Friday, May 31, 2013

Russian economist flees in new sign of pressure on Putin critics

By Douglas Busvine

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A prominent economist and government adviser has fled Russia after being questioned by state investigators, amid a growing clamp-down on groups and individuals critical or independent of President Vladimir Putin.

Sergei Guriev, an English-speaking economist well known to Western investors, had been questioned as a witness in an investigation into the defunct Yukos oil company, whose founder Mikhail Khodorkovsky was jailed in 2005 for fraud.

His real transgression, supporters and commentators say, was to support Alexei Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner who led protests against Putin's return to the presidency which the Kremlin has been trying gradually to snuff out.

"He (Guriev) defended Khodorkovsky and said that the case was fabricated. An enemy? Of course," Boris Nemtsov, a protest and opposition leader, said ironically. "He fights corruption? That betrays our fundamental ideals!"

Since Putin's return to the Kremlin after four years as prime minister, the authorities have moved across a broad front to silence critics, with Navalny now on trial on fraud charges which he says are trumped up and politically motivated.

Non-governmental organizations such as rights groups, independent vote monitors and opinion pollsters that receive foreign funding have been told to register as "foreign agents", a term with overtones of the Cold War and treason.

Guriev, the 41-year-old rector of Moscow's New Economic School, has advised Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, served on the board of state bank Sberbank and is a leading commentator in the local and international press.

The flight of the liberal economist, a former visiting professor at the U.S. university of Princeton, was confirmed when Sberbank issued a statement saying he had declined to seek re-election to its board.

Sources familiar with the situation said he left Moscow in early May to join his family and was now in France. He had tendered his resignation as head of the NES, a post he has held since 2004, but his resignation has not yet been accepted.

Guriev, reached by Reuters, said his decision was personal, that he was "on vacation" and that he would not comment further.

"This is a very bad signal, definitely," said Sergei Aleksashenko, another leading Moscow economist.

"He was the economist who was most affiliated to the government. The signal I read is that Medvedev is not willing, or able, to defend his supporters."

Erik Berglof, chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, said Guriev - a personal friend - had made a huge contribution to the policy debate in Russia as a speechwriter for Medvedev and an advocate of economic reform.

"LET HIM LEAVE"

The Kremlin denies cracking down on opponents or using the judiciary for political ends. Putin has laughed off accusations that he is tightening the screws on opponents.

"If he wants to leave, let him leave. If he wants to return, let him return. It's his personal affair," Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said.

Another official who declined to be named said there would be no impact on the investment climate - growth in investment has halted amid high capital outflows - but "another small log will be thrown on the furnace of anti-Russian hysteria".

Putin critics saw Guriev's flight as another sign of pressure on economic reformers, who are being marginalized.

The Investigative Committee, Russia's most powerful law enforcement agency, said it had questioned Guriev in an unspecified investigation into Yukos, the oil firm that was bankrupted, broken up and sold off, mainly into state hands.

Guriev had previously given a critical expert opinion, said a source familiar with the matter, adding that he believed a new case was being prepared against Khodorkovsky.

Critics say the Investigative Committee is being used by a powerful faction of 'siloviki', or men of power who share Putin's background in the security services, to remove liberals from positions of power or influence.

BACKING NAVALNY

It was Guriev's institute that provided a stage for Barack Obama to deliver a keynote address during the U.S. president's visit to Moscow in 2009 at the height of a 'reset' in relations.

Ties have since been blighted by rows over issues including Syria, human rights and a ban on the adoption of orphaned Russian children by American families.

Guriev had announced in a blog post last May - a week after Putin was sworn in - that he had donated 10,000 roubles ($320) to an anti-corruption project set up by Navalny. Navalny fears he will be jailed for 10 years but says protests, although they have now dwindled, will continue against Putin.

Guriev told Reuters last September that Putin could fall "overnight" if he fails to stamp out corruption and wean Russia off its economic dependency on oil and had questioned the fairness of recent elections.

"We all lived through the Soviet Union, which was forever until it was no more," he said.

Guriev joins other independently minded public figures, including the founder of Russia's largest online social network VKontakte, Pavel Durov, in leaving Russia under duress.

Some commentators said the departures could mark the start of a wave of emigration by Russia's best and brightest, like those in the 1970s and after the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.

"They have gone pretty far, shifting from manipulative means to repressive ones," said Maria Lipman, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center. "It used to be that politics was banned. Now we are experiencing a ban on autonomy in the public space. To use Putin's metaphor - we will call the tune."

($1 = 31.4850 Russian roubles)

(Additional reporting by Alexei Anishchuk, Editing by Timothy Heritage and Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-economist-flees-sign-pressure-putin-critics-152446178.html

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Two Injured in Golf Cart Crash

Two people were injured at Valley Vista Golf Course, Monday. According to the Ross County Sheriff's Office, deputies were dispatched to the golf course on Tong Hollow Road at 6:38pm?following a golf cart accident.

Nicholas Flint and Sean Flint were reportedly taken to the hospital.

Clear Channel News?has requested details regarding the patients' status.

?

Source: http://www.comedy1350.com/cc-common/news/sections/newsarticle.html?feed=106759&article=11329850

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Fight Bad Breath and Bathroom Clutter With This Toothbrush Cup

Fight Bad Breath and Bathroom Clutter With This Toothbrush Cup

Counter clutter can be even worse in a bathroom which is typically a lot smaller than a kitchen. And if you find yourself constantly battling to find room to store things around the sink, you'll immediately see the genius behind this flippable cup that doubles as a way to rinse your mouth and a convenient spot to store a toothbrush.

Available in a small selection of decor-friendly colors, the $11 Flip Cup also features a contoured rim that allows air to get in when flipped upside-down so it dries quickly preventing germs and bacteria from finding a home. So say goodbye to halitosis and goodbye to awkwardly trying to rinse your mouth directly from the faucet.

Fight Bad Breath and Bathroom Clutter With This Toothbrush Cup

[Soda Home via Fancy]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/fight-bad-breath-and-bathroom-clutter-with-this-toothbr-509995347

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

GOP continues to slam new Obama war approach

President Barack Obama walks with Col. Greg Urtso to board Air Force One, Sunday, May 26, 2013, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., en route to Moore, Okla., to visit with families and first responders in the wake of the tornadoes and severe weather that devastated the area. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama walks with Col. Greg Urtso to board Air Force One, Sunday, May 26, 2013, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., en route to Moore, Okla., to visit with families and first responders in the wake of the tornadoes and severe weather that devastated the area. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? Republicans keep slamming President Barack Obama's push to move the government away from a war footing and refine and recalibrate counterterrorism strategy.

Capitol Hill Republicans like Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina say Obama is projecting weakness at a time when the United States needs to show resolve against terror networks like al-Qaida.

The South Carolina Republican said Sunday that "at a time when we need resolve the most, we're sounding retreat."

Obama gave a major speech Thursday in which he said al-Qaida is "on the path to defeat" and he's signaling that he's reluctant to commit troops overseas to conflicts like Syria or other countries struggling with instability in the uncertain aftermath of the Arab Spring. He's also modifying policies on the use of unmanned drone aircraft to try to limit civilian casualties and is redoubling his longstanding ? but so far unfulfilled ? promise to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where many terrorism suspects are being held without formal charges.

Obama is trying to recast the image of terrorists from enemy warriors to cowardly thugs and move the United States away a state of perpetual war.

But Graham said Obama is displaying a "lack of resolve" despite a slew of concerns in the Middle East, including civil war and chemical weapons in Syria and threats to Israel from Syria's unrest and Iran's nuclear program.

"We show this lack of resolve, talking about the war being over," Graham said. "What do you think the Iranians are thinking? At the end of the day, this is the most tone-deaf president I ever could imagine."

"I see a big difference between the president saying the war's at an end and whether or not you've won the war," said Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla. "We can claim that it's at an end, but this war's going to continue. And we have still tremendous threats out there, that are building, not declining, building, and to not recognize that, I think, is dangerous in the long run and dangerous for the world."

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., defended the president, reprising Obama's theme that maintaining a wartime posture runs the risk of compromising U.S. principles.

"If we're constantly thinking of this as a war, we stand a chance of doing things that compromise our freedoms," Durbin said.

Obama ally Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said that "having transparency, having rules and engaging other activities other than military to help curb the war on terror ? diplomacy, economic sanctions and things like that ? is going to be useful as well. So I think the president did a very, very smart pivot, realizing we're not going to let up on terrorists, but at the same time we're going to meet the changes in the world."

Graham and Durbin spoke on "Fox News Sunday." Schumer and Coburn spoke on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-26-US-Obama-War-Endgame/id-5230b38f580140ceb19f442cd977688c

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Obama to visit Oklahoma, tour Jersey Shore

AT&T said earlier this week that it will add a new administrative fee to each of its wireless subscribers? monthly bills. The fee is only $0.61, which doesn?t sound like much, and an?AT&T?spokesperson was quick to point out to several news sites that this new fee is lower than similar fees charged by rival carriers. Subscribers were still outraged. Now that the shouting has died down a bit, however, people are looking for a batter explanation for the new charge they?ll see each month. According to one industry watcher, that explanation couldn?t be simpler: ?Because they can.? ?Why would AT&T do this? Because they can, and it is all in the pricing strategy,? Joe Hoffman, principal analyst at ABI Research

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-visit-oklahoma-tour-jersey-shore-chris-christie-203429952.html

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Acer C7 Chromebook getting 16GB SSD option, keeping $199 price tag

Acer C7 Chromebook getting 16GB SSD option, keeping $199 price tag

Acer's C7 Chromebook is the cheapest way to get in on Google's cloud-OS party. But, it still ships a 320GB 5,400RPM drive. Truth be told, such a large amount of local storage is counter to the whole idea of Chrome OS -- not to mention that the slow spin introduces a certain amount of unwelcome lag. Thankfully the bargain-basement $199 laptop is about to get an SSD makeover, according to a listing at Best Buy. The official specs at the Google Play store still list the standard hard drive, but the big box shop has a model featuring 16GB of solid state storage. The updated C7 keeps the same affordable price point, though we have no idea when it might start shipping. Best Buy lists the Chromebook simply as "coming soon," with no estimated delivery date. From what we can see there are no other changes to the machine, so if you weren't a fan of the cheap construction before, don't expect that to change.

[Thanks, Cody]

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: Best Buy

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/23/acer-c7-chromebook-getting-16gb-ssd-option/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Piercing unpopular in Japan

Advertisement

Research Panel recently did a Day Research quick survey on piercings; 147,357 people responded to the question.

Pierced Cosplayer

14.7% said they had one (there was no investigation into what part of the body, but the answer includes conventional ear lobe piercing), 9.7% used to have one, 8.9% didn?t have one but were interested in getting one, and 66.7% had no interest at all.

By way of comparison, according to this data, 14% of Americans and 10% of British people have piercing in places other than their earlobes, but their figures on 83% of Americans having piercings and 72% of them being women would mean that at least 60% of Americans are female, which obviously indicates an error somewhere!

Read more on: piercing,research panel

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/2DfMFRgemYQ/

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Freeport Indonesia: Death toll rises to 28 after tunnel accident

JAKARTA (Reuters) - The death toll from a tunnel collapse at the world's second largest copper mine run by Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc's Indonesian unit was raised to 28 on Wednesday as rescuers gave up hope of finding any more survivors.

Arizona-based Freeport closed the remote Papua mine on Wednesday last week, a day after a training tunnel away from its main operations fell in on 38 workers. Ten workers were rescued, but the search for the seven still listed as missing has now turned into an attempt the retrieve their bodies.

"We continue to grieve with the families even as we close this grim chapter," Freeport Indonesia President Director Rozik Soetjipto said in a statement.

"There is still much to do for us to provide the best care and support for the injured and the families of the bereaved."

Although Indonesia's mining sector has a poor safety record, last week's tunnel accident is one of the country's worst-ever mining disasters, industry officials say.

Soetjipto said on Saturday that once the rescue efforts were finished the company would launch an investigation with the help of international experts and Indonesian government officials.

Freeport emergency response teams, who are working around the clock to try to recover the remains of the dead, have been hampered by narrow tunnels and loose rock at the site, Wednesday's statement said.

It made no mention of the investigation or the current suspension of mining operations.

A union leader last week demanded that Freeport keep the mine closed while the cause of the accident was investigated.

The incident's impact on global copper supply has so far been limited as the Grasberg mine keeps stockpiles in reserve in case of disruptions, but that would change if any investigation and closure drags on.

(Reporting by Randy Fabi and Michael Taylor; Editing by Richard Pullin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/freeport-indonesia-says-death-toll-rises-28-tunnel-022416999.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Syrian troops push into strategic rebel-held town

BEIRUT (AP) ? Syrian troops pushed into a rebel-held town near the Lebanese border on Sunday, fighting house-to-house and bombing from the air as President Bashar Assad tried to strengthen his grip on a strategic strip of land running from the capital to the Mediterranean coast.

With the regime scoring gains on the battlefield, the U.S. and Russia could face an even tougher task persuading Assad and his opponents to attend talks on ending Syria's 26-month-old conflict. Washington and Moscow hope to start talks with an international conference as early as next month, though no date has been set.

Government forces launched the offensive on the town of Qusair just hours after Assad said in a newspaper interview that he'll stay in his job until elections ? effectively rejecting an opposition demand that any talks on a political transition lead to his ouster.

Even though the regime and the main opposition group have not yet committed to attending the conference, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said Sunday that he is hopeful it can take place "very soon," possibly in early June. In addition to the U.S. and Russia, he said he has spoken with Britain, France, China and other key parties.

Previous diplomatic initiatives have failed, in part because of divisions within the international community and because the regime and the armed opposition believed they could achieve more on the battlefield than in talks. Russia and the U.S. have backed opposite sides in Syria.

Still, neither regime forces nor rebel fighters have been able to create significant momentum since the uprising against Assad erupted in March 2011 and last year escalated into a full-fledged civil war.

The rebels control large rural areas in the north and east of the country, while Assad has successfully defended his hold on the capital, Damascus, the coastal area and parts of Aleppo, Syria's largest city.

Before Sunday's offensive, Qusair had been ringed by regime troops and fighters from the Lebanese militia Hezbollah, an Assad ally, for several weeks.

Qusair lies along a land corridor between Damascus and the Mediterranean coast, the heartland of Assad's Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Many rebel fighters are Sunni Muslims and Qusair, overwhelmingly Sunni, had served as a conduit for shipments of weapons and supplies smuggled from Lebanon to the rebels.

Hadi Abdullah, a Qusair activist reached by Skype, said regime troops and Hezbollah fighters began shelling the town late Saturday, followed by airstrikes early Sunday that sent residents taking cover in basements. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an activist group, said warplanes resumed bombing raids later Sunday.

By Sunday afternoon, regime forces had advanced into the town, engaging in house-to-house battles with rebel fighters, Abdullah said.

Syrian state media said Assad's troops took control of the main square, the area around the municipal building, a sports stadium and a local church. Syrian state TV said troops arrested rebel fighters who tried to flee Qusair dressed as civilians.

A government official said the regime left an escape road open to civilians, a claim denied by Abdullah, who said thousands of noncombatants were trapped in Qusair. "We tried to get civilians out four times. They are not allowing us," he said of regime forces.

The Observatory said 52 people were killed in Qusair, including 48 fighters, three women and a male civilian.

Abdullah said the air raids destroyed at least 17 houses. A field hospital was damaged last week, leaving the town with only one medical center which was unable to handle the influx of some 400 wounded Sunday, he said.

The main political opposition group, the Syrian National Coalition, said some 40,000 civilians are currently in Qusair and expressed concern for their safety. It urged the international community to step in to protect the lives of the civilians and called on the U.N. Security Council to denounce Hezbollah's involvement in the attack.

Six mortar rounds, apparently fired from Qusair, struck in nearby Lebanon, causing damage to a carpentry shop where a fire broke out, Lebanese security officials said. There were no reports of casualties.

In the northern Lebanese port city of Tripoli, clashes erupted between residents of a predominantly Alawite area and a majority Sunni neighborhood, Lebanon's National News Agency reported. It said at least five people were wounded in the fighting.

Events in Syria often raise tension among rival sects in neighboring Lebanon, particularly in Tripoli.

The Qusair offensive was just the latest indicator that the joint U.S.-Russian diplomatic initiative faces challenges.

Russia, despite its stated commitment to Syria peace talks, has reportedly delivered an advanced version of its Yakhont anti-ship cruise missiles to Syria, prompting U.S. complaints last week about an "ill-timed" step. Russia is a key political ally and arms supplier of the Assad regime, along with Iran.

The Obama administration, meanwhile, wants to avoid getting drawn into the Syria quagmire, despite pressure to find a way to end the bloodletting that has left more than 70,000 dead. U.S. concerns have been heightened by the growing dominance of Islamic militants among the fighters, including those linked to the al-Qaida terror network.

"For the U.S., (the conference) is mostly about postponing the tough decision-making Obama has been loath to get himself involved in, because he fears Syria will suck him in," said Peter Harling, a Syria expert at the International Crisis Group think tank.

In a further complication, Israel could get drawn in.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Sunday that he is ready to act if Syria attempts to ship advanced Iranian weapons to Hezbollah, saying that "we are prepared for every scenario." Earlier this month, Israel struck twice near Damascus, to intercept purported shipments to Hezbollah.

___

Associated Press writers Albert Aji in Damascus, Aron Heller in Jerusalem and Yasmine Saker in Beirut contributed reporting.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-troops-push-strategic-rebel-held-town-190723274.html

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

'The Office' Blooper Reel: Two Hours Of Hilarious Outtakes From The Series (VIDEO)

Having a hard time letting go of "The Office" after last night's finale? Then why not drag it out for another two hours with the ultimate blooper reel?

Here's two hours of bloopers from seasons two through eight. (Note: if the image gets stuck at 11:40, skip forward to 22:00... there seems to be a glitch occasionally).

Via Blame It On The Voices

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/17/the-office-blooper-reel_n_3292008.html

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DODOcase Releases DODOnotes, A Little Notebook For Your iPhone

DODOnotes_iPhone5_6_1024x1024I like little notebooks. I need a place for my introspective musings. Moleskine notebooks are fine. But now there's DODOnotes, a clever little notebook *slash* iPhone holder that could soon earn a place in my pocket. This contraption is from DODOcase, the same San Francisco-based startup that created the make-a-tablet-look-like-a-book craze. DODOnotes costs $13.95 and is available for both the iPhone 5 and iPhone 4. Sorry, Galaxy S owners; DODOcase doesn't want your money.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/AmwvnyWY3TA/

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What could happen to you: tales of big lottery winners

By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

Will the winner of the next Powerball drawing be one of the luckiest people in the world? Or will more money really, as the man once said, mean more problems?

At a massive $600 million as of Friday afternoon, the prize was the largest estimated Powerball jackpot ever after a drawing Wednesday failed to yield a winner.

But what is a modern Croesus to do with all that dough? While some winners manage to fulfill their dreams and keep in the black, others go overboard ? and some lottery winners wind up dead.

It?s the American dream with an adrenaline epidural, and no one knows how they?re going to react until their number gets called.

James A. Finley / AP file

Winners of the $224.2 million Powerball jackpot pose for a group photo in Clayton, Mo. on April 13, 2006. Sandra Hayes is third from the left.

The National Endowment for Financial Education estimates that as many as 70 percent of Americans who experience a sudden windfall will lose that money within a few years. People handed a hefty check also usually experience erratic emotions ranging from elation to resentment to anger, according to the NEFE.

Or you could wind up like the luckless Hurley of "Lost" fame.

The best way to deal with a life-changing windfall might be to stick to a budget and a routine, at least according to some past winners.

Missouri child services worker Sandra Hayes split a $224 million Powerball jackpot in 2006 with a dozen co-workers. She kept her job with the state for a month after taking a $6 million lump sum, she told The Associated Press.

?I had to adapt to this new life,? Hayes said. ?I had to endure the greed and the need that people have, trying to get you to release your money to them. That caused a lot of emotional pain. These are people who you?ve loved deep down, and they?re turning into vampires trying to suck the life out of me.?

Even the biggest winner can lose it all, she told the AP: ?If you?re not disciplined, you will go broke. I don?t care how much money you have.?

With unexpected riches can come unwanted publicity, too. New Jersey bodega owner Pedro Quezada made tabloid headlines with his $338 million Powerball win in March, the fourth largest jackpot ever.

Julio Cortez / AP file

Pedro Quezada, the winner of the Powerball jackpot, holds up a promotional check during a news conference at the New Jersey Lottery headquarters, on March 26, in Lawrenceville, N.J.

Then the Passaic County Sheriff?s office got a whiff of his winnings, and announced Quezada owed $29,000 in child support and had an outstanding warrant in his name.

Quezada, a father of five from the Dominican Republic, said he wanted to help others at a press conference after he turned in the lucky ticket he bought at his neighborhood liquor store.

?My family is a very humble family and we?re going to help each other out,? Quezada said as he grasped a giant yellow New Jersey Lottery check.

For still other winners, the wheel of fortune has taken a more macabre turn after they raked in their loot.

Chicago dry cleaner Urooj Khan won $1 million on a scratch-off lottery ticket last summer ? then dropped stone dead of what a medical examiner later said was cyanide poisoning. The man had bought the ticket at a Windy City 7-Eleven, and said later that he tipped the clerk $100 after discovering that he had won.

Authorities dug up Khan?s body in February looking for more clues, but said it was too badly decomposed to give them a fresh lead.

Then there are the winners who take the swelling of their bank account in stride.

Cindy and Mark Hill of Missouri won half of a $587.5 million jackpot in November of 2012 ? and by all accounts managed to keep their cool despite their sudden riches.

?I called my husband and told him, ?I think I am having a heart attack,?? Cindy said at the time, according to a Missouri Powerball press release. ?I think we just won the Lottery!?

They pocketed a cool $136.5 million after taxes, but as of earlier this year they hadn?t let their eyes fill with dollar signs according to an article that caught up with the fortunate duo in February.

The nouveau riche Hills paid for a new fire station and baseball field in their hometown of Camden Point, Mo., Mayor Kevin Boydston told Reuters. They gave another $50,000 toward a sewage treatment plant for local residents, he told the news agency.

?I?ve said all along that these lottery winnings could not have gone to a better couple,? Boydston said. ?They are giving back to the community, just like they said they would.?

The couple?s fiscal good sense gave Mark Hill?s mom reason to brag, beyond the fact that her boy was a newly minted millionaire.

?I?m real proud of them,? Shirley Hill told Reuters. ?They have stayed grounded. That?s their nature.?

Related:

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HiRISE Mars camera reveals hundreds of impacts each year

Friday, May 17, 2013

Scientists using images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, or MRO, have estimated that the planet is bombarded by more than 200 small asteroids or bits of comets per year forming craters at least 12.8 feet (3.9 meters) across.

Researchers have identified 248 new impact sites on parts of the Martian surface in the past decade, using images from the spacecraft to determine when the craters appeared. The 200-per-year planetwide estimate is a calculation based on the number found in a systematic survey of a portion of the planet.

The University of Arizona's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, or HiRISE camera, took pictures of the fresh craters at sites where before and after images had been taken. This combination provided a new way to make direct measurements of the impact rate on Mars and will lead to better age estimates of recent features on Mars, some of which may have been the result of climate change.

"It's exciting to find these new craters right after they form," said Ingrid Daubar of the UA, lead author of the paper published online this month by the journal Icarus. "It reminds you Mars is an active planet, and we can study processes that are happening today."

These asteroids or comet fragments typically are no more than 3 to 6 feet (1 to 2 meters) in diameter. Space rocks too small to reach the ground on Earth cause craters on Mars because the Red Planet has a much thinner atmosphere.

HiRISE targeted places where dark spots had appeared during the time between images taken by the spacecraft's Context Camera, or CTX, or cameras on other orbiters. The new estimate of cratering rate is based on a portion of the 248 new craters detected. If comes from a systematic check of a dusty fraction of the planet with CTX since late 2006.

The impacts disturb the dust, creating noticeable blast zones. In this part of the research, 44 fresh impact sites were identified.

The meteor over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in February was about 10 times bigger than the objects that dug the fresh Martian craters.

Estimates of the rate at which new craters appear serve as scientists' best yardstick for estimating the ages of exposed landscape surfaces on Mars and other worlds.

Daubar and co-authors calculated a rate for how frequently new craters at least 12.8 feet (3.9 meters) in diameter are excavated. The rate is equivalent to an average of one each year on each area of the Martian surface roughly the size of the U.S. state of Texas. Earlier estimates pegged the cratering rate at three to 10 times more craters per year. They were based on studies of craters on the moon and the ages of lunar rocks collected during NASA's Apollo missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

"Mars now has the best-known current rate of cratering in the solar system," said UA's HiRISE Principal Investigator Alfred McEwen, a co-author on the paper.

MRO has been examining Mars with six instruments since 2006. Daubar is an imaging targeting specialist who has been on the HiRISE uplink operation s team from the very beginning. She is also a graduate student in the UA's department of planetary science and plans on graduating with her doctorate in spring 2014.

"There are five of us who help plan the images that HiRISE will take over a two-week cycle," she explained. "We work with science team members across the world to understand their science goals, help select the image targets and compile the commands for the spacecraft and the camera."

"The longevity of this mission is providing wonderful opportunities for investigating changes on Mars," said MRO Deputy Project Scientist Leslie Tamppari of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

###

University of Arizona: http://uanews.org

Thanks to University of Arizona for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128274/HiRISE_Mars_camera_reveals_hundreds_of_impacts_each_year

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Tomorrow Lab and the Beat of the Planets

?The planets have a beat,? said Dr. Oded Aharonson, snapping his fingers. Skyped in from Israel into a Manhattan boardroom on May 10, Aharonson is a scientist who has operated the rover on Mars. Some of his pictures of Titan are among those that have given us, on earth, a more accurate perspective on what it means to live in a solar system.

He held up a basketball, partly because he needed a round object to show the oscillations of the earth?s climate cycles and partly because the Tomorrow Lab Summit was being hosted by and is a community partner of NBA Cares. NBA Commissioner David Stern was one of the two men at the head of the table and the other was Marshall Levin, the President and CEO of the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science, the organization that created the Tomorrow Lab project to support the mission of science for the benefit of humanity.

Every 20,000 years, Aharonson explained, earth?s orbit changes and summer occurs closer or further from the sun. Every 40,000 years or so, the poles point more toward the sun, which changes the climate of the planet. Every 100,000 years, the furthest point from the sun moves in and out. The glacial cycles are connected in this way to the beat of the planet?s movement, which is one of the reasons why we?ve had climate change on our planet in the past. But it isn?t the beat of that particular dance, he warned, that?s causing the massive global warming we?re experiencing today.

As a girl on spring break, Jennifer Lopez, shown here at the Tomorrow Lab Summit, loved reading Brian Greene while her friends flipped through fashion magazines. She later went on to study molecular biology and now, as a philanthropist, focuses on social entrepreneurship.(Image by Rita J. King)

As a girl on spring break, Jennifer Lopez, shown here at the Tomorrow Lab Summit, loved reading Brian Greene while her friends flipped through fashion magazines. She later went on to study molecular biology and now, as a philanthropist, focuses on social entrepreneurship.(Image by Rita J. King)

I looked across the table at Jennifer Lopez, director of strategic partnerships at PopTech, who I?d met only a couple of weeks ago on April 23 after a talk I gave about the future of business at the intersection of science and art. We connected instantly, animated by our shared passion for getting girls excited about science and math. During a rapid-fire exchange we learned that we share a role as supporters of the Tomorrow Lab project. We agreed on the spot to start collaborating. She came to visit me at Science House a few days later to discuss ways we could prepare for the Tomorrow Lab Summit. When I told her Brian Greene would be there, her face lit up.

?On spring break,? she told me, ?I was the one reading The Elegant Universe while my friends flipped through magazines. I love quasars!?

Science House founder James Jorasch and I first met with Marshall and his team a couple of years ago. We committed to Tomorrow Lab when we began to learn about the jaw-dropping accomplishments of the Weizmann Institute. The news coming out of Weizmann is always stunning, so we were happy to record videos of ourselves (here?s mine) telling stories about our passion for science and what it means to us. James?s video is about a memorable teacher who sparked his imagination. These videos become leaves on the tree of humanity that Tomorrow Lab aims to create, a repository of stories about the personal impact of science in our lives that others can support to keep the work at Weizmann going strong.

Each person at the Tomorrow Lab summit similarly described the passion that attracted them to the project. As I listened, I sensed a seismic shift in the future of the effort. Somehow, we managed to eat sandwiches while theoretical physicist Brian Greene reminded us of the underlying weirdness at the subatomic scale within the illusion we perceive as reality. Jennifer and I glanced at each other across the table and raised our eyebrows, a silent reminder of the promise we made to get a picture of ourselves with Brian Greene before the summit?s end.

In an infinite multiverse, theoretical physicist Brian Greene could have been anywhere on May 10, but he was at the Tomorrow Lab Summit with Rita J. King, left, and Jennifer Lopez, right. (Image by Tracy Day)

In an infinite multiverse, theoretical physicist Brian Greene could have been anywhere on May 10, but he was at the Tomorrow Lab Summit with Rita J. King, left, and Jennifer Lopez, right. (Image by Tracy Day)

The more tangible proof of the power of science came when not one, but two people at the table shared stories about having survived brain tumors. Matthew Zachary, founder of Stupid Cancer, shared a glimpse of a terrifying moment in his life when, as a concert pianist and 21-year old college senior, he lost the use of his left hand, was diagnosed with a brain tumor and told that he might not survive. The group also included investors looking to channel significant resources into the future of science, publishers, strategists and editors of prominent publications looking to infuse their content for girls with the exciting presence of women they might want to emulate.

Allison Arden, publisher of AdvertisingAge and author of The Book of Doing, spoke about creativity and sending a pumpkin through the mail because she discovered that it was possible to do so. What else, she wondered, is possible?

It?s rare for a meeting to start with a mention of the shared beat of the planets and have the snap of a distant scientist?s fingers continue to keep silent time for two hours until the rhythm animates the people in the room. Tomorrow Lab has set a mission for us, and we are in service of that shared goal: to support science for the benefit of humanity, right here on the tiny blue planet that we share. We need all earthlings on board.

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Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=dea76897d850446c613ee6541b70000a

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Holder to face tough questioning at House hearing (The Arizona Republic)

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Sharp reshuffles management, forecasts profit

TOKYO (AP) ? Japanese electronics maker Sharp Corp. has named a new president as it reshuffles top management while seeking to restore profitability after reporting a record loss of 545.4 billion yen ($5.4 billion).

The Osaka-based maker of Aquos TVs said Tuesday that Kozo Takahashi, currently an executive vice president, will become its president and CEO as of June 25 as part of a business reorganization aimed at returning to the black in the fiscal year ending March 2014 after years of losses.

Sharp's main banks have extended it 150 billion yen ($1.48 billion) in fresh loans to help it meet a repayment deadline looming in September.

The company said it planned to beef up its loss-making liquid crystal display panel business as part of its alliance with South Korea's Samsung Electronics Co.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-05-14-Japan-Sharp/id-3c9fdd2c4b734b7a842246bef0c7ef61

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US, Russia and Iran work to save Olympic wrestling

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? In Iran, Olympic wrestling champion Jordan Burroughs felt like Justin Bieber, LeBron James and Tom Brady all rolled into one.

Not so much in his home country, though the New Jersey native was greeted by more than a dozen television cameras Tuesday when the American team arrived at the United Nations for a news conference with the Iranian and Russian squads.

Wrestling's leaders hope sports fans do a double-take when they see those three countries in the same sentence ? to prove a point about the sport's universality. The International Olympic Committee has recommended that wrestling be dropped starting with the 2020 Games, a decision that has a lot of people talking about the sport.

"It was like a double-edged sword. It's bittersweet," Burroughs said. "We're fighting for our lives, but in retrospect, we're getting more attention than we've ever received. Walking in here and seeing all these cameras, you're like, 'What the heck's going on?' It's not a lot of times we get this much press."

The United States will face fellow wrestling powers Iran and then Russia in exhibitions Wednesday at Manhattan's Grand Central Terminal. It's not the first time a wrestling meet has sprung up at a famed New York City locale ? this is the fourth straight year such an event has been held to raise money for wrestling nonprofit Beat the Streets, with the last two in Times Square.

And it's not the first time the Iranians have competed in the U.S., though they hadn't been back since the world championships in this same city a decade ago. But February's unexpected IOC decision changed everything, and the organizers' goal is for "The Rumble on the Rails" to be much more than just another charitable event or international exhibition.

They hope the IOC is watching and notices the symbolism.

"I think they are. They have to. Three superpowers in the world are telling them to put it back in," said Kyle Dake, who will be competing in his first major senior-level international event after becoming the first wrestler to win NCAA titles in four weight classes.

Wrestling is now one of eight sports seeking to fill one spot in the 2020 Olympics. The IOC board will meet May 29 in Russia to recommend a short list, with the final decision in September.

Wednesday's meet is one of many events around the world this month to promote the sport. The Iranians will also wrestle the Americans in Los Angeles on Sunday.

All these efforts to publicize the sport are among the lessons of the IOC's decision. Wrestling leaders are rethinking everything from their governance structure to their rules.

There's a sense the sport will emerge stronger from these tribulations ? if it emerges as an ongoing part of the Olympics.

"It's a weird feeling," said U.S. freestyle coach Zeke Jones. "Wrestling's not going away. It's what humans do; it's innate in mankind. But you have this feeling of, 'Man, we're getting better right now when we might not be in the Olympic Games.'"

Staying in the Olympics is a matter of national pride in Iran and Russia. Rasoul Khadem, Iran's technical manager, explained it this way through a translator: "Where I come from, wrestling is not just a sport; it is a part of culture and history."

Days after the IOC announcement, Burroughs and the U.S. team competed at the World Cup in Tehran. The Iranian fans kept asking for his T-shirts. Burroughs and other teammates shook hands with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a gesture of goodwill.

Burroughs said he saw the movie "Argo," about the 1979 hostage crisis, about a week later and was glad he didn't watch it before the trip because "I would've been freaking out." Now he feels he has a more nuanced view of the country.

Whether Iranians' opinions of the U.S. have been affected by wrestling's show of unity is unclear. Iran's state media did not report much on the arrival of the American wrestlers, which may stem from the official anger over the sanctions that have hit Iran's critical oil exports and blacklisted the country from international financial networks. The attention was much greater in 1998 when U.S. wrestlers competed in Iran for the first time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, which cut ties between the countries.

Dake, the former Cornell star, hears from friends: "Are you really wrestling Iran? That is amazing. That has bigger implications than just wrestling. That has huge political implications."

But to wrestling veterans like Jones, a 1992 Olympic silver medalist, the Iranians are just friendly rivals. He's visited their homes, dined with their families.

"U.S. and Iran have this tension publicly. Really, I sit down and have dinner with them all the time," Jones said. "Kind of sounds odd, right?"

Khadzhimurad Magomedov, one of the Russian coaches and a 1996 Olympic gold medalist, also finds that events like this week's feel like reunions.

"We are eager to show here how friendly the wrestlers are to each other," he said through a translator.

Russia's contingent includes 2009 world silver medalist Rasul Dzhukaev at 163 pounds. Iran is led by two-time world champion Mehdi Taghavi Kermani at 145? pounds and Olympic bronze medalists Ehsan Lashgari at 185 pounds and Komeil Ghasemi at 264? pounds.

Burroughs, the reigning Olympic gold medalist at 163 pounds, promises some big throws and high-flying takedowns for the fans who bought tickets to Wednesday's event. Rich Bender, USA Wrestling's executive director, expects some serious passion from the wrestlers considering the stage and the stakes. The Iran match will be on NBC Sports Network, with the Russia match on Universal Sports.

"It's their canvas," he said. "It's their opportunity to articulate to people the good in wrestling."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-russia-iran-save-olympic-wrestling-180904996.html

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

'The Kings Of Summer' Exclusive Clip: Some Wontons Are Too Big For Nick Offerman

There are two things you should know about "The Kings of Summer," if you haven't already heard of it. First, back when it was called "Toy's House" at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, it was a huge crowd pleaser and one of the favorites of Park City. Second, it stars some serious comedy talent that [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/05/13/kings-of-summer-clip/

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Thursday, May 2, 2013

Acer Aspire V5 11.6-inch notebook leaked with $450 price tag, unexpected AMD Temash chip

Acer Aspire V5 11.6-inch notebook leaked with $450 price tag, unexpected AMD Temash chip

While AMD announced its new Temash APU (alongside others) at this year's CES, the only device we've seen sporting it was an intriguing reference hybrid that made the rounds at the show. Now, details of an Acer Aspire V5 notebook have emerged, indicating the company is preparing its first Temash-powered device for general consumption. Acer already has a trio of Aspire V5 models with Intel Core processors and NVIDIA handling the graphics, but a half-complete product page for an unannounced V5-122P-0643 swaps those components out for AMD's wares. Formally called the AMD A6-1450, the Temash APU combines a quad-core 1GHz processor -- or 1.4GHz in "Turbo" state -- with a Radeon HD 8280 GPU. When put into tablets, it has an unusually low, sub-5W power envelope that allows for passive cooling. While we don't know exactly what wattage this Acer notebook will have, the presence of Temash should bode well for battery life. Head past the break for more details.

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Source: Acer

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/SC4n3tAK4hs/

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