Thursday 25 July 2013

World champion Greene out of London Diamond League

LONDON | Wed Jul 24, 2013 7:44pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - World champion Dai Greene has pulled out of the 400 metres hurdles at this weekend's Diamond League meeting in London in a bid to get fit to defend his title in Moscow next month.

The 27-year-old Briton, who has struggled with injury and illness all season, withdrew from last week's Monaco Diamond League meeting with an Achilles problem.

"World Champion @DaiGreene will not compete in London after failing to recover from a slight niggle in his leg. Main focus is now the Worlds!," his management company tweeted on Wednesday.

Greene beat Puerto Rico's Javier Culson to win the world title in Daegu in 2011. He finished fourth at last year's Olympics but has been struggling to find any form this year and took his first victory of 2013 at the British championships earlier this month.

"So disappointed that I'm having to withdraw from the Anniversary Games this weekend. Hopefully it will pay off at the world champs," Greene tweeted.

The world championships start on August 10.

(Writing by Alison Wildey; Editing by John Mehaffey)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/UKSportsNews/~3/gbkGtuFeBo4/uk-athletics-world-greene-idUKBRE96N14Q20130724

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Wednesday 10 July 2013

Farrah Abraham: Kicked Out of Rehab For Being "Disruptive Influence," Taking Pics of Tan Mom

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/farrah-abraham-kicked-out-of-rehab-for-being-disruptive-influenc/

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The Daily Troll: Mayoral commercials coming at cable viewers. 'Delivering the vision' at Microsoft ... on Thursday? Officers get jobs back at Monroe.

The Daily Troll: News for your evening commute.

The Daily Troll: News for your evening commute. Art work by Noel Franklin

Mayor ads coming to cable?

State Sen. Ed Murray will begin airing some Seattle mayoral campaign commercials on cable TV tomorrow, joining incumbent Mike McGinn and Bruce Harrell in the broadcast battle, Publicola reports. The story also notes that Peter Steinbrueck will pass on TV ads, instead concentrating on "direct voter contact." Steinbrueck's campaign manager, Tom Van Bronkhorst, tells us that the decision is not about money, or lack thereof. It's just that direct mail pieces are a better way to reach potential supporters. The strategy would be the same, he said, "even if I had an extra $200,000 in cash right now." Van Bronkhorst said focus group research has shown that Steinbrueck's supporters tend to be very active. "We don't think they are going to be home watching TV in the summer," he said.

Publicola takes the Murray release as an occasion to grade the candidates' commercials: A for Harrell, B for McGinn and C for Murray. Not sure we agree, but the grades sure are explained well.

Microsoft shakeup coming Thursday

Microsoft's expected organizational shakeup will take place on Thursday, according to influential national tech news site, All Things D. Based on that report, which came out late Monday, Puget Sound Business Journal and GeekWire, among others, reprised some of the potential scenarios for changes. But nobody really knows, at least anyone who is talking. Meanwhile, All Things D writer Kara Swisher got an email today from Ford CEO Alan Mulally?? who left Boeing for that job?? confirming that he had advised Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer on how to revamp the company.

"While we clearly are not part of any Microsoft reorganization or its business operations," wrote Mulally, "we have shared with Steve ? as we have with many others who have asked ? the elements of the Ford business transformation, including the importance of having a compelling vision and the relentless implementation of a plan that delivers the vision."

Given Mulally's performance at both Boeing in Puget Sound and Ford, that's promising for the long run at Microsoft?? presuming Microsoft doesn't conclude that Boeing's smartest move ever was to take off for Chicago.

Officers back to work

An arbitrator overturned the firing of three Monroe Corrections Center employees whose mistakes, the state had once suggested, might have contributed to the murder of fellow guard Jayme Biendl. She was murdered in the prison chapel in 2011 by inmate Byron Scherf, who faces the death penalty.?The Herald reported today that the Department of Corrections must offer the officers their jobs back; Corrections officials are reviewing the ruling by the arbitrator, who said a larger climate of complacency, not individual mistakes, created dangerous conditions that Scherf exploited.

Amanda Knox retrial

An Italian court will again try once-exonerated Seattle resident Amanda Knox for the murder of her roommate, Meredith Kercher, in Perugia. Associated Press notes that Knox is not expected to attend. But Italian prosecutors will be there with their theories.?

All's quiet inside Green Hill

All was apparently calm inside the Green Hill juvenile facility on Monday, contrary to our report from yesterday. Some activists did demonstrate?? noisily?? outside the facility, according to The Centralia Chronicle, but?Green Hill Superintendent Marybeth Queral told the paper there had been no work stoppage or hunger strike in sympathy with Guantanamo Bay inmates. A spokesman for the Department of Social and Health Services said checks by officials in Olympia with the facility, which is part of DSHS, also indicated no difficulties.

Love the Daily Troll? Now you can?sign up to get it in your inbox every afternoon. And to catch up on the most recent news, click here.

Source: http://crosscut.com/2013/07/09/thedailytroll/115472/daily-troll/

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Christian Hernandez Leaves Facebook For White Star Capital, Raising $100M Fund

Christian Hernandez, a long-time employee for Facebook in Europe, is leaving the company to go full-time at White Star Capital, an early-stage VC investment firm founded by Eric Martineau-Fortin. Hernandez was most recently Facebook?s director for EMEA, and before that had been head of platform partnerships for the region. White Star to date has backed some 20 companies both in the U.S. and Europe, including Betaworks, Science, Bloglovin? in Sweden, Execution Labs in Canada and Dollar Shave Club. Two companies have exited: Summly, sold to Yahoo!; and Ludia, sold to Fremantle. It says it?s raised $70 million in follow-on financing. TechCrunch understands that White Star is currently raising money for a new fund of $100 million, with about 80 percent of that from institutions and family offices. So far $20 million has been committed.

TechCrunch also understands that White Star has not gone through the Financial Conduct Authority process yet, which means they are still at the early stages of the fund: most VCs defer that until the end, although you can?t fundraise in the U.K. until you?re registered with the FCA.

christian hernandezHernandez has also been angel investing on the side, and those holdings will be combined with White Star?s portfolio. Both he and Martineau-Fortin will be managing partners, and at the same time the firm is announcing two principals: John Henderson (most recently of Summly) and David Szekely. The news was laid out in a Facebook post from Hernandez as well as an announcement from White Star.

Hernandez has had a long career to date that includes, before Facebook, several years at Google and, prior to that, Microsoft. Since September 2011, he?s also been on the board of advisors at Seedcamp, the European startup accelerator. Those two sides of his experience ? first-hand with the heavy hitters and investing in and advising startups ? gives him and White Star a shot at bringing in dealflow as well as helping portfolio companies partner and exit to bigger players.

White Star will focus primiarly on seed and A rounds, filling what some still see as a gap in the market for early-stage companies particularly in Europe. The other big focus will be to provide funding specifically for startups to scale internationally, playing on White Star?s existing U.S./European pedigree.

As for what kinds of companies White Star will pick, the focus sounds like it will be on homing in on niches rather than expansive platform plays: included are ?affinity networks? ? think more-targeted social networks around special interests ? as well as niche e-commerce opportunities and social games. More generally, it will also put a strong emphasis on mobile-focused companies.

As for Facebook, the company officially confirmed Hernandez?s departure in June, at the same time that U.K. commercial director Stephen Haines left London to move to New York to work directly on Facebook?s network partnership with Omnicom. It doesn?t look like they?ve tapped a replacement for Hernandez yet. Nichola Mendelson, the company?s newly appointed VP for EMEA, will likely be addressing that as she settles into her new role, which she only took on at the beginning of this year.


Founded in 2007, White Star Capital invests in early-stage companies to help them scale internationally. We support the growth of firms across the social, mobile and e-commerce space.

? Learn more

Christian Hernandez Gallardo is Facebook?s Director for the UK and Pan-Euro. He leads Facebook?s commercial operations in the region, and is tasked with establishing strategic partnerships with innovative companies to develop technology and marketing solutions that help them connect and engage with Facebook?s more than 1 billion users. Christian joined Facebook in 2009 and led the international expansion of the company?s Business Development, Developer Relations, Gaming and Platform businesses. Prior to Facebook, Christian worked at Google where he was...

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9MhK9nPFffc/

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Crash investigators turn to cockpit decisions

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, the wreckage of Asiana Flight 214 lies on the ground after it crashed at the San Francisco International Airport, in San Francisco. The pilot at the controls of airliner had just 43 hours of flight time in the Boeing 777 and was landing one for the first time at San Francisco International. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

An unidentified family member of one of two Chinese students killed in a crash of Asiana Airlines' plane on Saturday, cries at the Airlines' counter as she and other family members check in a flight to San Francisco at Pudong International Airport in Shanghai, China, Monday, July 8, 2013. The Asiana flight crashed upon landing Saturday, July 6, at San Francisco International Airport, and the two of the 307 passengers aboard were killed. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Asiana Airlines President and CEO Yoon Young-doo, left, speaks with an unidentified family member of one of two Chinese students killed in an Asiana Airlines plane crash on Saturday at San Francisco International Airport, at the transit lounge of the Incheon International Airport in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Monday, July 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Korea Pool via Yonhap) KOREA OUT

Deborah Hersman of the National Transportation Safety Board speaks at a news conference , Monday, July 8, 2013 in South San Francisco, Calif. An Asiana Airlines Boeing 777 crashed upon landing Saturday, July 6, at San Francisco International Airport, and two of the 307 passengers aboard were killed. (AP Photo/George Nikitin)

(AP) ? Investigators trying to understand why Asiana Airlines Flight 214 crash-landed focused Monday on the actions of an experienced pilot learning his way around a new aircraft, fellow pilots who were supposed to be monitoring him and why no one noticed that the plane was coming in too slow.

Authorities also reviewed the initial rescue efforts after fire officials acknowledged that one of their trucks may have run over one of the two Chinese teenagers killed in the crash at San Francisco International Airport. The students were the accident's only fatalities.

National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Deborah Hersman said investigators watched airport surveillance video to determine whether an emergency vehicle hit one of the students. But they have not reached any firm conclusions. A coroner said he would need at least two weeks to rule in the matter.

The students had been in the rear of the aircraft, where many of the most seriously injured passengers were seated, Hersman said.

The NTSB also said part of the jet's tail section was found in San Francisco Bay, and debris from the seawall was carried several hundred feet down the runway, indicating the plane hit the seawall on its approach.

Investigators have said Flight 214 was flying "significantly below" its target speed during approach when the crew tried to abort the landing just before the plane smashed onto the runway. Authorities do not know yet whether the pilot's inexperience with the Boeing 777 and landing it at San Francisco's airport played a role.

The airline acknowledged Monday in Seoul that the pilot at the controls had flown that type of plane for only a short time and had never before landed one at that airport.

Asiana spokeswoman Lee Hyomin said pilot Lee Gang-guk had logged nearly 10,000 hours operating other planes but had only 43 hours in the 777, a plane she said he was still getting used to.

It's not unusual for veteran pilots to learn about new aircraft by flying with more experienced colleagues. Another pilot on the flight, Lee Jeong-min, had 12,390 hours of flying experience, including 3,220 hours on the 777, according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport in South Korea.

Lee Jeong-min was the deputy pilot helping Lee Gang-guk get accustomed to the 777, according to Asiana Airlines.

It was unclear whether the other two pilots were in the cockpit, which in the Boeing 777 typically seats four. But that would be standard procedure at most airlines at the end of a long international flight.

NTSB lead investigator Bill English said pilot interviews were going slowly because of the need for translation. The interviews began only after agents from the Korean Aviation and Rail Accident Investigation Board arrived from South Korea.

New details of the investigation have also raised questions about whether the pilots may have been so reliant on automated cockpit systems that they failed to notice the plane's airspeed had dropped dangerously low, aviation safety experts and other airline pilots said.

Information gleaned from the Boeing 777's flight-data recorders revealed a jet that appeared to be descending normally until the last half-minute before impact.

The autopilot was switched off at about 1,600 feet as the plane began its final descent, according to an account of the last 82 seconds of flight provided by Hersman.

Over the next 42 seconds, the plane appeared to descend normally, reaching about 500 feet and slowing to 134 knots (154 mph), a 777 pilot for a major airline familiar with Hersman's description told The Associated Press. The pilot spoke on the condition of anonymity because his company had not authorized him to speak publicly.

But something went wrong during the following 18 seconds. The plane continued slowing to 118 knots (136 mph), well below its target speed of 137 knots (158 mph) that is typical for crossing the runway threshold. By that time, it had descended to just 200 feet.

Eight seconds later, with the speed still falling, Hersman said, the throttles were moved forward, an apparent attempt by the pilot to increase speed. But it was too little, too late.

Five seconds later, at 50 percent power, speed began to increase.

A key question raised by the NTSB's account is why two experienced pilots ? the pilot flying the plane and another supervising pilot in the other seat ? apparently didn't notice the plane's airspeed problem.

Part of the answer to that question may lie in whether the pilot flying, after switching off the autopilot, still had the plane's autothrottle engaged during the descent.

Aviation safety experts have long warned that an overreliance on automation is contributing to an erosion of pilots' stick-and-rudder flying skills. It's too soon to say if that was the case in the Asiana crash, but it's something NTSB investigators will be exploring, they said.

"It sounds like they let the airplane get slow and it came out from under them," said John Cox, a former US Airways pilot and former Air Line Pilots Association air crash investigator.

"There are two real big questions here: Why did they let the airplane get that slow, and where was the non-flying pilot, the monitoring pilot, who should have been calling out 'airspeed, airspeed, airspeed,' " Cox said.

More than 180 people aboard the plane went to hospitals with injuries. But remarkably, 305 of 307 passengers and crew survived, and more than a third didn't even require hospitalization. Only a small number were badly hurt.

The passengers included 141 Chinese, 77 South Koreans, 64 Americans, three Canadians, three Indians, one Japanese, one Vietnamese and one person from France.

Three firefighters ? and two police officers without safety gear ? rushed onto the plane to help evacuate trapped passengers, including one who was trapped under a collapsed bulkhead.

They had gotten everyone off the craft except one elderly man, who was in his seat, moaning and unable to move.

"We were running out of time," San Francisco Fire Department Lt. Dave Monteverdi recalled Monday at a news conference. "The smoke was starting to get thicker and thicker. So we had no choice. We stood him up and amazingly, he started shuffling his feet. That was a good sign...we were able to get him out and he was pretty much the last person off the plane."

The two dead passengers were identified as 16-year-old students from China who were scheduled to attend summer camp in California with dozens of classmates.

One of their bodies was found on the tarmac near where the plane's tail broke off when it slammed into the runway, the other was found on the left side of the plane about 30 feet (10 meters) away from where the jetliner came to rest after it skidded down the runway.

The flight originated in Shanghai, China, and stopped over in Seoul, South Korea, before making the nearly 11-hour trip to San Francisco.

NTSB investigators are also sure to examine whether pilot fatigue played a role in the accident, which occurred after a 10-hour nighttime flight. As is typical for long flights, four pilots were aboard, allowing the crew to take turns flying and resting. But pilots who regularly fly long routes say it's difficult to get restful sleep on planes.

The accident occurred in the late morning in San Francisco, but in Seoul it was 3:37 a.m.

"Fatigue is there. It is a factor," said Kevin Hiatt, a former Delta Air Lines chief international pilot. "At the end of a 10-hour flight, regardless of whether you have had a two-hour nap or not, it has been a long flight."

The two teenagers killed in the crash were close friends and top students.

Wang Linjia showed talent in physics and calligraphy; Ye Mengyuan was a champion gymnast who excelled in literature. Both were part of a trend among affluent Chinese families willing to spend thousands of dollars to send their children to the U.S. for a few weeks in the summer to practice English and hopefully boost their chances of attending a U.S. college ? considered better than China's alternatives by many Chinese families.

The girls posted their last messages on their microblog accounts Thursday and Friday. The last posting from Wang said simply, "Go."

___

Lowy reported from Washington.

___

Associated Press writers Jason Dearen, Terry Collins, Paul Elias, Lisa Leff and Sudhin Thanawala in San Francisco, Gillian Wong and Didi Tang in Beijing, and Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-07-08-US-San-Francisco-Airliner-Crash/id-a3f3fa530fd84a08b64e5e843583785a

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Video: Stocks Shake Off Taper Talk

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52425496/

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Garmin's clever 'HUD' puts directions right onto your windshield

garmin

4 hours ago

Garmin hud

Garmin

The Garmin HUD, shown on a transparent film attached to the windshield.

The latest tech from Garmin isn't a bigger or higher-resolution screen on a GPS unit, but a clever way of putting your turn-by-turn directions straight onto the windshield, fighter pilot-style. If you're tired of candy-colored maps and a bright LCD in your face at night, this retro-futuristic setup could be for you.

Garmin's "HUD" or "head-up display" is a bit like those in pricier rides ? like F-16s (and the occasional Cadillac). It eschews the LCD screen entirely; Instead, the dash-top device has a small but bright monochrome display that is simply reflected in a special transparent sticker you put on the windshield. There's also an included reflecting lens in case your windshield is for some reason unsuitable.

Why get this, you ask? Some people will prefer the minimal, single-color display over the occasionally gaudy and distracting LCD. A bit of cool blue text, an arrow or two, and some voice directions are more their style. And automatically adjusting brightness means it'll be visible in broad daylight but won't blind you in darkness.

Garmin

Garmin

The HUD unit, reflectors, and car kit.

The HUD unit costs $130 and pairs with your smartphone ? but it relies on a Garmin app for its map data, so be ready to drop at least another $30 for that. You may also want to pack a car charger kit, since your phone will have to be on and transmitting location data over Bluetooth for the entire trip.

You can pick up a HUD at Garmin's website starting later this summer.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBC News Digital. His personal website is coldewey.cc.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e5ff882/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cgarmins0Eclever0Ehud0Eputs0Edirections0Eright0Eyour0Ewindshield0E6C10A560A784/story01.htm

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Asiana passenger describes crash, calm amidst chaos

Firefighters attending to Asiana Airlines jet (Photo by Wendell Hom)

Wendell Hom trained at a Yongmudo martial art camp in Seoul, went diving and surfing in Bali and took muay thai boxing classes in Bangkok. "It's been a month," he posted from Thailand on his Facebook account. "The adventure ends and it's time to go home."

Not quite.

Hom, a senior software engineer at a Silicon Valley company, was a passenger on Asiana Airlines Flight 214 when it crashed-landed at San Francisco International Airport on July 6. He walked away from the crash unscathed and told his story to Yahoo News in an exclusive interview on Monday.

The flight itself, Hom told Yahoo News, had been uneventful. As passengers and crew prepared for landing, Hom could see the San Francisco Bay from his aisle seat, 15D. "We were going down and then it did seem like we were a little too close to the water," he recalls. The plane touched down with a thud?nothing that he hadn't felt before. Then, Hom says, "everything went crazy."

The impact jerked Hom across the aisle. He ducked his head under his arms (his martial arts training had triggered protective instincts) and hit the chair across the aisle. The seat belt kept him in his seat. "That was the worst roller coaster I've ever been on," Hom recalls."It was over pretty quickly."

The plane's breathing masks came down as parts of the fuselage started breaking off. Personal belongings were thrown about; Hom lost his flip flops. "I wasn't sure what we were supposed to do at that point," he said.

He said he remembers focusing on finding his footwear and noticing that his middle-row seatmates had put on the breathing masks although the air wasn't smoky.

"I don't know when I unbuckled my seat belt. I was still seated," he said. "At one point, I was like, 'screw that, I don't need flip flops, I need to get out,' but the doors were still closed."

Much remains a blur for Hom. He doesn't recall hearing instructions from the flight attendants, but he did see one struggling to open the panel to deploy the escape chute. Some passengers were panicky, some were tangled up, but everyone was largely calm. It wasn't until Hom got to the chute and looked up into the sky did he see smoke.

Asiana Airlines 214 crash (Photo by Wendell Hom)

"The flight attendants were still on the plane, making sure everyone was getting off safely," Hom says. Once they made distance, passengers gathered in small groups?and only then did those sitting in Hom's area see the severed tail.

Hom saw at least seven people who looked as if they were in serious condition. One woman was laid out on the grass, and fellow passengers were trying to summon rescue workers to attend to her. "They were a bit slower than we hoped," he says.

The initial scene was of chaos. Even now, investigations are underway to see if an emergency vehicle may have contributed to one of the two fatalities: Chinese schoolgirls Ye Mengyuan and Wang Linjia.

Firefighters are on hand as smoke billows from Asiana Airlines flight 241 (Photo by Wendell Hom)

Eventually the uninjured were separated from the injured. Asiana Airlines personnel were on hand to translate for the diverse group of 291 passengers, which included 61 Americans, 77 South Koreans, 141 mainland Chinese and and 1 Japanese. "We were in the runway for quite a long time," Hom says.

Buses came to transport passengers, who were divided again between injured and uninjured, Hom said. They were moved through customs, then to a lounge. By then, security was in place to make sure nobody left, and even escorted passengers to the restroom. Nothing was being ruled out as a potential cause of the crash, including the possibility of a terrorist act.

As people waited, they compared notes, lent phones to call loved ones, and played cards. One woman borrowed Hom's phone to call her husband in Colorado; she and the two kids would miss the connecting flight, but the children were frightened and wanted their father to come and pick them up. This was their first vacation.

Hom also talked with David Eun, the Samsung executive who sent tweets about the crash. Hom hadn't wanted to post anything on his social network; his family and friends thought he was coming directly from Thailand, and he didn't want his mother to worry. In fact, he told her upon landing that his luggage had been delayed, and it would take a while. She guessed the truth, though, when she called again around 4 p.m.. "She wasn't mad," he says.

After the passengers provided their contact information to the FBI, they were finally let go around 5 p.m.

The president of Asiana Airlines issued a public apology at a Sunday conference in Seoul. Hom hasn't heard yet from the airline about what to expect next. "Overall, I think the flight attendants did their job to help people," he said.

And Hom did end up updating his social network. "The landing could have used a bit of work," he posted. "What a way to end the vacation."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/exclusive-asiana-airlines-passenger-describes-crash-calm-amidst-194130785.html

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MSNBC's Schultz Spews: GOP 'Attacking Minorities' By Opposing Obama's Efforts

Ed Schultz continued his weekly tirade against Republicans Sunday, arguing for a second straight week that the GOP is engaged in an all-out war against minorities.

After accusing conservatives of wanting to ?keep a minority down? on last week?s Ed Show, the bombastic MSNBC host was at it again on Sunday, accusing Republicans of ?attacking minorities? in their attempt to block President Obama?s appointees to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).

Schultz?s latest incendiary remarks come after an effort by Senate Republicans to challenge President Obama?s recess appointments to the NLRB last year. The GOP argues the move was unconstitutional and an ?unprecedented power grab? by the president. The Supreme Court recently agreed to hear the case against Obama?s recess appointments.

But according to MSNBC?s chief left-winger, the court of law isn?t good enough to settle this debate. Schultz berated Republicans for ?the total destruction of the National Labor Relations Board,? charging the party with wanting to ?erase out any kind of labor law.?

Of course, it?s incredibly hyperbolic to suggest any lawmaker wants to remove ?any kind of labor law? ? Republicans and Democrats alike know that many labor laws offer important protections for children and those working in dangerous conditions.

But Schultz is not one to shy away from hyperbole. The progressive host whined that Republicans were not ?giving President Obama the nominees he wants,? before launching a diatribe against the party:

Do you really think between now and 2016 that the Republicans are going to step to the plate and help President Obama put together what FDR started 78 years ago? The answer is hell no. This is about attacking workers. This is about attacking minorities. This is about keeping the working folk down, concentrating the wealth, more corporate power, and a restrictive approach when it comes to growing our economy.

Now, some have suggested that the NLRB is actually preventing growth in our economy, pointing to recent disputes with Boeing and Cablevision as proof of the board?s own ?restrictive approach.?

The NLRB filed a case against Boeing back in 2011, attempting to block the construction of a new plant in South Carolina which a Washington state union vigorously opposed. The board also criticized a Brooklyn division of Cablevision earlier this year for granting its employees pay raises and benefits in order to prevent them from unionizing. No word from the NLRB over Cablevision employees?s overwhelming 121 to 43 vote against unionization, or the positive results of a company bargaining with its employees sans union.

In the non-MSNBC version of reailty, the evidence suggests that the NLRB is often a pro-union arm of the federal government, despite Schultz?s over-the-top claims to the contrary.

See the full transcript below:

Story Continues Below Ad ?

MSNBC
The Ed Show
July 7, 2013
12:05 p.m. Eastern

ED SCHULTZ: Well, folks, are you convinced yet? Do you believe that there has been an attack on labor? Those were clips from the last five years here on The Ed Show, and now we're at the pinnacle point in my opinion when you look at the total destruction of the National Labor Relations Board. This has been a systematic approach by the Republicans over years to get to this point to totally erase out any kind of labor law. You look at the number of states that are going Right to Work, and all the legislation that's being offered up by radical governors who were attacking wages, blaming middle class workers for the financial woes of each one of their states.

They want to put it on the back of the workers. They want to take away their voice in the workplace, and now what they want to do is take away the overriding board that decides labor law in this country. They want to destroy it, and the way they've done it is through obstruction, not giving President Obama the nominees he wants. And so now we're down to one member on the National Labor Relations Board that is supposed to have five appointees that are political, three Democratic and two Republican based on who's in the White House. But, of course, they won't give that to President Obama. So the last person on the labor relations board, his term will end on August 1, just a few weeks away, and then what? Do you really think between now and 2016 that the Republicans are going to step to the plate and help President Obama put together what FDR started 78 years ago? The answer is hell no. This is about attacking workers. This is about attacking minorities. This is about keeping the working folk down, concentrating the wealth, more corporate power, and a restrictive approach when it comes to growing our economy.

Now, with all of that, we have added 40 months of private sector job growth with no help from the Republicans. We'll talk about that in the next segment. But I want this country, every American, to understand that you don't have to be in a union to be affected by the National Labor Relations Board. Because if there's no overriding arbitrator, if there's no overriding board that can make decisions in disputes and make labor law and enforce things on behalf of workers, what do we have? We have a free-for-all in the economy. We have the only recourse of having what's known in the old days as total general strikes, which would be the worst thing that could ever happen to this economy. So, as so many people put the economy on the back of President Obama, what we need to realize is that, yes, there's been a bunch of filibusters in the Senate, but there has also been a systematic attack on workers, and now they're trying to strip away the institution of the National Labor Relations Board. It's a serious issue.

Source: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/andrew-lautz/2013/07/08/msnbcs-schultz-spews-gop-attacking-minorities-opposing-obamas-efforts

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My Heart is Always Home: Creation Museum: Gardens

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Source: http://myheartisalwayshome.blogspot.com/2013/07/creation-museum-gardens.html

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Tuesday 9 July 2013

India police detain 1 over Buddhist shrine blasts

PATNA, India (AP) -- One man has been detained and sketches of two others have been prepared as investigators searched for clues Monday into a series of blasts at some of Buddhism's holiest sites in eastern India.

Two people were wounded in the eight blasts that went off Sunday in and around the main temple complex in Bodh Gaya, the town where the Buddha is believed to have gained enlightenment.

The Mahabodhi or the Great Awakening Temple is the main shrine in the town and has been declared a UNESCO world heritage site. Another explosion took place in an empty tourist bus parked near the temple complex.

Senior police officer S.K. Bhardwaj said Monday that police had detained a man whose identification documents had been found at one of the sites. He provided no further details about the detained man or the sketches of two other people investigators would like to find.

Local magistrate Balamurugan said the temple complex would reopen later Monday after monks held a special prayer. Balamurugan uses one name.

Federal Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said that federal investigators had flown to Bodh Gaya and were in charge of the probe.

The Mahabodhi Temple is adjacent to the Banyan tree, believed to have grown from a sampling of the same tree the Buddha meditated under. Bodh Gaya is one of Buddhism's four most sacred sites and every year large number of pilgrims, especially from Japan, Thailand, Sri Lanka and Myanmar visit though the main pilgrimage starts in September.

The entire town is dotted with temples built with donations from Buddhists all over the world.

(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Source: http://www1.whdh.com/rss/read/news/articles/world/21011097722930/

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Police: Woman steals sports bra, bites officer

NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCIV) -- North Charleston police arrested a woman after officers said she tried to steal items from a Wal-Mart store and assaulted a loss prevention officer.

According to a report, Aja Raniesha-Simone Williams, 23, stole $37.23 worth of sports bras and personal hygiene items on Friday at the Wal-Mart store on Centre Pointe Drive.

A loss prevention officer noticed Williams putting items into her purse, the report states, and he watched her leave the store without paying for the items.

The officer identified himself to Williams and she ran away, according to the report. The officer tried to detain Williams and she bit his arm, breaking the skin, punched him in the head, and tried to kick his knee, the report states.

Once police arrived,officers chased Williams and arrested her.

After running a check, police discovered that Williams had four previous convictions for shoplifting.

She was charged and her driving privileges were suspended.

Source: http://www.abcnews4.com/story/22787611/police-woman-steals-sports-bra-bites-officer

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House Republicans Prepare Harsh New Debt Ceiling Demands

nationaljournal.com:

GOP?s opening move will be a ?menu? of mandatory spending cuts for Obama to consider. Here?s what it looks like.

Read the whole story at nationaljournal.com

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/07/house-republicans-draft-t_n_3557932.html?utm_hp_ref=politics

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Asia stocks gain but China economy caution lingers

BANGKOK (AP) ? Asian stock markets rebounded Tuesday, joining a global rally following positive U.S. economic news as nervousness about an imminent scaling back of the Federal Reserve's monetary stimulus eased.

The regional heavyweight, Japan's Nikkei 225 index, rose 1.2 percent to 14,272.32 and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 was up 1.3 percent to 4,8673.10.

The move higher came a day after concerns over a sustained China slowdown prompted a selloff in Asia.

Other regional markets rose only moderately, reflecting continued caution. South Korea's Kospi inched up 0.4 percent to 1,824.58 and Taiwan's Taiex rose 0.7 percent to 7,942.66. Hong Kong's Hang Seng added 0.3 percent to 20,636.56.

Chinese stocks continued to be weighed down by a credit crunch, with the Shanghai Composite dipping 0.3 percent to 1,952.07. Indonesian stocks also dropped with the benchmark down by 0.4 percent to 4,417.60.

The overall Asian gains followed the lead of investors in Europe and the United States.

Wall Street has been buoyed by stronger-than-expected U.S. hiring figures released Friday that suggested the world's biggest economy is on a firm footing. The strong jobs growth has outweighed jitters about the prospect that the Fed will soon start winding down its unprecedented support for the economy

In the U.S., the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6 percent to close at 15,224.69. The Standard & Poor's 500 gained 0.5 percent to end at 1,640.46.

European markets started the week positively with the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closing up 0.4 percent at 6,450.07. Meanwhile, Germany's DAX rose 2.1 percent to 7,968.54 and the CAC-40 in France was 1.9 percent higher at 3,823.83.

Given the prevailing focus on the U.S., the key day this week will likely be Wednesday, when the minutes of the last policy meeting of the Fed are published. The Fed's chairman, Ben Bernanke, is also due to deliver a speech.

"It is possible that the combination of these events will encourage speculation that tapering is almost upon us," said Jane Foley, an analyst at Rabobank International, referring to the possibility of the Fed scaling back its $85 million of monthly bond purchases that have kept interest rates low.

"Alternatively there is the possibility that Bernanke will push back against speculation that the Fed is ready to take a less accommodative position."

Benchmark crude for August delivery was down 18 cents to $102.96 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, giving up some of its recent gains after worries over Egypt's political crisis pushed the price up $1.98 to $103.22 on Friday, the highest in more than a year.

Among major currencies, the euro was nearly flat at $1.2852 while the dollar rose to 101.03 yen from 100.90 yen.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stocks-gain-china-economy-caution-lingers-034115690.html

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 vs Nexus 7: 5 Reasons to Wait for the New 7-inch Google Tablet [PHOTOS]

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Sunday, July 07, 2013
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 is now available in some online stores, and will soon be released to Australia. But those shopping for a new 7-inch Android tablet should probably wait for the new Nexus 7 from Google. There are at least 5 reasons why. S. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/487411/20130708/samsung-galaxy-tab-3-nexus-7-google.htm

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Sebastian Vettel wins 1st Grand Prix at home

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany sprays with champagne during the German Formula One Grand Prix at the Nuerburgring racetrack, in Nuerburg, Germany, Sunday, July 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany sprays with champagne during the German Formula One Grand Prix at the Nuerburgring racetrack, in Nuerburg, Germany, Sunday, July 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany leads team mate Mark Webber of Australia during the German Formula One Grand Prix at the Nuerburgring racetrack, in Nuerburg, Germany, Sunday, July 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Michael Probst)

Second place Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen of Finland holds the trophy on the podium after the German Formula One Grand Prix at the Nuerburgring racetrack, in Nuerburg, Germany, Sunday, July 7, 2013.(AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany celebrates on the podium kissing the trophy after winning the German Formula One Grand Prix at the Nuerburgring racetrack, in Nuerburg, Germany, Sunday, July 7, 2013.(AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

(AP) ? Three-time defending Formula One champion Sebastian Vettel surged ahead in his Red Bull at the start of the German Grand Prix on Sunday and held off a strong challenge from the two Lotus cars to win his first race on home soil.

There were no tire blowouts but the race had its share of bizarre incidents, with a loose wheel flying through the air in the pit lane and an abandoned car drifting on its own down the track.

Vettel started second behind pole sitter Lewis Hamilton and powered past the Mercedes driver into the first bend.

The German then held off the Lotus pair of Kimi Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean for his fourth win of the season. Raikkonen was second, only a second behind, and Grosjean third, 5.8 seconds off. Ferrari's Fernando Alonso took fourth, 7.7 seconds behind.

"I am happy the race was 60 laps and not 61 or 62, the Lotus were incredibly fast and pushing very hard and Kimi was putting a lot of pressure on me at the end," Vettel said.

"It's incredible to win at home, a great relief. It's sweet to win here but at the end it's just another race. I'm happy to take (the) win and score some points," Vettel said.

Vettel had been without a win in Europe for 22 months and ? more obscurely ? had never won a race in July.

Vettel's 30th career victory extended his championship lead over Alonso to 34 points ? 157 vs. 123. Raikkonen moved up to third with 116.

Hamilton struggled with his tires and finished fifth as Mercedes again failed to live up to the promise of a fast qualifying.

Hamilton was also passed by the other Red Bull of Mark Webber before the first bend, who went past Hamilton on the outside as Vettel drove by inside.

But Webber lost a wheel when he was released from his first pit stop too soon and finished seventh after dropping to the back of the field after the incident. The flying wheel struck British cameraman Paul Allen in the left side. He remained conscious and was treated at the circuit before being taken to a hospital for observation. Race officials later said he had a cracked rib and a fracture in his shoulder.

Red Bull was fined $38,650 for releasing Webber too soon.

While the tires held and made the threat of a drivers' boycott redundant, another scary incident took place when Jules Bianchi's Marussia spewed smoke and caught fire briefly. Bianchi got out of the car, which started freewheeling down the track on its own. There were no other cars coming as the driverless vehicle ended up on grass, hit a trackside billboard and came to a halt as stewards rushed to control it.

That brought on the safety car for five laps, which brought the Lotus cars closer to Vettel.

Despite coming close, neither Lotus managed to get past Vettel. Raikkonen went for his third and final pit stop with 10 laps remaining and overtook Grosjean five laps later, on team orders.

"Maybe we should have gambled, the tires were good," Raikkonen said about his late pit stop. "I wonder if we should have gone to the end.

"But I had massive problem with the radio. I could hear the team but they couldn't hear me."

The tires became an issue after a series of blowouts at last week's British Grand Prix, prompting drivers to threaten with a pullout if the problems persisted in Germany.

Tire supplier Pirelli made some changes and the tires held, before the Italian manufacturer provides a new compound to be used for the first time at the next Grand Prix in Hungary in three weeks.

Raikkonen is being mentioned as Vettel's possible future teammate. The drivers are friends off and on the track but were non-committal when asked Sunday about such a move.

"At the end, it's not my decision," Vettel said.

Webber is leaving the team at the end of the season to join Porsche's sports program. The Australian finished seventh, behind McLaren's Jenson Button, after having to fight from the back of the field following his pit-lane accident.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-07-07-CAR-F1-German-GP/id-4441f24797a340b6a33250779ea9868c

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Zombie Ants and a Cultural Obsession

You?re in a dark forest, surrounded by misty fog and strange animal noises. You?re on a mission, jumping over traps and snares in search of something you?ve lost dear to you. As you make your way deeper into the forest, you come across an odd glowing plant hanging from a nearby tree branch, perhaps a fungus of some kind. As you creep up to inspect the glowing substance, you are horrified to have it drop onto your head and cling to your scalp. You try to scream, but your eyes go dark. You find yourself walking, but you don?t know where to, your arms heavy and your feet numb. Is it possible you no longer have control of your body?

Screenshot from Limbo, from limbogame.org media materials.

Screenshot from Limbo, from limbogame.org media materials.

This is a scene from Limbo, a modern video game that is a great example of a post-apocalyptic genre filled with zombie-themed obstacles. Zombies have long been a part of our storytelling culture, with stories about zombies originating in the Afro-Caribbean spiritual belief system of Voodoo and the belief that witchcraft could raise corpses from the dead. But modern scientific discoveries of mind-controlling parasites may be further inspiring media examples of this favorite American obsession.

?Zombies seem to be one of the most popular metaphors these days,? said Tracy Stephenson Shaffer, an associate professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Louisiana State University whose research interests include popular culture and the horror genre. Shaffer is also something of a zombie expert; in 2009 she produced Nonfiction Zombie, an ensemble performance considering the zombie?s recent rise in popularity as a useful metaphor and critique of contemporary life.

?They are often used to describe anything that has lost control or acts in a mindless way,? Shaffer said. ?They?ve captured the public?s imagination because they are both us and not us simultaneously. They are also dead ? our biggest fear ? which makes them a great monster.?

Zombies have morphed over the years, however, embodying, or rather em-monsterfying, different metaphors in popular culture. The ?disease model? of zombies is apparently relatively recent in our entertainment culture. Today?s zombies are often called ?the infected,? and zombie outbreaks spread like other infectious diseases. Mathematicians have even created models of zombie infection outbreaks and models of how to fight zombies off.

The background stories behind zombie movies, video games etc, are purposefully vague and inconsistent in explaining how the zombies came about in the ?rst place. Some ideas include radiation (Night of the Living Dead), exposure to airborne viruses (Resident Evil), mutated diseases carried by various vectors (Dead Rising claimed it was from bee stings of genetically altered bees). ? When Zombies Attack! Mathematical Modelling

But where does our continuing imagination for zombie infections come from? Could traditional zombie fiction be morphing into a more scientifically inspired genre?

Zombie Ants

Ohiocordyceps unilateralus on ant, Polyrhachis armata. Photo compliments of David Hughes.

Ohiocordyceps unilateralus on ant, Polyrhachis armata. Photo compliments of David Hughes.

David Hughes, Penn State assistant professor of entomology and biology, is an expert on ?zombie??ants. Through research in Thailand and Brazil, Hughes and other scientists have revealed the biology and mechanics of Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, a parasitoidal fungus that infects particular ant species, dramatically changing behavior in order to benefit fungal reproduction.

?The fungi which control ant behavior are an interesting example of adaptation through natural selection,? Hughes said during a Penn State ScienceCast video. ?The life cycle of the fungus begins with a fungus spore on the forest floor. And when the ants are out foraging for food, they pass through these little ?killing fields?, as we describe them, of fungal spores.?

I don?t know about you, but I?m already imagining ?killing fields? of zombie pods in my mind, a combination of Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Walking Dead.

The growing Ophiocordyceps unilateralis fungus fills the ant?s body and head, affecting the central nervous system of the ant and causing confusion and convulsions. The fungus eventually guides infected ants to the underside of hanging leaves, forcing each infected ant to bite the main vein of a leaf, and, through a lock-jaw phenomenon, keeping the ant in this location until a fungal fruiting body grows through the ant?s head and releases more fungal spores for another deadly life cycle.

When I asked Hughes in an email exchange what he thought the coolest part of this deadly ant-fungus relationship was, he said, ?[t]hat complex manipulation of animal behavior is controlled by a single-celled microbe.?

When complex animal behavior can be controlled by a single microbe, a zombie human apocalypse starts to sound not-so-far-fetched. The pure science isn?t the only interesting aspect of the discovery of a real-life zombie ant fungus. In his fascination with zombie behavior, ?where a parasite actually takes over the brain of its host and causes the host to do its bidding,? Hughes has himself guided the integration of his science with Hollywood movie and gaming culture.

??I?m motivated by this opportunity to get the science to people who wouldn?t get it in another way,? Hughes said in a Penn State news article.

Just the fact that the ant struck by Ophiocordyceps unilateralis has been commonly termed the ?zombie ant? places this biological phenomenon not only in a scientific context, but also in a cultural context. As a part of a society obsessed with monsters, it isn?t odd that Hughes and his colleagues refer to Ophiocordyceps unilateralis as the zombie ant fungus.

?The ?zombie ant? is interesting because it has more in common with the voodoo zombies of early film,? Shaffer said. ?The first zombie film, the Halperin brothers ?White Zombie? (1932) stars none other than Bela Lugosi as a voodoo master who controls the minds of zombies to do his bidding. The fungus seems to work like a voodoo master over the ants.?

Aha. So we might not be as obsessed with the infected zombie ant as we are with the voodoo master fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateralis that makes ants do its bidding. While we may have no control over zombies, we might be inspired to harness the powers of the fungus ?master? to do our bidding. Hughes, for example, hopes to perhaps someday use Ophiocordyceps fungi as a biological insecticide to target pest insects.

?It will be a major focus in my group,? Hughes said in a 2011 National Geographic News article. ?How can we use this [discovery] to control ants, which are, after all, devastating pests in many places??

We can start to see how both science and the zombie metaphor are put to work in popular culture.

All Zombies Evolve

Fungi aren?t the only zombie voodoo masters. Parasite-induced alteration of host behavior has been also been reported in viruses, bacteria, protozoans, nematodes and other microscopic creatures. The changes that ?zombie? parasites induce in their hosts range from small shifts in the percentage of time the host spends performing certain activities to the display of spectacularly abnormal behaviors, like in the zombie ant. Changes in the host caused by infection by the ?zombie? are beneficial to the parasite because they lead to better transmission, or reproduction, success of the parasite.

Zombie parasites that dramatically change host behavior, like the zombie ant fungus, also likely evolved from ancestor parasites that either did not change behavior, or only changed a single behavioral trait. Over generations, however, natural selection would favor those parasites that could control more than one dimension of host behavior. For example, the parasite Polymorphus minutus, which starts out its life cycle in crustaceans and ends it in birds that eat the crustacean, such as the Mallard Duck, causes the crustaceans to swim to the surface of the water when a bird is stirring around in the water, for example. However, the parasite has also evolved to increase the swimming speed of the crustacean so that it can avoid water predators that are not hosts for the parasite.

As it turns out, zombie parasites have evolved over the years, just as zombies as a cultural phenomenon have evolved to embody different metaphors in our lives.

Another parasitic protozoan, Toxoplasma gondii, infects rodents, cats and even humans. The parasite can only reproduce in the intestines of felines, so cats are the preferred host. This zombie parasite manipulates the behavior of rats, making them rather reckless and attracted to the smell of cat urine (gross!), thus increasing the rodents? chances of being preyed upon by cats. Some studies have even suggested that T. gondii may slightly change behavior of infected humans, potentially playing a role in schizophrenic disorders. A real-life zombie voodoo master of humans?! Not so fast ? research is still needed to confirm this potential association between T. gondii and behavioral changes in humans, and to determine whether this is true host manipulation, or, more likely, just a side effect of infection.

From Culture to Science and Back Again

Fascination with zombies may have started with ancient spiritual beliefs in voodoo and magic, but the scientific community hasn?t been immune to the bug. In the process of calling insects and animals infected by behavior-changing parasites ?zombies,? scientists themselves are evoking metaphors that pervade our culture far beyond the science itself.

??There is something horrifying and wondrous about a tiny ?implant? being able to control such a large animal machine,? Journal of Experimental Biology Editor Michael Dickinson was quoted in a recent scholarly article titled How Pernicious Parasites Turn Victims into Zombies. ??Neuroparasitology is a science where science meets science fiction.?

It appears that zombies as a cultural metaphor are not only helping us deal with scary subjects such as infectious disease epidemics and global changes beyond our immediate control, but also helping us put complex biological interactions between different organisms in a context we can relate to.

And the zombie bus doesn?t stop there. Hughes is the science advisor to the movie World War Z, featuring Brad Pitt and a zombie epidemic, and Last of Us, an extremely popular video game featuring his own Ophiocordyceps unilateralis making the jump from insects to humans.

?In terms of video games, I might flinch if the game asked me to kill other humans, but a zombie?? Shaffer said. ?Killing a zombie is a bit easier.?

And so, just like a zombie parasite life cycle, the zombie metaphor comes back full circle to popular culture. As much as it is a spectacular vehicle for communication of complex science to the public, it may be first and foremost a cultural phenomenon created out of our deepest human fears and concerns.

Learn more about Zombie Ants:

Getting to the bottom of the zombie ant phenomenon

Behavioral mechanisms and morphological symptoms of zombie ants dying from fungal infection

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/~r/sciam/basic-science/~3/0UZ0w3cR01A/post.cfm

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Nokia Lumia 928 ? shooting the jungle with Home windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

Nokia Lumia 928 -- photographing the rainforest with Windows Phone 8

This weekend, My partner and i returned coming from a 9 day cruise from the Caribbean. For this particular cruise, I visited Bermuda, St. Martin, Puerto Rico and Haiti. What I really like about cruise trips, other than the foodstuff (yes, I?m any fat guy), is browsing multiple locations in a short time rather than being in a single place for your entire trip. This gives me to consider very diverse photos and possess memories that may last a life-time.

I own a very nice point-and-shoot photographic camera with the Nikon Coolpix AW100. Your Nikon is my go-to camera when I am traveling to beaches as it is often waterproof. Even so, while in Puerto Rico, I used to be to excursion El Yunque Rainforest ? a beautiful place to take photos wherever I would not be going swimming. And so, I decided to utilize a different digicam instead ? the particular Nokia Lumia 928 on Verizon. You got it, I was trusting my trip memories using a camera-phone!

Like my coworker Alan Buckingham, We too have been trying Home windows Phone Eight instead of Android. However, I am going to save our opinions in the Windows Phone 8 system for another moment. This particular Htc phone includes a great track record of taking great photos i wanted to examination.

The first thing to understand about the Nokia Lumia 928 is the committed camera switch ? located on the right-side of the phone. In my opinion, this is a requirement for any mobile phone to be given serious attention as a probable camera substitute. This will permit you take images without going on the screen. Tapping on the screen to consider a photo may cause the phone for you to shake and cause blurriness. Furthermore, tapping the particular screen calls for you to hold the phone unclearly which may result in it staying dropped and also broken. Nonetheless, the Nokia Lumia 928 allows you to tap on the screen to take a picture if that?s your preference.

The very first thing to dislike about the Nokia Lumia 928 is the not enough an SD card slot. The telephone has 64gb of storage area but only 23GB can be usable. Even though this will be a good amount of storage for the majority of, it is not perfect for a Nine day luxury cruise. The ability to change SD cards is vital for a long vacation. Taking a huge number of photos over a long trip is not uncommon. If this phone was your current exclusive camera on a prolonged trip, you?d probably eventually end up choosing which usually photo as well as potential valuable memory to delete.

Microsoft supplies a really exciting feature on Windows Cell phone 8 called Blink. This particular feature allows you to take the animated photo by taking multiple fast photos. My 1st stop in your rainforest had been La Coca Falls, a beautiful waterfall and a ideal place to analyze Blink. You can see some examples below. The quality of these photos are merely average however the animation is excellent ? it really reflects my expertise at the fountain and has wowed the friends and also family using whom We shared these people.

The rest of my personal tour has been walking in trails and also taking photos of leaves and creatures. The Nokia performed wonderfully capturing the astonishing views found in the rainforest. I was able to get a number of nice close-ups of the lizard along with a snail, two wildlife that are loaded in this jungle. The only occasion the camera hit a brick wall me has been trying to get a new close-up shot of your spider rolling around in its web in the middle of red plants. The picture will be beautiful total but the crawl and its world wide web can rarely be seen. The actual landscapes which it captured are usually breathtaking and they are desktop wallpapers worthy.

Overall, the Nokia Lumia 928 is an excellent camera mobile phone ? the best That i?ve ever used. The idea feels excellent in the side with the devoted camera button and it will take wonderful pictures. If it had an Facts slot, it could be camera-phone perfection. Even so, most people do not take on long getaways very often so it should mainly not not be an issue. My spouse and i highly recommend this specific to anyone looking for a cell phone with a large emphasis on photo-taking. I will be very happy that we trusted my personal vacation reminiscences with the Htc Lumia 928.

Source: http://www.lazyhacks.com/2013/07/nokia-lumia-928-shooting-the-jungle-with-home-windows-phone-8.html

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Monday 8 July 2013

Mumford & Sons' 'Babel' Video: Watch It Now!

In their new video, Mumford get repetitive ... and the formula works.
By James Montgomery

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1710082/mumford-and-sons-babel-video-premiere.jhtml

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NEWS: Nicol appointed University Librarian

The University of Lethbridge has named Dr. Christopher J. Nicol as its new University Librarian, an appointment that took effect on July 1, 2013.

Nicol, the former Dean of the Faculty of Arts & Science, had been serving as Acting University Librarian since
Sept. 1, 2012. He took that position in the wake of former University Librarian Alison Nussbaumer?s move to the role of Interim Dean, Internationalization.

?Chris Nicol?s service to the University of Lethbridge as Dean of Arts and Science has been both remarkable and exemplary,? says Bob Boudreau, the University?s Vice Provost. ?His contributions in advancing the Faculty of Arts and Science will be felt for years to come. Building on this legacy, we are absolutely thrilled that Chris will continue to serve and lead the U of L in his new role of University Librarian.?

A native of Scotland, Nicol earned his master?s and PhD in economics at Queen?s University in Kingston, Ont., before spending 16 years as a professor of economics at the University of Regina. He arrived on the University of Lethbridge campus in 2001 and assumed his duties as a professor in economics while also serving as the Dean of the Faculty of Arts & Science. He will continue on as a professor of economics in the Department of Economics while serving as the University Librarian.

An esteemed researcher, Nicol?s interests are in econometrics, applied econometrics and the theory of consumer behaviour. He is also keenly interested in macroeconomic policy debates, especially those arising in the wake of the financial crisis of 2008.

Nicol is also an accomplished swimmer, having competed internationally and at the post-secondary level for Queen?s University. In 1985, Nicol won both the 100-metre and 200-metre breaststroke events at the inaugural World Masters Games in Toronto.


---
U of L Communications and Public Relations Contact:
Bob Cooney, Communications and PR Officer (403) 382-7173

Back to the Notice Board

Source: http://www.uleth.ca/notice/display.html?b=300&s=19641

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Canada beats Japan to advance to world volleyball finals

OSAKA, Japan ? Canada has advanced to the FIVB World League men?s volleyball finals for the first time after a dramatic five set victory over Japan (25-23, 23-25, 25-27, 25-18, 15-7) in their last preliminary round match.

It was a sixth consecutive win for the Canadians (8-2) and they will be one of six countries in Mar del Plata, Argentina, for the finals July 17-21.

?We reached our big goal for this season,? said Canada?s head coach Glenn Hoag. ?It?s easy to say but a lot harder to do. This is a big step for us. The guys worked hard and improved through the process. They never flinched under the pressure today. I was really impressed.?

Dallas Soonias of Red Deer, Alta., led the Canadian attack with 24 points while Rudy Verhoeff of Calgary and Gord Perrin of Creston, B.C., added 18 each.

?The stress level was pretty high,? said Canadian team captain Fred Winters. ?When we fell behind 1-2 in sets we were aware that we could potentially squander our chance to be in the final. But we knew Japan couldn?t keep that pace and in the end we got them.?

The 24th FIVB World League, which offers $5.7 million in prize money, features 18 teams split into three pools of six that compete in a five-round, 10-match format.

The top two teams from Group A and B also advance to the six-team finals, along with host Argentina. The other two groups conclude their preliminary rounds next weekend.

Source: http://thechronicleherald.ca/sports/1140440-canada-beats-japan-to-advance-to-world-volleyball-finals

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Markets outside of Asia recover their poise

LONDON (AP) ? Aside from a big sell-off in Asia, markets generally recovered their poise Monday, as investors shrugged off fears of an imminent scaling-back of the U.S. Federal Reserve's monetary stimulus.

Investors in Europe, in particular, regained their footing after last week's stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report prompted an end-of-week sell-off. After European markets closed on Friday, U.S. stocks posted solid gains and that's carried through into Monday's session.

Given the prevailing focus on the U.S., the key day this week will likely be Wednesday, when the minutes to the last policy meeting of the Fed are published. The Fed's chairman, Ben Bernanke, is also due to deliver a speech.

"It is possible that the combination of these events will encourage speculation that tapering is almost upon us," said Jane Foley, an analyst at Rabobank International. "Alternatively there is the possibility that Bernanke will push back against speculation that the Fed is ready to take a less accommodative position."

Without a clearer gauge, markets around the world have been volatile for weeks. For the past few years, the Fed's stimulus, echoed by other central banks, has been one of the props shoring up a number of financial assets, in particular stocks.

Volatility was a key feature Monday as European markets started the week positively. The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was up 1.3 percent at 6,458 while Germany's DAX rose 2.4 percent to 7,992. The CAC-40 in France was 2 percent higher at 3,828.

The mood in Europe was also helped by the news that Greece's international creditors appear to have reached a deal with the cash-strapped country over further economic reforms required for the release of the bailout funds. A meeting later in the day of the finance ministers of the 17 European Union countries that use the euro is expected to confirm the release.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was up 0.7 percent at 15,237, while the broader S&P 500 index rose 0.6 percent to 1,642.

While the Fed looks set to be the main market driver, investors will be closely monitoring the start of the U.S. second-quarter corporate reporting season, which starts in an after-hours statement from aluminum company Alcoa Inc.'s.

"One update does not determine the tone of the entire earnings season, but at least it will provide a view on how the aluminum market is faring, an important element given ongoing worries about the Chinese economy," said Chris Beauchamp, market analyst at IG.

Those worries over China weighed on investor sentiment earlier during Asia's session. Investors appear to be getting increasingly worried about a cash squeeze in the world's number 2 economy.

In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index closed down 2.4 percent to 1958.27 while the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index lost 3.6 percent to 889.53. Elsewhere, Hong Kong's Hang Seng closed down 1.3 percent at 20,582.19 and Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 1.4 percent to 14,109.34.

In other financial markets, the mood was fairly benign. Among major currencies, the euro was up 0.3 percent at $1.2871 while the dollar fell 0.2 percent to 101.09 yen.

In commodity markets, the price of oil was down 65 cents at $102.58 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-outside-asia-recover-poise-141812215.html

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Is the U.S. the Place to Be for Stock Investors? - Morningstar

Morningstar.com readers are all over the map on the question of how much of their equity allocation comes from the United States.

By Adam Zoll?| 07-07-13?| 06:00?AM?|?Email Article Portfolio allocation can be a tricky business. First you must decide what percentage of assets to invest in stocks, bonds, and other asset classes; then how much belongs in small-, mid-, and large-sized companies; and then whether to tilt more toward value, growth, or somewhere in between. Along the way you also have to answer a question that can be among the most complex: How much do I invest in U.S. stocks, and how much do I invest overseas?

Adam Zoll is an assistant site editor with Morningstar.com

Although it might sound simple, that question raises its own unique set of challenges. As many Morningstar.com users noted in response to a question posted to the Hands-On Investing area of our Discuss board (you can read the full discussion here), merely knowing where a company is based doesn't necessarily tell the whole tale because many companies operate internationally. In today's increasingly globalized world economy, the line between U.S. and foreign stocks gets blurred.? 'The Home Country of a Corporation Means So Little'
Carman's comment was typical of many. "I'm about 80% U.S. and 20% foreign (mostly Europe) at the moment," carman wrote. "I see no compelling reason to change this ratio because the home country of a corporation means so little in?a?global economy. I've steered clear of significant emerging countries holdings because so many of?these?exhibit political instability or lack a meaningful regulatory environment." A number of posters echoed the idea that investing in U.S. stocks that do business abroad provides international exposure without some of the complications that go along with investing in companies based outside the U.S. For example, wenzela said, "The only 'foreign' stock I own is BP BP. Otherwise it is all U.S. companies. Most of my major holdings are global firms doing a large part of their business in other countries. I consider that plenty of diversification. Besides, it is much easier to read U.S. financials, and also my income planning is more predictable with regular quarterly dividend payments." "My stocks are 80% U.S. and 20% foreign, which is the lowest my foreign exposure has been in 10 years (originally it was 65% U.S. and 35% foreign)," wrote rossinator.?"I find investing in the U.S. is a lot simpler for me.?First, I can know and research the companies a lot better, and I am less buffeted (but not totally free) from foreign currency, foreign government, international strife issues that arise in other parts of the world." 'The Cleanest Dirty Shirt'
Others in the discussion said the equity portions of their portfolios tilt toward U.S. stocks simply because they seem like better bets than foreign stocks these days. Overall the U.S. represents about 47% of the global market cap. Mickeg wrote, "I generally prefer to weight my foreign holdings to about 50% to 65% of my total, but in the current global environment, I find U.S. exchange-traded funds to be the best place to be. To use an overly used phrase, U.S. stocks are the 'cleanest dirty shirt' out there right now.?Thus, I consider my 90% domestic holdings now to be a temporary overweighting of U.S. equities." Grandmarais wrote, "I'm currently about 62% U.S., 17% Europe, 2% Japan, and 19% emerging markets. I'm big on playing the historical trends, so was big in emerging markets (40%) for the last 10 years. Did well for a while, but the political climates/practices in China and South America have led me to draw back.?Europe is just a timing play.?The U.S. certainly looks the strongest long-term." "Presently I have a conservative portfolio with 45% in equities, 7% of which are foreign equities through investing in U.S. large-cap funds and some world-allocation funds," said yeagermj. "I didn't start following foreign markets until 2007 and fortunately have ignored the advice of my financial planner to jump in every time they dropped. I don't trust their accounting standards and I see no need so far to add the accompanying volatility to my portfolio.?I've had good returns without them." Artsdoc, who said the equity side of their portfolio is weighted at about two thirds U.S. stocks and one third non-U.S., admitted to having a home bias and gave three reasons as to why: "1) There is currency risk associated with holding international equities, 2) it is more expensive to own since they're more expensive to trade abroad, and 3) the expense ratios are higher to own internationals although the fees have come down considerably over the past few years." Then there were those commenters who took home bias almost to an extreme. One was banker5358, who wrote, "Except for ?Potash Corp.?, I have never knowingly purchased a foreign stock." Cliff said, "I hold investments in 30 companies, 26 of which are U.S. companies that derive almost 100% of their revenue domestically. Two are Canadian. The other two are ?Philip Morris and ?Diageo , which sell all over the world. I'm probably 99% truly domestic in terms of revenue and free cash flow." 'An Opportunity to Buy Into Beaten-Down Sectors'
But not all commenters were sold on the idea of being heavy in U.S. stocks. Several mentioned allocating their equity holdings in a more balanced way. ? "We are 50/50 domestic and foreign,?betting on?growth?in the U.S., value in Europe, and a growing middle class in Asia," wrote Wartybliggins.?"While always with a strong percentage in overseas funds,?we've arrived at?the current?ratio by profit taking on domestic investments for a larger allocation to cash." Academic, whose?equity allocation is tilted 51% toward foreign stocks, added, "I've been steadily increasing the proportion of equity allocated to foreign stocks over the last year. This is based on valuation measures that show U.S. stocks overvalued relative to foreign. Unfortunately, that particular move hasn't worked out so far."? Meanwhile, BMWLover sounded a contrarian viewpoint. "All the experts are saying that the U.S. is the place to be investing right now because of its prospects for the best economic growth in the near future," said BMWLover.?"True, the Eurozone is still experiencing economic problems and emerging markets have seen their growth slow. And to that point, in general, prices of equities from foreign-based companies and international and emerging market ETFs are well off their highs. I see this as an opportunity to buy into beaten-down sectors. I'm buying at lows with long-term (three to five years) expectations of watching these investments reach new highs." Carrie said that even though her portfolio is tilted toward U.S. stocks, that's changing. "Seventy-five percent of my stock portfolio is?U.S.," she wrote. "However, all of my 401(k) contributions have been going into a?foreign-stock fund?(heavily weighted toward Europe)?for a while now because that's where I see opportunity."

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Source: http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=601722

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