Saturday, July 6, 2013

Former Hernandez fans make a profit off of No. 81 jerseys

Jim Rogash / Getty Images file

Aaron Hernandez's New England Patriots jersey can be exchanged this weekend to the team's apparel store, but a better deal for jersey holders may be online.

By Tracy Jarrett, NBC News

The New England Patriots will offer fans a chance to exchange their Aaron Hernandez jerseys for free this weekend, but jersey holders may find a better deal selling their jerseys on online markets.?

In light of Hernandez's first-degree murder charge, the Patriots ProShop at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass., will allow fans to swap their Hernandez jerseys for any other comparably-priced jersey in stock. No receipts are needed, but only officially licensed Nike or Reebok jerseys will be accepted.?

Customers can exchange their jerseys Saturday and Sunday. Only one jersey swap allowed per customer.?

"We know that children love wearing their Patriots jerseys, but may not understand why parents don't want them wearing their Hernandez jerseys anymore," New England Patriots spokesperson Stacey James said in a release to NBC affiliate WWLP. "We hope this opportunity to exchange those jerseys at the Patriots ProShop for another player's jersey will be well-received by parents."

For fans who can?t make it to the exchange, there may be another way to profit from their No. 81 jerseys. Turning to secondary markets, like eBay, can earn fans twice the original price for their jerseys. ?

John Lamothe was surprised when he sold his Hernandez jersey for $289.

?I thought I might get $15 for it,? he told The Boston Globe.

There are currently 768 results for ?Aaron Hernandez jersey? being auctioned on eBay. Asking prices range from 99 cents to more than $1,000.

Hernandez, 23, was released from the New England Patriots after being charged with murder in the death of Odin Lloyd.?

The former tight end is also being investigated by Boston police for his possible connection to a 2012 murder in which he allegedly shot a man in the face. He is currently being held without bail.?

?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2e4228b1/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C0A50C1930A38640Eformer0Ehernandez0Efans0Emake0Ea0Eprofit0Eoff0Eof0Eno0E810Ejerseys0Dlite/story01.htm

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Get your iMore daily dose on Google+, here's how!

If you're new to iMore, or new to social networking, you may not be aware that you can follow the site and the writers on Google+. We're talking social all week this week on Talk Mobile and so we're also showing you how you can get your daily dose of iMore across the different social platforms. So, if you're on Google+, check out the links below to follow the iMore team!

If you're on Google+, those are all the links you need to keep up with the iMore team, but be sure to shout out in the comments below and let us know how to find you!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/anQVPjZrmL4/story01.htm

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Friday, July 5, 2013

India's first infrastructure debt fund assigned 'AAA' rating

New Delhi, July 5: Ratings agency Crisil Friday assigned 'AAA' ratings to India Infradebt Limited, the country's first infrastructure debt fund under the non-banking finance company structure.

The fund, jointly promoted by ICICI Bank, Bank of Baroda, Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and Citicorp Finance (India), awarded its first sanction letter to a road project.

Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram said a high ratings would make infrastructure debt funds competitive in the refinancing market.

The first sanction letter was given to a project by Jaiprakash group for refinancing of NHAI-bid road-project of Zirakpur-Parwanoo section of NH-22 built by Himalayan Expressway Limited.

Mayaram said debt funds would play an important role in financing of infrastructure projects in the country.

India targets to invest nearly $1 trillion in infrastructure between 2012-17. Half of this money is expected to come from private sector.

"We require about $1 trillion for infrastructure sector, out of which $500 billion have to come from private sector. Therefore, we have to provide multiple instruments to the private sector to raise funds," Mayaram said at a function organised at the finance ministry in North Block.

Managing director and chief executive of ICICI Bank Chanda Kochhar said the "rating would enable Infradebt to access long-term funds for Indian infrastructure sector at low interest rates from domestic markets as well as pension and insurance funds."

IANS

Source: http://news.oneindia.in/2013/07/05/india-first-infrastructure-debt-fund-assigned-aaa-rating-1253160.html

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Port Burwell man pleaded guilty to crime-spree that stretched from Stratford to London

It was crime spree that ended with the $500,000 armed robbery of a Strathroy jewelry store.

Jeffrey Ysebert, 32, of Port Burwell, pleaded guilty to nine charges Thursday, more than a year after a harrowing afternoon at James O. Poag?s Jewellers, when two men ? one of them Ysebert ? barged in and began smashing show cases with a crowbar.

Along with the plea to armed robbery, Ysebert pleaded guilty to stealing a car from a London car dealership, stealing a pickup truck from a St. Marys car dealership, possession of stolen lottery tickets, two counts of gasoline theft, two counts of driving while disqualified and an armed robbery of a London convenience store.

Regional Crown counsel David Foulds outlined the facts for Ontario Court Justice Jeanine LeRoy.

Foulds said that on June 4, 2012, Ysebert and another man entered the jewelry store with their faces masked.

While they smashed the show cases, owner Jim Poag tried to call 911. One of the men smashed the phone.

Poag ushered his 10 staff into a back office while Ysebert and the other robber grabbed diamonds and diamond rings and shoved them into a duffel bag.

On the other side of the store, they smashed more cases and scooped up men?s and women?s gold chains.

The men left the store and ran to an alley where they were seen getting into a black Dodge Ram pickup truck. The licence plate number was given to police.

The plates had been stolen earlier in the day in Komoka. The truck was from St. Marys.

The Nissan Infiniti listed in Ysebert?s charges was stolen on May 16, 2012. Ysebert was caught on surveillance video stealing gas for the stolen car from Husky gas station and a Petro-Can gas station, both in London.

The Mac?s Milk robbery was on May 19, 2012. Ysebert and another man robbed the variety store, one of them armed with a baseball bat.

The lottery tickets found on Ysebert were stolen from a Mac?s convenience store in Watford that was robbed twice in May.

Ysebert is to be sentenced Aug. 14.

jane.sims@sunmedia.ca

twitter.com/JaneatLFPress

Source: http://www.lfpress.com/2013/07/04/port-burwell-man-pleaded-guilty-to-crime-spree-that-stretched-from-stratford-to-london

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ifttt


Use ifttt to create "recipes" of automation?no code or scripting required?and kiss your worries goodbye. Ifttt stands for "if this, then that." It's a free website and service that lets you automate simple tasks in your digital life, such as "if there is an upcoming event on my Google Calendar, then send me a text message reminder with the event name, time, and address," or "If someone tags a photo of me on Facebook, then save a copy of that photo to Dropbox."

The most amazing thing about ifttt is how simple it is to use. You might assume that these commands, or "recipes" as they're called on ifttt.com, would require some programming know-how?but they don't. The site shows you how to build a command using icons, and then customize them by clicking a button or two, or typing what you want. They couldn't be easier to write and implement, and once they're in place, you can kick back and relax because ifttt follows through on what it promises to do.

Anyone can sign up for a free account on ifttt. To write commands, you have to enable the apps and services that you want ifttt to be able to reach, such as your Facebook, Google, Twitter, Instagram, email, SMS, Dropbox, LinkedIn, Instapaper, Flickr, Foursquare, Vimeo, and even Philips Hue (smart, app-controlled lighting in your home). It can also pull data from weather apps, stock tickers, and dozens of other services.

How to Create a Recipe in Ifttt
Here's an example of a recipe I created and the steps to do it:

"If I share a link on Facebook, then save it to a spreadsheet on Google Drive."

1. Click "Create."

2. A large line of text appears reading "if this then that" and "this" is underlined and in blue. Clicking "this" brings up a list of available sites and services, called "trigger channels," which are shown as icons with their names underneath. I choose "Facebook."

3. Next, I can "choose a trigger" from five available options. I chose "new link post by you," and clicked "create trigger."

4. Then I saw "if [Facebook icon], then that," which "that" underlined and in blue.

5. I clicked "that" and choose the Google Drive icon. Then I could select again from a list of actions, such as "upload file from URL," "create a document," "append to a document," and so forth. I chose "add row to a spreadsheet."

6. Finally, ifttt showed me a few text fields where I could enter additional details about the recipe, such as the name of the spreadsheet (which it said it would create if it did not yet exist) and the folder path. It also had an item for what to put in the row, pre-filled in with the basics (date and time created, title of post, link, description), and here were more options, this time from a drop-down menu, so that I could customize these fine details. I then hit "create action" to save all my changes to initialize the recipe.

Note that if your automations don't seem to work straightaway, you may have to check the "channel" you have enabled to make sure they are active and validated. Ifttt doesn't have a warning flag that tells you if, for example, you have temporarily deactivated your connection to an account.

Other Users' Recipes
While you can create your own commands from scratch, ifttt also lets you browse recipes that other users have created and made public. A section for browsing recipes lets you see what's new, or what's hot or popular. Whenever I look through ifttt's suggested recipes, I always find automations that would make my digital life so much easier and richer, but that I never would have thought to create on my own. It's a marvelous place to explore.

Ifttt gives the user control over the recipes once they're created as well, so you can turn them on or off any time without deleting the recipe from your file. An activity log shows you not only the recipes you've created and when you toggled them on and off, but also other factors that might affect ifttt's ability to perform the function, such as failed API calls.

When you enable a phone number in ifttt for either text messaging or phone calls, you have to enter a code sent to that number, which helps ensure no one uses ifttt for nefarious purposes.

The site's design puts huge lettering and icons on a white background. It drives home the point that this site is meant to be simple. Point at what you need, click it, and let ifttt handle the rest. And from a readability standpoint, it's not often I can read everything on a page without having to zoom.

Does ifttt Work?
All the recipes I've created and tried, including those that use SMS messages, have worked, although some took longer than others to take effect. Most initiated immediately, however. Delays, when they do occur, could be caused by some site's servers or possibly the complexity of the recipe?it's hard to pinpoint the problem. But that's the only issue I've had with this otherwise phenomenal site.

Ifttt is a PCMag Editors' Choice website and service, and is one of my favorite sites for making my life simple and better organized.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/2HIwSSazWF0/0,2817,2399266,00.asp

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Thursday, July 4, 2013

This Coin-Operated Radio Was Like a Vending Machine For Your Ears

This Coin-Operated Radio Was Like a Vending Machine For Your Ears

Back in the 1920s, it seemed everything was becoming coin-operated. All over the U.S., you could find coin-operated weighing machines at railroad stations; coin-operated vending machines were chock full of candy, cigarettes and other tasty treats; and the automatic coin-operated shoe shine machine was even threatening to put its flesh-and-blood counterpart out of a job. A 1926 issue of Radio News magazine called dropping coins in a slot the great American past-time. But unlike the candy vending machine or even weighing machines, there's one Jazz Age coin contraption that you'd be hard pressed to find today: the coin-operated radio.

As Radio News explained the brand new coin-operated radio in 1926:

If you forget to bring your pocket portable-receiver with you, and there is a program on the air that you are particularly anxious to hear, just walk into a store that has one of these radio receiver slot machines, drop a nickel in the slot, set the two dials of the set?and your station will be heard from the loud speaker in the top of the machine.

This Coin-Operated Radio Was Like a Vending Machine For Your Ears

The magazine explained how the radio worked, with the machines recently popping up in Philadelphia stores:

This slot machine made its appearance recently in Philadelphia and consists of a five-tube radio frequency receiver, having one stage tuned R.F., one stage of fixed R.F., detector and two stages of audio frequency amplification. There is also a timing mechanism which limits the reception to five minutes. On the side of the machine next to the slot in which the nickels are deposited, is a table showing the times when stations are broadcasting and also the necessary dial settings of the receiver.

The small knob below the slot is turned after the nickel is deposited. This starts the motor which operates the timing mechanism. After four minutes of music a red electric lamp lights in the front of the cabinet, warning the listener that if he wishes to continue the reception beyond the period of another minute another nickel must be dropped in the slot. This must be repeated every five minutes. The opening of the loud speaker horn is behind the grill work above the dials of the receiver, and the timing mechanism is under it.

Before long, it is possible these machines will be as common a sight as the many different types of vending machines that are familiar to everybody today and then the American boy and girl will have another slogan, "Papa, gimme a nickel I waunta hear some radio music!"

The coin-operated radio would find some success in hotels, motels and hospitals (largely before television hit the scene in an affordable way), but eventually the technology faded away without much fanfare. Perhaps it was because the coin-operated radio left too much to chance. Sure, you might have a favorite music station that you'd like to share with everybody else at the malt shop. But when it comes to spending your hard earned nickels, the coin-operated jukebox was the only logical choice for delivering the exact song you were dying to hear.

Image: April 1926 issue of Radio News magazine

Source: http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/this-coin-operated-radio-was-like-a-vending-machine-for-532327397

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Dendritic cell therapy improves kidney transplant survival, team finds

June 28, 2013 ? A single systemic dose of special immune cells prevented rejection for almost four months in a preclinical animal model of kidney transplantation, according to experts at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Their findings, now available in the online version of the American Journal of Transplantation, could lay the foundation for eventual human trials of the technique.

Organ transplantation has saved many lives, but at the cost of sometimes lifelong requirements for powerful immunosuppressive medication that can have serious side effects, said senior investigator Angus Thomson, Ph.D., D.Sc., distinguished professor of surgery and of immunology, Pitt School of Medicine. Scientists have long sought ways to encourage the organ recipient's immune system to accept or tolerate the donor organ to reduce the need for drugs to stave off rejection.

"This study shows it is possible to prepare the patient's immune system for a donor kidney by administering specially treated immune cells from the donor in advance of the transplant surgery," Dr. Thomson said. "This could be very helpful in the context of planned kidney donations from living relatives, and could one day be adapted to transplantation from deceased donors."

For the project, the research team generated immune cells called dendritic cells (DCs) from the blood of rhesus macaques that would later provide a kidney to recipient monkeys. Dendritic cells are known to be key regulators of the immune system by showing antigens to T-cells to either activate them against the foreign protein or to suppress the T-cell response. The researchers treated the donor DCs in the lab to prevent them from fully maturing and having the capacity to trigger an immune reaction against foreign proteins.

One week before having a kidney transplant, recipient monkeys received a single infusion of treated DCs obtained from their respective donor animals. Another group of monkeys was transplanted without receiving the cells, but both groups were given the same regimen of immunosuppression drugs, a modified protocol for experimental purposes that eventually results in donor organ rejection. The researchers found that the donor kidney was rejected in about 40 days among animals that got only the drugs, but survived for about 113 days in the group that had a prior infusion of treated DCs.

The modified donor DCs sent signals to the recipient immune system to stay quiet and not launch an attack against the donor organ, explained lead author Mohamed Ezzelerab, M.D., research assistant professor, Department of Surgery, Pitt School of Medicine.

"The results indicate that we achieved immune system regulation without side effects of the DCs, but better yet, the monkeys were healthier from a clinical perspective," he said. "They maintained a better weight, had less protein in the urine and fewer signs of kidney damage than the other group. Ultimately, all these factors played a role in prolonging organ survival in the group that received DC therapy."

Co-authors of the paper include other researchers from the Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, and the departments of Surgery, Immunology, Medicine and Pathology, Pitt School of Medicine. The project was funded by National Institutes of Health grant AI051698.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/R_OkREoSSY4/130628113214.htm

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Mutant Silkworms Spin Fluorescent Silk in 3 Colors

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Mutant Silkworms Spin Fluorescent Silk in 3 Colors
Silkworms in a Japanese lab are busy spinning silks with a colorful glow. But these silkworms, unlike others that have been fed rainbow-colored dyes, don't need any dietary intervention to spin in color: They've been genetically engineered to produce fluorescent ...????

Source: Wired
Posted on: Thursday, Jun 20, 2013, 8:13am
Views: 8

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128732/Mutant_Silkworms_Spin_Fluorescent_Silk_in___Colors

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Friday, April 26, 2013

Putin says opportunity for better US-Russian ties in Boston aftermath

Speaking in his annual town-hall meeting, which this year ran nearly five hours, the Russian president called for greater US-Russian cooperation on terrorism after the Boston bombing.

By Fred Weir,?Correspondent / April 25, 2013

Russian President Vladimir Putin is seen on television screens in a shop as he speaks during an annual call-in show on Russian television, 'Conversation With Vladimir Putin,' in Moscow on Thursday. Mr. Putin held forth on topics ranging from Russian-US cooperation on terrorism to whether he was happy.

Mikhail Metzel/AP

Enlarge

The Boston Marathon bombing offers a fresh opportunity for the US and Russia to revisit the basics in their struggling relationship and prioritize security cooperation in order to prevent any repetition of the tragedy, Vladimir Putin said in his annual electronic town-hall meeting with the Russian public Thursday.

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"I just call for this tragedy to be an incentive for us to become closer in tackling common threats, with terrorism being one of the most important and dangerous of them. If indeed we combine our efforts, we won?t take such hits and sustain such losses," Mr. Putin said.

In the wake of the bombing it became known that one of the two suspects, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, had been on the radar of both the FBI and the Russian FSB security service, and that the Russian agency had warned both the FBI and the CIA about him in 2011. Yet a subsequent FBI check failed to validate the Russians' suspicions, and the FSB itself apparently did not follow up on Tamerlan when he made a six-month visit to the Russian republics of Dagestan and Chechnya the following year.

"We always have said that we shouldn't limit ourselves to declarations about terrorism being a common threat, and [that we should] engage in closer cooperation. Now these two criminals have proven the correctness of our thesis," Putin added.

Putin's yearly telethon, which took place even during the years Dmitry Medvedev was president and Putin was prime minister, is seldom a news-breaking event. But it is a good opportunity to take the Kremlin's temperature on, literally, scores of issues. Experts argue over how tightly stage-managed the sessions are ? they combine a studio audience, telelinks with viewers across the country, and questions submitted by electronic media ? but there is no doubt about the ability of the Russian leader to field an exhausting battery of questions, on almost every imaginable subject, and provide lengthy, detailed answers. The event has grown steadily in duration, from 2 hours, 27 minutes for the first one in 2001, to 4 hours, 33 minutes last year.

Today he talked for a whopping 4 hours, 47 minutes, and answered almost 100 queries, including: How goes the fight against corruption? When will Russia's new stealth fighter be ready for service? Will he sack the government of Prime Minister Medvedev over alarming signs that the Russian economy is slipping into recession? Does he think that the current crackdown on NGOs, and upcoming prosecution of protesters connected with an alleged "riot" at a protest rally last May, suggest "overtones of Stalinism" in current Russian politics? Is he happy?

On the issue that will be of greatest interest in the US, Putin combined his plea for greater security cooperation with some tough criticism of past US policies and attitudes.

"This [slump in Russia-US relations] didn't begin yesterday," he said. "Back when our American colleagues called upon us to join in the process [leading up to the 2003 invasion of] Iraq, we told them it was a mistake. Our position was open and honest, but relations grew cooler. After that there were the events in Libya, and other states. We are watching chaos unfold everywhere."

"Must we support what we consider erroneous? Why do they demand that we accept their standards? Let's not demand anything from each other, but rather look for ways to improve mutual understanding," he said.

He also argued that Western sympathy for the Chechen side in two brutal wars in the past 20 years ? a struggle that has morphed over that time from a secular nationalist bid for Chechen independence from Russia into a more diffuse, Cacausus-wide jihadist insurrection ? has been deeply misguided.

"I always felt indignation when our Western partners and Western media referred to terrorists who conducted brutal and bloody crimes on Russian soil as 'rebels,'" Putin said.

On corruption, Putin vowed ? as he has in most telethons since 2001 ? to crush it: "We will fight against [corruption] no less stubbornly than against inflation. We will wipe it out," he said.

Russia's cool new T-50 "fifth generation" fighter plane, which is claimed to be equivalent to the US F-22 Raptor, will enter service as promised in 2016, Putin said.

Despite persistent rumors that Putin may be preparing to sack Medvedev's government, and perhaps even call fresh Duma elections, Putin insisted "there is no division between the government and the president," on the economy. He added Medvedev's government has been in place for less than a year, and needs time to work.

Putin dismissed the question about echoes of Stalinism, saying "Stalinism is connected to the cult of personality, massive legal abuses, repressions, and gulags. There are no such things in Russia, and I hope they will never happen again."

He insisted that in contemporary Russia, people are jailed "for legal violations" and not for their political views.

Many critics argue that laws are selectively applied, and bent, in Russia in order to punish political opponents such as former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the Pussy Riot performance-art band, currently on-trial protest leader Alexei Navalny, and almost 30 people soon to be tried, and facing serious jail time, over a fairly minor disturbance at a legal protest rally almost a year ago.

As for whether Putin is happy, he suggested the jury is still out on that.

"I am thankful to destiny and the citizens of Russia for showing the trust that allowed me to become Russian president," he said. "This is my whole life. Whether it's enough for happiness, that's another question."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/cA3gEBEh0G4/Putin-says-opportunity-for-better-US-Russian-ties-in-Boston-aftermath

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A.J. Clemente Appears on Letterman, Pushes for ESPN Job

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/aj-clemente-appears-on-letterman-pushes-for-espn-job/

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Trulia: Housing Recovery Marches on in March | AOL Real Estate

Each month, Trulia's Housing Barometer charts how quickly the housing market is moving back to "normal." We summarize three key housing market indicators: construction starts (Census), existing home sales (NAR), and the delinquency-plus-foreclosure rate (LPS First Look). For each indicator, we compare this month's data to (1) how bad the numbers got at their worst and (2) their pre-bubble "normal" levels. In March 2013, construction starts and the delinquency-plus-foreclosure rate improved:

Construction starts rocketed to a new post-bubble high. Housing starts were at a 1,036,000 seasonally adjusted annualized rate -- up 7 percent month-over-month and 47 percent year-over-year -- which is the highest level since June 2008. In March, 38 percent of new starts were in multi-unit buildings, compared with the typical level of 20 percent Construction starts are now 55 percent of the way back to the normal level of 1.5 million from their low during the bust.

Existing home sales went down a bit. Sales fell 0.6 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 4.92 million homes. That's a 10 percent increase over one year ago. Excluding distressed sales, conventional home sales were up 23 percent year-over-year in March. Also, inventory rose even on a seasonally adjusted basis for the second month in a row. Overall, existing home sales are 66 percent back to normal.

The delinquency-plus-foreclosure rate dropped yet again. The share of mortgages in delinquency or foreclosure dropped to 9.96 percent in March, down from 10.18 percent in February and 10.98 percent in March 2012. The combined delinquency-plus-foreclosure rate is 48 percent back to normal and at its lowest level since October 2008.

Averaging these three back-to-normal percentages together, the housing market is now 56 percent of the way back to normal, up from 54 percent in February and 43 percent six months ago in September. One year ago, the market was only 33 percent back to normal -- so the last year has been a significant recovery. Furthermore, this month's improvement is even better than it looks with the shift of sales from distressed to conventional and early signs that the inventory crunch may be easing, which will bring some relief to would-be homebuyers.

Jed Kolko is the chief economist for online listings site Trulia. This article originally appeared on the Trulia Trends blog.

trulia housing recovery barometer

See more by Jed Kolko:
Learn From Their Mistakes: What Homeowners, Renters Regret
Are Homes Near Baseball Stadiums Worth More?

Baseball Season 2013: Are Homes Near Stadiums Worth More?
More on AOL Real Estate:
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foreclosures in your area.
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Source: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/on/housing-recovery-march-2013/

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Thursday, April 25, 2013

Hubble Telescope Photographs Potential 'Comet of the Century'

NASA's iconic Hubble Space Telescope has snapped stunning new photos of Comet ISON, which could become one of the brightest comets ever seen when it zips through the inner solar system this fall.

Hubble captured the new photos on April 10, when?Comet ISON?was slightly closer than Jupiter. At the time the icy wanderer was about 386 million miles?(621 million kilometers) from the sun and 394 million miles (634 million km) from Earth.

The new images are already helping astronomers take a bead on the mysterious Comet ISON, which may shine as brightly as the full moon when it makes its closest pass by the sun in late November. (The comet poses no threat to Earth, NASA has said.) [Photos of Comet ISON in Night Sky]

For example, the Hubble telescope photos show that ISON is already becoming quite active, though it's still pretty far from our star. The?comet's dusty head, or coma, is about 3,100 miles (5,000 km) wide, and its tail is more than 57,000 miles (92,000 km) long, astronomers said. And ISON sports a dust-blasting jet that extends at least 2,300 miles (3,700 km).

Yet the comet's nucleus is surprisingly small ? no more than 3 or 4 miles (4.8 to 6.5 km) across.

This small core makes the comet's behavior on its trip around the sun, which will bring ISON within 730,000 miles (nearly 1.2 million km) of the solar surface on Nov. 28, especially tough to predict, researchers said. Also complicating the forecast is the fact that ISON is apparently making its first trip through the inner solar system from the distant, icy Oort cloud.

So it's difficult to know if ISON will live up to its billing or fizzle out like Comet Kahoutek ? another possible "comet of the century" ? did in 1973.

But Comet ISON's relatively pristine state has a real upside to astronomers, who will study the material that sublimates off the comet to gain insight into its composition.

"As a first-time visitor to the inner solar system, Comet C/ISON provides astronomers a rare opportunity to study a fresh comet preserved since the formation of the solar system," Jian-Yang Li of the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Ariz., who led a team that imaged the comet, said in a statement. "The expected high brightness of the comet as it nears the sun allows for many important measurements that are impossible for most other fresh comets."

NASA has organized a?Comet ISON Observing Campaign?to coordinate the efforts of observatories on the ground and in space. Hubble is seen as a key player in this campaign, along with a number of other instruments.

Comet ISON is officially designated as C/2012 S1 (ISON) and was discovered in September 2012 by Russian amateur astronomers Vitali Nevski and Artyom Novichonok.

Hubble's new ISON photos were taken just two weeks before the telescope's 23rd anniversary. The Hubble Space Telescope, a collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency, launched aboard the space shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990.

Follow Mike Wall on Twitter?@michaeldwall?and?Google+.?Follow us?@Spacedotcom,?Facebook?or?Google+. Originally published on?SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hubble-telescope-photographs-potential-comet-century-192609966.html

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Fake tweet shows country 'sensitive to any news that sounds like terrorism'

By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

A stock market and a nation already on edge was temporarily knocked off its axis on Tuesday by a single fake tweet.?

Following a hack attack, the Associated Press' verified Twitter account posted "an erroneous tweet" claiming that two explosions occurred in the White House and that President Barack Obama is injured. Moments later, the @AP Twitter account ? with nearly 2 million followers ? was suspended.

"That's a bogus tweet," an AP spokesperson initially told NBC News, a statement that was?repeated by the company's corporate communications account. Though the false tweet disappeared, the false message continued to exist on the service in over 4,000 retweets.

The chart of the Dow Jones industrial average just after 1 p.m. may as well have been a chart of America's heartbeat -- stopped for a moment, again, by seemingly horrific information. The Dow lost more than 140 points almost instantly, before recovering five minutes later.

It's incredible what a single 12-word lie can do.

The markets plummet, and then snap back after a fake AP terror tweet, with the "Power Lunch" crew.

"We're in an environment where we're sensitive to any news that sounds like terrorism," said Art Hogan of Lazard Capital Markets.? "That makes it that much more believable. That's the tricky part. When something like AP gets hacked, it becomes reality for a period of time, until it's not."

The market's reaction hints at the our collective fragility right now.? In the past, carefully crafted fake press releases or other Internet disinformation has been able to influence individual stocks both up or down.

But a single Tweet sinking the market?? It's just the latest sign that lies now spread on the Internet as fast as computer viruses, and can have just as much impact. Like the false rumors that spread like wildfire during the Boston bombing aftermath, or Hurricane Sandy before that, Twitter's surge to mainstream popularity ? it now boasts 140 million U.S. accounts???has made it an incredible source of on-the-spot information, but also the world's most powerful rumor-mongering tool.

"You wonder who did it and whether it was done on purpose. It certainly was an instant implosion," said Art Cashin, director of floor operations for UBS Financial Services, who watched the minutes of bedlam on the floor of the NYSE. Cashin said the reaction was especially dramatic because it said the president was injured.

If you define the term "hacking" loosely, you might consider that whoever wrote the fake tweet hacked not only AP's account, but the entire Wall Street trading system. The trades which sank the market Tuesday were almost certainly initiated by automated trading programs designed to profit by fast-twitch reacting to good or bad news.

The combination of a jittery public, automated trading, and a worldwide rumor tool was toxic for the markets.

"That goes to show you how algorithms read headlines and create these automatic orders ? you don't even have time to react as a human being," said Kenny Polcari of O'Neil Securities. "I'd imagine the (Security and Exchange Commission) is going to look into how this happened. It's not about banning computers, but it's about protection and securing our markets."

It's also about figuring out how to handle a world where the firewall between seemingly disconnected systems like Twitter and brokerage servers is really only 91 characters long, particularly a world where skepticism?s classic grains of salt seem to be in short supply.

CNBC's JeeYeon Park, Patti Domm and John Melloy contributed to this story.

Related:?AP Twitter account hacked, posts false White House scare

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2b1933f9/l/0Lredtape0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C230C178812150Efake0Etweet0Eshows0Ecountry0Esensitive0Eto0Eany0Enews0Ethat0Esounds0Elike0Eterrorism0Dlite/story01.htm

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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The ASUS CUBE with Google TV review

ASUS CUBE

A bold design and great software additions make the ASUS CUBE unique, but is that enough to push Google TV to mainstream living rooms?

The ASUS CUBE with Google TV is the latest premium Google TV box to come out, and it’s also one of the most anticipated. It has a unique look and design, a nifty rotating-cube user interface, and plenty of features both in the hardware and software. We’ve been waiting for it since it was first unveiled in January at CES, and now it’s here.

I’m convinced that the Google TV platform is “almost there”, and one key component to get it from a cool toy for enthusiasts to something you would find in a mainstream consumer’s living room is great hardware. The $140 price tag will help -- you can grab one from various e-tailers including Newegg -- will help provided the unit provides a good experience with the current Google TV software.

The ASUS CUBE is certainly unique, but is it great? Hit the break and we’ll have a look.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/JcnpV-aKzkI/story01.htm

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Monday, April 22, 2013

Antibody transforms stem cells directly into brain cells

Apr. 22, 2013 ? In a serendipitous discovery, scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have found a way to turn bone marrow stem cells directly into brain cells.

Current techniques for turning patients' marrow cells into cells of some other desired type are relatively cumbersome, risky and effectively confined to the lab dish. The new finding points to the possibility of simpler and safer techniques. Cell therapies derived from patients' own cells are widely expected to be useful in treating spinal cord injuries, strokes and other conditions throughout the body, with little or no risk of immune rejection.

"These results highlight the potential of antibodies as versatile manipulators of cellular functions," said Richard A. Lerner, the Lita Annenberg Hazen Professor of Immunochemistry and institute professor in the Department of Cell and Molecular Biology at TSRI, and principal investigator for the new study. "This is a far cry from the way antibodies used to be thought of -- as molecules that were selected simply for binding and not function."

The researchers discovered the method, reported in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of April 22, 2013, while looking for lab-grown antibodies that can activate a growth-stimulating receptor on marrow cells. One antibody turned out to activate the receptor in a way that induces marrow stem cells -- which normally develop into white blood cells -- to become neural progenitor cells, a type of almost-mature brain cell.

Nature's Toolkit

Natural antibodies are large, Y-shaped proteins produced by immune cells. Collectively, they are diverse enough to recognize about 100 billion distinct shapes on viruses, bacteria and other targets. Since the 1980s, molecular biologists have known how to produce antibodies in cell cultures in the laboratory. That has allowed them to start using this vast, target-gripping toolkit to make scientific probes, as well as diagnostics and therapies for cancer, arthritis, transplant rejection, viral infections and other diseases.

In the late 1980s, Lerner and his TSRI colleagues helped invent the first techniques for generating large "libraries" of distinct antibodies and swiftly determining which of these could bind to a desired target. The anti-inflammatory antibody Humira?, now one of the world's top-selling drugs, was discovered with the benefit of this technology.

Last year, in a study spearheaded by TSRI Research Associate Hongkai Zhang, Lerner's laboratory devised a new antibody-discovery technique -- in which antibodies are produced in mammalian cells along with receptors or other target molecules of interest. The technique enables researchers to determine rapidly not just which antibodies in a library bind to a given receptor, for example, but also which ones activate the receptor and thereby alter cell function.

Lab Dish in a Cell

For the new study, Lerner laboratory Research Associate Jia Xie and colleagues modified the new technique so that antibody proteins produced in a given cell are physically anchored to the cell's outer membrane, near its target receptors. "Confining an antibody's activity to the cell in which it is produced effectively allows us to use larger antibody libraries and to screen these antibodies more quickly for a specific activity," said Xie. With the improved technique, scientists can sift through a library of tens of millions of antibodies in a few days.

In an early test, Xie used the new method to screen for antibodies that could activate the GCSF receptor, a growth-factor receptor found on bone marrow cells and other cell types. GCSF-mimicking drugs were among the first biotech bestsellers because of their ability to stimulate white blood cell growth -- which counteracts the marrow-suppressing side effect of cancer chemotherapy.

The team soon isolated one antibody type or "clone" that could activate the GCSF receptor and stimulate growth in test cells. The researchers then tested an unanchored, soluble version of this antibody on cultures of bone marrow stem cells from human volunteers. Whereas the GCSF protein, as expected, stimulated such stem cells to proliferate and start maturing towards adult white blood cells, the GCSF-mimicking antibody had a markedly different effect.

"The cells proliferated, but also started becoming long and thin and attaching to the bottom of the dish," remembered Xie.

To Lerner, the cells were reminiscent of neural progenitor cells -- which further tests for neural cell markers confirmed they were.

A New Direction

Changing cells of marrow lineage into cells of neural lineage -- a direct identity switch termed "transdifferentiation" -- just by activating a single receptor is a noteworthy achievement. Scientists do have methods for turning marrow stem cells into other adult cell types, but these methods typically require a radical and risky deprogramming of marrow cells to an embryonic-like stem-cell state, followed by a complex series of molecular nudges toward a given adult cell fate. Relatively few laboratories have reported direct transdifferentiation techniques.

"As far as I know, no one has ever achieved transdifferentiation by using a single protein -- a protein that potentially could be used as a therapeutic," said Lerner.

Current cell-therapy methods typically assume that a patient's cells will be harvested, then reprogrammed and multiplied in a lab dish before being re-introduced into the patient. In principle, according to Lerner, an antibody such as the one they have discovered could be injected directly into the bloodstream of a sick patient. From the bloodstream it would find its way to the marrow, and, for example, convert some marrow stem cells into neural progenitor cells. "Those neural progenitors would infiltrate the brain, find areas of damage and help repair them," he said.

While the researchers still aren't sure why the new antibody has such an odd effect on the GCSF receptor, they suspect it binds the receptor for longer than the natural GCSF protein can achieve, and this lengthier interaction alters the receptor's signaling pattern. Drug-development researchers are increasingly recognizing that subtle differences in the way a cell-surface receptor is bound and activated can result in very different biological effects. That adds complexity to their task, but in principle expands the scope of what they can achieve. "If you can use the same receptor in different ways, then the potential of the genome is bigger," said Lerner.

In addition to Lerner and Xie, contributors to the study, "Autocrine Signaling Based Selection of Combinatorial Antibodies That Transdifferentiate Human Stem Cells," were Hongkai Zhang of the Lerner Laboratory, and Kyungmoo Yea of The Scripps Korea Antibody Institute, Chuncheon-si, Korea.

Funding for the study was provided by The Scripps Korea Antibody Institute and Hongye Innovative Antibody Technologies (HIAT).

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Scripps Research Institute.

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


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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/4sCqbLxIxUg/130422154756.htm

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Sunday, April 21, 2013

KISS SEO & Web Design: Slideshare: Delivering in promotion and ...

For many B2B companies, SEO is gaining in importance as they begin to understand the dynamics of how search engines work. Unfortunately, many B2B companies are still way behind the curve; they know they need good SEO, but their understanding of what that entails is woefully behind.

In SEO circles, content marketing is the rage for 2013, but it's a concept that not all our clients and prospects are understanding just yet.

So, let me put it in the simplest terms, using one specific example of a resource for content marketing: Slideshare.

In addition to making sure that your website content matches the types of searches people are doing to find you, it's also important to promote your content more widely across the Internet. Remember the old days, when we all had a business card? That business card didn't do us much good unless we distributed it, by passing it out at trade shows, during visits with clients and prospects, and by advertising our contact information in print ads.

Well, your website is now your business card, although Google has certainly made it much easier to find you. Now the key is to make sure your "business card" doesn't end up at the bottom of the stack, where no one will look for you. Creating content you can seed on third-party sites and link back to your website is one way to help move your "business card" up in the deck.

The more links you have from other websites, the more credible your company will be viewed by the search engines, and the higher your site will rank.

There are a number of ways you can create content for these third-party sites, but let's just focus on one today -- Slideshare.

Slideshare is like YouTube, except instead of sharing videos, you share Powerpoint presentations. For businesses, this is great, because it's very likely you have at least one sales or marketing person in your organization who has created a Powerpoint, so the technology isn't daunting.

There are just a few things you need to know while creating a Slideshare presentation to make it an effective piece of content for SEO purposes:

1. Include keywords that are important search terms for your audience so that your presentation can be ranked well by search engines;
2. Include links in the presentation to your website so that prospects can find your site and so the search engines can associate the content with your company;
3. Try to make it interesting to generate the most interest in your topic.
4. Once you've posted it, share it via your social media accounts, by e-mail and by embedding it on your website.

If you haven't jumped in the content marketing pool yet, start with Slideshare. It's not difficult and it'll help you get a feel for the SEO and promotional opportunities with third-party content sites.

Here's an example of a Slideshare we prepared for our client EDCO Awards, a manufacturer of corporate awards.

Need help with your SEO and website marketing? Contact Pilot Fish at 877-799-9994 ext. 2104 or fill out this form.

Source: http://kiss-seo-wd.blogspot.com/2013/04/slideshare-delivering-in-promotion-and.html

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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Risk factor for depression can be 'contagious'

Apr. 18, 2013 ? A new study with college roommates shows that a particular style of thinking that makes people vulnerable to depression can actually "rub off" on others, increasing their symptoms of depression six months later.

The research, from psychological scientists Gerald Haeffel and Jennifer Hames of the University of Notre Dame, is published in Clinical Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Studies show that people who respond negatively to stressful life events, interpreting the events as the result of factors they can't change and as a reflection of their own deficiency, are more vulnerable to depression. This "cognitive vulnerability" is such a potent risk factor for depression that it can be used to predict which individuals are likely to experience a depressive episode in the future, even if they've never had a depressive episode before.

Individual differences in this cognitive vulnerability seem to solidify in early adolescence and remain stable throughout adulthood, but Haeffel and Hames predicted that it might still be malleable under certain circumstances.

The researchers hypothesized that cognitive vulnerability might be "contagious" during major life transitions, when our social environments are in flux. They tested their hypothesis using data from 103 randomly assigned roommate pairs, all of whom had just started college as freshmen.

Within one month of arriving on campus, the roommates completed an online questionnaire that included measures of cognitive vulnerability and depressive symptoms. They completed the same measures again 3 months and 6 months later; they also completed a measure of stressful life events at the two time points.

The results revealed that freshmen who were randomly assigned to a roommate with high levels of cognitive vulnerability were likely to "catch" their roommate's cognitive style and develop higher levels of cognitive vulnerability; those assigned to roommates who had low initial levels of cognitive vulnerability experienced decreases in their own levels. The contagion effect was evident at both the 3-month and 6-month assessments.

Most importantly, changes in cognitive vulnerability affected risk for future depressive symptoms: Students who showed an increase in cognitive vulnerability in the first 3 months of college had nearly twice the level of depressive symptoms at 6 months than those who didn't show such an increase.

The findings provide striking evidence for the contagion effect, confirming the researchers' initial hypothesis.

Based on these findings, Haeffel and Hames suggest that the contagion effect might be harnessed to help treat symptoms of depression:

"Our findings suggest that it may be possible to use an individual's social environment as part of the intervention process, either as a supplement to existing cognitive interventions or possibly as a stand-alone intervention," they write. "Surrounding a person with others who exhibit an adaptive cognitive style should help to facilitate cognitive change in therapy."

According to the researchers, the results of this study indicate that it may be time to reconsider how we think about cognitive vulnerability.

"Our study demonstrates that cognitive vulnerability has the potential to wax and wane over time depending on the social context," say Haeffel and Hames. "This means that cognitive vulnerability should be thought of as plastic rather than immutable."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Association for Psychological Science.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. G. J. Haeffel, J. L. Hames. Cognitive Vulnerability to Depression Can Be Contagious. Clinical Psychological Science, 2013; DOI: 10.1177/2167702613485075

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/lBxtXHdmyR4/130418154413.htm

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Friday, April 19, 2013

Kepler Telescope Spots 3 New Planets In The 'Goldilocks Zone'

The small squares superimposed on this image of the Milky Way galaxy show where in the sky the Kepler telescope is hunting for Earth-like planets. Kepler, which launched in 2009, has identified more than 100 planets.

NASA

The small squares superimposed on this image of the Milky Way galaxy show where in the sky the Kepler telescope is hunting for Earth-like planets. Kepler, which launched in 2009, has identified more than 100 planets.

NASA

Astronomers have found three planets orbiting far-off stars that are close to Earth-sized and in the "habitable zone": a distance from their suns that makes the planets' surfaces neither too hot nor too cold, but just right.

One of the three planets orbits a star with the prosaic name Kepler-69.

"Kepler-69 is a sun-like star," says Thomas Barclay, a research scientist at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute who uses the Kepler space telescope, which is on a mission to search for Earth-like planets. It finds planets by looking for tiny dips in the light coming from a star. The dips come when a planet passes in front of a star. By measuring the interval between dips, astronomers can figure out how long it takes a planet to orbit its star.

? Back in the good old days, you'd find one or two crappy, Jupiter-like planets, and you'd be on the cover of 'Time' magazine. But those days are long gone.

The planet around Kepler-69 is "around 70 percent bigger than Earth, so what we call super-Earth-sized," says Barclay. "This represents the first super-Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone of a star like our sun."

Twenty five years ago, if you had asked astronomers if there were planets around other stars, they'd probably say maybe, but they'd admit they were just speculating.

Boy, have times changed. In the past two decades, using some innovative measurement techniques, astronomers have confirmed the existence of lots of planets ? 697, in fact ? according to the Exoplanet Orbit Database.

"Back in the good old days, you'd find one or two crappy, Jupiter-like planets, and you'd be on the cover of Time magazine. But those days are long gone," says Paul Butler, a planet hunter at the Carnegie Institution for Science. Most new planets barely elicit a yawn these days.

The Kepler mission is partly to blame for that. The spacecraft, which launched in 2009, has been wildly successful, having found more than 100 planets, most of which have been the nasty Jupiter-sized planets Butler talks about. But the three planets being announced today are different.

In addition to the one orbiting Kepler-69, there are two around Kepler-62 that are even closer to Earth-sized. Kepler-62 is a dimmer star than Kepler-69, so the planets' orbits must be closer to the star to keep them in the habitable zone. The planets around Kepler-62 are described in the online edition of the journal Science.

William Borucki, an astronomer with the NASA Ames Research Center and the principal investigator for Kepler, says the mission's goal is to find how many Earth twins are out there.

"If they're frequent, then there may be lots of life throughout the galaxy," says Borucki. "They may just be waiting for us to call and say, 'Hello, we'd like to join the club.' Or if we don't find any, the answer may be just the opposite. Maybe we're alone, there isn't anybody out there; there will never be a Star Trek because there's no place to go to."

And that's a sobering thought.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/18/177774505/kepler-telescope-spots-three-new-planets-in-the-goldilocks-zone?ft=1&f=1007

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Russia opens new probe into protest leader Navalny

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian investigators increased pressure on one of President Vladimir Putin's biggest critics on Thursday, opening a new criminal investigation against Alexei Navalny a day after he went on trial on theft charges.

Navalny, who has helped organize a wave of protests against Putin and is a campaigner against state corruption, denies any wrongdoing and says charges are being falsified against him as part of a Kremlin campaign to crush the opposition.

Russia's Investigative Committee, which answers directly to Putin, said Navalny and his brother Oleg were suspected of defrauding a company out of 3.8 million roubles ($120,000) by organizing mail transport for them at excessive prices in 2008.

It is the fourth criminal case opened against Navalny in recent months.

Navalny reacted wryly to the announcement of the new investigation on his Twitter feed as he traveled back to Moscow by train after going on trial on Wednesday on charges of theft in the city of Kirov.

"I woke up on the train. I found out that another criminal case has been launched. That means our trip was successful," he wrote.

The 36-year-old faces up to 10 years in jail in the trial that opened on Wednesday if he is convicted of stealing about $510,000 from a timber firm he was advising in Kirov in 2009. The trial has been adjourned until April 24.

The most prominent opposition leader to be tried in post-Soviet Russia, Navalny says he believes Putin, 60, ordered the investigations and trial against him to sideline him as a potential presidential rival.

The Kremlin denies putting pressure on the courts and says Putin does not use them for political ends. But Putin's former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin cast doubt on the trial this week, saying it may harm Russia's investment image.

POLITICAL JUSTICE

Navalny has been a thorn the government's side since starting an online campaign against state corruption in 2007.

A ruling party deputy was forced to resign in February when Navalny revealed on his blog that he had failed to declare $2 million worth of property in the U.S. state of Florida.

"It is obvious that all the cases against Navalny are politically motivated," veteran Russian rights activist, Svetlana Gannushkina, told Interfax.

Since Putin's return to the Kremlin last May after four years as prime minister, two members of the dissident punk band Pussy Riot have been jailed, a prominent protest leader has been thrown out of parliament and another is under house arrest.

In addition to the case that has put Navalny in the dock, he has been charged with embezzling up to $3.24 million from a political party in 2007.

Investigators said the latest case will be bundled together with another ongoing investigation into suspicions that Navalny, along with his brother, cheated a mail-transport company out of $1.79 million.

A spokesman for the Investigative Committee said last week that cases against Navalny had been speeded up because he had taunted the authorities.

More than a dozen protesters also face sentences of up to 10 years over clashes with police at a rally on the eve of Putin's inauguration last May, after which parliament pushed through stiff new penalties for demonstrators who stray out of line.

A group of human rights and opposition activists blamed riot police for initiating the clashes at the May 6 rally across the river from the Kremlin in a report published on Thursday.

The report, based on 600 witness interviews, case and video materials, accuses the authorities of exaggerating the scale of the violence and using excessive force.

About 600 protesters were detained at the rally, part of a campaign of protest against Putin's 13-year dominance of politics that at its peak saw 100,000 Russians on the streets but has since lost steam.

(Reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel; Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russia-opens-investigation-against-protest-leader-navalny-064736129.html

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Baldwin County Chase Ends With Florida Traffic Crash

A driver that fled from a traffic stop in Foley ended Thursday night in Escambia County.

The Florida Highway Patrol said the 2001 Honda Accord driven by 44-year old Rodney Durand Reynolds of Foley was spotted by the Baldwin County Sheriff?s Office? at County Road 87 and Highway 98 in Alabama. Baldwin County deputies attempted to overtake the vehicle as it continued eastbound at a high rate of speed on Highway 98 into Florida.

Reynolds turned right onto Bauer Road before turning onto Seratine Drive and crashing into a wooded area about 10:24 p.m.. He was apprehended and detained on scene by the Baldwin County Sheriffs Office.

Reynolds was placed under arrest by the FHP for DUI and driving while license suspended. He was also cited for careless driving and no proof of insurance. Additional charges are pending in Baldwin County. A passenger in his vehicle 39-year old Cynthia Foster of Gadsden, Ala., was not injured.

Source: http://www.northescambia.com/2013/04/baldwin-county-chase-ends-with-florida-traffic-crash

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Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Don't Take Promotions That Draw You Away from Your Main Strengths

When you're offered a promotion at work it's hard not to get excited and just take it. However, sometimes it's not always a good fit, and creativity blog 99U suggests you think twice before you say yes to a promotion.

99U points to the satirical, but still useful Peter Principle, that says when people get promoted they often go beyond their means and can't actually do the job. The lesson is that if a promotion doesn't fit into your skill set, it's probably not worth it, even if the pay's a lot higher:

If the newly offered promotion involves much of the same skill set with a minimal addition of new skills, then it?s likely a good fit. If however, the new position would draw you away from your core strengths, then perhaps you should reconsider. Either way, it?s important to examine whether any new competencies are ones you feel capable of acquiring. If you feel like you?d be a quick learner, then it might be worth rolling the dice. If not, then perhaps you should pass and wait for a more fitting assignment to come along.

If you're in line for a promotion, it's worth thinking about whether it's something you'll really be good at. It's easy to just just accept a promotion right away because it gets you further along in the company, but if it's not a good fit it might end up getting you in more trouble than it's worth.

"The Peter Principle" and Other Reasons To Think Twice Before Accepting a New Promotion | 99U

Photo by Egan Snow.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/jpkPAbi5aLE/dont-take-promotions-that-draw-you-away-from-your-main-472954036

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Pope Francis supports crackdown on US nuns

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? The Vatican said Monday that Pope Francis supports the Holy See's crackdown on the largest umbrella group of U.S. nuns, dimming hopes that a Jesuit pope whose emphasis on the poor mirrored the nuns' own social outreach would take a different approach than his predecessor.

The Vatican last year imposed an overhaul of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious after determining the sisters took positions that undermined Catholic teaching on the priesthood and homosexuality while promoting "radical feminist themes incompatible with the Catholic faith." Investigators praised the nuns' humanitarian work, but accused them of ignoring critical issues, including fighting abortion.

On Monday, the heads of the conference met with the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Archbishop Gerhard Mueller, who is in charge of the crackdown. It was their first meeting since Mueller was appointed in July.

In a statement, Mueller's office said he told the sisters that he had discussed the matter recently with Francis and that the pope had "reaffirmed the findings of the assessment and the program of reform."

The conference, for its part, said the talks were "open and frank," and noted that Mueller had informed them of Francis' decision.

"We pray that these conversations may bear fruit for the good of the Church," the conference said on its website.

The Vatican crackdown unleashed a wave of popular support for the sisters, including parish vigils, protests outside the Vatican's embassy in Washington, D.C., and a U.S. Congressional resolution commending the sisters for their service to the country.

Following Francis' election, several sisters had expressed hope that a Jesuit pope devoted to the poor and stressing a message of mercy rather than condemnation would take a gentler approach than his predecessor, Benedict XVI.

Francis has called for a more "tender" church and one that serves society's poorest ? precisely a message American sisters have stressed in their ministry in hospitals, hospices, soup kitchens and schools that serve some of the most marginalized in the U.S.

The Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit author who has been a staunch supporter of the U.S. sisters, cautioned against reading too much into the Vatican statement.

He noted that Francis' first appointment to the Vatican bureaucracy was that of the Rev. Jose Rodriguez Carballo as the No. 2 in the Vatican's congregation for religious orders. Rodriguez Carballo had been superior of the Friars Minor branch of the Franciscan order that was founded by the pope's namesake, St. Francis of Assisi, who devoted himself to helping the poor.

Martin said it would have been unusual for Francis to undo a process that has been years in the works and that as a Jesuit he is "naturally going to be sympathetic" to the challenges faced by members of religious orders, such as those represented by the nuns' conference.

As part of its imposed reforms, the Vatican appointed Seattle Archbishop Peter Sartain and two other bishops to oversee a rewriting of the conference's statutes, to review its plans and programs, approve speakers and ensure the group properly follows Catholic prayer and ritual.

The conference represents about 57,000 sisters, or 80 percent of U.S. nuns. It has argued that the Vatican reached "flawed" conclusions based on "unsubstantiated accusations." The group's officers have said they would participate in discussions with Sartain "as long as possible" but vowed they would not compromise their group's mission.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-francis-supports-crackdown-us-nuns-150211781.html

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