrounds and are excited to start sporting their knee-length kilts and tartan trucks around the Greater Toronto Area. Lewis says, ?This is a very familiar business venture for me. With my experience as a business coach in the franchise industry, I have a solid understanding of how to scale our operations. Owning Men In Kilts Toronto will provide a new adventure for myself and will be extremely rewarding.?

Longpre expands, ?We are excited to launch. We see a huge opportunity in the overlooked window and exterior cleaning industry in our market. The time is right to open up a franchise here in Toronto. We could not be more amazed at the level of support and drive from the entire team at the Men In Kilts Head Office.?

As with every new Men In Kilts franchise, locals in the Toronto area are sure to get a surprise the first time they spot these kilt-wearing men cleaning windows. Lewis says, ?The feedback we have already received from family and friends has been incredible. Here in Toronto, we will continue bringing smiles into the world, one kilt at a time!?

About Men In Kilts

Men In Kilts was started in 2002 by Nicholas Brand with $500, a squeegee and a hand-sewn kilt. The first franchise was opened in 2010 in Vancouver and has grown to ten locations across Canada and the US. The company continues their successful expansion across North America, with plans to be in every major market by 2017.

For more information on Men In Kilts, or to see them in action, please contact Brent Hohlweg at pr [at] meninkilts [dot] com or visit http://www.meninkilts.com.

--high-resolution images available upon request--

Contact:

Brent H.
Men In Kilts
http://www.meninkilts.com/brent-hohlweg-bio/
800-777-5458

###

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Source: http://www.franchising.com/news/20130311_tartan_kilts_set_to_launch_in_toronto.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Steve Carell And Jim Carrey Will Astound With MTV First

Two of the world's greatest magicians comedians, Steve Carell and Jim Carrey are coming to "MTV First" to thrill and amaze you in anticipation of their next big collaboration, "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone." Carell and Carrey will bring the magic to you on MTV this Tuesday (March 12) at 7:56 p.m. ET with an exclusive [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/03/11/steve-carell-jim-carrey-mtv-first/

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Fluoride in drinking water cuts tooth decay in adults, study shows

Mar. 11, 2013 ? A new study conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Adelaide, Australia, has produced the strongest evidence yet that fluoride in drinking water provides dental health benefits to adults, even those who had not received fluoridated drinking water as children.

In the first population-level study of its kind, the study shows that fluoridated drinking water prevents tooth decay for all adults regardless of age, and whether or not they consumed fluoridated water during childhood.

Led by UNC School of Dentistry faculty member Gary Slade, the study adds a new dimension to evidence regarding dental health benefits of fluoridation.

"It was once thought that fluoridated drinking water only benefited children who consumed it from birth," explained Slade, who is John W. Stamm Distinguished Professor and director of the oral epidemiology Ph.D. program at UNC. "Now we show that fluoridated water reduces tooth decay in adults, even if they start drinking it after childhood. In public health terms, it means that more people benefit from water fluoridation than previously thought."

The researchers analyzed national survey data from 3,779 adults aged 15 and older selected at random from the Australian population between 2004 and 2006. Survey examiners measured levels of decay and study participants reported where they lived since 1964. The residential histories of study participants were matched to information about fluoride levels in community water supplies. The researchers then determined the percentage of each participant's lifetime in which the public water supply was fluoridated.

The results, published online in the Journal of Dental Research, show that adults who spent more than 75 percent of their lifetime living in fluoridated communities had significantly less tooth decay (up to 30 percent less) when compared to adults who had lived less that 25 percent of their lifetime in such communities.

"At this time, when several Australian cities are considering fluoridation, we should point out that the evidence is stacked in favor of long-term exposure to fluoride in drinking water," said Kaye Roberts-Thomson, a co-author of the study. "It really does have a significant dental health benefit."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. G. D. Slade, A. E. Sanders, L. Do, K. Roberts-Thomson, A. J. Spencer. Effects of Fluoridated Drinking Water on Dental Caries in Australian Adults. Journal of Dental Research, 2013; DOI: 10.1177/0022034513481190

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/~3/CzuieRa3jpk/130311151255.htm

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Asia stocks rise after strong US jobs report

(AP) ? A strong U.S. jobs report helped propel Asian stock markets higher on Monday.

The U.S. government reported that the unemployment rate fell to 7.7 percent from 7.9 percent in January and that employers added far more jobs in February than expected, despite higher taxes and cuts in government spending.

The good news overshadowed a credit downgrade slapped on Italy by Fitch Ratings Agency on Friday, which said the country's inconclusive election that left no party in clear control of the government harmed the chances of Italy moving ahead with economic reforms.

"Sentiment was boosted by the better-than-expected US jobs report on Friday, but downgrade of Italy by Fitch over the weekend has casted some doubts ahead," analysts at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong said in an email commentary.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index marched higher as the yen slid against the dollar. The Nikkei rose 0.7 percent to 12,358.37. Hong Kong's Hang Seng advanced 0.4 percent to 23,194.38 and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 added 0.4 percent to 5,145.10. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and New Zealand also rose. Indonesia fell. Mainland Chinese shares were mixed.

Jackson Wong, vice president of Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong, said the Dow's recent record highs have helped investment sentiment, especially among traders looking for bargains, although volumes on the Hang Seng were subdued.

He also said China's pledge last week to increase spending on environmental cleanup and public services boded well for clean energy and medical companies such as Shandong Weigao Group Medical Polymer, which rose 4.3 percent in Shenzhen.

At a budget presentation last week, outgoing Premier Wen Jiabao called for spending on social programs to raise the living standards of ordinary Chinese and to promote energy conservation.

Japanese export shares rose on hopes that the weakening yen would help boost their bottom lines. Yamaha Motor Co. jumped 5.3 percent. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. surged 5.9 percent.

On Friday, both the Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose for a sixth straight day on the heels of the positive jobs report. The Dow gained 0.5 percent to 14,397.07. The S&P 500 rose 0.5 percent to 1,551.18. The Nasdaq rose 0.4 percent to 3,244.37.

Benchmark oil for April delivery was down 23 cents to $91.72 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 39 cents to finish at $91.95 per barrel on the Nymex on Friday.

In currencies, the euro rose to $1.2999 from $1.2981 late Friday in New York. The dollar rose to 96.11 yen from 95.70 yen.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-03-11-World%20Markets/id-19c26247b75146f798a461823b943972

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Don't worry, Justin Bieber is alright

LONDON (AP) ? Justin Bieber says he is "getting better," after fainting backstage at a concert in London, and the venue says Friday's show is scheduled to go ahead as planned.

A spokesman for the O2 Arena said the 19-year-old pop star was treated backstage during Thursday's concert after becoming short of breath, but recovered and finished his set.

"As far as we are concerned everything is on, on, on" for Friday's show, Jeremy King said.

"He was treated by our team of medics and after further examination they didn't find anything more serious or worrying."

A spokeswoman for Bieber said he was given oxygen and took a 20-minute reprieve after fainting backstage at the arena on Thursday.

Bieber later posted a shirtless photo of himself in a hospital bed with the caption: "Gettin better listening to Janis Joplin." Before that on Twitter he thanked "everyone pulling me thru tonight."

"Best fans in the world," he wrote. "Figuring out what happened. Thanks for the love."

Video footage from the concert shows Bieber appearing to fade during a performance of his up-tempo hit, "Beauty and a Beat." He slows down, puts a hand to his head then bends over, resting his hands on knees before walking slowly to the back of the stage.

The AP spoke to 18-year-old journalism student Prithvi Pandya, who shot the footage, to confirm its authenticity.

"When he started 'Beauty and a Beat' you could see he was struggling," said Pandya, who was near the front of the crowd. "He took lots of drinks of water, that seemed unusual, and he was really sweaty, sweating a helluva lot.

"Toward the end of it, he went backstage. We didn't see him fainting. They brought on dancers to entertain, and I knew something was wrong at that point."

Bieber's manager, Scooter Braun, appeared onstage and told the crowd that the singer was feeling "very low of breath" but would come back to finish the show.

Jazz Chappell, a 20-year-old concertgoer who brought her younger sister and her friend to the show, said that In the nearly 30 minutes he was offstage, some fans started to leave. Once his manager announced what had happened, Chappell said many fans in the audience were gasping and crying, while others kept cheering for him to return.

"I thought, 'Give the guy a break. He just fainted. He's not a performing horse. Let him rest a second,'" said Chappell.

Chappell said Bieber, who is in London to perform four concerts at the O2, later returned and performed low-energy renditions of his hits "Boyfriend" and "Baby."

Braun later tweeted "everyone please give him a little space and he will be ok. Im sure he appreciates the support ... Tough kid proud night once again he always finishes the show. Full out. True pro..."

The incident caps a difficult week for Bieber. He was forced to apologize to outraged fans who accused him of taking the stage almost two hours late for his first concert at the O2 on Monday. He insisted he was only 40 minutes late and blamed "technical issues." He took to Twitter to vent his frustrations with the media's portrayal of the incident.

The star's Believe world tour is due to move on to Portugal on Monday, then continue across Europe, the Middle East, South Africa and North America until August.

___

AP writers Jill Lawless and Gregory Katz in London and Derrik J. Lang in Los Angeles and AP Music Writer Mesfin Fekadu contributed to this report.

___

Online:

http://www.justinbiebermusic.com/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bieber-concert-friday-fainted-105415550.html

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Here Come the Culture Wars: Court Hears Cases on Affirmative Action and Gay Marriage

The Supreme Court is weighing major decisions on gay marriage and race that could roil the 2014 election beyond the debates in Washington over the federal budget, immigration and gun control.

Among the measures dominating the docket: the constitutionality of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) federal same-sex marriage ban, California?s Proposition 8 ballot initiative outlawing gay marriage, the affirmative action policy at the University of Texas, and a section of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that requires some states and communities to clear voting changes with the federal government. The high-stakes decisions, expected in June, may force candidates in competitive races to take sides on divisive social issues. Religious conservatives and African-American voters are ready to mobilize if same-sex marriage bans or racial equality laws are overturned, potentially reshaping the mid-term electorate.

?With everything coming down the pike, I think 2014 is going to be a culture election in a way we haven?t seen in a few years,? said Lanae Erickson Hatalsky, director of social policy and politics at Third Way, a left-of-center think tank. ?With racial politics and gay rights swirling around at the same time, it will be interesting how Republicans and Democrats respond.?

With fewer vulnerable Republicans on the ballot in 2014, the candidates who could be tripped up the most are the six red-state Democratic senators up for re-election: Kay Hagan in North Carolina, Mary Landrieu in Louisiana, Max Baucus in Montana, Mark Begich of Alaska, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Tim Johnson in South Dakota. Re-election challengers may try to use social issues to lure these senators out of an economy-focused comfort zone that allows them to retain Democratic support and seek crossover votes from independents and moderate Republicans.?

In one example of how a Supreme Court decision could permeate the national debate, Hatalsky noted that the word ?spouse? appears 1,138 times in federal laws and regulations. Many of those references would end up before Congress if DOMA is overturned, giving opponents of same-sex marriage a last-ditch chance to raise religious objections -- similar to those raised by opponents of the administration?s new rules on insurance coverage of birth control.? ?June is just the beginning,? Hatalsky said. ?There will be so many opportunities after that for Republicans to try to limit the application of DOMA.?

The Proposition 8 decision could be narrower and apply only to California. But if the Obama administration?s argument wins the day, eight states that currently allow civil unions would have to sanction same-sex marriage, bringing the total to 17 states with marriage equality.

?If the court can overturn a popular vote of the people, I think you?ll find a lot of outrage that would motivate people to go the polls in 2014,? said Tom McClusky, vice president for government affairs at the Family Research Council. ?It will be very hard for James Carville or Karl Rove to say the election is just about the economy.?

The public's concerns about jobs and national security have mostly overshadowed social issues in recent elections. Support for gun control played a role in Democratic defeats in 1994, after President Clinton signed the assault weapons ban, and in 2000, when Vice President Al Gore ran for president. In 2006, the inflammatory debate over immigration reform helped Democrats broaden their appeal to Hispanic voters and take back Congress. Religious conservatives came out in droves in 2004, when gay marriage bans were on the ballot in 11 states. The state where they made the biggest difference was Ohio, which proved pivotal to Bush?s re-election. The gay marriage ban won with 61 percent of the vote, while Bush barely eked out a victory.

Since that election, Family Research Council?s nationwide e-mail list has grown from about 400,000 people to nearly 2 million, McClusky said. ?We?re able to reach people much quicker and mobilize much quicker,? he said. ?As people see the building blocks of our society crumbling, our organization has grown.?

Democrats are skeptical of a surge in voting by social conservatives. A majority of Americans said they supported gay marriage in a Gallup poll last year. Dozens of prominent Republicans signed a legal brief submitted to the Supreme Court in support of same-sex couples in the DOMA case. ?Attitudes toward gay marriage are changing faster than any other issue in the history of polling, so I think what the Supreme Court does will be less consequential,? said Democratic pollster Mark Mellman.

Turnout in mid-term elections tends to be older and less diverse than the presidential electorate. Blacks made up 13 percent of the electorate in 2008 and 2012, when Obama was on the ballot, but only 11 percent in 2010.

Civil rights groups were worried about minority turnout in 2012 after a slew of states passed laws requiring voters to show photo IDs. Courts blocked ID laws in Pennsylvania, Texas, Wisconsin and South Carolina, but the challenge to the Voting Rights Act is reviving concerns about minority disenfranchisement. The NAACP estimates that 5 million people who voted in 2012 would have been have been denied that right if not for the Voting Rights Act.

?Many Americans were outraged when they looked the voter ID laws and restrictions on early voting in 2012, which created an air of righteous indignation because they appeared to be similar to what was used in 1960s to prevent minorities from turning out to vote,? said Hilary O. Shelton, director of the Washington bureau of the NAACP. ?If these obstacles are in place in 2014, it could have a major impact in stirring people to come out to the polls. If people think their rights are being threatened, they will be more likely to pay attention, even if the president is not on the ballot.?

Over the next few months, Supreme Court watchers will parse the courtroom debates for signs of which way these landmark cases on gay marriage and race will go. Politically, the aftermath of the decisions will be just as interesting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/come-culture-wars-court-hears-cases-affirmative-action-060002067--politics.html

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Females butterflies can smell if a male butterfly is inbred

Mar. 5, 2013 ? The mating success of male butterflies is often lower if they are inbred. But how do female butterflies know which males to avoid? New research reveals that inbred male butterflies produce significantly less sex pheromones, making them less attractive to females.

The research was published today in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

If animals (and humans) breed with a relative their offspring will be inbred and more likely to have genetic disorders. Because of these disorders inbred males are often weaker and, for instance, less able to defend the nest or provide food for their youngsters. To make sure her offspring will have the highest chance of survival and reproduction, females are expected to avoid mating with a weak inbred male. That is, if she is able to recognize who is inbred and who is not.

Erik van Bergen, currently at the University of Cambridge and formerly with Leiden University, where he conducted much of the research, said: "Interestingly, traits used by males to attract the opposite sex are often strongly affected by inbreeding and might be used by females to recognize inbred individuals. For example, inbred male zebra finches produce a lower number of different individual songs and inbred male guppies have less conspicuous colour patterns. Additionally, in one cricket species, the inbred males are known to produce less acoustic signals while trying to attract females."

For the butterfly Bicyclus anynana, it is critical that the female avoids breeding with an inbred male as some 50 per cent of the latter are completely sterile. As a result, if a female mates with a sterile inbred male none of her eggs will hatch, and she will therefore produce no offspring.

For the study, the researchers produced inbred butterflies by ensuring that sisters could only reproduce with their own brothers. The male inbred offspring were then tested for their flight performance (as an index of general condition) and the amount of sex pheromones they produced. The researchers found that the general condition of the inbred males was worse, and that they also produced less sex pheromones then normal outbred males.

Next, to test whether the low mating success of inbred males could be restored, the scientists released males and females in a large cage. The genitals of the males were marked with fluorescent dust with different colours for inbred and outbred males. During mating, this dust is transferred to the female and can later be detected using UV light. The antennae of some of the females were painted over with nail polish to prevent them from detecting the amount of sex pheromone produced by males.

During the experiment, females with the treated antennae and therefore no sense of smell had no preference and mated with inbred and normal outbred males equally. In contrast, females with untreated antennae (and thus able to detect the sex pheromone differences) mated significantly more often with normal outbred males. These results indicate that the lower production of sex pheromones by inbred males, and not the general health of the inbred butterflies, is the reason for the low mating success of inbred males.

van Bergen added: "We know that inbreeding contributes to the decline and eventual extinction of small and isolated populations, so it is valuable to have more knowledge about the processes involved in general."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Cambridge. The original story is licensed under a Creative Commons license.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. E. van Bergen, P. M. Brakefield, S. Heuskin, B. J. Zwaan, C. M. Nieberding. The scent of inbreeding: a male sex pheromone betrays inbred males. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2013; 280 (1758): 20130102 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2013.0102

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/9LHrz6qfqc8/130305200457.htm

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House GOP Proposes Healthcare Conscience Act

A trio of Republican congressmen has introduced a measure called the Health Care Conscience Rights Act.

The measure, introduced by Reps. Diane Black, R-Tenn., Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., and John Fleming, R-La., is designed to protect the rights of pro-life employers, insurers and medical workers.

The idea is to give them the right to go to court if they're forced to take part in procedures that violate their religious or moral beliefs.

It would give greater protection to nurses like Catherine Censon-DeCarlo. She says she was forced to take part in abortion in 2009 even though the hospital knew of her objections as a practicing Catholic.

Four years later, she says she still has nightmares from the procedure.

"I feel strongly about caring for the sick and about giving life and being true to my calling as a nurse," Censon-DeCarlo said. "And to be forced to do this was an anathema. It's everything that you thought was not in America."

The move is solely a GOP effort spear-headed by a handful of House Republicans.

They have asked House leadership to include the act in the upcoming continuing resolution to fund the government. Leadership has not said whether they will grant that request.

Source: http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/politics/2013/March/House-GOP-Proposes-Healthcare-Conscience-Act/

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

U.S. sees 'deception and delay' from Iran

VIENNA (AP) ? A senior U.S. envoy accused Iran of "deception, defiance and delay" Wednesday in dealing with international concerns about its nuclear program, reflecting frustration over Tehran's expanding uranium enrichment program and stalled U.N. attempts to determine whether Tehran has worked secretly on nuclear arms.

Joseph Macmanus, the chief U.S. delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency, also suggested that the U.S. might push for tougher diplomatic action in the coming months.

While not going into details, his comments indicated that America might lobby the IAEA board to ask for a special inspection of Parcin, a facility that the agency suspects was used to test explosive triggers for a nuclear weapon, or that the United States would seek an IAEA resolution critical of Tehran.

International criticism of Iran has been relatively muted since last week's nuclear talks in which Tehran showed interest in proposals made by the United States and five other world powers. While expressing concern about enrichment and the deadlocked probe, the six powers avoided tough language and mentioned the "useful meetings" that produced the proposals in a joint statement Tuesday to the 35-nation International Atomic Energy Agency board.

By contrast, the comments Wednesday to the same meeting by Macmanus were unusually hard edged, suggesting they were meant to signal that pressure on Iran over its nuclear activities would not diminish.

Without having to pay heed to Russia and China ? countries in the six-power group that are traditionally softer on Iran than Washington ? Macmanus concentrated on expressing the U.S. view of Iran's alleged failure to meet its international obligations and diminish concerns that it wants nuclear weapons.

Iran denies any such aspirations. But it hid its enrichment program for years and is rapidly expanding it, prompting suspicions that it was less interested in using it to make reactor fuel and more in its other use ? producing fissile warhead material.

The IAEA also suspects that Tehran worked secretly on nuclear weapons, basing its assessment mostly on intelligence from the U.S., Israel and West European nations. Tehran says the intelligence is faked and refuses to allow the IAEA to resume a probe of the allegations until details of how that should proceed are worked out ? a stipulation the West dismisses as a delaying tactic.

Repeating that his country had no interest in nuclear weapons, Iran's chief delegate, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, told reporters that IAEA chief Yukiya Amano was to blame for Iran-related tensions at the agency by issuing reports that "provoke" member states through allegations that his country denies. As for lack of progress in reopening the agency's probe, "the source of the problem is not Iran" but the IAEA, he told reporters.

Amano was likely to be approved by the board for a second four-year term on Wednesday. Asked about his views on Amano's handling of Iran's nuclear file, Soltanieh criticized his "political approach," adding: "there have been some ups and downs."

Macmanus, in comments to the closed meeting made available to media, focused on both Iran's expanding enrichment program and refusal to allow IAEA experts access to sites, officials and documents it wants to probe in its investigations of Parcin and other suspicions of nuclear weapons work.

"We are deeply concerned with what appears to be Iran's unwavering commitment to deception defiance and delay," he said. "Iran ... has chosen to take further provocative actions."

Asked about possible requests for a special inspection or an IAEA board resolution in the future, he later told reporters that "some adjustment might have to be made" in ways to address concerns about Iran, adding that will be taken up by the board "over the next several months."

Iran can refuse a special inspection but that would set it up for referral to the U.N. Security Council. Like others before it, a resolution critical of Iran also would go automatically to the council, adding diplomatic pressure on Tehran.

Diplomats say the proposal made to Iran late last month by the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany, would obligate Iran to decommission its centrifuge plant at Fordo now making higher-enriched uranium and ship out the approximately 165 kilograms (about 365 pounds) it now has as well as allowing increased U.N. oversight.

With no such material stored and none being made, Iran's most direct path to quick manufacture of weapons-grade uranium would be eliminated ? about 250 kilograms of higher-enriched uranium are needed to be able to have enough material for one nuclear bomb with further enrichment .

In return, the six are offering to help supply and run Iran's research reactor which is fueled by plates made from higher enriched uranium, coupled with what Iran wants most ? relief from sanctions meant to penalize Iran for refusing to heed U.N. Security Council demands to stop all enrichment.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-accuses-iran-nuke-deception-delay-113402845.html

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FDA flags new concerns on Hospira's Rocky Mount plant

(Reuters) - Hospira Inc said U.S. health regulators issued a letter raising fresh concerns about one of the injectable-drugs maker's largest manufacturing plants in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, sending the company's shares down 4 percent.

Hospira's Rocky Mount facility has been under the FDA scanner since April 2010, when the regulator issued a warning letter stating manufacturing practices at the plant violated its defined standard practices.

The company said on Tuesday that the FDA inspected its Rocky Mount facility for three weeks and issued a letter outlining 20 concerns, three of which the agency had expressed earlier.

A number of these concerns were based on issues that are currently being resolved or have been identified by the company previously and would be addressed, Hospira said in a regulatory filing.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fda-flags-concerns-hospiras-rocky-mount-plant-140443889--finance.html

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Love Letters: Paul Monahan Loves Boston

Paul Monahan has seen his fair share of action. His well-earned reputation as a tough-living night owl, Paul is uniquely placed to carry on the legacy of Norman "Sailor Jerry" Collins as well as the 92 proof Rum that bears his name. Originally hailing from Boston, Paul now works as Sailor Jerry's Brand Ambassador. Paul has developed and expanded his craft within the world of mixology. This drive to be imaginative with spirits and develop engaging events has brought him to New York, where he continues to embody the spirit he finds in dive bars, cocktails bars, tattoo parlors and motorcycle shops.

---

Dear Boston,

You are fifty square miles of bittersweet emotion.

When the sun is out, your streets bustle with commuters rushing for trains and meetings - not to mention the duck boats and freedom trail walkers. Horns from cavalier drivers play honky tonk. Your eyes see beautiful old buildings surrounded by green grass and turning foliage.

After sunset, everyone rushes toward the quickest watered down draft and local sports bar. Lines into clubs and bars are filled with patrons practicing all manners and styles of cultural regression. Sirens from cavalier police officers and city officials plague your ears. The night's streets are welcoming, but also unforgiving.

After working for a decade in your bustling bars, I miss that singular darkness.

I miss the die-hard sports fans that have never played a competitive sport in their lives. I miss the intoxicated faces selling their souls to get into mediocre drinking establishments. I miss the pretentious city officials attempting to crack down on underage drinking and fire codes. I miss the single-serving friends claiming false promises to get through your doors. I miss the cold weather bringing in five hundred jackets but no where to put them. I miss the quiet nights at the bar when the thriving local sports teams are in the playoffs. I miss after-hours card games full of bartenders and club managers. I miss sleeping all day during the winter months and seeing only two hours of daylight before work. I miss telling myself I didn't care what time I got home that night, I was going to get up before noon.

I miss taking the red line home in the morning after work and watching commuters start their days. I miss watching the city repeat itself every night, where commuters and city dwellers drink like there is no tomorrow. I miss their attempt at an escape from their next Monday.

Today, I spend over 75 percent of my time on the road, in planes, in hotels and, naturally, in bars. Regardless of the time zone or latitude location, I still see the same faces, efforts, and intentions as I did the past ten years.

Still, I am forever grateful to have been shaped by the toughness of Boston.

Sincerely,
Paul Monahan

?

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/love-letters/paul-monahan-loves-boston_b_2817600.html

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Deutsche Bank Says Buy the Enduring Eight Tech Stocks (CSCO ...

During the bull market for technology stocks in the 1990s, investors eagerly awaited the quarterly results from the large-cap technology leaders. The personal computer was being totally integrated into the home and business environment and pricing was more competitive with each passing year. In a new research report, Deutsche Bank A.G. (NYSE: DB) says its time for investors to own the ?Enduring Eight? big-cap technology leaders again.

With business fundamentals expected to improve in 2013, corporate spending is expected to follow suit. The analysts at Deutsche Bank expect an upturn in tech business spending in 2013, after a flattish 2012, as growth picks up and confidence improves. Companies have been frugal in their information and technology budgets, and their IT infrastructure has aged. Gartner forecasts around 5% annual growth in?information technology (IT) spending from 2013 to 2016, led by storage and software.

One key reason cited for purchasing the large-cap tech leaders is that, in the Deutsche Bank view, large multinational companies treat the global tech giants as key operational partners and not mere vendors. The long-term and global relationships these tech leaders have with customers are part of their ability to endure the challenges of a dynamic and competitive industry ? a key difference from consumer tech products. In addition, these companies are already key players in big data, cloud and mobility, the main drivers of business IT spending

These are the Deutsche Bank enduring eight tech stocks to buy:

Networking leader Cisco Systems Inc. (NASDAQ: CSCO) currently is trading near the $20 level. The Wall St. consensus estimate target for Cisco is $26.

Storage giant EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC) makes the list. It is trading at what appears to be a support level of $23. The Thomson/First call price target is $30.

Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) is the only personal computer company to make the grade. It closed last Friday at $20.15, and the consensus target is lower at $17.50.

International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE: IBM), the leader in IT products and services worldwide, has a consensus price target of $230. The stock closed Friday at $202.91.

Semiconductor giant Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) is the only chip company to make the Deutsche Bank list. The stock closed Friday at $21.03 and has a consensus price target of $23.00.

Windows software maker Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) also makes the Deutsche Bank list. The stock closed Friday at $27.95 and has a consensus target of $33.

Network storage solution leader NetApp Inc. (NASDAQ: NTAP) is trading near $33.95, which is way below the 52-week high of $46.80. The consensus price target is $40.

Application software giant Oracle Corp. (NASDAQ: ORCL) rounds out the enduring eight list. Trading close to its 52-week high at $34.63, it has a consensus price target of $38.

The analysts at Deutsche Bank point out that while growth disappointed in 2012, it should be better in 2013. Over the cycle, tech?s enduring eight have generated healthy growth, which has yet to be fully appreciated by investors. From 2006 to 2012, average annual revenue and earnings per share growth was 9% and 15% respectively, better than the S&P?s 4% for both. And net margins and free cash flow yields are higher than history. The average trailing price-to-earnings ratio for tech?s enduring eight has compressed to 11.2x from 17.5x in 2005 to 2010. These companies have gone from being growth at a reasonable price stocks (GARP) to deep value.

The bottom line for investors is that these large-cap tech leaders are cheap. They also are not prone to suffer the fate of tech trends or fads that can erode their core business. That can really help investors if the market rally starts to slow down.

Lee Jackson

Source: http://247wallst.com/2013/03/04/deutsche-bank-says-buy-the-enduring-eight-tech-stocks-csco-emc-hpq-ibm-intc-msft-ntap-orcl/

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Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Dow: Old, yes, but hardly irrelevant in march to record

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Market professionals sometimes deride it as a relic, deeply flawed in its structure, useful mostly as the man-on-the-street's window on the stock market.

But the old man of Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average, has had enough kick left in its 117-year-old legs to vault to an all-time high before its major rivals. Not only that, but it has done it with arguably more tortoises than hares in its mix.

The index hit a high of 14,286.37 on Tuesday, surpassing the previous high set in 2007.

The Dow, created in 1896 with the shares of 12 companies, comprises 30 stocks. Most are household names: General Electric , Coca-Cola , Boeing , Procter & Gamble and IBM .

When it was originally conceived, the index was made up of the more important companies of the time, mainly railroads and raw materials producers. As time passed, the average shifted to reflect the changing economic make-up and now includes only a handful of companies that would be considered "industrial."

Investment pros regard a clutch of rival market measures - the S&P 500, the Russell averages and the MSCI Indexes - as better barometers of the overall market because they represent a broader swath of companies. But the Dow remains the common man's index, its compact size and infrequent changes making it easy for the average investor to follow.

The fact that the Dow is so widely followed and recognized by Main Street is part of what makes the index important.

"For everyday investors, the Dow is probably more important than the S&P 500," said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial, Westport, Connecticut.

"The idea that the Dow Jones industrial index is an industrial average reflecting the manufacturing sector in the United States went away decades ago."

So what has propelled it to uncharted territory when broader benchmarks are still retracing losses from the financial crisis? In a nutshell: dividends and value.

First, most of the stocks in the average pay dividends, giving it a slightly higher dividend yield, currently 2.61 percent, than the Standard & Poor's 500 Index' yield of 2.52 percent. The Dow's dividend yield has averaged a quarter percentage point above the S&P 500's yield since the U.S. stock market's post-crisis low in March 2009, attracting investors who favor income as well as stock price appreciation.

From the previous U.S. market peak close on October 9, 2007, the Dow's dividend superiority has contributed to a positive total return, including reinvested dividends, of 17.4 percent versus just 9.9 percent for the S&P.

Also, during the bear market from October 2007 to March 2009, the Dow fell less than other market measures. For instance, it lost 53.8 percent of its value, compared with 56.8 percent for the S&P 500.

The heavy focus on value stocks in the Dow has helped it during the recent market advance that began in November. The blue-chip index sports a price-to-earnings ratio of 14.5 times trailing 12-month earnings while the S&P is about 8 percent pricier, with a comparable multiple of 15.7.

That value bias has provided a tailwind for the Dow in recent months, with the index up 8.9 percent so far this year. A broader measure of the market, the Russell 3000 value index is up nearly 9.4 percent for the year, compared with a gain of about 7.3 percent for Russell's growth index <.rag>, and value has outperformed significantly since September.

"Historically, the Dow tends to perform better in difficult markets and the S&P tends to perform better in stronger markets," said Jamie Farmer, managing director for S&P Dow Jones Indices, in New York.

"If you see the tendency of the Dow right now to outperform slightly, that may be reflection of the fact that people are more drawn to those mega-cap stocks."

The Dow has another factor working in its favor over the last few months: it does not include Apple , which has tumbled from its record high hit last September. The stock's huge influence on the S&P 500 has been a significant drag, and had Apple merely remained stagnant after hitting its closing record of $702.10, the S&P would be about 10 points from its record.

Then again, if Apple had been in the price-weighted Dow over the last several years, it would have overwhelmed the index with its big gains. Apple has not been included in the Dow due to the fact that its still expensive $425 price would give it an undue influence on the index, said Farmer.

While they might not be the trendiest stocks on Wall Street, companies in the index are seen as having progressed past their heady high growth days and into a more mature stage of life, ideally offering steady returns.

That's not to say the index does not have detractors. The Dow indexes have traditionally favored stocks that reflect the economic makeup of the economy, so underperformers like American International Group can stay in the index, dragging the average lower. One of the more recent culprits has been Hewlett-Packard , which ironically is the biggest gainer in the Dow this year, up more than 40 percent.

One or two stocks can play an outsized role in the average's moves because of their price - International Business Machines , for instance, at $200 a share, more than doubles the price of every other member of the average except for two. The S&P 500 and most other indexes, in contrast, are market-cap weighted.

Also, very few stocks in the index can be called "growth" stocks - not even tech names like Cisco and Microsoft , which were added after their highest-growth years.

"Obviously it's only 30 stocks, so it's not the broader indicator like the S&P 500," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital in New York.

"You can have the Dow go up, and rest of the market just flag. It doesn't give you an accurate picture of what the whole market in general is really doing. But it's not something you totally discard."

(Additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Dan Grebler)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dow-old-yes-hardly-irrelevant-march-record-212617371--sector.html

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