Monday 25 February 2013

Biden: Washington frozen by partisanship

(AP) ? Vice President Joe Biden says Washington is frozen by intense partisanship ? but he's hoping it's just temporary.

Biden told governors gathered at the White House for an annual meeting Monday that they're more disciplined than Congress. He chided Washington lawmakers, asserting that they are preventing a solution to the automatic spending cuts set to kick in on March 1.

Biden says Democratic and Republican governors alike ask him how he can deal with gridlock in Congress. He says people may disagree on solutions, but everyone agrees the so-called sequester should be addressed.

The White House has warned the $85 billion budget mechanism could affect everything from commercial flights to classrooms to meat inspections. They would slash domestic and defense spending, leading to furloughs for hundreds of thousands of workers.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-02-25-US-Budget-Battle-Biden/id-39f199e57b704491987e4aebcddb881b

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Sunday 24 February 2013

Top GOP Voter ID Crusader Loses Virginia Election Panel Post

Hans Von Spakovsky in his official FEC photo taken during former President George W. Bush's administration.

FEC.gov

To those who closely follow the voter ID wars, Hans von Spakovsky is a household name, one of the nation's leading crusaders against voter fraud, and also one of its more controversial. Days before the 2012 election, The New Yorker profiled him as "the man who has stoked fear about imposters at the poll."

So it was news that von Spakovsky, a Republican lawyer and scholar at the conservative Heritage Foundation, failed to get a second term on the electoral board of Fairfax County, Virginia's largest county, despite being the top choice of the county's Republican Party.

It was the kind of local personnel change that normally wouldn't get much attention ? except that von Spakovsky has become something of a national lightning rod.

The panel of county circuit court judges who approve the political parties' nominees to the board voted to replace von Spakovsky with another Republican lawyer, Brian Schoeneman. County Democrats had accused von Spakovsky of being hyperpartisan and a master at voter suppression tactics, charges that have trailed him for years.

In an email to my request for reaction to his judicial decision, von Spakovsky, whose term ends Feb. 28, wrote:

"The 'partisanship' claim is disproved by a very simple, uncontested fact, which is reflected in the minutes of the January 10, 2013, meeting of the Board.

"I asked our clerk in December to total up all of the votes taken by the Election Board since Seth Harp, the Democratic appointee to the Board, took office. There were 224 votes taken during that time period. The Board voted 2-1 on only three issues. All remaining votes were unanimous.

"It is a bit much to claim we (or I) acted in a partisan manner on the Board when the Democratic member voted with me in 99% of all of the votes of the Board.

"But then, a majority of the judges who made this decision are Democratic appointees and they clearly made a purely partisan, political decision. They apparently don't like someone who has stood up for the integrity of the election process as I have."

According to Jay McConville, chairman of the county's Republican Party, it was the first time to his knowledge or that of those he consulted that the county's judges rejected one of the two major political parties' top choices to the electoral board. In an interview with me, he said:

"In my opinion it was the unprecedented, unnecessary and really unacceptable protest by the Fairfax County Democrats. And for reasons that are very hard to understand other than just being partisan gamesmanship. They've broken a longstanding tradition honestly because they want to show that they can. And that's really unfortunate.

"... What we care about in the Republican Party is defending the vote and free elections where qualified folks can vote. And make sure it runs well. Hans is an expert on that and he should be on the board."

Fairfax County Democrats agree that the circumstances surrounding von Spakovsky were unprecedented, though they put their emphasis not on how he is leaving the board but rather how he arrived.

Bettina Lawson, an official, said:

"What was unprecedented, actually, was the original nomination of the Fairfax County Republican Party of Hans von Spakovsky. He has a national reputation for efforts to suppress the vote with his various positions on voter identification and creating a lot of fear about voter fraud. And putting a person like that on the Fairfax Electoral Board was the original problem.

"What we did in the last three years was experience the results of that. That's why the Fairfax Democratic committee took the step of sending the letter to the judges to say, we want you to know that this man has this reputation. While he has been on our electoral board he's continued these efforts."

Von Spakovsky pushed successfully to end the practice of providing multilingual voting information in the voter registrar's office, Lawson said, a problem in a county with considerable diversity. He also succeeded in removing from the registrar's office nonpartisan informational material provided by the League of Women Voters that the county had long been made available to voters.

These and other actions made Democrats seek to permanently suppress von Spakovsky's vote on the board by getting him kicked off.

Von Spakovsky was a George W. Bush appointee to the Federal Elections Commission. But it was von Spakovsky's work before that as a Justice Department political appointee that drew the praise of voter ID proponents and ire of those opposed to the controversial laws.

As NPR's Peter Overby reported in 2007 at the time of von Spakovsky's confirmation hearing to the FEC, von Spakovsky critics accused him of, among other things, being overly partisan:

"In 2003, he worked on a redistricting plan from Texas. Tom Delay, then the most powerful Republican in Congress, drew the plan to add Republicans to the state's Congressional delegation. Career lawyers in the Justice Department said it shouldn't be approved. Von Spakovsky and other politicos thought it should be, and it was.

" ... Here are other notable cases, too. In 2005, Justice reviewed a voter identification law from Georgia. Critics said it discriminated against poor people who would have the hardest time getting photo IDs. Von Spakovsky had published a law review article arguing strongly for voter ID laws, but he'd used a pseudonym so no one connected him to it. He oversaw the review of the Georgia case at Justice and once again he overruled the career lawyers. After that career employees say there was a purge.

"... Von Spakovsky has drawn other criticism as well. At the Federal Election Commission, he declared that a proposal to regulate political advertising was equivalent to the Alien and Sedition Acts, laws that were enacted in 1798 in an effort to silence attacks on President John Adams. Proponents of stronger campaign finance regulation questioned his commitment to enforcing policies that he so clearly opposes. Von Spakovsky declined to be interviewed for this piece."

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/02/22/172722972/top-gop-voter-id-crusader-loses-virginia-election-panel-post?ft=1&f=1001

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Saturday 23 February 2013

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Port of Salalah holds union elections

Salalah: The Port of Salalah last week conducted the elections of the company's Union Administrative Authority (UAA) and the registration of General Assembly (union) members.

A total 875 employees at the Port of Salalah have registered with the union for the upcoming four-year period, of which approximately 85 per cent are Omani nationals and the remaining 15 per cent are expa-triates. These employees elected the leaders of the UAA from a group of 11 Omani candidates.

The Port of Salalah, currently the largest private sector employer in the Dhofar region with more than 2,200 employees, formed the first representative body in 2000. Following the amendment to Oman's Labour Law in 2006 to formalise the establishment of trade unions in Oman, the first official union body was elected at the port in 2009, which served its four-year term until 2012. The current round of elections lasted for two days, following staff members' enrolment and campaign.

The elections were supervised by Masoud bin Ali Jaaboub, head of the trade union organisations at the Dhofar governorate office for the Ministry of Manpower.
Masoud praised the administration's organising committee for maintaining transparency in its registration, nomination, and screening process.?

The newly elected UAA members include Salim Masoud Ali Bait Said, Zeyad Ahmed Salim Al Marhoon, Khalid Salim Ali Jaboob, Said Mahad Musallam Bait Said, Musallam Said Ahmed Tabook, Ali Salim Ali Al Jahfali, and Salim Said Musallam Al Kathiri.

Ahmed Akaak, Deputy CEO at the Port of Salalah, said, "At the Port of Salalah, we place a lot of emphasis on providing support to facilitate the work of the union authorities, and we praise all efforts made in this regard."

Hind Jumaan Hubais, the head of the election organising committee and member of the port's human resources department, said that the fact that the employees were fully exercising their electoral rights reflected the election's success and employee credibility.
Hubais also underlined the support offered by the members of the organising committee in this regard.

Former president of the port's UAA, Ahmed bin Salim Al Amri, pointed out that the new union authority was picking up from the previous union's success and the results that had been achieved in an era of strong dialogue and sound negotiations.

Al Amri also thanked the former members of the UAA for their hard work and offered his best wishes to the newly elected? members.

Source: http://www.timesofoman.com/News/Article-9216.aspx

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Colo. teen heard on 911 call saying he killed girl

This photo provided by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office shows Austin Reed Sigg on Nov. 27, 2012. Sigg, 18, accused of kidnapping and killing a 10-year-old Westminster girl, is due in court for a hearing laying out the evidence against him. Sigg's hearing on Friday comes a day after the Colorado Supreme Court overturned a judge's decision to keep proceedings closed to the public.(AP Photo/Jefferson County Sheriff's Office)

This photo provided by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office shows Austin Reed Sigg on Nov. 27, 2012. Sigg, 18, accused of kidnapping and killing a 10-year-old Westminster girl, is due in court for a hearing laying out the evidence against him. Sigg's hearing on Friday comes a day after the Colorado Supreme Court overturned a judge's decision to keep proceedings closed to the public.(AP Photo/Jefferson County Sheriff's Office)

(AP) ? A Colorado teenager told a 911 dispatcher last fall that he kidnapped and killed a missing suburban Denver school girl and hid her remains in a crawl space at his mother's home, according to a recording played by a prosecutor in court Friday.

The recording was played at a preliminary hearing at which a judge decided there's enough evidence for Austin Sigg to stand trial in both the death of 10-year-old Jessica Ridgeway and an attack on a jogger at nearby Ketner Lake in May.

Westminster police Detective Michael Lynch testified at the hearing that Sigg first confessed to his mother, telling her that he kidnapped Jessica as she walked past his car, bound her arms and her legs, placed her in the back seat, drove around for a little bit, then took her to his house.

He had Jessica change clothes and tried to strangle her, first with zip ties and later with his hands, Lynch testified. He then took the girl's body to a bathtub where he dismembered her using a saw, he said.

Sigg, now 18, is charged with murder, kidnapping, sexual assault and robbery in Jessica's death.

Prosecutors have added three counts of sexual exploitation of a child because child pornography was allegedly found during the investigation.

He also faces an attempted kidnapping charge for the attack on the jogger. Attempted murder and attempted sexual assault charges have been dropped in that case.

Jessica's disappearance on her way to school on Oct. 5 set parents in the Denver area on edge for several weeks. Hundreds of officers canvassed the area, investigated leads and took DNA samples as parents waited with their children at bus stops and thought twice about letting them out of sight.

On Oct. 23, Sigg's mother called 911 to say her son wanted to turn himself in and had confessed to killing the girl. When the dispatcher asked what her son had said, Mindy Sigg replied, "That he did it, and he gave me details, and her remains are in my house."

She can be heard crying and asking if her son will talk to the dispatcher, who asks him general questions.

"I don't exactly get why you're asking me these questions. I murdered Jessica Ridgeway. I have proof that I did it," Austin Sigg said. "You have to send a squad car down here, and I'll answer any questions you want to ask me."

He also said the remains were in a crawl space.

When asked about his criminal record, he told the dispatcher: "The only other thing that I have done was the Ketner Lake incident where the woman got attacked. That was me."

Mindy Sigg told investigators that her son appeared sick the day he confessed and said he opened the conversation by saying he was a "monster," Lynch testified.

The teen had been on investigators' radar before his mother turned him in. A neighbor called a tip line suggesting they check him out because he seemed preoccupied with death, Westminster police Detective Luis Lopez said.

Two FBI agents responded and took a DNA sample from Sigg on Oct. 19, four days before his mother called 911.

Lopez said Sigg's DNA ? the kind left behind by touching something ? was found on Jessica's clothing, but no semen was found.

Sigg told investigators that he didn't rape Jessica, Lynch said.

"It was a comment he had made right off the bat, 'I didn't rape her. I didn't torture her.'"

Some of Jessica's remains were found in garbage bags in an open space park five days after she went missing. Friday was the first time investigators revealed that the bags contained her torso. Lopez testified that she died of asphyxiation.

The judge originally ordered Friday's hearing to be closed to the public but the Colorado Supreme Court sided with media organizations who argued that he failed to show that holding the hearing in public would jeopardize Sigg's right to a fair trial.

Arraignment is set for March 12.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-02-22-School%20Girl%20Killed/id-c15b969184ec4ae588774b8dca3cb33a

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TSX rises on oil and banks, but Agrium dives

TORONTO (Reuters) - The main Canadian stock index rose on Friday as heavyweight energy shares climbed with oil prices and financial stocks were up ahead of their earnings season, and the index ended the week with a slight gain despite sharp mid-week falls.

Canadian banks rode higher on broadly positive sentiment for equities. Their quarterly earnings season starts next week, and some investors expect dividend increases.

"Banking stocks, for the most part, are on the positive side," said Fred Ketchen, director of equity trading at ScotiaMcLeod. "There has been some speculation that a couple of the banks will be increasing their dividend."

Bank of Nova Scotia gained 0.7 percent to C$60.34, Royal Bank of Canada added 0.4 percent to C$64.22, and Bank of Montreal was up 0.6 percent at C$63.09.

The energy sector gained as the price of crude oil rebounded after two days of heavy losses.

Suncor Energy Inc had the single biggest positive effect on the index, moving 1.4 percent higher to C$31.95.

"We may be reinitiating the uptrend," said Douglas Davis, chief executive at Davis-Rea. "Possibly it's just a bounceback after two bad days, but it doesn't look like that."

The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index <.gsptse> bounced off a five-week low hit on Thursday, and ended up 61.66 points, or 0.49 percent, at 12,701.63. It notched a gain of 0.12 percent for the week.

Davis said the beaten-down oil and gas sector might win back favor as problems getting Canadian oil to market dissipate with increased rail volume and the likelihood of a U.S. government green light for the Keystone XL pipeline project to carry crude from the Alberta oil sands to refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast.

"If Keystone stumbles, we stumble ... but I would bet on it going through," he said.

The index's gain echoed moves in U.S. and European markets, although Canadian miners bucked the trend, with heavy selling in fertilizer companies in particular. <.n><.eu/>

Fertilizer producer Agrium Inc was the heaviest weight on the index, down 5.2 percent at C$103.14.

Agrium reported record high fourth-quarter profit after normal trading hours on Thursday but was hurt by an analyst downgrade of many of the leading names in the fertilizer sector, including Potash Corp , which fell 1 percent to C$39.96.

The market mostly brushed off data that showed the Canadian economy registered its lowest inflation in more than three years in January and its largest drop in retail sales in almost three years in December.

"I don't see anything that is really outstanding on the positive side...when you look at things going on in the Canadian economy," ScotiaMcLeod's Ketchen said.

($1=$1.02 Canadian)

(Editing by Peter Galloway)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tsx-may-open-higher-positive-german-business-data-132954578--sector.html

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HP's stock soars to biggest 1-day gain since 2008

(AP) ? Hewlett-Packard Co.'s stock surged to its biggest one-day gain since 2008 after the company's latest quarterly earnings report indicated the ailing personal computer and printer maker isn't quite as sick as many investors feared.

THE SPARK: Chalk up Friday's 12 percent gain to a quintessential relief rally. After the stock market closed Thursday, HP released quarterly earnings and revenue that topped the projections of the company's management and analysts.

Although the results showed that HP's PC business and other key operations are still slumping, the numbers were a soothing contrast to the company's ghastly performance during much of last year. In the previous two quarters alone, HP had registered losses totaling $15.3 billion, reflecting the costs of two major acquisitions that had gone awry. In the January quarter, it posted a $1.2 billion profit.

THE BIG PICTURE: Now that HP did better than expected in its fiscal first quarter, which ended in January, it's raised hopes that HP CEO Meg Whitman might be able to engineer a turnaround ahead of schedule. Whitman has consistently described her plan as a "multi-year journey."

HP, which is based in Palo, Alto, Calif., fed the optimism by predicting that its earnings for the current quarter will be slightly better than analysts' projections. Even so, Whitman cautioned in a Thursday conference call with analysts that HP still faces plenty of challenges. Among other things, the downturn in PC sales could still get even worse, according to HP. In the most recent quarter, revenue in HP's PC division fell 8 percent from the previous year.

Like most other PC makers, HP is scrambling to adapt to a technological shift that is driving more spending on smartphones and tablet computers instead of desktop and laptop machines.

Plenty of investors still have their doubts about HP's ability to evolve while it also tries to expand into more profitable technology niches such as business software, data-analysis tools and consulting services. Even after Friday's big boost, the shares are about 15 percent below where they stood when Whitman became CEO in September 2011. Over the past three years, shares have lost about 60 percent of their value.

ANALYST'S TAKE: Many analysts seem to think the market may have overreacted to HP's latest earnings report. One, Sterene Agee's Shaw Wu, said in a Friday research note that he didn't expect big future stock-market gains.

SHARE ACTION: HP's stock climbed $2.10, or 12 percent, to close at $19.20. That marked the company's biggest one-day gain since a 14.5 percent increase in November 2008 and left the shares at its highest closing price in six months.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-02-22-US-Hewlett-Packard-Stock/id-3933dc4c7dc44e65bff3baf1a51cdd61

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Friday 22 February 2013

Britain to India: Diamond in royal crown is ours

AMRITSAR, India (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron says a giant diamond his country forced India to hand over in the colonial era that was set in a royal crown will not be returned.

Speaking on the third and final day of a visit to India aimed at drumming up trade and investment, Cameron ruled out handing back the 105-carat Koh-i-Noor diamond, now on display in the Tower of London. The diamond had been set in the crown of the current Queen Elizabeth's late mother.

One of the world's largest diamonds, some Indians - including independence leader Mahatma Gandhi's grandson - have demanded its return to atone for Britain's colonial past.

"I don't think that's the right approach," Cameron told reporters on Wednesday after becoming the first serving British prime minister to voice regret about one of the bloodiest episodes in colonial India, a massacre of unarmed civilians in the city of Amritsar in 1919.

"It is the same question with the Elgin Marbles," he said, referring to the classical Greek marble sculptures that Athens has long demanded be given back.

"The right answer is for the British Museum and other cultural institutions to do exactly what they do, which is to link up with other institutions around the world to make sure that the things which we have and look after so well are properly shared with people around the world.

"I certainly don't believe in 'returnism', as it were. I don't think that's sensible."

Britain's then colonial governor-general of India arranged for the huge diamond to be presented to Queen Victoria in 1850.

If Kate Middleton, the wife of Prince William, who is second in line to the throne, eventually becomes queen consort she will don the crown holding the diamond on official occasions.

When Elizabeth II made a state visit to India to mark the 50th anniversary of India's independence from Britain in 1997, many Indians demanded the return of the diamond.

Cameron is keen to tap into India's economic rise, but says he is anxious to focus on the present and future rather than "reach back" into the past.

(Reporting By Andrew Osborn; Editing by Michael Roddy)

(This story corrects to remove reference to Queen Elizabeth I in lead paragraph)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/britain-india-diamond-royal-crown-ours-000545529.html

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Major methane release is almost inevitable

We are on the cusp of a tipping point in the climate. If the global climate warms another few tenths of a degree, a large expanse of the Siberian permafrost will start to melt uncontrollably. The result: a significant amount of extra greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere, and a threat ? ironically ? to the infrastructure that carries natural gas from Russia to Europe.

The Arctic is warming faster than the rest of the planet, and climatologists have long warned that this will cause positive feedbacks that will speed up climate change further. The region is home to enormous stores of organic carbon, mostly in the form of permafrost soils and icy clathrates that trap methane ? a powerful greenhouse gas that could escape into the atmosphere.

The Siberian permafrost is a particular danger. A large region called the Yedoma could undergo runaway decomposition once it starts to melt, because microbes in the soil would eat the carbon and produce heat, melting more soil and releasing ever more greenhouse gases. In short, the melting of Yedoma is a tipping point: once it starts, there may be no stopping it.

For the first time, we have an indication of when this could start happening. Anton Vaks of the University of Oxford in the UK and colleagues have reconstructed the history of the Siberian permafrost going back 500,000 years. We already know how global temperatures have risen and fallen as ice sheets have advanced and retreated, so Vaks's team's record of changing permafrost gives an indication of how sensitive it is to changing temperatures.

Stalagmite record

But there is no direct record of how the permafrost has changed, so Vaks had to find an indirect method. His team visited six caves that run along a south-north line, with the two southernmost ones being under the Gobi desert. Further north, three caves sit beneath a landscape of sporadic patches of permafrost, and the northernmost cave is right at the edge of Siberia's continuous permafrost zone.

The team focused on the 500,000-year history of stalagmites and similar rock formations in the caves. "Stalagmites only grow when water flows into caves," Vaks says. "It cannot happen when the soil is frozen." The team used radiometric dating to determine how old the stalagmites were. By building up a record of when they grew, Vaks could figure out when the ground above the caves was frozen and when it wasn't.

As expected, in most of the caves, stalagmites formed during every warm interglacial period as the patchy permafrost melted overhead.

But it took a particularly warm interglacial, from 424,000 and 374,000 years ago, for the stalagmites in the northernmost cave to grow ? suggesting the continuous permafrost overhead melted just once in the last 500,000 years.

At the time, global temperatures were 1.5??C warmer than they have been in the last 10,000 years. In other words, today's permafrost is likely to become vulnerable when we hit 1.5??C of global warming, says Vaks.

"Up until this point, we didn't have direct evidence of how this happened in past warming periods," says Ted Schuur of the University of Florida in Gainesville.

It will be very hard to stop the permafrost degrading as a warming of 1.5??C is not far off. Between 1850 and 2005, global temperatures rose 0.8??C, according to the 2007 report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Even if humanity stopped emitting greenhouse gases tomorrow, temperatures would rise another 0.2??C over the next 20 years. That would leave a window of 0.5??C ? but in fact our emissions are increasing. What's more, new fossil fuel power stations commit us to several decades of emissions.

Soggy permafrost

What are the consequences? The greatest concern, says Tim Lenton of the University of Exeter in the UK, is the regional landscape. Buildings and infrastructure are often built on hard permafrost, and will start subsiding. "Ice roads won't exist any more."

The increasingly soggy permafrost will also threaten the pipelines that transport Russian gas to Europe. "The maintenance and upkeep of that infrastructure is going to cost a lot more," says Schuur.

As for the methane that could be released into the atmosphere, Schuur estimates that emissions will be equivalent to between 160 and 290 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide.

That sounds like a lot, but is little compared to the vast amount humans are likely to emit, says Lenton. "The signal's going to be swamped by fossil fuel [emissions]."

He says the dangers of the permafrost greenhouse gases have been overhyped, particularly as much of the methane will be converted to carbon dioxide by microbes in the soil, leading to a slower warming effect.

Schuur agrees with Lenton that the methane emissions are "not a runaway effect but an additional source that is not accounted in current climate models".

Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1228729

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Thursday 21 February 2013

Thies: Law school debt 'unsustainable' over long term

CHAMPAIGN ? Today's law school students, on average, face a debt load of about $100,000 for legal education, the president of the Illinois State Bar Association said.

That figure, John Thies said, doesn't include debt they may have incurred as a result of undergraduate education.

Speaking at the University of Illinois College of Law on Tuesday, Thies told students that their counterparts over the next 10 to 15 years will probably face similar challenges.

But over the long term, that kind of debt for legal education is "unsustainable," given salaries in the profession.

Jobs that pay enough to satisfy the debt payments aren't forthcoming, he said.

"I don't see salaries changing," Thies said. "What's got to change is cost."

Thies, a shareholder in the Urbana law firm of Webber & Thies, said he didn't think law school could very well be cut from three years to two.

But he suggested "significant changes" could be made to the third year to help make students "practice-ready."

Upon becoming president of the state bar association, Thies created a task force to report on what effect law school debt is having on the delivery of legal services in Illinois.

For example, small law firms ? those with fewer than 10 employees ? may not be able to afford people who have to pay off high law school debt.

The task force scheduled five hearings around the state and heard testimony from 50 witnesses, he said. Now it's drafting a report on what can be done, both short and long term, to make a difference.

One student in the audience reported hearing a story of someone still paying off law school debt from 1993.

Thies said he didn't doubt that. He said some have described law school debt as "the mortgage for a house I can't live in" and "the debt I'll die with."

One student asked why, if law school costs are so high, aren't fewer students applying to law school.

Thies said applications to law schools have dropped substantially the last two years.

He said the nation "may have too many law schools." But he dismissed any notion that there are too many lawyers or law students, saying there's "a tremendous need" for legal services.

When asked what reforms law schools should make, Thies said he didn't want to pre-empt the task force's recommendations. But he said arrangements could be made to match law school students with "aging baby-boomers" in private practice so the young lawyers can eventually take over the practice.

He also said law schools could do a better job facilitating internships and externships for students, recognizing that many students can't afford to serve unpaid.

Separately, Thies said the bar association has launched a two-week food and fundraising campaign for eight regional food banks in Illinois, with the goal of providing 1 million meals for the hungry.

As of Tuesday, the "Lawyers Feeding Illinois" campaign had raised enough for 352,000 meals.

Source: http://www.news-gazette.com/news/education/2013-02-20/thies-law-school-debt-unsustainable-over-long-term.html

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Multiple tests needed to detect infection in low birth-weight newborns, study suggests

Feb. 20, 2013 ? New research by Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine and Yale University School of Medicine finds that cultures commonly used to detect bacterial infections in low birth-weight newborns with early onset sepsis may actually overlook some germs.

The research done at Case Western Reserve supports the need for multiple detection methods, such as DNA genomic analyses and other independent culture technologies, to identify bacteria that culturing may miss, said Yiping Han, professor of Periodontics and Reproductive Biology at the Case Western Reserve dental school and the corresponding author on the study.

An analysis of 44 prematurely-born babies, the majority of whom were diagnosed with early onset sepsis, was published in the journal PLOS ONE article, "Comparative microbial analysis of paired amniotic fluid and cord blood from pregnancies complicated by preterm birth and early-onset neonatal sepsis."

"Culture independent technology has broadened our scope of understanding human pathogens," said Han. The testing, under the lead investigator and Case Western Reserve postdoctoral scholar Xiaowei Wang, analyzed umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid samples from Yale University medical school.

The researchers found more than 20 bacterial species not discovered using standard culturing. Some of the uncultured species appeared in both the cord blood and amniotic fluid samples.

The uncultured bacteria were detected with DNA genomic analysis that Han's lab had used in a prior study that discovered the link between oral bacteria that causes still- or premature-births due to infected amniotic fluid that is supposed to be a sterile environment.

"By using molecular biology identity tools this is the first time we have shown that same microbes could move from the amniotic fluid into the fetal bloodstream," said Dr. Catalin S. Buhimschi, MD, from Yale University's Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences.

The bacteria enter the fetus' blood after the fetus ingests the amniotic fluid in the lungs or gastrointestinal tract.

Han said the discovery is further evidence of how oral bacteria travel into the maternal blood stream and eventually through the cord blood and amniotic fluid to the baby.

Researchers detected such uncultured bacteria as Fusobacterium nucleatum, which has a key-like mechanism that opens blood-vessel and cell walls to infect other areas of the body.

Han said DNA testing techniques were able for the first time to detect the oral bacteria -- Fusobacterium nucleatum, Begeyalla and Sneathia sanguinegens -- that brought on early neonatal sepsis and put newborns at risk of dying shortly after birth. Among these, Fusobacterium nucleatum was found at the same high frequency as the well-known Escherichia coli, putting the former on the same importance scale as the latter.

Early sepsis develops within 72 hours of birth. Its symptoms are varied, from apnea to low body temperatures. Four of every 1,000 births in the U.S. develop the infections.

Baby's blood or spinal fluid is cultured for bacteria. A positive culture confirms sepsis, but many babies exhibit the symptoms of infection unconfirmed by culturing.

Standard management is to administer antibiotics for three days while doctors monitor the response to treatment.

Dr. Vineet Bhandari, MD, DM, associate professor of Pediatrics, Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences and director of the Program in Perinatal Research at the Yale University School of Medicine, raises concerns that widespread use of antibiotics could increase antibiotic-resistant bacteria when the exact bacteria are not targeted.

"This research is important in finding the right bug to target for antibiotics," Bhandari said.

Detecting bacteria is also more complicated if the mother has an infection prior to birth and is treated with antibiotics, the neonatologist said. Bhandari explained that treating the mother eliminates many cultured bacteria, making it difficult to determine what is infecting the baby.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Case Western Reserve University, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Xiaowei Wang, Catalin S. Buhimschi, Stephanie Temoin, Vineet Bhandari, Yiping W. Han, Irina A. Buhimschi. Comparative Microbial Analysis of Paired Amniotic Fluid and Cord Blood from Pregnancies Complicated by Preterm Birth and Early-Onset Neonatal Sepsis. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (2): e56131 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0056131

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/_zwWB1h7D44/130220184953.htm

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Lady Gaga Goes Under The Knife For Hip Surgery

'I thought to myself, I'm alive, I'm living my dream, and this is just a bump in the road,' Gaga says about Wednesday's procedure.
By Gil Kaufman


Lady Gaga
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702309/lady-gaga-hip-surgery.jhtml

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PFT: McCoy says Rivers perfect face of franchise

officialGetty Images

With the end of the lockout between the NFL and the referees association came the possibility of full-time officials for the first time in league history.

Former V.P. of officiating Carl Johnson stepped down from his role in December to return to the field and became the league?s first full-time referee. The league?s competition committee has been meeting this week in Indianapolis in advance of the NFL combine. New V.P. of officiating, Dean Blandino, said in an interview with Ian Rapoport of the NFL Network that the league is looking at increasing its stable of full-time officials.

?We?re looking at possibly going to seven full-time officials, one at each position, and they will work throughout the season and the off-season,? Blandino said. ?They?ll be able to go to OTAs, work practices, go to training camp, that type of thing ? put together guidelines, mechanics manuals, competition committees like this they could be a part of, so we?re excited about the possibility of full-time officials and what they can bring to the program.?

Johnson is expected to return to his prior role as a line judge for next season. If the league adds a full-time official at all seven position, they would also be adding a referee, umpire, head linesman, field judge, back judge and side judge. Blandino also said the league is looking at creating a developmental program for college officials that will be able to work the NFL during the off-season. Those officials will be able to work during off-season workouts and mini-camps to get a feel for being an NFL official and could even end up working preseason games to get a feel for the game environment before becoming a game official.

All the changes are pointed toward trying to improve the consistency of officiating across the league.

?My whole focus is striving for consistency. I think that?s what everybody wants,? Blandino said. ?Coaches, players, owners, officials, we want consistency. We want to be transparent. We?re going to communicate. Whether it?s clubs, whether it?s the media, if we make a mistake we?re going to admit but people have to understand it?s a fast game. It happens quickly and our officials do a tremendous job. Our officials are going to strive for consistency and that?s what everybody wants.?

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/02/19/mike-mccoy-rivers-a-great-guy-to-have-as-face-of-franchise/related/

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Thursday 14 February 2013

reasons-to-run-and-how-it-will-change-your-life - Health - Women ...

There are so many reasons to run ? to be fit, to clear your head, to be able to eat as many cookies as you want ? it seems like every runner has a different reason to lace up their trainers and run every day. If you start running, chances are you?ll completely agree with some of these brilliant reasons to run. Which might motivate you to give it a go? Let?s find out.

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For most runners, this is one of the reasons to run that got them to the track, or on the trail, in the first place. In a time when so many of us are battling obesity and its related health issues, the fitness aspect of running can?t be ignored. If you?re on your own weight loss and fitness journey, reap the fitness benefits of running safely, by starting slow, with walking, then gradually building your distance and pace til you?re (literally) off and running. Your body will thank you!

Source: http://health.allwomenstalk.com/reasons-to-run-and-how-it-will-change-your-life/

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Cisco results beat Street; CEO sees challenge in Europe

(Reuters) - Cisco Systems Inc's quarterly results topped Wall Street views on Wednesday amid early signs tech spending was on the mend, but CEO John Chambers warned the picture was mixed and parts of Europe remained challenging.

The company's shares were down 1.7 pct in after hours trading after Cisco reported that revenue growth in Europe - which accounts for a quarter of its business - was down 5 percent. Revenue in the Americas was up 9 percent and was 8.3 percent higher in the Asia-Pacific region.

Chambers pointed out that business in Germany and Northern Europe was beginning to give reason for cautious optimism, but Southern Europe remained tough in economic terms.

"We are seeing early signs of stabilization in government spending and also in probably a little bit over two thirds of Europe," CEO John Chambers told analysts on a conference call after the results were announced.

"But I want to watch that for at least another quarter before I get really excited about it."

Chambers comments on economic development are generally watched closely because Cisco is considered a sector bellwether due to its global scale and diverse client base.

For the current quarter, which runs until the end of April, Cisco expects revenue to grow 4 percent to 6 percent compared with a year ago.

It forecast earnings per share, excluding items, in a range of 48 cents to 50 cents, in line with average analyst expectations of 49 cents.

JPM Securities analyst Erik Suppiger said revenue was a particular focus for investors.

"People are pretty confident about Cisco's ability to cut costs and maintain gross margins," Suppiger said.

"The metric people don't have as much confidence in is revenue," he said. "There was upside to consensus in the second quarter, but it was fairly modest."

Suppiger said Cisco's stock had been trading higher before the results and investors had been hoping for more comments on recovery.

"He certainly said positive things about the federal sector and positive signs in Europe, but there is not a lot of tangible evidence that we have turned the corner," Suppiger said.

For its fiscal second quarter that ended on January 26, Cisco reported that revenue rose 5 percent to $12.1 billion versus a year ago. Analysts, on average, were expecting $12.06 billion, as compiled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Income, excluding items, rose 6.2 percent to $2.7 billion, or 51 cents per share, 3 cents above analysts' average estimate of 48 cents a share.

Chief Financial Officer Frank Calderoni said demand for equipment to enable data centers and cloud computing were the main drivers in Cisco's results, as well as demand for infrastructure for wireless networks, mobility and service provider video.

Cisco's core business is routers and switches, which direct Internet traffic, but the company has begun to focus on data centers, enabling and providing cloud computing technology and video platforms, as well in its goal to become the No. 1 Information Technology company.

Its data center business showed 65 percent growth compared with the previous year, while its wireless business and service provider video offerings grew 27 percent and 20 percent, respectively.

"They did say they got a benefit from taxes," Shaw Wu, an analyst at Sterne Agee, said of the second quarter result. "When you (take) that out, it's 50 cents. That still beat by 2 cents."

(Additional reporting by Sinead Carew. Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Leslie Adler and Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cisco-results-beat-street-ceo-sees-challenge-europe-005640118--finance.html

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New technology for producing hydrogen

Feb. 13, 2013 ? The PhD thesis of Aingeru Remiro-Eguskiza, a chemical engineer of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), deals with the quest for a process to produce hydrogen from bio-oil that has a lower impact on the environment than the process using current routes.

The gradual increase in the price of crude oil and the negative environmental consequences that its use entails are putting us on the threshold of a change of energy model that will need to be tackled over the coming decades. Faced with the obvious necessity of finding an energy alternative that will replace fossil fuels in the near future at least partially and in a gradual way, hydrogen is emerging as one of the alternatives.

Currently, hydrogen is obtained through various methods that require separating the hydrogen from other chemical elements like carbon (in fossil fuels) and oxygen (from water). The methods used for this purpose are not viable from an environmental or economic perspective, respectively, as far as the large-scale production of hydrogen is concerned.

The aim of this thesis was to contribute towards the laboratory scale development of a process for producing hydrogen from bio-oil by means of catalytic reforming using water vapour. Bio-oil is a heterogeneous mixture of wood-based oxygenated products, the catalytic transformation of which routinely entails problems of operability and deactivation of the catalyst. This is because when it is being heated, a fraction of the compounds that make up the bio-oil form a solid residue (the so-called pyrolytic lignin) which collects on the inlet pipes of the reactor and in the reactor itself. The bio-oil used for the research in the thesis was developed at an IK4-Ikerlan plant.

An in-house designed reaction unit

To solve the problems caused by the use of bio-oil, an in-house designed reaction unit was used and which comprises two stages: the thermal and the catalytic stages. In the thermal stage (in which the bio-oil is heated) the controlled deposition of the pyrolytic lignin takes place and this minimizes the operational problems and the deactivation of the catalyst. That way the compounds obtained in the thermal stage are more susceptible to being transformed.

In addition, a third stage has been incorporated into the process: the CO2 capture intended to intensify the production of H2 increases its purity and cuts the associated contaminating emissions. The process involves using an adsorber in the reaction bed and which is designed to capture the CO2. "When the CO2 is eliminated from the reaction bed, we are encouraging the displacement of the reaction equilibriums and, as a result, a greater yield and a greater output of hydrogen are obtained," explains Remiro.

In this context, he stresses that improvement in the CO2 capture in the reaction bed was verified when extremely pure hydrogen, close to 100%, was obtained and at a lower operating temperature with respect to the process minus the CO2 capture.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Basque Research.

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


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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/pSvpPY2qvY4/130213082336.htm

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Wednesday 13 February 2013

First lady plugs 'Beasts of the Southern Wild'

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Michelle Obama on Wednesday gushed over the Oscar-nominated film "Beast of the Southern Wild," calling it one of the "most powerful and most important" movies in a long time in a ringing endorsement delivered less than two weeks before this month's Academy Awards ceremony.

The first lady commented during a Black History Month workshop at the White House for about 80 middle- and high-school students from the District of Columbia and New Orleans. The movie was set in Louisiana.

Students saw the film, then got to question director Benh Zeitlin and actors Dwight Henry and 9-year-old Quvenzhane Wallis. Wallis stars in the mythical tale of a 6-year-old girl named Hushpuppy struggling to survive in the southern Delta with her ailing father as a storm approaches. Her world consists of a tight-knit, shantytown community on the bayou with wild animals, both real and imagined.

The film won four Oscar nominations, including for best picture, best actress and directing.

Mrs. Obama said she saw the 93-minute film over the summer with a large group of friends and family who ranged in age from 3 to 73, and they were enthralled by it.

"It's rare these days to find a movie that can so completely and utterly captivate such a broad audience and that was one of the things that struck me about this movie," she said. "It managed to be beautiful, joyful and devastatingly honest."

The first lady said "Beasts" makes viewers "think deeply about the people we love in our lives who make us who we are" and shows the strength of communities and the power they give others to overcome obstacles.

"It also tells a compelling story of poverty and devastation but also of hope and love in the midst of some great challenges," she said.

Mrs. Obama also said it was "cool" that "there are so many important lessons to learn in that little 93 minutes."

"That a director and a set of writers and producers can say so much in just 93 minutes," the first lady told the students. "And it doesn't always happen in a movie, quite frankly, but this one did it, and that's why I love this movie so much and why our team wanted to bring it here to the White House and share it with all of you."

Mrs. Obama also used the film to inspire her young audience, noting that Wallis was just 5 years old when she auditioned for the part and Henry, who runs a bakery, had never acted a day in his life.

"You all have to really be focused on preparing yourselves for the challenges and the opportunities that will lie ahead for all of you. You've got to be prepared," she said, urging them to go to school, do their homework every day and follow her husband's example by reading everything they get their hands on.

___

Follow Darlene Superville on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dsupervilleap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-lady-plugs-beasts-southern-wild-185826139.html

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KISS Valentine's Day Sweepstakes: Get Married at the 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas!

KISS Mini Golf

With Valentine's Day right around the corner, Noisecreep has partnered with the 'Hottest Band in the World' to make KISStory together!

Late last year, the new KISS Mini Golf compound opened in Las Vegas. The indoor 18-hole course is a rock fan's dream, with giant black light KISS-themed sculptures, a stage with life-size animatronic KISS mannequins, and an 18th hole modeled after Gene Simmons's "Demon" character.

But it's the 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Chapel that truly takes the place over-the-top!

It's the ideal spot for a Rock & Roll Wedding, where invitations are concert tickets and rose petals are guitar picks. KISS fans can get married on a big stage fashioned after the Love Gun album cover, with theatrical lights and sound and the kinds of fog machines present at any arena concert.

In honor of Valentine's Day, Noisecreep is giving one lucky winner the change to get hitched for the first time or renew their wedding vows at the KISS 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas!

If that weren't already enough, the winner's Grand Prize package also includes: photos at the Wedding Chapel with a professional photographer; 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Lanyards + Laminates; 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Chapel certificate; (2) 'I Got Married at...' KISS t-shirts; (2) Passes to play KISS Monster Mini Golf.


KISS Mini Golf


KISS Mini Golf + 'Hotter Than Hell' Wedding Chapel Photos

KISS by Monster Mini Golf is located at 4503 Paradise Rd, Las Vegas, Nev. (Across from the Hard Rock Hotel, next to Rumor). Get more info at their official website.

Source: http://www.noisecreep.com/2013/02/11/kiss-las-vegas-wedding-chapel-sweepstakes/

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U.S. military extends many benefits to same-sex partners

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon announced on Monday it would extend more of the benefits offered to spouses of heterosexual troops to those of gay personnel but acknowledged some key benefits, like housing, would still be off-limits, at least for now.

The step came 17 months after the Pentagon scrapped its "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" ban on openly serving homosexuals in the U.S. military and will affect the day-to-day lives of their spouses in ways big and small - from allowing them to finally get military I.D. cards to granting hospital visitation rights.

But outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, in a memorandum explaining the move, noted his actions were limited by U.S. law, specifically the Defense of Marriage Act, which is now being reviewed by the Supreme Court and which defines marriage as a union between a man and woman.

"There are certain benefits that can only be provided to spouses as defined by that law," said Panetta, who is expected to retire in the coming days.

"While it will not change during my tenure as secretary of defense, I foresee a time when the law will allow the department to grant full benefits to service members and their dependents, irrespective of sexual orientation."

Pentagon officials estimated the cost of the policy change would be negligible, since it would only affect around 9,000 spouses of active duty and reserve members and another 8,000 retirees. They hoped the changes would go into effect by the end of August.

The announcement came on the eve of President Barack Obama's State of the Union address and just weeks after he made history by becoming the first U.S. president to praise progress on gay rights in his inaugural address.

"Secretary Panetta's decision today answers the call President Obama issued in his inaugural address to complete our nation's journey toward equality," said Allyson Robinson, head of the advocacy group OutServe-SLDN and an Army veteran. The moves will substantially improve the quality of life of affected spouses, she said.

DEFINITION OF A SPOUSE

Pentagon officials, briefing reporters on the decision, explained that other sensitivities, bureaucratic considerations and even the spirit of the U.S. law were also taken into account. But the big problem Defense Department attorneys ran into were legal ones, when a benefit was limited to a "spouse" as formally defined by the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA.

The Pentagon said it was still reviewing whether certain benefits could still be extended to the spouses of gay and lesbian servicemembers, even under existing law, like some housing benefits and burial at Arlington National Cemetery.

A USA Today/Gallup poll published in December found that approval of same-sex marriage among the general public had risen to 53 percent in 2012 from less than 40 percent in 2005. Young adults were the most supportive.

Nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized same-sex marriage. Last November, Maryland, Maine and Washington became the first states to do so through the ballot box.

But opposition still runs deep in parts of the country. The USA Today/Gallup poll found gay marriage opposed by a majority in the South. North Carolina in 2011 added a voter-approved ban to its constitution. Some 30 states have passed constitutional amendments banning same-sex marriage.

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-military-extends-many-benefits-same-sex-partners-194226111.html

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Syrian rebels seize dam in strategic victory

By Bassem Mroue, The Associated Press

BEIRUT ? Syrian rebels scored one of their biggest strategic victories Monday since the country's crisis began two years ago, capturing the nation's largest dam and iconic industrial symbol of the Assad family's four-decade rule.

Rebels led by the al-Qaida-linked militant group Jabhat al-Nusra now control much of the water flow in the country's north and east, eliciting warnings from experts that any mistake in managing the dam may drown wide areas in Syria and Iraq.

A Syrian government official denied that the rebels captured the dam, saying "heavy clashes are taking place around it." The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations. But amateur video released by activists showed gunmen walking around the facility's operations rooms and employees apparently carrying on with their work as usual.


In the capital, Damascus, the rebels kept the battle going mostly in northeastern and southern neighborhoods as the fighting gets closer to the heart of President Bashar Assad's seat of power.

The capture of the al-Furat dam came after rebels seized two smaller dams on the Euphrates river, which flows from Turkey through Syria and into Iraq. Behind al-Furat dam lies Lake Assad, which at 247 square miles is the country's largest water reservoir.

The dam produces 880 megawatts of electricity, a small amount of the country's production. Syria's electricity production relies on plants powered by natural gas and fuel oil.

Still, the capture handed the rebels control over water and electricity supplies for both government-held areas and large swaths of land the opposition has captured over the past 22 months of fighting.

"This is the most important dam in Syria. It is a strategic dam, and Lake Assad is one of the largest artificial lakes in the region," said Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"It supplies many areas around Syria with electricity," Abdul-Rahman said, citing the provinces of Raqqa, Hassaka and Aleppo in the north as well as Deir el-Zour in the east near the Iraqi border.

The dam, constructed in the late 1960s in cooperation with the Soviet Union, is located in a northeastern town once called Tabqa. After the dam was built, the town's name changed to Thawra, Arabic for revolution, to mark the March 8, 1963 coup that brought Assad's ruling Baath party to power.

Early Monday, when the rebels stormed the dam and the town, one of the first things they did was set ablaze a giant statue of the late President Hafez Assad, the current president's father.

"This is one of the biggest projects that have a moral value in Syria's history," said Dubai-based Syrian economist Samir Seifan. "It was the Syrian government's biggest project in the 20th century."

'A very sensitive plant'
Seifan said that the dam is "a very sensitive plant" and it is very important that technicians and experts keep it running as usual because any mistake could have dangerous consequences.

A car exploded at a crossing on Turkey's border with Syria, killing at least ten people, according to state-run Anadolu Agency. NBCNews.com's Gabe Gutierrez reports.

He added that any mistake could "release massive amounts of water that will drown wide areas including the city of Deir el-Zour as well as cities in Iraq." Seifan added that "any damage will have dangerous consequences on civilians. It supplies hundreds of thousands of hectares with water."

An amateur video released by activists showed rebels walking through large operations rooms as employees went on with their work as usual.

"The al-Furat dam is now in the hands of the Free Syrian Army heroes," says the narrator. "And these are the workers, continuing their work as usual."

The video appeared genuine and corresponded to other Associated Press reporting on the events depicted.

Abdul-Rahman, of the Observatory, said the rebels have told their fighters not to interfere with the work of the dam. He added that the gunmen will leave the dam for employees to run but will keep their checkpoints around the dam.

The rebels now control three dams on the Euphrates. In November, they captured the Tishrin Dam, near the northern town of Manbij. And last week, they took the Baath dam, close to al-Furat.

In Damascus, activists reported clashes and shelling mostly in the northeastern neighborhoods of Jobar and Qaboun as well as the southern parts of the city.

Over the past four days, the rebels brought their fight to within a mile of the heart of the capital, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key highway.

Syrian TV showed footage from Abbasid Square, a landmark plaza in central Damascus, after sunset Monday to counter activists' claims of fighting only hundreds of yards away. The footage showed little traffic in the square, and it was dark.

Car bomb strikes
Meanwhile, the Observatory said members of Jabhat al-Nusra blew themselves up in two car bombs outside an intelligence office in the northeastern city of Shadadah, killing at least 14 security agents and wounding many people.

The Observatory said Shadadah has been witnessing heavy clashes between troops and rebels.

Jabhat al-Nusra, which led the fighting at the dam, has been named by the U.S. government as a terrorist organization. It has proved to be the most effective group among rebels fighting in Syria.

Also in northern Syria, a car bomb exploded at a border crossing with Turkey in Idlib province. Turkey's prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said 13 people died in the blast. He didn't specifically say the explosion was caused by a bomb, possibly in deference to an ongoing investigation, but he left little doubt that authorities believed it was the work of assailants.

"The incident is very important in showing to what extent our stance on terror and our sensibility toward Syrian incidents is well-directed," Erdogan said.

The border area between the two countries has seen fierce fighting in the civil war. Tensions have also flared between the Syrian regime and Turkey in the past months after shells fired from Syria landed on the Turkish side.

As a result, Germany, the Netherlands and the United States decided to send two batteries of Patriot air defense missiles each to protect Turkey, their NATO ally.

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/11/16928540-syrian-rebels-seize-key-dam-gain-control-of-water-in-government-held-areas?lite

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Sunday 10 February 2013

First Person: Massive Blizzard Drops More Than a Foot of Snow on Long Island

Yahoo! News is gathering brief first-person accounts, photos and video from the severe winter weather in the northeastern United States. Here's one resident's story.

FIRST PERSON | A massive winter storm hit the northeast on Saturday, causing long gas lines and hazardous driving conditions on Long Island.

In this video, taken in Westbury, N.Y., at 1 p.m. on Saturday, the icy roads and slippery traffic conditions are clearly visible. Many cars have been plowed in, and it's become difficult to get out onto the roads.

The Long Island Expressway and Sunrise Highway were closed on Feb. 8 due to dangerous driving conditions, and most roads around Long Island remain icy and covered in snow as of the morning of Feb. 9.

Many people are struggling to dig their cars out of the snow.

Motorists are advised to stay off the roads to help plows and sand-spreading crews get through.

The storm dumped at least a foot of snow on Long Island.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-person-massive-blizzard-drops-more-foot-snow-204200213.html

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The Drone Consensus

In the run-up to yesterday?s Senate confirmation hearings for would-be CIA director John Brennan, everyone was waiting for an epic clash over the morality of drones. Brennan, having spent the past four years as Obama?s chief counterterrorism adviser, has been at the center of the administration?s targeted killing program?which seemed to make his nomination the perfect moment for a showdown between Congress and the White House on the subject. The potential for drama was only heightened with the recent leak of a white paper outlining the Obama administration?s legal rationale for targeting American citizens.

And the hearing did get off to an unruly start. Code Pink protesters repeatedly disrupted the proceedings until they were ejected from the room. One woman held up a placard that read ?drones fly, children die,? while others called Brennan an ?assassin.? There were also plenty of heated exchanges between Brennan and the senators: Democrats bored into him over the drone program?s lack of transparency, and Republicans hammered him with questions about classified leaks and his alleged involvement in the Bush administration?s harsh interrogation program.

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Yet despite the testy exchanges and the theatrical protests, it?s worth noting that not a single senator said he or she opposed targeted killings. It was perhaps a recognition that drones are here to stay?a permanent part of America?s hi-tech twenty-first century arsenal. Indeed, instead of a dramatic moral showdown, the hearing showcased evidence that Congress and the Obama administration could be moving toward pragmatic compromises which would impose more accountability on, but not eliminate, the drone program.

These compromises came in the form of two concrete proposals. Dianne Feinstein, who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, revealed that the panel was reviewing proposals to establish a special court that would assess the government?s evidence against American citizens it wants to target?an idea that may give comfort to critics who say the current approach deprives Americans of their right to due process under the Fifth Amendment. Feinstein was vague about how a special court overseeing targeted killings might work. But she suggested it could be an ?analogue? to the secret judicial panel that grants the government surveillance authority in counterterrorism and espionage cases.

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To be sure, the prospect of federal judges second-guessing the targeting judgments of military and intelligence officials will without a doubt face stiff opposition from the Pentagon and the CIA. Still, while Brennan reacted cautiously to the idea, he also said it was ?certainly worthy of discussion.?

To get a sense for why Feinstein is so eager to impose this kind of accountability, it helps to understand just how ad-hoc the administration?s current process can be. Consider the lethal targeting of Anwar al Awlaki, the American citizen and al Qaeda member who was killed in a CIA drone strike in Yemen in September 2011. Awlaki was actually placed on the kill list before the Justice Department had finished its opinion, though Obama?s lawyers had already weighed in orally. As for due process, it was far more informal than anything Feinstein envisions. One example: before State Department legal adviser Harold Koh was willing to give his blessing to the deliberate killing of an American, even one who had joined an enemy force, he wanted to scrutinize the intelligence himself. So in March 2010, he holed up in a secure room in the State Department and pored over hundreds of pages of classified reports detailing Awlaki?s alleged involvement in terror plots. Koh had set his own standard to justify the targeted killing of a U.S. citizen: he felt that Awlaki would have to be shown to be ?evil,? with iron-clad intelligence to prove it. After absorbing the chilling intel, which included multiple bombing plots and elaborate plans to attack Americans with ricin and cyanide, Koh concluded that Awlaki was not just evil; he was ?satanic.? (I originally wrote about this in my book Kill or Capture.)

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Another proposal that came up at the hearing would impose a measure of accountability on the back end. Brennan was asked whether he favored the establishment of an independent, or at least more objective, panel that could conduct after-action inquiries in the wake of individual strikes and assess the effectiveness of the program. Absolutely, responded Brennan, who has himself championed the idea within the administration, arguing that there is an implicit conflict of interest when those who pull the trigger are then in the position of judging their own work.

For those?and there are many?who are distrustful of the government?s assertion that civilian casualties under the program have been negligible, this could be a valuable check. And it?s an idea that seems to be gaining traction outside and inside the administration. In his latest column, The New York Times?s David Brooks called for the appointment of an independent board made up of retired military and intelligence officers who could keep tabs on the effectiveness of the program. Meanwhile, two sources tell The Daily Beast that the co-chairs of the President?s Intelligence Advisory Board?David Boren (a former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee) and Chuck Hagel (Obama?s nominee for Secretary of Defense)?have suggested that the National Counterterrorism Center play such a role.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/drone-consensus-024816213--politics.html

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