Monday, July 29, 2013

Key Anthony Weiner staffer resigns: Is his time almost up?

The campaign manager for Anthony Weiner resigned this weekend as calls for the New York mayoral candidate to leave the race mounted. But Weiner might have strong reasons for staying in.

By Mark Sappenfield,?Staff writer / July 28, 2013

Democratic candidate for New York City mayor Anthony Weiner speaks to members of Brownsville Community Baptist Church in the Brooklyn borough of New York Sunday.

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

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Whatever one may think about Anthony Weiner, he has no small amount of pluck.

Skip to next paragraph Mark Sappenfield

Staff writer

Mark is deputy national news editor for the Monitor.

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That was true when he was a member of Congress, where he sometimes spoke from the House floor in a verbal conflagration on the order of Sherman blazing through Atlanta. It was true when he entered the race for New York mayor two years after resigning from Congress in disgrace ? the titters of disbelief still audible in the press gallery. And it remains true today, when he has not pointedly not listened to his former leader in the House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, who captured the feeling of many Americans in telling Mr. Weiner to "get a clue" and drop out of the mayoral race.

At this point, Weiner's refusal to give up his bid to be mayor of New York seems to have more than a whiff of sheer stubbornness. This, after all, is the man who continued the very behavior that forced him to resign from Congress ? trading raunchy and racy online posts with single women ? for more than a year after he left Washington. And that revelation, uncovered Tuesday, is what has brought us all to this moment of midsummer political tragicomedy.

Yet why should Weiner abandon his bid to become the next mayor of New York, really?

From the outside, there is no shortage of reasons. Bringing one of America's great cities into disrepute by association is only the most obvious. Weiner's campaign manager, Danny Kadem, apparently felt enough was enough, resigning his post this weekend.

But his resignation could point to some of the very reasons why Weiner has been so determined to continue his campaign ? and why it's not unthinkable that he could still be in the race when the election is held on Nov. 5.

Surmising why Mr. Kadem might have quit, Fordham University political scientist Joseph Mercurio suggested to Bloomberg news: "I suspect there's been a tremendous pressure on Kedem from labor campaigns and others who oppose Weiner, and I'm sure Kedem's interested in remaining in this business, and he can't take the pressure and he's leaving."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/IZAyKD-brtk/Key-Anthony-Weiner-staffer-resigns-Is-his-time-almost-up

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Pope draws 3 million in Rio de Janeiro for vigil aimed at shaking up Catholic Church

Catholic faithful crowd the streets and Copacabana Beach as Pope Francis gives mass to those attending the World Youth Day.

Catholic faithful crowd the streets and Copacabana Beach as Pope Francis gives mass to those attending the World Youth Day. Photo: Reuters

Rio de Janeiro: Pope Francis drew a reported 3 million flag-waving, rosary-toting faithful to Rio's Copacabana beach on Saturday for the final evening of World Youth Day, hours after he chastised the Brazilian church for failing to stem the "exodus" of Catholics to evangelical congregations.

The pontiff also urged Brazilians to turn to dialogue, rather than violence, as it seeks to tackle its economic disparity and to show greater respect for the Amazon rainforest and the indigenous peoples who live there.

Francis headed into the final hours of his first international trip riding a remarkable wave of popularity: By the time his open-sided car reached the stage for the vigil service Saturday night, the back seat was piled high with soccer jerseys, flags and flowers tossed to him by adoring pilgrims lining the beachfront route.

"Jesus offers us something bigger than the World Cup!" Francis said, drawing cheers from the crowd in this soccer-mad nation.

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In the longest and most important speech of his four-month pontificate, Francis took a direct swipe at the "intellectual" message of the church that so characterised the pontificate of his predecessor, Benedict XVI. Speaking to Brazil's bishops, he said ordinary Catholics simply don't understand such lofty ideas and need to hear the simpler message of love, forgiveness and mercy that is at the core of the Catholic faith.

"At times we lose people because they don't understand what we are saying, because we have forgotten the language of simplicity and import an intellectualism foreign to our people," he said.

Pope Francis also urged Brazilians to rely on dialogue instead of violence, as the country with the world's biggest Catholic population grappled with its largest street protests in decades.

Citizens face the choice of either coming together in a climate of respect or losing out, Francis said, and called for more humanist economic and political systems to improve public participation and eradicate poverty.

"Between selfish indifference and violent protests there is always a possible option, dialogue," Francis said.

A bus fare increase in Sao Paulo sparked the protests last month. Unrest later spread to other cities including Rio de Janeiro, as demonstrators expanded their grievances to include corruption and poor public services. Since arriving in Rio last week on his first major international trip, Francis has attempted to address the causes of Brazil's unrest without embarrassing local leaders.

In a speech outlining the kind of church he wants, Francis asked bishops to reflect on why hundreds of thousands of Catholics have left the church for Protestant and Pentecostal congregations that have grown exponentially in recent decades in Brazil, particularly in its slums or favelas, where their charismatic message and nuts-and-bolts advice is welcome by the poor.

"Perhaps the church appeared too weak, perhaps too distant from their needs, perhaps too poor to respond to their concerns, perhaps too cold, perhaps too caught up with itself, perhaps a prisoner of its own rigid formulas," he said.

On his visit, the pope also spoke out on the dangers facing the Amazon environment and the native people living there.

"The church's presence in the Amazon basin is not that of someone with bags packed and ready to leave after having exploited everything possible," he said.

AP, Bloomberg

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Wave of car bombings in Iraq kills at least 47

(AP) ? A wave of over a dozen car bombings hit central and southern Iraq during morning rush hour on Monday, officials said, killing at least 47 people in the latest coordinated attack by insurgents determined to undermine the government.

The blasts, which wounded scores more, are part of a months-long surge of attacks that is reviving fears of a return to the widespread sectarian bloodshed that pushed the country to the brink of civil war after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. Suicide attacks, car bombings and other violence have killed more than 3,000 people since April, including more than 500 since the start of July, according to an Associated Press count.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Monday's attacks, but they bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida's Iraqi arm. The group, known as the Islamic State of Iraq, frequently sets off such coordinated blasts in an effort to break Iraqis' confidence in the Shiite-led government.

Eight police officers said a total of 12 parked car bombs hit markets and parking lots in predominantly Shiite neighborhoods of Baghdad within one hour. They say the deadliest was in the eastern Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City, where two separate explosions killed nine civilians and wounded 33 others.

Ambulances rushed to the scene where rescuers and police were removing the charred and twisted remains of the car bombs from the bloodstained pavement. The force of the two explosions lightly damaged nearby houses and shops.

Two other separate car bombs went off in the northern Hurriyah neighborhood, killing six bystanders and wounding 23 others. In the busy northern Kazimiyah neighborhood, another parked car bomb killed four civilians and wounded 12.

In the southwestern neighborhood of Bayaa, three civilians were killed and 15 wounded in another car bomb explosion. In western Baghdad in the neighborhood of Shurta, two other people were killed and 14 wounded.

In the southern Abu Disheer area, four civilians were killed and 17 wounded. Another car bomb struck in the northwestern Tobchi district, killing three and wounding ten others.

Five more people were killed and 44 others wounded in the southwestern Risala neighborhood, the northern Shaab neighborhood and in the town of Mahmoudiya, about 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Baghdad.

The wave of bombings also extended to Iraq's majority-Shiite south.

Back-to-back explosions by two parked car bombs in an outdoor market and near a gathering of construction workers killed seven civilians and wounded 35 others in the city of Kut, 160 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Baghdad.

And in the oil-rich city of Basra in southern Iraq, four other people were killed and five wounded when a parked car bomb ripped through a market. Basra is 550 kilometers (340 miles) southeast of Baghdad.

Nine health officials confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release information.

The violence surged after an April crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest camp in the northern town of Hawija that killed 44 civilians and a member of the security forces, according to United Nations estimates. The bloodshed is linked to rising sectarian divisions between Iraq's Sunni and Shiite as well as friction between Arabs and Kurds, dampening hopes for a return to normalcy nearly two years after U.S. forces withdrew from the country.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-29-Iraq/id-4abece0c714345479dc3d0e4085eedf3

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Lydell Hartford, Jr., Killed: College Football Player Dies Outside Home

Lydell Hartford, Jr., was killed at his home in Waggaman, Louisiana, last week, according to the Jefferson Parish Sheriff?s Office (JPSO). Authorities said that a 16-year-old friend of Hartford?s was playing with a gun and accidentally shot the promising young freshman linebacker for the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB).

Glen T. Boyd, a spokesman for the JPSO, said that Hartford, 20, died from a gunshot wound he had suffered to the neck as a result of the accident.

According to police, Hartford and the teen friend were sitting inside a 2012 Chevrolet Camaro that belonged to Hartford?s mother. The car was in the driveway of the home. Boyd said the teen discovered a.38-caiber pistol inside the car and began taking out the bullets.

Hartford instructed the teen to stop, but was ignored as the teen continued unloading the bullets until he believed the gun to be empty. At that point, the boy squeezed the trigger ?three or four times? until the pistol fired into Hartford?s neck.

The teen then pulled him from the car and laid him on the driveway, authorities stated. Hartford died close to an hour later, and the 16-year-old was booked for negligent homicide.

?It is a shock to us all,? said UAPB Chancellor Dr. Laurence Alexander in a press release. ?We are saddened by the news of his death and offer our condolences, thoughts, and prayers to his family and friends during this difficult time.?

Hartford?s head coach Monte Coleman said the 20-year-old was ?proud to be a part of the team ? I am sad to see another young person leave this earth too soon. He will be missed.?

And UAPB Offensive Coordinator Eric Dooley, a fellow Louisiana native ?well acquainted? with the family, said Lydell Hartford did everything asked of him on the field.

UAPB Defensive Coordinator Earl Buckingham agreed. ?He was a good kid and loved being on the team ? Our team is hurting and offers our condolences to his family and all those that knew him.?

Unfortunately, this is another in a long line of recent gun related accidents to take the life of a young person. Earlier this month, we told you about Jon Andrew Meyer, Jr., who was reportedly using a rifle as a crutch when the gun went off and fired into the apartment below, killing a five-year-old child.

There was also a similar incident in Louisiana in which a mother was charged with murder after her five-year-old daughter accidentally shot herself.

As for the Lydell Hartford, Jr., case, authorities are withholding the name of the shooter because he is a juvenile.

[Image via UAPB website]

Source: http://www.inquisitr.com/873690/lydell-hartford-jr-killed-college-football-player-dies-outside-home/

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Mali votes for president; few go to polls in Kidal

KIDAL, Mali (AP) ? Voters headed to the polls Sunday in Mali's first election since last year's coup, struggling to cast their ballots despite the logistical and technical problems that have plagued the hastily-organized poll. Tens of thousands of people who registered to vote do not appear on the voter roll.

In the contested region of Kidal in north Mali, only a trickle of voters made their way past security checkpoints guarded by U.N. peacekeepers in flak jackets, who checked the men's turbans and voluminous robes for signs of explosives. And the majority couldn't find their name on the lists posted outside their polling station, or else found their name but couldn't find their polling booth. Several voting stations failed to open because one or more of the election workers didn't show up.

Kidal was the birthplace of last year's uprising by Tuareg separatists, a rebellion which set in motion a sequence of events that led to the coup in the capital, after disgruntled soldiers mutinied over the army's inept and lackluster handling of the insurgency. The rebels capitalized on the security vacuum created by the coup in the south. They pushed into the main cities in northern Mali, occupying and briefly holding an area the size of France, before being pushed out by al-Qaida's fighters in the region. For the brief interval in which they controlled northern Mali, the separatists declared the birth of a new Tuareg nation, named "Azawad."

Throughout the morning as people in Kidal tried to vote, rebels holding the Azawad flag crisscrossed the town center on motorcycles, speeding past polling stations, screaming, "Yes to Azawad, No to Mali."

Officials are worried that the legitimacy of the election will be undermined by low voter turnout, technical lapses that prevent people from voting, and the contested status of Kidal where the rebels remain in control of numerous government buildings. Overnight, the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa, one of the al-Qaida-linked groups which seized part of Mali's north on the heels of the Tuareg separatists, issued a threat that said they planned to attack polling stations, according to the Noukachott Information Agency, a Mauritanian website frequently used by the jihadists to post messages.

A total of 6.8 million people registered to vote in this West African nation of nearly 15 million. They are choosing from a list of 28 candidates on the ballot, though politician Tiebile Drame pulled out of the race last week, citing the uncertainty over the vote in Kidal as well as the massive technical lapses.

"There have been problems in the past. But nothing like the mountain of unresolved problems I see today," he said the day before pulling out of the race last week. "This crisis is infinitely more serious, more dangerous. Never before has the question of our territorial integrity been in play like it is today. This demands a particular level of attention. A rushed election is going to equal a botched election."

___

Associated Press writer Baba Ahmed contributed to this report from Kidal, Mali.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mali-votes-president-few-polls-kidal-100257943.html

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Fairfield University Lands On Top Instagram Users List

FAIRFIELD, Conn. -- Whether it's through a "Lo-Fi" or a "Toaster" filter, Fairfield University looks good on Instagram, according to a ranking of American universities on the blog Nitrogram.

The blog ranked Fairfield University among the top 70 universities to feature its campus life, activities and architecture on the popular smartphone app, Instagram.

"We are very pleased about making this list and being recognized among other prestigious universities," Nikki Pellows, social media coordinator at Fairfield University, said in a statement. "It shows that our social media efforts are getting noticed."

Fairfield University started using Instagram in November and now has several hundred online photos posted in its account. They are organized by month of posting and often include contributed pictures of campus activities, landscape photographs, and historic, archival events.

The university's popularity on Instagram has grown steadily and now includes more than 1,000 followers.

See the full list of universities with great Instagram accounts here.

Check out Fairfield University's Instagram pictures here.

Source: http://westport.dailyvoice.com/schools/fairfield-university-lands-top-instagram-users-list

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'Sonna Puriyadhu' review: This Tamil film is only funny in parts


Cast: Shiva, Vasundhara Kashyap, Mano Bala, Vatsala and Meera Krishnan; Director: Krishnan Jayaraj

Rating: 2 out of 5

Shiva's films guarantee entertainment, but 'Sonna Puriyadhu', which revolves around Shiva, who is commitment phobic and hates the idea of marriage, fails in the effort of delivering a wholesome entertainer. What it does manage to deliver finally is not even remotely close to other films of Shiva such as 'Chennai 600028' and 'Thillu Mullu'.

\'Sonna Puriyadhu\' review: This Tamil film is only funny in parts

Handicapped by a weak screenplay, the movie is satirical and funny in parts.

Handicapped by a weak screenplay, the movie is satirical and funny in parts, but never makes you laugh out loud like you're expected to do in a Shiva-starrer.

Shiva plays a dubbing artiste, lending voice to English films. He has an aversion towards the idea of marriage and hates being in a commitment. However, his life takes unexpected turns when his mother blackmails him to meet a girl (Anjali) of her choice. But Shiva has plans of his own to rule out the idea of marriage with Anjali.

What follows is funny occasionally, but rather juvenile in its attempt. The idea to stall the marriage of Anjali and Shiva doesn't quite go down well with the audiences, who are left with the option of either laughing for the heck of it or ignore the passe effort to entertain.

Some of the best humour comes from the scene where Shiva and his friend are seen dubbing for English films. It's hilarious and certainly becomes the perfect icing on the cake to provide some momentary laughs in the film.

What happens between Anjali and Shiva reach an end most of us would've expected midway. Had the director planned to have an alternate ending then I'm sure people would have loved the effort put in to build an unconventional premise.

The role played by Vatsala as Shiva's grandmother is delightful to watch. It's surprising how this one particular character is so modern and forward thinking, while the film struggles to stay away from certain cliches that could have been easily avoided.

Shiva did all that he could to save the film from going down the path that several comedy flicks over the years have travelled. He doesn't have a strong supporting cast that he could rely on. Vasundhara doesn't play her part with conviction, while the rest of the actors have nearly meaningless parts to essay.

Krishnan handles the film promisingly, but you don't see the urge in him to make it a memorable film. 'Sonna Puriyadhu' is definitely an effort worth taking notice but it doesn't make you want to cheer for it.

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Source: http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sonna-puriyadhu-review-this-tamil-film-is-only-funny-in-parts/409853-71-178.html

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Syria says rebels killed 123 people in north, majority civilians

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-says-rebels-killed-123-people-north-majority-155737307.html

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Ex-con pleads guilty to sneaking into NYC jails

(AP) ? A convicted sex offender has pleaded guilty to repeatedly using phony credentials to gain entry into New York City jails.

The New York Post (http://bit.ly/17HthlL ) reports that 36-year-old Yonkers resident Matthew Matagrano pleaded guilty Thursday to posing as a correction officer and sneaking into the Manhattan Detention Center.

During one of those visits, on Feb. 27, Matagrano assaulted an inmate and stole a $2,500 walkie-talkie. He also handed out cigarettes to inmates.

It's not clear why the former inmate, whose rap sheet includes a conviction for sodomy and sexual abuse, wanted to get back into jails.

He faces 10 years behind bars at sentencing.

___

Information from: New York Post, http://www.nypost.com

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-07-26-Rikers%20Impersonator/id-7d469063a2e94b09857d52e1a59ca3ea

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Pope scolds rich, demands social justice in visit to Brazil slum

By Philip Pullella and Anthony Boadle

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Pope Francis on Thursday issued the first social manifesto of his young pontificate, telling slum dwellers in Brazil that the world's rich must do much more to wipe out vast inequalities between the haves and the have-nots.

The pope also urged Brazil's youth, who have taken part in recent protests showing discontent with the status quo, to keep alive their "sensitivity towards injustice" and be a catalyst in the fight against corruption.

The first Latin American pope, who has rallied the Church on behalf of the poor and who lives more austerely than his predecessors, called for a "culture of solidarity" to replace the "selfishness and individualism" prevailing in modern society.

"No one can remain insensitive to the inequalities that persist in the world," he told residents of Manguinhos, a sprawling shantytown, or favela, of ramshackle brick dwellings that until recently was overrun by violence and controlled by drug lords.

His speech, under rains that have persisted throughout most of his first trip abroad as pope, came halfway through a week-long visit around World Youth Day, a gathering of young Catholics that is expected to attract more than a million faithful to Rio de Janeiro and nearby sites.

Despite the downpours and unusually chilly weather, tens of thousands of rapturous Brazilians and foreign visitors have turned out to welcome the pope. The World Youth Day events are an effort by the Vatican to inspire Catholics at a time when rival denominations, secularism and sexual and financial scandals continue to lead some to abandon the Church.

Brazil, home to the world's biggest population of Catholics with over 120 million faithful, is an apt locale for the pope to remind the world of inequality. A recent decade of economic growth in the country raised incomes for many, but tens of millions of Brazilians still live in poverty or with little more than the basics to get by.

In Manguinhos, Francis, an Argentine known for frequent outings into the slums near Buenos Aires even as a cardinal, smiled and visibly enjoyed the chaotic close contact allowed with residents there. He called for more efforts to end poverty and said authorities must do more than just crack down on the drug trade to ensure opportunities for those at the bottom of the economic ladder.

"Everybody, according to his or her particular opportunities and responsibilities, should be able to make a personal contribution to putting an end to so many social injustices," he said in an address on a muddy, rain-drenched soccer field next to a river smelling of sewer water.

Making the speech after blessing the favela's small chapel and visiting one of its homes on a recently cleaned street, the pope challenged the rich and powerful to use their influence to enact lasting change.

"I would like to make an appeal to those in possession of greater resources, to public authorities and to all people of good will who are working for social justice: never tire of working for a more just world, marked by greater solidarity!" he said.

Reflecting his humble personal style, Francis said he would like to have been able to stop in every Brazilian home "to ask for a glass of cold water, to take a cafezinho, but not a shot of cacha?a," a mention of Brazilian rum that drew laughter from the crowd.

Driving in an open popemobile, Francis was surrounded by a throng of residents, some barefoot, and leaned out to kiss a woman and shake extended hands as he entered the slum, where there was a heavy presence of police and military.

'PACIFICATION' OF POOR NOT ENOUGH

The pope praised Brazil?s efforts over the last decade to reduce poverty in Latin America's largest nation, which last month was rocked by massive protests against corruption, the misuse of public money and the high cost of living.

But he said more needed to be done to bridge the gap between rich and poor at the root of social injustice, in a reference to the police occupation of Rio's slums started last year to "pacify" drug-related violence.

"No amount of 'pacification' will be able to last, nor will harmony and happiness be attained in a society that ignores, pushes to the margins or excludes a part of itself," he said.

Manguinhos, home to about 35,000 poor people, was known locally as "Gaza Strip" for its frequent shootings. It is one of the slums that have been part of a community policing operation that has reduced violence in the shantytowns of Rio de Janeiro.

"In those days, I never knew when I entered the church if I would be alive when I got out," said Father Marcio Queiroz, pastor of the local chapel. "It was like a fruit market but instead of selling fruit on the tables on the street there was guns, crack and other drugs."

At one end of the sports field where Francis spoke hung a huge painting of Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador, who often denounced repression and poverty in his weekly homilies and was murdered by a right-wing death squad in 1980.

Francis has decided to unblock the beatification process for Romero, the penultimate step before Catholic sainthood.

From the slum, Francis traveled to Rio's modern cathedral, where he received a roaring welcome from tens of thousands of young people from his native country who were in Rio for the Catholic jamboree.

On Thursday evening he is to welcome participants in the World Youth Day from a stage on the crescent shaped Copacabana beach. More than one million people are expected for the event.

On Sunday, he presides at the close of World Youth Day in a pasture outside Rio before leaving for Rome that evening.

(Editing by Paulo Prada and Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-scolds-rich-demands-social-justice-visit-brazil-103446753.html

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'White House Down' Off To Solid Start In China

Sources tell BoxOffice that White House Down has grossed an estimated $10.5 million after three days of release in China. That's a healthy start for the action flick, but it will soon face tough competition from Fast & Furious 6 (opening July 26)?and Pacific Rim (opening July 31). Chinese officials have once again decided to bunch together Hollywood flicks in a short period time. Many pundits conclude that the tactic is designed to hinder American films and ensure the success of Chinese efforts. If that's the case, it's working. Chinese films account for more than 60% of the total box office in 2013.?

Official numbers will be released earlier next week.?

Source: http://www.boxoffice.com:80/latest-news/2013-07-25-white-house-down-off-to-solid-start-in-china

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HPV's link to esophageal cancer

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The human papillomavirus triples the risk of people developing yet another cancer, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, according to new research.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/DjMcuZpF3Tw/130724200427.htm

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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

While You Were Watching a Baby, 500 Inmates Escaped Iraq's Abu Ghraib Prison

In the United Kingdom and around the world, lots of people spent Monday waiting for a royal baby to show up. Eventually, the baby was born, and it was a boy, and it was all totally great. But here's something many people may have missed: In Iraq, hundreds of Qaida militants escaped from the infamous Abu Ghraib prison in a raid that began Sunday night.

The raid, possibly driven by al-Qaida, lasted until Monday morning and resulted in the deaths of 10 policemen and four militants. A senior member of the security and defense committee in Iraq's parliament told Reuters?Monday afternoon, "The number of escaped inmates has reached 500, most of them were convicted senior members of al-Qaeda and had received death sentences."

The prison raid comes after a weekend that saw a wave of car-bomb attacks?in Shiite areas of Baghdad that killed at least 46 people inside and outside of the city. Also this weekend, a local Sunni militia leader was killed just outside the capital. Since July 10, according to the Associated Press, more than 250 people have been killed in increased sectarian violence. By Iraq Body Count's estimate, around 600 people have been killed in militant attacks in July alone. Sunday night's prison raid increases fears that sectarian violence in Iraq is returning to near-civil-war levels.

So, again, royal baby, totally cool stuff. But, oh my, is the the world still a scary place.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/while-were-watching-baby-500-inmates-escaped-iraqs-170642990.html

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Manage your Windows 2012 Server with Remote Server Administration Tools (RSAT) from Windows 8 ? Read on?

What can the Remote Server Administration Tools (RSAT) do from Windows 8 managing Windows Servers?

This is the tool of choice if you are managing Windows Servers from Windows 8, especially Windows Server 2012. Remote Server Administration Tools (RSAT) enables you to remotely manage roles and features in Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2008 or Windows Server 2008 R2 from a computer that is running Windows 8, Windows Vista, or Windows 7.?

If you are new to the RSAT you can get this at:? Download the RSAT for Windows 8 here!

To get a copy of Windows Server 2012 go to: http://aka.ms/msproducts

image

To get a copy of Windows Server 2012 go to: http://aka.ms/msproducts

Source: http://blogs.technet.com/b/blainbar/archive/2013/07/23/manage-your-windows-2012-server-with-remote-server-administration-tools-rsat-from-windows-8-read-on.aspx

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Monday, July 22, 2013

The Most Powerful Advocacy Tool For People With Disabilities

By Anita Cameron, The Mobility Resource

There are several tools that, as advocates and activists, we use to be effective in our work. Most of us tend to use what I refer to as the ?nice? tools ?- letter writing, meetings, action alerts and ?- quite often ?- policymaking, which is crafting public policy or legislation to address or resolve an issue.

In fact, in the disability advocacy world, policymaking is a favorite tool, as it is considered ?safe." It is used almost exclusively by the large ?mainstream? disability organizations. Some even offer training on policymaking for their employees and other disability rights advocates.

Advocacy and policy training are great and necessary but there is a tool in the toolbox glaring all in the face, yet the advocacy and policy types don?t want to discuss or utilize it -- it?s called direct action.

What is direct action?

It?s what activists call ?taking it to the streets? and can include marches, vigils, protests and civil disobedience.

All the civil rights that we enjoy today were gained by direct action, then, the policy stuff came into play.

Read more from The Mobility Resource: Special Needs Parents On Grieving The Imagined Child

Hundreds, even thousands of people, including children, marched, protested and were jailed fighting for civil rights for African Americans. Some people even gave their lives. Many, many suffragettes were beaten and dragged to jail for fighting for the right to vote.

In the arena of disability rights, every major piece of disability legislation or rules were gained by direct action by grassroots groups and movements.

There are veteran disability rights activists who participated in the 504 actions and sit-ins demanding that children with disabilities have the right to an education. I was a small child back then, but it had a direct effect on my life ?- I was not only able to attend school, I was mainstreamed, meaning I was able to be in regular classes in an ordinary elementary school, rather than a segregated ?special school.? ADAPT, the national, grassroots, disability rights group that I have been a member of for 27 years of its 30-year existence, is well known for nonviolent civil disobedience that often results in arrests.

Being nice has its place. Meetings have their place. Policy discussions are definitely important and there are times for those, as well.

There comes a time, however, when advocates must realize that they?re being strung along, bamboozled, screwed or when an opponent simply says no. That?s where direct action comes in.

When, during a meeting at the White House, President Obama told ADAPT members ?no? to including provisions for long term care in the Affordable Care Act, we didn?t shrug our shoulders, hang our heads and go home to pray. We walked out of that meeting and 99 of us chained ourselves to the White House gate and were arrested. That eventually led to the inclusion of the Community First Choice Option in Obamacare.

Direct action isn?t for everyone or for every group. Some groups, due to their funding sources, particularly if they receive federal funding, cannot engage in such activities.

I also understand that direct action isn?t always warranted; it, too, has its place and time, and doesn?t always have to include civil disobedience or arrests.

Avoiding direct action simply because ?it?s not nice," "our reputation will be ruined,? or ?that is so pass?? only serves to perpetuate the status quo.

Even though fear of retaliation is a very valid concern, that fear cannot stop a group; that is what the opponent wants. Direct action, when used correctly, can be a powerful and effective tool in the advocacy and activist toolbox, particularly when all of the ?nice? measures have been tried, to no avail. Even if it isn?t used eventually, it should be part of advocacy training as a viable option.

My point is this: One cannot talk about the sacrifices of advocates in our movement and community without acknowledging the work of those of us who went all the way and went to jail for our resolve, for fighting for the rights of people with disabilities. Unfortunately, that is exactly what the policy folks in our community DON?T want to do. They forget that our civil rights were not gained by policy, alone, but by a combination of advocacy tools, most notably (and dramatically), direct action.

Besides, at least in ADAPT the strongest, fire-in-the-belly activists can make excellent policy folks. I know ?- I?m one.

This post originally appeared on The Mobility Resource blog.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/22/direct-action-disability-rights_n_3636511.html

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Sexual abuse is a ?gateway experience? that often leads to drug ...

Lesser known fact about Sigmund Freud ? early in his career he was all but laughed out of his field for suggesting that sexual abuse within families was a significant social problem. To remain respected he recanted his findings. Toward the end of his career he went back to his original claims and backed them up, demonstrating that this ugliness was indeed not simply at the fringes of society.

We?ve known for many decades now that sexual abuse is a significant social problem. We?ve made gains in our efforts to create awareness and reduce other forms of sexual assault, but we remain largely at a loss with regard to what happens within a family unit. Our laws treat children as property and we continue to maintain startlingly underfunded and overworked Child Protective Services as our primary form of intervention.

Our discomfort acknowledging the prevalence of sexual abuse is evident in the language we use. Media reports tend to minimize its significance and impact. One rarely reads of a child being raped. One reads of a child being ?molested.? I?m repulsed every time I read about a child of 12 or 13 who engaged in ?sex? or ?sexual acts?, when in fact a child of this age is incapable of consent.

We water down and minimize because we are sickened to imagine what so many children experience. We cannot expect to make significant gains with social problems we?re uncomfortable discussing. It?s additionally problematic that our social problems are intimately connected to each other. As we struggle to make progress in prevention and intervention of substance abuse; we overlook the frequently underlying dynamics of surviving childhood sexual abuse.

We have language for ?gateway drugs? but fail to identify gateway experiences. There?s little or no shame in admitting to alcohol or marijuana use. There are a myriad of obstacles to discussing a history of sexual abuse. The degree to which surviving traumatic experiences in childhood lead us toward addiction and alcoholism cannot be overstated.

We need to re-conceptualize ?dual diagnosis treatment? as existing within a social context that perpetuates shame. We have language for disgrace but not for transformation. I have the honor of serving what our society labels as: drunks, junkies, druggies, whores, and welfare cases, who are characterized as immoral, weak, lazy, and crazy.

What I often see professionally are the combined effects of residual grooming, (the molding processes that manipulate a child?s understanding of their abuse), the excessive loyalty of being an Adult Child Of An Alcoholic/Addict (ACOA) and the social stigmas of living with addiction(s), mental health conditions, and being a survivor of what remain unspeakable acts. Each of these individually can be debilitating. Their combined impact requires that the survivor progressively claim personal power and develop a new identity.

Children who survive abuse and neglect learn shame from their earliest days. Every one of us was placed at greater risk of abusing substances because we survived traumatic losses at the hands of those who were supposed to protect and nurture us. Yet we live in a world that does not grasp the disease of addiction and are afraid to hear our stories.

We search for those with similar experiences. We find people we relate to in self help programs and group therapy. We seek out clinicians who get us. Bit by bit, we come to understand ourselves and we cease our self destruction, hiding, and hopelessness. We learn to speak the unspeakable. We accept that we need not be ashamed of what was inflicted upon us. We learn to live one day at a time.

We come to take pride in what we incrementally overcome and refuse to allow anyone but ourselves the right to define us. We come to accept that we are forever works in progress and that ?failure? only occurs when we stop trying.

The outside world rarely learns of our successes. Our milestones occur privately in therapists offices, in AA, and NA. We are supported by kindred spirits and we celebrate with only the closest and most trusted of loved ones.

The average person will never experience the joy of witnessing transformation, much less achieve it for themselves. They cannot grasp the heroism of maintaining sobriety, overcoming the feeling of never being clean, or the guts it takes to break free of unhealthy loyalties. We remain marginalized and misunderstood. Mores the pity, for we are the very best of people.

When at last we are no longer stigmatized, we will revolutionize. Too many of our brothers and sisters become forever buried under the shame of judgment. What we survived does not define us. Our resilience and determination to achieve the lives we want does.

This post originally appeared as Sexual Abuse and Addiction in Recovery Rocks, by Jim LaPierre.?LaPierre is a recovery ally, mental health therapist and addictions counselor. He specializes in assisting people in recovery (whether from drugs, alcohol, trauma, depression, anxiety, or past abuse) overcome obstacles and improve their quality of life.?

Source: http://bangordailynews.com/2013/07/22/news/childhood-sex-abuse-victims-often-live-misunderstood-in-a-world-of-isolation/

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Jobs lost, but unemployment rate remains level

Published: Saturday, July 20, 2013 at 19:38 PM.

Though nearly 11,000 left their jobs in the state in June, only 596 are considered unemployed and didn?t make a significant enough impact on the numbers, leaving the state unemployment rate at 8.8 percent.

June represented the last month many people would receive benefits under the Emergency Unemployment Compensation Program, with the last benefit checks going out June 29. Also, the maximum weekly benefit reduced from $535 to $350 and the maximum period a person could receive benefits dropped from 26 to 20 weeks.

?Of course, since unemployment benefits have ended, we?ve seen an increase in traffic, like I envisioned two weeks ago ? ,? said Jamie Wallace, state Division of Workforce Solutions manager for Lenoir and Greene counties. ?We?ve seen a lot more people come into the office, looking for work, trying to get assistance in different areas.

?And, that?s probably happened in the last two weeks or so. We got a lot of phone calls the first week, and in the second week we had a lot more traffic.?

Some people denied that unemployment benefits may be eligible if anticipated tweaks to the law happen before the end of the General Assembly session.

An official with the federal Office of Unemployment Insurance said in a letter to Dale Folwell, assistant secretary of the state Division of Workforce Solutions, the new regulations didn?t square with federal law, and could lead to decertification of the state.

That could mean canceling the grant to the state government to run the unemployment programs, and doing away with a tax credit to state businesses estimated at $1 billion.

?For employment separations, a total reduction of benefits rights may be imposed only if the individual is discharged for misconduct connected with work, fraud in connection with a claim for compensation, or receipt of disqualifying income,? wrote Gay Gilbert, administrator of the OUI.

Gilbert specifically mentioned reducing or eliminating benefits for those who leave their jobs voluntarily, not seeking work while in job training programs or work in education.

For those who are actively seeking work, Wallace said there is employment to be had.

?We have job orders available ? there is work out there,? Wallace said. ?We just need people to come down, and then find and check out our services ? find what jobs are available and a job they may qualify for. But, we don?t have a shortage of job orders in the system. We?re just trying to find some good people to fill them.?

Wes Wolfe can be reached at 252-559-1075 and Wes.Wolfe@Kinston.com. Follow him on Twitter @WolfeReports.

North Carolina unemployment rate for 2013

June: 8.8 percent

May: 8.8 percent

April: 8.9 percent

March: 9.1 percent

February: 9.4 percent

January: 9.5 percent

Source: N.C. Department of Commerce

Source: http://www.kinston.com/news/local/jobs-lost-but-unemployment-rate-remains-level-1.175606

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After 3 bodies found, Ohio police to resume search

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) ? Police plan to expand their search Sunday for possibly more victims after three bodies were found wrapped in plastic bags in a Cleveland suburb.

The bodies, believed to be female, were found about 100 to 200 yards apart, and a 35-year-old man was arrested and is a suspect in all three deaths, though he has not yet been charged, East Cleveland Mayor Gary Norton said Saturday.

The suspect is a registered sex offender and has served prison time, the mayor said. In police interviews, the man led them to believe he might have been influenced by convicted serial killer Anthony Sowell, Norton told The Associated Press.

"He said some things that led us to believe that in some way, shape, or form, Sowell might be an influence," the mayor said.

Sowell was found guilty in 2011 of killing 11 women and hiding their remains around his Cleveland home from June 2007 to July 2009. Police found their mostly nude bodies throughout the house after a woman escaped and said she had been raped in there.

Sowell's victims ranged in age from 24 to 52, all were recovering or current drug addicts and most died of strangulation; some had been decapitated, and others were so badly decomposed that coroners couldn't say with certainty how they died.

Prosecutors described him in court papers as "the worst offender in the history of Cuyahoga County and arguably the State of Ohio." He was sentenced to death.

On Saturday, Police Commander Mike Cardilli announced that a woman's body had been found Friday in a garage and two other bodies were found a day later ? one in a backyard and the other in the basement of a vacant house.

All three people are believed to have been killed in the last six to 10 days.

Police did not know the identities of the three victims. Norton said police believe the three were female, although the bodies had not yet been examined by the medical examiner.

Norton said the bodies were each in the fetal position, wrapped in several layers of trash bags. He said detectives continue to interview the suspect, who used his mother's address in Cleveland in registering as a sex offender, the mayor said.

Cardilli said the man was arrested after a standoff with police Friday. Police did not immediately release the suspect's name. He was jailed in East Cleveland, the mayor said.

"The person in custody, some of the things he said to investigators made us go back today," the mayor said.

Police searched vacant houses over about three blocks in the neighborhood Saturday and planned to expand their search Sunday, Norton said.

The police, FBI, the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department went through yards and abandoned houses and used dogs trained to find cadavers.

The neighborhood in East Cleveland, which has some 17,000 residents, has many abandoned houses and authorities want to be thorough, the mayor said.

"Hopefully, we pray to God, this is it," he said.

The Cleveland area has had its share of gruesome news in recent years. In May, three women who separately vanished a decade ago were found captive in a run-down house. Ariel Castro, a former school bus driver, has been charged with nearly 1,000 counts of kidnap, rape and other crimes.

Castro is accused of repeatedly restraining the women, sometimes chaining them to a pole in a basement, to a bedroom heater or inside a van. The charges say one of the women tried to escape and he assaulted her with a vacuum cord around her neck. He also fathered a daughter with one captive, authorities said.

He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/3-bodies-found-ohio-police-resume-search-064039703.html

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A career round gives Mickelson a claret jug

GULLANE, Scotland (AP) ? Phil Mickelson is mystified no more by links golf. He has his name etched in a silver claret jug to prove it.

Mickelson delivered his best closing round ever in a major Sunday ? at the British Open, of all places ? when he ran off four birdies over the last six holes for a 5-under 66 at Muirfield to win the third leg of the career Grand Slam.

"This is such an accomplishment for me because I just never knew if I'd be able to develop the game to play links golf effectively," Mickelson said. "To play the best round arguably of my career, to putt better than I've ever putted, to shoot the round of my life ... it feels amazing to win the claret jug."

At the end of a rough-and-tumble week along the Firth of Forth, Mickelson was the only player under par. He wound up with a three-shot win over Henrik Stenson, one of four players atop the leaderboard during a final round that was up for grabs until Mickelson seized control in the final hour.

Lee Westwood, who started Sunday with a two-shot lead, fell behind for the first time all day with a bogey on the 13th and never recovered. He closed with a 75. Masters champion Adam Scott took the lead with a 4-foot birdie on the 11th, and closed as sloppily as he did last year. He made four bogeys starting at the 13th, and a final bogey on the 18th gave him a 72. At least he has a green jacket from the Masters to console him this year.

Tiger Woods, in his best position to win a major since the crisis in his personal life, stumbled badly on his way to a 74 and was never a serious challenger.

Westwood said he didn't play all that badly. Instead, he paid tribute to what will be remembered as one of the great closing rounds in major championship history.

"When you birdie four of the last six of a round any day, that's good going," Westwood said. "With a decent breeze blowing and some tough flags out there, it's obviously a pretty good experience. When you do it in a major championship, it's an even better experience."

But this major championship? Phil Mickelson?

He had only contended twice in two decades at golf's oldest championship. One week after he won the Scottish Open in a playoff on the links-styled course of Castle Stuart, Mickelson was simply magical on the back nine of a brown, brittle Muirfield course that hasn't played this tough since 1966.

Tied for the lead, Mickelson smashed a 3-wood onto the green at the par-5 17th to about 25 feet for a two-putt birdie, and finished in style with a 10-foot birdie putt on the 18th to match the lowest score of this championship.

Mickelson figured a par on the 18th would be tough for anyone to catch him. When the ball dropped in the center of the cup, he raised both arms in the air to celebrate his fifth career major, tying him with the likes of Seve Ballesteros and Byron Nelson.

"Best round I've ever seen him play," said his caddie, Jim "Bones" Mackay. Mickelson shared a long hug with his caddie and whispered in his ear, "I did it."

His final surge was right about the time Westwood and Scott began to fold.

Scott, trying to join an exclusive list of players who have won a green jacket and a claret jug in the same year, made a remarkable recovery from the dunes right of the par-3 13th hole, only to miss the 7-foot par putt. He took three putts for bogeys on the next two holes ? from long range on the 14th, and from 20 feet on the 15th ? and found a bunker on the next.

Westwood started to lose his grip on the jug with bogeys on the seventh and eighth, and failing to birdie the downwind, par-5 ninth. Presented with birdie chances early on the back nine, his putting stroke began to look tentative. He hit into the dunes on the right side of the 13th to make bogey and never caught up.

Westwood and Scott tied for third with Ian Poulter, who played a four-hole stretch in 5-under around the turn and closed with a 67. At 1-over 285, he canceled a flight home in case of a playoff. Moments later, with Mickelson pulling away, the outcome was clear.

Making this even sweeter for Mickelson is that just one month ago he lost out on yet another chance to win the U.S. Open, the missing link of a career Grand Slam. Mickelson twice made bogey with wedge in his hand on the back nine at Merion and had his record sixth runner-up finish.

Mickelson joins an elite list of winners at Muirfield, which is considered the fairest of the links on the British Open rotation. All but two of the Open champions at Muirfield are in the World Hall of Fame. Mickelson is the only winner who already has been inducted.

It was the 43rd win of his PGA Tour career. The guy who once couldn't win the big one now has five majors in the last nine years. This one returns him to No. 2 in the world ranking for the first time in nearly three years.

Woods, meanwhile, now has gone 17 majors without winning, and that pursuit of Jack Nicklaus and his benchmark of 18 majors ? Woods is stuck on 14 ? doesn't look any closer. He three-putted twice in four holes and looked like just another contender on this Sunday.

He attributed his round to not getting the right pace on the greens, which he said were progressively slower.

"I felt like I was really playing well today, actually the whole week, " said Woods, who has not broken 70 in the final round of his last seven majors. "I really hit so many good shots and really had control of my ball this week. As I said, it was just trying to get the speed, and I just didn't get it."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/career-round-gives-mickelson-claret-jug-175503104.html

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

China, U.S. companies? great hope, now a drag

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Source: in-the-news.net --- Thursday, July 18, 2013
By Angela Moon NEW YORK | Fri Jul 19, 2013 1:15am EDT NEW YORK (Reuters) ? It?s official. China?s slowdown is starting to hurt corporate America. As the world?s second-largest economy ? and still growing ? China is seen as a primary source of revenue growth by the largest U.S. companies. But a country that ...read more ...

Source: http://in-the-news.net/china-u-s-companies-great-hope-now-a-drag/

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Confirmed: F-1 Rocket Engine Salvaged By Amazon's Bezos Is From Apollo 11

[unable to retrieve full-text content]willith writes "The folks at Bezos Expeditions have confirmed that faintly visible serial numbers on one of the large engine components they lifted from three miles below the ocean's surface match the serial number of F-1 engine F-6044, which flew in the center position on Saturn V number SA-506 — Apollo 11. With the 44th anniversary of the first lunar landing coming up tomorrow, the confirmation comes at an auspicious time. The F-1 engine remains to this day the largest single-chamber liquid fueled engine ever produced — although NASA is considering using a newer uprated design designated as the F-1B to help boost future heavy-lift rockets into orbit."

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Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/uf6s73htgqg/story01.htm

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Your Top Plays for Today

Your Top Plays for Today: AP's Sports Guide

--JOHNSON LEADS AFTER DIFFICULT FIRST DAYS OF LINKS GOLF AT BRITISH OPEN

American Zach Johnson best handles the firm, dry links at Muirfield to take the first-round lead at the British Open.

http://apne.ws/18qXXMj

--BRAZIL BACKS ITS HOSTING OF WORLD CUP AFTER FIFA EXPRESSES DOUBTS

Brazil's government has defended its capability of hosting next year's World Cup after FIFA boss Sepp Blatter says it may have been the wrong choice.

http://apne.ws/12PgWHz

--FRENCH BREAK STAGE-WIN DROUGHT AT TOUR DE FRANCE

Christophe Riblon takes 18th stage of Tour de France to quell rising fears this would be the first time in 14 years a Frenchman would fail to take a stage.

http://apne.ws/15Pbyte

--LAWSUIT AGAINST COLLEGE SPORTS BODY BROADENS

Six current football players have joined a lawsuit against U.S. college sport's administrative body, the NCAA, for using their likenesses on computer games and other items.

http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_268750

--MAN CITY SPLASHES MORE CASH ON JOVETIC

Big-spending Manchester City added to its arsenal of attacking options by spending a reported $32 million to lure Montenegrin forward Stevan Jovetic from Fiorentina.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/soccer/news/20130718/fiorentina-man-city-jovetic.ap/

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-plays-today-070246380.html

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Gene mutation linked to obesity

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Researchers have identified a genetic cause of severe obesity that, though rare, raises new questions about weight gain and energy use in the general obese population. The research involved genetic surveys of several groups of obese humans and experiments in mice.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/v3EzQhnwqRg/130718142807.htm

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Mandela's miraculous 95th birthday

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? South Africa celebrated Nelson Mandela's 95th birthday on Thursday, a milestone capped by news that the former president's health was improving after fears that he was close to death during ongoing hospital treatment.

"Madiba remains in hospital in Pretoria but his doctors have confirmed that his health is steadily improving," said a statement from President Jacob Zuma, referring to Mandela by his popular clan name.

"We are proud to call this international icon our own as South Africans and wish him good health," Zuma said in the statement. He thanked South Africans for supporting Mandela during his hospitalization with "undying love and compassion" and responding to a call to give the beloved figure "the biggest birthday celebration ever this year."

Mandela was taken to a hospital on June 8 for treatment for a recurring lung infection. In previous announcements, the government said he was in critical but stable condition. Court documents filed by Mandela's family earlier this month had said Mandela was on life support and near death.

Mandela is making "remarkable progress," said one of his daughters, Zindzi, on Thursday, after tense weeks in which some South Africans talked about the possibility that Mandela was on the verge of dying.

"We look forward to having him back at home soon," the South African Press Association quoted Zindzi Mandela as saying during the government rollout of a digital ID card system in Pretoria, the South African capital. She was handed a replica of Mandela's new ID card during the ceremony.

Thursday also marked the 15th wedding anniversary of Mandela and Graca Machel, the former First Lady of Mozambique who has spent much of the time at her husband's side during his illness.

Schools around South Africa honored the anti-apartheid leader in special assemblies, and many people volunteered 67 minutes for charitable activities to match what organizers said were the 67 years of public service by Mandela, leader of the fight against white minority rule. Activities were also planned at the United Nations headquarters in New York City and other parts of the world.

"We don't only recognize him on this day. We put smiles on other people's faces, we donate to other people less fortunate," Thato Williams, a 13-year-old student, said during an assembly in Mandela's honor at Melpark Primary School in Johannesburg. Some 700 students there sang "Happy Birthday" in a hall filled with posters created to honor Mandela's contributions to peace and education.

"He's a man that ended the life of apartheid and he's a man of peace that everyone can look up to," said Ashley Kunutu, a 12-year-old pupil.

President Jacob Zuma opened low-cost housing for poor black and white families in the Pretoria area. South Africa is struggling with high unemployment, labor unrest, service delivery shortcomings and other social challenges that have dampened the expectations of a better life for black South Africans after the end of apartheid two decades ago.

Elsewhere in South Africa, social workers, military commanders and others joined in planting trees, painting hospices, and donating food, blankets and other basic necessities in poor areas. Doctors also administered eye tests, inoculations and other medical treatments to the needy.

Visiting Pretoria, European Union President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso packed food parcels at a charity event. Van Rompuy said his two sons were fans of Mandela, whom he described as "the brightest sun of South Africa."

The U.N has declared July 18 as Nelson Mandela International Day as a way of recognizing the Nobel Peace Prize winner's contribution to reconciliation. A procession was held in India to honor Mandela. In Washington, U.S. congressional leaders planned a ceremony later Thursday.

Mandela was jailed for 27 years under apartheid and led a difficult transition from apartheid to democracy, becoming president in all-race elections in 1994. He served one five-year term, evolving into a global statesman and pursuing charitable causes after that. He retired from public life years ago.

In other activities marking Mandela's birthday, English Premier League football team Manchester City was scheduled to play South Africa's AmaZulu team at Durban's World Cup stadium later Thursday. The game is the second of two pre-season matches in South Africa for Manchester City in the Nelson Mandela Football Invitational.

"South Africa is a better place today than it was in 1994 and this is because of the contribution made by Madiba and his collective," the ruling African National Congress, once led by Mandela, said in a statement.

The ANC was the leading liberation movement during apartheid, and has dominated politics since the end of white rule. However, it has come under increasing criticism because of corruption scandals and frustration over poverty and other problems.

In recent months, the ANC and opposition groups have sought to emphasize their connections to Mandela's legacy in the fight for democracy, leading to accusations of political opportunism on both sides.

F.W. de Klerk, the last president of the apartheid era, said in a statement that Mandela's birthday "should be a time for quiet and respectful contemplation ? and not for unseemly squabbling over the ownership of Mr Mandela's heritage."

He continued: "Throughout his life he has been a loyal and stalwart member of the ANC ? but I believe that through his example and through his unwavering commitment to national reconciliation ? all South Africans, regardless of their race or political affiliation, can now proudly call him their own."

De Klerk shared the Nobel prize with Mandela in 1993 because he effectively negotiated his own government out of power, working on a political transition with Mandela that allayed fears of all-out racial conflict.

Mandela's former wife said she wanted to reassure South Africans who fear the eventual death of Mandela, a unifying figure, would open the way to unrest.

"There are sometimes prophets of doom who say the country will come to a standstill," said Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, herself a prominent figure in the anti-apartheid movement, in an interview with South Africa's Radio 702.

However, she said: "The country will solidify, come together and carry on."

___

Associated Press writer Wandoo Makurdi contributed to this report from Johannesburg.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mandela-steadily-improving-95th-birthday-050940812.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Outspoken Assad supporter assassinated in Lebanon

BEIRUT (AP) ? Gunmen burst into the first floor apartment of a pro-government Syrian journalist Wednesday, killing him in a hail of nearly 30 bullets in a Hezbollah stronghold in southern Lebanon.

The pre-dawn assassination is the latest in a series of brazen attacks that have shown the growing vulnerability of the Shiite militant group, which has found itself increasingly on the defensive at home over its decision to back President Bashar Assad in the civil war raging next door.

Violence linked to Syria's war is increasingly washing across Lebanon, threatening to unleash large-scale fighting in a deeply fragmented country that is being constantly tested with ever deepening polarization over the conflict in Syria.

In recent months, violence has become more recurrent and geographically widespread, extending to predominantly Shiite neighborhoods that had been relatively immune from attacks plaguing other, mostly border areas.

On Tuesday, a roadside bomb struck a Hezbollah convoy near the Syrian border, wounding two, and last week a car bombing in south Beirut wounded 53 people in the heart of the militant group's bastion of support. Rockets have recently hit the Hezbollah stronghold south of the Lebanese capital.

The attacks come as no surprise. Although there have been no credible responsibility claims, Syria-based extremist Sunni groups have interpreted Hezbollah's moves in Syria as a declaration of war against their sect and have threatened to retaliate inside Hezbollah-controlled areas in Lebanon.

"It is still the beginning of a probably tough road ahead" for Hezbollah, said Kamel Wazne, founder and director of the Center for American Strategic Studies in Beirut. Such attacks, however, will not change the group's ideology or direction, but "will actually strengthen their resolve to continue what they started," he said.

Mohammed Darrar Jammo, a 44-year-old journalist and political commentator, was one of Assad's and Hezbollah's most vociferous defenders. In frequent appearances on television talk shows, he would staunchly support the Syrian regime's strong-armed response to the uprising and in at least one case shouted down opposition figures, calling them "traitors."

His hard-line stance earned him enemies among Syria's opposition, and some in the anti-Assad camp referred to Jammo as "shabih," a term used for pro-government gunmen who have been blamed for some of the worst mass killings of the civil war.

On Wednesday, he was gunned down with automatic rifles shot at close range in his apartment in the coastal town of Sarafand, a stronghold of Hezbollah, where he lived with his Lebanese wife. The perpetrators got away.

Lebanon's state news agency published a photo Wednesday of a shirtless Jammo lying on a blue sheet soaked with blood, his chest riddled with bullet wounds. Bullet holes were clearly visible in the walls inside the house.

Hezbollah condemned the attack, saying it showed the "bankruptcy" of Sunni extremist groups fighting in Syria. In a statement, it said that the crime should serve as an "alarm bell" for Lebanese authorities "to find the most appropriate way to confront these terrorist groups before it is too late."

Assassinations of politicians, army officers and journalists who support Assad's regime are not uncommon in Syria, but the killing of a well-known Syrian in Lebanon is rare.

Syria's conflict has cut deep fissures through Lebanon and exposed the country's split loyalties. Many Lebanese Sunnis support the overwhelmingly Sunni uprising against Assad, while Shiites generally back Hezbollah and the Syrian regime.

Clashes between pro- and anti-Assad groups in Lebanon have left scores of people dead in recent months, and the violence has escalated as Hezbollah's role fighting alongside the Syrian regime has become public. The group was instrumental in helping secure a regime victory in the strategic town of Qusair near the border with Lebanon last month.

Naufal Daou, a member of the anti-Hezbollah political coalition in Lebanon, said that by defying the will of the Lebanese people, Hezbollah finds itself facing a real dilemma "inflicted on itself by its stubbornness ... and insistence to attach Lebanon's fate to that of rogue states and dying political regimes."

The slide in Lebanon toward violence is taking place amid a dangerous political void. Politicians have been unable to form a new government since outgoing premier Najib Mikati resigned in March. Parliament extended its mandate by a year and a half in June, skipping scheduled elections largely because of the instability in the country.

The country appears to be headed toward a security vacuum in September, when the term of army commander Gen. Jean Kahwaji expires. Politicians are divided over whether parliament should meet to extend his mandate.

Analysts say Hezbollah is unlikely to be affected by the wave of attacks targeting its strongholds.

"Hezbollah is very good at taking punches," said Wazne. He said the group feels stronger and more assured now that Assad has regained the momentum against rebels fighting to topple him, largely after the fall of Qusair.

Hezbollah's hard-core Shiite supporters are likely to rally further around the group following such attacks.

In other developments Wednesday, Kurdish gunmen captured most of a Syrian town near the border with Turkey after a day of fighting against jihadi groups in the area, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Such clashes have been common over the past months in rebel-held areas in northern Syria.

The Observatory said the fighting in the town of Ras al-Ayn between the pro-government militia of the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD, and members of al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant left at least 11 dead people dead, including nine extremists.

Stray bullets from the fighting killed a 17-year-old in a Turkish town, a Turkish official said. Turkey's military said it fired into Syria in retaliation for the killing.

The fighting broke out Tuesday after the Islamic fighters attacked a Kurdish patrol in the area, capturing a Kurdish gunman. Wide clashes broke out later in the day after the two extremist groups rejected a truce offer, according to the Observatory.

Syrian TV reported Wednesday that a car bomb went off near a mosque in the Damascus suburb of Kanakir, killing three people and wounding 10 others, including women and children.

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Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Syria and Bassem Mroue in Beirut, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/outspoken-assad-supporter-assassinated-lebanon-181154052.html

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