Monday, 11 February 2013

PFT: Pats could part with both Welker, Lloyd

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With the Patriots tepid on the topic of keeping cornerback Aqib Talib with a multi-year deal, his former college coach has offered a surprisingly strong assessment in response to the notion that Talib doesn?t work hard enough.

?[H]e loves to play football,? Mark Mangino recently told Jeff Howe of the Boston Herald.? ?He enjoyed practice time.? He hustled, made plays, did all of his drill work full speed, played hard in the games, did what was asked of him in the weight room, got bigger and stronger when he was with us.? I find that a little hard to believe.

?Things can change, obviously, but I stopped into the Tampa Bay Buccaneers training camp [last summer]. I visited with several members of the staff, front office people, strength coaches, trainers, assistant coaches. To the person, they told me what a great job Aqib was doing. ?He is showing leadership. He is working his tail off in the [OTAs].? He?s been a leader.? He is really busting his butt, and he is really working hard.?

?That doesn?t always happen. I have been to training camps in the past where I?ve had a former player that I?ve coached, and the coaches have come up to me and say, ?This player doesn?t work hard. He?s not into it.?? They?ll tell you the truth. When you go to these NFL places, they don?t mince any words.?

The Bucs may not have minced words, but they eventually traded Talib.? And it?s no surprise.? As coach Greg Schiano tries to build a roster of players of high character, Talib was one of several who simply didn?t fit.

That said, Talib possibly was working hard; it could be that his four-game suspension for violating the league?s policy regarding performance-enhancing substances prompted the trade.? And it could be that an Adderall-free Talib doesn?t work as hard as he does when taking the banned stimulant.

Still, it seems a little odd Mangino is singing Talib?s praises.? Throughout Talib?s various on-field and off-field struggles, Mangino has not been a particularly vocal defender.? Also, it was widely known during the weeks preceding the 2008 draft that Kansas coaches were not saying flattering things about Talib to scouts.

The question now for the Pats is whether they can strike a deal that will extend Talib?s stay beyond a handful of 2012 games.? If he leaves, they won?t have gotten much in return for the fourth-round pick they sent to Tampa.

But at least they got a seventh-round pick back in return.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/10/talk-in-new-england-that-welker-lloyd-could-both-be-gone/related/

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PFT: Niners TE Walker could seek starting job

Missouri+v+Kansas+PKV8so1zHyalGetty Images

With the Patriots tepid on the topic of keeping cornerback Aqib Talib with a multi-year deal, his former college coach has offered a surprisingly strong assessment in response to the notion that Talib doesn?t work hard enough.

?[H]e loves to play football,? Mark Mangino recently told Jeff Howe of the Boston Herald.? ?He enjoyed practice time.? He hustled, made plays, did all of his drill work full speed, played hard in the games, did what was asked of him in the weight room, got bigger and stronger when he was with us.? I find that a little hard to believe.

?Things can change, obviously, but I stopped into the Tampa Bay Buccaneers training camp [last summer]. I visited with several members of the staff, front office people, strength coaches, trainers, assistant coaches. To the person, they told me what a great job Aqib was doing. ?He is showing leadership. He is working his tail off in the [OTAs].? He?s been a leader.? He is really busting his butt, and he is really working hard.?

?That doesn?t always happen. I have been to training camps in the past where I?ve had a former player that I?ve coached, and the coaches have come up to me and say, ?This player doesn?t work hard. He?s not into it.?? They?ll tell you the truth. When you go to these NFL places, they don?t mince any words.?

The Bucs may not have minced words, but they eventually traded Talib.? And it?s no surprise.? As coach Greg Schiano tries to build a roster of players of high character, Talib was one of several who simply didn?t fit.

That said, Talib possibly was working hard; it could be that his four-game suspension for violating the league?s policy regarding performance-enhancing substances prompted the trade.? And it could be that an Adderall-free Talib doesn?t work as hard as he does when taking the banned stimulant.

Still, it seems a little odd Mangino is singing Talib?s praises.? Throughout Talib?s various on-field and off-field struggles, Mangino has not been a particularly vocal defender.? Also, it was widely known during the weeks preceding the 2008 draft that Kansas coaches were not saying flattering things about Talib to scouts.

The question now for the Pats is whether they can strike a deal that will extend Talib?s stay beyond a handful of 2012 games.? If he leaves, they won?t have gotten much in return for the fourth-round pick they sent to Tampa.

But at least they got a seventh-round pick back in return.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/10/delanie-walker-could-be-getting-a-chance-to-start-elsewhere/related/

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Lack of stiff opening round opposition a double edged sword for Canada in Sochi

So the draw is set for Sochi and the 2014 men?s Olympic hockey tournament. After qualifying tournaments played this past weekend across Europe, Canada is in a pool (Group B) with Finland, Norway and Austria ? one perennial medal contender and two just-happy-to-be-there squads.

What is the opposite of a Group of Death? Canada gets two virtual walkovers in its first three preliminary-round games and there are two schools of thought about that development.

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The good: In a venue as geographically removed from North America as Sochi is ? where the players will need to deal with the effects of travel and a 12-hour time change ? it is not a bad thing to face a couple of minnows early on to get their legs under them.

The bad: While other teams are getting battle-tested by more challenging opponents, Canada will be on cruise control for two-thirds of the preliminary round and could potentially play just the one meaningful game against the Finns before it gets to the one-and-done stage of the tournament.

Of course, all this presupposes that the NHL is actually going Sochi, which will still require some give-and-take at the bargaining table before it becomes a fait accompli.

The NHL has meetings scheduled with the International Ice Hockey Federation and the International Olympic Committee in New York later this week to see if they can come to an agreement.

Some time ago, the NHL ?shared? with both bodies the conditions under which it will consider participating in the 2014 Olympics so that when the stakeholders come to the bargaining table, there will be no surprises at the 11th hour.

The NHL wants a number of concessions, most of them involving access issues, including the right to show images from the Olympic hockey tournament on its own web site, for its own marketing purposes. Indications are that the IIHF is on board with some of the NHL?s demands, but there could be issues with the IOC ? which, as a matter of policy, rarely wants to relinquish control over any aspect of the Games. The fear is that if the IOC accedes to the NHL?s requests, other governing bodies in other sports, such as FIFA, will ask for even greater concessions.

It is a balancing act, kind of a CBA negotiation in microcosm. Deep down, the IOC must surely understand that the presence of NHL players at the Olympics greatly enhances the rights fees that they can charge to broadcasters for the Games.

On its side, the NHL must just as surely feel an obligation to NBC Sports, which signed a $2-billion deal with the league last year and then found itself without product to put on its cable sports channel during 3 1/2 months of the season, thanks to the lockout. Competing in Sochi ? even if it doesn?t commit to South Korea four years later ? would be seen as the NHL extending an olive branch to an important sponsor. There are enough good reasons on both sides to see them coming to an agreement, but until it actually happens, there are no guarantees.

For Sochi, Russia is in Pool A with Slovakia, the United States and the third qualifier, Slovenia, which will compete in the Olympics the first time in its history. In Pool C, Latvia earned the other Olympic qualifying berth and will join the Czech Republic, Sweden and Switzerland.

The IIHF is always tweaking and adjusting its format because it wants to be inclusive ? and give the second tier of the hockey-playing world a chance to compete against the big boys.

In Vancouver, Canada had just a so-so record in the round-robin portion of the tournament ? a win over Norway, a shootout win over Switzerland and a loss to the United States. In the Olympics, where the three-points-for-a-victory system is in effect, that gave Canada just five out of a possible nine points and forced it to play an extra game in the qualification round (against Germany) before advancing to the quarter-finals.

There the Canadians met a rested Russian team that had cruised through the preliminaries ? and you probably remember the rest of the story. Canada came out like ?a gorilla out of a cage? (Russian goalie Ilya Bryzgalov?s colourful post-game description) and crushed the Russians. Afterward, most of the Canadian players agreed ? playing the extra game against the Germans actually helped them get untracked in the tournament. From there, they defeated the Slovaks and Americans in subsequent rounds and won the gold medal. Television ratings, in Canada and the United States, reached record levels.

Accordingly, the NHL holds considerable leverage here and if it ultimately decides to give Sochi a pass, it won?t be going to South Korea in 2018.

Some Russian players say they will defy the league and play in Sochi, no matter how the talks unfold, but aside from them, it would be a watered-down tournament without the NHL. No amount of warm and fuzzy Olympic profiles about the kids and minor-leaguers that would be playing instead is going to fool the hockey-watching public into thinking this is anything more than a second-rate show.

If the NHL stays home, about the only thing you can safely predict about the 2014 Olympics is that the gap between international hockey?s haves and have-nots will shrink considerably.

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Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/sports/hockey/lack-of-stiff-opening-round-opposition-a-double-edged-sword-for-canada-in-sochi/article8434618/?cmpid=rss1

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Sunday, 10 February 2013

LinkedIn's 4Q gets rave reviews from investors

FILE - In this Monday, May 9, 2011 file photo, LinkedIn Corp., the professional networking Web site, displays its logo outside of headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Linkedin is reporting their fourth quarter 2012 earnings on Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

FILE - In this Monday, May 9, 2011 file photo, LinkedIn Corp., the professional networking Web site, displays its logo outside of headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. Linkedin is reporting their fourth quarter 2012 earnings on Thursday, Feb. 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

(AP) ? Online professional-networking service LinkedIn's fourth-quarter performance added another line to its sterling resume as a public company.

The results announced Thursday extended LinkedIn Corp.'s uninterrupted streak of exceeding analysts' projections for both earnings and revenue. It marked the seventh consecutive quarter since LinkedIn's May 2011 IPO that the company has pulled that off, to the delight of investors.

The run of pleasant surprises is one of the reasons that LinkedIn's stock has tripled from its initial public offering price of $45. The shares surged $11.71, or 9.4 percent, to $135.80 in extended trading after the numbers came out.

Besides a 66 percent increase in earnings from the previous year, the latest quarter was highlighted by an influx of 15 million accounts to propel LinkedIn's total membership beyond 200 million. Visitors to LinkedIn's website also viewed 67 percent more pages than the previous year, an indication that the company's efforts to add more business news and career tips from top business executives are paying off.

Wall Street's embrace of LinkedIn contrasts with the cold response given to other Internet services that have gone public during the past few years. Most of them are trading below their IPO prices. The most notable is Facebook Inc., whose stock is worth about 25 percent less than it was when it made its market debut in May.

Although both run websites devoted to connecting people with common interests, LinkedIn and Facebook are targeting different audiences. Facebook focuses mostly on letting friends and family share good times and swap stories, while LinkedIn concentrates on helping people advance their careers and helping companies fill jobs.

Facebook, which is based in Menlo Park, is the larger of the two services, with more than 1 billion active users and $5.1 billion in revenue last year. LinkedIn, which is based in Mountain View, Calif., has 202 million accountholders and revenue of $972 million in 2012.

But LinkedIn is growing more quickly, partly because it's less dependent on advertising than Facebook and most Internet services. In the fourth quarter, advertising accounted for 27 percent of LinkedIn's revenue. The remainder comes from various tools that it sells to help recruit workers and glean more insights from the information that its users post on its website.

Reflecting its belief that the member data are becoming increasingly valuable, LinkedIn said Thursday that it intends to raise some prices this year. Setting up a member profile remains free. The price increase reflects the additional information that the company has accumulated as its membership has more than doubled in less than two years, according to Steve Sordello, LinkedIn's chief financial officer. The company provided no specifics on the increases.

LinkedIn earned $11.5 million, or 10 cents per share, during the final three months of last year. That compared to $6.9 million, or 6 cents per share, a year earlier.

If not for the costs of employee stock compensation and certain other charges, LinkedIn said it would have earned 35 cents per share. That was far above the average estimates of 19 cents per share among analysts surveyed by FactSet.

Revenue soared 81 percent from the previous year to $304 million ? about $24 million above analyst forecasts.

LinkedIn's revenue outlook for the current quarter and all of 2013 were roughly in line with analyst estimates, setting the stage for the company to clear those financial hurdles once again.

Management's forecast for annual revenue of $1.4 billion this year appears conservative, given that it would translate into an increase of about 45 percent from last year. In 2012, LinkedIn's annual revenue rose 86 percent.

"We are trying to utilize a prudent approach to year-over-year growth," Sordello told analysts during an analyst conference call.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-02-07-US-Earns-LinkedIn/id-fef9fa0048da4fb3b660f24ef31df0f6

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APNewsBreak: Flaws found in missile shield

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Secret Defense Department studies cast doubt on whether a multibillion-dollar missile defense system planned for Europe will ever be able to protect the U.S. from Iranian missiles as intended.

Military officials say they believe the problems can be overcome and are moving forward. But proposed fixes could be difficult.

The studies are the latest to highlight serious problems for a plan that has been criticized on several fronts. Republicans claim it was hastily drawn in an attempt to appease Russia. But Russia is also critical of the plan, which it believes is really intended to counter its missiles.

The classified studies were summarized in a briefing for lawmakers by the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office. The briefing, which was not classified, was obtained by The Associated Press.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/apnewsbreak-flaws-found-missile-shield-081631698--politics.html

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Hunt for Christopher Dorner becomes major PR problem for L.A. police (+video)

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck says he will review alleged cop killer Christopher Dorner's charges of racism. It could be an important step in reversing the LAPD?s history of corruption and abuse.

By Brad Knickerbocker,?Staff writer / February 10, 2013

A digital billboard along Santa Monica Boulevard shows a "wanted" alert for former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner, suspected in a spree of violence as part of a vendetta against law enforcement after being fired by the department.

Reed Saxon/AP

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The hunt for alleged cop killer Christopher Dorner has turned into a major public relations challenge for law enforcement officials, in particular the Los Angeles Police Department working its way back from a history of corruption and abuse.

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Not only have hundreds of well-trained officers equipped with military-style vehicles ? including helicopters with thermal imaging devices one pilot says can pick out a rabbit in a snowstorm ? been unable to find the man charged with killing three people and wounding two others on a rampage aimed at police officers and their families.

The LAPD also has been forced to reexamine the reasons for Mr. Dorner?s dismissal as a police officer in 2009 ? brought about, Dorner charges in the 11-page manifesto he posted on Facebook, by racism in the department. And the LAPD is having to make amends to the two people ? a middle-aged Hispanic woman and her mother delivering newspapers ? wounded when police riddled their truck with gunfire. (The women?s truck was neither the make nor the color of Dorner?s pickup later found abandoned.)

How much do you know about the Second Amendment? A quiz.

The search for Dorner continued Sunday in and around the San Bernardino mountains east of Los Angeles, but police were on edge and alert to the possibility that the alleged killer had left California. Police in Las Vegas (where Dorner owns property) are now traveling in pairs, and motorcycle patrol officers have been ordered into less-vulnerable cruisers.

Given Dorner?s claims about why he was fired, which detail specific episodes with specific senior officers named, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck has ordered an official review of the case, which occurred before he took over the department.

"I am aware of the ghosts of the LAPD's past and one of my biggest concerns is that they will be resurrected by Dorner's allegations of racism within the department," Chief Beck said in a statement Saturday. "Therefore, I feel we need to also publicly address Dorner's allegations regarding his termination of employment."

In his manifesto, Dorner warns that the killing will continue until ?the department states the truth about my innocence.?

But Beck says, "I do this not to appease a murderer?. I do it to reassure the public that their police department is transparent and fair in all the things we do."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/SkeTvFv9GsY/Hunt-for-Christopher-Dorner-becomes-major-PR-problem-for-L.A.-police-video

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Town of Tessalit in Mali falls to French

GAO, Mali (AP) ? A Malian official says French forces have taken another town in north Mali from Islamic insurgents. They're now in Tessalit.

Aicha Belco Maiga, president of the government body representing the area of Tessalit, confirmed by telephone from her home in the capital Bamako that her town had been retaken by French forces. She is in contact with a colleague in Tessalit.

"Since 8 a.m. this morning, French troops are in Tessalit. They control the entrance to the town, as well as the administrative buildings," said Maiga.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/town-tessalit-mali-falls-french-142401718.html

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The amazing amphibians and reptiles of the Philippine island Luzon

Friday, February 8, 2013

A recent study of the amphibians and reptiles of Sierra Madre Mountain Range, northeastern Luzon, reveals a preliminary enumeration of more than 100 species that contribute to the unique biodiversity of the region. At present, the Luzon region's herpetological range stands at more than 150 species. Out of these, a total of 49 amphibian species have been documented, 44 of which are native and a remarkable 32 endemic. In the world of reptiles, Luzon can boast with 106 native species, 76 of which are unique to this region.

The catalogue published in the open access journal Zookeys features a fascinating range of reptiles and amphibians, such as the beautifully coloured colubrid snake Hologerrhum philippinum, which is one of the four endemic snake genera from the region and can be recognized by the vibrant-yellow skin decoration. Another species that provokes amazement is the bizarre soft-shell turtle Pelochelys cantorii. The variety described in this study includes fascinating frogs, crocodiles, snakes, lizards and many more, offering a menagerie of shapes and colours all documented in stunning photography.

With such a great array of biodiversity, the northern Philippines has been the focus of of large numbers of new species discoveries and re-discoveries of new species in recent decades, establishing it as a major regional biodiversity hotspot. The herpetological diversity of the island may grow to as many as 90-100 (70-80% endemic) amphibian species and as many as 150-160 reptiles with the contributions of ongoing biodiversity studies in the near future. It will be a major challenge to monitor these communities through time in order to assess their responses to land use changes, climate change, resource extraction, introduced species, emerging infectious disease, and habitat degradation.

With the initial baseline information provided in the survey, tremendous opportunities exist for future studies in taxonomy, biogeography, ecology and conservation of northern Luzon's amphibians and reptiles. Conservation of Luzon's vertebrate biodiversity remains an on-going effort, challenged by rapid development,logging, mining and conversion of natural habitats into agricultural lands to provide food for a burgeoning human population.

###

Brown RM, Siler CD, Oliveros CH, Welton LJ, Rock A, Swab J, Van Weerd M, van Beijnen J, Jose E, Rodriguez D, Jose E, Diesmos AC (2013) The amphibians and reptiles of Luzon Island, Philippines, VIII: the herpetofauna of Cagayan and Isabela Provinces, northern Sierra Madre Mountain Range. ZooKeys 266: 1-120. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.266.3982

Pensoft Publishers: http://www.pensoft.net

Thanks to Pensoft Publishers for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126702/The_amazing_amphibians_and_reptiles_of_the_Philippine_island_Luzon

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Saturday, 9 February 2013

Nikki Reed: Hanson's 'Get the Girl Back' Video Guest Star! - Just Jared

Nikki Reed sprints down the sidewalk as part of her morning workout routine on Wednesday (February 6) in Los Angeles.

The 24-year-old actress was joined by her pet pooch for the jog.

PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Nikki Reed

Nikki, a Hanson fan, recently took part in their upcoming video for their song ?Get the Girl Back.?

The band recruited Nikki, along with Kat Dennings, Drake Bell, and Drew Seeley to participate! ?It was a very fun thing because they [Nikki and Kat] are genuine fans of our band,? the band told AOL.

Take a sneak peek at the video below!

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Source: http://www.justjared.com/2013/02/09/nikki-reed-hansons-get-the-girl-back-video-guest-star/

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Friday, 8 February 2013

Obama aides meet with business groups about spending cuts (Washington Bureau)

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Police arrest 3 for threatening Kashmir girl band

In this Sunday, Dec. 23, 2012 photo, members of Indian-controlled Kashmir?s first all-girl rock band Pragaash, or First Light, perform at the annual 'Battle of the Bands' in Srinagar, India. The band has decided to disband after only one concert because of threats its three teenaged members received on social media and harsh criticism from a top Muslim cleric and separatists, who criticized it as ?Western-style cultural waywardness.? The fate of Pragaash highlights the simmering tension between modernity and tradition in Muslim-majority Kashmir, where an armed uprising against Indian rule and a relentless crackdown by government forces have killed over 68,000 people since 1989. (AP Photo)

In this Sunday, Dec. 23, 2012 photo, members of Indian-controlled Kashmir?s first all-girl rock band Pragaash, or First Light, perform at the annual 'Battle of the Bands' in Srinagar, India. The band has decided to disband after only one concert because of threats its three teenaged members received on social media and harsh criticism from a top Muslim cleric and separatists, who criticized it as ?Western-style cultural waywardness.? The fate of Pragaash highlights the simmering tension between modernity and tradition in Muslim-majority Kashmir, where an armed uprising against Indian rule and a relentless crackdown by government forces have killed over 68,000 people since 1989. (AP Photo)

(AP) ? Three people have been arrested in Indian-controlled Kashmir for allegedly threatening the first Kashmiri all-girl rock band, which disbanded after its debut concert following abusive comments on social media and a demand from a top Muslim cleric that they stop performing.

The three have been booked for criminal intimidation and violating Internet laws, police officer Afadul Mujtaba said Thursday. If convicted, they could be jailed for up to seven years each. They were arrested Wednesday night

The controversy over the band Pragaash, or "First Light" in Kashmiri, highlights the simmering tension between modernity and tradition in Muslim-majority Kashmir, where an armed uprising against Indian rule and a crackdown by government forces have killed more than 68,000 people since 1989.

Police are looking for at least a dozen other people whose comments were abusive. However, no action has been taken against the cleric for describing the girls' band as a non-Islamic activity.

The arrests came as one of the band members told India's CNN-IBN channel that the group had decided to stop singing because of the cleric's edict, and not merely because of the online abuses. "Everything was going fine till the fatwa was issued," she said, referring to the cleric's order.

The TV channel did not identify the band member, who also said the band members respected the cleric's decision because he was "more aware of our religion." She urged the media to stop reporting on the case.

Pragaash performed in public for the first time in December in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-controlled Kashmir. It won third place in an annual "Battle of the Bands" rock show organized by an Indian paramilitary force as part of a campaign to win hearts and minds in the region.

Soon after the show, Kashmiri pages on social networking sites like Facebook hotly debated the band. Some wondered whether the performance was appropriate in Muslim-dominated Kashmir, while others raised broader questions on the Islamic approach to music and the role of women in the society.

Many commenters backed the girls, but others were abusive, hurling sexual slurs and calling for them and their families to be expelled from the region.

The controversy deepened Saturday after Omar Abdullah, the region's top elected official, promised a police probe into the threats and wrote on Twitter that "the talented teenagers should not let themselves be silenced by a handful of morons."

The all-girl band then came under the scrutiny of various groups.

Mufti Bashiruddin Ahmad, Kashmir's state-sponsored cleric, issued a fatwa on Sunday ordering the girls to "stop from these activities and not to get influenced by the support of political leadership."

Kashmir's main separatist alliance, the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, also did not approve of the band, calling the band "a step toward Westernization of young girls."

However, the alliance also distanced itself from the cleric's edict, and denied the girls were under threat. It said the Indian media was "blowing up a small issue with a purpose to defame the Kashmiri freedom struggle."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-07-AS-Kashmir-Girl-Band/id-c9accebef63a418a8cead0857daa8133

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Researchers Take a Closer Look at the Most Common and Powerful Triggers of Depression

Like a sudden forest fire with no traceable origin, depression often flares up for no apparent reason. Sometimes, though, one can identify a catalyst?the lightning bolt that delivered the spark. On its own no single misfortune can fully explain why and how someone develops depression, and depression sometimes arises and lingers largely irrespective of events or circumstances outside the mind. But some painful experiences?such as the death of a loved one, divorce and abrupt unemployment?can trigger individual episodes of depression, especially the very first incidence.

For a long time psychiatrists and psychologists have lumped such triggers together under rather vague umbrella terms, including "severe psychosocial stressors" and "stressful life events." In recent years, however, a few researchers have looked more carefully at the different kinds of events that provoke a depressive episode. The evidence they have collected so far argues for a more nuanced understanding of how stress interacts with individual susceptibility to depression, how quickly depression follows different types of stress, and how best to treat depression in these various situations.

The current guidebook for psychiatrists, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV (DSM-IV), defines a major depressive episode as at least five characteristic symptoms of depression persisting two weeks or longer. Symptoms include low mood and energy, insomnia, feelings of worthlessness, diminished pleasure in daily activities and weight change; to meet the criteria for a diagnosis, the symptoms must interfere with one's work or social life.

The taxonomy of events that precipitate a major depressive episode is vast and diverse. Some people become depressed after learning that they have a serious illness, after a natural disaster destroys their homes or when they fail to achieve important goals. Depression is also prevalent among those who have survived rape and war. The most common trigger of depression is loss, which takes many different forms, including economic misfortune, unexpected unemployment and the loss of cherished possessions. According to large surveys, around 44 percent of depressive episodes are preceded by "interpersonal loss," such as the death of a loved one, divorce, the end of a romantic relationship or the fact that a close friend has moved to another part of the country. In other words, a severed connection with another person probably triggers more depression than any other kind of painful experience.

An event that catalyzes a depressive episode does not have to be catastrophic?sometimes what seems like mild stress or a minor loss to most people is enough to plunge someone into murky misery that refuses to fade. It all depends on an individual's vulnerability to depression, which is determined by a complex interaction of many different factors, including: sources of stress in one's life; family history of mental illness; cognitive style?that is, the patterns of thought unique to an individual; and psychosocial factors, such as adversity in early childhood and the presence or absence of caring relatives and friends. Someone with low vulnerability and no previous depressive episodes may survive a devastating hurricane or emerge from a period of grief following the death of a sibling having never experienced true depression. In contrast, someone at high risk of depression with little social support might fall into the depths of despair for months on end after a budding romance wilts and withers.

Kenneth Kendler of Virginia Commonwealth University and other researchers have argued that people at high risk for depression are "prekindled"?it might not take much to spark their first depressive episode and, from then on, they are increasingly susceptible to spontaneous bouts of depression not triggered by any specific event. A bigger spark?or a greater number of small sparks?is needed to kindle depression in people whose risk is lower, and any relapses are more likely to be linked to a particular loss or stressful experience, rather than flaring up on their own.

An example of how stress interacts with individual susceptibility to depression comes from recent research by George Slavich of the University of California, Los Angeles, and his colleagues. Among 100 people who had been diagnosed with major depressive disorder, those who had experienced greater adversity in their childhoods and who had a longer history of depression were more likely to have had episodes of depression triggered by relatively minor forms of loss. Past experiences had lowered their threshold for depression or, as Kendler might say, prekindled their minds?the embers of depression were still warm. Slavich and his colleagues speculate that people who lose important relationships early on?through the death of a parent, for example?may become especially sensitive to even small losses in the future, especially interpersonal losses.

Slavich has also found that the deliberate rejection of one person by another?a form of interpersonal loss known as "targeted rejection"?is a particularly powerful catalyst of depression. In one study, he and his colleagues interviewed 27 people who had been diagnosed with major depressive disorder. Twelve of 16 participants (75 percent) who had experienced targeted rejection developed depression within 30 days; only three of 11 interviewees (27 percent) who had not been actively rejected became depressed that quickly. Overall, the onset of depression was three times faster following targeted rejection than other forms of loss. The researchers note that rejection by one person often involves subtler exclusion from many others, a phenomenon they term rejection reverberation: if your boss fires you, you will probably lose contact with many of your fellow employees; if your partner unilaterally ends a romantic relationship, you may lose some mutual friends.

New understanding of how quickly interpersonal loss can trigger depression in certain vulnerable people is reflected in a recent change to the DSM. The current version, the DSM-IV, stipulates that someone who has recently lost a loved one should not be diagnosed with a major depressive episode unless his or her depressive symptoms persist longer than two months. If the symptoms have not lasted that long, the reasoning goes, then the person is most likely grieving?a typical and often transient response?rather than suffering from depression. The DSM-5, to be published this May, eliminates this caveat, allowing someone to be diagnosed with depression two weeks after the death of a loved one. It includes some footnotes distinguishing depression from grief, however. Whereas depression is usually constant, grief is more likely to ebb and flow in waves and it does not usually invoke the feelings of worthlessness and low self-esteem that are so characteristic of depression. Grievers long to be reunited with someone they loved; the depressed often believe that they are unlovable.

The DSM revision emerged from new studies confirming that bereavement is one of the most devastating forms of interpersonal loss and sometimes triggers a genuine depressive episode alongside grieving. Studies have also shown that people who are both grieving and depressed benefit from therapy and antidepressants.

In one experiment conducted in California, for example, 22 adults who had lost their spouses in the previous six to eight weeks and subsequently met the DSM-IV criteria for a major depressive episode volunteered to take a daily dose of bupropion, a commonly prescribed antidepressant also known by its brand name, Wellbutrin. Grief and depression responded differently to the treatment, suggesting that the volunteers were indeed experiencing both simultaneously: most people showed lessening symptoms of depression, but not of grief. In fact, some people found that as the fog of depression lifted they were able to grieve properly and confront the fact that their spouse was gone. Sidney Zisook of U.C. San Diego, who conducted the study with his colleagues, cautions that it is a small and uncontrolled trial, which means that the treated volunteers were not directly compared with a similar group of people who did not receive medication. The study was also sponsored by a pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline, for which Zisook has been a consultant.

When a patient shows symptoms of depression soon after a loss?whether the death of a spouse or a failed romance?clinicians face a dilemma: They must determine whether the patient is heading toward or has already developed true depression or, instead, whether the patient is passing through a phase of typical grief. Weighing factors such as changes in self-esteem and family history of mental illness can help clinicians make an informed evaluation in many cases, but some situations are more ambiguous. Psychiatry has no universal litmus test for depression. Richard Friedman of Weill Cornell Medical College and other psychiatrists have argued that the changes in the DSM-5 will discourage clinicians from carefully considering the difference between grief and depression, thereby encouraging overmedication. In line with DSM-IV, they advocate a period of watchful waiting for at least two months after a patient has lost a loved one before diagnosing depression. "There's nothing to be lost by waiting," Friedman says. "There's probably a tiny fraction of people at high risk for quickly developing depression after bereavement and they will have a known history of depression."

Zisook acknowledges that axing the bereavement exclusion in DSM-5 will help only a small segment of the population. When treating a vulnerable patient with a history of depression, however, a clinician may need to act quickly to prevent bereavement from triggering another major depressive episode. That is what the DSM-5 allows. Zisook also thinks that the DSM-IV confused many clinicians by implying that grief does not last longer than two months. To the contrary, Zisook says, grief can last a lifetime. He further points out that antidepressants are not the only or necessarily the best option for people who are both depressed and grieving. Talk therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy?which involves recognizing and changing maladaptive thought patterns?work as well.

More effective treatments will likely require a much clearer understanding of exactly what happens in the brain and body during depression. As with the majority of mental disorders, depression's underlying biology remains cloudy?but projects such as the National Institute of Mental Health's Research Domain Criteria are making impressive progress. For now, although we may not be able to govern all the genetic and social factors that kindle our minds, we can learn how to contain the sparks life flings at us. "At the end of the day, it's not stressful events alone that result in depression," Slavich says. "It's about the differences in how our brains construe those types of events. All the stress we experience gets translated into the types of biological and cognitive processes that precipitate depression. Some people ruminate about them and others don't. Some people may never develop depression, no matter how badly they are rejected. That's the silver lining?although we can't always control whether someone dies or whether our girlfriend breaks up with us, we can try to control how we think about it and deal with it." Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/researchers-closer-look-most-common-powerful-triggers-depression-123000209.html

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Thursday, 7 February 2013

Investor sues Apple, wants more cash

(AP) ? With its annual meeting looming and its stock on the decline, Apple is facing a rebellion from an influential investor who wants the company to stop stockpiling cash and give it to shareholders instead.

Greenlight Capital said Thursday that it is suing Apple in a New York federal court over the company's proposal to make it more difficult for it to issue preferred stock. David Einhorn, who heads the investment fund, said the proposal would close down one avenue for Apple to reward shareholders with more cash.

Preferred stock is designed primarily as a way for companies to deliver a fixed income to shareholders. It differs from common stock, which generally doesn't promise a regular flow of income but rather is a wager on a company's long-term growth.

Apple is still the world's most valuable company, but its stock has lost 35 percent of its value since September, as it's become obvious that its once-rapid growth has slowed down. The company is fabulously profitable, and Wall Street wants the company to share more of that money with its shareholders rather than tucking it away in low-yielding bank accounts.

"Apple has $145 per share of cash on its balance sheet. As a shareholder, this is your money," Einhorn said in a letter to the company. He has a history of criticizing companies publicly, often after shorting their stocks.

In a statement Thursday, Apple said its management and board continue "active discussions" about what to do with the money, and it will take Einhorn's proposal into consideration.

Its $137 billion in cash makes up nearly a third of Apple's stock market value. Shares of the Cupertino, Calif., company traded at $456.95 in the late afternoon, up $2.25, or 0.5 percent, from Wednesday's close.

Corporations normally don't hoard cash the way Apple does. They keep enough on hand for immediate needs, and either invest the rest in their operations or hand it out to shareholders in the form of dividends or stock buybacks. If they need more cash for, say, an acquisition, they borrow it.

Einhorn told CNBC on Thursday that Apple was acting like his grandmother "Roz," who grew up during the Great Depression. People who've experienced financial trauma, he said "sometimes feel like they can never have enough cash."

Roz was so careful about saving money, Einhorn said, that she never left messages on his answering machine out of concern that she'd be charged for the call.

Einhorn's criticism hints at Apple's lean years in the mid-90s. Former CEO Steve Jobs came out of that experience with a very tight hold on the company's purse strings. Apple has never explained its reasons for hoarding the cash other than to say it is preserving its options. Since his death in Oct. 2011, Apple has begun paying a quarterly dividend of $2.65 per share and started to repurchase some of its shares.

Analysts say the company should be doing more if it wants to lure investors back to its shares. Stuart Jeffrey at Nomura Securities calculates that Apple will generate about another $103 billion over three years to add to the $137 billion it has now, but it has only committed to returning $45 billion of this $240 billion in total cash to shareholders.

Wall Street didn't complain much about Apple's hoarding policies until its revenue growth started slowing. In the recent holiday quarter, Apple's revenue rose 18 percent from a year ago ? a very good figure for a company of its size, but a far cry from the 50 percent-plus increases it has often posted since the 2007 launch of the first iPhone. Apple hasn't launched a new ground-breaking product since the iPad in 2010, so the company is forced to expand the appeal of its current products to achieve growth.

The slowing growth has scared away investors who focus on fast-growing companies, and the relatively small dividend means the company doesn't get much respect from investors who look for regular income, analysts say.

Greenlight, a shareholder since 2010 with 1.3 million Apple shares worth nearly $600 million, wants Apple to create a class of preferred stock that carries a higher dividend, and give it away to current shareholders. That way, he believes the company would appeal to value investors and those who are risk-averse.

Einhorn said his firm has been talking to Apple over the past several months about the creation of the new share class. Apple, he said, rejected the idea in September. The company doesn't currently issue preferred stock. At its annual meeting on Feb. 27, it plans to ask shareholders to approve a measure that would force the board to get shareholder approval before issuing preferred shares.

Apple said in its proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission that its board does not plan to issue preferred stock in the future and believes it is "appropriate" to eliminate the possibility from its charter.

Greenlight urges Apple shareholders to vote against the proposal. In the lawsuit, it claims that the proposal bundles three distinct proposals that the SEC requires to be separated so shareholders can vote on each one.

In its statement, Apple said that even if the proposal passes, it could still adopt Greenlight's concept and issue preferred stock.

Apple has at least one major shareholder on its side. The California Public Employees' Retirement System, the country's largest pension fund, said in an SEC filing Monday that it will vote for Apple's proposal, which would also let shareholders vote against directors. CalPERS owns 2.7 million Apple shares, nearly three times as many as Greenlight.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-07-Apple-Greenlight/id-04dd99df84cf4dacb8f88edb799b812f

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Global Rumblings: How To Kill A Drone:

Since Barack Obama recently took it upon himself to label himself ?dictator? with free will to kill Americans with drones, isn?t it time that Americans?learn how to?fight back and kill drones? Where there is a will, there is a way! This excellent article informs Americans who are completely disgusted with the ?Police State? our once free nation has become on how to kill UAV?s. If UAV?s are going to be used to kill Americans, Americans need to?learn how to?fight back. Our GOD given right to defend our own lives is a much higher power than either Barack Obama or?the 2nd Amendment?of the US Constitution or the US Pentagon and their killing machines. These monsters DESERVE to be grounded. Here?s how to do it!

The UAVs have two alternative systems for communication.

Line of sight radio :
In the military C-Band? 500 ? 1000 MHz that can be jammed with simple spark-gap radio

Satellite?communication :
In the Ku-Band between 10.95 ? 14.5 GHz, and? the?satellite?can be jammed.
The Uplink-Band?to?the?satellite?is 13.75 ? 14.5 GHz
The Downlink-Band?from?the?satellite?is 10.95 ? 12.75 GHz
And you should jam the Uplink frequencies with a jammer directed at thesatellite.

uavcom.jpg (29230 bytes)

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parab.jpg (8240 bytes)

Surprisingly, the resistance can tap off the military?s video feeds

As you can see in the specifications, the?satellitelink system uses the same civilian commercial technology as television broadcasting companies. And the surprise is that the resistance and others have tapped off the videos from the battlefield with simple commercial equipment.

If you jam the communication, then the operator becomes blind and the UAV will fly around until it crashes or the fuel is gone. But you must kill both links of communication to kill any rescue.

There are a limited number of?satellite?channels available which means that the?satellitelink becomes a bottleneck. The?satellite?is therefore used as a backup and jammer-rescue channel and for?single special operations?from far away from the target, while C-band radio is used for multiple simultaneous operations from near the targets. Every military base have their own UAVs that must be operated through the C-band radio. C-band radio is also reported to be used for take off and landing. Which means that?the C-band radio is your primary target.?The C-band radio is also easier to jam.

Read much more on how to destroy Americans latest and greatest enemy?here.

- Disasters - Economy Collapse - Mobs, Drones, Etc.

Source: http://globalrumblings.blogspot.com/2013/02/how-to-kill-drone.html

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MyFord Mobile adds PlugShare's location data, C-Max and Fusion Energi compatibility

MyFord Mobile adds PlugShares location data, CMax and Fusion Energi compatibility

Driving the kids to soccer practice in one of Ford's hybrid minivans might lead you to wonder why the Focus Electric gets all of the company's smartphone app love. Fortunately, Dearborn is teaming up with PlugShare to bring the latter's EV charging maps to a version of the MyFord Mobile app that's designed for the C-Max and Fusion Energi. The new app blends location and point-of-interest data, so if the little ones crave milkshakes after the game, the software can pinpoint the nearest power station that's beside a burger joint. The update is available for iOS and Android devices, and will also tell you how fuel-efficient your driving is -- without resorting to making things competitive.

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Source: MyFord Mobile

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/07/myford-plugshare-app-update/

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Sprint/Emmis Communications' New Music App ... - Radio Facts

Posted: February 5, 2013 at 9:56 am

?

emmis

In what is being marketed as the best local radio listening experience for a Sprint smartphone, Emmis Communications Corporation (Nasdaq: EMMS) will host a free event for broadcasters in order to ready them and their staff for the big roll out launch this year.

All stations are encouraged to have their IT & Engineering staff as well as others present at the free informational forum on Wednesday, February 27th in Indianopolis. The purpose of the event is to make sure stations are on the forefront in terms of knowledge on how to enhance and perpetuate this new technology for their listeners. NextRadio? is a product that is specific to local FM and HD radio, and allows listeners to access their local radio stations from their smartphones without using their data plan for pure internet streaming.

Emmis? Chief Technology Officer, Paul Brenner, said: ?Step one of this Sprint partnership was to win the opportunity to prove how radio can be on the leading edge of technology.? He encourages broadcasters and their staff to attend this forum, particularly while the Sprint/Emmis forum partnership is still being finalized, in order to learn about the nature of the agreement itself, as well as demonstrations and a hands on set up process, plus a Q&A.

Seating is limited. The event will be simulcast via webinar, and an alternate webinar-only event is scheduled for March 6th, but a hands on experience in February is encouraged by Emmis, so please visit www.NextRadioApp.com/events for registration details, or contact Mike Englebrecht, Director of Client Services, at menglebrecht@emmis.com.

Source: http://www.radiofacts.com/sprintemmis-communications-new-music-app-nextradio-event-this-month/

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Soccer Match-Fixing: Investigation Finds Global Betting Scam Fixed ...

(Reuters) - Hundreds of soccer matches have been fixed in a global betting scam run from Singapore, police said on Monday, in a blow to the image of the world's most popular sport and a multi-billion dollar industry.

About 680 suspicious matches including qualifying games for the World Cup and European Championships, and the Champions League for top European club sides, have been identified in an inquiry by European police forces, the European anti-crime agency Europol, and national prosecutors.

"This is a sad day for European football," said Rob Wainwright, director of Europol. "This is now an integrity issue for football. Those responsible for running the games should hear the warnings."

The world's most popular sport, soccer is played on every continent. The World Cup and Europe's Champions League are beamed worldwide and generate billions of dollars for national associations, clubs and broadcasters.

The matches in question were played between 2008 and 2011, the investigators said. About 380 of the suspicious matches were played in Europe, and a further 300 were identified in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

Corruption linked to Asian betting syndicates and organized crime has long been seen as a threat to the game, but Monday's announcement underlines the scale of the problem.

Ralf Mutschke, Director of Security for world soccer's governing body FIFA, said sports bodies and prosecutors needed to work more closely together.

"The support of law enforcement bodies, legal investigations, and ultimately tougher sanctions are required, as currently there is low risk and high gain potential for the fixers," said Mutschke, a German former police officer.

Last year the head of an anti-corruption watchdog estimated that $1 trillion was gambled on sport each year - or $3 billion a day - with most coming from Asia and wagered on soccer matches.

SINGAPORE CONNECTION

A German investigator described a network involving couriers ferrying bribes around the world, paying off players and referees in the fixing which involved about 425 corrupt officials, players and serious criminals in 15 countries.

"We have evidence for 150 of these cases, and the operations were run out of Singapore with bribes of up to 100,000 euros paid per match," said Friedhelm Althans, chief investigator for police in the German city of Bochum.

Singapore police said last month that they were helping Italian authorities to investigate alleged soccer match fixing involving a Singaporean, but said he had not been arrested or charged with any offence there.

German investigators said international matches were implicated as were games in Turkey, Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, Croatia, Austria, Hungary, Bosnia, Slovenia and Canada. Suspicious games had also been identified in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Fourteen people have already been convicted in Germany in connection with the investigation.

Austrian prosecutors are investigating 20 people, including players, on suspicion of fraud and money laundering linked to fixing and betting on soccer matches, a spokesman for prosecutors in the city of Graz said.

Investigators said no names of players or clubs would be released while the investigation proceeded. However, the fixing also included top flight national league matches in several European countries, as well as two Champions League matches, including one played in Britain.

UEFA, European soccer's governing body, said it expected to receive further information from Europol in the coming days.

"As part of the fight against the manipulation of matches, UEFA is already cooperating with the authorities on these serious matters as part of its zero tolerance policy towards match-fixing in our sport," it added.

England's Football Association said it was not aware of any "credible reports into suspicious Champions League fixtures in England."

Soccer has been affected by bribery scandals in the past, with the English game suffering in the 1960s and Italian soccer hit by a series of fixing cases in recent years.

The growth of televised sport and technology that allows gamblers to bet during a match have created fresh opportunities for fraudsters with links to organized crime.

Corruption goes beyond soccer. Three Pakistani international cricketers were jailed in Britain in 2011 for their part in a scam where players agree to rig a specific part of a game, so-called "spot fixing".

TIP OF THE ICEBERG

Althans said that while German police had concrete proof of 8 million euros ($11 million) in gambling profits from the match fixing, this was probably the tip of the iceberg.

Investigators described how gang members immediately subordinate to the Singapore-based leader of a worldwide network were each tasked with maintaining contacts with corrupt players and officials in their parts of the world.

Laszlo Angeli, a Hungarian prosecutor, gave an example of how the scam worked. "The Hungarian member, who was immediately below the Singapore head, was in touch with Hungarian referees who could then attempt to swing matches at which they officiated around the world," he said.

Accomplices would then place bets on the internet or by phone with bookmakers in Asia, where bets that would be illegal in Europe were accepted. "One fixed match might involve up to 50 suspects in 10 countries on separate continents," said Althans.

"Even two World Cup qualification matches in Africa, and one in Central America, are under suspicion," Althans added.

($1 = 0.7301 euros)

(Reporting By Thomas Escritt; Editing by Janet McBride, David Stamp and Giles Elgood, Martin Howell)

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/05/soccer-match-fixing-investigation-betting-scam_n_2622092.html

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Wednesday, 6 February 2013

White House denies report of replica Oval Office

President Barack Obama in the Oval Office in September 2012. (Pete Souza/White House)

After days of dodging questions about a story reporting that a replica Oval Office is being built at the White House, White House press secretary Jay Carney on Wednesday publicly dismissed the report.

The reports "are false," Carney told reporters at Wednesday's White House press briefing. "No one is moving from the West Wing, including the president."

Real Clear Politics last week, citing several unnamed sources, reported that the replica Oval Office was being built for the president to use while the West Wing undergoes extensive renovations. Asked repeatedly to confirm or deny that story in the days since it was published, Carney refused to comment and referred reporters to the General Services Administration, which also refused to comment.

On Wednesday, Carney acknowledged that "constant work [is being] undertaken" in the West Wing to make improvements and renovations, but said he had no details about specific renovations.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/white-house-denies-report-replica-oval-office-182731454--politics.html

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Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Kidnapped Boy Held In Alabama Bunker, Happy To Be Home With ...

MIDLAND CITY, Ala. ? The man who held a 5-year-old boy captive for nearly a week engaged in a firefight with SWAT agents storming his underground bunker before he was killed during the rescue operation, the FBI said Tuesday night. Also, bomb technicians scouring the property found two explosive devices, one in the bunker, the other in a plastic pipe negotiators used to communicate with the man.

Officers killed 65-year-old Jimmy Lee Dykes Monday, said a law enforcement official in Midland City, speaking on condition of anonymity. The bunker raid came six days after Dykes boarded a school bus, fatally shot the driver and abducted the boy, who by all accounts was unharmed.

Dykes "reinforced the bunker against any attempted entry by law enforcement," FBI Special Agent Jason Pack said in an email. The devices found were "disrupted," Pack said, though he did not say whether that meant they were detonated or disarmed. Officers will continue into Wednesday to sweep the 100-acre property and when they finish, investigators can more thoroughly investigate, Pack said.

For days, officers passed food, medicine, toys and other items into the bunker, which was similar to a tornado shelter and apparently had running water, heat and cable television.

On Monday, authorities said Dykes had a gun and appeared increasingly agitated, though it's unclear exactly how his behavior changed. Negotiations ? the details of which have not been made public ? were deteriorating. Agents stormed the bunker, whisking the boy to safety and leaving Dykes dead. The official who confirmed that officers killed Dykes requested anonymity because the person was not authorized to speak publicly about the investigation.

Neighbors said they heard what sounded like explosions and gunshots, though the FBI and local authorities would not confirm if shots were fired or explosives detonated.

By all accounts, despite his ordeal, the 5-year-old appeared to be acting like a normal kid, people around him say. He was running around, playing with a toy dinosaur and other action figures, eating a turkey sandwich and watching "SpongeBob SquarePants," relatives and Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson said.

"We know he's OK physically, but we don't know how he is mentally," Betty Jean Ransbottom, the boy's grandmother, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. She added that she feared the ordeal would stay with the child, who turns 6 on Wednesday, the rest of his life.

An FBI agent had been staying with the family, and relatives learned of the child's rescue after another agent at the scene called the person who was with them.

The family was relieved and grateful for all the support in a community where ribbons, fliers and vigils all symbolized the prayers for the safe return of the boy, whom law enforcement officials have identified by his first name, Ethan.

The boy's mother, in a statement released by the FBI, expressed her thanks for all the hard work of so many officers to bring her son home. The woman declined to be identified, the statement said.

"For the first time in almost a week, I woke up this morning to the most beautiful sight ... my sweet boy," she said. "I can't describe how incredible it is to hold him again."

Dale County Coroner Woodrow Hilboldt said Tuesday that he had not been able to confirm exactly how Dykes died because the man's body remained in the bunker. An autopsy was to be conducted in Montgomery once the body is taken away.

It also wasn't clear how authorities knew Dykes was armed, or what kind of surveillance they used to track his behavior and movement. Pack did not address the questions in Tuesday's email.

At the request of law enforcement authorities, Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta had approved the provision of certain equipment that could be employed to assist in the hostage situation, according to a U.S. official who requested anonymity to discuss a pending law enforcement matter. It is not clear whether the equipment was actually used.

In Midland City, a town of about 2,400 nestled among peanut and cotton fields, residents were relieved that the boy was safely rescued from Dykes, a man neighbors described as an unstable menace who beat a dog to death and threatened to shoot trespassers.

Children and teachers were trying to get back to normal, though some children who were on the bus where Dykes killed the driver have not yet returned to school, said Donny Bynum, superintendent of Midland City schools. Counselors and clergy are at the school to help any distraught students.

Officials hope to eventually throw a party to celebrate the boy's sixth birthday and to honor the memory of Charles Albert Poland Jr., the slain bus driver. No date has been set, Bynum said.

Midland City Elementary School principal Phillip Parker said he stands at the entrance to the school every day as the children arrive. The boy is a friendly, energetic child who comes up, shakes his hand and then continues on into the school as if he's in a hurry, Parker said.

The boy gave his mother a big hug at the hospital, where officers gave him a teddy bear, Olson said.

"He's just a bundle of joy," Olson said.

For now, the boy's family just wants things to go back to normal ? for all the reporters to go home, for him to be like any other kid.

"He has gone through a terrible ordeal, and I don't know if he will ever get over it," said Debra Cook, the boy's great aunt. "I just want him to be all right."

___

Associated Press writer Phillip Rawls in Montgomery, Ala., and Lolita Baldor in Washington contributed to this report.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/05/ethan-kidnapped-boy-alabama-bunker-happy_n_2621451.html

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Busy Philipps: My Body Takes to Pregnancy Like Nobody?s Business

The Cougar Town star dishes on her evolving curves, and daughter Birdie's excitement at being a big sister.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/_UmPRGPeQj0/

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Daily Kos: Memo explains administration's legal rationale behind ...

MQ-9 Reaper drone

MQ-9 Reaper drones have been used in targeted killings since 2007.

NBC's Michael Isikoff reported Monday on a 16-page confidential Justice Department memo that gives details on when the United States can order the killing of American citizens if it's thought by an "informed, high-level" U.S. official that they are "senior operational leaders" of al Qaeda or an associated force. Suspects must be an imminent threat, capturing them must be considered "infeasible," and the actual attack must be conducted according to "law of war principles."

Such kill orders can be legally given, the undated "white paper" memo explains, even if there is no intelligence saying the targeted individuals are actively preparing an attack and even if they have never been indicted or otherwise charged with any crimes. Two such U.S. citizens, Anwar al-Awlaki and Samir Khan, were killed in a drone strike in Yemen in September 2011. The memo also expands the definition of what constitutes "imminence."

?In the Department?s view, a lethal operation conducted against a U.S. citizen whose conduct poses an imminent threat of violent attack against the United States would be a legitimate act of national self-defense that would not violate the assassination ban. Similarly, ?the use of lethal force, consistent with the laws of war, against an individual who is a legitimate military target would be lawful and would not violate the assassination ban.?
The memo, "Lawfulness of a Lethal Operation Directed Against a U.S. Citizen who is a Senior Operational Leader of Al Qa?ida or An Associated Force," argues against judicial intervention, stating flat out "that the Department notes that under the circumstances described in this paper, there exists no appropriate judicial forum to evaluate these constitutional considerations." Below the fold, you can read further analysis.

The memo was provided to members of the Senate Intelligence and Judiciary committees in June 2012 with the proviso that it be kept secret. It goes beyond what Attorney General Eric Holder and counter-terrorism adviser John Brennan have said publicly. Brennan has been nominated to head the Central Intelligence Agency, which carries out U.S. drone strikes:

?This is a chilling document,? said Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director of the ACLU, which is suing to obtain administration memos about the targeted killing of Americans. ?Basically, it argues that the government has the right to carry out the extrajudicial killing of an American citizen. ? It recognizes some limits on the authority it sets out, but the limits are elastic and vaguely defined, and it?s easy to see how they could be manipulated.?

In particular, Jaffer said, the memo ?redefines the word imminence in a way that deprives the word of its ordinary meaning.?

The memo is not, as blog-analyst Marcy Wheeler points out, one of the actual legal memos behind the targeting of suspects that Democratic and Republican senators have been seeking. Eleven of them, in fact, asked for those memos for at least the 12th time in a letter they sent to President Obama on Monday. Even though nine of the 11 signers sit on the committees to which the memo was sent eight months ago, their Monday letter clearly shows they are not satisfied with its explanations. They asked once again in their letter for legal documentation "so that Congress and the public can decide whether this authority has been properly defined, and whether the President's power to deliberately kill American citizens is subject to appropriate limitations and safeguards."

Wheeler, who has closely followed intelligence matters for years, notes that the administration's argument in the memo leans heavily on the broad authority given to the president in the congressional Authorization for the Use of Military Force approved on Sept. 14, 2001, in the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. But the memo also says, almost in passing, that the president could order the killing of Americans based on his inherent Article II powers. "[T]his paper does not attempt to determine the minimum requirements necessary to render such an operation against a U.S. citizen lawful in other circumstances."

In other words, the actual still-secret memos from the Justice Department's Office of the Legal Counsel, Wheeler opines, may lay out "other circumstances, other lesser requirements fulfilled, that would still allow the President to kill an American citizen."

But unless and until the memos are released, we won't know.

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Kevin Jon Heller at Opinio Juris goes into detail about the reasoning in the memo and speculates on why it may have been written the way it was.

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Steven D has a discussion on the subject here.

Source: http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/02/05/1184741/-Memo-explains-administration-s-legal-rationale-behind-targeted-killings-Senate-critics-not-soothed

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