Sunday, June 30, 2013

Demonstrators target DISD superintendent's home, but ordinance keeps them at a distance | Dallasnews.com - News for Dallas, Texas - The Dallas Morning News

From staff writer Claire Wiseman:

When a dozen demonstrators gathered at the corner of Hockaday and Snow White drives?Saturday morning, they?thought they'd be allowed closer to DISD Superintendent Mike Miles, the target of their protest.

"We had no idea that we would not be able to protest in front of his house," organizer Joyce Foreman?said.

But a city ordinance kept them on the sidewalk next to Amy and Scott Sample's home. Amy Sample only understood the noise outside after entering "DISD protest" into a Google search.

"We were just watching out the window, trying to figure out what was going on," she said. "We didn't know that it was planned."

The group assembled about 9:45 a.m. and were met by Dallas police, who informed them they'd have to stay on a strip of sidewalk on Snow White Drive.

Because Hockaday Drive doesn't have public sidewalks, that area provided the closest strip of public land?

Source: http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2013/06/demonstrators-target-disd.html

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"All eyes are opened, or opening to the rights of man, let the annual return of this day(July 4th), forever refresh our recollections of these rights, and an undiminished devotion to them."
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Source: http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?419819-Croatians-voluntarily-enter-the-EU-black-hole-of-debt&goto=newpost

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Graphic: In Focus: The Coal Lobby?s Fight for Survival

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been married for eight years. When we married, we both drank and smoked. My husband quit smoking five years ago, and I have continued to smoke off and on. If he catches me with a cigarette it becomes an argument, and it's either I quit or we're done!I love my husband, but I find it difficult to be honest about this. I don't see the big deal if I smoke a cigarette. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/graphic-focus-coal-lobby-fight-survival-123939903.html

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D-Wave Large-Scale Quantum Chip Validated, Says USC Team

An anonymous reader writes "A team of scientists says it has verified that quantum effects are indeed at work in the D-Wave processor, the first commercial quantum optimization computer processor. The team demonstrated that the D-Wave processor behaves in a manner that indicates that quantum mechanics has a functional role in the way it works. The demonstration involved a small subset of the chip's 128 qubits, but in other words, the device appears to be operating as a quantum processor."

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/qlW1olj54uc/story01.htm

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Breckenridge condo project collapses in debt

Developer, John Niemi (Andy Cross, The Denver Post)

An Austrian businessman has been ordered to pay $62 million to a Colorado developer, professional golfer Jesper Parnevik and another investor in a Breckenridge condominium deal that collapsed in debt.

But Erwin Lasshofer, a resident of Salzburg, apparently has no intention of paying, despite mounting fines of $10,000 a day, a warrant for his arrest for contempt of court and the wrath of an increasingly frustrated federal judge.

"Suffice it to say that this was a first in this court's experience," U.S. District Court Judge R. Brooke Jackson of Denver wrote in an order in April.

Jackson also ordered Lasshofer to pay $10,000 a day until he ponies up $2.18 million to Parnevik, developer John Niemi and Robert Naegele, a

Investor, Bob Naegele (Andy Cross, The Denver Post)

third partner. That tab reached $820,000 on Sunday, but Lasshofer has ignored every order issued by Jackson. Kevin Evans, Lasshofer's lawyer, said Lasshofer has no U.S. assets that could be seized.

It is unlikely that the arrest warrant will lead to Lasshofer's extradition, said former Denver District Court Judge Christina Habas, a lawyer with Keating Wagner Polidori Free. "Even though it is a criminal process, it is in a civil case. Now, if he was under indictment ... "

Evans said the plaintiffs ? Niemi, Parnevik and Naegele ? have no grounds for their lawsuit, and have misled Jackson. Lasshofer's lawyers also say Jackson lacks jurisdiction in the case, and they are appealing the judgment.

Lasshofer didn't return calls from The Denver Post.

"The way he has been treated thus far, he has no appetite to speak to anybody in the states," Evans said. "Everything that has happened in this case has been suspect."

Niemi's lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Denver claims he and his partners were duped into paying millions in upfront money to Lasshofer and Michael Burgess, who worked with him, in return for financing to build the Breckenridge development.

Burgess and Lasshofer never delivered and the project fell apart, leaving Niemi and his investors with losses that Jackson calculated to be the $62 million in damages he awarded.

Judge: "They got taken"

"I have a great deal of sympathy for their situation. They got taken, taken out of a lot of money. This project would have been a huge success but for the lack of funding," Jackson said.

Niemi's tale begins in 2006, when he purchased three Breckenridge properties to develop in partnership with Fairmont Hotels and Resorts for $42 million in debt and equity.

His plan called for a blue-chip, mixed-use development with two lodges, more than 200 condominiums, underground parking, a spa and a restaurant.

The first phase of the development lasted nearly three years and saddled Niemi with $24 million in expenses for planning, architecture, design and other costs, according to the lawsuit.

Sales of duplexes completed along the Blue River shoreline, one of the properties, went well, generating $12 million in revenue.

Niemi started looking for financing of up to $220 million to pay off early loans and fund the remaining work.

A mortgage broker in Orlando, Fla., introduced him to Burgess, a South African businessman who headed now-defunct Prosperity International. Burgess had a partnership with Lasshofer and a collection of his companies ? the Innovatis Group ? that provide global asset management and consulting services.

Parnevik jumps inIn September 2009, Niemi locked into a single consolidated construction loan agreement with Prosperity, according to the suit. Lasshofer and Burgess promised to get financing from lenders, and Niemi and his partners agreed to pay upfront collateral of $2.18 million.

Burgess indicated that loan disbursements could begin in early 2010, Niemi said.

Parnevik, a longtime friend of Niemi's, jumped on the bandwagon when the developer showed him plans for a piece of the property called Shock Hill, where a lodge was to be located.

The land was "50 steps" from a stop on a gondola that rises from the town of Breckenridge to base areas in the ski resort, Niemi said.

It was a time for celebration. The project was full-speed ahead, despite a recession that had stalled development elsewhere.

"The pre-billings were very high. It was just a matter of getting it built and it would have been pretty much sold," said Parnevik, who with his family and friends invested about $6 million in the project.

"We celebrated the signing of the contract at my house in Florida," Parnevik said.

Burgess attended the party. "He seemed very nice," Parnevik said. "I talked to his colleagues, and they made me feel very secure that they were professional, and he seemed very professional. It never crossed my mind that it was a scam."

When the loans didn't materialize, Niemi became concerned, and in February 2010, he flew to Zurich to meet Lasshofer.

At the end of a week in which Lasshofer never arrived, he and Burgess drove the six hours to Salzburg and met with the Austrian.

Niemi said he asked him to return the $2.18 million and void the loan agreement. "Lasshofer looks at me like that's not going to happen. He stood up and said, 'You can call my attorney.' "

Things grew heated, and Burgess stepped between the two when the confrontation threatened to become violent, Niemi said.

Niemi returned to the U.S. to find the Fairmont Breckenridge project on the verge of collapse. Sponsors, contractors and clients were threatening to withdraw unless the Prosperity financing came through.

"Things started slowing down when we didn't receive the funds from Lasshofer and Burgess. All of us put in more money to cover it, and it just kind of fell apart," Parnevik said.

At the end of June, Burgess told Niemi he was returning to the U.S. from Europe the following day and funding would commence within a week.

But when Burgess stepped off a plane at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Secret Service agents were waiting to arrest him in a case that sounds a lot like Niemi's lawsuit.

An indictment accused Burgess of bilking Plymouth Rock Studios, a company planning a $550 million transformation of 240 acres in Massachusetts into a movie studio.

Burgess, Prosperity and unnamed co-conspirators promised to get financing for the studio project in return for a deposit of $3.5 million, according to the indictment.

Burgess sentencedAnne Conway, chief judge for U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, sentenced him to serve 15 years in prison and ordered him to pay restitution of more than $94 million.

At his sentencing, Burgess implicated an "associate partner," who Niemi's lawyers believe was Lasshofer.

"I was very trusting with all those I had been working with over the past four years, and especially my associate partner for the past 11 to 12 years," Burgess said, according to a court transcript of the November 2011 hearing. "I knowingly followed everything that this associate partner instructed me to do even though I was told by others to be more (wary) of my association with him. I was easily influenced, which has been a weakness of mine."

Burgess is listed as a defendant in Niemi's lawsuit, but the developer sees no hope of collecting any damages from him. At 71, "he is 1? years into a 15-year term," Niemi said.

Wringing the damages out of Lasshofer, who has already appealed the $62 million order and whose cash is in countries with banking regulations that shroud depositors' finances in secrecy, isn't going to be any easier.

"I think the chances of him paying are very slim indeed," Burgess said in an e-mail from a low-security lockup in the Butner Federal Correctional Complex in North Carolina.

Lasshofer's lawyers blame any fraud on Burgess.

"It was Burgess who sought out Innovatis and persuaded them to help with certain aspects regarding the project finance. Innovatis believed these deals were real and that Burgess was a highly successful and prominent businessman who intended to perform," Washington D.C.-based lawyer Carl Rauh told Jackson, according to a court document. "Their belief, like everybody else's now, in Burgess was wrong."

Niemi has hired Hubertus P. Weben, an Austrian lawyer, to pursue the case. Weben has filed a criminal complaint there against Lasshofer, according to a document in U.S. District Court.

Lasshofer "has been investigated for fraud on other occasions in the recent past," Weben said in the document.

Seven years after the Breckenridge project began, the land that Niemi, Parnevik and Naegele invested so much money and hope in is owned by others, after going through foreclosure and sale.

Homes are being built on one piece, and time-share condos on another.

The centerpiece of Niemi's project, Shock Hill, where he envisioned a lodge branded with the Fairmont name, will be the location of townhomes and duplexes.

Niemi still dreams of what might have been.

"We would have made $4 million a year just renting it out," he said.

Tom McGhee: 303-954-1671, tmcghee@denverpost.com or twitter.com/dpmcghee

Source: http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_23569214/breckenridge-condo-project-collapses-dept?source=rss

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Where did Miesha Tate, the Jones family and Brendan Schaub fall on Cagewriter?s hot list?

It's been a slow week of MMA, but never fear. UFC 162 and a championship fight are oh-so-close. Who had a good week, and who didn't?

Hot -- Miesha Tate: She's filming "The Ultimate Fighter" now as a coach against UFC women's bantamweight championship. She will also pose nude as a part of ESPN the Magazine's Body Issue.

Not -- Brendan Schaub and Matt Mitrione: The one-time teammates started squabbling on Twitter like a bunch of seventh graders. They are fighting on July 27, so the squabbling will likely continue until then.

Hot -- The Jones' jewelry collection: According to UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones' Instagram, the Jones family has much better jewelry than most of us.

Hot -- GLORY: The kickboxing promotion will become more available to the U.S. fans. They will start airing fights on Spike come October.

Thank you for reading Cagewriter this week. Want more? Follow Cagewriter on Facebook or Twitter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/where-did-miesha-tate-jones-family-brendan-schaub-211833292.html

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At Williamstown Theatre Festival: 'Animal Crackers,' when nearly Marx-ism isn't enough

(Courtesy photo)

WILLIAMSTOWN -- In taking on the 1928 George S. Kaufman & Morrie Ryskind/Bert Kalmar and Harrry Ruby musical, "Animal Crackers," director Henry Wishcamper has reimagined this Marx Brothers vehicle -- it was their last Broadway show before they headed to Hollywood where they made a film version in 1930 -- as, essentially, a series of loosely connected vaudeville sketches set against the background of a swank party in a swank Long Island mansion where a much prized painting is about to be unveiled, but not before it becomes the target of thieves.

Wishcamper sends the action spilling off the stage and into the audience at Williamstown Theatre Festival's Main Stage, up and down the aisles on the main floor and through the box seats on the second and main kevels.

But for all the energy being expended at Williamstown, it all feels more like a lot of huffing and puffing rather than antic and madcap; deliberate and effortful rather than the exuberant sharply timed rhythms of a "Laugh-In" or "Monty Python."

The chief problem is the show's Marx Brothers avatars -- Jonathan Brody's dutiful Chico-like Emmanuel Ravelli; Brad Aldous' unsettlingly leering Professor; and Joey Slotnick's Capt. Spaulding, one of Groucho's signature characters.

?

What's missing is the natural, easylooking chemistry among them; the audacious, brazen, carefree tearing apart of the pretensions of the idle rich. It doesn't help that Ellen Harvey's Mrs. Rittenhouse isn't

much of a target.

Brody goes through Chico's motions, playing the piano, for example, ably but without the tasty flavors Chico Marx brought to the keyboard. Aldous' Harpo takes an unimpressive turn at the harp. He lacks Harpo Marx' virtuosity just as he lacks throughout Harpo's robust libidinous spirit and boyishly impish, naughty impulses. There is something faintly unsettling and unnerving in Aldous' approach.

Slotnick catches Groucho's vocal and physical mannerisms but misses, for the most part, the edge that shapes his puns, ad-libs, insults, although at Thursday's opening, Slotnick began rising to Groucho's occasion in the show's second half.

Overall, the timing is off when the Nearly-Marx Brothers are around, especially Brody's Chico and Aldous' Harpo.

?

It's no small irony that "Animal Crackers" is at its most stylish and breezy when it is dancing and when it is in the hands of its supporting players, particularly Ren?e Elise Goldsberry, whose remarkable singing voice ranges from the captivatingly crystalline in her two duets with Adam Chanler-Berat, "Why Am I So Romantic?" and "Watching the Clouds Roll By" to the haunting deeper register in her remarkable "The Blues My Naughty Sweetie Gives to Me," which is alone worth the admission.

Mara Davi also raises the bar, especially in her dance numbers with Joey Sorge -- the jaunty "Three Little Words" and the second-act opener, "Long Island Low Down."

Davi and Sorge's dancing -- indeed the dancing throughout -- soars on a terrifically saucy, impudent, carefree spirit that lifts "Animal Crackers" like a hot-air balloon, until the Nearly-Marx Brothers bring everything back to earth.

Source: http://www.berkshireeagle.com/life_arts/ci_23565217/at-williamstown-theatre-festival-animal-crackers-when-nearly?source=rss_viewed

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Hollyoaks star is blasted after train jump Twitter rant

HOLLYOAKS star James Sutton was slammed by his girlfriend ? after moaning at being delayed after a man jumped in front of a train.

And Virgin Trains bosses also criticised the actor, who plays John Paul McQueen in the Channel 4 soap, for complaining about the service.

Sutton, 30, was forced to apologise for his insensitive Twitter remark after his Liverpool to London train was delayed following the incident at Rugby, Warks.

He tweeted: ?Various trains to catch. If everyone could refrain from jumping in front of them for the next few hours, that would be great.?

But girlfriend Jessica Fox, 30, who plays Nancy Hayton in Hollyoaks, tweeted him: ?That?s somebodies child!!?

And Virgin?s tweet to him said: ?Some sensitivity would be appreciated, delayed or not.?

Source: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/soaps/4990102/Hollyoaks-star-is-blasted-after-train-jump-Twitter-rant.html

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Nate Silver: Hillary Is the Strongest Non-Incumbent Ever (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/315892277?client_source=feed&format=rss

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You Can Use Digg Reader Now

You Can Use Digg Reader Now

Just in time! On the weekend before Google Reader is set to mercilessly kill itself off, Digg Reader has opened its arms to everyone. After being in beta, Digg Reader is ready for public release. It's a simple process. Just head here. Link up your Google account and Digg Reader will show everything you had in Google Reader. And then read, I guess. [Digg]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/you-can-use-digg-reader-now-615778369

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Chopped Recap: Climbing and Cooking

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/chopped-recap-climbing-and-cooking/

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How a Fridge Full of Beer That Only Unlocks for Canadians Gets Made

As part of a recent ad campaign, Canadian beer company Molson Candian took a fridge full of its special adult beverage all around Europe to share with the thirsty masses. But there was a catch?the only way to unlock the boozy treasure was by scanning a Canadian passport. And though you may have already seen the commercial itself making the rounds these past few days, chances are you haven't seen what's actually the coolest part of the whole campaign?how a Canuck-specific cooler gets made.

The video gives you a look into the fridge's entire construction; you get to see everything from the shiny red paint job to the passport scanner's wiring process. Of course, the latter is likely going to raise a few red flags for the more privacy-wary poutine enthusiasts, but it seems everyone in the commercial eventually found someone willing to swipe their Canadian passport. Because fortunately for Europe's native population, the one nationality they needed is the just aboot the nicest around. [Design Taxi]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/how-a-fridge-full-of-beer-that-only-unlocks-for-canadia-596858353

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News in Brief: Voyager 1 on fast track toward interstellar space

News in Brief: Voyager 1 on fast track toward interstellar space

More than 35 years after launch, the probe finally nears the solar system's edge

More than 35 years after launch, the probe finally nears the solar system's edge

By Jessica Shugart

Web edition: June 27, 2013

Enlarge

Voyager 1 is illustrated merging onto the "magnetic highway" at the solar system's edge.

Credit: JPL-Caltech/NASA

The Voyager 1 space probe has merged into a newly discovered zone at the solar system?s edge, and scientists think the craft?s next destination could be interstellar space. Measurements from Voyager?s erratic transition, presented at a meeting in December (SN: 1/12/13, p. 17) and in the June 27 Science, reveal ?that the probe no longer encounters particles emanating from the sun. But Voyager 1 still feels the effects of the sun?s spiral magnetic field. Voyager team scientists think this realm could represent the last leg of Voyager?s journey out of the solar system.

A change in the orientation of the magnetic field will likely herald the probe?s entry into interstellar space. When this will happen ?is anybody?s guess,? says ?Leonard Burlaga, a Voyager team member at NASA?s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. But the timing of another Voyager milestone is certain: The plutonium that powers the spacecraft?s instruments will run out in 2020. The team hopes the probe will escape the solar system before then, Burlaga says. ?We're looking forward to seeing that interstellar medium.?


L.F. Burlaga et al. Magnetic Field Observations as Voyager 1 Entered the Heliosheath Depletion Region. Science. Published June 27, 2013. doi:10.1126/science.1235451 [Go to]

S.M. Krimigis et al. Search for the Exit: Voyager 1 at Heliosphere?s Border with the Galaxy. Science. Published June 27, 2013. doi:10.1126/science.1235721 [Go to]

E.C. Stone et al. Voyager 1 Observes Low-Energy Galactic Cosmic Rays in a Region Depleted of Heliospheric Ions. Science. Published June 27, 2013. doi:10.1126/science.1236408 [Go to]


T. Lewis. Voyager crossing superhighway to solar system exit. Science News. Vol. 183 #1, January 12, 2013. Available online: [Go to]

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/351258/title/News_in_Brief_Voyager_1_on_fast_track_toward_interstellar_space

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Sikh group hopes to sue Indian official in Wis.

MILWAUKEE (AP) ? A Sikh (seek) group is offering $10,000 to anyone who serves an Indian head of state with federal lawsuit papers on his expected visit to Wisconsin next week.

Sikhs for Justice filed a civil lawsuit this week in Milwaukee. One defendant is Parkash Singh Badal (BAH'-dhul), chief minister of the Indian state of Punjab. The other is his son, Sukhbir (sook-BEER') Singh Badal.

The advocacy group alleges the Badals oversee a state police force that uses torture.

The group was unable to serve the elder Badal when he visited Wisconsin last year. They're offering $10,000 to whichever professional server or community member serves him this time.

Parkash Singh Badal's media adviser says the case is "politically motivated" but wouldn't confirm whether his client will be in the U.S. next week.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sikh-group-hopes-sue-indian-official-wis-151029494.html

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Markets remain calm as half-year comes to an end

LONDON (AP) ? Markets were ending the half-year on a settled note Friday after a month of volatility that pushed many of the world's major stock indexes down from multi-year and record highs.

The coincidence of the end to the month, quarter and half year may prompt some volatility in trading, as some investors try to make their portfolios look better for financial reports. But the prevailing market mood was calm, particularly compared with last week.

That's due to a number of factors, including solid U.S. economic data and a seeming attempt by the U.S. Federal Reserve to ease investor concerns over the pace of any reduction in its monetary stimulus.

Japan also got a dose of upbeat economic news when the government said industrial production rose 2 percent in May from April, the fourth straight monthly increase. Perhaps more importantly, the consumer price index stopped falling for the first time in seven months. That's important as the Bank of Japan is engaged on a massive monetary stimulus to get prices rising again after a near two-decade period of deflation.

"The latest Japanese economic data just published highlighted encouraging signs of recovery," said Neil MacKinnon, global macro strategist at VTB Capital.

The news gave Japan's main stock index, the Nikkei 225 index, a big lift as it finished 3.5 percent higher at 13,677.32. The Nikkei's gains fed through across Asia and helped shore up Europe at the open.

Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.1 percent to 6,251, while Germany's DAX was more or less unchanged at 7,989. The CAC-40 in France fell 0.4 percent to 3,749.

Wall Street was poised for another solid performance, with Dow futures up 0.3 percent and the broader S&P 500 futures 0.4 percent higher.

The main U.S. economic data later will be a manufacturing survey around the Chicago region and the University of Michigan's latest assessment of consumer confidence around the country. They may determine whether the Dow finishes the month in positive territory. It needs to add 200 points to do so, a tough ask.

"It's arguably going to be close as to whether the Dow can manage to finish the month positive," said Fawad Razaqzada, market strategist at GFT Markets. "The bulls would need to remain in a rampant move."

One reason stock markets have calmed this week is that Fed officials appear to be trying to calm investor jitters over an upcoming reduction in the financial assets the central bank buys every month to help the economy. The so-called tapering of the purchases raised fears because the stimulus has been one of the drivers for stocks over recent years.

Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng advanced 1.8 percent to 20,803.29 while mainland Chinese shares also rose as fears eased of a credit crunch in China. The Shanghai Composite Index gained 1.5 percent to 1,979.21, while the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index edged up less than 0.1 percent to 887.68.

The central bank had allowed rates that banks pay to borrow from each other to soar last week, part of an attempt to clamp down on massive credit in the informal lending industry. Later, however, Chinese policymakers softened their stance with the promise to provide "liquidity support" if needed.

In currency markets, the dollar has been making further gains against the yen, trading up 0.5 percent higher at 99.01 yen on Friday. The euro was up 0.2 percent at $1.3059.

Oil prices were steady too with the benchmark rate up 60 cents at $97.65 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-remain-calm-half-comes-end-103449011.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Report: Hernandez investigated for double murder

Washington Redskins v Tampa Bay BuccaneersGetty Images

In their zeal to defend the name Redskins against disorganized and scattered opposition that gradually is becoming more organized and less scattered, the NFL team bearing that name has had a tendency to seize in knee-jerk fashion upon anything that supports the position that the name isn?t offensive.

The two primary tactics having entailed citing the various high schools that still use the name (there are fewer all the time) and trumpeting the opinions of Native Americans who have no problem with the name, and who ostensibly would regard as a compliment the greeting, ?What?s up, redskin??

As explained by Dave McKenna in an item published earlier today by Deadspin (yeah, I know that one of the morons who works there recently called me a moron . . . again), a supposed Native American Chief whom the Redskins recently trotted out in support of the name isn?t a Chief, and may not even be a Native American.? But the Redskins, who apparently have chosen to dispense with steps like vetting a guest, put the guy on their in-house web show, described him as a Chief, and had him explain why he supports the name.

And, yes, the guy actually said that Native Americans on the ?reservation? actually great each other with, ?Hey, what?s up, redskin??

Complicating matters for the league is that Commissioner Roger Goodell recently pointed to the same non-Chief-possibly-non-Native-American in a letter to member of Congress defending the ongoing use of the name Redskins.

The full item is worth a read, even though it?s a little lengthy.? Also, it probably should include a disclaimer that the author once triggered a defamation lawsuit from owner Daniel Snyder, which gives McKenna a natural bias.

But the point has been made.? Yet again, the Redskins end up looking bad while trying to make their name look good.

If nothing else, we now know why they?ve hired Frank Luntz.? Then again, maybe they think he?s a Chief, too.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/27/report-hernandez-is-being-investigated-for-july-2012-double-murder/related/

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Stocks gain on encouraging news about the economy

Trader William McInerney works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday, May 28, 2013. A jump in home prices is helping send the stock market sharply higher in early trading. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Trader William McInerney works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Tuesday, May 28, 2013. A jump in home prices is helping send the stock market sharply higher in early trading. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Better news on jobs and consumer spending pushed stocks higher Thursday.

The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose for a third straight day. Bond yields fell for a second day, easing worries that a sudden spike in interest rates could hurt the economy.

Consumer spending rose 0.3 percent last month as incomes increased at the fastest pace in three months, the government reported. The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits fell 9,000 to 346,000 last week. The report added to evidence that the job market is improving modestly.

Stocks have rallied since Tuesday as investors took advantage of lower prices after a sell-off that lasted till Monday. The plunge came after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that the central bank could cut back on its stimulus later this year and possibly end it next year, if the economy continued to improve.

The Dow sank 560 points over Wednesday and Thursday of last week. Even with the gains this week the index is still 293 points below where it was June 18, the day before the Fed laid out its plans for how it might wind down its stimulus.

The central bank is buying $85 billion in bonds every month to hold down long-term interest rates and encourage borrowing and spending. Fed stimulus has underpinned a stock market rally that started in March 2009 by encouraging investors to put money into risky assets.

"What's driving that market up is that people are realizing that they are in a 'win-win' situation," said Rick Robinson, a regional Chief Investment Officer at Wells Fargo Private Bank. "If you have good economic data that should be good for stocks, if you have poor economic data ... that means the Fed will probably have its (stimulus) longer."

The Dow closed up 114.35 points, or 0.8 percent, to 15,024.49. The S&P 500 index climbed 9.94 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,613.20.

Nine of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 rose, led by financial stocks. Materials companies were the only group that fell.

In a sign that investors were once again more confident in holding riskier assets, the Russell 2000 index of small-company stocks rose 16.09 points, or 1.7 percent, to 979.92, more than twice as much as the rest of the market.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.48 percent from 2.54 percent late Wednesday. The yield climbed as high 2.66 percent on Monday, the highest since August 2011. The rate has surged since May 3, when it touched its low for the year of 1.63 percent. Concern that the Fed is poised to start pulling back on its stimulus prompted investors to sell bonds, pushing the yield higher.

Investors who have added bonds to their portfolios at the expense of stocks should consider reducing their fixed income holdings because yields are likely to rise further, said Doug Cote, chief market strategist at ING Investment Management. Bonds rallied from 2007 to 2012, years that encompassed the financial crisis and the Great Recession. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to a record low of 1.39 percent in July last year.

"For the first time in five years, equities are the safest asset class," Cote said.

Higher yields on Treasury bonds translate into higher borrowing costs on many kinds of loans including home mortgages. Average U.S. rates on fixed mortgages surged this week to their highest levels in two years. Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday that the average rate on the 30-year loan jumped to 4.46 percent. That's up from 3.93 percent last week and the highest since July 2011.

Higher rates have yet to slow the housing market. Homebuilders got a lift from a report Thursday suggesting that the housing recovery remains intact. The number of people who signed contracts to buy U.S. homes jumped in May to the highest level in more than six years.

D.R. Horton rose 79 cents, or 3.8 percent, to $21.71. Lennar gained $1.37 cents, or 3.8 percent, to $37.38.

Investors were also encouraged by comments from a key Fed official. Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William Dudley said the central bank would likely keep buying bonds if the economy failed to grow at the pace the Fed was expecting.

"If labor market conditions and the economy's growth momentum were to be less favorable than in the (Fed's) outlook_and this is what has happened in recent years_I would expect that the asset purchases would continue at a higher pace for longer," Dudley said at a news conference in New York.

While the S&P 500 index is on track to record its first monthly loss since October, the index is still poised to end June with the best first half of a year since 1998, when it rose 17.7 percent. The index has gained 13.2 percent so far this year.

The market will likely become more volatile though in the second half of the year as investors assess when the Fed will end its stimulus, said Kate Warne, investment strategist at retail brokerage firm Edward Jones.

"The general outlook for the economy is solid," said Warne. "The trend in stock prices is likely to continue to be higher, even though we'll see a lot more zig-zagging as everyone debates the timing of the Fed's next move."

In commodities trading, the price of oil rose $1.55, or 1.6 percent, to $97.05 a barrel. Gold fell $18.20, or 1.5 percent, to $1,211.60 an ounce. The price of the precious metal has plunged more than 10 percent in the last two weeks. Gold traded below $1,200 for the first time since August 2010.

In other trading, the Nasdaq composite rose 25.64 points, or 0.8 percent, to 3,401.86.

The dollar fell against the euro and the Japanese yen.

Among stocks making big moves:

? ConAgra Foods rose $1.69, or 5.1 percent, to $35.04 after the company posted a quarterly profit that came in a penny above the forecasts of Wall Street analysts. The maker of Chef Boyardee, Hebrew National and other packaged foods benefited from acquisitions and price cuts that helped increase sales. ?Payroll processor Paychex fell $1.39, or 3.7 percent, to $36.60 after posting earnings that fell short of analysts' expectations. The company said profit for the three months through May 31 came in roughly flat at 34 cents per share. Analysts had expected earnings of 37 cents a share.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-27-Wall%20Street/id-9e11ea2268044917b3c374580a808766

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Armstrong uninvited, unwanted guest at 100th Tour

FILE - In this May 20, 2010 file photo, Lance Armstrong bleeds from a cut under his left eye after crashing during the fifth stage of the Tour of California cycling race in the outskirts of Visalia, Calif. The dirty past of the Tour de France came back on Friday, June 28, 2013, to haunt the 100th edition of cycling's showcase race, with Lance Armstrong telling a newspaper he couldn't have won without doping. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

FILE - In this May 20, 2010 file photo, Lance Armstrong bleeds from a cut under his left eye after crashing during the fifth stage of the Tour of California cycling race in the outskirts of Visalia, Calif. The dirty past of the Tour de France came back on Friday, June 28, 2013, to haunt the 100th edition of cycling's showcase race, with Lance Armstrong telling a newspaper he couldn't have won without doping. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS, JUNE 22-23 - FILE - In this May 20, 2010 file photo, Lance Armstrong bleeds from a cut under his left eye after crashing during the fifth stage of the Tour of California cycling race in the outskirts of Visalia, Calif. The Tour de France, which starts next Saturday, June 29, 2013, remains a fantastic idea, not old even as it is put into practice for the 100th time. Asking riders to pedal around Western Europe's largest country and up and down some of its tallest mountains for three weeks is zany and whimsical enough to always be interesting. But is the Tour still worth taking seriously as a sports event? (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

(AP) ? Lance Armstrong made himself the uninvited guest at the Tour de France on Friday, coming back to haunt the 100th edition of the race and infuriating riders both past and present by talking at length in a newspaper interview about doping in the sport.

Armstrong told Le Monde that he still considers himself the record-holder for Tour victories, even though all seven of his titles from 1999-2005 were stripped from him last year for doping.

He said his life has been ruined by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency investigation that exposed as lies his years of denials that he and his teammates doped. He also took another swipe at cycling's top administrators, darkly suggesting they could be brought down by other skeletons in the sport's closet.

None of those comments broke new ground, but in answering questions from Le Monde ? a newspaper he scorned when he was still competing ? Armstrong ensured that his views on doping at the Tour would have maximum impact in France and couldn't easily be written off as sour grapes being hurled at the race from afar. The respected daily is very much France's newspaper of record. Its interview with the rider and his assertion that doping won't be eradicated from cycling dominated French airwaves ahead of the race start on Saturday, causing dismay and anger in the sport desperate to prove that it has turned the page on his era of serial cheating.

The Tour's director, Christian Prudhomme, suggested Armstrong was milking the race's notoriety to further his own agenda.

"This is a very big tournament, just look around: There are 2,300 accredited journalists here, there are cameras everywhere. So if someone wanted to transmit a message, this is the time obviously, especially since everyone likes this kind of controversial statements," he said.

Armstrong's comments and the consternation they caused highlighted cycling's dilemma: It is a sport fighting to give itself a cleaner, brighter future by combating drug cheats but much of that good work is being overshadowed by the dirty secrets of dopers from the past.

Pre-Tour, a drip-drip-drip of doping confessions and revelations about the Armstrong era have rained on the sport. Armstrong's former rival on French roads, 1997 Tour winner Jan Ullrich, admitted to blood-doping for the first time. French media also reported that a Senate investigation into the effectiveness of anti-doping controls pieced together evidence of drug use at the 1998 Tour by Laurent Jalabert, a former star of the race now turned broadcaster.

Armstrong's claim that it was "impossible" to win the Tour without doping in his era echoed what he already told U.S. television talk show host Oprah Winfrey in January, when he finally confessed. Then, he said doping was "part of the job." The banned hormone erythropoietin, or EPO, wasn't detectable by cycling's doping controls until 2001 and so was widely abused because it prompts the body to produce oxygen-carrying red blood cells, giving a big performance boost to endurance athletes.

"The Tour is a test of endurance where oxygen is decisive," Le Monde quoted Armstrong as saying. It published the interview in French.

Asked later by The Associated Press to clarify his comments, Armstrong confirmed on Twitter he was talking solely about the period from 1999-2005. He indicated that doping might not be necessary now.

"Today? I have no idea. I'm hopeful it's possible," Armstrong tweeted.

Still, his comments touched a nerve ? both because cycling has since spent heavily on a pioneering anti-doping program and because Armstrong, once very much a boss of the peloton, is now a pariah.

"Those were cursed years for the Tour de France," Prudhomme said. "When Armstrong said it was impossible to win the Tour during those years without doping, he is probably trying to find excuses for himself and say implicitly that there was nothing else he could have done."

Jean-Rene Bernaudeau, manager of the Europcar team, likened Armstrong to a robber who tells a bank how it should be run.

"I don't think it is nice that a guy who embodies a decade we should completely forget gives us lessons on how we should behave, while we were the ones who suffered during that time. It is almost surreal," he said. "This is unacceptable."

In a statement issued in the name of competitors at the 100th Tour, a union representing European professional riders said: "Enough is enough!"

"It is disgraceful to be systematically dragged through the mud and be denigrated by people aiming to make money off our backs or seeking notoriety," said the French wing of the union, the CPA.

A group of riders also asked for and were granted a meeting with the French sports minister before the start of Saturday's first stage, so they can voice their unhappiness.

The renewed pre-Tour focus on cycling's past has led to renewed appeals from some involved in the sport for a "truth and reconciliation" process ? where those involved in doping past and present could air what they know once and for all, so cycling can then move forward

"Having it come out in dribs and drabs: You know, Laurent Jalabert this week, this guy (another week) ? is ridiculous and painful and unnecessary," Jonathan Vaughters, a former Armstrong teammate and manager of the Garmin-Sharp team, said this week before Le Monde's interview.

"I really wish that we could get on with the truth and reconciliation committee. ... Let's just move the sport forward, let's get it out, let's deal with it, let's recognize it, let's own it, let's learn from it."

Armstrong told Le Monde he would be prepared to appear before such a committee.

"The whole story has still not been told," he was quoted as saying. The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency investigation that unmasked him as a serial doper "did not paint a faithful picture of cycling from the end of the 1980s to today. It succeeded perfectly in destroying one man's life but did not benefit cycling at all."

He argued that doping would never be eradicated.

"I did not invent doping," Le Monde quoted Armstrong as saying. "And nor did it end with me."

Perhaps what was most interesting about Armstrong's interview was the choice of newspaper: It was Le Monde that reported in 1999 that corticosteroids were found in the American's urine as he was riding to the first of his Tour wins. Armstrong complained back then he was being persecuted by "vulture journalism, desperate journalism."

Now seemingly prepared to let bygones be bygones, Armstrong was asked whether, when he raced, it was possible to succeed without doping.

"That depends on which races you wanted to win. The Tour de France? No. Impossible to win without doping," Le Monde quoted him as saying.

After Armstrong retired for the first time in 2005, cycling pioneered a so-called "biological passport" program, introduced in 2008, that monitors riders' blood readings for tell-tale signs of doping. Riders in the top tier of teams were tested an average of nearly 12 times in 2012.

Pat McQuaid, president of cycling's governing body, the UCI, called the timing of Armstrong's interview "very sad."

"The culture within cycling has changed since the Armstrong era and it is now possible to race and win clean," McQuaid said in a statement.

___

AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire, AP writer Jamey Keaten and AP video journalist Ben Barnier contributed from Porto Vecchio.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-06-28-Tour%20de%20France-Armstrong/id-2680e74a209a4930826d0cab4828e38a

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Info tech company CDW rises in debut on the Nasdaq

NEW YORK (AP) ? CDW's stock climbed Thursday in the information technology company's first day of trading on the Nasdaq.

CDW rose $1.48, or 8.7 percent, to $18.48 in late morning trading Thursday after rising as high as $18.67 earlier.

The offering of about 23.3 million shares was priced at $17 per share. That was at the low end of its projected range of $17 to $18. CDW Corp. raised about $396 million from the IPO.

The underwriters have a 30-day option to buy up to an additional 3.5 million shares.

CDW said in a regulatory filing that it plans to use part of the net proceeds to redeem $156 million senior subordinated notes. It intends to use $24.4 million in proceeds for a one-time payment related to the termination of a management services agreement. The company also plans to use some of the proceeds to exercise its right under an equity clawback provision related to $175 million senior secured notes.

CDW reported 2012 net income of $119 million on revenue of $10.13 billion. In 2011, the Vernon Hills, Ill.-based company had net income of $17.1 million and revenue of $9.6 billion.

The shares are trading under the "CDW" ticker symbol.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tech-company-cdw-rises-debut-nasdaq-145250509.html

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'No one wants this fight:' Ecuadoreans divided over Snowden asylum

Dolores Ochoa / AP

A vendor who sells roasted corn pushes her cart past a flower shop in Quito, Ecuador, on Wednesday. Unlike with China, Russia or Cuba, the Obama administration could swiftly hit Ecuador in the pocketbook by denying reduced tariffs on cut flowers, artichokes and broccoli if it grants Snowden's request for asylum.

By Mary Murray and Miguel Almaguer, NBC News

QUITO, Ecuador -- Ecuador, the South American country known for the Middle of the World -- a park honoring the Equator that boasts a yellow line painted on the ground said to be precisely at Earth?s midpoint -- is now becoming the center of an international chase for National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden.

Public opinion in Ecuador runs hot and cold on whether the country should extend political asylum to Snowden. While some admire their president for trying to stick it to the United States, others fear economic fallout if Snowden settles in Ecuador.

One Ecuadorean newspaper this week called the leaker a ?hot potato,? while another labeled him ?a spy.?

Luis Ortega, who makes his living working in tourism, believes political fighting of any kind is bad for business. His big question: ?Will Americans stop coming here??

The 25-year-old, who had just finished showing a tour group from Chicago around Quito?s World Heritage landmarks, said he was worried about his livelihood.

?I just got married and I can?t afford for my business to suffer,? he said.

Ecuador?s tourism industry generates more than $1 billion a year and is growing.

Jose Jacome / EPA file

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa smiles at the crowd during a military act at the presidential palace in Quito, Ecuador, on Wednesday. Correa announced that his government will decide with 'absolute sovereignty' on political asylum for Edward Snowden.

?Americans come here because we?re friends,? Ortega said. ?No one wants this fight.?

Rodrigo Espinosa shared that same point of view. He?s employed by a private security firm that caters to American business executives.

?Snowden is not our problem, so why are we sticking our nose into this business?? he said.

The concerns are not unfounded. On Wednesday, U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-NJ, who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, vowed to eliminate the preferential trade agreements in place under the Andean Trade Preference Act should Snowden, 29, gain asylum in Ecuador.

"Our government will not reward countries for bad behavior," Menendez said in a written statement. At the end of July, Congress must vote to renew the trade accord.

That message angered Ecuador's President Rafael Correa, an economist educated in the United States. In a tweet, Correa denounced the U.S. view as ?unjust? and ?immoral."

Heightening tensions further, Correa's representative on Thursday renounced the trade benefits and called the lower tariffs ?blackmail,? sarcastically suggesting that Washington instead use Ecuador?s share of $23 million for human rights training inside the United States.

"Ecuador does not accept pressure or threats from anyone, nor does it trade with its principles," said Fernando Alvarado, the communications secretary.

U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman told reporters in Washington that despite Alvarado's comments, Ecuador was still eligible for benefits under two different programs, Reuters reported.

Although China invests heavily in the region, the U.S. remains Ecuador's main trading partner, accounting for some 40 percent or about $9 billion of all exports.

Ecuador benefits heavily from its Andean trade program with the United States. An oil-rich country, Ecuador exported an estimated $5.4 billion worth of oil, as well as $166 million from its flower industry, $122 million of fruits and vegetables and $80 million of tuna to the United States in 2012.

In a country that battles a high poverty rate, the flower industry alone employs more than 100,000 workers, many of them women.?

Ecuadoreans like Dr. Catalina Nuncios applaud Alvarado's view and stand ready to welcome Snowden with open arms.

?We are Christians and cannot turn our back on this young man who needs our help,? said Nuncios, a pediatrician who voted for Correa twice. She said she felt offended by Menendez's statement.

President Obama remarks on the situation with admitted NSA leaker Edward Snowden, saying he has no plans to disrupt relations with Russia and China, nor to scramble jets to capture the "29-year-old hacker."

?No one can threaten us to toe their line," Nuncios said.

Engineering student Jesus Lombardi, who was born in Ecuador but raised in southern California, said he feels torn.

?The American part of me understands national security, but my Ecuadorean side is proud that Correa is putting my country on the map.?

As tensions escalate, Snowden remains in legal limbo somewhere in the Moscow airport.

Ecuadorean law is, in fact, hindering his case. Under the constitution, Snowden must make his asylum request in person either in the country or at an Ecuadorean embassy or consulate. And, according to local press reports, Snowden still does not possess a legal travel document that would allow him to board a flight to Quito.

NBC's Carlos Rigau and?Reuters contributed to this report.?

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Kerry plunges back into Mideast peace diplomacy

AMMAN, Jordan (AP) ? Secretary of State John Kerry plunged back into the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict on Thursday, using Jordan as a base for talks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

It is Kerry's fifth visit to the region to try to restart peace talks that broke down in 2008.

He left Amman Thursday evening in a convoy of nearly a dozen vehicles for the roughly 90-minute drive to Jerusalem to dine with Netanyahu. A Jordanian military helicopter flew over his convoy during the trip. He is to have lunch with Abbas on Friday in Amman and more meetings could be in the offing.

U.S. State department officials say that while there are no scheduled plans for any three-way discussion during Kerry's trip, they are confident that both sides are open to negotiations, or at least sitting down together at the same table.

Kerry, they say, will continue to try to find common ground between the two sides that would lead to a re-launching of peace talks. On this trip, Kerry is trying to pin down precisely what conditions Abbas and Netanyahu have for restarting talks and perhaps discuss confidence-building measures.

Beyond that, Kerry wants to talk about the positive outcomes, such as enhanced economic growth, of a two-state solution. But at the same time, the secretary, who has long-time relationships with officials from both sides, will remind them of what's at stake if the conflict is left unresolved, they said.

Earlier this month, in a speech to the American Jewish Committee Global Forum in Washington, Kerry warned of serious consequences if no deal is reached.

"Think about what could happen next door," he told the Jewish audience. " The Palestinian Authority has committed itself to a policy of nonviolence. ... Up until recently, not one Israeli died from anything that happened from the West Bank until there was a settler killed about a month ago.

"But if that experiment is allowed to fail, ask yourselves: What will replace it? What will happen if the Palestinian economy implodes, if the Palestinian Security Forces dissolve, if the Palestinian Authority fails? ... The failure of the moderate Palestinian leadership could very well invite the rise of the very thing that we want to avoid: the same extremism in the West Bank that we have seen in Gaza or from southern Lebanon."

So far, there have been no public signals that the two sides are narrowing their differences.

Abbas has said he won't negotiate unless Israel stops building settlements on war-won lands or accepts its 1967 lines ? before the capture of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in a Mideast war that year ? as a starting point for border talks. The Palestinians claim all three areas for their future state.

Netanyahu has rejected the Palestinian demands, saying there should be no pre-conditions ? though his predecessor conducted talks on the basis of the pre-1967 lines, and the international community views the settlements as illegal or illegitimate.

Earlier on Thursday, Kerry talked about the crisis in Syria and the Mideast peace process over lunch with Jordan's King Abdullah II.

In a statement, the Royal Palace said Abdullah told Kerry that he will continue trying to bridge the gaps in the viewpoints of Palestinians and Israelis. But he warned that Israel's "unilateral actions, which include continuous Israeli trespassing on Christian and Muslim holy sites, undermine chances for peace."

On Wednesday, an Israeli planning committee gave the final approval for construction of dozens of new homes in a settlement in east Jerusalem. The announcement, which was made the day before Kerry's visit, appeared to be an Israeli snub at the secretary of state's latest round of Mideast diplomacy.

Officials traveling with Kerry sought to minimize the significance of the announcement, saying the U.S. has repeatedly said that continued construction of settlements were unhelpful to efforts to restart the talks. The settlements are part of the Har Homa area of east Jerusalem. The Obama administration said it was "deeply concerned" back in 2011 when an Israeli planning commission approved 930 new housing units in the Har Homa neighborhood.

The Palestinian side condemned the announcement.

"Such behavior proves that the Israeli government is determined to undermine Secretary Kerry's efforts at every level," said Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat.

___

Associated Press writer Jamal Halaby in Amman contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-plunges-back-mideast-peace-diplomacy-154841578.html

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Social lemurs make better larcenists, scientists say

Social lemurs were found to be better thieves than their less social counterparts, in a study that could have implications for how animal intelligence in measured.

By Elizabeth Barber,?Contributor / June 27, 2013

Seven weeks old ring-tailed lemur twins sit in their enclosure in the Zoo in Erfurt, Germany, in May 2013. A recent experiment found that social lemurs make better thieves than do lemurs that live in small social groups.

Jens Meyer/AP

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If you ever have the occasion to dine with a lemur, choose one from a small social group.

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Researchers from Duke University have found that lemurs living in large social groups are smarter thieves, a find that could have implications for how scientists measure primate intelligence, which is usually correlated with brain size.

Researchers first trained 60 lemurs to see humans as their competitors for food and then arranged an experiment that gave the animals a choice between which human to steal food from: A person placidly staring down the lemur, or another person facing away from the lemur, their food left vulnerable.?

The lemurs from small social groups were indiscriminate in which food they went after, reaching as often for the vulnerable food as they did for the well-protected items. But the lemurs that came from large groups were savvier. They could read the social cues, and those cunning animals were more likely to target the food that the humans had left foolishly unguarded.

Scientists said that the lemurs in small and large social groups have brains of roughly the same size. Usually, brain-size is an indicator of how well an animal will score on intelligence tests, say researchers. But this study, says the scientists, suggests that social factors could also influence animal cognition and that more studies are needed that test forms of animal intelligence un-related to brain size.

?These data provide evidence for a relationship between group size and social cognition in primates, and reveal the potential for cognitive evolution without concomitant changes in brain size,? the scientists wrote in the study, published in PLOS ONE.

The results offer tentative support for what is called the ?social intelligence hypothesis,? which proposes that a group living selectively favors cognitive skills that help animals compete for food and mates within the group, while also maintaining the stability of large social groups. Animals who have those skills are favored in natural selection, meaning that the group as a whole will evolve to have heftier cognitive abilities than animals that have not experienced that natural selection in their small groups.

The stealthy knowledge that the large-group lemurs used in the experiment would also have been useful in their social groups, in which underling individuals must procure food or seize mating opportunities in secret.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/BRYFVtTK1RQ/Social-lemurs-make-better-larcenists-scientists-say

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Ritalin shows promise in treating addiction

June 27, 2013 ? A single dose of a commonly-prescribed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug helps improve brain function in cocaine addiction, according to an imaging study conducted by researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Methylphenidate (brand name Ritalin?) modified connectivity in certain brain circuits that underlie self-control and craving among cocaine-addicted individuals.

The research is published in the current issue of JAMA Psychiatry, a JAMA network publication.

Previous research has shown that oral methylphenidate improved brain function in cocaine users performing specific cognitive tasks such as ignoring emotionally distracting words and resolving a cognitive conflict. Similar to cocaine, methylphenidate increases dopamine (and norepinephrine) activity in the brain, but, administered orally, takes longer to reach peak effect, consistent with a lower potential for abuse. By extending dopamine's action, the drug enhances signaling to improve several cognitive functions, including information processing and attention.

"Orally administered methylphenidate increases dopamine in the brain, similar to cocaine, but without the strong addictive properties," said Rita Goldstein, PhD, Professor of Psychiatry at Mount Sinai, who led the research while at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) in New York. "We wanted to determine whether such substitutive properties, which are helpful in other replacement therapies such as using nicotine gum instead of smoking cigarettes or methadone instead of heroin, would play a role in enhancing brain connectivity between regions of potential importance for intervention in cocaine addiction."

Anna Konova, a doctoral candidate at Stony Brook University, who was first author on this manuscript, added, "Using fMRI, we found that methylphenidate did indeed have a beneficial impact on the connectivity between several brain centers associated with addiction."

Dr. Goldstein and her team recruited 18 cocaine addicted individuals, who were randomized to receive an oral dose of methylphenidate or placebo. The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measure the strength of connectivity in particular brain circuits known to play a role in addiction before and during peak drug effects. They also assessed each subject's severity of addiction to see if this had any bearing on the results.

Methylphenidate decreased connectivity between areas of the brain that have been strongly implicated in the formation of habits, including compulsive drug seeking and craving. The scans also showed that methylphenidate strengthened connectivity between several brain regions involved in regulating emotions and exerting control over behaviors -- connections previously reported to be disrupted in cocaine addiction.

"The benefits of methylphenidate were present after only one dose, indicating that this drug has significant potential as a treatment add-on for addiction to cocaine and possibly other stimulants," said Dr. Goldstein. "This is a preliminary study, but the findings are exciting and warrant further exploration, particularly in conjunction with cognitive behavioral therapy or cognitive remediation."

Additional co-authors included Nora D. Volkow, MD, the Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse; Dardo Tomasi, the MR director at BNL; and Scott J. Moeller, PhD a postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry at Mount Sinai.

This research was supported by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grants 1R01DA023579 and 1F32DA030017-01) and the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, divisions of the National Institutes of Health.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/qOFIq-NRB_g/130627151646.htm

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Hospitals seek high-tech help for hand hygiene

In this Thursday, June 20, 2013 photo, Theresa Gratton, infection prevention coordinator at St. Mary's Health Center, wears a device to help remind health care workers to keep their hands clean at the hospital in Richmond Heights, Mo. In the past, hospitals have mostly relied on education, threats of discipline and reports from observers to try and make sure staff keep their hands clean but St. Mary's began testing the device about a year ago and officials say they've been stunned by how well the system works.(AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

RICHMOND HEIGHTS, Mo. (AP) ? Hospitals have fretted for years over how to make sure doctors, nurses and staff keep their hands clean, but with only limited success. Now, some are turning to technology ? buzzers, lights and tracking systems that remind workers to sanitize and chart those who don't.

Health experts say poor hand cleanliness is a factor in hospital-borne infections that kill tens of thousands of Americans each year. Hospitals have tried varying ways to promote better hygiene.

Since last year, SSM St. Mary's Health Center in suburban St. Louis has been testing a system developed by Biovigil Inc., of Ann Arbor, Mich. A flashing light on badges worn by workers changes colors when hands have been cleaned and tracks compliance.

It is among several being tried at hospitals around the country.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hospitals-seek-high-tech-help-hand-hygiene-071012525.html

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Few Tips You Can Use To Find A Right Vacation Rental | Content for ...

Category: Top ? Recreation-and-leisure ? Travel ?

Author: Laura Lee | Total views: 113 Comments: 0
Word Count: 653 Date:

Planning for a holiday, then a vacation rental is easily the most important factor to check into apart from traveling. You have wide assortment of options to choose from once you plan a lease. Right from staying with someone you know to staying as a paying guest to booking a hotel or renting a villa are quite a few things you could think over for a holiday.

Pick a rental place: Renting a place to stay can be a tedious task. You need to have great source of information accessible so you could decide the correct one for you. The issue with choosing a place is, you cannot see the place before you reserve the place. Therefore you have to be a lot more worried about the rental. The quickest and easiest way to ensure you get a correct place will be to assess the place on the net and find pictures of the place and then decide if the place is mainly for you.

Vacation rental - the remain to choose:

Representative for rentals: It'll be a tiresome task to go to a place and locate a rental for you. It is nearly not a possible option that you have. An Agent can be of great help to you in this endeavour. Finding a great tourist guide might make it even easier. Tourist guides are typically well connected in the cities you might want to spend your holiday. Having a right travel agent will ensure you will get a right tourist guide also. There are a wide variety of travel agents available in the internet for you to choose from. Ensure you look for a reputed vendor who has good evaluation from clients and also have good credentials and is large enough as a company.

Avoid agents owning a chain of locations

You need to be the determining factor in making a choice for your stay. Agents with string of rental places will strive to motivate you places that aren't so popular and those that aren't chose by most travelers. It is better to have a good test on the place and see if it's the correct one for you before you opt to finalize the place.

The place you need to rent must have some characteristics and essentials to make your stay memorable. Good laundry services, a great bed having a great and well maintained mattress, a good kitchen with enough equipment for you to cook are a couple of things you got to look for before you finalize the place. Look for alternatives: A great agent should understand what you want and ought to provide you with options. The broker ought to be able to understas well as your need and then show you places that suite your lifestyle along with your journey need. Search for several choices and go through the place thoroughly and be sure to have checked the cleanliness of the place before you freeze on the same.

Well connected location: Planning you trip needs you to really plan the entire trip to its final moments. What you wish to do, where you want to go, and how you need to spend your day will all include in your trip planning. It is of extreme importance your vacation rental is a well connected place. The place must be well connected to local transfer, it must also be connected to great restaurants and shopping places to spend time. The crucial things have to be available at shortest of distances.

Cost: Finally, the most significant part of your holiday will be the affordability of the whole trip. Select a right vacation rental plus a right spot to make sure you don't spend too much cash on the holiday and also you don't withhold yourself from the delights of the trip.

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