Sunday, July 28, 2013

Londoner Aaron Yoon returns to Canada after being released from North African prison

London native Aaron Yoon is reportedly back in Canada, after spending 18 months in a north African prison on terrorism-related charges.

As of late Friday night, however, Yoon still hadn?t been publicly seen in London.

Yoon, 24, deported from Mauritania, landed at Toronto?s Pearson International Airport Friday afternoon, media reports said.

The RCMP confirmed to news outlets Yoon had returned to Canada, after a flight from Paris. He was apparently seen being escorted by Mounties off the flight in Toronto.

It was unclear whether Yoon was detained or was free to go home.

He wasn?t seen getting off afternoon or night flights to London from Toronto.

Reporters were camped outside his family?s south-end home into the night.

Mounties had said they would return Free Press calls, but hadn?t done so.

The former South Collegiate Institute student was arrested in his hotel in Mauritania?s capital, Nouakchott, in December 2011.

He was sentenced to two years on terrorism-related charges.

Yoon had maintained he travelled to Mauritania to study Arabic and Islam in May 2011.

Two schoolmates and travel companions, Ali Medlej and Xristos Katsiroubas, were killed in an al-Qaida-linked terrorist attack on an Algerian gas plant in January that killed 39 hostages.

dale.carruthers@sunmedia.ca

twitter.com/daleatLFPress

?

Source: http://www.lfpress.com/2013/07/26/aaron-yoon-returns-to-london-after-being-released-from-north-african-prison

Deval Patrick Dedication 4 labor day college football scores khan academy Espn College Football Eddie Murphy died

Friday, July 26, 2013

Hey Girl, Wanna Go to a Galaxy Far, Far Away With Ryan Gosling?

By Amos Barshad on
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Before we go any further, let's double down right now on the fact that what you are about to hear is just a rumor ? but, hey, this is new Star Wars. Right now, all we've got is rumors. So, anyway: According to Latino Review, the actors Disney is considering for roles in Episode VII are ?

Ryan Gosling and Zac Efron! Says LR, "As for what role Efron would be playing, we don?t know. He could be a Solo kid. But what I was told for sure is the Gosling went in for Skywalker?s son. Yes, that?s right Luke?s kid." Oh, also: "Leonardo DiCaprio was up for a role in Star Wars but passed. He passed because he wants to do a project that is being developed and that project is ? Robotech." Uh, yeah, sure, whatever there Leo, have fun with your little Smartech movie. We're kind of more focused on the Efron/Gosling/extended-Skywalker-Solo-family right now.

Speculating on how the two would fit in seems premature, as this could be nothing more than someone along the line misreading an e-mail. But as Latino Review points out, Disney's D23 Expo goes down in a few weeks, and some sort of Star Wars announcements are speculated to drop there. What I'm saying is, go ahead and make your "shirtless Gosling and Efron swinging lightsabers" fan art right now. If this all turns out to be a bunch of smoke and mirrors, we're sure you'll still find all kinds of uses for that thing.

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.

Source: http://www.grantland.com/blog/hollywood-prospectus/post/_/id/82635/hey-girl-wanna-go-to-a-galaxy-far-far-away-with-ryan-gosling

Leila Fowler Seth Meyers mothers day Mothers Day Cards Players Championship 2013 rod stewart derrick rose

President Obama's return to Jacksonville gives the city a national spotlight in economic recovery

President Barack Obama?s appearance Thursday in Jacksonville to talk about his vision for the nation?s economy will shine a national spotlight on how Jacksonville stands in its recovery from a painful recession.

When Obama came to Jacksonville for a campaign speech in the heat of summer 2012, the Jacksonville area?s unemployment rate was 8.7 percent that June. Since then, the area?s unemployment rate has dropped to 7 percent in June 2013.

?I think the community is becoming more confident in their future aspirations,? said Daniel Davis, president and CEO of JAX Chamber.

He said he sees sustained momentum for economic growth by capitalizing on strengths such as transportation logistics and financial services.

?Over the last six months to a year, I?ve seen positive consumer confidence,? he said. ?That fuels everything. If people feel better about the future, they?re going to take their money off the sidelines.?

Davis and Candace Moody, spokeswoman for WorkSource, said the region has benefited from having a diverse economy that?s not overly reliant on any single industry.

?That has sheltered us when we go into recessions and it has helped us recover a little faster,? she said.

But she said even though ?optimism is coming back,? the improving economy hasn?t yet translated to robust job growth.

She said small business owners tell WorkSource that they are being cautious in light of uncertainty over federal policies such as the Affordable Care Act and the possibility of an increase in the minimum wage.

?I still see businesses holding off on really making investments in hiring new employees until they?re sure what that will cost them,? she said.

Davis said he thinks the biggest challenge is upgrading the port so it can compete with other East Coast cities.

Florida has earmarked $36 million to fix navigation hazards at Mile Point, but JaxPort is waiting to see if the federal government will clear the way for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to do the construction using state money.

Deepening the 40-foot channel to a depth of 47 feet would cost an estimated $733 million, according to a draft report by the corps.

Obama will be giving his speech at the port.

?I hope that everybody who has a chance to speak to the president talks to him about Mile Point and deep water because it?s clear to me we need deep water to compete in shipping,? Davis said.

Obama?s speech is not open to the public.

david.bauerlein@jacksonville.com, (904) 359-4581

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JacksonvillecomsNewsSportsAndEntertainment/~3/w5GIaj6nKT0/president-obamas-return-jacksonville-gives-city-national-spotlight

madmen james cameron liam hemsworth miss canada justin bieber boyfriend marianas trench camille grammer

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Leader of 'church for the poor' to visit Rio favela

Felipe Dana / AP

Policemen from Brazil's Pacifying Police Unit patrol the poor Varginha favela ahead of Pope Francis visit on Thursday.

By Clare Duffy, Producer, NBC News

RIO DE JANEIRO ? Just a short ride away from Rio?s legendary beaches of Ipanema and Copacabana are some of the most crime-ridden slums in Latin America. Known here as favelas, they are equally legendary, but for all the wrong reasons. Pockets of relentless poverty, drugs and weapons flood streets dotted with ramshackle buildings.

Pope Francis will step into one of these neighborhoods, Varginha, in the larger Manguinhos favela, on Thursday.

Little seems to faze Pope Francis. The throngs of well-wishers who mobbed his car, overwhelming his security detail on Monday just seemed to make him smile even more broadly. And visiting Varginha's mean streets likely won't faze him either.

As the former Archbishop of Buenos Aires, Francis regularly visited the poorest, most dangerous areas of that city, and he specifically asked that Varginha be added to his schedule. An estimated 1.2 million people, or 22 percent of Rio?s population, live in favelas.

Varginha is known locally as the "Gaza Strip" for its spiraling violence between rival drug gangs. The area was recently "pacified" by police ? a policy of flooding the area with heavily armed officers, both uniformed and plainclothes, to form a visible presence to disrupt and disperse criminal activity.

Officers wearing bulletproof vests patrolled the streets during a recent visit, keeping a watchful eye on the cramped apartment windows above.?

The pontiff is making his first visit overseas since he was elected in March. An estimated 2 million people are expected to greet him.

But the effort has not been entirely successful - far from it. A pitched gun battle erupted between rival gangs here just last month.

Paulo Lima, 58, a carpenter, who like most here barely ekes out a living, would like to see more police action. ?


"Police pacification brought some peace here, but it's not enough for us. We need much more," he said. "There is no state presence; our community was forgotten for a long time. I hope with the pope's visit we can have some improvement."

While there have been some cosmetic improvements ahead of the pope?s visit ? such as paved sidewalks and the removal of trash ? there is still room for much more in terms of sanitation, health care and education. A fetid river runs behind the small cinderblock church Francis will visit.?

Pope Francis heads to Brazil for World Youth Day where more than one million young people are expected to gather. The high cost of the trip to the Brazilian government has stoked fears that the event will be marked by protests. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

When it rains, the sewage-ridden waters flood the neighborhood?s streets, carrying life-threatening diseases that sicken the area's children. A new sewage system was promised, but as it often happens here, improvements have yet to arrive. ??

Ranger Silva, a 24-year-old student, has heard it all before. "People here are still skeptical. We need to see these changes lasting, and not only because the pope is coming."?

As the Vatican's first Jesuit leader who called for a ?church of the poor,"?the simplicity of the?Capela Sao Jeronimo church Francis will visit is fitting. It's a small chapel nestled inside a box-like structure and has only 18 simple wooden pews inside. Francis is expected to speak with residents and give a blessing.?

Francis' effort to reach out to the poor during his visit has been welcomed by many Brazilians - particularly in the wake of massive anti-government protests across the country last month over corruption and the run-away costs of next year?s soccer World Cup.

There were a few signs of progress and hope in Varginha. Boys in brand new team jerseys played soccer on the field where the pope will address the community ? their dazzling, effortless skills would be the envy of any American suburban youth coach.??

And the sounds of a rock band filtered out of the little church Francis will visit.

Anderson Braz, 19, expertly strummed his electric guitar, as the group rehearsed their upcoming performance for the pope.?

"I'm nervous now," he said. "Imagine on the day ? it will be pure heart, pure emotion."

Related links:

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2f1cdb12/sc/11/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C240C19659590A0Eleader0Eof0Echurch0Efor0Ethe0Epoor0Eto0Evisit0Erio0Efavela0Dlite/story01.htm

Win McMurry Whitey Bulger pga tour robin roberts Liz Cheney ESPYS 2013 project runway

San Diego mayor: I think claims in sex harass suit untrue

In a brief statement, the divorced, 70-year-old Filner said he does not believe the claims are valid and said he intends "to defend myself vigorously."

McCormack, as she is known professionally, offered lurid details in the lawsuit.

McCormack said at a news conference that she took a $50,000-a-year pay cut while accepting the job in January -- two months after Filner was elected to a four-year term as the city's first Democratic leader in 20 years after he spent 10 terms in Congress.

"I saw him place his hands where they did not belong on numerous women," McCormack said alongside her attorney, Gloria Allred, one of the most widely known civil rights attorneys in the country.

"He is not fit to be the mayor of our great city," McCormack added. "He is not fit to hold any public office."

Filner rejected the claims in a brief statement that didn't address specifics of McCormack's allegations.

The lawsuit, filed in San Diego Superior Court, says McCormack resigned after a heated exchange between the mayor and Allen Jones, his deputy chief of staff, at a meeting that she attended. Jones told his boss that he needed "extreme therapy."

"You are treating women in a horrible manner. What you are doing may even be illegal. You need to change your ways," Jones is quoted saying.

McCormack agreed that the mayor was "horrible" and began to leave the meeting before Filner challenged her to give an example.

"How about when you said that I should take my panties off and work without them," she replied, according to the lawsuit, which also names the city as a defendant and seeks unspecified damages.

After the meeting, an unnamed Filner "emissary" told McCormack that the mayor acknowledged behaving despicably toward women, according to the lawsuit. Filner offered her a job as communications manager for city operations that reported to someone else -- a job she still holds.

The lawsuit also alleges that Filner declared his love for McCormack and asked her to marry him. Filner was engaged at the time to Bronwyn Ingram, who announced this month that she had ended the relationship.

Filner told McCormack that he wanted to see her naked, according to Allred. On one occasion, McCormack allegedly told Filner to leave her office when he tried to kiss her, prompting the mayor to respond that "he could be wherever he wanted whenever he wanted."

"He told her that he was infatuated with her," Allred said.

McCormack worked for nine years at the Port of San Diego, most recently making $175,000 a year as vice president of public policy. She was previously a journalist for 25 years.

Filner apologized earlier this month for disrespecting and sometimes intimidating women in an extraordinary video released immediately after the initial allegations surfaced. He said, "I need help," and that he would be unable to lead San Diego if his behavior didn't change.

He has repeatedly rejected calls that he resign without addressing specific allegations, other than to say he doesn't believe he was guilty of sexual harassment.

On Friday, Filner welcomed the San Diego County Sheriff's Department's decision to open a hotline to take calls from any possible victims of his misconduct, saying, "Some of these allegations will finally be addressed by an appropriate investigative authority rather than by press conference and innuendo."

The San Diego County district attorney's office said it would not be part of the Sheriff's Department investigation and that the California attorney general's office would review the findings to determine whether the mayor should be prosecuted.

District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis finished fourth in last year's mayoral primary and supported a Filner rival in the general election, saying then that Filner mistreated women.

City Attorney Jan Goldsmith, whose office prosecutes misdemeanors and represents the city in civil lawsuits, said Monday that his office wouldn't participate in any criminal investigation. He said Filner's attorney agreed that the mayor would no longer meet alone with women while on city business.

No one had publicly identified herself as an alleged victim until Monday.

Last week, former supporters said Filner forcibly kissed a campaign volunteer on a public sidewalk and groped her in her car. Another constituent who attended a mayoral event at City Hall said Filner took her to an enclosed area, dismissed a staff member, asked her on a date and kissed her.

An employee who worked for the mayor for six months complained that Filner grabbed her buttocks and touched her chest, according to the former supporters. Allred declined to say if McCormack was that woman.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/cbsnews/feed/~3/xYiaMo5OkOg/

p Tropical Storm Sandy W S B H c

Get your sports tickets now! As an official partner of the 2013 IAAF World Champ...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/MoscowTimes/posts/10151800202239766

cirque du soleil Confederations Cup Phil Costa Fruitvale Station BART strike nhl draft dexter

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Ex-CIA official to address government-wary hackers

By Jim Finkle

BOSTON (Reuters) - A former CIA official and a retired Air Force general will address next week's Def Con hacking convention, which for the first time asked federal officials to steer clear because of anger over alleged government spying.

Joseph DeTrani, a long-time CIA official who served as a U.S. envoy in talks with North Korea regarding its nuclear activities, will open the hackers' conference on August 2 with a speech about weapons of mass destruction and cyber technology. Former Air Force General Robert Elder, who created one of the U.S. military's first cyber units, will speak the following day.

Def Con founder Jeff Moss said the two had been invited long before his July 11 request that federal officials stay away from the convention to defuse tensions over the U.S. mass surveillance programs leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Moss said that having former U.S. officials at the conference could be useful to the hacking community because they are uniquely placed to help explain the government's position on the surveillance programs.

"Being former, not current, they might be able to speak more freely and offer a more nuanced perspective," said Moss, who is known in hacking circles as The Dark Tangent.

"They would probably offer more credible perspective that people are not going to just dismiss out of hand and say ?Of course you are going to say that. That's your job,'" he said in an interview.

Def Con - short for Defense Condition, in military speak - has since 1992 been bringing together people with a common interest in software, computer architecture, and any high-tech system that can be hacked. It typically attracts a small contingent of officials from the CIA, NSA, FBI, and military among hackers, researchers, security workers, activists and others. The conference this year is expected to draw 15,000 people.

DeTrani told Reuters that after his speech he will address surveillance programs, if asked.

"Everything I've heard about these programs is that they were authorized with oversight. From what I know Americans were not spied upon," he said. "Hopefully nobody throws marshmallows at me and says ?You wacko, go back to North Korea.'"

DeTrani stepped down as a senior advisor to the Director of National Intelligence in May 2012, ending more than three decades in government, the bulk of the time at the CIA.

His speech will be followed by several panels led by critics of government surveillance. The American Civil Liberties Union is holding a Friday afternoon session on "NSA surveillance and more." Representatives of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group that has filed lawsuits against the NSA over surveillance programs, will review "the year in digital civil liberties."

Elder, who is currently an engineering professor at George Mason University, plans to talk about applying lessons from military operations to protecting computer networks.

He said that while he knows nothing more about the Snowden case than what he has read in the paper, he expects the issue will come up. "I expect there to be some tension," he said.

(Reporting by Jim Finkle; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ex-cia-official-address-government-wary-hackers-183659716.html

dj am bully bohemian rhapsody bohemian rhapsody spike lee carson daly heejun han

DuPont seeks exit from paints business to focus on farms

plans to exit its once-lucrative paint pigments business to focus on a thriving agricultural unit better equipped to shield the biggest U.S. chemicals maker from market volatility.

DuPont's shares rose as much as 6 percent to their highest in more than 13 years after the company said it would consider selling or spinning off its performance chemicals unit, which contributed a fifth of its sales last year.

Chief Executive Ellen Kullman said DuPont's earnings would be "significantly better" in the second half of 2013 than in the same period last year due to agricultural growth in the Americas - reinforcing the planned exit from performance chemicals.

DuPont is joining an industry-wide shift among chemical makers, including rival Dow Chemical , into production of seeds and pesticides, which have proven to be less exposed to market ebbs and flows than the popular pigment titanium dioxide.

Agricultural demand is driven by North American farmers in the first half of the year and South American farmers in the second. The expanding global population, particularly in Asia, is also driving demand for fertilizers, seeds and pesticides.

But demand for titanium dioxide, a pigment that gives shine to car paints, sunscreen and toothpaste, has long been susceptible to swings in the global economy.

Global titanium dioxide prices went into tailspin last year after the world's biggest producers, including DuPont, Saudi Arabia's Cristal Global, Tronox Ltd and Huntsman Corp , restarted plants idled during the recession.

As prices declined, revenue within DuPont's performance chemicals unit fell 8 percent in 2012. Kullman said the company had been weighing the cash generation of the businesses against their cyclical nature and "lower growth profile".

"There is nothing science can do to arrest the volatility or the cyclicality of these businesses," she said on a conference call, adding DuPont would focus on "science-driven" businesses such as agriculture, nutrition and industrial biosciences.

Analysts said the hand of a new investor might also be behind the move. Nelson Peltz, a force behind some of the global food industry's biggest deals, had amassed a "big stake" in DuPont through his Trian Fund Management, CNBC reported last week.

Some investors have blamed the performance chemicals business for weighing on DuPont's shares, which trade at a discount to those of another rival in the agriculture business, Monsanto Co .

"I don't think we would have seen this move about the performance chemicals business in this quarterly release without revelations about activist investors getting involved," said Stephen Hoedt, senior equity research analyst with Key Private Bank.

Kullman, in an interview with CNBC on Tuesday, said she had not spoken to Peltz. She said she had heard "rumors" about his acquisition of a stake.

SPIN OFF OR SALE?

DuPont's performance chemicals unit, of which paints pigments are a big part, generated total sales of $7.2 billion in 2012.

In a note to clients, BGC Financial analyst Mark Gulley estimated that the unit could be worth about $8.9 billion pre-tax.

But DuPont might find it easier to spin off the business or seal private-equity deals than find a strategic buyer for the performance chemical business, said John Roberts, who leads U.S. chemical coverage at UBS Investment Research.

Roberts cited smaller rival Rockwood Holding Inc's difficulties in finding a buyer for its titanium dioxide business.

DuPont itself declined to comment.

"It's way too soon to go down a path of who might be a potential buyer," Chief Financial Officer Nick Fanandakis said in an interview with Reuters.

Huntsman, which is also exploring options for its titanium dioxide business, could be looking to buy Rockwood's pigments unit, Reuters reported this month.

Wilmington, Delaware-based DuPont, a 211-year-old company, sold its car paint unit for $5 billion last year and bought nutritional supplements maker Danisco for $6 billion in 2011.

Sales of pesticides and other agricultural products helped DuPont's quarterly profit scrape past analysts' estimates, as paint pigments once again lagged. Net income fell 13 percent to $1.03 billion in the second quarter.

DuPont's shares shed earlier gains to trade up just 0.5 percent at $57.40 in midday trading on the New York Stock Exchange. They have risen about 20 percent in the last six months.

(Additional reporting by Garima Goel in Bangalore; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Robin Paxton)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dupont-says-may-sell-spin-off-paint-pigments-102111052.html

saint louis university night at the museum pope shenouda bolton muamba crystal cathedral sxsw st. patrick s day

Leap Motion's 'Minority Report'-esque controller ships to first buyers

leap-motion

1 hour ago

Leap 1

Leap Motion

The Leap Motion Controller in action, controlling a 3-D game.

The Leap Motion Controller, which tracks users' hands with great precision and allows for gesture controls like those made famous in the movie "Minority Report," is arriving this week on the doorsteps of those who pre-ordered it.

Leap device

Leap Motion

The device is extremely small and powered by USB.

Leap Motion's device tracks your hand and fingers with an infrared sensor, and the company claims that it's hundreds of times more sensitive than similar devices like the Kinect. And it's all in a device about the size of a stick of gum and costs a surprisingly low $80.

Imagine brushing aside windows with a wave of the hand, pausing Netflix with a raised palm, or just using your finger to control the cursor when your wrist is sore from long hours of Excel (or games).

Of course, even the coolest peripheral is useless if nothing works with it. And right now the Leap is compatible mainly with a stable of 75 approved apps they've collected at Leap Motion's "Airspace Store."

A few companies are already lined up to implement the device in their apps and games (Corel and Disney, for instance), but until some bigger names like Microsoft and Adobe take up the call, it may be more of an impressive tech demo than a transformative experience.

The Leap Motion Controller is just now arriving in buyers' and reviewers' laps; we'll be posting our hands-on experience with it later this week.

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

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f05b9a6/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cleap0Emotions0Eminority0Ereport0Eesque0Econtroller0Eships0Efirst0Ebuyers0E6C10A710A439/story01.htm

detroit lions Thanksgiving Day cooking a turkey toysrus how to carve a turkey ipad 2 wal mart

Monday, July 22, 2013

Nikkei up on election win, yen tempers rally

By Ian Chua

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Japanese stocks led Asian markets higher on Monday after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's big election win over the weekend, but a rebound in the yen prompted some profit taking that knocked the Nikkei off highs.

Most other Asian share markets were modestly higher, although Hong Kong's Hang Seng and mainland Chinese stocks lost a bit of ground.

European shares were seen opening higher. "This week's economic data and earnings results could set a bullish tone in the markets," Jonathan Sudaria, a dealer at Capital Spreads in London, wrote in a note.

Tokyo's Nikkei ended 0.5 percent higher, having earlier climbed as much as 1.2 percent. Exporters such as Nissan Motor underperformed as the dollar slid below 100 yen.

Abe's victory in the election for the upper house of parliament, which was widely expected, should make it easier for him to push through painful economic reform, the "Third Arrow" of his "Abenomics" prescription to end deflation. The other two arrows are ultra-easy monetary policy and spending.

"The results of Sunday's election are pretty much fully priced in and we're seeing more sell on the fact type moves," said a trader in Tokyo, adding overall flows were light.

Another dealer said markets were now turning to earnings results due in major financial centres over next few weeks for fresh trading cues.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan advanced 0.4 percent, with South Korea's KOSPI was up 0.5 percent and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index gained 0.6 percent.

YEN OFF LOWS

Abe's win should be negative for the yen, which initially plumbed a 1-1/2 week low against the dollar and a two-month trough on the euro.

But selling of dollars for yen by Japanese investors, which in turn triggered stop-loss selling in thin conditions, saw the Japanese currency bounce back in the short term.

That left the dollar down 0.6 percent on the day at 99.96 yen, a turnaround from a high of 101.05. The euro was also 0.6 percent lower at 131.51, well off an early high of 132.47.

Against the dollar, the euro drifted up 0.1 percent from late New York levels to $1.3153, while the Australian dollar advanced 0.5 percent to $0.9225.

The Aussie was further buoyed by news of more market-oriented reforms in the banking sector of China, Australia's single biggest export market.

China's central bank has removed controls on bank lending rates in a long-awaited move that could lower financial costs for companies, offering hopes that cheaper credit will help support the softening economy.

Commodities were mostly firmer thanks to the softer dollar. U.S. crude held near a 16-month peak of $109.32 a barrel, while copper gained 1.0 percent to $6,982 a tonne.

Gold reached a one-month high of $1,322.50 an ounce, continuing to recover from last month's eye-watering slide to a three-year low around $1,180.71.

There was little reaction to news that the Federal Reserve is "reviewing" a landmark 2003 decision that first allowed regulated banks to trade in physical commodity markets.

The one-sentence statement suggests the Fed is taking a much deeper, wide-ranging look than previously believed at how banks operate in commodity markets, amid intensifying scrutiny of everything from electricity trading to metals warehouses.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nikkei-election-win-yen-tempers-rally-070211513.html

clay matthews Ncaa Tournament 2013 2013 NCAA Bracket leprechaun ides of march pi higgs boson

A career round gives Mickelson a claret jug

Phil Mickelson of the United States gestures as he holds the Claret Jug trophy after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Phil Mickelson of the United States gestures as he holds the Claret Jug trophy after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Phil Mickelson of the United States holds up the Claret Jug trophy after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)

Phil Mickelson of the United States celebrates after his final putt on the 18th green during the final round of the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Phil Mickelson of the United States poses with his family after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

Phil Mickelson of the United States kisses his wife Amy as they pose for a photo with their family after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Muirfield, Scotland, Sunday July 21, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

(AP) ? One of the greatest final rounds in a major. Two of the best shots he ever struck with a 3-wood. The third leg of the Grand Slam.

Phil Mickelson never imagined any of this happening at the British Open.

No wonder he never took his hand off the base of that silver claret jug as he talked about the best Sunday he ever had at a major. Five shots out of the lead, Mickelson blew past Tiger Woods, caught up to Lee Westwood and Masters champion Adam Scott, and won golf's oldest championship with the lowest final round in his 80 majors.

With four birdies over the last six holes, Mickelson closed with a 5-under 66 for a three-shot win over Henrik Stenson.

No longer is he mystified by links golf, and he has his name etched in that jug to prove it.

"This is such an accomplishment for me because I just never knew if I'd be able to develop the game to play links golf effectively," Mickelson said. "To play the best round arguably of my career, to putt better than I've ever putted, to shoot the round of my life ... it feels amazing to win the claret jug."

Introduced as the "champion golfer of the year," he held the oldest trophy in golf over his head to show it off to one side of the massive grandstand lining the 18th green at Muirfield, and then the other. An hour earlier, they gave the 43-year-old Mickelson the loudest ovation of the week as he walked up the final fairway.

He drained an 8-foot birdie putt and thrust his arms in the air, hugged caddie Jim "Bones" Mackay and whispered to him, "I did it." After signing for the lowest final round ever at Muirfield, Mickelson huddled with his wife and three children ? back from a quick holiday to Spain ? for a long embrace and waited for the others to finish.

Westwood, who started the day with a two-shot lead, fell behind for the first time all day with a bogey on the par-3 13th hole and never recovered, closing with a 75.

Scott took the outright lead with a 4-foot birdie on the 11th, and then closed as sloppily as he did last year when he threw away the Open at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. He made four straight bogeys starting at the 13th, and a final bogey on the 18th gave him a 72. At least he has a green jacket from the Master to console him.

Woods, in his best position to win a major since the crisis in his personal life, stumbled badly on his way to a 74 and was never a serious challenger.

"We know that he goes for broke, and if that's how he was feeling and pulling it off, he's got the ability to do that," Scott said about Mickelson. "And he's gone and won an Open easily. So every credit to him."

At the end of a rough-and-tumble week along the Firth of Forth, Mickelson was the only player under par at 3-under 283. In his four other majors ? three Masters and one PGA Championship ? he had never started the final round more than one shot behind.

"I don't care either way how I got this trophy ? I got it," Mickelson said. "And it just so happened to be with one of the best rounds of my career, which is really the way I've played my entire career. I've always tried to go out and get it. I don't want anybody to hand it to me. I want to go out and get it. And today, I did."

Westwood, whose only other 54-hole lead in a major ended with Mickelson winning the Masters, paid tribute to Lefty for what will go down as one of the great closing rounds in a major.

"When you birdie four of the last six of a round any day, that's good going," Westwood said. "With a decent breeze blowing and some tough flags out there, it's obviously a pretty good experience. When you do it in a major championship, it's an even better experience."

But this major? Phil Mickelson?

He had only contended twice in two decades at golf's oldest championship. One week after he won the Scottish Open in a playoff on the links-styled course of Castle Stuart, Mickelson was simply magical on the back nine of a brown, brittle Muirfield course that hasn't played this tough since 1966.

Tied for the lead, Mickelson smashed a 3-wood onto the green at the par-5 17th to about 25 feet for a two-putt birdie, and finished in style with a 10-foot birdie putt on the 18th to match the lowest score of this championship.

"Those two 3-woods were the two best shots of the week, to get it on that green," Mickelson said. "As I was walking up to the green, that was when I realized that this is very much my championship in my control. And I was getting a little emotional. I had to kind of take a second to slow down my walk and try to regain composure."

Mickelson figured a par on the 18th would be tough for anyone to catch him. When the ball dropped in the center of the cup, he raised both arms in the air to celebrate his fifth career major, tying him with the likes of Seve Ballesteros and Byron Nelson.

"Best round I've ever seen him play," said his caddie, Jim "Bones" Mackay.

His final surge was right about the time Westwood and Scott began to fold.

Scott, trying to join an exclusive list of players who have won a green jacket and a claret jug in the same year, made a remarkable recovery from the dunes right of the par-3 13th hole, only to miss the 7-foot par putt. He took three putts for bogeys on the next two holes ? from long range on the 14th, and from 20 feet on the 15th ? and found a bunker on the next.

Westwood started to lose his grip on the jug with bogeys on the seventh and eighth, and failing to birdie the downwind, par-5 ninth. Presented with birdie chances early on the back nine, his putting stroke began to look tentative.

Westwood and Scott tied for third with Ian Poulter, who played a four-hole stretch in 5-under around the turn and closed with a 67. At 1-over 285, he canceled a flight home in case of a playoff. Moments later, with Mickelson pulling away, the outcome was clear.

Jack Nicklaus said on Twitter, "Phil's round was incredible. After his bad break on 16 and to then get up and down showed a lot of guts. And the two great shots at 17 ended the tournament."

Making this even sweeter for Mickelson is that just one month ago he lost out on yet another chance to win the U.S. Open, the missing link of a career Grand Slam. Mickelson twice made bogey with wedge in his hand on the back nine at Merion and had his record sixth runner-up finish.

Woods, Nicklaus, Gary Player, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen are the only players to win all four professional majors. Mickelson figured it would be the British Open that would hold him back. Now he has the jug, and he never took his hand off it during his press conference.

"I think that if I'm able to win the U.S. Open and complete the career Grand Slam, I think that that's the sign of the complete, great player," Mickelson said. "And I'm a leg away. And it's been a tough leg for me."

For now, Mickelson takes his place among an elite list of winners at Muirfield, which is considered the fairest of the links on the British Open rotation. All but two of the Open champions at Muirfield are in the World Hall of Fame. Mickelson is the only winner who already has been inducted.

It was the 43rd win of his PGA Tour career. The guy who once couldn't win the big one now has five majors in the last nine years. This one returns him to No. 2 in the world ranking for the first time in nearly three years.

Woods, meanwhile, now has gone 17 majors without winning, and that pursuit of Nicklaus and his benchmark of 18 majors ? Woods is stuck on 14 ? doesn't look any closer. He three-putted twice in four holes at the start of the round and looked like just another contender on this Sunday.

He attributed his poor day to not getting the right pace on the greens, which he said were progressively slower.

"I felt like I was really playing well today, actually the whole week, " said Woods, who has not broken 70 in the final round of his last seven majors. "I really hit so many good shots and really had control of my ball this week. As I said, it was just trying to get the speed, and I just didn't get it."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-07-21-British%20Open/id-4bb2c482f0c54c259adb4620b0b7db01

johnny depp John Zawahri Suki Waterhouse apple apple Sagrada Familia Animal Crossing New Leaf

MSI Z87-G45 Gaming Review | bit-tech.net

Manufacturer: MSI
UK Price (as reviewed): ?116.76 (inc. VAT)
US Price (as reviewed): $149.99 (ex. Tax)MSI Z87-G45 Gaming Review

Unlike many of its competitors, who seem to operate with the objective of drowning the market in overlapping SKUs, MSI?s Z87 product stack is refreshingly simple to follow. Below ?100 there?s the G41 and G43, before bumping up to the ?120 G45-Gaming and ?170 GD65-gaming. Further up are the super-high end MPower overclocking boards, but for most of us MSI is offering a fairly straightforward choice between its entry, mid-level and high-end Z87 boards.

The Z87-G45-Gaming sits at that mid-range point and at less than ?115 is substantially cheaper than many of the other enthusiast-targeted boards on the market. Despite the cut-price though, the G45-Gaming more than looks the part, with a black PCB, VRM heatsinks and Southbridge cooler, trimmed in an anodised red, dragon-styled trim.

The G45 Gaming?s feature set also belies its low price. It supports up to three-card CrossFire and two-card SLI thanks to a trio of PCI-E 3.0 16x slots. The slots share x16 lanes of bandwidth between them, so a single slot gets x16 lanes, a pair of slots both run with x8 lanes and three cards run at x8, x4, x4. As they?re all PCI-E 3.0 though, this still means double the bandwidth of like-for-like PCI-E 2.0 slots. Alongside are no less than four PCI-E 1x slots. Fitting a pair of dual-slot GPUs will obscure a pair of these, but that still leaves a couple for expansion cards.


Elsewhere the G45 Gaming offers the standard Z87 chipset?s six SATA 6gbps ports, but compliments them with a full set of 90? right-angled connectors to help keep cabling tidy. This is complemented by a 90? right-angle USB 3.0 header - a nice touch for what is fast becoming the most awkward motherboard connector behind the 24-pin and 8-pin power connectors.

The SATA situation is further improved with the addition of an mSATA slot right in the middle of the board. This slot takes SATA 6gbps bandwidth from the SATA6 port, so connecting an mSATA drive will disable this port. Sadly, mSATA drives are yet to see industry-wide SSD adoption, with the likes of Samsung?s SSD 840 and OCZ?s Vector yet to make the jump to the smaller form factor, so its inclusion wouldn?t be top of our list when picking motherboard features. Regardless, it?s a neat extra that would further negate cabling should you chose to use it, as the power and data connections are integrated right into the board.


Looking to the rear I/O you?ll find MSI has swapped out the Intel Gigabit LAN port favoured by many for a Killer NIC E2205 gigabit Ethernet port. We?ve never been convinced by the lag-busting, frag-winning claims of Killer NIC, but the bundled software does allow you to monitor bandwidth and assign priority to certain applications.

The rear I/O also boasts both coaxial and optical S/PDIF outputs, four chipset USB 3.0 ports, a pair of USB 2.0 ports, six 3.5mm outputs for the on-board 7.1 channel audio (courtesy of a Realtek ALC1150 codec and a PS2 port). On-board display outputs consist of VGA, DVI and HDMI while rounding out the rear I/O is a clear CMOS switch, making it possible to reset the BIOS without having to take your PC apart.


Sadly, the clear CMOS button is the only on-board button that the G45 Gaming boasts. This means there?s no on-board power or reset switches and, more frustratingly, no LED post-code readout. These are incredibly useful extras when troubleshooting and certainly we'd rather have them than an mSATA slot, but their omission underlines the board?s cheaper price tag. Oddly MSI has still chosen to include a set of voltage read-out points, although we?re sure few if any G45 Gaming owners will use them.

With its reasonable feature set, the G45 Gaming is still well laid out. The aforementioned 90? ports keep cabling neat, and all the headers and 24-pin power connector are close to the board edges. Five 4-pin fan headers are all placed sensibly too, with a pair servicing the CPU socket and a rear fan header above the expansion slots. Our only complaint is the placement of the 8-pin EPS12V connector, which is vertically aligned and a few inches away from the edge of the board, making it tricky to reach when looping the cable behind a motherboard tray.

Well laid out and with a sensible set of features to match its affordable price the G45 Gaming is off to a strong start; let?s find out if it can hold its ground in the face of dearer opposition when it comes to system performance and overclocking.

  • Chipset Intel Z87
  • CPU support LGA1150 compatible
  • Memory support 4 slots: max 32GB DDR3 (2,400MHz)
  • Expansion slots SLI and Crossfire support, Three 16x PCI-E 3.0 slots (One at x16, two at x8, three x8, x4, x4), four 1x PCI-E
  • Sound 7.1-channel HD audio via Realtek ALC1150
  • Networking Killer NIC E2205 Gigabit LAN
  • Ports 6 x SATA 6Gbps via Intel Z87, 1 x mSATA, 6 x USB 3 (2 x via headers), 6 x USB 2 ( 4 via headers), LAN, audio out, line in, mic, Coaxial and Optical S/PDIF out, HDMI, VGA, DVI,
  • Dimensions (mm) 305 x 244 (ATX)
  • Extras on-board clear CMOS switch, mSATA slot

Source: http://www.bit-tech.net/hardware/2013/07/22/msi-z87-g45-gaming-review/1

john edwards conocophillips capitals dan savage new world trade center kellen moore octomom

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Even the Aide Who Coined the Hastert Rule Says the Hastert Rule Isn't Working (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/320788872?client_source=feed&format=rss

amber portwood Phyllis Diller Darla Moore newsweek Tony Scott UFC 151 empire state building

National GOP chief moved by Iowa pastors? event

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IowaPolitics/~3/yJwH7yhtBjk/article

Barcelona celtics harry connick jr Marc Maron amanda knox Danny Brown The Following

Lincoln Electric Systems to add wind energy

Lincoln Electric Systems is set to acquire an additional 100 megawatts of wind energy for its portfolio by January 2016.

The power will come from EDP Renewables' Arbuckle Mountain Wind Farm in Oklahoma and boost LES's renewable resource portion of its portfolio by 12 percent, said LES administrator and CEO Kevin Wailes. He owed the 20-year contract to the federal production tax credit extension, saying the deal will deliver customer-owners ?considerable savings.?

?We expect to begin realizing these savings in the first year, with the benefits increasing throughout the life of the contract,? he said.

The wind farm was selected for its competitive costs, strength of existing electric transmission connections, company experience and reputation, as well as the project structure and timeline, Wailes said. Gabriel Alonso, CEO of EDP Renewables North America, said the company is pleased to partner with LES.

By 2016, more than 23 percent of LES's annual retail sales will come from renewable resources, which includes wind, solar, hydro and landfill gas.

Contact the writer: Emily Nohr

emily.nohr@owh.com ?? | ??402-444-1192 ?? |??

Emily covers freight transportation, manufacturing, green/renewable energy and small business.

Source: http://www.omaha.com/article/20130720/MONEY/130729954

Cressida Bonas Kenny Clutch Edward Gorey nba trade deadline diane lane drew peterson Argo

Saturday, July 20, 2013

The AM Roundup: Detroit Faces Years of Legal Wrangling - Law ...

Long road: The move to restructure the debt is bound to set off months, if not years, of legal wrangling, asset sales and cuts to benefits for Detroit workers and retirees. WSJ

Creditor battle: Detroit officials may decide to reach a settlement with general-obligation bondholders in order to clear the way for wider discussions with creditors who are owed much larger sums of money. WSJ

Hit list: Detroit filed thousands of bankruptcy documents late Thursday. One of the most important is a list of the city?s top 20 creditors. Freep.com

In other news:

Memorial clash: A privately-funded Holocaust memorial to be built on the grounds of the Ohio Statehouse could ensnare the state in a separation-of-church-and-state dispute. AP

Whistle dismissal: A federal appeals court ruled that would-be whistleblowers are protected from retaliation only if they report their employer?s wrongdoing to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. National Law Journal

Help wanted: New York?s chief judge is looking at corporate in-house lawyers to help fill the need for legal services for those who can?t afford it. AP

Silverstein setback: A federal judge on Thursday rejected developer Larry Silverstein?s bid to recover billions of dollars from two airlines whose planes were used in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. WSJ

Standing firm: Stand Your Ground may be getting more attention now after the Zimmerman verdict, but the laws themselves don?t look like they?re going anywhere. National Law Journal

Phone data ruling: The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that police must get a search warrant before obtaining tracking information from cellphone providers. NYT

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2013/07/19/the-am-roundup-detroit-faces-years-of-legal-wrangling/

albatross louis oosthuizen 10 year old gives birth c. difficile carmelo anthony nurse jackie nurse jackie

Barcelona manager Tito Vilanova steps down to undergo further cancer treatment

Barca president Sandro Rosell confirmed on Friday evening Vilanova would resign and that a new manager at the Nou Camp would be announced next week

Stepping down: Vilanova has resigned to undergo treatment
Stepping down: Vilanova has resigned to undergo treatment

David Ramos

Barcelona have confirmed that Tito Vilanova has stepped down as manager to undergo further treatment for cancer.

The Spaniard took over from Pep Guardiola last summer, but the club revealed in December that he was unwell with parotid gland cancer for a second time .

He returned to management in late March after Jordi Roura took control.

Barca president Sandro Rosell and director of the football Andoni Zubizarreta addressed the media and the playing squad on Friday evening to confirm the news.

"After evaluating routine tests on Tito Vilanova, he is to undergo a process of treatment incompatible with being Barca coach," Rosell said.

He added: "This is a big blow for Barcelona, but Barca have received many blows and have always overcome them."

Rosell confirmed a new manager would be announced early next week.

Source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/football/news/barcelona-manager-tito-vilanova-steps-2067147

Joseph Gordon-Levitt space shuttle Torrey Smith Brother fiona apple CJ Spiller tracy morgan Chase.com

Microsoft profit misses

SEATTLE - Microsoft Corp on Thursday reported lower-than-expected quarterly earnings as slow personal computer sales ate into its Windows business and the company took an unexpected $900 million US charge for its inventory of unsold Surface tablets, sending its shares down 5% after hours.

The massive charge underlines the struggles of the world's largest software company, which last week announced a deep reorganization to transform itself into a "devices and services" leader, but is struggling to make mobile devices as attractive as those by Apple Inc or Google Inc.

"That's the biggest miss we've ever seen from Microsoft, the biggest that I could remember," said Brendan Barnicle, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities. "It looks like everything was weak and that's what we need an explanation on."

Microsoft shares fell 5% in after-hours trading, tumbling from 5-year highs. Before the close, the shares were up 32% this year, beating a 19% rise in the Standard & Poor's 500 index.

Microsoft said the $900 million charge was related to its Surface RT tablet, the version of its tablet running on ARM Holdings -designed chips. The Surface was meant to challenge Apple's iPad when it was launched alongside Windows 8 in October, but has not sold well.

Earlier this week, Microsoft said it was drastically cutting prices and expanding distribution of the model to entice buyers, reducing the value of Surface devices in its inventory.

"We do know we have to do better, particular in mobile devices," Amy Hood, Microsoft's new chief financial officer, said in a telephone interview. "That's a big reason we made the strategic organizational changes last week."

Microsoft's biggest shake-up in five years, unveiled by chief executive Steve Ballmer last week, creates a single devices unit for the first time at the company, suggesting that it will double down on its so-far unsuccessful move into hardware.

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit of 59 cents per share, compared with a 6 cents per share loss in the year-ago quarter when it wrote off the cost of a failed acquisition.

Wall Street had expected earnings of 75 cents per share, on average, according to Thomson Reuters.

Revenue rose 10% to $19.9 billion, helped by sales of Microsoft's Office suite of applications, but fell short of analysts' average estimate of $20.7 billion.

The sales of Windows rose slightly, but only because of the inclusion of some deferred revenue, weighed down by an estimated 11% dip in PC sales in the quarter.

?

Source: http://technology.canoe.ca/2013/07/18/20985806.html?cid=rsstechnology

lra lra eric johnson eric johnson big east tournament ashley olsen new apple tv

Friday, July 19, 2013

Water Challenges Our Farmers Face ~ ~ Regional | Moonlady

Water Challenges Our Farmers Face ~ ~ Regional

women-farm-ranch

Water Challenges Our Farmers Face

by Lynette Fortson

With the glorious, drought-relieving rain we?ve received this week, it seems appropriate to address water issues faced by farmers and ranchers. This is third in a series of articles discussing challenges faced by our producers. All have been researched and written by Coppell Farmers Market committee member Lynette Fortson.
?
Water needs vary by the time of the year and the type of agricultural product being raised. All agricultural producers welcome the slow rains that soak deep into the soil, taking the roots down below the scorching shallow soil areas. Stressed fields and pastures respond immediately to a good gentle rain in a way they don?t with irrigation from a processed water source.

What do our growers do when the rain does not occur when needed? Some have catch ponds that capture runoff water that can be pumped to crops for irrigation purposes. Ranchers and farmers with catch ponds welcome the occasional hard downpour creating runoff. The land is sloped down to the pond and a runoff rain is needed to refill these bodies of water for livestock or irrigation. Others rely on city or community water services, adding considerable expense for watering such large areas with less desirable results than rain water due to the chemicals used in cleaning the water.

Some have wells that depend on an underground water source. At least one grower draws water from the Ogallala Aquifer, which is an underground layer of water that filtered through permeable rock to below ground. Aquifers are dependent on rain both occurring and hitting the recharge area, the area of rock that allows the water to percolate on down to the water table below. The entire area above the aquifer does not necessarily allow water to filter through so the recharge areas must be carefully protected or wells run dry despite rain.

Stacy Finley reported that she plants her pumpkin and winter squash seeds in July, watering only three times if needed during their growing season. Using a community watering system, she pays for each gallon used. If rains don?t occur at the needed times, they flood the field to send the roots deep. After a successful growing season last year, heavy fall rains prevented harvesting. They were not able to get a truck into the field and it was too far to carry each large item out through heavy mud. So needed rain can also be detrimental at the wrong time.

Watermelons and tomatoes also show the effects of rain just as they ripen. Soaking up that extra water can cause them to turn mealy, less sweet. Tomatoes may develop a crack on the skin from the sudden absorption of extra water. Both are still edible, however.

Drought also requires supplementary feeding for animals; finding organic feed or hay in a drought can be a challenge of its own and might necessitate shipping from long distances, adding significantly to expenses. Chickens stressed by heat become disoriented and die of dehydration with ample water bowls provided and replenished several times during the day.

Think of our producers when it rains. Rain in Coppell does not mean rain on their lands. They appreciate our concern.

Author :Moonlady.com

Source: http://moonlady.com/water-challenges-our-farmers-face/

andy reid redskins sugar bowl downton abbey season 3 2013 Calendar chris christie American Horror Story

For the prize: Forecasting MVP, Cy Young races

NEW YORK (AP) ? As the season's second half gets set to begin Friday, an early forecast for baseball's biggest individual awards:

___

AL MVP ? Hard to imagine anyone gaining enough ground to challenge Detroit slugger Miguel Cabrera and Baltimore first baseman Chris Davis in what appears to be a two-man race. Look for Davis to drop off a bit while Cabrera keeps up his astounding pace and wins his second consecutive MVP. No Triple Crown this time, though, as Davis hangs on for the home run title.

___

NL MVP ? A wide-open scramble at the All-Star break, it comes down to Arizona first baseman Paul Goldschmidt and Pittsburgh center fielder Andrew McCutchen. Goldschmidt has the power numbers, but it might be difficult for the Diamondbacks to hold off the surging Dodgers in the NL West. After two decades of losing, the Pirates have staying power this time. McCutchen, an all-around dynamo who started their turnaround, gets rewarded for a clutch stretch drive when Pittsburgh makes the playoffs for the first time since 1992.

___

AL CY YOUNG ? Max Scherzer went 13-1 for Detroit in the first half to earn the All-Star start. Felix Hernandez is coming on strong in Seattle, however, and the 2010 winner takes home another prize.

___

NL CY YOUNG ? Second-year sensation Matt Harvey of the New York Mets got the early attention and started the All-Star game at home. Clayton Kershaw was even better in the first half, though. Kershaw should get more run support from Yasiel Puig and an improved Los Angeles lineup the rest of the way en route to his second Cy Young in three years.

___

AL ROOKIE OF THE YEAR ? Nobody has really emerged yet. Tampa Bay has a pair of promising candidates who just got started in outfielder Wil Myers and pitcher Chris Archer. There's also Boston infielder Jose Iglesias, Seattle second baseman Nick Franklin and Oakland pitcher Dan Straily. Look for Myers to bloom in the second half.

___

NL ROOKIE OF THE YEAR ? The deep pitching class includes 20-year-old All-Star Jose Fernandez from Miami, Shelby Miller in St. Louis, Hyun-Jin Ryu of Los Angeles and Julio Teheran with Atlanta. But if Puig's first six weeks in the majors are any indication, his electrifying talent will win him this award as the Dodgers take off toward a division title.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prize-forecasting-mvp-cy-young-races-212340562.html

Sarah Savage Jaimie Alexander Army Navy Game john lennon leann rimes pearl harbor Jacintha Saldanha

Shells hit major Shiite shrine near Damascus

BEIRUT (AP) ? Mortar shells struck near a major Shiite shrine outside Damascus on Friday, killing its caretaker in an attack that threatens to further escalate sectarian tensions in Syria's civil war, the government and activists said.

State-run news agency SANA said shells fired be rebels fighting to topple President Bashar Assad landed "in the vicinity" of the revered Sayida Zeinab shrine, killing Anas Roumani, the shrine's administrative director. Several people were wounded in the explosion, SANA said.

Protection of the ornate, golden-domed mosque has become a rallying cry for Shiite fighters backing Assad, raising the stakes in a conflict that is increasingly being fought along sectarian lines.

Lebanese fighters from the militant Shiite Hezbollah group as well as Shiite Iraqi fighters have joined Syrian forces in battling rebels in the suburb that is home to the shrine of Sayida Zeinab, the Prophet Muhammad's granddaughter. The area, about 16 kilometers (10 miles) south of Damascus, has been engulfed in an offensive by Assad's forces to recapture suburbs held by rebels and areas in the country's strategic heartland.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on a wide network of activists on the ground, said the shells struck on the edge of shrine's complex, causing minor damage to its external wall.

Before Syria's civil war, now in its third year, the shrine attracted tens of thousands of Shiite pilgrims from around the world. Last year, rebels kidnapped Iranian pilgrims visiting the area, accusing them of being spies. The pilgrims were later released.

In Lebanon, Hezbollah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah has called it "a duty" to protect the shrine, saying that if Syrian rebels destroyed it, that would ignite a sectarian war with no end.

Also Friday, pro-government Kurdish fighters battled al-Qaida-linked rebels in northeastern Syria, the latest in clashes that have killed more than 40 on both sides this week, activists said.

The Kurdish forces, which back Assad, have fought rebels from radical Islamic groups in the northeastern province of Hassakeh and the northern region of Aleppo for months now.

Fighting erupted again on Tuesday and the dead since then have included 15 Kurdish fighters of the pro-government Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD, as well as 28 al-Qaida-linked fighters from the Jabhat al-Nusra or Nusra Front and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, the Britain-based Observatory said.

The Kurdish militiamen captured the oil-rich area of Suweidiyeh and also the town of Ras al-Ayn near the border with Turkey, the Observatory said. It added that Friday's fighting focused mostly on towns and villages near Ras al-Ayn.

Kurds, the largest ethnic minority in Syria, make up more than 10 percent of the country's 23 million people and have seen their loyalties split in the conflict between pro- and anti-Assad groups. The minority is centered in the poor northeastern regions of Hassakeh and Qamishli, wedged in between the borders of Turkey and Iraq. The capital, Damascus, and Syria's largest city, Aleppo, also have several predominantly Kurdish neighborhoods.

In other developments, authorities in Damascus complied with a rebel demand and released several women prisoners, Lebanese officials said Friday.

The release was expected to set the stage for the freeing of several Lebanese Shiite pilgrims held by Syrian rebels since they were abducted in May 2012.

Lebanese security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with regulations, said the women were released on Thursday. The Observatory said 23 women were freed, though there was no confirmation from Damascus.

It was unclear when or why the women were detained. There are tens of thousands of prisoners in Syrian jails, including many political prisoners and Assad opponents.

Lebanese officials have been shuttling between Syria and Turkey to try to mediate the pilgrims' release. In January, rebels freed 48 Iranians in exchange for more than 2,000 prisoners held by Syrian authorities.

More than 93,000 people have been killed since the Syrian conflict started in March 2011 as largely peaceful protests against Assad's rule. The crisis escalated into a civil war after some opposition supporters took up arms to fight a brutal government crackdown on dissent.

Also Friday, Lebanese military prosecutors filed charges against six members of the Nusra Front, accusing them of having weapons and explosive devices with the aim of "carrying out terrorist attacks" in Lebanon, the state-run National News Agency said. If convicted, they could face the death sentence, the report said.

Syria's civil war has spilled over to Lebanon on several occasions in the past months, killing scores. Many Lebanese Sunnis support the overwhelmingly Sunni uprising against Assad, while Shiites generally back Hezbollah and the Syrian regime.

The British government said Friday it banned ? effective immediately ? the Nusra Front, a move making membership in the group a criminal offense. The Home Office said it added the group to the government's list of outlawed organizations, a U.K.-wide roster of foreign and domestic terror groups.

Many Western governments have expressed concern that the Syrian conflict is serving as an incubator for Islamist terror. Last week senior British lawmakers warned that jihadists in Syria "currently represent the most worrying emerging terrorist threat to the U.K. and the West."

___

Associated Press writer Zeina Karam contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/shells-hit-major-shiite-shrine-near-damascus-174449259.html

barbra streisand barbra streisand hugh jackman Aly Raisman Oscar Results Jennifer Lawrence Fall Ang Lee

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Need help on next steps with uncooperative debt collector

Thanks for the response. All of this is taking place in Connecticut (where I am from). I do understand that the debt collector is not on my side. I was already sued by them (served with a summons on the day after Christmas 2012), which resulted in a stipulated judgment I had no choice to sign since I could not afford a lawyer.

?

?

?

Ouch. Judgments in CT are enforceable for 20 years.

?

?

44% of the entire debt, including interest, is paid off..

?

I wouldn't count on that.

?

If you ask the collector how much the balance is, you might be in for a shock since you defaulted in May.

?

?

My mother said I don't qualify for bankruptcy since the debt is small. She knows since she had to file twice over the years.

?

The size of the debt has less to do with bankruptcy qualifications than your income level.

?

If you are curious as to whether you might qualify for Ch 7, take the means test and see how you come out:

?

http://www.uscourts....rrent/B_22A.pdf

?

However, if this is your only debt and you have no other?income or credit issues, then bankruptcy might not be a good choice.

?

But if you have other debts that are eating up all your income (even if they are being paid current) then bankruptcy might be worth looking into.

?

And (no disrespect here) do not take legal advice from your mother.?Unless, of course, she is a bankruptcy attorney.? ^_^


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FindlawAnswers/~3/K9SUMBt4V4Q/

LIPA Garcinia Cambogia Little Things One Direction Bob Ross Hurricane Categories Hurricane Sandy new jersey

Pregnant Olympic Runner Dies, Baby Saved

A former Olympic runner, who was eight months pregnant, died suddenly Wednesday at a restaurant in Hamden, Conn. Emergency personnel were able to safely deliver her baby at a nearby hospital.

Meskerem Legesse, 26, was getting takeout food from a Chinese restaurant with her 2-year-old son when she suddenly collapsed and died, according to The Associated Press. Paramedics and emergency crews were able to perform CPR on Legesse until she was taken to the Yale-New Haven Hospital, where the baby was delivered.

The hospital did not immediately respond to calls about the condition of the baby.

Fatima Sene, a friend of Legesse, said that she had suffered heart problems in the past.

"It is very sad. She was a very good person," Sene told the AP. "She would do anything for anybody. And she loved that little boy she left behind."

Pregnant Women Most Vulnerable to Flu

The cause of death has not been made public and according to the state medical examiner's office there are no plans for an autopsy.

Dr. Todd Miller, director of Sports Cardiology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., said that sudden death in athletes under 30 is often attributed to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a hardening of the heart muscle, or anomalous coronary artery, an irregular artery. Miller, who did not treat Legesse and does not know her cause of death, said underlying heart problems can cause fatalities even when a person is at rest.

"That's the paradox, sometimes [fatal events] happen during extreme exertion and sometimes they come out [when a person is at] rest," said Miller.

Dr. Jordan Metzl, a sports medicine physician at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, said that underlying heart problems can be exacerbated by pregnancy.

"Anytime you're pregnant, it's like you're jogging when you're walking or you're sprinting when you're jogging," said Metzl. "It's just more strain."

Heart Troubles Rare but Deadly in Young Athletes

Legesse reportedly collapsed seconds after she sat down at the Chinese restaurant. Paramedics reportedly were there within minutes and started CPR.

Dr. Robert Barbieri, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Brigham and Women's hospital in Boston, said that the CPR could have helped save the baby by keeping the blood flowing. Barbieri, who did not treat Legesse, said if there is some blood flowing, doctors may have up to 30 minutes to deliver the baby.

Legesse was an accomplished professional runner, who ran in the first round of the 1500 meter race in the 2004 Olympics. The Associated Press has contributed to this report.

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pregnant-olympic-runner-dies-baby-saved-183400678.html

Beyonce Bow Down Jason Molina UCF Pigeon Forge Fire cyprus cyprus Bracketology