Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Baseball: Jeff Thompson Named Golden Spikes Award Finalist

Photo from BigEast.org

Photo from BigEast.org

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Louisville pitcher Jeff Thompson was one of 30 semifinalists announced for the 2013 USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award on Tuesday.

Recently named the Big East Pitcher of the Year, Thompson,10-1, is boasting a 2.09 ERA this season with 97 strikeouts in 90.1 innings. At one point this season, Thompson had a stretch in which he had 28 consecutive scoreless innings.

Fans are encouraged to vote for three finalists online at GoldenSpikesAward.com?until May 31st. The three finalists will be announced on June 4th. From June 4th to June 14th, fans are encouraged to vote for the winner of the award. The Golden Spikes Award presentation will air July 19th during The Rundown at 2 pm on the MLB Network. The presentation will be simulcast on GoldenSpikesAward.com?and USABaseball.com.?

Below is the full list of GSA semifinalists:

2013 Golden Spikes Award Semifinalists
Name, Position, Class, School, Conference (in order of last name)

Mark Appel, RHP, Senior, Stanford, Pac-12
Tyler Beede, RHP, Sophomore, Vanderbilt, SEC
David Berg, RHP, Sophomore, UCLA, Pac-12
Alex Bregman, IF, Freshman, Louisiana State, SEC
Kris Bryant, UTIL, Junior, San Diego, West Coast
Kerry Doane, RHP, Senior, East Tennessee State, Atlantic Sun
Hunter Dozier, IF, Senior, Stephen F. Austin, Southland
Kent Emanuel, LHP, Junior, North Carolina, ACC
Thomas Eshelman, RHP, Freshman, Cal State Fullerton, Big West
Zane Evans, C/RHP, Junior, Georgia Tech, ACC
Marco Gonzales, LHP, Junior, Gonzaga, West Coast
Jonathan Gray, RHP, Junior, Oklahoma, Big 12
Eric Jagielo, IF/OF, Junior, Notre Dame, Big East
Mason Katz, IF, Sr, Louisiana State, SEC
Tony Kemp, OF, Junior, Vanderbilt, SEC
Michael Lorenzen, OF/RHP, Junior, Cal State Fullerton, Big West
Kyle McGowin, RHP, Sophomore, Savannah State, Mid-Eastern
Colin Moran, IF, Junior, North Carolina, ACC
Aaron Nola, RHP, Sophomore, Louisiana State, SEC
Justin Parr, OF, Senior, Illinois, Big 10
D.J. Peterson, IF, Junior, New Mexico, Mountain West
Nick Petree, RHP, RS Junior, Missouri State, Missouri Valley
Jimmie Sherfy, RHP , Junior, Oregon, Pac-12
Ryne Stanek, RHP, Junior, Arkansas, SEC
Mike Tauchman, OF, Senior, Bradley, Missouri Valley
Jeff Thompson, RHP, Junior, Louisville, Big East
Trea Turner, IF, Sophomore, NC State, ACC
Bobby Wahl, RHP, Junior, Mississippi, SEC
Jimmy Yezzo, IF, Junior, Delaware, Colonial Athletic
Kevin Ziomek, LHP, Junior, Vanderbilt, SEC

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Source: http://cardinalsportszone.com/2013/05/28/baseball-jeff-thompson-named-golden-spikes-award-finalist/

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Bachmann Won't Seek Re-Election in 2014 (WSJ)

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U of A medical researchers ID genetic marker for sporadic breast cancer

U of A medical researchers ID genetic marker for sporadic breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Raquel Maurier
rmaurier@ualberta.ca
780-492-5986
University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry

Medical researchers at the University of Alberta have pinpointed a genetic marker for sporadic breast cancer one of a handful identified to date in Caucasians.

Researchers have identified many genetic markers for familial breast cancers, but not for sporadic breast cancer which accounts for 80 per cent of all cases. Sambasivarao Damaraju, a professor with the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry and a researcher at the Cross Cancer Institute, worked with his team to scan the DNA of about 7,200 Alberta women, including those who have had sporadic breast cancer and those who have not had cancer. Their genomes were scanned from DNA isolated from blood.

The results? Women who had sporadic breast cancer frequently had a genetic marker on chromosome 4 a marker that has never been associated with familial breast cancer cases.

"The frequency of this marker occurring was statistically significant," says Damaraju, who works in the Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathology. "Genetic factors that predispose women to breast cancer is a subject of intense investigation in the research world. While 60 to 70 genetic risk factors have been identified for familial breast cancer, we don't know much about the genetic risk factors for sporadic breast cancer. So this finding is exciting, and shows us more research is needed in this area."

The team's findings were recently published in the peer-reviewed journal, PLoS One. Damaraju noted the team, which included co-author John Mackey and PhD student Yadav Sapkota, was multi-disciplinary, including basic scientists, medical oncologists, biostatisticians and epidemiologists. He also acknowledged the initial contributions to this work from previous trainees, Malinee Sridharan and Badan S. Sehrawat. Overall, he collaborated with colleagues from the U of A's School of Public Health, the Department of Oncology, and the Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, as well as colleagues from the Cross Cancer Institute and Alberta Health Services.

Damaraju and his team are continuing their work in this very young field (the first genetic marker for breast cancer predisposition was reported in 2007). He says more research is needed to identify genetic markers for sporadic breast cancer, but that large scale screening to identify those at risk is still years away.

Lifestyle factors account for two-thirds of the risk associated with breast cancer, while the remaining one-third of the risk is attributed to genetics, Damaraju noted.

The research was funded by the Alberta Cancer Foundation and the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Prairies/NWT region.

"We are pleased to see donor dollars having a direct impact on outcomes that are important to Albertans in this case identifying a genetic marker of a specific breast cancer may lead to earlier detection and improved treatment options," says Myka Osinchuk, CEO of the Alberta Cancer Foundation. "For years, the Alberta Cancer Foundation has invested in the 'biobank' that has given this research team access to the blood and tissue samples used in this study, and we recently confirmed our support with more funding. It is exciting to see how this comprehensive collection of tumour and tissue samples is starting to provide answers to key clinical questions."

Tracy Sopkow, VP, Cause Related Programs with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Prairies/NWT Region, added: "Our organization believes in supporting innovative research that has the potential to make a real, tangible difference. We're proud to support Dr. Damaraju and his team in their quest to identify genetic markers for sporadic breast cancer because the knowledge gained has the potential to change the future for thousands of women."

###



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


U of A medical researchers ID genetic marker for sporadic breast cancer [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Raquel Maurier
rmaurier@ualberta.ca
780-492-5986
University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry

Medical researchers at the University of Alberta have pinpointed a genetic marker for sporadic breast cancer one of a handful identified to date in Caucasians.

Researchers have identified many genetic markers for familial breast cancers, but not for sporadic breast cancer which accounts for 80 per cent of all cases. Sambasivarao Damaraju, a professor with the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry and a researcher at the Cross Cancer Institute, worked with his team to scan the DNA of about 7,200 Alberta women, including those who have had sporadic breast cancer and those who have not had cancer. Their genomes were scanned from DNA isolated from blood.

The results? Women who had sporadic breast cancer frequently had a genetic marker on chromosome 4 a marker that has never been associated with familial breast cancer cases.

"The frequency of this marker occurring was statistically significant," says Damaraju, who works in the Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathology. "Genetic factors that predispose women to breast cancer is a subject of intense investigation in the research world. While 60 to 70 genetic risk factors have been identified for familial breast cancer, we don't know much about the genetic risk factors for sporadic breast cancer. So this finding is exciting, and shows us more research is needed in this area."

The team's findings were recently published in the peer-reviewed journal, PLoS One. Damaraju noted the team, which included co-author John Mackey and PhD student Yadav Sapkota, was multi-disciplinary, including basic scientists, medical oncologists, biostatisticians and epidemiologists. He also acknowledged the initial contributions to this work from previous trainees, Malinee Sridharan and Badan S. Sehrawat. Overall, he collaborated with colleagues from the U of A's School of Public Health, the Department of Oncology, and the Department of Agricultural, Food and Nutritional Sciences, as well as colleagues from the Cross Cancer Institute and Alberta Health Services.

Damaraju and his team are continuing their work in this very young field (the first genetic marker for breast cancer predisposition was reported in 2007). He says more research is needed to identify genetic markers for sporadic breast cancer, but that large scale screening to identify those at risk is still years away.

Lifestyle factors account for two-thirds of the risk associated with breast cancer, while the remaining one-third of the risk is attributed to genetics, Damaraju noted.

The research was funded by the Alberta Cancer Foundation and the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Prairies/NWT region.

"We are pleased to see donor dollars having a direct impact on outcomes that are important to Albertans in this case identifying a genetic marker of a specific breast cancer may lead to earlier detection and improved treatment options," says Myka Osinchuk, CEO of the Alberta Cancer Foundation. "For years, the Alberta Cancer Foundation has invested in the 'biobank' that has given this research team access to the blood and tissue samples used in this study, and we recently confirmed our support with more funding. It is exciting to see how this comprehensive collection of tumour and tissue samples is starting to provide answers to key clinical questions."

Tracy Sopkow, VP, Cause Related Programs with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Prairies/NWT Region, added: "Our organization believes in supporting innovative research that has the potential to make a real, tangible difference. We're proud to support Dr. Damaraju and his team in their quest to identify genetic markers for sporadic breast cancer because the knowledge gained has the potential to change the future for thousands of women."

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/uoaf-uoa052713.php

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Hermann has not considered resigning as Rutgers AD

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) ? Julie Hermann has not considered resigning as Rutgers' incoming athletic director following reports that 16 years ago she humiliated and emotionally abused players while coaching Tennessee's women's volleyball team.

Speaking to reporters on a conference call, Hermann denied having knowledge of a letter that the 16 Tennessee players submitted to the school. Rutgers officials, however, have talked to her about it in recent days.

The 49-year-old Hermann acknowledged she was an intense coach and may have made a few mistakes handling her team. Hermann says she has matured and believes she is qualified to lead the scandal-marred Rutgers athletic program.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie plans to examine the appointment before Hermann begins June 17.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hermann-not-considered-resigning-rutgers-ad-190805828.html

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Should You Get BRCA Gene Testing?

May 27, 2013 10:19am

The death of Angelina Jolie?s aunt, Debbie Martin, has once again highlighted the genetic risk of breast cancer.

gty angelina jolie thg 130514 wblog Angelina Jolie Loses Aunt to Breast Cancer: Should You Get BRCA Gene Testing?

Alastair Grant/AFP/Getty Images

Martin, 61, was the younger sister of Jolie?s mother, Marcheline Bertrand, who died from ovarian cancer at the age of 56. Martin?s ?death comes ?two weeks after Jolie revealed she?d had a preventive double mastectomy after testing positive for a hereditary mutation in one of the?BRCA genes.

Women with mutations in the genes BRCA1 or BRCA2 are five times more likely to be diagnosed with breast cancer and up to 28 times more likely to be diagnosed with ovarian cancer, according to?the National Cancer Institute. That means that 60 percent of women with a BRCA mutation will develop breast cancer in their lifetimes, compared with 12 percent of women in the general population, and up to 40 percent of women with a BRCA mutation will develop ovarian cancer, compared with 1.4 percent of women without a mutation.

Angelina Jolie Reveals She Had Double Mastectomy to Prevent Breast Cancer

Less than 1 percent of women carry a faulty BRCA gene, making costly genetic testing unnecessary for most. But women with a mother and aunt diagnosed with breast or ovarian cancer are prime candidates for the test, according to the NCI.

For women who are not of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, the agency recommends genetic testing if you have:

  • Two first-degree relatives diagnosed with breast cancer, with one of them before age 51. First-degree relatives include your mother or sister;
  • Three or more first- or second-degree relatives diagnosed with breast cancer. Second-degree relatives include your grandmother or aunt;
  • A combination of first- and second-degree relatives diagnosed with breast cancer?or ovarian cancer;
  • A?first-degree relative?diagnosed with cancer in both breasts;
  • A combination of first- or second-degree relatives diagnosed with ovarian cancer;
  • A first- or second-degree relative diagnosed with breast?and?ovarian cancer;
  • A male relative diagnosed with breast cancer.

For women of Ashkenazi Jewish descent, who are more likely to carry a specific BRCA2 defect passed from generation to generation, the NCI recommends genetic testing if you have:

  • A first-degree relative diagnosed with breast?or?ovarian cancer;
  • Two second-degree relatives on the same side of the family diagnosed with breast?or ovarian cancer.

About 2 percent of adult women have a family history pattern described above but, again, less than 1 percent of women will have a BRCA mutation.

?Not every?woman in such families carries a harmful?BRCA1?or?BRCA2?mutation, and?not every?cancer in such families is linked to a harmful mutation in one of these genes,? according to the NCI. ?Furthermore,?not every?woman who has a harmful?BRCA1?or?BRCA2?mutation will develop breast and/or ovarian cancer.?

Women without one of the family history patterns described above are unlikely to have a harmful BRCA?mutation, according to the NCI.

Based on her genetic testing results, Jolie opted for a preventive double mastectomy ? the surgical removal of both breasts to reduce the risk of breast cancer. Studies suggest that preventive mastectomy can reduce breast cancer risk by about 90 percent in high-risk women, according to the NCI. But surgery carries risks, too, so women are advised to talk to their doctors about the procedure?s pros, cons and possible alternatives.

Click here?for more information from the National Cancer Institute.

SHOWS: Good Morning America

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2013/05/27/angelina-jolie-loses-aunt-to-breast-cancer-should-you-get-brca-gene-testing/

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Gerard Depardieu goes to Chechnya to film next movie

Depardieu and actress Liz Hurley are paying a visit to Chechnya to make a movie, in what appears to be an effort to remake the former war zone's international image.

By Fred Weir,?Correspondent / May 23, 2013

Actor Gerard Depardieu participates in a news conference in Grozny May 21, 2013. According to local media, Depardieu is visiting the Chechen capital for the filming of his new movie, "Turquoise."

Rasul Yarichev/REUTERS

Enlarge

Russians often grit their teeth at the way their country is portrayed in Hollywood films: a grim, wintry post-Soviet wasteland peopled with mafia thugs, drunks, and Kremlin megalomaniacs.

Skip to next paragraph Fred Weir

Correspondent

Fred Weir has been the Monitor's Moscow correspondent, covering Russia and the former Soviet Union, since 1998.?

Recent posts

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That may be set to change, thanks in part to a global movie star, "the Russian actor of French origin" Gerard Depardieu, who was granted Russian citizenship by President Vladimir Putin last January after he ditched his native France in a huff over high taxes.

Mr. Depardieu, who has become a vocal booster of his new homeland, is currently making a movie in Moscow and its repeatedly war-ravaged southern republic of Chechnya. It's a fairly standard blood-and-guts thriller called "Biryuza" (Turqoise) ? a tale of tragedy, betrayal, lots and lots of mayhem and, finally, sweet bloody revenge.

But Depardieu and the film's producers are making it clear that this movie's backdrop will be graphically different from the sad, impoverished land so often depicted by Hollywood. It will be set amid the glittering skyscrapers and swank nightclubs of Putin-era Moscow and the risen-from-the-ashes boulevards and modern apartment blocks?of postwar Chechnya. And it will feature many noble Russian ??and Chechen ??characters, as well as the usual gangsters.

With his co-star, British actress Liz Hurley, and director Philippe Martinez in tow, Depardieu faced journalists at a press conference in the Chechen capital, Grozny,?on Wednesday?to explain why he chose Chechnya to make a violent vengeance-themed movie.

"I followed everything that happened here and saw a city totally rebuilt and very sympathetic people," he said. "I saw more love and friendship than hate here."

But, perhaps also in the Putin-era spirit, anyone with questions about human rights abuses or the arbitrary one-man rule of Depardieu's "very close friend," pro-Moscow Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, was made to feel extremely unwelcome.

Asked by a journalist whether there were any parallels to be found in the fictional Depardieu's character's murderous revenge streak that culminates in Chechnya, and the real-life assassinations of Mr. Kadyrov's political foes that have been documented by human rights monitors, the film's director Mr. Martinez exploded in fury, according to the Independent.

"I have to tell you I?m a bit ashamed that you are asking that question," he is quoted as saying. "Gerard Depardieu and Elizabeth Hurley are making a movie in Chechnya! And you?re asking questions of a political nature! I don?t even want to answer."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/bT1mU7FdaE4/Gerard-Depardieu-goes-to-Chechnya-to-film-next-movie

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Military exemptions threaten Israeli coalition

JERUSALEM (AP) ? The leader of Israel's second largest party says Benjamin Netanyahu's ruling coalition could collapse if it fails to reform the military draft and end a system of exemptions for ultra-Orthodox Jewish seminary students.

Finance Minister Yair Lapid spoke Monday after a committee meeting tasked with changing the rules ended without results.

Military service is compulsory in Israel, but thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews get exemptions each year to pursue religious studies. The ultra-Orthodox insist military service would compromise their strict religious lifestyle, while Israelis who serve in the military say the system is unfair.

Lapid's party surged in January's parliamentary election by vowing to make the ultra-Orthodox "share the burden" of military service.

Lapid warned Monday, "There will be an equal sharing of the burden, or this government will fall apart."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/military-exemptions-threaten-israeli-coalition-135508650.html

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Jolie aunt dies of breast cancer days after op-ed

FILE- In this Aug. 13, 2003 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie arrives at the Mathaeser cinema in Munich, Southern Germany, to attend the German premiere of her latest movie "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life." Less than two weeks after Jolie had a double mastectomy to avoid breast cancer, her aunt has died from the disease. Jolie?s aunt Debbie Martin died at age 61 Sunday in a San Diego-area hospital, her husband Ron Martin tells The Associated Press. Debbie Martin was the younger sister of Jolie?s mother Marcheline Bertrand, whose own death from cancer in 2007 inspired the surgery that Jolie described in a May 14 New York Times op-ed. (AP Photo/Uwe Lein, File)

FILE- In this Aug. 13, 2003 file photo, actress Angelina Jolie arrives at the Mathaeser cinema in Munich, Southern Germany, to attend the German premiere of her latest movie "Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life." Less than two weeks after Jolie had a double mastectomy to avoid breast cancer, her aunt has died from the disease. Jolie?s aunt Debbie Martin died at age 61 Sunday in a San Diego-area hospital, her husband Ron Martin tells The Associated Press. Debbie Martin was the younger sister of Jolie?s mother Marcheline Bertrand, whose own death from cancer in 2007 inspired the surgery that Jolie described in a May 14 New York Times op-ed. (AP Photo/Uwe Lein, File)

FILE - In this March 12, 2000 file photo, Actress Angelina Jolie arrives at the 6h Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards in Los Angeles. Jolie won an award for Outstanding Performance for a Female Actor in a Supporting Role for "Girl, Interrupted." Less than two weeks after Angelina Jolie had a double mastectomy to avoid breast cancer, her aunt has died from the disease. Jolie?s aunt Debbie Martin died at age 61 Sunday in a San Diego-area hospital, her husband Ron Martin tells The Associated Press. Debbie Martin was the younger sister of Jolie?s mother Marcheline Bertrand, whose own death from cancer in 2007 inspired the surgery that Jolie described in a May 14 New York Times op-ed. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

ESCONDIDO, Calif. (AP) ? Less than two weeks after Angelina Jolie revealed she'd had a double mastectomy to avoid breast cancer, her aunt died from the disease Sunday.

Debbie Martin died at age 61 at a hospital in Escondido, Calif. near San Diego, her husband, Ron Martin, told The Associated Press.

Debbie Martin was the younger sister of Jolie's mother, Marcheline Bertrand, whose own death from ovarian cancer in 2007 inspired the surgery that Jolie described in a May 14 op-ed in the New York Times.

According to her husband, Debbie Martin had the same defective BRCA1 gene that Jolie does, but didn't know it until after her 2004 cancer diagnosis.

"Had we known, we certainly would have done exactly what Angelina did," Ron Martin said in a phone interview.

Debbie Martin's death was first reported by E! News.

Ron Martin said after getting breast cancer, Debbie Martin had her ovaries removed preventively because she was also at very high genetic risk for ovarian cancer, which has killed several women in her family.

The 37-year-old Jolie said in her op-ed that her doctors estimated that she had a 50 percent risk of getting ovarian cancer but an 87 percent risk of breast cancer so she had her breasts removed first, reducing her likelihood to a mere 5 percent.

She described the three-step surgical process in detail in the op-ed "because I hope that other women can benefit from my experience."

The story, a surprise to most save those closest to Jolie, spurred a broad discussion of genetic testing and pre-emptive surgery.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-05-26-Angelina%20Jolie-Aunt/id-99468d679e6b4fb4bd9316552eded204

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Jury foreman says life or death decision unfair

PHOENIX (AP) ? They were 12 ordinary citizens who didn't oppose the death penalty. But unlike spectators outside the courthouse who followed the case like a daytime soap opera and jumped to demand Jodi Arias' execution, the jurors faced a decision that was wrenching and real, with implications that could haunt them forever.

In an interview Friday, jury foreman William Zervakos provided a glimpse into the private deliberations, describing four women and eight men who struggled with the question: How heinous of a killing deserves a similar fate?

"The system we think is flawed in that sense because this was not a case of a Jeffrey Dahmer or Charles Manson," Zervakos told The Associated Press.

"It was a brutal no-win situation. ... I think that's kind of unfair," the 69-year-old added. "We're not lawyers. We can't interpret the law. We're mere mortals. And I will tell you I've never felt more mere as a mortal than I felt for the last five months."

Zervakos said the most difficult time of the entire trial was hearing directly from victim Travis Alexander's family as his brother and sister tearfully explained how his killing has shattered their lives.

"There was no sound in that jury room for a long time after that because you hurt so bad for these people," he said. "But that wasn't evidence. That's what made it so hard. ... This wasn't about them. This was a decision whether we're going to tell somebody they were going to be put to death or spend the rest of their life in prison."

Zervakos described a deliberations room full of tears and spinning moral compasses as each juror struggled to come to grips with their own beliefs about what factors ? including Arias' young age at the time of the killing and her lack of criminal history ? should cause them to show mercy and spare her life.

"You've got Travis Alexander's family devastated, that he was killed, that he was brutally killed. You've got Jodi Arias' family sitting in there, both families sitting and seeing these humiliating images and listening to unbelievably lurid private details of their lives, and you've got a woman whose life is over, too," Zervakos said. "I mean, who's winning in this situation? And we were stuck in the middle."

Zervakos declined to discuss his thoughts or those of other jurors on whether Arias should have been sentenced to death or life. But he said he was torn between her two personas: a killer and an average young woman struggling through life.

"You heard (prosecutor Juan) Martinez say she was only 27. ... She's old enough that she should have known better," Zervakos said. "I didn't look at it that way. I'm looking at 27 years of an absolutely normal everyday young woman that was living a life that was perfectly normal. Then something changed the trajectory of her life after meeting Travis Alexander, and it spiraled downhill from there."

The same jury on May 8 convicted Arias of first-degree murder in Alexander's killing, but couldn't reach a decision Thursday after about 13 hours of deliberations on whether she should live or die.

Judge Sherry Stephens was forced to declare a mistrial of the penalty phase and dismissed the panel.

A conference with the judge and attorneys is set for June 20 to determine how both sides want to proceed. In the interim, Stephens set a July 18 retrial date.

The mistrial set the stage for a whole new proceeding to determine whether the 32-year-old former waitress should get a life sentence or the death penalty for murdering Alexander five years ago.

Arias stabbed and slashed him nearly 30 times, slit his throat slit and shot him in the forehead. Prosecutors said she attacked Alexander in a jealous rage after he wanted to end their relationship and planned a trip to Mexico with another woman. Arias contends it was self-defense.

Prosecutors now have the option to take the death penalty off the table and avoid a new penalty phase. The judge would then determine whether to sentence Arias to spend her entire life behind bars, or give her life with the possibility of release after 25 years. Given Arias could not afford her own defense, taxpayers footed the bill for court-appointed attorneys at a cost so far of nearly $1.7 million, a price tag that will only balloon if the case moves forward.

Should the state decide to seek death again, jury selection alone could take months, given the difficulty of seating an impartial panel in a case that has attracted global attention and become daily cable TV and tabloid fodder with tales of sex, lies and violence, said jury consultant Jo-Ellan Dimitrius.

"Will it be impossible? No. Will it be tough? Absolutely," she said.

Dimitrius noted that jury selection in the widely publicized trial of infamous serial killer Richard Ramirez, known as the "Night Stalker," who is on death row in California, took six months as attorneys weeded through more than 2,000 prospective jurors.

If Arias faces a new penalty phase, her murder conviction would stand, leaving the new panel tasked only with sentencing her. However, the proceedings could drag on for several more months as the new jury reviews evidence and witness testimony.

If the second jury cannot reach a unanimous decision, the judge would then sentence Arias to one of the life-in-prison options. The judge cannot sentence Arias to death.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jury-foreman-says-life-death-decision-unfair-000931802.html

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Obama calls Oklahoma tornado's toll 'hard to comprehend'

By Jeff Mason

MOORE, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Standing by a pile of debris that once was an elementary school, President Barack Obama on Sunday called the destruction last week's tornado wrought in Moore, Oklahoma, "hard to comprehend" and vowed to provide long-term federal help in rebuilding.

The tornado, rated at the top of a five-step scale used to measure the destructive power of twisters, killed 24 people - including seven children at the school site Obama visited. It ripped a 17-mile-long (27-km-long) corridor of destruction through the suburb of Oklahoma City, flattening entire blocks of homes, two schools and a hospital.

"Obviously the damage here is pretty hard to comprehend," Obama said, standing on a block where piles of boards, bricks and cinder blocks that used to be buildings and houses lined the side of the street. Rare items that survived the disaster - a television set, a pink baby carriage - stood in contrast to the wreckage.

The visit to the disaster-shaken town was one in a series of responses Obama has made in recent months to tragedies including the Boston Marathon bombings last month; a December mass school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut; and the destruction that Superstorm Sandy caused along the Jersey Shore in October.

"Whenever I come to an area that has been devastated by some natural disaster like this, I want to make sure that everyone understands that I am speaking on behalf of the entire country," said Obama, flanked by officials including Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin. "Everywhere, fellow Americans are praying with you, they're thinking about you and they want to help. And I'm just a messenger here letting you know that you are not alone."

Cars with their bodies dented and windows smashed lay under debris or twisted on their sides. Rising above the wasteland were at least three American flags that had been attached to the rubble, waving in the wind.

Caleb Sloan, 24, who lost his home in the storm, said Obama's words gave him hope that help would be forthcoming.

"He has no choice but to live by his word," Sloan said. "I hope and pray and think he will keep his promises."

SPATE OF STORMS

The May 20 Moore tornado was the most powerful of a spate of 76 twisters that touched down in 10 states from May 18 through 20, causing an estimated $2 billion to $5 billion in insured losses, according to disaster modeling company Eqecat.

The Moore tornado, the deadliest such windstorm to hit the United States in two years, also injured 377 people.

One volunteer who had been working on the response raised the commonly voiced complaint that the tight security surrounding a presidential visit can interfere with efforts to return to normal.

"It is fantastic he came, but his visit shut down everything," said Carol Hull, who has been working to feed and counsel victims. "We have no place to send people for food and aid while he is here because the roads and centers are shut down."

While assuring that residents of the 1,200 homes that the storm destroyed would receive extended federal help, Obama also urged lawmakers to maintain funding for the training and equipment that emergency responders rely on in the aftermath of disasters.

"I know everybody in Congress cares deeply about what's happening and know that resources will be forthcoming when it comes to rebuilding," Obama said. "But remember that it's also the ongoing training and equipment, making sure those things are in place. We can't shortchange that kind of ongoing disaster response, we can't just wait until the disaster happens. That's how, in part, we're able to save a lot of lives."

(Additional reporting by Heide Brandes; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Sandra Maler and Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-visit-tornado-oklahoma-town-sunday-143110804.html

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Google gives sneak peek at probable future Gmail app design

 

Gmail

A good portion of Google I/O was spent, naturally, on the design of applications, and Google apparently gave a little sneak peek at what probably is an upcoming redesign of the Gmail app. As evident in the Structure in Android App Design session, Jens Nagel shows off a redesign navigation drawer that combines several views into a single drawer-style UI.

As the slide above shows, there are different layers to the views, collapsed by default. And most important is that you can get to this drawer from anywhere in the app, which is what lets them get rid of that lower Action Bar. (It's almost in the same vein as the BlackBerry Hub in BB10, just at an application level instead of at the homescreen level.) It should also mean a much faster switch between labels, long a sore spot for some of us here.

If we had to guess, we'd expect to see an updated Gmail app roll out with the expected Android 4.3 update, whenever that's available.

Source: YouTube; via Android Police

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/5vj4Ncti9k8/story01.htm

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Obama balances threats against Americans' rights

President Barack Obama pauses as his speech is interrupted by CODEPINK founder Medea Benjamin, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington. CODEPINK is a women-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement working to end U.S. funded wars and occupations, to challenge militarism globally, and to redirect our resources into health care, education, green jobs and other life-affirming activities. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama pauses as his speech is interrupted by CODEPINK founder Medea Benjamin, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington. CODEPINK is a women-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement working to end U.S. funded wars and occupations, to challenge militarism globally, and to redirect our resources into health care, education, green jobs and other life-affirming activities. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama talks about national security, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington. Declaring America at a "crossroads" in the fight against terrorism, the president revealed clearer guidelines for the use of deadly drone strikes, including more control by the U.S. military, while leaving key details of the controversial program secret. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama continues to speak about national security, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington, as CODEPINK founder Medea Benjamin of Code Pink shouts from the back of the auditorium. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama pauses as his speech is interrupted by CODEPINK founder Medea Benjamin, as he talked about national security, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama reacts to a CODEPINK founder Medea Benjamin as she shouts at him from the back of the auditorium as he talked about national security, Thursday, May 23, 2013, at the National Defense University at Fort McNair in Washington. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Forecasting the changing nature of threats against the U.S. for years to come, President Barack Obama says "America is at a crossroads." And so, too, is his presidency's counterterrorism policy, which has long struggled to balance protecting the nation from terror attacks while upholding Americans' rights.

The Obama administration this week acknowledged that four Americans have been killed ? three of whom were not specifically targeted ? in secretive overseas drone strikes against al-Qaida extremists since 2009. And in a wide-ranging speech Thursday, Obama warned that Americans must be vigilant against increasing homegrown threats from within, including from fellow citizens like the surviving suspect in last month's Boston Marathon bombing.

It is an awkward position for the president, a constitutional lawyer, who took office pledging to undo policies that infringed on Americans' civil liberties and hurt the U.S. image around the world.

Instead, he defended on Thursday his continued and expanded use of the spy drones, which have killed thousands of terror suspects and civilians, in places like Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia. He hinted in the speech that he would give law enforcement officials new authority to seize suspicious communications within the United States.

And Obama defiantly promised to push forward with his longtime goal of closing the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where 166 terror suspects are being held ? but said it's largely up to a resistant Congress to get it done.

Obama acknowledged it's a tough line to walk in striking a balance.

"Now is the time to ask ourselves hard questions ? about the nature of today's threats and how we should confront them," Obama told his audience of students, national security and human rights experts and counterterror officials at the National Defense University.

"In the years to come, we will have to keep working hard to strike the appropriate balance between our need for security and preserving those freedoms that make us who we are," he said.

The president outlined a narrower scope of threats against the United States in the years ahead, with the war in Afghanistan winding down and an al-Qaida that has splintered ? in part, due to the very attacks he authorized. But as al-Qaida has fragmented, it has given rise to smaller networks and homegrown extremists that pose increased risks to Americans, he said.

Some Republicans criticized Obama as underestimating the strength of al-Qaida and objected to his plans to try to repeal broad executive powers to use military force against the nation's enemies. Congress granted those powers to George W. Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

"I believe we are still in a long, drawn-out conflict with al-Qaida," Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a leading voice among Republicans, told reporters after the speech. "To somehow argue that al-Qaida is on the run comes from a degree of unreality that to me is really incredible. Al-Qaida is expanding all over the Middle East, from Mali to Yemen and all places in between."

Obama's address came amid increased pressure from Congress on both the drone program and the status of the Guantanamo Bay prison. A rare bipartisan coalition of lawmakers has pressed for more openness and more oversight of the secretive targeted drone strikes, while liberal lawmakers have pointed to a hunger strike at Guantanamo in pressing Obama to renew his stalled efforts to close the Navy detention center.

The president cast the drone program as legal, effective and necessary as terror threats progress. But he acknowledged that the targeted strikes are no "cure-all" and said he is haunted by the civilians unintentionally killed.

In Pakistan alone, up to 3,336 people have been killed by the unmanned aircraft since 2003, according to a New America Foundation database of the strikes. However, the secrecy surrounding the drone program makes it impossible for the public to know for sure how many people have been killed in in strikes, and of those, how many were intended targets.

The Justice Department revealed Wednesday that four Americans had been killed in U.S. drone strikes abroad. Just one was an intended target ? Anwar al-Awlaki, who officials say had ties to at least three attacks planned or carried out on U.S. soil. The other three Americans, including al-Awlaki's 16-year-old son, were unintended victims.

"How good, really, is our system for targeting and reducing unintended casualties?" said Elizabeth Goitein, an attorney and co-director of the Brennan Center Justice's Liberty and National Security Program at the New York University law school. "These three American citizens were not targeted, and their deaths were collateral damage."

She added: "The talk about being more transparent and preserving our liberties is talk. It's rhetoric."

In newly public White House guidelines governing when to launch drones, the U.S. will not strike if a suspect can be captured, and attacks may only target an "imminent" threat. Though the White House prefers greater military responsibility for drones, the CIA will play a continued role with strikes in Yemen and control the program in Pakistan.

The president said he was open to additional measures to further regulate the drone program, including creating a special court system to regulate strikes. Congress is already considering whether to set up a court to decide when drones overseas can target U.S. citizens linked to al-Qaida.

In seeking to close Guantanamo, Obama faces many of the same roadblocks that stymied his efforts to shutter the prison when he first took office. Many Republican lawmakers oppose Obama's efforts to bring some of the detainees to the U.S. to face trial.

But a new hunger strike by prisoners protesting their conditions and indefinite confinement has refocused Obama on efforts to close the detention center. He announced a fresh push Thursday to transfer approved detainees to their home countries and lift a ban on transfers to Yemen.

The end of the Yemen restrictions is key, given that 30 of the 56 prisoners eligible for transfer are Yemeni. Obama halted all transfers to the poor Middle Eastern nation in 2010 after a man trained in Yemen was convicted in a failed bombing attempt of an airliner bound for Detroit.

McCain pledged to urge his colleagues to work with Obama to shut the facility, but Rep. Howard P. "Buck" McKeon, the Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said Thursday's speech did not convince him.

"This speech was only necessary due to a deeply inconsistent counterterrorism policy, one that maintains it is more humane to kill a terrorist with a drone than detain and interrogate him at Guantanamo Bay," McKeon said.

Closer to home, Obama also warned of "the daunting challenge of terrorism from within our borders." He said law enforcement authorities would be reviewed, "so we can intercept new types of communication and build in privacy protections to prevent abuse." He did not provide specifics.

___

Associated Press writers Lolita C. Baldor, Kimberly Dozier and Richard Lardner contributed to this report.

___

Follow Lara Jakes and Julie Pace on Twitter: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP and https://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-24-US-Obama-National-Security/id-8c80e7b468484bab815661845cb8e564

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UTA Hires Top Investment Banker to Explore Finance Options - The ...

Michael Buckner / Getty Images Entertainment

Ken Moelis

United Talent Agency has engaged a top Wall Street banker to help evaluate investment offers in the wake of the sale of minority interests in its two larger competitors.

UTA declined to comment, but sources confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter that the Beverly Hills-based agency is working with Ken Moelis, founder of Moelis & Co., to possibly take on a financial partner. A source said that UTA is not aggressively seeking capital but has been approached by several suitors and would consider selling a stake in the agency if the arrangement fits its growth strategy.

PHOTOS: Secrets of Hollywood Agency Mailrooms

The move by the privately held, 22-year-old agency comes in the wake of two major deals by its larger rivals CAA and William Morris Endeavor.

In October 2010, CAA sold a reported 35 percent stake to TPG Capital, a buyout firm that has invested in a number of businesses including Harrah?s Entertainment. The New York Times reported that the deal called for CAA and TPG to create a $500 million investment fund in an arrangement that valued CAA at around $700 million.

In May 2012, WME sold a reported 31 percent share of the agency to Silver Lake Partners, a private equity firm based in Palo Alto and known for high-profile technology deals.

Both agencies cited growth plans as the reason for taking on financial partners. CAA has since expanded its business via investments in sports, fashion and digital (among others), and its top partners are said to have cashed out a portion of the investment themselves. WME also has helped back several start-up companies. UTA could be eyeing the same strategy.

With about 125 agents in Beverly Hills and New York, UTA boasts clients including actors Johnny Depp, Gwyneth Paltrow and Channing Tatum as well as producer-filmmaker Judd Apatow, Modern Family showrunner Steve Levitan and the Coen brothers, among many others. Key executives at UTA include CEO Jeremy Zimmer and chairman Jim Berkus along with managing directors Jay Sures and David Kramer, as well as board members Peter Benedek and Tracey Jacobs.

Moelis, 55, has been among the most successful investment bankers for three decades, enabling dozens of deals for big companies like Hilton Hotels, Anheuser-Busch, Gillette, Dubai World, MGM Mirage and Yahoo!

The press-shy Moelis did not respond to a request for comment.

Moelis began his career at Drexel Burnham Lambert in its heyday and later worked at buyout firm Donaldson Lufkin & Jenrette and Swiss investment bank UBS before starting his own firm, Moelis & Company, in 2007.

Moelis & Co. has offices in New York, Los Angeles and a dozen other cities, with more than 230 employees.

Moelis is well known among the nation?s richest individuals, many of whom are or have been clients or have been on the other side of his deals, including Steve Wynn, John Kluge, Donald Trump, Carl Icahn and Sam Zell.

?He?s like an old-time investment banker,? former Hilton Hotels CEO Stephen Bollenbach told the L.A. Times in 2008, a year after Moelis engineered the sale of the Hilton chain to Blackstone Group for $26.2 billion. ?You can actually trust him to give you an honest judgment, not just what?s in his best interest.?

Moelis has said in interviews that he is interested in West Coast companies in what he calls the ?middle market? ? those with annual sales from $200 million to $2 billion. Those are companies he feels have not always gotten the attention they deserve from the big banks in New York.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/uta-hires-top-investment-banker-556811

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Partaking and Passing On: The Work of Luci Shaw | Seattle Pacific ...

Partaking and Passing On: The Work of Luci Shaw

content43d83ee2ef93fea2425d3770e85a9c83The following post by Allison Backous Troy honors Luci Shaw, the 2013 recipient of the Denise Levertov Award. This award is presented annually by?Image and the SPU MFA and English departments to an artist or creative writer whose work exemplifies a serious and sustained engagement with the Judeo-Christian tradition.

The world is
not with us?enough.
O taste and see.

?Denise Levertov, ?Taste and See?

It may seem incongruous to speak about a poet by introducing the work of another poet?in this case, Luci Shaw via Denise Levertov. But many factors make this epigraph fitting of Luci?s work, vision, and character, the most immediate reason being that Luci is the recipient of the tenth annual Denise Levertov Award, an annual literary award given by?Image Journal,?Seattle Pacific University, and the?SPU MFA?program in creative writing.

If it weren?t for Luci?s work and vision, it could be said the MFA program that shaped and spurred me wouldn?t exist. And if it weren?t for Luci?s character?generous and lovingly, stubbornly brilliant?many poets and writers who wrestle with Christian faith would not have the room to explore language and belief on equal terms.

Luci Shaw, alongside Levertov, has spent her life opening the world to us through poems and prose, her faith never smugly covering up life?s unanswerable complexities. Instead, Luci?s Christianity is one with muscle: it asks the hard questions, examines the difficulties of doubt, of thirsty children in Honduras, of a mother?s coldness in the face of a child?s need for love.

But if Luci?s faith can be compared to muscle, it is a supple one, unafraid to bend and bow to the mysteries that both haunt and comfort her: ?Sterile, skeptics, yet we may be broken / to his slow, silent birth, his beginning / new in us.?

In Luci, we see a poet who does not shy away from faith, but without kitsch or pretense, clings to it with her whole being. We are brought to both beauty and wonder in a way that both satisfies and leaves us hungry, a way that demands total attention: ?My whole body an ear, an eye,? she writes in ?The Simple Dark,? a poem that could be considered a trademark of Luci?s aesthetic vision.

Luci?s poetry has taught me this: paying attention is hard, holy work, and we must do it all the time. And we must bring others to see what we see, make them stare a little longer than they are comfortable doing, in order to see the beauty and difficulty of the world that we live in.

This is what it means, in Luci?s work, to ?taste and see??to examine what is around us with an open heart, and to recognize that what makes the world feel frightening to us is often our own fear, which, when faced, can give way to something more.

In a small way, I try to share Luci?s vision with others. I?ve bought many of her almost thirty books, but none of them are on my shelves: they sit with friends, churchgoers, old students who needed something to read.

I?ve had the honor of working with Luci on some of her poems as an editor for?The Other Journal, and I was always surprised at her graciousness, her fluid revisions, the kindness with which she took my simple questions.

I was completely surprised at the reception my students gave her work when I taught her latest book of poetry,?Harvesting Fog. The journey through Luci?s book was slow and rewarding. Many of my students had never read a full book of poetry before, and were delighted to find a poet whose depictions of ladybugs, water, and midnight soul searching mirrored their own.

One student wrote a poem in response to one of Luci?s and submitted it to a magazine. Another student, a self-professed hater of poetry, wrote a poem about his Mountain Dew bottle in imitation of Luci that shocked both of us with its wit and humor.

We spent one class hour sitting in the woods outside campus, the morning sun spilling through the tree branches, all of us standing in a circle, listening to a Kenyan student read Luci?s work, her hushed, graceful voice hard to catch in the windy morning.

This was a lesson to us?the need to listen closely, to quiet ourselves, to pay attention. It is still a lesson to me in these days where I rush through job applications and frantically add items to my unborn son?s baby registry.

It is a lesson to all of us who would measure our faith by the products of our belief: committees headed, checks written, but our own midnight questions ignored out of fear, or apathy, or simple weariness at the endurance faith requires.

?We live in such a changing, complex, intricately formed universe. Every part of it deserves to be brought to our attention.? Luci said in a recent interview with?Image.

And what does that attention do but force us to listen for God, even if what we hear is silence, or a murmuring that we cannot decipher? What does that attention do but erase our excuses, reveal our needs to us, humble us to the bone?

And if that is the case, what can we hope for? If we read Luci rightly, we hope for love, which she sees as a reality that, perfectly divine, is always drawing us:

?The tide that outward ebbs, turns then and inward flows,? she writes in ?The Returns of Love,? comparing our blind seeking to the endless reach of God?s love for us. ?And what I offer you, you?ll multiply to me.?

Luci?s body of work is a legacy that offers us a way to see the world as a testament to what is multiplied to us, an invitation to God?s table, which invites all and is for all. Her work challenges us to see that invitation in things both beautiful and difficult?to not only see, but to accept, partake, and pass on.

Note: This post was originally published on the?Image Journal?blog?Good Letters.

Source: http://blog.spu.edu/mfa/2013/05/23/partaking-and-passing-on-the-work-of-luci-shaw/

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'No guarantee of peace,' NKorean envoy warns China

BEIJING (AP) ? China told a top North Korean envoy Friday it wants a peaceful, denuclearized Korean Peninsula, and said the emissary warned there is "no guarantee of peace" but that his country was willing to hold talks with all sides.

The official state Xinhua News Agency said a top Chinese army general, Fan Changlong, made the call for denuclearization in his meeting Friday with North Korean Vice Marshal Choe Ryong Hae.

His comments were a reiteration of China's established position, but could be seen as a rebuke of its neighboring ally following a half-year gap in high-level contacts during which Pyongyang angered Beijing by conducting rocket launches, a nuclear test and other saber-rattling.

Tensions surrounding the nuclear issue have "intensified strategic conflicts among involved parties and jeopardized the peace and stability of the peninsula," continued Fan, a vice chairman of the Central Military Commission overseeing China's armed forces.

Choe, a personal envoy of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, was widely expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping and deliver a message from Kim before returning.

"Conditions on the Korean Peninsula and in the east Asian region are complex and exceptional, and there is no guarantee of peace. North Korea's people require a peaceful and stable environment to build their nation," Choe was quoted as saying.

"North Korea is willing to work with all sides to search for a method of solving the problems through dialogue," Choe said.

The envoy's comments reflect both the threatening tone of North Korea's recent statements, and its desire to show deference to Beijing's hopes for a return to nuclear disarmament talks.

Choe met Thursday with the ruling Communist Party's fifth-ranked official, and Chinese state media later quoted the envoy as saying that North Korea "is willing to accept the suggestion of the Chinese side and launch dialogue with all relevant parties."

Beijing considered Pyongyang's recent moves an affront to its interests in regional stability and showed its displeasure by joining with the U.S. to back U.N. sanctions and cut off dealings with North Korea's Foreign Trade Bank.

China is North Korea's last significant diplomatic ally and main source of trade and economic assistance.

China's North Korea watchers said it is unlikely that Chinese leaders would have accepted Choe's visit without a promise from Pyongyang that it was prepared to return to diplomacy as Beijing has sought.

"The relationship is rocky, so they will try to mend the relationship," Cui Yingjiu, a retired professor of Korean at Peking University, said of North Korea. "Second, they also want to improve relations with the U.S. and need China to be their intermediary."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-guarantee-peace-nkorean-envoy-warns-china-083329581.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Obama: Congress briefed on every drone strike

(AP) ? President Barack Obama says his administration informs Congress about every drone strike America orders.

In a national security speech Thursday, Obama said the administration has briefed the appropriate congressional committees about all drone strikes outside of Iraq and Afghanistan, such as in Yemen.

He says the briefings included the one instance in which an American citizen was the target: Anwar al-Awlaki. Officials say al-Awlaki was a leader in a branch of al-Qaida that operated in the Arabian peninsula, and that he had ties to at least three attacks planned or carried out on U.S. soil.

Obama spoke a day after the administration disclosed the deaths of three other Americans abroad in drone strikes.

Obama says he authorized the release of the information to encourage debate on the issue.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-23-Obama-National%20Security-Drones-Congress/id-792cc26651a94b43be6e613a7bf16f29

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Mastering The Plunger Plus More ? Tips To Tackle Your Plumbing ...

If you?re looking for facts about the many plumbing problems, if you are a little bit of maintenance by yourself or someone else?s home, this short article provides you with the right information. If you attempt and accomplish these tasks with no knowledge, your end product will end up an emergency and a waste of time.

Ensure your tool box ready for any project you are preparing to do. The thing you don?t want will be knee deep in the job only to discover that you?re missing normally the one tool you have to finish. Be sure you have various sizes of pipe wrenches that can be used to complete any job.

If your pipes have burst in a upstairs area, work with a tool to perforate the ceiling underneath in numerous places and places cookware under to catch the lake. Via a done, the weight with the accumulating water might lead to a collapse with the entire ceiling. http://www.pro-anaheim-plumbing.com

How can you check if you will find pipes inside the wall you want to do work on? You can purchase a pipe and stud sensor at the home improvement store, but if you don?t intend on making use of it again that?s probably a complete money. If you might be putting something big on the wall you?ll be able to cut a chunk in the market to peek inside then purchase it together with your project.

When worried about plumbing, you must know what can cause noisy pipes. This will be relevant as it can often mean the difference between a meticulous noise and flooding in your own home. Do your research to tell apart relating to the different noises and engage a professional if any serious risk is posed.

In case you have a crack within your toilet tank, you?ll be able to sometimes fix this having an epoxy resin. However, it?s very difficult to take care of this sort of maintenance, and also the best choice could be contacting the supplier and ordering a brand new tank being positioned in your bathrooms. Nevertheless, keeping some epoxy resin on hand for emergencies is a good idea.

Governmental regulations sometimes prevent plumbers from actively providing maintenance to copper piping. In case you have a calcium buildup within your copper piping, you will need to deal with this yourself. You?ve to eliminate each of the water and add vinegar which eats away the calcium buildup out of copper pipes. pro-anaheim-plumbing.com

Perform a routine search around your home every month on each and every faucet to be sure there isn?t any signs of leaks or drips. Over time, leaks can add a lot of cash on your water bill and definately will worsen if you do not keep up with the problem.

With the proper knowledge, you?ll be able to accomplish plumbing tasks, in the event you take the time to learn and perform each of the steps correctly. Now that you have the information which you will want, in order to accomplish your plumbing needs, don?t waste any moment trying to fix your plumbing problems.

Source: http://www.laurenhoekstra.com/194-mastering-the-plunger-plus-more-tips-to-tackle-your-plumbing-emergencies

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Whatever Happened to the Cast of ?She?s All That??

When She's All That came out in 1999, it was one of the biggest romantic comedies to hit the big screen. Rachael Leigh Cook and Freddie Prinze Jr. seemed like the ones to watch, and we didn't see how another romcom could ever top this teen flick.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/where-are-they-now-the-cast-of-shes-all-that/1-a-536903?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Awhere-are-they-now-the-cast-of-shes-all-that-536903

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Alan Jackson: Back to Church

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Source: http://boards.gactv.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/7361090334/m/5313937077

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Heart health: 5 ways healthy living impacts your heart

5 ways healthy living impacts your heart  | Dr Louis Ignarro | HerbalifeEat well. Exercise. Get enough omega-3s. Chances are, you?ve heard tips on making heart-healthy choices before. But how do your good decisions affect heart function? Read on to discover how common advice has an extraordinary impact on heart health.

I?m Dr. Louis Ignarro, a research pharmacologist and Nobel Laureate* in medicine for my research into Nitric Oxide, an important molecule Susan Bowerman described in detail in a?recent article?about heart health. I?ve spent the last decade focusing on educating others about the impact of nutrition and lifestyle on the heart, and you know what I?ve found? Many people don?t understand how their good decisions affect heart health and overall bodily wellness. And for good decisions to have staying power, it?s important to understand the impact they?re having.

When you lose weight, you can see the difference. But the results of a healthier heart are more difficult to measure. Let?s take a look at five healthy choices and how they impact your heart.

Heart healthy choice:?Exercise

Impacts:?Blood flow

We all know activities like running, cycling, and swimming are good for you, but why are they heart-healthy choices? Along with improving overall bodily health, exercise helps blood vessels relax and widen, or dilate. Relaxed blood vessels allow blood to flow efficiently and nourish the heart, which it stimulates Nitric Oxide (NO) production in the body. Since Nitric Oxide controls, regulates, and protects the cardiovascular system, the result is clear: more exercise equals more Nitric Oxide, which results in a healthier heart.

Heart healthy choice:?Eating a balanced diet ? especially omega-3s

Impacts:?Cholesterol and overall health

A healthy diet is as good for your heart as it is for your taste buds. Fresh fruits, vegetables, proteins, and whole grains give your body the energy and nutrients it needs to maintain overall health. Foods like fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, and tuna), flaxseeds, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, and soybeans are jam-packed with omega-3 fatty acids,?and consumption of EPA (eicosapantaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) omega-3 fatty acids, ?which may reduce the risk of heart disease.?Not only is fish a great substitute for foods like beef, which is high in saturated fats, but the omega-3s help to support a healthy cardiovascular system by maintaining cholesterol and triglyceride levels already within the normal range.

Louis Ignarro, Heart Health Expert | HerbalifeHeart healthy choice:?Lowering stress

Impacts:?Blood pressure and cholesterol levels

If you think activities like?yoga, meditation, and deep breathing aren?t for you, think again. Doing stress-relieving activities can do more for your body than you might think. A recent study found that chronic stress is linked to coronary heart disease and that stress management is an important part of heart health.

While there are a lot of theories on how lowering stress can help keep the heart healthy, many researchers believe that increased stress levels can worsen other states in the body. For example, if you have high blood pressure or cholesterol, stress can cause these levels to rise even further. Stress may also impact the way blood clots, which may increase the risk of a heart attack. People with lower stress levels may be more likely to exercise and eat well, both of which are important for a healthy heart. So, lowering stress not only helps you feel better, italso keeps your body balanced and supports healthy blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

Heart healthy choice:?Losing weight

Impacts:?Blood circulation andoverall heart health

Did you know that even moderate weight loss can have a huge impact on the health of your heart? A healthy weight lowers the risk of heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, and diabetes?not to mention positively impacts overall physical health. But how does it do this?

While there are lots of benefits of weight loss, it especially impacts blood circulation. One study found that when body weight?especially belly fat?is within healthy range, arteries are better able to expand, which results in better blood flow. And since optimal blood flow is one of the keys to a healthy cardiovascular system, weight loss (or maintenance, if you?re at a healthy weight), can be one of the most important steps toward supporting a healthy heart.

Heart healthy choice:?Supporting the endothelium

Impacts:?Nitric Oxide production, blood flow, and blood pressure

Many people are taking steps to support the endothelium but don?t even realize it. In fact, you may have never even heard of this important organ before. Our bodies contain 6 trillion endothelial cells, which line 60,000 miles of blood vessels in a single layer; together, those 6 trillion cells make up an organ known as the endothelium.

As I found in my research, Nitric Oxide is one of the most important molecules in the cardiovascular system. Increased Nitric Oxide results in increased blood flow to the organs, which supports healthy blood pressure and a healthy cardiovascular system. But for all this to happen, the ?production house? of Nitric Oxide ? the endothelium ? needs to be supported.

Doing the things we?ve already discussed ? exercising, eating a healthy diet, lowering stress, and losing weight ? all contribute to endothelial health. Supplementing with targeted nutrients like omega-3 fatty acids, CoQ10, krill, garlic, andgreen tea also help keep your endothelium healthy by providing the nutrients it needs to function at its best. And a healthy endothelium results in healthyNitric Oxide levels, which impacts blood flow and blood pressure ? not to mention the functioning of the entire body.

Keep Up the Heart-Smart Lifestyle

You can?t always see the results of your hard work, but now you know the impact your heart-smart decisions are having on your cardiovascular system. So, keep making healthy choices, and remember that each good decision you make?does?take you one step closer to a healthier heart.

Written by Louis Ignarro, Ph.D. ?Dr. Ignarro is a member of both the Editorial and Nutrition Advisory Boards of the Herbalife Nutrition Institute and receives compensation for his endorsement of Herbalife? products. ?*The Nobel Foundation has no affiliation with Herbalife and does not review, approve or endorse Herbalife?products. ?Herbalife markets an omega-3 supplement:?Herbalifeline.

Source: http://www.discovergoodnutrition.com/2013/05/heart-health-choices/

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