Sunday, June 30, 2013

LSU's Mainieri will host Baseball camps

LSU Baseball Coach Paul Mainieri will host a summer baseball camp that will run from June 30 to Aug. 1.

There will be five sessions and it will be held at Alex Box Stadium on LSU's campus.

The camp is open to kindergarteners through eighth graders.

For more information, call (225) 578-0082 or click here http://www.lsubaseballcamps.com.

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Copyright 2013?WAFB. All rights reserved.

Source: http://ebrsouth.wafb.com/news/events/62631-lsus-mainieri-will-host-baseball-camps

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Obama says climate change is make-or-break issue

President Barack Obama wipes sweat from his head during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

President Barack Obama wipes sweat from his head during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

FILE - In this May 21, 2013 file photo, Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz speaks after being sworn in as Energy Secretary, at the Energy Department in Washington. Moniz says coal will continue to play a role in meeting America?s energy needs even as the Obama administration seeks to reduce carbon emissions and combat global warming. In an interview with The Associated Press, Moniz refuted claims by Republicans and even some coal-state Democrats that the president?s climate plan would cripple the coal industry. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

President Barack Obama gestures during a speech on climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. Obama is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama is trying to frame climate change as a make-or-break political issue, urging Americans to vote only for those who will protect the country from environmental harm.

He says people in the United States already are paying a price for climate change, including in lost lives and hundreds of billions of dollars.

"If you agree with me, I'll need you to act," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address. "Remind everyone who represents you, at every level of government, that there is no contradiction between a sound environment and a strong economy ? and that sheltering future generations against the ravages of climate change is a prerequisite for your vote."

In his remarks released Saturday but recorded at the White House before his trip to Africa, Obama is trying to persuade the public to help sell his climate change plan for him.

That plan, released last week, is bypassing Congress after years of efforts to get lawmakers to pass legislation to deal with the issue.

At the core of Obama's plan are new controls on new and existing power plants that emit carbon dioxide, heat-trapping gases blamed for global warming. The program is intended to boost renewable energy production on federal lands, increase efficiency standards and prepare communities to deal with higher temperatures.

None of the measures in Obama's plan requires congressional action.

Republicans and some Democrats have denounced the plan as a job-killing "war on coal," and opponents could try to undercut Obama's plan or hinder it through legal action if Americans don't seem to be on board.

"The question is not whether we need to act. The question is whether we will have the courage to act before it's too late," Obama said.

Obama has also pledged that the U.S. will lead other nations in a "coordinated assault" to reduce pollution. But he acknowledged Saturday in a town hall meeting with young people in Johannesburg that the U.S. and other wealthy countries must shoulder a disproportionate part of the burden.

His proposal to cut off U.S. subsidies for coal-fired power plants overseas, for example, includes exemptions for the poorest countries where no better technology is available.

"The United States cannot do it by itself," Obama said in South Africa. "I expect it's going to be your generation that helps lead this, because if we don't, it's going to be your generation that suffers the most."

In the Republican address, Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas says there are troubling, unanswered questions about the implementation of Obama's health care law.

"We must put an end to the fear and uncertainty," Roberts says. "Those 'bumps' and 'glitches' the president talks about? It's a train wreck, folks, and we have to get America out of the way."

___

AP White House Correspondent Julie Pace in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

___

Reach Josh Lederman on Twitter at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-29-Obama-Climate%20Change/id-7feb46c56e4e4611b47d8a9ee48bee73

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

The Dancer. At Taksim Square.

It's called the Dancer. La Bailarina. Like some crazed Stravinsky diva, the Condor GL 310 gas grenade bobs and weaves when it lands, moving in random patterns, spewing noxious gas into the air. Its jittery swirls are specifically designed to cover large areas with gas, but also--critically--to prevent protestors from grabbing the thing and chucking it back at the police. The 202, you see, is a long-range gas grenade--also quite popular--but the 202 lands and just lies there. It can be shot from further away (over distant barricades, for example, or down into metro stations, or into second-floor windows or terraces or hospitals but it gives no chase. The 310 dances. Just weeks after Turkey's protest movement erupted, Brazilians have taken to the streets en masse. In a show of solidarity, Turks waved the Brazilian flag in Taksim square. The Condor company happens to be based in Rio de Janiero, Brazil, and is one of the two major suppliers of "non-lethal technologies" to both the Turkish and Brazilian governments. In a kind of bizarre, capitalist love triangle of tear gas, popular uprising and government repression, Turkey and Brazil have never been closer. All along Istiklal, the pale, dented corpses of Condor grenades skitter into gulleys and cracks in the pavement, nestle in piles of burned trash: like detritus on a seascape, old shells, broken eggs. ~~~ The first time I saw the Dancer--really saw it, I mean, not just the haze of its after-effects--I was standing with my brother John on a side street of Istanbul. We'd come for a vacation, actually, on the way to the Netherlands to present at a scientific conference. I have friends that teach in universities in Turkey. One with a 5-year-old daughter I hadn't seen in two years. Pleasantries, I mean. Socializing. And a bit of work. But then Turkey blew up. My brother started reporting for Science magazine. During the day, I worked on my data for the conference. At night I'd walk the city. It was just getting dark. Maybe 9 pm. We didn't see the police. We knew the protestors had set up a barricade on Istiklal, the main pedestrian shopping street that reaches down from Taksim Square, one of the major arteries of the city's public life. They'd built the barricade from anything they could find--old metal siding, garbage bins, bits of stray lumber, metal ladders--and were holding it against the police in the distance. But from a side street, down a little hill, all you could see was the faint glow of garbage fires and people walking back and forth. Then the grenade came. First the *pop* sound of a policeman firing his grenade launcher, then the zzzzzzzz as it flew through the air, then the tinny clatter when it hit the top of the hill and started to roll towards us. The Dancer doesn't start releasing gas on impact--for most gas grenades, it's a time delay after firing. That's why you'll see streaks of gas falling down around civilians on TV news programs--that's usually the Condor 210, another Brazilian number, or the MP-40L, manufactured in Pennsylvania, fired from enough of a distance that the lozenges inside the grenade have started to release into the air. But the Dancer isn't fired from a great distance. Sometimes it'll roll a pinch before it starts to go off. And that's what I remember, in that flash before my brother and I started to run. For a second or two, it rolled down the little stone street, picking up speed with gravity. Then the gas started. And that's when the stochastic movements kick in. It began dashing this way and that, spewing gas up and diagonally, semi-circles, jagged lines, at one point even pinging off the side of a building. It looked alive. Really alive. It was, to be honest, strangely beautiful. The novelty quickly wore off--neither of us had gas masks--and the neurons in my brain sent off a cascade of firing, all of which reminded me, "Cat, it's time to run." What I thought of at that moment--you think of strange things when you're running from a gas grenade near the Bosphorus--was stochastic movement. The rapid saccades of my eyes moving over the visual scene, the trill of my neurons firing--first in areas dealing with vision, then with novelty, then directly into recognition and fear. Underlying all these processes is the "random walk." **** First named by Karl Pearson at the dawn of the 20th century, the random walk is essentially a mathematical tool that is now one of the most widely borrowed principles from statistics. It's used to model everything from crowd behavior to biological systems and back again, even reaching out to fluctuations in international markets. The idea applied in molecular science is fairly simple: molecules bump into each other--sometimes violently, sometimes gently. All of those countless interactions shape the path of a single molecule in space. That path is called a "random walk." Bobbing and jagging, the path looks cluttered and wild, but it's just how molecules move in space. Every molecule in the human body is, at every moment, buzzing and colliding with other molecules. We are an aggregate of movement. A density in a cloud. The random walk is simply a statistical formulation of a series of random "steps" on a "walk". The size of those steps matter. For example, if step size is variable in a normal distribution, then you can use a random walk to model fluctuations in financial market data over time. Imagine the value of a stock over time on a graph. The value, for example, of Condor's stock on the international market is dependent on obvious factors--for example, how many of its usual buyers happen to be either actively using their products (and thus need to replenish their supplies) or are anticipating using them in the future. But just like the weather, predicting the future value of a stock is extremely hard. (If anyone could actually predict the stock market beyond a two-day horizon, that person would be extremely rich.) The best you can do, like weather, is statistical. By looking back over the years, a June day in Istanbul will probably be beautifully warm and breezy. But you could also get a rain storm. So while it's certainly the case that economists can tie real-world events to fluctations in Condor's stock, their power of prediction falls away to nothing over time. Yes, it's true that last November Condor secured a contract with the Brazilian government for 49 million dollars' worth of rubber bullets, gas grenades, "flashbangs" (sound and light grenades), and pepper spray. (That contract isn't even for the current protests--that's just for upcoming sporting events like the World Cup.) But the day to day fluctuations in the stock value, taken in aggregate, are best modeled with a random walk. That's why stock market graphs actually look a lot like data graphs of eye saccades, or neuronal activation patterns in a brain. Human behavior, at various scales, from cellular activity to large social groups, can also be approximated by a random walk. But it's not truly random. And for scientists who try to model it--which way a crowd will move, which way a stock will go, the international valuation of the Turkish lira or the Brazilian peso--that's the rub. To model, one can assume randomness as a given, but when thinking about what those graphs actually represent, one also has to assume that there's much more going on than you can know. The purpose of making a model is to predict. Many models rely on the assumption that some random process or mechanism determines human decisions. If you want to predict what will happen in a crowd when a tear gas grenade goes off, you can treat people as particles in a thermodynamic system. And you get a lot of powerful mathematical tools when you do that. You can even predict the rate at which people will flow through passageways, the likelihood of trampling, the likelihood of crush and compression deaths. Diffusion, at its root, is powered by random movement, and many modelers will use a random walk to build their computations. **** After wandering the winding streets and alleys of Istanbul's Beyo?lu district, we found ourselves back on Istiklal in the middle of the crowd. I climbed up on a tall metal utility box to get a better view. My brother followed. I hung onto a street light for balance. We were maybe three feet up. I wanted to get a handle on what was going on. The most dangerous thing about a crowd is usually the crowd itself. In a completely open space--say a very flat plane that runs for miles, unbounded on any side--crowds aren't that bad. Trampling isn't usually the problem. Sure, some people trip. But crowds don't usually gather in wide-open spaces. More often, they gather in cities and stadiums. Places that are bounded. Crowds flow like a liquid. They will fill every available space. And if a crowd panics and rushes into an enclosed space that's too tight--a bottleneck, or a police blockade, an alley that's too narrow for them--the pressure from the back can crush the people in the front and on the sides. Horribly, in those moments, no one can even hear the people screaming, because their lungs are compressed. The biggest advocates of "non-lethal technologies" like tear gas say that the real challenge for governments is controlling large crowds. If you can disperse them before they reach critical mass, lives can be saved. At low doses, by that logic, tear gas saves lives. Of course, that says nothing about why those crowds might be forming in the first place. Condor's company profile says that their products are an "effective instrument" that are used "without infringing upon individual Human Rights." But it's well known that the Dancer is being "weaponized" in Turkey, Brazil and Syria right now. Canisters are being fired directly at protestor's faces at close range, leaving grotesque wounds as they cut through flesh and bone. People are being heavily gassed in closed spaces. Doctors worldwide are concerned about the long-term lung and nerve damage that may result from inhaling that much gas over time. Nevertheless, at that moment, my brother and I were more concerned with the crowd than our burning lungs and eyes. I was the first to see it. The front line. Where the flags stopped, and just beyond, the glare of headlights from water cannon trucks. Maybe half a mile up, some thousands of people between it and us. And suddenly, it changed. The entire front wall of people turned and started running towards us. People in the street behind them also started to run, a ripple, like a shockwave. The start of a stampede. And it was coming in our direction. I didn't stop to think. I lept from the sill, barely pausing to hit my brother on the arm on the way down, and started sprinting up a side street. A couple of blocks out I heard Bro behind me calling out, "Sis? What are we running from exactly?" He hadn't seen it. Though others had seen me jump, and now they were running too--the way all of Istanbul has learned to run, now, when they see others running, even if it has nothing to do with them. If one runs, you run. I stopped to catch my breath and looked behind us. Some dozens ran past us. Some stopped, like us, to turn and see what was happening through a narrow opening onto Istiklal. It was maybe 60 seconds before the rest of the crowd slammed past our alley: a wall of panicked humans, wild-eyed and yelling. And another 60 seconds before we saw the gas. (to be continued...) Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dancer-taksim-square-130100443.html

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Sears Holdings severs ties with Paula Deen

NEW YORK (AP) ? Paula Deen just lost another business partner.

Sears Holdings Corp. announced Friday that it is cutting ties with the Southern celebrity chef, adding to the list of companies severing their relationship following revelations that Deen used racial slurs in the past.

The company, based in Hoffman Estates, Ill., said Friday that it decided to phase out all products tied to the brand after "careful consideration of all available information."

"We will continue to evaluate the situation," said Amy Diamond, a spokeswoman at the parent company of Sears and Kmart stores.

Both Sears and Kmart sold Paula Deen products.

Sears joins Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Target Corp. and Home Depot as retailers that plan to stop selling cookware and other items with Deen's brand.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, Novo Nordisk said it and Deen have "mutually agreed to suspend our patient education activities for now." Deen, who specializes in Southern comfort food, had been promoting the company's drug Victoza since last year, when she announced she had Type 2 diabetes

On Monday, pork producer Smithfield Foods dropped her as a spokeswoman.

Caesars Entertainment also announced that Paula Deen's name is being stripped from four buffet restaurants owned by the company. Caesars said that its decision to rebrand its restaurants in Joliet, Ill.; Tunica, Miss.; Cherokee, N.C.; and Elizabeth, Ind., was a mutual one with Deen.

Last week, the Food Network said that it would not renew her contract.

The stakes are high for Deen, who Forbes magazine ranked as the fourth highest-earning celebrity chef last year, bringing in $17 million. She's behind Gordon Ramsay, Rachael Ray and Wolfgang Puck, according to Forbes.

Deen's empire, which spans from TV shows to furniture and cookware, generates total annual revenue of nearly $100 million, estimates Burt Flickinger III, president of retail consultancy Strategic Resource Group.

But Flickinger says that the controversy has cost her as much as half of that business. He also estimates that she could lose up to 80 percent by next year as suppliers extricate themselves from their agreements.

Still, book-buyers are so far standing by Deen. As of Friday morning, "Paula Deen's New Testament: 250 Recipes, All Lightened Up," remained No. 1 on Amazon.com. The book is scheduled for October. Another Deen book, "Paula Deen's Southern Cooking Bible," is No. 2. Several other Deen books were out of stock.

___

Follow Anne D'Innocenzio on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ADInnocenzio

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sears-holdings-severs-ties-paula-deen-150104907.html

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Iran, Shiites' protector - sometimes

The savage beating to death this week of four Shiite Muslims by a Sunni mob in Egypt set off a predictable chain reaction in Iran, which has long cast itself as the protector of Shiites around the world.

Iran condemned the Cairo killings and ?any act of extremism and violence which contradicts Islam,? and called upon ?the sensible and revolutionary Egyptian nation, through its prudent leaders [to] exercise vigilance vis-?-vis plots to foment discord among various schools of Islam.?

A prominent Shiite cleric in Iran?s religious center of Qom went further, speaking about an ?anti-Shia project in Egypt [which has] caused the intensification of sectarian [violence], emergence of crimes and legalization of bloodshed.?

But even though Iran has stepped up the rhetoric, it has done little else ? evidence that the Islamic Republic?s willingness and ability to intervene on behalf of embattled fellow Shiites depends more on strategic than religious calculations, analysts say.

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

The Cairo killings come amid an escalation of sectarian tensions between the two main denominations all over, especially in Syria. That divide presents a dilemma for Iran, which has always presented its 1979 Islamic revolution as a pan-Islamic model for Sunnis and Shiites alike.

For example, although Iran?s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is officially referred to as the ?Leader of the World?s Shia," in a 2008 speech he says, ?Even those who were not Shia Muslims were attracted to the Islamic revolution. Millions of our Sunni brothers in Arab, African, and Asian countries were attracted to the Islamic revolution, and this [1979 revolution] was a blow to the enemies.?

PLAYING INTO WESTERN HANDS

?Iran?s response to this massacre in Egypt is quite typical of how it has approached sectarian division,? says Roxane Farmanfarmaian, who teaches politics and international relations at Cambridge University in Britain.

?Iran has consistently stated that Muslims must act and stand together, and that any division or conflict between the Sunni and Shia only plays into Western hands that think of Islam as violent,? says Ms. Farmanfarmaian. ?It will support Shia when it?s geopolitically important and useful, but it has to have that extra dimension before it supports Shia per se.?

Mr. Morsi has condemned the killing of Shiites as a ?heinous crime.? And the country?s leading Sunni religious establishment, Al-Azhar, said the killings were against Islam and urged the ?harshest punishment.? But Morsi ? the Muslim Brotherhood president who will mark one year as Egypt?s first democratically elected president on June 30 ? is also accused of giving free rein to fundamentalist Sunnis known as Salafists, who consider Shiites heretics.

SPILLING OVER FROM THE SYRIAN WAR

Many of the most troublesome sectarian tensions today are spilling over from the Syrian war, afflicting Lebanon and Iraq. Iran?s critics accuse it of deepening those divisions with its support of the Syrian government, even though fellow Syria allies Russia and China have no pro-Shiite agenda.

Speaking in April, Khamenei sought to minimize the split. He said that the Assad regime is not Shiite (although its Alawite roots are a Shiite sect), nor are its opponents Sunni, even though ?Western propaganda and dependent regional media? try to depict it that way.

Yet even the fighters themselves have increasingly described their battle as a sectarian fight. As Iran and Hezbollah (with Russia) have enabled Assad?s forces to make recent military gains, the Sunni states of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, and Jordan (with the US and Europe) have bolstered support for the opposition.

NEW RISKS

Iranian leaders have long recognized that specific talk from them about defending Islam?s minority Shiites does not go over well with majority Sunnis, and adds stress to religious faultlines that date back 14 centuries.

And in apparent recognition of the new risks of sectarian hatred spiraling out of control, Iran?s President-elect Hassan Rohani has stated that a top priority after he is sworn in will be mending relations with Saudi Arabia. He took similar conciliatory steps a decade ago as the head of Iran?s Supreme National Security Council.

The pragmatism in Iran's selective support of fellow Shiites can be found in Bahrain, the tiny Persian Gulf sheikhdom where Shiites began pro-democracy protests in early 2011. Iran did nothing to prevent Saudi Arabia from sending military forces to bolster the government as it crushed the protests.

Such signals from Tehran means Iran ?is not going to go out on a limb for Shia per se, it?s going to go out on a limb for unity,? says Farmanfarmaian. ?When it comes down to being ?Shia vs. political expediency,? as in the case of Bahrain, [Iran] certainly sees no reason to show up on those beaches and get into a war.?

In March 2011, Khamenei said: ?Do not make [Bahrain ] a Sunni and Shia issue; this would be the biggest favor ? for the enemies of the Islamic nation?. There exists no Sunni-Shia conflict.?

Then last February, Khamenei explained the result: ?The rulers of Bahrain claimed that Iran is involved in the events of Bahrain. This is a lie. No, we are not involved,? he said. ?If we had interfered, the conditions would have been different in Bahrain.?

RECOMMENDED: Sunni and Shiite Islam: Do you know the difference? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-shiites-protector-sometimes-161838687.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

The Heat Reviews: A Buddy Cop Out?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/the-heat-reviews-a-buddy-cop-out/

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China official in sex case gets prison for bribery

BEIJING (AP) ? A former Chinese official at the center of a sex tape scandal was convicted of taking more than 3.1 million yuan ($500,000) in bribes and sentenced to 13 years in prison Friday, at a time when China's new generation of leadership has vowed to crack down on widespread graft.

Lei Zhengfu, former party chief of a district in the south-central metropolis of Chongqing, did not say whether he would appeal the verdict by the city's No. 1 Intermediate Court, according to state media. The punishment meted out to him also includes confiscation of personal assets of 300,000 yuan ($48,000).

Lei's case has riveted the public since video clips went viral of the portly 55-year-old having sex with a woman hired by property developers, allegedly in an elaborate extortion scheme. The scandal has exposed in lurid detail the shady intertwining of sex, money and power in Chinese society.

Beijing Institute of Technology law professor Xu Xin said the sentence was more severe than those in earlier corruption cases involving similar amounts of bribes.

"Maybe because of the case's social impact, the court has chosen to be on the harsh end with its sentence," he said.

Lei asked another property developer who had benefited from his patronage to pay hush money of 3 million yuan to the blackmailers. Lei argued that the money was a loan, but prosecutors said the money ? which was not fully repaid ? amounted to a bribe.

Prosecutors also said Lei took two other bribes ? one of $10,000 and another of 100,000 yuan ($16,000) ? in return for favors granted through his government position, but it is Lei's sex scandal and the scheme behind it that have captivated member of the Chinese public, who are disgusted by what they see as the moral degradation of those in power.

Verdicts were expected to be announced later Friday in a separate case against the woman and the men behind the alleged extortion scheme.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-official-sex-case-gets-prison-bribery-040755134.html

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Mystery in synchrony

Cicadas' odd life cycle poses evolutionary conundrums

By Susan Milius

Web edition: June 28, 2013
Print edition: July 13, 2013; Vol.184 #1 (p. 26)

Enlarge

Credit: Tom Siegfried

After 17 years underground, throngs of ruby-eyed cicadas clawed up through the soil this year to partake in a once-in-a-lifetime, synchronized mating frenzy. Except it wasn?t one big insect orgy: It was three.

The insects that unearthed themselves to breed in 2013 belong to three distinct species. You need only flip them over to see some differences, written in the varieties of their orange markings.

You can hear the differences too, says Chris Simon of the University of Connecticut in Storrs. The tymbals on either side of a male?s abdomen vibrate to make the racket for which cicadas are famous. A chorus of courting Magicicada cassini males sounds like an electric carving knife revving up. M. septendecula coughs out a series of? rasps. And M. septendecim serenades with the whistling drone of a B-movie spaceship.

The various thrums and buzzings may mingle in the same neighborhood, but the last time ancestors of these species mated with each other was almost 4 million years ago, Simon says. That?s the conclusion of the most detailed genetic studies yet of periodical cicada evolutionary history, which Simon and colleagues published in April in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. With DNA plus episodic field observations, the scientists are getting an idea about the odd family tree of periodical cicadas, how the insects synchronize their life cycles and why they breed side-by-side with others unsuitable for mating.

Enlarge

The three species of Brood II that emerged this year are (left to right) Magicicada cassini, M. septendecula, and M. septendecim. The males sing species-specific songs to ensure that they attract the appropriate females.

Credit: Courtesy of John Cooley/Univ. of Conn.

Biologists have named a few thousand cicada species worldwide, all within the families Cicadidae and Tettigarctidae. Cicadas nestle on the evolutionary tree of life among planthoppers and related botanical vampires that suck plant fluids ? not with locusts as is commonly thought. But only the seven named species that make up the genus Magicicada live underground for more than a decade and then burst forth to breed in multi-species masses. These periodical cicadas live in eastern and central North America, where biologists and spring-wedding planners alike keep tabs on the 15 different cohorts, or broods. The broods are identified according to the years in which they cycle into frantic reproduction.

From then to now

On an evolutionary family tree, the periodical cicadas branch and then fan into species sets with patterns that echo each other. And since this is biology and not mathematical theory, odd anomalies show up here and there.

For example, consider the origins of the 13- and 17-year cyclers. A biologist from another planet might hypothesize that such a dramatic difference in life cycles arose once when ancient ancestors of today?s 17-year species diverged from 13-year counterparts. Logical enough, but not what happened, Simon says.

Enlarge

Life underground

View larger image | Billions of noisy bugs may attract all the attention, but the cicadas' mass emergence is just the final blip in the long life of the periodical species. All seven species spend the majority of their lives buried in the soil. Then, on cue, they surface to find a mate and reproduce.

Credit: Nicolle Rager Fuller

The big, new family tree confirms that a common ancestor first split into three lineages (called Cassini, Decula and Decim) and then each lineage independently evolved 17-year and 13-year forms. So this year?s cicada brood, designated by the Roman numeral II, comprises a 17-year species from each of the three ancient lineages. And the closest sister species of this year?s breeders are not each other but 13-year cyclers locked in with different broods.

Safety in numbers

What preserves the multi-species broods may be cicada predators, says Rick Karban of the University of California, Davis. Cicadas haven?t evolved the common insect defenses of camouflage or nimble flight. These are big, noisy bugs without many escape skills. ?You can pick them off a tree,? Karban says. ?They?re just seemingly ? dumb.?

But with thousands, millions or billions living conspicuously for the same brief period of time, each individual has a better chance of surviving. Predators can?t eat the whole generation. There?s safety in extreme numbers, so synchronizing with a different species beats coming out with just your own in smaller numbers and getting picked off by hungry birds. As segments of different species overlap in their reproductive timing, they ?get sucked into a brood,? Simon says. Only one brood, VII, consists of just one species.

Enlarge

Mix and match

View larger image | Almost any year, periodical cicadas burst from the ground in mating frenzies in the eastern United States. A single cohort, Brood II, emerged in 2013, but in 2014 and 2015, both 13- and 17-year cicada broods will emerge. (Color-coded dots show observed or expected locations.) Most broods include a mix of what are considered separate Magicicada species, which evolved from a common ancestor almost 4 million years ago (family tree, left). Those ancestors branched into three main lineages: Decula, Cassini and Decim. Now each lineage has its own 13-year species (?tre? prefix) and 17-year species (?septen? prefix, not used in M. cassini). Species from each lineage live in all regions (east, middle and west) where cicadas are found. The genetics of the regional populations mirrors their geographic distribution (shown on tree).

Credit: T. Sota et al/PNAS 2013 and Magicicada.org; Map: E. Otwell

Surging forth in great numbers to thwart predators is not some special cicada thing, Karban notes. Cicadas get the headlines, but mayflies transforming from their aquatic to aerial forms synchronize, and oak trees drop occasional bumper crops of acorns.

How the cicadas manage to synchronize may be trickier to explain, though. In fact, cicadas in the same brood grow idiosyncratically. Karban has dug up samples of periodical cicadas during their underground years and found all kinds of out-of-sync stages of development. Those that race through the five stages of underground life end up waiting for the signal to emerge, giving the laggards time to catch up.

What that signal might be is also in question. Soil temperature probably cues the right calendar day for the neighborhood mass emergence, but how the cicadas choose the right year is a puzzle. They could ?count? the years with seasonal changes in the tree sap they feed on, Karban speculates. To test this idea, he dug up cicadas with two years yet to go underground and moved them onto roots in a colleague?s research set of peach trees. The colleague coaxed the trees to flower twice in one year, and cicadas emerged as if two years had passed instead of one.

But why so long underground? Karban?s answer is basically, why not? A long immature period may have more advantages than disadvantages. Again he has gone digging. His samples of cicadas from underground don?t show much evidence of premature death by predator attack. And spending more time growing may mean bigger bodies with the power to have more offspring. The 17-year cicadas he unearthed in the Midwest were in the process of forming more eggs than 13-year ones living nearby.

A long development time could also have been a big boon for surviving the ice ages, says geologist Randy Cox of the University of Memphis, who has analyzed how climate affects the pattern of cicada emergences. During ice ages, he points out, even southern refuges had chilly years, and a really cold spell could wipe out a population. The longer a cicada?s cycle, the fewer times populations would have to play climate roulette.

If big numbers are good for cicada life cycles, he and other researchers suspect that big, prime numbers (divisible only by one and themselves) are even better. Predator populations can rise and fall in cycles too. If cicadas had a 12-year cycle instead of a 13-year one, for example, they would coincide more frequently with big years of any predators on two-, three- or four-year cycles.

Those big, prime numbers might also minimize unfortunate hybridization between cicadas timed to breed on different cycles, Cox suggests. When such cicadas? reproductive years coincide, any cross-breeding could doom offspring. Their half-brood genes could lead them to reproduce in some intermediate year between mom?s and dad?s regular cycle. Without the company of millions of pure-broods, hybrids would be easy pickings for predators and reproductive dead-ends for their family lineages. But with life spans of 13 and 17 years, the simultaneous emergence of broods on different schedules happens only once every 221 years.

Cicadas may even somehow influence predator cycles, suggests ornithologist Walt Koenig of Cornell University. Decades of nationwide citizen-science surveys of breeding birds show that cicadas tend to show up during dips in numbers of seven cicada-eating birds, including American crows and blue jays. This may not be coincidence. That feast of easy-to-catch cicadas may somehow set bird populations on rise-and-fall trajectories that miss big cicada years, he and Andrew Liebhold of the USDA Northern Research Station in Morgantown, W.Va., proposed in the January American Naturalist. ?Even we think this is kind of weird,? he says, ?but it fits the data.?

However the brood emergences came to be, they?re worth seeking out. ?Cicadas are one of the big natural spectacles of North America,? Karban says. For those who missed the show this year, he promises, one of the 15 periodical broods will break out loud and dumb somewhere almost any year.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/351285/title/Mystery_in_synchrony

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Jackson's son says father feared concert promoter

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Michael Jackson's eldest son testified Wednesday that his father was excited about going back on tour before his death but wasn't happy about the pressure that came with the ill-fated shows.

Prince Jackson told jurors his father wanted more time to rehearse and had several tense phone conversations with promoters of his "This Is It" shows that sometimes ended with his father in tears.

The 16-year-old said his father remarked after one of the conversations, "'They're going to kill me.'" He did not elaborate.

The testimony came in a lawsuit claiming AEG negligently hired Conrad Murray, the doctor who was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter for giving Jackson an overdose of the anesthetic propofol.

AEG denies it hired the physician or bears any responsibility for the entertainer's death.

Wearing a black suit with a dark grey tie and his long brown hair tucked behind his ears, Prince testified that he saw AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips at the family's rented mansion in a heated conversation with Murray in the days before his father died. The teenager said Phillips grabbed Murray's elbow.

Phillips "looked aggressive to me," Prince testified.

Michael Jackson wasn't at home at the time and was probably rehearsing, Prince said.

Murray's attorney Valerie Wass and AEG defense attorney Marvin S. Putnam later denied outside court that the meeting Prince described ever happened.

Putnam said Prince would be re-called to the witness stand during the defense case later in the trial.

"I think as the testimony will show when he is called in our defense that's not what happened," Putnam said. "He was a 12-year-old boy who has had to endure this great tragedy."

For the first time, the teenage publicly provided details about the day his father died. Prince testified that he saw Murray performing CPR on his father, who was hanging halfway off a bed. It appeared his dad's eyes were rolled up in the back of his head, Prince told jurors.

Prince's eyes appeared red as he recalled being told by Murray at a hospital that his father was dead.

Prince said he never saw Murray's treatments of his father.

"I was 12. To my understanding he was supposed to make sure my dad stayed healthy," Prince testified.

Prince said none of the household staff were allowed upstairs at the mansion, and the singer kept his bedroom locked while receiving treatments from Murray.

During cross-examination, Putnam played a clip from a deposition of Prince in which the teen said he discovered the bedroom was locked when he and his siblings were playing hide-and-seek and couldn't get inside.

Prince also said his father gave him and his sister Paris a stack of $100 bills on a few occasions to give to Murray. The teen said his father told him that Murray wouldn't take the money from him, and the doctor wouldn't take the full amount from the children.

The teenager said his understanding was that the money was meant to tide Murray over until he got paid by AEG Live.

Prince's grandmother, Katherine Jackson, sat in the front row of the courtroom during his testimony. She held a tissue and removed her glasses several times.

The testimony began with the teenager showing jurors roughly 15 minutes of private family photos and home videos.

He described growing up on Neverland Ranch and showed the panel videos of the property's petting zoos, amusement park and other amenities. After his father's acquittal of child molestation charges, Prince described living in the Middle East, Ireland and Las Vegas.

He told the jury that his father was always working, but the children had no idea he was a global superstar.

"We always listened to his music, but we never knew how famous he was," Prince said.

He said he and his sister Paris watched a video of one of their father's performances and got a sense of his fame when overwhelmed fans were carried from his shows on stretchers.

Prince is the first Jackson family member to testify during the trial, now in its ninth week. Attorneys have said TJ Jackson, who serves a co-guardian to Prince and his siblings, and Taj Jackson, are also expected to take the witness stand. They are the sons of Tito Jackson.

Prince Jackson, his sister Paris and brother Blanket are plaintiffs in the case against AEG, which their grandmother and primary caretaker filed in August 2010.

Prince spoke softly as he began testifying, and the first exhibit shown to jurors was a photo taken with his grandmother on his and Paris' first day of school.

He described his school life, including taking a summer course in U.S. history, participating on the school robotics team and volunteer work.

Another image showed Michael Jackson playing piano with his son while Prince was still a toddler.

Plaintiffs' attorney Brian Panish asked Prince whether he was interested in pursuing a career in music.

"I can never play an instrument and I definitely cannot sing," Prince said to laughter from the jury.

He said he wanted to study film or business when he goes to college.

The trial is expected to last several more weeks.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jacksons-son-says-father-feared-concert-promoter-175534619.html

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Armed groups clash in Libyan capital for second day

By Ghaith Shennib

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - At least two people were killed and 24 wounded in clashes between militias in Libya's capital on Wednesday, highlighting the rivalries behind heavily armed groups that have plagued the country since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi.

Loud explosions and gunfire rocked Tripoli's southern neighbourhoods - the second day of violence in the battle-scarred city.

Armed groups made up of former rebel fighters from different parts of the country have grown in power and ambition nearly two years after Gaddafi was ousted and the government has struggled to impose its authority over them.

The latest fighting started on Tuesday morning when a militia given the job of guarding a major Libyan oil field attacked the headquarters of the national body set up to guard oil facilities across the country.

The group from the western town of Zintan was disgruntled after another group was given supervision of a drill in the area, officials said.

That fighting triggered widespread resentment in Tripoli against fighters from Zintan and by Wednesday, parts of the city were caught in fighting between people from that town and other areas.

Underlining the complexity of the situation, Wednesday's violence pitted a separate group from Zintan against fighters from the Tripoli-based Supreme Security Committee (SSC).

"It seems the fighting is a continuation of what happened yesterday. It could be a revenge attack for the death of the commander," a military source said.

The SSC had lost a commander in earlier fighting on Tuesday. Other security sources said the Zintan group may have launched a revenge attack after some of their men were seized.

A doctor working at a hospital in the Abu Salim neighbourhood, scene of some of the heavier fighting, said two people had been killed and 15 wounded.

Soon after an SSC vehicle drove up to the hospital, its passengers calling for help to carry one of their men who had been shot, a Reuters reporter at the scene said.

At another hospital, a doctor said eight injured people were brought in - a mix of civilians and SSC and Zintan fighters.

Separately, three explosions - believed to be car bombs - were heard in the southern desert town of Sabha on Wednesday, a local government official told Reuters.

"Three civilian cars exploded in different places around the town. One is said to have had a lot of ammunition inside," the official, who declined to be named said, adding one was close to a hotel in the centre of the town.

In the eastern city of Benghazi, a military intelligence officer, Lieutenant Colonel Giuma Misrati, was killed near his home when a bomb exploded in his car, officials said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/armed-groups-clash-libyan-capital-second-day-065239648.html

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Sony's unannounced Reader PRS-T3 leaks out at the FCC

Image

Last summer, Sony's PRS-T2 e-reader was leaked when it visited the FCC, and was available for pre-order a week ahead of its official launch. Therefore, it's with a sense of deja-vu that we tell you that Sony's annual update, the PRS-T3, has now mooched through the FCC's hallowed halls and been passed fit for human consumption. There's not much we can glean from the documents, except to say that it's got a 3.6Wh battery, 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and will probably be available in stores about a month or two from now.

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Source: FCC

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aGu_G9clyLc/

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Autism in children affects not only social abilities, but also a broad range of sensory and motor skills

June 25, 2013 ? A group of investigators from San Diego State University's Brain Development Imaging Laboratory are shedding a new light on the effects of autism on the brain.

The team has identified that connectivity between the thalamus, a deep brain structure crucial for sensory and motor functions, and the cerebral cortex, the brain's outer layer, is impaired in children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD).

Led by Aarti Nair, a student in the SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, the study is the first of its kind, combining functional and anatomical magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) techniques and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to examine connections between the cerebral cortex and the thalamus.

Nair and Dr. Ralph-Axel M?ller, an SDSU professor of psychology who was senior investigator of the study, examined more than 50 children, both with autism and without.

Brain communication

The thalamus is a crucial brain structure for many functions, such as vision, hearing, movement control and attention. In the children with autism, the pathways connecting the cerebral cortex and thalamus were found to be affected, indicating that these two parts of the brain do not communicate well with each other.

"This impaired connectivity suggests that autism is not simply a disorder of social and communicative abilities, but also affects a broad range of sensory and motor systems," M?ller said.

Disturbances in the development of both the structure and function of the thalamus may play a role in the emergence of social and communicative impairments, which are among the most prominent and distressing symptoms of autism.

While the findings reported in this study are novel, they are consistent with growing evidence on sensory and motor abnormalities in autism. They suggest that the diagnostic criteria for autism, which emphasize social and communicative impairment, may fail to consider the broad spectrum of problems children with autism experience.

The study was supported with funding from the National Institutes of Health and additional funding from Autism Speaks Dennis Weatherstone Predoctoral Fellowship. It was published in the June issue of the journal, Brain.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/NQP8dzX2Rvk/130625141216.htm

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

One Direction: This is Us Trailer is Here!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/one-direction-this-is-us-trailer-is-here/

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Eat,drink+beKerry: Need to know - Top cuts from this week's food news

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This week find out what's growing in your own 'backyard', get the goss on a new restaurant/bar opening, discover cold press coffee, enjoy a royal afternoon tea or weekday lunch special, take an Asian cooking class and eat healthy chocolate.

Eat local week


It's time to find out where your food really comes from with a visit to the Scenic Rim. See those mountains in the distance? That area just out of Brisbane is the Scenic Rim and it's and incredibly rich agricultural area.

Eat Local Week is on from June 23 to 30 celebrating local food production with a Carrot Field Day on June 29 from 9am to noon. You can pick your own carrots, see the tractors, harvesters, planters etc and tour the washing and packing factory.

The week culminates in the Winter Harvest Festival on Saturday June 29 from noon to 5pm. There will be food and wine tastings, cooking demos, activities for children and a Tractor Pulling Competition.? Find our more at www.scenicrim.qld.gov.au/eat-local-week


Rugby Club revamp


From the people who brought you Byblos and 5ifth Element, the Ghanem family,? will come Blackbird in the massive 1000 square metre site formerly owned by the Queensland Rugby Club.

With construction starting in August, Blackbird will be a sophisticated and funky bar and restaurant space with a 1920s prohibition theme. The bar will feature an extensive cocktail list paired with a grazing menu which will be available until late in the night.

?We are really excited to launch a venue in the heart of the CBD.? While many of the details are still being finalised, I can say Blackbird will be unlike anything Brisbane has seen before.? We have an extremely well-regarded chef coming in to take charge of the kitchen and he?ll be doing amazing things with the restaurant,? says Nehme Ghanem.


Deer Sir serves it up cold


Portside Wharf's Deer Sir has released its own blend of bottled iced-coffee, serving a distinct blend of AllPress Espresso produced using traditional methods of cold press.

Brewed and bottled on-premise and served in beer bottles with Deer Sir's unique label, there's a mix to suit every taste with options of black, soy, skim or full-cream milk.

"I absolutely love it and have been making it at home for years," Co-owner of Deer Sir, Michael Cotton said.

Mr Cotton said cold-brewing coffee was a precise process that involved 12 hours of cold water brewing, designed to enrich the flavours of the coffee. Deer Sir Cold Press is available in-store or in take-home packs of six. A single bottle of black cold press can be taken home and made into one to two litres of iced-coffee when mixed with milk. www.portsidewharf.com.au


Take tea with the Queen


It's not an invitation to Buckingham Palace, but Royal Tea at the Athenaeum Hotel in Mayfair, London within sight of Buckingham Palace, will see you sharing a few palace secrets.

The Athenaeum is hosting an exhibition of more than 40 rarely-seen photos of the Royal family?s children, from Victorian times to the present day, including a striking, never-before-published image of HM The Queen making sand castles in Sussex at the age of four.

On weekends until the end of August, guests will be able to view the photographs over a sumptuous afternoon tea in the Hyde Park suite and listen to the insights from Royal photographer Ian Pelham Turner and Helena Chard. They have a store of fascinating anecdotes, including the shaving of Bertie's head by Queen Victoria; HM The Queen?s famous left hook, displayed in disputes with her sister Margaret (known as The Mauler); and the reason George VI is thought to have gained his stammer.

The Athenaeum?s Royal Summer Afternoon Tea includes honey roast ham with Royal Park honey, arugula and red onion marmalade sandwiches, along with Royal drop orange blossom scones with rich Devonshire clotted cream and homemade

English strawberry jam. Also on the menu is a selection of traditional British cakes and pastries, including Victoria sponge cake with Royal icing, Battenberg cake and English strawberry tartlets.

There are two sittings per day at weekends, subject to availability at 1:30pm ? 3:00pm and 4:00pm ? 5:30pm and is priced at (approximately $93) per person. Reservations toll free 1-800-335-3300 or royalsummer@athenaeumhotel.com


Appy dinner planner


Time to Dine is a new app that helps you prepare a meal with many dishes at once ensuring that they are all ready at the same time. With reminders each step of the way it keeps you on track to deliver a meal to the table with all the dishes ready on time. Available for the iPhone for $1.00 in the app store visit www.TimeToDineApp.com

International Flavours with Spring Cooking School


From France to Asia, choose your flavour and learn the secrets to cooking your favourite authentic dishes with Spring?s upcoming cooking classes. The Asian Street Food class on Thursday, 27 June ($110), will help you learn to whip up delicious, aromatic and soulful street-style Asian favourites. Visit www.spring.com.au for full cooking class schedules and bookings, or call Spring on (07) 3229 0460.

Warm up to weekday lunch at Stokehouse

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This season, Stokehouse invites guests to indulge in a new weekday lunch special. Throughout winter, enjoy a delicious main course with a glass of wine for just $28! Eat and go on your lunch break or treat yourself to a leisurely, long lunch in the restaurant?s relaxed, waterfront surrounds. The special main course changes weekly, allowing you to sample a new, delicious offering each week ? more reason to go back for more! The winter weekday lunch special is available each Monday ? Friday at Stokehouse, from 12.00 ? 2.30pm. Bookings on (07) 3020 0600.

This week I'm liking

I'm rationing chocolate in my house as we seem to be constantly consuming it as an after dinner treat in the cold weather.? I didn't feel so guilty with the samples of? AntiOx Chocolate and Snack Bars that arrived at my door - lower calories and health benefits are a great way to ease a guilty conscience.? This chocolate and snack bars are high in natural antioxidants and made with superfruits and covered in 70% cocoa dark chocolate (which is sugar-free and sweetened naturally with stevia). Best of all they give you a good chocolate fix without the calories you also gain with a standard block of chocolate. AntiOx Snack Bars are available in Acai, Goji and Chia & Quinoa flavours and AntiOx Chocolate is available in Acai or Goji flavours. AntiOx Snack Bars (RRP $2.49 for a 40g bar size) and AntiOx Chocolate (RRP $4.65 for an 80g block) are available in the health section of Woolworths, Coles, IGA stores and health food stores. www.vitalitybrands.com/antiox

Kerry Heaney

Disclaimer: This is not a paid post.

Source: http://eatdrinkandbekerry.blogspot.com/2013/06/need-to-know-top-cuts-from-this-weeks.html

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Not-quite-steampunk bumpers for iPad and iPhone 5

These are the most unusual bumper cases for iPhone 5 and iPad that I’ve seen. ?Stone Jelly Ltd. makes these bumpers by hand, using brown oak, precision-engineered anodized aluminum, and custom fittings. ?Everything is made in their UK-based shop or by a few local suppliers. ?They are lined with cork for increased protection of your [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/06/24/not-quite-steampunk-bumpers-for-ipad-and-iphone-5/

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Peloton's Android-powered static bike lets you spin from home (video)

Pelotons Androidpowered static bike lets you spin from home video

Here's some gear that'll ensure you'll never again have to fight for space in that hyper-competitive spin class. The Peloton Bike is two grand's worth of static bike that's designed to bring the gym experience to your home with a number of innovative touches. First up, the Android 4.1-running unit is controlled by a 1.5GHz TI OMAP 4470 with 1GB of RAM and 16GB storage with 802.11 b/g/n WiFi, ANT+, Bluetooth 4.0 and Ethernet. It's connected to a 21.5-inch 1080p multitouch display, which'll let you stream classes from Peloton's NYC studio live and on-demand. The display also holds a webcam and microphone, so you can still swear at your friends / the instructor as if you were there in real life.

Secondly, the New York design house has abandoned the bike chain -- replacing it with a belt drive that'll prevent your training getting too noisy, and a magnetic resistance system to reduce wear and tear on the flywheel. The company has taken to Kickstarter to raise funds for the initial production run, requesting $250,000 before it can release the hardware. Pre-ordering now means that you can get the bike for $1,700 with a year's worth of subscription to the spin classes, after which point will cost you $40 a month. Interested in learning more? There's a video after the break.

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Source: Kickstarter

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ezjfq0v2Oxs/

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Jim Carrey 'Cannot Support' 'Kick-Ass 2' After Sandy Hook

Carrey tweeted that he's had a 'change of heart' about the August sequel, prompting creator Mark Millar to respond.
By Jocelyn Vena


Jim Carrey
Photo: Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1709455/jim-carrey-kick-ass-2-sandy-hook.jhtml

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Existing home sales jump 4.3 percent in May

Existing home sales rose 4.2 percent in May and 12.9 percent above the level seen in May 2012.?

By SoldAtTheTop,?Guest blogger / June 23, 2013

This chart shows the monthly and annual change in existing single family home sales. Single family homes jumped 5 percent in May 2013.

SoldAtTheTop

Enlarge

Today, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) released their Existing Home Sales Report for May showing an increase in sales with total home sales rising a notable 4.2% since April and climbing 12.9% above the level seen in May 2012.?

Skip to next paragraph SoldAtTheTop

Writer, The PaperEconomy Blog

'SoldAtTheTop' is not a pessimist by nature but a true skeptic and realist who prefers solid and sustained evidence of fundamental economic recovery to 'Goldilocks,' 'Green Shoots,' 'Mustard Seeds,' and wholesale speculation.

Recent posts

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Single family home sales also improved climbing a whopping 5.0% from April and rising 12.7% above the level seen in May 2012 while the median selling price increased a notable 15.8% above the level seen a year earlier.?

Inventory of single family homes increased from?April to 1.98 million units but still remained 9.2% below the level seen in?May 2012 which, along with the sales pace, resulted in a monthly supply of 5.2 months.?

The following charts (click for full-screen dynamic version) shows national existing single family home sales, median home prices, inventory and months of supply since 2005.?

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here.To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on paper-money.blogspot.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2mRu1WINRQw/Existing-home-sales-jump-4.3-percent-in-May

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Dueling Headlines ? ?Snowden seeks asylum in Ecuador? edition (Michellemalkin)

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

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Ohio air show resumes after stuntwoman, pilot die

CINCINNATI (AP) ? An air show in southwestern Ohio reopened with a moment of silence Sunday, a day after a pilot and wing walker died in a horrifying, fiery crash in front of thousands of spectators.

The Vectren Air Show near Dayton, which closed right after Saturday's crash, resumed Sunday in honor of pilot Charlie Schwenker and veteran stuntwoman Jane Wicker, both of Virginia.

"As a pilot, you accept the fact that accidents do happen ? it's an accepted risk we take," said John King, president of the Flying Circus Airshow, which employed Wicker.

"They were both dedicated to flying and the act. They were true, ultimate professionals," King said. "I don't know of anyone who could have done any better than what they were doing."

Wicker and Schwenker were killed when their plane crashed in front of spectators who screamed in shock as the aircraft became engulfed in flames. No one else was hurt.

Video of the crash showed their plane gliding through the sky before abruptly rolled over, crashing and exploding into flames. Wicker, performing at the Dayton show for the first time, had been sitting atop the 450 HP Stearmans.

The decision to resume the show a day after the crash was an emotional one supported by Wicker's ex-husband, said air show general manager Brenda Kerfoot.

"He said, 'This is what Jane and Charlie would have wanted,'" Kerfoot said. "'They want you to have a safe show and go out there and do what you do best.'"

Wicker, 44, who lived in Bristow, Va., was a mother of two boys and engaged to be married, Kerfoot said. Schwenker, 64, of Oakton, Va., was married.

The cause of the crash is unclear and the conclusion of an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board likely will take months. Investigators picked through the debris of the crash site Saturday.

Wicker's website says she responded to a classified ad from the Flying Circus Airshow in Bealeton, Va., in 1990, for a wing-walking position, thinking it would be fun. She was a contract employee who worked as a Federal Aviation Administration budget analyst, the FAA said.

In one post on Wicker's site, the stuntwoman explains what she loved most about her job.

"There is nothing that feels more exhilarating or freer to me than the wind and sky rushing by me as the earth rolls around my head," the post says. "I'm alive up there. To soar like a bird and touch the sky puts me in a place where I feel I totally belong. It's the only thing I've done that I've never questioned, never hesitated about and always felt was my destiny."

She also answered a question she said she got frequently: What about the risk?

"I feel safer on the wing of my airplane than I do driving to the airport," she wrote. "Why? Because I'm in control of those risks and not at the mercy of those other drivers."

A program for the air show touted Wicker as a performer of "heart-stopping" feats who did moves that "no other wing walker is brave enough to try."

"Wing riding is not for this damsel; her wing walking style is the real thing," the program said. "With no safety line and no parachute, Jane amazes the crowd by climbing, walking, and hanging all over her beautiful ... aircraft.

"Spectators are sure to gasp as this daredevil demonstrates in true form the unbelievable art of wing walking," it says.

On the video of the crash, an announcer narrates as Wicker's plane glides through the air.

"Keep an eye on Jane. Keep an eye on Charlie. Watch this! Jane Wicker, sitting on top of the world," the announcer said, right before the plane makes a quick turn and nosedive.

Some spectators said they knew something was wrong because the plane was flying low and slow.

Thanh Tran, of Fairfield, said he could see a look of concern on Wicker's face just before the plane went down.

"She looked very scared," he said. "Then the airplane crashed on the ground. After that, it was terrible, man ... very terrible."

In 2011, wing walker Todd Green fell 200 feet to his death at an air show in Michigan while performing a stunt in which he grabbed the skid of a helicopter.

In 2007, veteran stunt pilot Jim LeRoy was killed at the Dayton show when his biplane slammed into the runway while performing loop-to-loops and caught fire.

Still, King said, in the four decades since Flying Circus started, many kids have been so inspired watching the show that they later became military and commercial pilots.

"Our show takes them back to the barnstorming era of air shows," he said. "It's amazing how many people have taken up aviation careers because of their first exposure to the Flying Circus."

___

Online:

Raw video of crash: http://bit.ly/11Vf7JA

___

Associated Press writer Verena Dobnik in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at https://twitter.com/AmandaLeeAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ohio-air-show-resumes-stuntwoman-pilot-die-131204772.html

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