Saturday, June 29, 2013

Obama jabs Russia, China on failure to extradite Snowden

By Jeff Mason and Mark Felsenthal

DAKAR (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama said on Thursday he would not start "wheeling and dealing" with China and Russia over a U.S. request to extradite former American spy agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Obama, who appeared concerned that the case would overshadow a three-country tour of Africa that he began in Senegal, also dismissed suggestions that the United States might try to intercept Snowden if he were allowed to depart Moscow by air.

"No, I'm not going to be scrambling jets to get a 29-year-old hacker," he told a news conference in Dakar, a note of disdain in his voice. Snowden turned 30 last week.

Obama said regular legal channels should suffice to handle the U.S. request that Snowden, who left Hong Kong for Moscow, be returned. Obama said he had not yet spoken to China's President Xi Jinping or Russian President Vladimir Putin about the issue.

"I have not called President Xi personally or President Putin personally and the reason is ... number one, I shouldn't have to," Obama said sharply.

"Number two, we've got a whole lot of business that we do with China and Russia, and I'm not going to have one case of a suspect who we're trying to extradite suddenly being elevated to the point where I've got to start doing wheeling and dealing and trading on a whole host of other issues," he said.

Snowden fled the United States to Hong Kong this month after leaking details of secret U.S. government surveillance programs, then flew to Moscow on Sunday. He had been expected to fly on to Havana on Monday but did not board the aircraft.

The American, who faces espionage charges in the United States and has asked Ecuador for political asylum, has not been seen since his arrival in Moscow. Russian officials said he remained in a transit area at Sheremetyevo airport.

CHINA, ECUADOR HIT BACK

Snowden's case has raised tensions between the United States and both China and Russia. On Thursday, Beijing accused Washington of hypocrisy on the issue of cyber security.

Obama's remarks seemed calibrated to exert pressure without leading to lasting damage in ties with either country.

Andy Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, said Obama was trying to play down the Snowden saga and minimize the impact on the United States.

"The more the administration can play it down, the more latitude they'll have in the diplomatic arena to work out a deal for him," he said.

Obama predicted there would be a made-for-TV movie about the ongoing saga, but indicated that damage to U.S. interests was largely limited to revelations from Snowden's initial leak.

"I continue to be concerned about the other documents that he may have," Obama said. "That's part of the reason why we'd like to have Mr. Snowden in custody."

Snowden's revelations of widespread snooping by the U.S. National Security Agency in China and Hong Kong have given Beijing considerable ammunition in an area that has been a major irritant between the countries.

China's defense ministry said the U.S. government surveillance program known as Prism "has revealed the concerned country's true face and hypocritical behavior". It did not name the country.

"This 'double standard' approach is not conducive to peace and security in cyber space," ministry spokesman Yang Yujun told reporters, according to state news agency Xinhua.

In Ecuador's capital Quito, the government said it was waiving preferential rights under a U.S. trade agreement to demonstrate its principled stand on Snowden's asylum request.

In a deliberately cheeky touch from the leftist government of President Rafael Correa, Ecuador also offered a multi-million donation for human rights training in the United States.

Ecuadorean officials added that the U.S. fugitive's case had not been processed because he had not yet reached any of its diplomatic missions.

"USEFUL" CONVERSATIONS

Obama said the United States expected all countries who were considering asylum requests for the former contractor to follow international law.

In Washington, the U.S. State Department warned of "grave difficulties" for U.S.-Ecuador relations if the Andean country were to grant Snowden asylum, but gave no specifics.

The White House said last week that Hong Kong's decision to let Snowden leave would hurt U.S.-China relations. Its rhetoric on Russia has been somewhat less harsh.

Obama acknowledged that the United States did not have an extradition treaty with Russia, but he said such a treaty was not necessary to resolve all of the issues involved.

He characterized conversations between Washington and Moscow as "useful" and said the United States would continue to press.

Putin has rejected U.S. calls to expel Snowden to the United States and said on Tuesday the fugitive should choose his destination and leave the airport as soon as possible. Ecuador has said it could take weeks to decide on his asylum request.

Washington is focused on how former Booz Allen Hamilton systems administrator Snowden gained access to National Security Agency secrets while working at a facility in Hawaii.

Obama said the leaks exposed "pretty significant vulnerabilities" at the NSA that had to be resolved.

In Baltimore, NSA Director Keith Alexander said the leaks had caused "significant and irreversible damage" and hurt the United States as well as its allies.

"I believe the irresponsible release of classified information will have a long-term detrimental impact on the intelligence community's ability to detect future attacks," Alexander told the AFCEA International Cyber Symposium.

"I worry there will be more leaks."

(Additional reporting by Brian Ellsworth and Alexandra Valencia in Quito, Lidia Kelly in Moscow, Sui-Lee Wee in Beijing, Deborah Charles in Baltimore and Steve Holland and Laura MacInnis in Washington; Writing by Jeff Mason; Editing by Mike Collett-White)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-jabs-russia-china-failure-extradite-snowden-142851006.html

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Obama yet to have African legacy like predecessors

AAA??Jun. 28, 2013?3:15 AM ET
Obama yet to have African legacy like predecessors
By NEDRA PICKLERBy NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press?THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES?

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, makes a toast during an official dinner with Senegalese President Macky Sall at the Presidential Palace on Thursday, June 27, 2013, in Dakar, Senegal. Obama is visiting Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania on a week long trip. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

U.S. President Barack Obama, left, makes a toast during an official dinner with Senegalese President Macky Sall at the Presidential Palace on Thursday, June 27, 2013, in Dakar, Senegal. Obama is visiting Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania on a week long trip. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

U.S. President Barack Obama looks out to sea through the 'Door of No Return,' at the slave house on Goree Island, in Dakar, Senegal, Thursday, June 27, 2013. Obama is calling his visit to a Senegalese island from which Africans were said to have been shipped across the Atlantic Ocean into slavery, a 'very powerful moment.' President Obama was in Dakar Thursday as part of a weeklong trip to Africa, a three-country visit aimed at overcoming disappointment on the continent over the first black U.S. president's lack of personal engagement during his first term. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

President Barack Obama meets with a group of drummers that were playing music on his departure after taking a tour of Goree Island, Thursday, June 27, 2013, in Goree Island, Senegal. Goree Island is the site of the former slave house and embarkation point built by the Dutch in 1776, from which slaves were brought to the Americas. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Barack Obama meets with a group of drummers that were playing music on his departure after taking a tour of Goree Island, Thursday, June 27, 2013, in Goree Island, Senegal. Goree Island is the site of the former slave house and embarkation point built by the Dutch in 1776, from which slaves were brought to the Americas. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is receiving an enthusiastic welcome in Africa, even as he has yet to leave a lasting policy legacy on the scale of his two immediate predecessors.

Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush passed innovative Africa initiatives while in the White House and passionately continue their development work in the region in their presidential afterlife.

Obama's efforts in Africa have not been so ambitious, despite his personal ties to the continent.

His first major tour of Africa as president is coming just now in his fifth year, while Bush and Clinton are frequent fliers to Africa. Bush even will be in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, next week at the same time as Obama, although they have no plans to meet.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-28-Obama/id-887a78f93a624da38121a4e6b7d2193a

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NATO convoy attacked by suicide bomber

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) ? Authorities say two civilians were killed when a suicide bomber attacked a convoy of NATO-led coalition troops in western Afghanistan.

Farah provincial governor spokesman Abdul Rahman Zhawandi said Saturday a man and woman on a motorcycle riding near the convoy were killed when the suicide attacker struck Thursday evening. Five civilians were wounded.

Coalition forces spokesman Capt. Luca Carniel says no NATO forces were hurt in the attack, but did provide medical assistance to the wounded civilians.

Elsewhere, in the central Oruzgan province, police spokesman Fareed Ayal said 20 Taliban fighters and one police officer were killed in an operation late Thursday.

Though the Taliban have indicated they are willing to start peace talks at a new office in Qatar, they have not renounced violence and attacks remain regular.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nato-convoy-attacked-suicide-bomber-084353465.html

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New cancer treatment beats chemotherapy without the toxic side ...

If a locked door must be opened, explosives can be used, but normally it is better to use a key. The conventional treatments for cancer, surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, have a range of terrible side effects that resemble the use of explosives. Now a key has been found to treat various forms of leukemia and lymphoma with only very minor side effects. The drug ibrutinib has proven sufficiently safe and effective in early clinical tests by physicians at Ohio State University that it has been given breakthrough drug status by the FDA.

Both chemotherapy and radiation treatment protocols for cancer have one primary goal ? design a treatment that is slightly more lethal to the cancer than to the patient. Chemotherapy began nearly 100 years ago, when mustard gas derivatives were studied following World War I. From this early start, serious research on chemotherapy agents for cancers began around 1950. While chemotherapy is still one of the key weapons to use in fighting cancer, a good deal of pharmaceutical and medical research is presently going toward more targeted agents to minimize the enormous stress of cancer therapy on the patient.

Leukemia and lymphoma are cancers of the blood. Leukemia is the proliferation of immature white cells in the blood, which leads to impairment of the immune system, blood clotting issues, and red cell anemia. Lymphoma is a similar proliferation of lymphocytes, which has similar symptoms, but can also involve solid tumors of the lymph nodes. In both cancers, complete cure is unlikely, but the disease can be managed in most cases by triggering partial or complete periods of remission through chemotherapy and/or radiation treatment. As these treatments are still painful and debilitating, and sometimes ineffective, new forms of treatment are an active area of research.

Ibrutinib is a member of a new class of drugs for use against B-cell blood cancers. B-cells are a type of white blood cell that is active in the body's immune system. They have B-cell receptor (BCR) proteins on the cell surfaces, which binds to specific bodily invaders, thereby allowing the immune system to attack the invaders. B-cells also act as part of the memory function of the immune system, keeping a chemical record of past targets of the immune reaction. Malfunctioning B-cells can cause autoimmune diseases as well as becoming cancerous themselves.

In B-cells, an enzyme called Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) is an important stage in the B-cell maturation and activation of the BCR proteins. Among other functions, this BCR signaling is thought to drive the growth and well-being of many types of B-cell cancers. In short, B-cell cancers have a very difficult time surviving in the absence of BTK.

Ibrutinib is a strong covalent inhibitor of BTK, and in inhibiting BTK triggers B-cells to undergo aptopsis, or cell death, effectively blocking cancer growth and metastasis. Ibrutinib also shows activity in treatment of autoimmune disease, by throttling back the action of the immune system.

A new clinical trial carried out by medical researchers at Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center in cooperation with MD Anderson Cancer Center, investigated the effect of ibrutinib in two groups of patients, one having confirmed recurring or resistant cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and the other having confirmed recurring or resistant cases of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Neither study involved a control group or healthy patients, as the object was to determine the toxicity and efficacy of the ibrutinib treatments.

The CLL trial involved 85 ambulatory patients, 51 of whom received ibrutinib at 420 mg/day, and 34 who received 840 mg/day. Ibrutinib can be absorbed by mouth, so the doses were given orally. The lower dose group included a third group, originally excluded from the study because of high-risk genetic factors, who showed no response to chemoimmunotherapy. The early results of the clinical study proved sufficiently positive that exclusion of the third group was judged to be inappropriate.

Treatment with ibrutinib proved to be very safe, with most participants only encountering annoying side effects that did not require stopping the treatment. Only six patients were forced to halt treatment, primarily due to diarrhea and the associated dehydration, and upper respiratory tract infections.

The treatment was also very effective at stopping progression of CLL, and in most cases (71 percent) causing at least a partial remission. The results were independent of the doses used, which argues toward using smaller doses. The response was somewhat better (85 percent) in patients lacking high-risk genetic mutations. Overall, the 26-month survival rate was 83 percent, with little dependence of age or stage of the cancer at the start of participation in the study.

The MCL trial included 111 ambulatory patients, all of whom received 560 mg/day of ibrutinib. Nearly all of the patients had previously received multiple rounds of chemotherapy, and 86 percent had intermediate or high-risk lymphoma.

The ibrutinib treatment proved quite effective, with 21 percent of the patients experiencing a complete remission of MCL, and another 47 percent having a partial remission. The estimated total rate of survival at 18 months was 58 percent. Again, a remarkable feature of the trial is that ibrutinib helped nearly all patients to one extent or another.

?This is remarkable because the last agent approved by the Food and Drug Administration for MCL had a 30 percent response rate,? says senior author Kristie Blum, MD, associate professor of medicine, and head of the OSUCCC ? James lymphoma program. ?This trial suggests that ibrutinib could significantly improve the landscape of therapy options for MCL.?

The level of response found to ibrutinib could only be approached through conventional chemotherapy by intensive, multiagent regimes of treatment associated with very high toxicity. Ibrutinib is clearly on the fast track to approval for treating a range of B-cell cancers. Hopefully it becomes a standard therapy option before any reader needs such treatment.

Source: Ohio State University

Source: http://www.gizmag.com/lymphoma-treatment-cancer-ibrutinib/28085/

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Video: Portfolio Prepping for Q3

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52346162/

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WSJ: Apple's Radio Terms Are (Slightly) More Generous Than Pandora's

WSJ: Apple's Radio Terms Are (Slightly) More Generous Than Pandora's

Apple's new Radio service is now official and Pandora is coming under fire for being tight-fisted. Interesting, then, to hear of figures dug out by the Wall Street Journal which suggest that Apple is being every-so-slightly more generous with its deal.

According to the Journal, Apple will pay 0.13 cents and 15 percent of advertising revenue to major labels every time a song is played on iTunes Radio in its first year of operation. In the second year, that'll hop up to 0.14 cents and 19 percent.

That compares to 0.12 cents per song paid by Pandora, according to the WSJ. Add to that that apparently Apple is offering twice the royalty rate to publishers that Pandora does, and it seems Cook and co are actually being fairly... nice.

There are some caveats. Apple won't need to pay up if a song is played for less than 2o seconds or if it's already in your iTunes library?but those conditions sound kinda fair. Pandora, obviously, claims that comparison between it and Apple are unfair but... yeah, not really. Given that Apple's Radio is going to be a go-to for many iOS users, it'll be interesting to see how the deal turns out for it. [WSJ via Engadget]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/wsj-apples-radio-terms-are-slightly-more-generous-t-595476481

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Sony Music Unlimited (for Android)


The stream music space is packed with competitors, so, to stand out from the glut, a product must be truly excellent (Slacker Radio) or be in possession of a unique feature/gimmick (Songza). Sony Music Unlimited is neither. While it doesn't do anything particularly offensive, it also doesn't do enough to warrant must-try status.

Getting Started With Sony Music Unlimited
You begin by creating an account and inputting your billing information. Yes, your billing information. Sony Music Unlimited lacks a free version (unlike Slacker Radio), but the $9.99 per month Premium membership delivers an ad-free listening experience and lets you skip tracks without limitations. There's also a 30-day free trial account if you'd like to try before you buy.

Sony Music Unlimited takes you to the Home screen after you log in. There you'll find a handful of new releases (at the time of this writing, they were Wale's "The Gifted" and Bob Marley's "Legend Remixed") and your recently updated playlists. Scrolling down reveals recommended tracks and popular songs. Songs and albums are represented by thumbnails set against a plain, white background?it isn't very visually appealing. Slacker, Songza, and other apps have more attractive interfaces that beckon you to dive deeper. Superficial gripe? Maybe.

But there are more serious issues with the interface, too. For instance, the home screen lacks a search box; you must tap the striped icon in the upper-left corner to access a vertical menu. Slacker Radio's mobile apps have the search box at the very top of the screen for fast access?I appreciate that it doesn't make me take an extra step. The same menu contains other options such as Channels (Latin Top 100, and Hot Songs), Browse (where check out almost two dozen genre stations), My Library (one of the two areas where playlists live), and tinker with settings. There's also an offline mode that you can toggle on/off, too. Sony Music Unlimited, by default, only lets you save playlists for offline playback if you're connected to a Wi-Fi signal, but you can change a setting so that you're able to do so over 3G/4G. This comes in extremely handy when you're in a location where you may not be able connect to a signal (such as on an airplane).

Pump Up the Volume
Sony Music Unlimited's boasts a 15-million-track library, but navigating it may prove a head scratcher. There's little visual consistency between the Home, Browse, Eras, and music playback screens, so moving from section to section was a bit jarring. Even worse, the app would sometimes hang as I tried attempted to move from screen to screen.

That said, the listening experience is quite good. Sony Music Unlimited features several Dirtbombs albums (a relatively obscure Detroit-based band), including a disc with King Khan that I didn't know existed. Very cool. Unfortunately, Sony Music Unlimited has just three of six Patton Oswalt albums, so fans of the nerd-king may be left disappointed.

On the other hand, Sony Music Unlimited's audio quality should please all but the most discerning ears?especially when a listener enters Settings and cranks the quality up to "HQ." With a pair of Sony MDR headphones channeling the audio, I picked up subtle instrumentation in the Eagles' "Take It Easy." You can share song snippets via Facebook, Twitter, email, and other means if you're so inclined. Unfortunately, Sony Music Unlimited doesn't have lyrics and artist bios, which many hardcore music fans love.

You can, of course, create custom channels and favorite/ban individual tracks to tailor the experience, but pretty much every streaming music service does that nowadays. The lack of hook?such as Slacker Radio's creative themed playlists (YOLO Radio, live ESPN sports talk)?leave it without much of an identity.

The Final Countdown
Sony Music Unlimited isn't a bad service?it just needs some work to make it a true challenger in the Android streaming music space. Slacker Radio remains the category's Don Dada, courtesy of its quirky themed stations, artist bios, and lyrics. Sony Music Unlimited's sound quality and catalog may appeal to some, but there are better options available.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/GSY9J4OarTs/0,2817,2421119,00.asp

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Heads Up, Haters, 70% Of The U.S. Has A Gay Friend On Facebook

Gay_Rainbow_Facebook_Like_02_1Americans are growing more open about their sexuality, and that could defeat prejudice. In honor of Gay Pride week, Facebook ran the numbers and found 70% of US users are friends with someone who lists themselves as gay, lesbian, or bisexual on their Timeline. That fact could remind people they're hurting someone they know when they're intolerant or use homophobic slurs.

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

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Possible Moto X prototype sighted once again, Sprint release rumored

Moto X

Motorola 'XT1056' said to be in testing on Sprint, appears to be running vanilla Android

While Motorola has officially acknowledged that the "Moto X" will be its next flagship device, we've yet to hear much in the way of official details from the manufacturer — and in the absence of any hard information, the rumors and leaks continue to flow. Today brings a fresh image of what might well be the front face of the device, sent to PhoneArena by an anonymous source. The phone appears to match the device sighted in Vietnam a few months back, and more recently in an AT&T-centric leak, hiding behind a dummy case.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/EciCamemNk4/story01.htm

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Digg has updated its iOS app to incorporate its experimental new Reader?and it'll directly import yo

Digg has updated its iOS app to incorporate its experimental new Reader?and it'll directly import your feeds from Google Reader, too. Go get it.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/digg-has-updated-its-ios-app-to-incorporate-its-experim-595741773

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Supreme Court clears way for gay marriage in Calif

AAA??Jun. 26, 2013?10:38 AM ET
Supreme Court clears way for gay marriage in Calif
By MARK SHERMANBy MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press?THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES?

California's Proposition 8 plaintiffs, Kris Perry and Sandy Steir walk into the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, June 26, 2013. The Supreme Court is meeting to deliver opinions in two cases that could dramatically alter the rights of gay people across the United States. The justices are expected to decide their first-ever cases about gay marriage Wednesday in their last session before the court's summer break. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

California's Proposition 8 plaintiffs, Kris Perry and Sandy Steir walk into the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, June 26, 2013. The Supreme Court is meeting to deliver opinions in two cases that could dramatically alter the rights of gay people across the United States. The justices are expected to decide their first-ever cases about gay marriage Wednesday in their last session before the court's summer break. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Gay rights advocate Vin Testa waves a rainbow flag in front of the Supreme Court at sun up in Washington, Wednesday, June 26, 2013. Justices are expected to hand down major rulings on two gay marriage cases that could impact same-sex couples across the country. One is a challenge to California's voter-enacted ban on same-sex marriage. The other is a challenge to a provision of federal law that prevents legally married gay couples from receiving a range of tax, health and pension benefits. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Casey Oakes, 26, of Monroe, N.J., left, Dan Choyce, 21, of Sicklerville, N.J., center left, Zach Wulderk, 19, of Hammonton, N.J., and his brother Dylan Wulderk, 22, right, wait for a ruling on same sex marriage at the Supreme Court in Washington, Wednesday, June 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Gay rights activist Bryce Romero, who works for the Human Rights Campaign, offers an enthusiastic high-five to visitors getting in line to enter the Supreme Court on a day when justices are expected to hand down major rulings on two gay marriage cases that could impact same-sex couples across the country, in Washington, Wednesday, June 26, 2013. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? The Supreme Court has cleared the way for same-sex marriage in California by holding that defenders of California's gay marriage ban did not have the right to appeal lower court rulings striking down the ban.

The court's 5-4 vote Wednesday leaves in place the initial trial court declaration that the ban is unconstitutional. California officials probably will rely on that ruling to allow the resumption of same-sex unions in about a month's time.

The high court itself said nothing about the validity of gay marriage bans in California and roughly three dozen other states.

The outcome was not along ideological lines.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion, joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan and Antonin Scalia.

"We have no authority to decide this case on the merits, and neither did the 9th Circuit," Roberts said, referring to the federal appeals court that also struck down Proposition 8.

Associated PressNews Topics: Government and politics, Same sex marriage, Supreme courts, Marriage, Family issues, Social affairs, Gay rights, Human rights and civil liberties, Social issues, National courts, National governments, Courts, Judiciary

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-26-US-Supreme-Court-Gay-Marriage/id-4c920d2299c34bb5bb880fa4b982a853

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interested party: A great generation sends another one home

During an early summer thunderstorm on the morning of 26 June, 2013 Harriet Kurtz checked out of the Brookings Hospital for the last time.

Harriet M. Craig was born 13 February, 1922 in Norfolk, Nebraska to Ralph A. and Frances (Beidinger) Craig.

After the family moved to Columbus, Harriet attended and graduated St. Bonaventure Catholic School. Ralph, a Union Pacific Railroad brakeman then conductor, relocated Frances (Frankie) and four girls to Omaha where Harriet excelled, completed secretary/stenographer coursework, went to work for the UP Railroad, and in 1944 met Sgt. Lawrence E. Kurtz whom she married. A daughter, Leslie, was born to the couple in 1945.

The young family entered military life moving from Nebraska to Colorado Springs then to Panama. In 1947 after the Department of the Air Force was created, Harriet entered civil service in the stenographer's pool where she enjoyed a top security clearance.

A transfer sent the family to Castle Air Force Base and in 1954 a son, Larry, was born. The birth of the Strategic Air Command near the Union Pacific rail head took the family back to Nebraska where daughter Lynn was delivered.

In November, 1957, CMsgt. and Mrs. Kurtz moved the family to Torrejon Air Force Base near Madrid, Spain where they remained until 1961. When the family wasn't exploring western Europe, Harriet managed the household while Lawrence was attache' to the Inspector General of the Air Force.

Harriet returned with her family to the United States, and in 1962 after Lawrence's retirement from the Service, a city girl became a farm wife near Elkton, South Dakota. In 1964 she elected to become a high school teacher, enrolled at South Dakota State College and graduated in 1968. Harriet taught Spanish and English at Lake Benton High School just across the state line in Minnesota until her retirement.

A devout lifetime Catholic, Harriet co-authored a comprehensive history of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish. She was very proud of that accomplishment.

In 1979 Lawrence and Harriet built a house in Elkton, sold the farm in 1984 then took to the road and traveled the United States extensively until 1995. The couple loved parties and friends and hosted many gatherings. Harriet played bridge until her eyesight failed.

She is survived by daughter Leslie (David) Leech, Elkton; son, Larry, Santa Fe, New Mexico; son-in-law David Larson, Flandreau, a sister Elizabeth, Omaha, Nebraska; eight grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Lawrence, daughter, Lynn, two sisters, and her parents.

She will be missed.

Source: http://interested-party.blogspot.com/2013/06/a-great-generation-sends-another-one.html

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Vitamin D improves mood and blood pressure in women with diabetes

June 25, 2013 ? In women who have type 2 diabetes and show signs of depression, vitamin D supplements significantly lowered blood pressure and improved their moods, according to a pilot study at Loyola University Chicago Niehoff School of Nursing.

Vitamin D even helped the women lose a few pounds.

The study was presented at the American Diabetes Association 73rd Scientific Sessions in Chicago.

"Vitamin D supplementation potentially is an easy and cost-effective therapy, with minimal side effects," said Sue M. Penckofer, PhD, RN, lead author of the study and a professor in the Niehoff School of Nursing. "Larger, randomized controlled trials are needed to determine the impact of vitamin D supplementation on depression and major cardiovascular risk factors among women with Type 2 diabetes."

Penckofer recently received a four-year, $1.49 million grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research at the National Institutes of Health to do such a study. Penckofer and her Loyola co-investigators plan to enroll 180 women who have type 2 diabetes, symptoms of depression and insufficient levels of vitamin D. Women will be randomly assigned to receive either a weekly vitamin D supplementation (50,000 International Units) or a matching weekly placebo for six months. The study is titled "Can the Sunshine Vitamin Improve Mood and Self Management in Women with Diabetes?

About 1 in 10 people in the United States has diabetes, and the incidence is projected to increase to 1 in 4 persons by 2050. Women with type 2 diabetes have worse outcomes than men. The reason may be due to depression, which affects more than 25 percent of women with diabetes. Depression impairs a patient's ability to manage her disease by eating right, exercising, taking medications, etc.

Many Americans do not get enough vitamin D, and people with diabetes are at especially high risk for vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency. Reasons include limited intake of foods high in vitamin D, obesity, lack of sun exposure and genetic variations.

The pilot study included 46 women who were an average age of 55 years, had diabetes an average of 8 years and insufficient blood levels of vitamin D (18 ng/ml). They took a weekly dose (50,000 International Units) of vitamin D. (By comparison, the recommended dietary allowance for women 51 to 70 years is 600 IU per day.)

After six months, their vitamin D blood levels reached sufficient levels (average 38 ng/ml) and their moods improved significantly. For example, in a 20-question depression symptom survey, scores decreased from 26.8 at the beginning of the study (indicating moderate depression) to 12.2 at six months (indicating no depression. (The depression scale ranges from 0 to 60, with higher numbers indicating more symptoms of depression.)

Blood pressure also improved, with the upper number decreasing from 140.4 mm Hg to 132.5 mm Hg. And their weight dropped from an average of 226.1 pounds to 223.6 pounds.

Penckofer is internationally known for her research on vitamin D, diabetes and depression. In October, she will be inducted as a Fellow in the American Academy of Nursing for her scientific contributions in improving the health and quality of life of women with chronic disease. And she recently was appointed as the first nurse researcher to the Chicago Diabetes Center for Translational Research.

Co-authors of the study are Todd Doyle, PhD, Patricia Mumby, PhD, Mary Byrn, Mary Ann Emanuele, MD and Diane Wallis, MD.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/nutrition/~3/DPhOiwJotg4/130625091841.htm

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CADCA Statement On Release Of 2013 World Drug Report

WASHINGTON, June 26, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA) Chairman and CEO Gen. Arthur T. Dean released the following statement in response to the 2013 World Drug Report, released today by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC):

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130130/DC51396LOGO)

"The 2013 World Drug Report highlighted an alarming trend in our nation and around the world ? the increase in use of new psychoactive substances (NPS), drugs with street names such as 'spice' and 'bath salts.' It's disappointing but not surprising that the number of NPS reported by Member States to UNODC rose from 166 at the end of 2009 to 251 by mid-2012, an increase of more than 50 percent.

"Over the past few years, we've heard from CADCA members about the negative impact these drugs are having in communities across the United States. Many young people are using these drugs under the mistaken belief that because they are not illegal and sold in stores they must be safe. However, synthetic marijuana, also referred to as 'spice' or 'K2,' and 'bath salts' have proven to be anything but ? leading to strong hallucinations, violent behavior and even suicides.?

"The report also indicated that prescription drug abuse is not only a major problem in the U.S. but also globally.

"As with any emerging drug trend, our most important tool is effective comprehensive prevention. Thankfully, there are thousands of community anti-drug coalitions throughout the country and abroad implementing evidence-based substance abuse prevention strategies at the community level.? These coalitions are often the first to detect new drug problems and using local data craft public health and safety strategies to improve their environment.

"The report also noted that Africa is emerging as a target for drug trafficking and illicit drug production. CADCA has recently increased its work in that continent, working with local non-governmental organizations in Ghana, Senegal, Cape Verde, Kenya and South Africa to build comprehensive community coalitions to address local problems associated with drug use and crime."

CADCA has been training and building community anti-drug coalitions internationally since 2004. Through a grant with the Department of State Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, CADCA works in 16 countries throughout Latin America, Africa and Central and Southeast Asia. CADCA also recently launched pilot projects in Italy and Iraq. In addition, CADCA has consultative status with the United Nations and is a member of the Vienna NGO Committee.

CADCA (Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America), is the national member-based organization representing coalitions working to make America's communities safe, healthy and drug-free. CADCA's mission is to strengthen the capacity of community coalitions to create and maintain safe, healthy and drug-free communities globally. To learn more about CADCA, visit www.cadca.org.

Media Contact: Natalia Martinez Duncan
703-706-0560, Ext. 256

SOURCE Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cadca-statement-release-2013-world-drug-report-210400080.html

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Market rises: less on Fed chatter, more on economy

NEW YORK (AP) ? Wall Street got back to focusing on the economy instead of the Federal Reserve on Tuesday, sending stocks higher.

Four reports showed a brightening U.S. economy. Housing and manufacturing continued to improve, and consumer confidence hit its highest level in 5 1/2 years.

The major U.S. stock indexes closed higher. The Dow Jones industrial average shot up 100.75 points, or 0.7 percent, to 14,760.31. The Standard & Poor's index rose 14.94 points, or 1 percent, to 1,588.03. The Nasdaq composite climbed 27 points, 0.8 percent, to 3,347.89.

The triple-digit rise in the Dow continues a bout of market volatility caused by investors and traders who are worried about the Fed ending its economic stimulus. Last Wednesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said he expects the Fed to end its bond buying by the middle of 2014 if it feels the economy can manage without that stimulus.

The Dow then plunged by triple digits on three of the next four trading days, with investors worried that the market would struggle without the Fed propping it up.

Some investors concluded that the recent sell-offs were overblown.

"This is the day where the dust appears to be settling," said Jonathan Lewis, chief investment officer at Samson Capital Advisors in New York.

Quincy Krosby, a market strategist at Prudential Financial, guessed that shorter-term traders bought stocks Tuesday because they judged that parts of the market were "oversold."

Among the biggest gainers were big dividend payers like phone and power companies. These are stocks that have been hit the hardest by the recent sell-off.

Long-term investors were likely still sitting on the sidelines, waiting for further signs that markets are becoming less volatile, Krosby said.

The stronger economic news for the U.S. led investors to sell U.S. government bonds, a sign that they're more comfortable putting money in stocks. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, a benchmark for many types of loans, rose to 2.6 percent from 2.54 percent late Monday.

The big economic reports Tuesday revealed.

?Orders for durable goods rose 3.6 percent in May, matching April's gain. The gauge is important because U.S. manufacturing has generally struggled this year as demand for American exports slows in other parts of the world.

? U.S. home prices jumped 12.1 percent in April compared with a year ago, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index. That was the biggest year-over-year gain since March 2006. For a fourth straight month, prices rose from a year earlier in all 20 cities in the index. Twelve cities posted double-digit price gains.

? The Conference Board's consumer confidence index jumped to 81.4 in June, the best reading since January 2008. The May reading, however, was revised down to 74.3 from the original estimate of 76.2.

? Sales of new homes rose in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 476,000, the Commerce Department said. That was the fastest pace since July 2008. Though sales of new homes remain below the 700,000 annual rate that most economists consider healthy, the pace has jumped 29 percent from a year ago.

Chris Baggini, senior portfolio manager at Turner Investments in Berwyn, Penn., said investors had used Bernanke's statements last week as an excuse to get out of the market ? something they wanted to do anyway, given its steady run-up for most of the year.

The S&P 500 is up 11 percent for the year. But at its peak last month, it was up 17 percent.

Among stocks making big moves:

?Walgreen, the nation's largest drugstore chain, slipped after reporting earnings and revenue that missed analysts' expectations. Walgreen's stock fell $2.83, or nearly 6 percent, to $45.22.

?Barnes & Noble plunged after reporting a loss that more than doubled in the latest quarter. The bookseller struggled to compete with online retailers and its Nook e-book continued to lose money. The stock fell $3.21, or more than 17 percent, to $15.61.

?Clothing chain Men's Wearhouse rose after saying it had fired executive chairman George Zimmer, the company's founder and star of its TV commercials, because he had advocated for "significant changes that would enable him to regain control," according to the company. The stock rose $2, or nearly 6 percent, to $37.13.

__

AP Business Writer Steve Rothwell contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/market-rises-less-fed-chatter-more-economy-192535225.html

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Charles Saatchi Defends Alleged Attack on Nigella Lawson as "Playful Tiff"

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/charles-saatchi-defends-alleged-attack-on-nigella-lawson-as-play/

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Mursi cuts Egypt's Syria ties, backs no-fly zone

By Tom Perry

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi said he had cut all diplomatic ties with Damascus on Saturday and backed a no-fly zone over Syria, pitching the most populous Arab state more firmly against President Bashar al-Assad.

Addressing a rally called by Sunni Muslim clerics in Cairo, the Sunni Islamist head of state also warned Assad's ally, the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shi'ite militia Hezbollah, to pull back from fighting in Syria.

"Hezbollah must leave Syria. These are serious words," said Mursi, whose country hosted a conference of Sunni clerics this week who issued a call for holy war against Damascus.

"There is no space or place for Hezbollah in Syria," Mursi said.

The rally underscored the region's deepening sectarian rift. A cleric who spoke before Mursi described Shi'ites as heretics, infidels, oppressors and polytheists.

It was also a show of support for Mursi as his opponents mobilise for protests to demand early presidential elections.

Mursi waved Syrian and Egyptian flags as he entered the auditorium packed with 20,000 supporters. The crowd chanted: "From the free revolutionaries of Egypt: We will stamp on you, Bashar!"

Mursi, a Muslim Brotherhood politician, steered clear of direct references to Shi'ites and Iran but in a partial allusion to Tehran, he accused states in the region and beyond of feeding "a campaign of extermination and planned ethnic cleansing" in Syria.

"We decided today to entirely break off relations with Syria and with the current Syrian regime," he said. He also urged world powers not to hesitate to enforce a no-fly zone over Syria.

Western diplomats said on Friday that Washington was considering a limited no-fly zone over parts of Syria, but the White House said later that the United States had no national interest in pursuing that option.

Russia, an ally of Assad and fierce opponent of outside military intervention in Syria, said any attempt to impose a no-fly zone using F-16 fighter jets and Patriots based in Jordan would be illegal.

Mursi said he was organising an urgent summit of Arab and other Islamic states to discuss the situation in Syria, where the United States has in recent days decided to take steps to arm the rebels.

Egypt's U.S.-funded and -trained army is among the most powerful in the Middle East. There has been no suggestion, however, that Egypt, a country steeped in poverty, should get involved in the fighting in Syria.

WARNS AGAINST VIOLENCE

Mursi said: "The Egyptian people supports the struggle of the Syrian people, materially and morally, and Egypt, its nation, leadership ... and army, will not abandon the Syrian people until it achieves its rights and dignity."

The Brotherhood has joined calls this week from Sunni Muslim religious organisations for jihad against Assad and his Shi'ite allies.

Egypt has not taken an active role in arming the Syrian rebels, but an aide to Mursi said this week that Cairo would not stand in the way of Egyptians who wanted to fight in Syria.

It marked Mursi's second combative foreign policy speech in less than a week. On Monday, he said Egypt would keep "all options open" for dealing with a dispute with Ethiopia over a giant dam it is building on the Nile, though he said Cairo did not want war and stressed it would work diplomatically.

Mursi's liberal and leftist opponents are mobilising for mass protests on June 30, the anniversary of Mursi coming to office, fuelling fears of possible further violence.

Mursi told his Islamist supporters at the rally that they must not be dragged into confrontations and that he would not tolerate any violence.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mursi-cuts-egypts-syria-ties-backs-no-fly-111108518.html

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Death toll in SW Pakistan attacks increases to 24

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) ? Pakistani police say the death toll from attacks on a hospital and a women's university bus in a southwestern provincial capital has increased to 24.

Senior police officer Fayaz Sumbal said Sunday that a doctor and two nurses who were critically wounded in the suicide attack on the Bolan Medical complex in the city of Quetta died overnight.

In the first of Saturday's attacks in Quetta, a blast ripped through a bus carrying female students, killing 14.

When the victims were taken to the nearby hospital, a suicide bomber struck killing three plus the three who died later. Other attackers captured parts of the complex, triggering a siege by security forces in which four paramilitaries also died.

The radical Lashkar-e-Jhangvi group claimed responsibility for the attacks. Six attackers also died.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/death-toll-sw-pakistan-attacks-increases-24-072832118.html

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Opinion: Iran's popular new leader is no reformist (CNN)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/313239244?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Hong Kong's pro-democracy activists rally around Snowden

The Chinese government controls many facets of life in Hong Kong, the former British colony that has been a "special administrative region" of the People?s Republic for the past 16 years. But the fate of Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblower, may not be one of them.

And as Mr. Snowden prepares for a legal battle in the courts to fight off an expected US extradition request, pro-democracy activists here have seized on the fugitive as a symbol of their resistance to Beijing?s increasing involvement here.

Snowden?s presence ?galvanizes the importance of the rule of law, and underlines the difference between Hong Kong and the mainland,? where the government?s word goes unchallenged, says Michael DeGolyer, who teaches politics at Hong Kong Baptist University.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about China? Take our quiz.

Snowden himself told the South China Morning Post last Wednesday that ?my intention is to ask the courts and people of Hong Kong to decide my fate.?

CHINA'S OPTIONS

Beijing has not made it clear how the Chinese government thinks Snowden ought to be treated.

If it wanted him to stay in Hong Kong, the central government could instruct the city?s Chief Executive, Leung Chun-ying, to declare that surrendering Snowden would damage ?the interests of the People?s Republic of China in matters of defense or foreign affairs.?

Beijing is responsible for Hong Kong?s defense and foreign affairs, and Hong Kong?s extradition treaty with the United States contains such a proviso. But China seems unlikely to risk souring relations with Washington by simply blocking an extradition request point blank.

If Beijing wanted to cooperate with Washington, there is little it could do if Snowden challenged an extradition order, legal analysts say; legal procedures under Hong Kong?s common law, patterned after the UK system, could take several years.

?The rule of law in Hong Kong is still alive and kicking,? says Alan Leong, a lawyer and legislator for the pro-democracy Civic Party in the Legislative Council. ?I am still very confident in the judiciary? to resist any political pressure, he adds.

HONG KONG DIFFERENCES

An independent judiciary is not the only thing setting Hong Kong apart from the mainland; the media here enjoy freedom of speech undreamt of across the border, and residents regularly exercise their freedom to protest. Most oddly, perhaps, the Communist party that rules the country is still a secret underground organization in Hong Kong.

That does not stop the central Chinese government from being the most influential force in Hong Kong life. Indeed Mr. Leung, who became Chief Executive a year ago, has long had to deny accusations that he is a clandestine member of the Chinese Communist Party. Tsang Yok-sing, president of the Legislative Council, has never denied similar suggestions.

Since Britain handed Hong Kong back to Chinese sovereignty in 1997, opening a 50 year period when the former colony will enjoy ?a high degree of autonomy and enjoy executive, legislative and independent judicial power,? according to the Basic Law, Beijing has nonetheless effectively chosen Hong Kong?s Chief Executive.

It has done so simply by quietly signaling its favored candidate to the 1,200 grandees who select Hong Kong?s top official. They are drawn mainly from Hong Kong?s business elite and are generally happy to follow Beijing?s suggestions.

?Most big businessmen here do a lot of business in China and they don?t want to offend the Chinese government,? says George Cautherley, a businessman whose family has lived here for five generations. ?They won?t speak out when they might.?

Pro-Beijing political parties also dominate the Legislative Council, with a 43-27 majority over a ?pan-democrat? alliance, thanks to a complex electoral system, despite the fact that the pan-democrats won 55 percent of the vote in elections last September.

Nor is Beijing afraid to openly back its favored candidates; officials from the central government?s liaison office appeared last year at campaign events run by candidates from the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, the main pro-Beijing party.

RESENTMENT AMONG ORDINARY RESIDENTS

Beijing?s control of political and business life here, however, has hardly endeared the mainland to ordinary Hong Kongers.

A number of factors have bred resentment. An influx of rich mainlanders has pushed house prices beyond the reach of most local citizens; mainland Chinese women have crammed Hong Kong?s maternity wards in recent years, ensuring that their offspring have Hong Kong residency rights, and Hong Kong mothers have found it difficult to buy powdered milk when mainland mothers ? afraid that Chinese brands are unsafe ? have snapped up all the supplies here.

At the same time, Hong Kongers are developing a different identity, says Prof. DeGolyer, who runs the Hong Kong Transition Project monitoring public opinion trends. In a report issued earlier this month, DeGolyer found 53 percent of respondents said ?Hong Kong?s identity as pluralistic and international? was ?the most important?to see protected and promoted.?

Only four percent said that ?China?s identity as ruled by the Communist party? was most important to them.

Young people in their twenties supported Hong Kong?s pluralistic traditions even more strongly than other groups, DeGolyer found. They made their voices heard last September, in street protests that forced the government to withdraw Beijing-backed plans for compulsory ?moral and national education? courses that critics said were brainwashing.

?The Chinese government had expected that the younger generation would turn their way,? DeGolyer says. ?That is decidedly not the case.?

?There is a growing perception in Hong Kong that Beijing, with the assistance of the local government and pro-Beijing supporters, interferes here too much,? says Michael Davis, a Law professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. ?There is fallout if they are too heavy handed, and every time they try to do something there is resistance.?

RULE OF LAW PRIZED

Citizens here are especially attached to the rule of law, Prof. Davis adds. ?What Edward Snowden came for is exactly what is most highly valued here,? he says. Any government effort to impinge on that tradition provokes fierce public criticism.

Last October, retiring Court of Final Appeal judge Kemal Bokhary warned that ?a storm of unprecedented ferocity is gathering over the rule of law in Hong Kong.? He was responding to accusations by then Justice Secretary Elsie Leung that judges do not properly understand Hong Kong?s relations with the mainland, and that the courts had made mistaken judgments, which Mr. Bokhary called undue government interference in court affairs.

If Snowden asks the courts here to decide his fate, says Davis, ?Hong Kong will be very careful to tick all the boxes and follow the rules. They know the world is watching.?

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about China? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hong-kongs-pro-democracy-activists-rally-around-snowden-133454352.html

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Mississippi State: The Pink Breast Cancer Uniforms May Be A Little ...

All, College Football June 15th. 2013, 12:15pm

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Source: http://www.thebiglead.com/index.php/2013/06/15/mississippi-state-the-pink-breast-cancer-uniforms-may-be-a-little-too-fierce-for-the-sec/

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IRS scandals threaten funding for health care law (The Arizona Republic)

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Libya military says 5 soldiers killed in east

TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) ? Libyan military officials say gunmen have killed five soldiers in overnight attacks on at least six security buildings and outposts throughout the eastern city of Benghazi.

Spokesman for the army's chief of staff Ali el-Sheikhy says no group has claimed responsibility for the attacks. Officials have also not announced any arrests.

Just after midnight on Saturday, gunmen in civilian clothes assaulted military outposts and the National Security Directorate with rocket-propelled grenades and heavy weapons.

The military's chief of staff, in a statement broadcast on Libyan state TV just before dawn, says at least one outpost was burnt.

Tensions are high in Benghazi over militias. The attack comes nearly a week after 31 people, mostly demonstrators, were killed during anti-militia protests. The military has since take over several militia bases there.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/libya-military-says-5-soldiers-killed-east-115610022.html

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Airbus A350 XWB First Flight Video: The Dreamliner's Nightmare Is Real

Airbus A350 XWB First Flight Video: The Dreamliner's Nightmare Is Real

What you're looking at here is history; the triumph of seven years of design and engineering. Today, the Airbus A350 XWB completed its first flight. Here's the video of the mammoth taking to the skies:

Far from just another tin tank, the A350 is a carbon fiber miracle. It's frame is made from 53-percent composite materials (more than any other), which makes it the most efficient large twin-engine bird to ever fly.

The A350 sailed off a runway in Toulouse, France, and completed a four-hour test flight as scheduled early this morning. This is just the beginning of the airplane's one-year, 2500-hour certification process. If all goes well, the airplane could be taking off from an airport near you by 2014.

In other words, Boeing's Dreamliner engineers are having a rough day. [Airbus]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/airbus-a350-xwb-first-flight-video-the-dreamliners-ni-513360748

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Readers Respond to "The Myth of Antioxidants"

Cover Image: June 2013 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Letters to the editor from the February 2013 issue of Scientific American


ANTIOXIDANTS AND HEALTH

Although I would not go so far as to say Melinda Wenner Moyer's ?The Myth of Antioxidants? established ?myth? status for antioxidants, it was an eye-opening account of recent experimental evidence demonstrating that an increase in free radical levels in living systems does not consistently correlate with shorter life spans and that the aging process contains more uncharted territory than initially believed. More important, however, no reader should come away feeling that vitamins from food products are in any way overrated or are ?killers.?

The studies that are mentioned in the article repeatedly made use of unnatural (and often unmeasured) vitamin sources, which of course will have the potential to do more harm than good to an organism. As a chemist in the pharmaceutical industry, I can state with considerable certainty that a drug product's formulation, inert substances and potency are equally as critical to its overall safety and efficacy as the active pharmaceutical ingredient, per se.

Case in point, a broccoli floret is a presentation of vitamin C and beta-carotene that the body digests and systemically disperses in a manner more natural and evolved than that of the exact same vitamins presented in tablets and capsules. Ingestion of supplements charges the body with concentrated vitamin doses lacking the beneficial delivery components that broccoli and other vegetables provide in well-received quantities. The generation and buildup of harmful oxidants is thus more likely to occur.

This may seem like a roundabout way of stating the obvious: a diet including foods rich in vitamins and other antioxidants is more beneficial than the routine consumption of vitamin supplements.

John J. Walsh
Cleveland

The article states that roundworms genetically engineered to not produce naturally occurring antioxidants lived as long as worms that produced them, implying that antioxidants are worthless at best. Yet length of life is not the only criterion we should go by. If it were, then you could say that my father-in-law, who never took antioxidants and subsisted almost entirely on candy bars, lived a good life. In fact, he lived to the same age as Jack LaLanne (97). But LaLanne was fit, active and in command of his faculties at the end of his life, whereas my father-in-law spent his declining years in a long, slow descent into the abyss of dementia.

David Blair
via e-mail

Wenner Moyer correctly points out that some studies of the effects of high doses of antioxidant supplements such as beta-carotene or vitamin E have found that they are associated with increased mortality. She fails to mention, however, that those studies were inspired by many others showing that higher levels of such dietary antioxidants in the blood are strongly linked with lower overall mortality and lower death rates from cancer and cardiovascular disease. This is particularly true of the carotenoids, the family of antioxidants related to vitamin A.

Because humans lack the ability to synthesize carotenoids, those measured in the blood must come from diet?especially from fruits and vegetables. Thus, it appears that antioxidant carotenoids derived from natural sources in diet do increase life span, whereas individual carotenoids given in high doses do not.

Will Lassek
University of Pittsburgh

?THE LEFT? AND SCIENCE

Michael Shermer appears to be reaching in his Skeptic column this month [?The Left's War on Science?]. He says that ?there is more, and recent, antiscience fare from far-left progressives,? yet his examples aren't antiscience at all. ?Liberals tend to be antinuclear because of the waste-disposal problem,? he says. So are most people?that's why Yucca Mountain hasn't been approved as a repository. ?Anti?fossil fuels because of global warming.? Global warming is occurring, in large part, because of fossil fuels. ?Antihydroelectric because dams disrupt river ecosystems.? Well, yes, they do (ask any ichthyologist how North American native fishes are doing; ask coastal cities why they are running out of beach sand). ?Anti?wind power because of avian fatalities.? Again, is this antiscience? No, birds do die in wind turbines (and because of other unnatural structures like mirrored skyscrapers).

Source: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=readers-respond-the-myth-of-antioxidants

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