Monday, 22 April 2013

Getting 3-D Printing and Next-Generation Manufacturing to the Factory Floor [Video]

"Additive manufacturing" offers manufacturers a powerful set of tools for making any number of products cost-effectively and with little waste, a groundbreaking development that promises to help revitalize the U.S. manufacturing sector. But what will it take to get the process out of the lab and onto the factory floor? A generous cash infusion, perhaps unsurprisingly, will help?and it is now in the offing.

Pres. Barack Obama's State of the Union Address and, more recently, his proposed budget for fiscal 2014 lift U.S. manufacturing?s needs to near the top of the agenda. And unlike the low-tech production and assembly jobs that U.S. companies have been outsourcing for decades, the new age of manufacturing will rely heavily on additive-manufacturing technologies and materials, which are slated to receive millions of dollars in funding to move them out of the lab and onto the factory floor.

3-D printing is the most widely recognized version of additive manufacturing. Inventors and engineers have for years used machines costing anywhere from a few thousand dollars to hundreds of thousands to rapidly prototype new products. All of the additive-manufacturing processes follow the same basic layer-by-layer deposition principle in slightly different ways using powdered or liquid polymers, metals or other materials. Each object begins as computer-aided design (CAD) or some other type of digital file, enabling designers to tweak their work prior to the actual build with little impact on cost.

At the low end of the scale, a MakerBot 3-D printer can build basic items like a hair comb or statue using polymer-based filaments. Industrial-scale, production-quality airplane or automobile parts, however, require additive machines and materials that don't currently exist. That?s where the funding comes in.

The U.S. Department of Commerce?s fiscal 2014 budget request in particular includes $1.5 billion in that year alone to spur the development of new approaches to manufacturing (pdf) on top of the $1 billon investment the Obama administration committed to in fiscal 2013 to launch the National Network of Manufacturing Innovation, a group of up to 15 manufacturing research facilities across the country.

The first is the National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute (NAMII) in Youngstown, Ohio, which will focus on development of additive-manufacturing technology and processes with help from a planned $45 million in federal funding. The Defense and Energy departments have already provided $30 million of that amount, with NASA, Commerce's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and the National Science Foundation expected to kick in the remaining $15 million over the next four years. Manufacturing firms, universities, community colleges and nonprofit organizations have promised the institute an additional $40 million in funding.

The institute already has seven projects in the works. These efforts range from basic research about how polymers and other materials will react during the heating and deposition process to more industrial applications, such as developing a lower-cost, high-temperature process for working with thermoplastics used to make air and space vehicle components.

The animation below shows how one type of additive-manufacturing process?electron-beam melting (EBM)?works. EBM begins with powdered metal alloy placed in the machine?s powder hopper. The machine?s rake distributes a fine layer of powder across the build platform. An electron beam enters the vacuum chamber and melts the particles in a pattern as dictated by a CAD file. The build platform is then lowered slightly and the process repeats until the object?in this case, a turbine?has been fully printed.

There are several areas where the process could be improved, provided the government?s money is well spent: In addition to speeding up the procedure, manufacturers need to make sure these printed products are consistent from one assembly to the next. They must also develop ways to make more complex, detailed and multi-material objects. Still, with additive manufacturing on the national radar?and, more importantly, in the budget?it?s only a matter of time before most parts are printed rather than carved out of raw materials. ? ? ?? Animation courtesy of George Retseck (Source: Arcam.com)
? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/getting-3-d-printing-next-generation-manufacturing-factory-110000545.html

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/etXVMR-4Irk/story01.htm

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Autism, Air Pollution, And My Son | Care2 Healthy Living

I am a mom concerned about autism, and I am a clean air activist. And I think the two things are connected.

On March 1st of this year, a new research?study connecting autism and air pollution was published in?Environmental Health Perspectives, a peer-reviewed journal published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The largest of its kind, this study shows a correlation between autism and prenatal exposure to air pollution. With autism in the United States rising at dramatic rates over the past two decades, this study shows?that air pollution may be an important contributing factor to the development of autism.

In the summer of 2010, my son Park turned 2 and I noticed he was pulling at his ears. I suspected an ear infection, so I made an appointment to visit his pediatrician. It was?his first visit in over a year and I looked forward to it despite the circumstances. We didn?t regularly?visit the clinic because (fortunately) Park rarely ever got sick,?a fact I?d been quite proud of. The pediatrician sat on the floor and attempted communicating with my son. She peered up at me with hesitancy and suggested I not delay in making an appointment with a specialist because she?suspected autism. At that moment in time, I felt my heart drop to the floor. This was when?I began what can only be described as a mourning process for my son. Along with being the start of a challenging period in our lives, I am grateful. It is the reason I share this story, and the ultimate reason behind my?quest for clean?air.

Utah has the?highest rates of autism in the United States. Years before entering motherhood, I worked with children who suffered from developmental delays and disorders, many of whom had Autism Spectrum Disorder. I learned that?researchers and doctors knew?little about what caused it. They did know that genetics can?t explain all cases and, according to the?Center for Disease Control, vaccine exposure is not a factor. However, I noticed that we cared for multiple children on the spectrum from the same families. If it wasn?t all genetic, I wondered whether something shared in the children?s environment was triggering the disorder.

While I was working with these beautiful children, I also learned of Utah?s crippling periods of?poor air quality. If memory serves me correct, I made a vow to try to avoid starting a family in Utah for fear of the effects our air would have on my babies. However, my love for?this state?and my fortune in finding my husband kept me here. Utah is where we began our family.

Following the initial shock we experienced from hearing the suggestion that our son has autism, we began a series of therapies. We immediately enrolled him in our state?s Early Intervention Program. I took a closer look at his diet and tested him for food allergies and intolerances, made changes in his food intake, worked diligently with his attention at home, and administered rounds of gentle heavy metal detoxes. While I cannot pinpoint exactly what change we made with Park that began to bring him back to us, I can tell you that it did happen?and that it was in a matter of a few short weeks.

I remember the day he brought books over to me to read to him, something he hadn?t had the attention for in over a year?s time. I remember when he began?to look?at us once again when we spoke, something he refused to also do since he was only a year old. I remember how he became less fascinated with wheels turning and more fascinated with socializing with other kids. And I remember when he quit inflicting pain upon himself such as banging his little toddler head on our hardwood floors and hitting his face. We were incredibly fortunate.

Of course, we couldn?t change the air he was breathing. Did Utah?s?air pollution contribute to Park?s symptoms? How many other children are being affected by their exposure to this pollution?

I tear up reliving the experience we had with our son, Park. For the autistic?children and their families whose healing wasn?t as quick as ours or hasn?t come, this is especially for you. My heart will forever be reaching?in your direction.

I am currently pregnant, and following an especially toxic winter in the Salt Lake Valley, I feel highly vulnerable now more than ever for the health and well being of my babies. Air pollution is toxic and our children deserve every opportunity to live healthy, normal lives.

PRESIDENT OBAMA GIVE US A BIG PLAN FOR CLIMATE CHANGE

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Source: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/autism-air-pollution-and-my-son.html

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Sunday, 21 April 2013

Bleak Canada first-quarter earnings outlook may mask market upside

By John Tilak

TORONTO (Reuters) - Corporate Canada looks set to post lackluster first-quarter results, but lowered expectations and a sharp selloff earlier this week may set the stage for near-term share price gains.

Earnings beats and any optimistic outlooks are now more likely to provide a boost when some of the biggest companies start reporting next week.

"It's the magic of low expectations," said CIBC World Markets senior economist Peter Buchanan. "Commodity markets aren't that great, and developments in the domestic economy haven't been wonderful, but the bar (for earnings) is not set very high."

Telecommunications company Rogers Communications Inc and Canadian National Railway , the country's largest rail carrier, will be among the first to kick off the season, reporting their first-quarter reports on Monday.

Analysts expect earnings from companies in the Toronto Stock Exchange's benchmark S&P/TSX composite index <.gsptse> to show only a 0.2 percent rise from a year earlier, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine SmartEstimates.

"The forecasts seem to be more dire than the reality," said Serge Pepin, vice president of investment strategy at BMO Asset Management Canada. "We're going into the earnings season with this thought that things won't be as good."

TSX LAGS U.S. RALLY

Results that top the very modest expectations could prove to be a much-needed catalyst for languishing Canadian stocks, market strategists said. The TSX composite is down more than 3 percent so far this year, compared with a gain of more than 8 percent in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx>.

Toronto stocks have lagged as earnings expectations have fallen about 5 percent for TSX components in the last three months, compared with a 3 percent decline for S&P 500 companies, data from StarMine showed.

The sector expected to show the biggest earnings decline is energy, which accounts for about 25 percent of the value of the Canadian index. Prices for the country's heavy crude oil slumped in the first three months of this year, and analysts now expect energy companies to report a profit drop of more than 7 percent.

However, Elvis Picardo, strategist and vice president of research at Global Securities in Vancouver, said most investors would pay more attention to companies' outlooks than to first-quarter results.

"That's usually the case, but more so this time," he said.

The most vulnerable segment in this regard may be gold producers, which have had a disastrous run this year. While first-quarter numbers will not reflect a recent dramatic selloff in gold, including a record one-day drop, it could start to show up in projections.

Still, the materials sector, home to gold companies, is trading at a huge discount to historical levels, said Craig Fehr, Canadian market strategist at Edward Jones in St. Louis.

"Valuations are attractive, and they are already pricing in expectations for some earnings disappointment," he said.

Indeed, the TSX composite index as a whole is trading about 13 times one-year forward earnings, according to Thomson Reuters data. That is also below historical levels.

BRIGHT SPOTS

The strongest growth in the quarter is likely to come from the healthcare sector, where earnings are expected to climb 15.5 percent, according to StarMine.

Another bright spot is the industrials space, which includes Canadian Pacific Railway and CN Rail. Analysts expect the sector to record profit growth of about 7 percent.

But the picture is more mixed for financial stocks, which make up almost a third of the index. Earnings are seen rising just 3.5 percent as the Canadian economy slows and housing market cools.

"Financials are not going to provide the same lift that they did in the fourth quarter, but that's more due to the weakness in the nonbanking sectors than in the banks themselves," said CIBC's Buchanan, who sees weakness in real estate investment trusts and insurers.

Longer-term, analysts said the Canadian market's prospects hinged on the global economy, which effectively sets the price for much of the country's resource exports.

But with an unsteady U.S. recovery, as well as mixed signals out of recession-hit Europe and higher-growth China, relief is far from certain.

"The beacon of hope," said Global's Picardo, "is that the global economy does a little better than expected and the TSX will do well."

(Editing by Jeffrey Hodgson and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bleak-canada-first-quarter-earnings-outlook-may-mask-145836676--finance.html

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Saturday, 20 April 2013

Rubio tries to muster conservative support for immigration bill

By Rachelle Younglai

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican Senator Marco Rubio on Thursday sought his fellow conservatives' support for a sweeping immigration bill by arguing that doing nothing is tantamount to "amnesty" for the 11 million people who are living in the United States illegally.

Trying to turn the tables on Republican opponents of the overhaul who say it would grant amnesty to law-breakers, Rubio said deportation of all the 11 million, which some conservatives favor, would never happen.

"We all wish we didn't have this problem, but we do and we have to fix it. Because leaving things the way they are, that's the real amnesty," Rubio said at a news conference.

Rubio spoke the day before the Senate Judiciary Committee starts to examine the immigration bill crafted by Rubio and seven other Republican and Democratic senators.

Rubio, a popular conservative already considered a contender for the 2016 presidential nomination, had been pushing for immigration reform even before the eight senators unveiled their legislation this week.

The Florida senator has been stressing the economic benefits of immigration reform and has been careful not to say the bill creates a special path to citizenship - a non-starter for many conservatives.

The bill requires tougher security at the southern border with Mexico before illegal immigrants are given a chance to apply for citizenship. It also establishes a new program to bring in unskilled foreign laborers and increases the number of work visas for high- and low-skilled workers.

Rubio also took his appeal for the bill to influential conservative Rush Limbaugh's radio talk show on Thursday.

Some Republican lawmakers "have stated pretty strong opposition" to the path to citizenship, Arizona Republican Jeff Flake, who is part of the bipartisan Senate group, told reporters after the news conference.

Republican Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama, who has been a vocal opponent of the plan, warned on Thursday that the bill would hurt U.S. workers and increase federal deficits as millions of undocumented residents eventually gain citizenship and become eligible for government benefits.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is to start working intensively on the bill in May with a goal of making changes before June.

The measure has a chance of passing the Senate, where Democrats control 55 of the 100 seats. However, its prospects are far less rosy in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives, where members of Rubio's party have started to coalesce around the idea of granting the illegal immigrants legal status but not citizenship.

(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan and Sam Youngman; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rubio-tries-muster-conservative-support-immigration-bill-233902575.html

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Friday, 19 April 2013

David Furhman: The decision to remove Chick-fil-A from Emory University was based solely on student feedback.

Emory University?s newspaper, The Emory Wheel, reported last month that the university will boot Chick-fil-A off campus this summer.

The move comes after Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy last year angered supporters of same-sex marriage. David Furhman, the senior director of Emory?s Food Service Administration, told the Wheel that the decision to remove Chick-fil-A was not spurred by the Cathy controversy. It was, he said, based solely on student feedback from surveys and focus groups.

?

"What we learned was that there was no great affinity or love for Chick-fil-A," Furhman said in a March 12 article in the Wheel. "It was more of an affinity or love of the convenience, and what students also told us was that they didn?t really love Chick-fil-A."

PolitiFact Georgia wondered: Was Emory's decision triggered solely by focus-group feedback?

And we wanted to know what that feedback included.

The conflict began when Cathy discussed same-sex marriage in a July 2012 interview.

"I think we are inviting God's judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say, 'We know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage,'" Cathy said.

Critics called for boycotts. Supporters rallied to Cathy?s defense, organizing a "Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day" that packed eateries.

Chick-fil-A, which began in metro Atlanta and is headquartered here, did not respond to an interview request.

Emory groups, including gay rights organizations and the Student Government Association, formally requested the removal of Chick-fil-A after the controversy began. Senior Director and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair released a statement saying the university wouldn?t remove the eatery based on Cathy?s comments.

But in February, the university and a student committee called FACE (Food Administration Committee Emory) said they were going to review all campus food venues, including Chick-fil-A.

Furhman told the Wheel that the examination of the campus food venues where Chick-fil-A is located predated the controversy. But both student co-chairs of FACE contradicted that. They said the review plan began when Furhman joined Emory in January.

PolitiFact contacted Furhman, who referred all inquiries to Campus Communications. He declined to answer our questions.

Nair said in the Wheel: "Through (dialogue over Chick-fil-A), we also learned that a re-visioning of dining at Emory could foster a separate, positive community change, while addressing students? concerns around their dining experiences."

One student co-chair of the food committee, Karoline Porcello, told the Wheel the restaurant?s values were a contributing, but not deciding factor in its removal. In an email, Porcello clarified that those values referred to "human development values" such as physical well-being, not political values.

After PolitiFact Georgia reached out to Campus Communications, Porcello said: "We've received strict instructions by Emory to no longer comment on the issue."

Michael Sacks, another co-chair, said the removal was not political.

"It?s kind of unfortunate that people very easily jump to the conclusion that Chick-fil-A?s political views were the reason we got rid of them, but that was not our intention at all," Sacks told WSB Radio.

The process reviewed each venue according to six criteria, including consistency with the campus life department?s core values and survey data.

The committee held open monthly meetings and focus groups with more than 30 volunteer attendees who answered FACE?s questions. In all three of the monthly meeting documents on the FACE website, Chick-fil-A was not mentioned.

Sacks sent over three of the four focus groups? minutes. He said that he was told that the last meeting "did not present much opportunity for note-taking."

The three focus group minutes didn?t conclusively show a distaste for Chick-fil-A. Some attendees said they eat at Chick-fil-A often while others showed distaste for the venue. One document even said "Keep Chick-fil-A" in the summary box.

Porcello said some focus group members wanted to remove Chick-fil-A for health reasons and that some said they only liked the convenience of the venue. The documents provided to PolitiFact Georgia didn?t confirm those claims. Porcello didn?t respond to requests to do so.

In a March meeting, the food committee put three floor plans up for a vote. None of the plans included Chick-fil-A or Pizza Hut. Sacks said that decision was based on the focus groups.

Ultimately, the redesign will replace Chick-fil-A with a pizza and pasta venue, expand Mexican food and salad areas and create a grab-and-go station and a coffee and bakery area. The committee chairs said the university will remove Pizza Hut as well.

Dena Smith, Emory?s senior communication officer, sent PolitiFact a link to a March 12 Campus Life statement indicating that Emory would announce a final Chick-fil-A decision soon. She said Emory would consider FACE?s input, which does not include "a chicken restaurant." This statement was released the same day that the Wheel and WSB Radio published their stories about the venue?s closure.

PolitiFact contacted 15 Emory political science professors for a comment. None wanted to weigh in on the controversy.

Kennesaw State University political science professor Kerwin Swint says that it is difficult to believe that the decision wasn?t political. He said that Emory?s role as ?"ground zero" of the Chick-fil-A debate may have something to do with its defense.

"I?m not saying that it isn?t true," Swint said, "But I work on a college campus ... and I can tell you that Chick-fil-A is probably the most popular dining option (on my campus)."

Our conclusion:

An Emory administrator said that a proposal to remove Chick-fil-A from a campus dining hall was not politically motivated but was instead based on focus groups. Campus officials have offered conflicting statements about Chick-fil-A?s future.

PolitiFact rules require the person making the statement to provide the proof to back it up. Furhman and Emory failed to do so.

There apparently was an objective process that reviewed all food vendors, but only incomplete documentation was provided. That documentation didn?t confirm any of the sources? claims. And the final redesign plan doesn?t indicate the committee was concentrating on health concerns. It ?wants to remove Chick-fil-A, but plans call for a proposed pizza and pasta joint and expanded Mexican food areas. Not exactly healthy alternatives.

We rated the claim Half True.


(Karishma Mehrotra is a journalism major at Emory University who is completing an internship with PolitiFact Georgia. She is also an editor at The Emory Wheel but took no part in the Chick-fil-A news coverage.)

Source: http://www.politifact.com/georgia/statements/2013/apr/19/david-furhman/emory-says-chick-fil-decision-not-political/

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Netflix's latest original series 'Hemlock Grove' is available for streaming

Netflix's latest original series 'Hemlock Grove' now available for streaming

Netflix's original content assault continues today with the debut of Hemlock Grove, a "supernatural" series directed by Eli Roth. This series takes place in a small Pennsylvania town which has suddenly come down with a bad case of werewolf attacks. Previous releases Lilyhammer and House of Cards chased viewers interested in quirky foreign humor and political drama, respectively, so this series represents a bit of a shift. Later this year, the streaming service will debut Orange is the New Black from Weeds creator Jenji Kohan and the second season of Lilyhammer. Cards is also due for a second season, and sci-fi fans have Sense8 to look forward to in 2014.

We'll see if its data-based approach to picking series has found another quality option in Hemlock Grove, however early reviews suggest that may not be the case for all viewers. Hitfix's Alan Sepinwall referred to it as a "streakbuster" between Cards and the upcoming season of Arrested Development, and a New York Times evaluation of the first few eps notes "it barely gets around to telling its story." Of course, it may just be targeted to viewers with different priorities, who will appreciate its style more than they did, and the company's algorithms are just waiting to dig those people out of the crowd. Whatever the case, with Netflix's characteristic all-episodes-at-once release schedule you can power through all 13 episodes and find out for yourself right now.

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Source: Netflix

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/19/netflix-hemlock-grove/

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Dirty Debt: The Shady Deal between Russia and Angola

Corruption Watch, a London-based anti-corruption NGO, recently released a groundbreaking report exposing massive corruption in Angola. Ken Hurwitz, the?senior legal officer on anticorruption with the Open Society Justice Initiative, will moderate a panel to discuss the report and potential remedies. Andrew Feinstein, a former South African MP who is the author of the report and the director of Corruption Watch UK;?Elias Isaac, the country director for the Open Society Initiative for South Africa (OSISA); and Adriano Parreira, the former permanent representative of Angola to the United Nations in Geneva will take part in the panel discussion.

The report, Deception in High Places: The Corrupt Angola-Russia Debt Deal,?details one of the most egregious cases of financial crime and corruption in recent memory. Through a series of financial transactions facilitated by dubious middlemen, hundreds of millions of dollars were diverted from Russian and Angolan treasuries into the pockets of politicians, businessmen and arms dealers. This money was transferred through shell corporations via a number of banks based in secrecy jurisdictions Switzerland, Luxembourg, Cyprus, and The Netherlands.

The report highlights the role of Swiss bankers and the corporation, Glencore International, as key enablers of the fraudulent transactions. This week, a group of Angolan anti-corruption campaigners filed a criminal complaint with the Swiss Federal Prosecutor?s office based on the new information contained in the report and called for a new investigation.

For more information on the report, please visit Corruption Watch?s dedicated website.

Date: April 25, 2013

Time: 10:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OpenSocietyInstituteAndSorosFoundationNetwork/~3/GISNNBz8pTQ/dirty-debt-shady-deal-between-russia-and-angola

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Kim Kardashian's Acting Skills 'Really Surprised' Cast Of 'Temptation'

'She was really funny and I think she did a fantastic job,' co-star Robbie Jones tells MTV News.
By Jocelyn Vena


Kim Kardashian in the "Temptation"
Photo: Lionsgate

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1705897/kim-kardashian-robbie-jones-temptation.jhtml

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Thursday, 18 April 2013

How do we reinforce trust, confidence in our kids after the Boston Marathon?

The Boston Marathon might have your child shook up. Here are some ideas to engage your kids after the Boston Marathon and restore their trust and self-confidence.?

By Bonnie Harris,?Guest Blogger / April 17, 2013

After the Boston Marathon explosions, how do we tell our kids that the world is not an evil place? Here, Boston Marathon runner Vu Trang kisses her 2-year-old daughter Cara at a makeshift memorial on Boylston Street near the finish line of Monday's Boston Marathon, in Boston, April 17.

Charles Krupa/Associated Press

Enlarge

Another tragedy has hit the airwaves and the school hallways. Again the question is raised, ?What do I tell my kids?? I addressed this question the best I could ? who can ever answer this well? ? in my blog,??Look for the Helpers??after Sandy Hook.

Skip to next paragraph Bonnie Harris

Guest Blogger

Bonnie Harris, a parenting specialist for 25 years, is the director of Connective Parenting and is known for her pioneering mindset shift out of the reward-and-punishment model to a connected relationship. She conducts workshops and speaks on parenting topics and is the author of "When Your Kids Push Your Buttons" and "Confident Parents, Remarkable Kids: 8 Principles for Raising Kids You'll Love to Live with. She is the mother of two grown children and lives with her husband in New Hampshire. Click here to learn more about her.

Recent posts

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This time I want to look at a different angle ? one that may hit home a bit more.

When a crisis happens, we naturally express and project our feelings, make assumptions about our children?s experience, and react or respond accordingly. The first question to consider is, ?How do?you?feel in the wake of the Boston marathon bombings??

Most parents want their children to grow up able to trust most people and trust the world they are growing into ? with discernment and good judgment. It seems to be getting harder and harder to trust our world, so how do we teach our children to trust ? or should we?

We want our children to reach their potential, to get the most out of their lives, to experience all they can for their fulfillment and satisfaction. We want them to have open doors in front of them to walk through. Most of all, we want them to feel self-confident ? the #1 key to successful living. Can they get there if we hold them back because we are afraid?

Questions to ask yourself:

Am I keeping my children closer and closer with every tragedy?

How will my children view their world if their model doesn?t trust it?

What purpose does my fear serve? How safe can I make them when I hold them back?

Am I changing my rules about what is okay for my children to do and experience based on my fear?

How to insure that your children don?t live out your fears:

  • Make sure you own your fear and express your concerns to your child as just that?yours.
  • Share your fears and worries with a partner or close friend.
  • Stick to a few facts when telling your child about tragedy?if?your child will inevitably learn about it. Keep media to a bare minimum.
  • Watch your child?s behavior to signal how he is dealing with it rather than assuming he will feel afraid.
  • If behavior shows increased anxiety, make sure to allow for feelings to be expressed. If behavior is different, but emotions are held, insure as many times of relaxed, downtime as possible. If you are highly anxious, your child will know it and may keep his own anxiety from you. Be sure someone close to him can handle his feelings.

Do you want your children to face the world each day afraid of what could happen or prepared to deal with whatever problem might arise? If you don?t allow independence because of your fear, your children won?t learn how to handle difficult situations.

To raise a problem-solver:

  • Engage your child in thinking through how she might handle a problem rather than imposing how you would handle it.
  • Encourage you child to speak up for herself, say ?no? when she doesn?t want what is being offered or pressured, be aggressive when called for. That means allowing young children to say ?no? to you when they don?t like something you have said or done.
  • Teach your children how to walk down the street with confidence. Encourage self-defense programs and body language awareness.
  • Allow your children to experience situations in which to solve problems.
  • When children express distress over happenings in their lives, ask what they might like to do to take action. Ask, ?What can you do to change that?? Even if nothing can be done, allow expression of anger or outrage.
  • Focus on the good and look for the heroic stories to tell your children. For instance, Bostonians opened their homes for meals, couches and beds for those stranded at the airport. Many ran to the scene to help those hurt.
  • Ask, ?What do you think you would have done if you had been there??

We must keep the perspective that tragedies have been happening for as long as the world has been. Plagues and wars, disease and death, violence and evil have always been in the world. And even though the media may tell a different story, tragedies remain infrequent. Let?s not allow those who are determined to hurt and kill to ruin life for all of us.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best family and parenting bloggers out there. Our contributing and guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor, and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. Bonnie Harris blogs at?Connective Parenting.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/OPrQfg2FzCw/How-do-we-reinforce-trust-confidence-in-our-kids-after-the-Boston-Marathon

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News roundup: Hunting for the Boston bomber | Political Cornflakes ...

Grieving for Boston. Bishop seeks public lands compromise. Utah company has its day before the Supreme Court.

It's Tuesday and Boston is still reeling from the dual bombs that killed three and maimed more than 140 people near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. The FBI has made no arrests yet and with so many people losing limbs, its possible that the death toll will climb today. [Globe] [Herald]

Boston Marathon bombing: Some 339 Utahns were registered to run in the marathon ? including a few who were near the blast, which they described as "horrifying." [Trib] [DNews] [Herald] [Fox13] [ABC4] [KUTV]

-> The Salt Lake marathon will go on ? with added security measures, says the city's police department. The race is this weekend. [Trib] [Fox13] [ABC4]

-> President Barack Obama was careful not to call it an act of terror in the immediate aftermath of the bombing, but he promised justice for those who committed the atrocity. [Globe]

-> Pat Bagley honors those who ran towards the explosions. [Trib]

-> Here's the front page of today's Boston Globe. [Newseum]

Tweets about the Boston bombing: From @dangillmor: "Glad to see a new kind of knee-jerk reaction to Boston: people telling each other to wait for actual facts before leaping to conclusions."

From @billyhesterman: "One runner from Provo in the Boston Marathon said the explosions sounded like cannons going off"

From @jasoninthehouse: "God bless the men, women and children dealing with the bombings in Boston. Thanks to the first responders."

From @RepPatriceArent: "My heart breaks for those killed & injured in Boston Marathon, along with their families & friends. Finish line is near where I lived."

From @governorherbert: "Thoughts and prayers are with all those victims, loved ones, family members... in Boston today "

From @jonesnews: "DPS says no 'credible threat' in Utah in the wake of Boston Marathon bombing. salt Lake Marathon scheduled for Saturday."

Happy birthday: To the Trib's Jennifer Dobner.

In other news: While still a strong advocate for drilling, Rep. Rob Bishop is trying to work out his own "grand bargain" by bringing environmental groups, energy companies and locals together to craft consensus public lands legislation. [Trib]

-> The Supreme Court heard a case involving Utah's Myriad Genetics and appeared to be skeptical of patenting genes. [Trib] [LATimes]

-> The Legislature will not override Gov. Gary Herbert's veto of a bill that would allow gun owners to conceal a firearm without a permit after Sen. John Valentine, R-Orem, became the 10th lawmaker to pull his support. The Legislature can't achieve a two-thirds majority required to start an override session. [Trib]

-> Rep. Jason Chaffetz's bill that cracks down on federal contractors who are behind on their taxes passed the House unanimously, on tax day no less. [Trib] [WaPost]

-> Salt Lake City DA Sim Gill is tossing an additional 69 drug cases that were being investigated by West Valley City Police. [Trib] [DNews] [Fox13]

-> Spencer Fox Eccles will be awarded for his contributions to athletics in Utah ? especially the 2002 Salt Lake Winter Olympics and the U.'s sports programs ? by Gov. Gary Herbert at an event Tuesday night. [Trib]

Nationally: Standing on already shaky ground, some Senate Democrats who face tough re-election bids say they won't support a bipartisan gun control measure that expands background check requirements for firearm sales. [NYTimes]

-> In a rare interview with the Dallas Morning News, former President George W. Bush opened up about his newly-discovered knack for painting, his record and his detractors, remarking, "Of course, some people are surprised I can even read." [DMN]

-> Republican check writing powerhouse Bob Perry, known for spending generously on backing candidates like Mitt Romney, passed away over the weekend at the age of 80.

[WaPost]

-> Senators will delay unveiling their immigration bill out of respect for those killed and injured in Boston. [YahooNews]

-> A new nonpartisan report says it is "indisputable" that the United States engaged in torture following Sept. 11. [NYTimes]

Where are they?

  • Rep. Rob Bishop chairs a public lands subcommittee hearing on the Antiquities Act and later sits down with new Interior Secretary Sally Jewell.
  • Rep. Chris Stewart meets with representatives from Utah Beer Wholesale Association, Utah Developmental Disabilities Council, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Utah Bankers Association, Weber State University, Utah Cattlemen's Association and the Washington County Water Conservancy District and meets with SLC Mayor Ralph Becker.
  • Rep. Jim Matheson receives the U.S. Chamber's Spirit of Enterprise award, meets with SL Co. Mayor Ben McAdams, SLC Mayor Ralph Becker and UTA General Manager Mike Allegra.
  • Gov. Gary Herbert has a conference call with Alan Matheson from the Western Governors Association, hits a State of Sport awards luncheon, prepares a speech and speaks at BYU's Political Affairs Society dinner.
  • Utah AG John Swallow is in Washington, attending a National Association of Attorneys General Presidential Initiative Summit.
  • SL Co. Mayor Ben McAdams is in Washington, meeting with members of Congress and Department of Transportation officials.
  • SLC Mayor Ralph Becker is in Washington, meeting with members of Congress and federal agencies.
  • WVC Mayor Mike Winder conducts a City Council meeting.
  • President Barack Obama lunches with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed of the United Arab Emirates, honors NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski at the White House and meets with Vice President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Email us at cornflakes@sltrib.com. If you haven't already, sign up for our weekday email and get this sent directly to your inbox. [Trib]

-- Matt Canham and Emily Andrews

Twitter.com/mattcanham and Twitter.com/emilytandrews

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/blogsoutofcontext/56165241-64/boston-trib-utah-marathon.html.csp

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Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Bear baiting may put hunting dogs at risk from wolves

Apr. 17, 2013 ? Bear hunters will tell you that a good way to attract a bear is to put out bait. And in 10 states, including Michigan and Wisconsin, that's perfectly legal. Hunting dogs are another useful technique in the bear-hunter's toolkit, and 17 states say that's just fine.

But who else likes bear bait? Gray wolves, that's who. And wolves that are feeling territorial about a bear bait stash can -- and sometimes do -- kill hunting dogs released at the bait site.

Like most interactions between wildlife and human beings, wolf attacks on hunting dogs illustrate a tangled trade-off: attracting bears for the hunters, attracting danger for their dogs.

Seeking possible ways to reduce potentially lethal encounters between wolves and bear hunting dogs, researchers at Michigan Technological University and the Michigan Department of Natural Resources compared bear hunting practices and regulations in Michigan and Wisconsin.

Joseph K. Bump, a Michigan Tech wildlife ecologist; Dean Beyer Jr. and Brian J. Roell from the Michigan DNR, and students Chelsea Murawski and Linda Kartano report their findings in the April 17, 2013 issue of the Public Library of Science (PLOS) journal PLOS ONE.

The researchers analyzed and compared a variety of factors in Michigan and Wisconsin, from regulations on bear baiting and compensation for hunting dog attacks to statistics such as the ratio of hunters to wolves and percentage of hunters using dogs to hunt bear.

They found that the neighboring states, with similar wolf and bear populations and similar numbers of bear-hunting permits issued per wolf, report dramatically different numbers of wolf attacks on hunting dogs. Wisconsin's relative risk of attack is two to seven times higher than Michigan's.

Bear baiting begins earlier in Wisconsin and lasts longer, the scientists note. "The longer you bait, the more opportunity you provide for wolves to discover and potentially defend bear-bait sites," says Bump. "Most hunters release their dogs at bait sites, and the longer the bait has been around, the more likely hunting dogs are to encounter territorial wolves who have found and are possibly defending the bait. So it appears that baiting is an important factor."

Wisconsin also compensates dog owners $2,500 per hunting dog killed by wolves. In fact, the Wisconsin DNR data show that compensation for wolf attacks on hounds costs the state more than it has spent for wolf attacks on any other category of domesticated animal, including calves, missing calves or cattle.

Michigan does not compensate dog owners for wolf attacks.

"Compensation can have multiple effects," Bump points out. " It is a reporting incentive, but it also creates an incentive for abuse. The net effect of compensation is far from clear, and it is an important factor to study further."

What can be done about wolves that prey on hunting dogs? One quick and obvious response appears to be to reduce the wolf population. In fact, the Wisconsin DNR has announced its intention to reduce the statewide population of wolves by half, from approximately 700 to approximately 350.

Bump and his co-authors recommend more conservation-friendly alternatives such as adjusting baiting regulations to start baiting later and allow it for a shorter time. "If a reduction in depredations is the goal, actions aside from (or in addition to) reducing wolf abundance might achieve that goal," they wrote in the PLOS ONE article.

"If stakeholders are serious about minimizing wolf depredations on bear-hunting dogs, then careful examination of the potentially exacerbating effects of bear baiting would appear to be a good idea," the wildlife ecologist suggests.

This research was supported by a National Science Foundation (NSF) Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF), an Actions for Transatlantic Links and Academic Networks for Training and Integrated Studies (ATLANTIS) fellowship and the Ecosystem Science Center at Michigan Tech.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Michigan Technological University. The original article was written by Jennifer Donovan.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Joseph K. Bump, Chelsea M. Murawski, Linda M. Kartano, Dean E. Beyer, Brian J. Roell. Bear-Baiting May Exacerbate Wolf-Hunting Dog Conflict. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (4): e61708 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0061708

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/ajCLZ4yswVI/130417185533.htm

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6.8 earthquake: Strong, shallow quake shakes Papua New Guinea

A magnitude 6.8 earthquake shook the South Pacific islands of Papua New Guinea about 12 hours after a magnitude 7.8 earthquake killed dozens in Iran and Pakistan.

By Associated Press / April 16, 2013

A magnitude 6.8 earthquake hit the northern boundary of Papua New Guinea at 8:55 a.m. local time April 17th (6:55 p.m. EST on April 16th). The epicenter was only 8.1 miles deep (13.0 km), making the 6.8 earthquake a shallow one in geological terms.

United States Geological Survey

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PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea

A powerful earthquake shook Papua New Guinea's northern coast Wednesday morning, but there was no threat of a widespread tsunami in the Pacific.

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The shallow magnitude-6.8 earthquake struck about 19 kilometers (11 miles) east of the small town of Aitape, where disaster authorities have not been able to contact people yet.

It's possible that residents headed to higher ground as soon as they felt the earthquake and were not immediately reachable, said Chris McKee, the assistant director of the Geophysical Observatory in the capital, Port Moresby.

He said there were no reports or indications of a tsunami.

He said people in the town of Vanimo, about 145 kilometers (89 miles) from the epicenter reported they had felt the quake strongly. There were no initial reports of damage or injuries.

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said, based on historical data, a quake of this strength has the potential to generate localized tsunamis within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the epicenter.

The U.S. Geological Survey said the quake was at a depth of 13 kilometers (8 miles), which is relatively shallow. Shallow quakes can potentially cause more damage at the surface.

Papua New Guinea is prone to seismic upheaval due to its location on the Pacific "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanoes and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/s71R69F3LQQ/6.8-earthquake-Strong-shallow-quake-shakes-Papua-New-Guinea

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Netflix Moves To Samsung ARM-Based Chromebooks, Thanks To Premium Video Extensions In HTML5

netflix html5Premium video extensions in HTML5 are opening the door for Netflix to embrace a more standards-based format for video playback, but it's doing so cautiously. The reason for Netflix's use of Silverlight in the first place is due to its need to provide DRM and ensure that its users aren't copying its content or displaying it in places where they're not authorized to.

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

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Google clears another step in EU antitrust case

(AP) ? Google has taken another step toward settling a European antitrust investigation focusing on whether the Internet giant is abusing its dominant position of online search and advertising markets.

Google Inc. has submitted a list of remedies in legally binding form to address the concerns voiced by the European Commission, which acts as the 27-nation bloc's antitrust authority, the body's spokesman Antoine Colombani said Monday.

He added that they will shortly be put to a market test to see whether they will be sufficient, but declined to elaborate on how long it might still take to reach a settlement in the three-year-old investigation.

The Commission is probing whether Google unfairly favors its own services in its Internet search results. Google's search engine ? the world's most influential gateway to online information and commerce ? enjoys a near-monopoly in Europe.

The major concession offered by Google is widely expected to center on more clearly labeling search results stemming from its own services such as YouTube, Google Maps or its shopping search function.

In addition, Google is supposed to offer remedies on the three other main areas the Commission has criticized. Those centered on how Google displays content from other websites, how it manages the ads appearing next to its search results, and how its actions affect marketers' ability to buy ads on rival networks.

Both, Google and the Commission, have declined to spell out what remedies the Mountain View, California, company is proposing pending the official announcement of the market test.

Without reaching a settlement ? to which both sides are committed ? the Commission would likely formally file a case against Google, setting the stage for a lengthy process that could result in the company being fined up to 10 percent of its annual revenue.

The EU Commission has often taken a harder line with U.S. tech companies than its American counterparts, the Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department. Google settled a similar antitrust complaint on its search business with the FTC in January without making any major concessions on how it runs its search engine.

Separately, major tech companies led by Microsoft last week filed another EU antitrust complaint against Google, alleging the company uses the dominant position of its Android smartphone operating system to illegitimately promote its own array of internet services.

Microsoft Corp., which has been a leading player in the complaints against Google, has had its own protracted run-ins with the EU Commission. The Redmond, Washington, company has paid 2.2 billion euros in various fines since investigations began in 1998.

___

Follow Juergen Baetz on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/jbaetz

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-04-15-Europe-Google/id-60ed41998f024fb9b34f11e73a9fd13c

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Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Stay Connected To These 3 Tech Values | iStockAnalyst.com

(By Jeremy Glaser) The tech world was taken aback this week when a report from the International Data Corporation?showed that PC sales plummeted 14% in the first quarter, the largest drop in two decades. The industry had expected sales to be pressured, but the scale of the decrease was somewhat stunning.?

There are a number of factors pushing sales lower. One is consumers' continued love affair with smartphones and, increasingly, tablets. There is no need to buy a shiny new laptop or desktop if more of your focus is on your mobile device. PC makers also haven't innovated enough to convince users that it is worth upgrading to newer models.?
?Intel's?(INTC) push to get makers to slim down designs (so-called Ultrabooks) has been greeted with a resounding sigh. Microsoft's?(MSFT)?attempt to bring together the features of a desktop and tablet operating system in Windows 8 has hardly been a hit either. The new convertible form factors (laptops that convert into tablets) remain a niche product. Even Apple (AAPL), whose PC unit had been growing faster than its peers' for years, now is also seeing a slowdown.

Although this obviously has a big impact on the PC manufacturers such as?Dell (DELL) and?Hewlett-Packard?(HPQ), as Morningstar's Grady Burkett?wrote earlier this week, the quarterly sales decline created shockwaves that were felt through much of the tech industry. Chip suppliers, software companies, and others throughout the entire sector are going to feel the pinch.

But this doesn't mean investors should avoid tech altogether. As with many things in investing, what matters is valuation. These businesses are not in terminal decline, and they will produce plenty of cash flow in the years to come. At the right price, they can make great investments. In some cases today, the market has priced in a too-pessimistic long-term outlook. Some of the woes we currently see are being caused by a combination of a weak global economic environment and where we are in the product cycle. We give many of these firms wide or narrow economic moat ratings because we think that they will be able to overcome these short-term problems and fend off upstart competitors. Patient investors can be rewarded.

We used Morningstar's?Premium Stock Screener to find these good long-term bets. We searched for wide- or narrow-moat tech firms with current Morningstar Ratings for stocks of 4 or 5 stars. You can run the screen for?. Below are three names that passed.

F5 Networks (FFIV)? ??
4 Star | Moat: Narrow | Fair Value Uncertainty: Medium ? ?
From the Premium Analyst Report: ?
During the last five years, F5 Networks' differentiated approach to network traffic management has allowed it to steadily gain share from much larger rival Cisco Systems?(CSCO)?in the rapidly growing application delivery controller, or ADC, market. We think F5's technological lead and the proven value of its products to customers positions the company for ongoing success for years to come, despite increasing competition over time.

Intel (INTC)? ??
4 Star | Moat: Wide | Fair Value Uncertainty: Medium ?
From the Premium Analyst Report: ? ?
Intel is the dominant force in the roughly $30 billion computer processor market. It has benefited tremendously from the proliferation of personal computers in the past few decades. Intel has long held the lead in microprocessor technology and performance, while Advanced Micro Devices?(AMD) has mostly been an also-ran. While there have been rising fears that Intel may have trouble competing with emerging processor design firm ARM Holdings?(ARMH), we believe this has been blown out of proportion.

ATMI (ATMI)? ??
4 Star | Moat: Narrow | Fair Value Uncertainty: Medium ? ?
From the Premium Analyst Report: ? ?
ATMI is a top supplier of materials and consumables used during chip fabrication and will benefit from continued advances in semiconductor technologies. The firm has been investing in opportunities that should drive growth down the road.

All data as of April 11, 2013.?

Source: http://www.istockanalyst.com/finance/story/6387040/stay-connected-to-these-3-tech-values

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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5 hits public beta, adds Smart Previews and Advanced Healing Brush

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5 hits public beta, adds Smart Previews and Advanced Healing Brush

Adobe just announced its next-gen version of Lightroom, which adds some pretty nifty Photoshop features to the company's lower-priced editing and archival offering. Photoshop Lightroom 5, which is available as a free public beta beginning today, brings features like Smart Previews and an Advanced Healing Brush to the table, delivering access to tools previously only available with full versions of Photoshop. That latter tool, the Advanced Healing Brush, lets you paint in corrections, rather than using the round dropper to make tweaks. Smart Previews enables you to edit images even when you're not connected to your archive -- smaller representations of selected RAW shots will be saved locally, and any changes you make to them will be automatically applied to the original image once the source comes back online. In the meantime, you can publish shots online or even add them to book layouts, thought prints can't be ordered until the app can locate the original file.

And the fun doesn't stop there. Another tool, called Radial Filter, adjusts levels for a highlighted area while adding a gradual, natural-looking shift. Editors who often work with scanned prints and negatives might find the Visualize Spots tool to be quite useful, which helps you easily identify dust spots and remove them, while perfectionists can take advantage of Upright, the app's new perspective shift technology -- it's some crazy voodoo code that more or less works like magic (see screenshot above). Lightroom 5 beta is compatible with Windows 7 SP 1, Windows 8, Mac OS 10.7 or 10.8, and is currently available at the source link below. Keep in mind that the beta expires on June 30th, though, so prepare to hand over some (TBD) cash to keep going after that date.

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Source: Adobe Labs

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/15/adobe-photoshop-lightroom-5-beta/

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Kerry hopes next Palestinian PM can work with US

TOKYO (AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday he hoped the Palestinians pick a new prime minister who can work with the United States and "establish confidence" so that Mideast peace can advance.

Speaking to journalists in Tokyo, Kerry praised Salaam Fayyad, who until resigning Saturday as prime minister was seen as one of the Palestinians' most moderate and respected figures. Kerry called Fayyad a "good friend" who made a big difference for Palestinians.

Fayyad's resignation comes as Kerry is working to revive the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. An important part of his strategy is developing the Palestinian economy and state institutions so the Palestinians can be a viable partner in any peace deal with Israel.

The United States had expected Fayyad to play a significant role in that effort.

But the 61-year-old political independent and Western-trained economist had clashed with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas over the extent of the prime minister's power.

"We're totally committed to moving forward with the economic thing no matter what," Kerry said, citing U.S. business partners including Coca-Cola. "The West Bank is there, Palestinian aspirations are there, the government is there. And in order to be a viable government, there's got to be more than one person that you can do business with."

"So we will continue to work at this and hope that President Abbas finds the right person to work with him in a transition, and work with us, to establish confidence," he added. "Everybody is going to want somebody who provides confidence."

Kerry said he preferred that Fayyad stay on the job, but that he understood Fayyad's decision.

"He's been sick, he's tired, he's been at this seven years. He has kids in school. He's anxious to carve his own path here and I respect that," Kerry said.

"But he's going to be there for a while. I had a long conversation with him. He's resigned and he accepted his resignation. But there's going to be a caretaker process for some period of time and he's not going to go away from Palestinian politics completely ? if at all."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-hopes-next-palestinian-pm-us-122925998--politics.html

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Monday, 15 April 2013

The Definitive Traveler&#39;s Guide To Shanghai - Business Insider

With innovative restaurants, sophisticated hotels, and a booming art scene, Shanghai is undergoing one of the most rapid expansions in the East.

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All safe as Lion Air plane misses Bali runway, lands in sea

By Andjarsari Paramaditha and Chris Nusatya

JAKARTA (Reuters) - All 108 passengers and crew miraculously survived when a Lion Air Boeing 737 missed the runway on the balmy Indonesian resort island of Bali on Saturday and landed in the sea.

Forty people were treated for injuries including broken legs, head wounds and shock, though only four were admitted to hospital, hospital officials said.

The brand new aircraft had flown from Bandung, in West Java, and was about to land at Bali airport. "But it probably failed to reach the runway and fell into the sea," said Lion Air spokesman Edward Sirait.

He said there were 101 passengers and seven crew on board but would not comment on the cause of the crash. An investigation is under way.

Bali's police chief told local television that there were two foreign passengers.

"There was no sign at all it would fall but then suddenly it dropped into the water," passenger Tantri Widiastuti, 60, told Metro TV. "I saw holes in the floor of the plane ... we were evacuated quickly."

She said she had been treated for minor cuts.

Budget carrier Lion Air is Indonesia's largest airline and is rapidly expanding.

The plane was delivered last month. The company has signed two record contracts with two world's top plane makers, Boeing and Airbus. Last month, it signed a deal with Airbus for 234 passenger jets worth a $24 billion. Two years ago, it signed a deal with Boeing for 230 planes.

Indonesia has been struggling to improve its civil air safety after a string of deadly accidents. In 2007, Lion Air was among a number of Indonesian airlines banned by the EU for lax safety standards. The ban was progressively lifted, starting in 2009.

The runway at Bali international airport starts next to the sea. The island is Indonesia's main tourist destination, especially popular with Australians for its surfing.

TV footage showed the jet floating in shallow waters with a fractured fuselage and passengers in the water with life jackets.

According to the Aviation Safety Network, Lion Air planes have been involved in six accidents since 2002, four of them involving Boeing 737s. Only one of them, according to the site, resulted in fatalities.

(Additional reporting by Trisha Sertori in Bali; Writing by Jonathan Thatcher; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/passengers-safe-lion-air-plane-overshoots-runway-bali-090959365--finance.html

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Sunday, 14 April 2013

Frustration as retrial of Egypt's Mubarak aborted

By Yasmine Saleh and Maggie Fick

CAIRO (Reuters) - The retrial of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was aborted on Saturday when the presiding judge withdrew from the case and referred it to another court, causing an indefinite delay that sparked anger in the courtroom.

Lawyers said that while the transfer would give prosecutors more time to draw on new evidence in an unpublished fact-finding commission's report into the repression, it could delay the case by months, increasing the risk that Mubarak, 84, may never be finally convicted and sentenced.

"Egypt cannot close the door on the former regime until there is justice for the martyrs of our revolution," said Mohamed Rashwan, a prosecution attorney and member of the Egyptian Lawyers' Union, which had petitioned to have the judge removed from the case. Two years had passed since Mubarak's fall and justice was taking too long, Rashwan said.

"The people demand the execution of Mubarak!" frustrated relatives of demonstrators killed in the 2011 uprising that overthrew him chanted in court after presiding Judge Mustafa Hassan Abdullah announced the decision at the opening session.

Outside the heavily guarded compound, pro-Mubarak demonstrators outnumbered opponents. The two small groups were kept well apart by a police cordon and there were no incidents.

Mubarak, who ruled Egypt for almost 30 years before being toppled by 18 days of Arab Spring pro-democracy unrest, waved and smiled to supporters from the defendants' cage in the courtroom before the brief hearing began.

He was flown by helicopter from a military hospital where he has been detained to the police academy used as a courthouse, and wheeled from an ambulance into the building lying on a hospital trolley wearing a white tracksuit.

Mubarak, former interior minister Habib al-Adli and four top aides face a retrial for complicity in the murder of more than 800 protesters after the highest appeals court accepted appeals by both the defense and the prosecution in January. Two other senior interior ministry officials face lesser charges.

The presiding judge was appointed under Mubarak and so were most of the current judiciary, a factor that has complicated transitional justice in Egypt. The judge said he had decided to refer the case to the Cairo appeals court as he felt "unease" in reviewing the case. He did not explain his decision further.

He had previously acquitted top former Mubarak era officials of orchestrating violence when thugs riding camels attacked pro-democracy activists in Cairo's central Tahrir Square.

"We ask for the harshest possible sentence on Mubarak due to the cruel crimes he committed against the protesters, but we are happy with the judge's decision to withdraw as we had worries about him given his ruling (on) the camel attack case," said Mohamed Abdel Wahab, a lawyer for the victims. His comment reflected a widespread mixture of relief and frustration.

COMPETING DEMONSTRATIONS

It was the first time Mubarak, who wore gold-rimmed aviator sunglasses in court, had been seen in public since he and Adli were convicted last June on grounds of failing to stop the killing, rather than actually ordering it.

Mubarak's two sons, Alaa and Gamal, were also in court to be retried on separate charges of financial corruption.

Propped up on a gurney in a cage with the other defendants, he looked fitter and more relaxed than on previous appearances in the dock, holding animated conversations with his son Gamal, and occasionally smiling and waving to people in the courtroom.

Judge Mahmoud el-Hafnawy of the prosecutor general's office ordered an urgent medical report on the former president to determine whether he was now fit enough to be sent to prison.

Prosecutors accuse Mubarak of giving orders to Adli to open fire with live ammunition against protesters to suppress demonstrations across the Arab world's most populous country.

Mubarak and his interior minister were sentenced to life imprisonment at their first trial but the appeals court upheld complaints stemming from the weakness of the evidence offered by the prosecution.

Outside the court, pro-Mubarak demonstrators chanted "thirty years without destruction!" in reference to accusations that the Muslim Brotherhood movement which won free elections after his ouster are destroying the country.

"Look at the country now," said a supporter who gave his name as Ibrahim. "We are going bankrupt. The whole country is suffering from this economic crisis, from this lack of security."

Across the square, relatives of victims of Mubarak's security forces held posters of young men killed in the revolt.

Mahmoud Saleh, whose son Mostafa was killed during revolution, said: "He who kills must be killed. This is what we want from the trial."

Mubarak became the first ruler toppled by the Arab Spring uprisings to stand trial in person. That irked Gulf Arab rulers in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, of whom the former air force commander had been a loyal ally for decades.

But the case has also exposed the difficulties of justice in a country where the judiciary and security forces are still largely run by men whose positions date to the Mubarak era.

The prosecution complained that the interior ministry had failed to cooperate in providing evidence, leading to the acquittal of six senior ministry officials tried with Mubarak.

Mohamed Gomaa, 50, an IT specialist whose son Hussein, 23, was killed in the uprising, said: "Major reforms are needed in the entire justice system. Until then, we can only hope to God for a fair trial for Mubarak. I have no confidence in the judiciary."

(Additional reporting by Tom Perry; Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-mubarak-flown-court-retrial-tv-070906417.html

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