Sunday, March 31, 2013

Rubio: Reports of immigration deal 'premature'

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Even with one of the largest hurdles to an immigration overhaul overcome, lawmakers on Sunday cautioned much work remains and that no final deal has been reached.

The AFL-CIO and the pro-business U.S. Chamber of Commerce reached a deal late Friday that would allow tens of thousands of low-skill workers into the country to fill jobs in construction, restaurants and hotels. Yet despite the unusual agreement between the two powerful lobbying groups, lawmakers from both parties tried to curb expectations that the negotiations were finished and an immigration bill was heading for a vote.

"Reports that the bipartisan group of eight senators have agreed on a legislative proposal are premature," said Sen. Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican who is among the lawmakers working on legislation.

Rubio, a Cuban-American who is weighing a presidential bid in 2016, is a leading figure inside his party. Lawmakers will be closely watching any deal for his approval and his skepticism about the process did little to encourage optimism.

"Eight senators from seven states have worked on this bill to serve as a starting point for discussion about fixing our broken immigration system," Rubio said. "But arriving at a final product will require it to be properly submitted for the American people's consideration, through the other 92 senators from 43 states that weren't part of this initial drafting process."

Fellow Republican, Rep. Peter King of New York, was skeptical about any prospects for a deal.

"Eight guys in a room saying the border is going to be secure is not enough," said King, who is not working on the bipartisan proposal.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., helped negotiate the deal between AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka and Chamber of Commerce head Tom Donohue during a late-Friday phone call. Under the compromise, the government would create a new "W'' visa for low-skill workers who would earn wages paid to Americans or the prevailing wages for the industry they're working in, whichever is higher. The Labor Department would determine prevailing wage based on customary rates in specific localities, so that it would vary from city to city.

The detente between the nation's leading labor federation and the powerful business lobbying group still needs senators' approval, including a nod from Sen. John McCain, the Arizona Republican whose previous efforts came up short.

The measure also under serious discussion would secure the border, crack down on employers, improve legal immigration and create a 13-year pathway to citizenship for the millions of illegal immigrants already here.

Schumer acknowledged on Sunday that the lawmakers themselves had not settled on a final deal and said the senators have not yet finished writing a bill to address the 11 million illegal immigrants already in the United States.

"Business and labor have an agreement," Schumer said. "This is a major, major obstacle that is overcome."

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., also warned the negotiations were not complete despite the truce between labor and business.

"That doesn't mean we've crossed every 'i' or dotted every 't,' or vice versa," said Flake, another lawmaker intimately involved in the talks.

Big labor and big business were at a standoff over wages for low-skill workers and which industries would be included. Those disputes had led talks to break down a week ago, throwing into doubt whether Schumer, Flake and other senators crafting a comprehensive immigration bill would be able to complete their work as planned.

It's a major second-term priority of President Barack Obama's and would usher in the most dramatic changes to the faltering U.S. immigration system in more than two decades.

"This is a legacy item for him. There is no doubt in my mind that he wants to pass comprehensive immigration reform," said David Axelrod, a longtime political confidant of Obama.

During the last week, an immigration deal seemed doomed. But the breakthrough late Friday restarted the talks.

Ultimately the new "W'' visa program would be capped at 200,000 workers a year, but the number of visas would fluctuate, depending on unemployment rates, job openings, employer demand and data collected by a new federal bureau being pushed by labor groups as an objective monitor of the market, according to an official involved with the talks who also spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of a formal announcement.

A "safety valve" would allow employers to exceed the cap, the official said, if they could show need and pay premium wages, but any additional workers brought in would be subtracted from the next year's cap.

The workers could move from employer to employer and would be able to petition for permanent residency and ultimately seek U.S. citizenship. Neither is possible for temporary workers now.

"As to the 11 million (illegal immigrants), they'll have a pathway to citizenship, but it will be earned, it will be long, and it will be hard, and I think it is fair," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

The new program would fill needs employers say they have that are not currently met by U.S. immigration programs. Most industries don't have a good way to hire a steady supply of foreign workers because there's one temporary visa program for low-wage nonagricultural workers but it's capped at 66,000 visas per year and is only supposed to be used for seasonal or temporary jobs.

Separately, the new immigration bill also is expected to offer many more visas for high-tech workers, new visas for agriculture workers, and provisions allowing some agriculture workers already in the U.S. a speedier path to citizenship than that provided to other illegal immigrants, in an effort to create a stable agricultural workforce.

King spoke with ABC's "This Week." Schumer, Flake and Axelrod appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press." Graham was interviewed on CNN's "State of the Union."

___

Associated Press writer Erica Werner contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rubio-reports-immigration-deal-premature-144123665--politics.html

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Art 7 Entertainment: All American Modern Art For Home And Garden ...


Learning to appreciate and admire our own culture is sometimes a tad bit overlooked by most, as is the essence of a weather vane. Life among the garden plants, vases, flowers, trees and birds at home sometimes also goes overlooked by those who are too busy to remember how far we have come as a civilization. Weathervanes are like instant memories. With some weathervane the sound of changing wind will be an immediate reminder of our culture and heritage, with others the mere sight will invoke past experiences and pleasant memories. Art can change society if it wants to or even bring inspiration and insight. The most traditional of American modern arts in the home and garden, is the weather vane. From the oldest documented colonial weathervane of Deacon Shem Drowne in the 18th century with his most famous Grasshopper weathervane that sits upon Faneuil Hall in Boston to the present day, weathervane sculptures have shaped American modern art.

Weathervane and American Modern Art

When we think of American modern art, most people tend to think of paintings and sculptures that sit in galleries and art museums. Weathervane are some of the most traditional works of American sculpture art because they have told the direction of the wind on the tops of houses, fences and barns for hundreds of years and represented important elements in our history. They are made by hand and no two can be exactly the same. Each weather vane is in and of itself a work of human expression, crafted by the hands of an artesian who takes their work seriously and with great passion. Old North Church (1740, Boston), First Church in Cambridge (1721), Province House (1716, Boston), Goddess of Liberty, the Federal Eagle and many famous race horses have all been immortalized by the sculpture of weathervane and banners upon the highest tops.

Weathervane Give The Direction of The Wind and Feed Imagination.

The compass rose is held firmly on a weather vane and will always show the direction of north. The weather vane itself will always point in the direction from which the wind originates. The movement of wind and air is physically the disbursing of energy that has picked up speed and travels through the sky abiding the laws of the cosmos. Indicating in a subtle way, what the skies are about to do. Wind may normally tend to stand idle without a weather vane, but it is always doing something, even if it is absent. Metalworkers and historians alike have been enchanted by the fascinating beauty of weathervane and those delicate ?cathartic? moments they captivate in our hearts. Curving and spinning like a dancer, the weather vane fuels our human imagination with its beauty and becomes our link to the sky.

Art In Home and Garden Inspires Peace and Contemplation

This deep and intricate realm of American modern art can be most appreciated in the delicate things. Home and Garden is a place where that kind of traditional hand made art restores the splendor of the subtle and peaceful. ?Home is where the heart is.? And through the art of weathervane our expressions of self and family become most attuned to the sky, wind and land that we call home. The weather vane inspires peace and contemplation wherever it stands. Mythical creatures, farm animals, creatures of the sea, sailboats, airplanes, national prides; creative works of an artistic imagination that follow the moving patterns of the wind, a wind that only sleeps at the calm of the storm. And in those moments the weather vane asks a question, where is the wind?


Source: http://art7entertainment.blogspot.com/2013/03/all-american-modern-art-for-home-and.html

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Bitcoin: How An Unregulated, Decentralized Virtual Currency Just Became A Billion Dollar Market

imagesHang around in the tech industry long enough and you or someone you know will be heard saying, "that's so crazy it just might work." Two years ago, if you'd told me that an open-source, P2P currency would soon be a thriving, billion-dollar market, I would've told you that you were on a lonely bus headed to CrazyTown, U.S.A. But today, Bitcoin officially became a crazy idea that's actually working. Today, all the Bitcoin in circulation -- some 10.9 million -- have collectively crossed the billion-dollar mark. As it is wont to do, the value of Bitcoin (and its exchange rate) has fluctuated wildly today. At one point, it hit a dollar value around $78, then pushed into the mid-nineties. As of this minute, it's hovering around $90.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/3yp-1RktKQ0/

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And Now Let's Go to Balki Bartokomous with the Weather

By Martyn Herman LONDON, March 28 (Reuters) - Whether by design, necessity, self-interest or because of all three, nurturing youngsters has become fashionable for England's elite with no expense spared in the hunt for the new Wayne Rooney or Steven Gerrard. The length and breadth of the country, scouts from top clubs are hoovering up promising footballers barely old enough to tie their bootlaces in a bid to unearth the 30 million pounds ($45.40 million) treasures of the future. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/now-lets-balki-bartokomous-weather-203148628.html

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Russia's MTS acquires stake in parent's bank

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's top mobile phone operator MTS said on Friday it has acquired a 25.1 percent stake in MTS Bank for 5.1 billion roubles ($164 million) by buying additional shares issued by the bank.

The deal was concluded in accordance with the terms of an indicative offer between MTS, MTS Bank and their majority shareholder Sistema that were announced in October 2012.

MTS now owns around 27 percent of MTS Bank, Sistema has a 65.3 percent stake, while the balance of shares is held by other minority shareholders, MTS said in a statement.

($1 = 31.0844 Russian roubles)

(Reporting by Maria Kiselyova; Editing by Douglas Busvine)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russias-mts-acquires-stake-parents-bank-122859415--sector.html

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Cyprus's Plan B: What will happen if Moscow won't foot the bill?

Cypriot officials have now lingered in Moscow for a second day of talks regarding a potential bailout deal. Meanwhile, the government is also looking into internal options to drum up funds.

By Robert Marquand,?Staff writer / March 21, 2013

Cyprus?s Central Bank chief, Panicos Demetriades, leaves after a meeting at the presidential palace in Nicosia Thursday. The European Central Bank says it will keep emergency aid for Cyprus's troubled banks in place at least until Monday, but will have to cut it off after that unless an international rescue program is drawn up.

Petros Karadjias/AP

Enlarge

The clock in Nicosia is ticking a lot louder: Tiny Cyprus has four days to come up with about ?6 billion ($7.5 billion) or lose its current lender of last resort, the European Central Bank (ECB).

Skip to next paragraph Robert Marquand

Staff writer

Over the past three decades, Robert Marquand has reported on a wide variety of subjects for?The Christian Science Monitor, including American education reform,?the wars in the Balkans, the Supreme Court, South Asian politics, and the oft-cited "rise of China." In the past 15 years he has served as the Monitor's bureau chief in Paris, Beijing, and New Delhi.?

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Tensions and emotions are high after ECB officials declared on Thursday that Cyprus must guarantee a ?10 billion ($13 billion) bailout by Monday or forfeit and presumably go into default, with unknown consequences for the eurozone economy and beyond.

Cypriot officials are scrambling to conjure new sources of revenue ? a so-called Plan B ? including a look at pension fund leveraging and sales of offshore gas exploration prospects. The finance minister and energy minister have now lingered in Moscow for a second day of talks regarding a potential bailout deal with Russia.?

Cypriot banks will remain closed this weekend even as bankers there worry about huge outflows of capital next week if some kind of deal, whether with the European Union or Moscow, is not in the offing. (Reportedly Russian officials yesterday told their EU counterparts they would not add to a current ?2.5 billion ($3 billion) loan to Cyprus.)?

Cypriot lawmakers vowed Thursday that they would not raise again the idea of a levy or tax on private accounts. However, EU and ECB authorities continue to state that available resources are so limited that the Cyprus parliament will need to revisit the issue, perhaps in a smaller percentage.

Meanwhile, Reuters notes, EU officials?continue to up the ante and put pressure on Cyprus. "I cannot rule out a Cyprus insolvency," Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter told the newspaper Oesterreich. "A euro exit would not achieve anything. Cyprus must act now."?

The ECB hard deadline comes a day after Cypriot lawmakers rejected the controversial EU terms of the bailout, engineered mysteriously last week, which require a ?tax? allowing Cypriot authorities to reach into the accounts of private bank deposits and withdraw some 10 percent of funds in accounts over ?100,000 ($130,000) and about 7 percent in accounts under that figure.

The idea of such a tax brings mingled perplexity and outrage in many parts of the world, but especially in Russia, which uses Cyprus as an offshore tax haven.

The Washington Post calculates?that:

Deposits in Cyprus?s banks were seven times the size of its economy at the end of 2012, an unusual situation fostered by low taxes and reputation for lax regulation. Many European policymakers suspect it is a hub for Russian money laundering. Cypriot banks hold $88 billion in deposits, of which $49 billion is in the form of deposits over $129,000, according to analysts? estimates.?

The Christian Science Monitor reports?that Moscow is playing ?hardball? with the Cypriot finance minister in order to protect its massive stake in Cyprus' banking system.

According to official Russian figures, more than $114 billion has flowed into Russia since 2007 from Cyprus, almost all of it in the form of dividends paid by Cyprus-registered holding companies. Big Russian firms, including most metals giants, the state-owned banks Sberbank and VTB, and the independent gas producer Novatek all have important holdings in Cyprus.

"The price of crisis in Cyprus is very high for Russia," says Igor Nikolayev, director of strategic planning for one of Russia's leading auditing firms.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/NC_GP51gGCc/Cyprus-s-Plan-B-What-will-happen-if-Moscow-won-t-foot-the-bill

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Uncovering Africa's oldest known penguins

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Africa isn't the kind of place you might expect to find penguins. But one species lives along Africa's southern coast today, and newly found fossils confirm that as many as four penguin species coexisted on the continent in the past. Exactly why African penguin diversity plummeted to the one species that lives there today is still a mystery, but changing sea levels may be to blame, the researchers say.

The fossil findings, described in the March 26 issue of the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, represent the oldest evidence of these iconic tuxedo-clad seabirds in Africa, predating previously described fossils by 5 to 7 million years.

Co-authors Daniel Thomas of the National Museum of Natural History and Dan Ksepka of the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center happened upon the 10-12 million year old specimens in late 2010, while sifting through rock and sediment excavated from an industrial steel plant near Cape Town, South Africa.

Jumbled together with shark teeth and other fossils were 17 bone fragments that the researchers recognized as pieces of backbones, breastbones, wings and legs from several extinct species of penguins.

Based on their bones, these species spanned nearly the full size spectrum for penguins living today, ranging from a runty pint-sized penguin that stood just about a foot tall (0.3 m), to a towering species closer to three feet (0.9 m).

Only one penguin species lives in Africa today ? the black-footed penguin, or Spheniscus demersus, also known as the jackass penguin for its loud donkey-like braying call. Exactly when penguin diversity in Africa started to plummet, and why, is still unclear.

Gaps in the fossil record make it difficult to determine whether the extinctions were sudden or gradual. "[Because we have fossils from only two time periods,] it's like seeing two frames of a movie," said co-author Daniel Ksepka. "We have a frame at five million years ago, and a frame at 10-12 million years ago, but there's missing footage in between."

Humans probably aren't to blame, the researchers say, because by the time early modern humans arrived in South Africa, all but one of the continent's penguins had already died out.

A more likely possibility is that rising and falling sea levels did them in by wiping out safe nesting sites.

Although penguins spend most of their lives swimming in the ocean, they rely on offshore islands near the coast to build their nests and raise their young. Land surface reconstructions suggest that five million years ago ? when at least four penguin species still called Africa home ? sea level on the South African coast was as much as 90 meters higher than it is today, swamping low-lying areas and turning the region into a network of islands. More islands meant more beaches where penguins could breed while staying safe from mainland predators.

But sea levels in the region are lower today. Once-isolated islands have been reconnected to the continent by newly exposed land bridges, which may have wiped out beach nesting sites and provided access to predators.

Although humans didn't do previous penguins in Africa in, we'll play a key role in shaping the fate of the one species that remains, the researchers add.

Numbers of black-footed penguins have declined by 80% in the last 50 years, and in 2010 the species was classified as endangered. The drop is largely due to oil spills and overfishing of sardines and anchovies ? the black-footed penguin's favorite food.

"There's only one species left today, and it's up to us to keep it safe," Thomas said.

###

National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent): http://www.nescent.org

Thanks to National Evolutionary Synthesis Center (NESCent) for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127480/Uncovering_Africa_s_oldest_known_penguins

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

New Card Games in Stock | Woozles Blog

How about some family card games to keep parents and children entertained? Woozles has some new card games in stock, and some familiar items back on the shelves.

Back in stock are Rat-A-Tat-Tat, Sleeping Queens, UNO, and Crazy Mates.

New on the shelves are:

There?s a Moose in the House
In this silly matching game, the goal is to keep the moose out of your house while passing the moose cards to your opponents instead.
Use a door to close off empty rooms, maybe plant a moose trap to keep the mooses (?!) away. The player with the fewest moose wins. An Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Best Toy Platinum Award Winner.
Ages 8 and up. For 2-5 players.

Horse Show
Which horse will take home the blue ribbon? Pick the best horse cards from your stable and enter the show. Each event favours some horses and penalizes others. There are special assit cards like custom saddles and braiding kits that earn you extra points. The most blue ribbon cards wins! A Dr. Toy Best Vacation winner.
Ages 8 and up. For 2-4 players.

Hike
A new card game where nature springs surprises and players battle for survival in the outdoors. Go on a trek, get lost on a trail, ride out avalanches and always remember to watch out for ? poop. No littering allowed. PLay a card in each hand and the win a hand with the fewest leftover cards. A Dr. Toy Best Vacation winner.
Ages 7 and up. For 3-8 players.

Wizard
This is a game of trump, where you score points if you predict exactly how many tricks you will will bid and take. Winning too many or too few means losing points. Each round adds more cards and more excitement as you try to beat your opponents!
Ages 10 and up. For 3-6 players.

Dutch Blitz
Dutch Blitz is a highly interactive, highly energetic, family-friendly card game that will test your skills, smarts and speed. A player?s goal is to be the first to empty his/her Blitz pile and yell ?Blitz? to win the game. Speed is essential in winning since everyone plays at the same time!
Ages 8 and up. For 2-4 players.

This entry was posted in New in Stock, News & Events, Toys. Bookmark the permalink.

Source: http://www.woozles.com/woozlesblog/2013/03/new-card-games-in-stock/

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Sanjay Dutt says he'll go to prison as ordered

Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, right, breaks down as his sister Priya Dutt tries to console him during a press conference at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt said he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, right, breaks down as his sister Priya Dutt tries to console him during a press conference at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt said he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Priya Dutt tries to console her brother Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, center, after he broke down during a press conference at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt said he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, right, breaks down as his sister Priya Dutt tries to console him during a press conference at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt said he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, center, gestures to the media after he broke down during a press conference as his sister Priya Dutt, left, stands next to him at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt said he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

Indian Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, right, breaks down as his sister Priya Dutt tries to console him during a press conference at his residence in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 28, 2013. Dutt says he has not sought pardon for a 1993 weapons conviction and will serve his prison sentence as ordered by India's Supreme Court. Dutt broke his silence a week after the court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people.(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)

(AP) ? Breaking down repeatedly, popular Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt said Thursday he will serve his prison sentence for a 1993 weapons conviction and he has not sought pardon in the case linked to the deadliest terror attack in Indian history.

Dutt broke his silence a week after the Supreme Court sentenced him to five years in prison for illegal possession of weapons supplied by Mumbai crime bosses linked to a 1993 terror attack that killed 257 people.

"I respect the Supreme Court's verdict. I have not applied for any pardon," an emotional Dutt told reporters at a news conference held outside his home in Mumbai, India's entertainment capital and home to Bollywood, India's prolific Hindi film industry.

"There are many other people who deserve pardon," he said.

Dutt broke down repeatedly while reading out a statement and hugged his sister, Priya Dutt, who is a Congress party lawmaker from Mumbai.

Dutt said he and his family were devastated by the verdict.

"Right now I am a shattered man. My family is shattered," he said.

Dutt, 53, originally had been sentenced to serve six years in prison on the charge of possessing an automatic rifle and a pistol that were supplied to him by men subsequently convicted in a series of bombings that hit Mumbai.

The actor has maintained that he knew nothing about the bombing plot and that he asked for the guns to protect his family after receiving threats during sectarian riots in Mumbai. His mother was Muslim and his father Hindu.

He served 18 months in jail before he was released on bail in 2007 pending the appeal, so three and a half years remain.

The aging actor, who mainly plays character roles, said he hopes to complete as many of his pending film projects in the four weeks that the court has allowed him before he reports to prison.

Trade analysts say Dutt's jail term will be a huge financial blow for the industry.

Two of Dutt's films are being readied for release, but several other projects are midway and are likely to be delayed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-28-India-Sanjay%20Dutt/id-9593eea0d0d44a278be9c9ab387669fa

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

HTC plans successor to 5-inch 'Butterfly'

Droid DNA

The HTC Butterfly (a.k.a. J Butterfly in Japan, Droid DNA in the U.S.) was one of the most compelling Android devices of 2012, with its 5-inch 1080p display and speedy internals. Now, according to comments attributed to the company's marketing chief, it seems HTC may be keen to keep the Butterfly line alive alongside its soon-to-be-launched HTC One.

Spurred by strong interest in the device from Asia, Taiwan Focus reports that CMO Benjamin Ho said the manufacturer plans to launch a "successor" to the Butterfly under the same brand name "to meet consumer demand." Speaking at a media briefing, Ho apparently didn't mention when (or where) this new Butterfly might appear, but we'd guess this model would be aimed at countries or carriers that aren't getting the HTC One.

We'll have to wait and see what form the second Butterfly might take, but given the design similarities between the original and the HTC One, we don't imagine it'll be radically different from the phones we're already familiar with.

Any crazy theories? Shout out in the comments!

Source: Taiwan Focus



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/v2Wwv0mZTdY/story01.htm

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Coupon clipping declines as shoppers get saavier

Nati Harnik / AP file

Margery Gibbs uses coupons at a store in Omaha, Neb., in 2009. Coupon use fell in 2012 after several strong years.

By Allison Linn, TODAY

The good, old-fashioned coupon ? which surged in popularity in recent years ? appears to be falling out of favor.

Two separate studies show that coupon use declined significantly in 2012.

One study, from coupon industry consulting firm Inmar, found that about 3 billion coupons were redeemed in 2012, a drop of about 14.3 percent from approximately 3.5 billion coupons redeemed in 2011. Another, from NCH Marketing Services, found that coupon use fell by 17 percent in 2012 over the year before.

The drop came after several good years for the coupon, which seemed to indicate that the weak economy had helped bring coupon clipping back in style. The coupon has even enjoyed its 15 minutes of pop culture fame thanks to the reality show ?Extreme Couponing,? which documents people using thousands of coupons to save hundreds of dollars stockpiling diapers, paper towels and other items.

But experts say that while frugality is still in vogue, many shoppers have gotten so savvy at saving money that they've moved past the coupon.

?It was like the training wheels ? to teach people how to save money,? Phil Lempert, the chief executive of Supermarket Guru, said of coupons.

Experts say it?s pretty common for coupon use to rise when the economy goes south, and start falling as the economy gets better.

But the economic gains in 2012 weren?t really strong enough to warrant people giving up their frugal habits. In addition, experts say they saw plenty of other reasons that coupon use has declined.

?It?s sort of a thousand cuts,? said David Mounts, the chief executive of Inmar. ?It?s little things here and there.?

For starters, there were slightly fewer coupons. The industry distributed about 310 billion coupons in 2012, down from 313 billion in 2011 and a big drop from 336 billion in 2010, according to Inmar?s research.

Last year?s batch of coupons also tended to be for smaller discounts and to expire more quickly than in the past, Mounts said.

In addition, shopping habits have changed.

Some customers have started to want more than a one-size-fits-all coupon that you clip out of a Sunday newspaper, Mounts said.??Instead, more shoppers are looking for personalized deals that more closely match their shopping habits. They also want deals that are delivered digitally so they don?t have to manage a stack of paper.

So far, though, those types of coupons aren?t that widespread. Inmar?s data shows that more than four in 10 coupons still come from the newspaper inserts.

Frugally minded shoppers also are finding even more sophisticated ways to save money, said Lempert of Supermarket Guru, which tracks customer shopping habits.

These days, he?s seeing more savvy shoppers going to multiple stores to find the best prices on food and other items. Their stops may include drugstores, dollar stores, warehouse chains like Costco and specialty grocers such as Trader Joe?s.

They?re also turning more to store brands that may be cheaper than name brands, even when there?s a coupon for the branded item, he said.

Many younger customers also are constantly changing their eating and shopping habits, he said, and may not be as interested in buying the items that are traditionally discounted with coupons. They also may be more captivated by new types of ways to save, such as a four-hour sale promoted on Twitter.

?Frankly, the coupons weren?t meeting their needs,? Lempert said.

The extreme couponing fad may not have helped either.

The trend sparked a backlash among some in the industry, who alleged that the TV show set unrealistic expectations.

Lempert thinks it also made some shoppers feel uneasy. He said he receives thousands of emails a week from shoppers, and reaction to extreme couponing was largely negative.

Despite such challenges, experts say?the coupon industry is adapting to changing customer preferences.?Inmar?s early data from the start of 2013 appears to be showing more positive trends in coupon use than last year, Mounts said, which suggests coupon clipping likely won't disappear completely any time soon.

Do you use coupons?

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Craig Kanalley: Reykjavik Internet Marketing Conference 2013: Key ...

As wonderful as all of this was, none of it would have happened if I wasn't attending an Internet marketing conference in Iceland. I was invited to speak, and it was actually the first conference I've ever attended outside the United States.

What an experience it was! There were so many brilliant minds present -- Google, Bing, Twitter, Spotify and others represented -- and I learned so much from all of them.

Due to the conference's location in Reykjavik, Iceland, I obviously had the chance to meet many Icelanders, but also many other Europeans, including from Sweden, Norway, England, Scotland, Ireland and Bulgaria. There were Americans too, but I got the sense we were in the minority. (Nothing wrong with that, of course -- in fact, it was good to learn more about other cultures and their respective digital media markets.)

One of the best pieces of advice from the entire conference came from El?sabet Gr?tarsd?ttir, who led global marketing for the popular social game EVE Online and is now Head of Marketing for Arion Bank in Iceland.

She said make sure you're switching things up often and trying new things, alluding to a popular saying, "Only the dead fishes swim with the stream." The biggest success happens "when you're willing to change and think differently."

Serial entrepreneur and investor Plamen Russev also gave an inspiring talk. One thing he said got laughs from the audience, but there's probably truth in it too:

"A few years ago, I would say quit your day job, follow your dreams," he said. "Now I would say, keep your day job, keep working outside of it, never sleep. It's much easier that way."

Here are some other key takeaways from the conference, encompassing five major areas: search, user experience, social, content and mobile.

Search

A common theme at the conference was that there's a lot of talk about search fading in the shining light of social, but the fact is, search overall drives more traffic and it remains dominant in the online ecosystem.

Duane Forrester, a senior product manager for Bing, boiled down the goal of a search engine as to answer a single question: "What's the user's intent?" Are they looking to gain information? To make a purchase? Search engines are constantly tweaking based on search patterns and analytics to answer these questions.

While Forrester said half of search sessions last for longer than 30 minutes -- people will continue to search for information related to something they're interested in -- oftentimes users will spend maybe two minutes on your website and that's it. You have to give them what they're looking for, prominently, and think about, "What can I do so they spend more time on my site?"

Shari Thurow, founder and SEO director of Omni Marketing Interactive, expanded on this. But she only gave a site 1.5 seconds before the user moves on.

"If they don't find the site easy to use or see what they want right away, they'll leave," she said.

In her "State of Search" presentation, SEO consultant Julia Logan (AKA IrishWonder) said that Google is becoming smarter. It's increasing its knowledge base and becoming a toolbox for definitions and references. This trend is impacting how people are searching and the results they're finding.

For better or worse, Google remains the biggest search engine, by a large margin, she said, so you'll want to be on good terms with Google and not spam it. In the future, she said she'd love to see more than one really powerful search engine, but the current space is what it is.

Thurow added that a creative human touch and voice often means higher quality content which users will spend more time with. This goes into the next major theme of user experience.

User Experience

Thurow emphasized the importance of site design and information architecture to deliver an experience that keeps users on your site longer. She added that usability studies have found that links at the bottom of content can actually perform well, but only if they're presented cleanly and nicely visually.

She quoted Jacob Nielsen on the importance of quality user experience: "Once you have lost a user, you almost always lose them for good."

Thurow also encouraged the use of wireframes and mock-ups. "It's far easier to change a wireframe than to change a fully-coded site," she said.

Your website should be remarkably simple, said Kristine Schachinger, who works as a digital media consultant and writes for searchenginewatch.com. "Don't put everything on the homepage," she said, adding it's a common mistake. "People can only handle 7 or 8 things in the nav."

She added that you can't forget about page speed and page weight for your websites. Again, that helps with user experience, which was so heavily talked up at the conference.

One type of user experience you can offer is games. "Games are simply getting people to behave repeatedly in a certain way," Gr?tarsd?ttir said.

Users build up reputation or honor points in games. As they become more popular, people will respect them, and they're more likely to play more games and get more challenges, Gr?tarsd?ttir said. Games are also often social, which goes into the next category.

Social

Search may still be huge, but there's no doubt about the growing significance of social. No one denied this. There were differing opinions on how big social will become, but that's another matter.

Google+ is evidence of the growth of social. Interestingly, speakers seemed to agree that Google+ is just as much an identity system, which ranks reputations of authors for example, as it is a social layer over Google's products. In fact, it's probably more so an identity system than a social network, Schachinger said, citing Google chairman Eric Schmidt himself who suggested that.

Schachinger also had excellent advice on how to approach social media.

"Social media is like going to a party," she said. "Give information, be funny at times, engage, THEN talk about yourself."

Matt Roberts, co-founder and VP Product of Linkdex, spoke about the importance of identifying key influencers on social platforms and how they can be beneficial to your content.

Spotify's General Manager Europe and VP Ad Sales Jonathan Forster said people love to socialize around music, and his service has observed a rise in users sharing specific songs related to moods they are experiencing. Whether they just went through a break up, or another significant life event, they are documenting it with accompanying music.

Bruce Daisley, director of Twitter in the U.K., highlighted some recent trends that social network has seen.

"We're seeing a rise of Twitter with smartphones," he said, adding that was the case worldwide. Twitter has observed a rise in people using the @ as their identity online, putting it on business cards, websites and elsewhere. He also said that Twitter is sometimes described as a "chat room," and "that's absolutely true." He noted 40 percent of all Twitter traffic, peak time for the social network, is around live television.

Daisley advised Twitter users to incorporate at least two of the following three options for their accounts: be fun, be helpful, provide information. That's where Twitter users often see the most success in terms of growing their accounts.

For example, a mobile network in the UK @O2 responded with jokes and sarcasm to tweets complaining about their network going down. "It's being fun and helpful," Daisley said. It turned the negative sentiment into largely positive sentiment based on its activity on Twitter.

In terms of Facebook, Marcus Taylor, founder of Venture Harbour, said Facebook apps are sometimes underrated. The viral potential on the platform alone provides reason to experiment with them and they're not particularly expensive to create. He also recommended experimenting with Facebook's advertising platform to target exactly who you want to target.

Social is particularly important for search because it's a signal for topical authority, Forrester said. Algorithms can look at what a person is posting about, their follow-to-follower ratio, and other metrics to find "voices in demand."

"If someone is popular, we want to figure out why," Forrester said, adding that artificial popularity can be just as easily determined. You can look at what they're tweeting about and why, who they're following and that they are engaged. If someone is engaged with others, it's another signal of good service.

There's also the commerce element of social. Some 80% of people about to make a purchase will first ask a family or friend whether it's a good idea or for a recommendation, Forrester said. "This is why social is huge," he added.

Mobile

The ever-growing importance of mobile was referred to throughout the conference.

"That whole thing, we got to do something about mobile, mobile's coming... OK, mobile's here," Forrester said.

Mobile is fundamentally changing how people search and do many things on the Internet. As a result of the rise of mobile, the Web has to be reorganized "for task completion," Forrester said.

Along with mobile's growth, there is the concept of interaction that has to be considered. People aren't just using the mouse and keyboard to navigate anymore. They're using voice, touch, gesture and vision too. Websites need to adjust for this from a search and content perspective.

Google Webmaster Trends Analyst Pierre Far emphasized the importance of page speed on mobile. You should focus on delivering users the page they're looking for in under one second.

When it comes to design, Cindy Krum, CEO of MobileMoxie, spoke highly of responsive design. It means one URL, one version of your site instead of two, it's less intensive on search engines' resources (and search is one of the biggest things people do on mobile) and you'll reduce the risk of bounce rate.

Rich Quick, head web developer at Arnold Clark, said that mobile sales in the U.S. nearly tripled year-over-year for his company from 2011 to 2012, so commerce is rising there too. He added that the majority of browsing of websites on mobile is through tablets, so that should be kept in mind for design.

Lisa Enckell, head of marketing at Wrapp, noted that many brands struggle with mobile monetization. The fact is mobile requires new ways of advertising. Wrapp is trying out one model with social gifting and in the process it reached 1 million users faster than sites like Pinterest and Twitter.

Content

Kevin Gibbons of BlueGrass Interactive had some good advice on generating valuable content. He said you need to be agile when it comes to content, not scared to fail, and you won't get it right at first every time.

"If you create 10 posts, 8 don't work, and 2 are really successful, that's probably better than having 10 posts of average quality," he said. Similarly, he brought up a quote from Abraham Lincoln: "If I had six hours to chop down a tree, I'd probably spend the first four hours sharpening the ax."

Todd Wilms who leads strategy for digital, social and communities at SAP, urged content producers to "connect, not pollute," as there is so much Internet pollution and noise due to content overload. He said you can actually connect with your audience through 3 C's: Content, Channel, Context. Make sure you spend time thinking about all three.

Author and consultant Rob Garner advises to closely watch trends and buzzes to see what people are talking about and opportunities to join the conversation. "You are publishing to an audience that expects a real-time response," he said.

Philip Petrescu, CEO of LeadConverter, a data-driven sales company, said you should always be thinking about how you can "fascinate your audience."

"If they don't remember you, then you have failed," he said.

Petrescu added that the biggest problem is people only have a five-second attention span these days. You have to impress users within the first five seconds to earn the next five seconds, then the next, and so on.

"They may not remember what you said or showed them, but they'll always remember how you made them feel," he added.

Web marketer and entrepreneur Chris Mortimer said at the end of the day, content is about telling stories. He said it's important to keep in mind users' expectations as they consume your content. People are going to think about what you share with them in a way that reflects them, personal experiences and what they know. So you always want to consider your target audience. This is especially important for global content strategy; Icelanders may not understand American references, and so on.

Bing really has one message for publishers, Forrester said: "Please stop publishing crap if you're publishing crap." Search engines have to deal with that and penalize such sites.

The definition of good content, from a search engine's point-of-view, is does it generate user engagement, Forrester said. And natural engagement at that, including organic growth through social and searches.

He also offered up some advice for content publishers: "Build great content. Get people engaged. Try usability tests." He recommended the book "The Power of Habit" which looks at how brands can tap into someone's existing habit and changes it or plays off of it to fuel growth.

Conclusion

When you think about all of this, a lot of it is interrelated, and they're all key elements to building a successful company in the Internet age.

The advice was top-notch and hopefully others find it as useful as I did.

At the end of the day, it's important to encompass all of the above into your digital strategy. And also, as Gr?tarsd?ttir said, a willingness to change and try new things. That's when you can reach your full potential.

?

Follow Craig Kanalley on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ckanal

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Sergio Garcia Climbs Tree, Hits Shot [Video] - Business Insider


Sergio Garcia hit his drive into a tree at Bay Hill today.?

But instead of taking a drop and moving on, he decided to climb the tree and play his ball as it laid.

In this surreal video (via CBS Sports), Sergio climbs what looks like eight feet or so, perches himself against a branch, and hits his ball back onto the fairway with a one-handed backwards shot.

He made double bogey.

Here's the video, which starts right before he hits the shot, (but you can rewind to see the full sequence):

Some surreal screenshots:

?

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/sergio-garcia-climbs-tree-hits-shot-video-2013-3

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Losing wetlands to grow crops

Mar. 25, 2013 ? Getting enough to eat is a basic human need -- but at what cost to the environment? Research published in BioMed Central's journal Agriculture & Food Security demonstrates that as their crops on higher ground fail due to unreliable rainfall, people in countries like Uganda are increasingly relocating to wetland areas. Unless the needs of these people are addressed in a more sustainable way, overuse of wetland resources through farming, fishing, and hunting will continue.

In 2009 it was estimated that about a third of Uganda's wetlands had been lost to growing crops and grazing. While the environmental significance of wetland loss is important, so are National Food Security targets and the Millennium Development Goal of halving the number of people who suffer from hunger by 2015. In order to evaluate how people are using the wetlands researchers from Makerere University, Uganda, with financial support from IDRC surveyed residents living in either Lake Victoria crescent, Kyoga plains, and South Western farmlands.

The survey revealed that more than 80% of people in these areas use wetland resources including collecting water, catching fish, hunting bush meat (Sitatunga, a type of antelope, and wild rat), and harvesting wild fruits and vegetables. Some of these they consume but others they sell in order to be able to buy food. Over half admitted to growing crops in the nutrient rich soil wetlands with its ready water supply. The families who were most likely to use the wetlands in this way were the ones who had the least access to other sources of food.

The locals blame their bad harvests on global warming, and as global weather systems change this can only get worse. Dr Nelson Turyahabwe explained, "Food insecurity is a real problem across the world. In Uganda the families most at risk tended to have younger or female household heads, or were less educated. Large families were also at high risk of not having enough to eat. In these cases use of wetlands allows families to survive. In designing sustainable use policies for wetlands the needs of humans also needs to be considered."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by BioMed Central Limited, via AlphaGalileo.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Nelson Turyahabwe, Willy Kakuru, Manson Tweheyo and David Mwesigye Tumusiime. Contribution of wetland resources to household food security in Uganda. Agriculture & Food Security, 2013; DOI: 10.1186/2048-7010-2-5

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.

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Holder averts furloughs of prison staffers (The Arizona Republic)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Stocks end higher amid Cyprus deal

Stocks closed higher Friday, rebounding from their biggest drop in nearly a month, as worries over Cyprus diminished and a batch of upbeat earnings reports were released.

Still, major averages finished in the red for the week. The Dow snapped a four-week win streak and the S&P 500 logged its second losing week this year.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied 90.54 points, or 0.63 percent, to close at 14,512.03, lifted by Wal-Mart and Hewlett-Packard, but still finished lower for the week.

The blue-chip index is still on track for its biggest ever quarterly point gain.

The S&P 500 gained 11.09 points, or 0.72 percent, to finish at 1,556.89. The Nasdaq rose 22.40 points, or 0.70 percent, to end at 3,245.00.

The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, slid below 14.

For the week, the Dow slipped 0.01 percent, the S&P 500 dipped 0.24 percent, and the Nasdaq erased 0.13 percent. Cisco was the worst performer on the blue-chip index for the week, while Hewlett-Packard climbed.

For the week, materials led the key S&P sector laggards, while consumer staples rallied.

(Read More:Cramer Concerned, Says Buyers Pause)

"If the eleventh-hour solution doesn't manifest itself, then it will really get the market's attention because a precedent will be set and it will have implications for other struggling European countries," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial.

(Read More: Who Will Blink First? Europe or Cyprus)

Cyprus was close to a deal to raise billions of euros and unlock a bailout from the European Union that could avert a financial meltdown and its exit from the euro, its ruling party said.

The European Union issued the nation with an ultimatum to raise the 5.8 billion euros ($7.4 billion) necessary for a 10-billion euro bailout package by next Monday. The European Central Bank has said it will cut off liquidity to Cypriot banks without a deal. Cyprus' finance minister returned to Cyprus after two days of talks with Russian officials in Moscow but failed to deliver a deal to rescue the country.

Earlier, Cyprus agreed with Greece on a takeover of the Greek units of Cypriot banks, which ended uncertainty over the fate of those operations.

European shares trimmed their earlier losses to end flat.

(Read More: As World Watches Cyprus, Slovenia in Danger Zone)

Meanwhile, some strategists pointed to the Federal Reserve's ongoing easy monetary policy as the reason for higher stock prices.

"With the $85 billion a month that the Fed is pumping into the market, this market only has one way to go and that's up," said Alan Valdes, director of floor operations and VP of trading at DME Securities. "And that's going to trump whatever's going on in Europe."

(Read More: Keep the Presses Rolling: Fed Won't Stop Easing)

Apple climbed amid reports the tech giant will unveil the iPhone 5s and the iPad 5 on June 29, according to tech website Gizmorati, citing an inside source and confirmation from a third party. The date would mark the sixth anniversary of the introduction of the original iPhone.

BlackBerry dropped sharply as the company's new BlackBerry Z10 went on sale in the U.S. at AT&T stores to little fanfare.

Among earnings, Nike soared to lead the S&P 500 gainers after the sports apparel retailer reported quarterly earnings that easily topped estimates and said future demand for its clothing and shoes gained. At least six brokerages lifted their price target on the company.

Tiffany rallied after the upscale jeweler said it sees worldwide sales gaining 6 to 8 percent this fiscal year and posted a better-than-expected profit.

Micron Technology posted a quarterly net loss, but surged nearly 10 percent after the chipmaker said the outlook for memory chip prices is improving.

Meanwhile, Tibco plunged after the business software maker forecast current-quarter results below estimates, citing execution challenges in North America and the UK.

And Darden Restaurants posted quarterly results that largely matched Wall Street's recently lowered estimates as consumers shied away from restaurants amid the payroll tax hike and higher gasoline prices.

JPMorgan held gains after the financial giant's board endorsed Jamie Dimon to remain both chairman and CEO.

Blackstone Group and General Electric's lending arm have discussed jointly pursuing Dell's financial-services business, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The New York Times also reported that Blackstone was weighing whether to make an offer for all or part of Dell, saying that some people close to the private equity firm are skeptical that an offer would materialize.

Pepsi gained after the U.K. Telegraph reported that investor Nelson Peltz has taken a stake in the beverage maker and Mondelez International and may push for a merger. Separately, Pepsi is redesigning its 20-ounce bottle for the first time in nearly 17 years.

(Happy Friday!Watch: Bacon Tacos = Bacos)

?Follow CNBC's JeeYeon Park on Twitter: @JeeYeonParkCNBC.

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

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Retaliation: Your #1 risk in job-bias lawsuits ? Business ...

Supervisors in your organization probably know it?s illegal to discriminate based on race, age, sex, religion or disability. But apparently far fewer realize those same federal laws also make it illegal to retaliate against people for voicing complaints about such discrimination.

Employees (and their lawyers) are certainly becoming aware of their rights.

For the third year in a row, retaliation is the No. 1 type of job discrimination claim filed with the EEOC. Employees submitted 37,836 retaliation claims in 2012. That?s only a small increase from 2011, but up more than 70% since 2005 and 100% since 1998.

Why the jump? The Supreme Court rewrote the definition of ?retaliation? a few years ago, making it easier for employees to get retaliation cases into court. Plus, workers now routinely tack retaliation claims onto their age-, sex- or race-bias complaints to the EEOC.

The law: EEOC rules clearly say that employers ?may not fire, demote, harass or otherwise ?retaliate? against an individual for filing a charge of discrimination, participating in a discrimination proceeding or otherwise opposing discrimination.?

Advice: Don?t give employees any reason to file retaliation claims. Before taking disciplinary action against people who?ve complained about discrimination (either formally or informally), supervisors and HR should ask themselves:

  1. ?Why am I taking this action now?? Scrutinize the reason and timing of the action. Is there any connection to the person?s complaint? If it smells at all like retaliation, a jury could see it that way, too.
  2. ?Would I take this action with my best employee?? If your answer is ?no,? you could be open to a retaliation charge. If it?s ?yes,? docu-ment the basis for your decision.

3 best practices

  1. Put retaliation on managers? radar screens. Clarify in policies that it?s unlawful to retaliate against anyone who exercises their legally protected rights. That includes everything from taking FMLA leave to filing a discrimination charge to going out on workers? comp.
  2. Have experts review complaints. All complaints that might give rise to retaliation claims should be funneled to a senior group that will determine the existence of ?protected activity,? decide on a response and guide supervisors.
  3. Use performance management. In court, retaliation cases often hinge on the timing of negative appraisals and discipline. Be prepared to show that managers followed a clear performance-management process and any negative feedback or reviews were in writing before the employee engaged in protected activity.

Online resource: The best tool for managers to prevent (and defeat) retaliation claims is a simple performance log system. Find six tips on creating a performance log, plus a list of what to include, in "Use performance logs to simplify employee reviews."

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Russian tycoon Berezovsky found dead in London

Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky, a prominent Russian opposition figure, was found dead at his home near London on Saturday, British officials told NBC News. He was 67.

His death was also reported in a Facebook post by his son-in-law, Egor Schuppe. "Boris Berezovsky dead," the post read.

Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images, file

A picture dated Oct. 4, 2011 shows Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky leaving the Court of Appeal in Central London. Berezovsky, the exiled Russian oligarch and long-time opponent of the Kremlin, has died in Britain at the age of 67, his spokesman said on March 23, 2013, without giving further details.

Police would not directly identify Berezovsky, but when asked Saturday about him by name they said "the death of a 67-year-old man at a property in Ascot, Berkshire" was being treated as "unexplained" and a full investigation is ongoing.

Ascot lies about 25 miles west of London.

"The area around the property has been cordoned off in order to allow the investigation to take place," the Thames Valley police statement read.

Berezovsky accumulated his wealth in the early 1990s, when Russia's privatization of state assets turned chaotic. He orchestrated the re-election of Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and played a role in Vladimir Putin's rise to prominence, but he fell out of favor with the latter after Putin became president of Russia in 2000.?


Berezovsky fled Russia for Britain in 2001 after criticizing Putin's government. He was granted political asylum in Britain in 2003.

Berezovsky was a close friend of Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko, who was fatally poisoned with radioactive polonium in London in 2006.

Last year, a court ordered him to pay $53.3 million in legal costs to fellow Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea Football Club, after losing a legal battle against him. The legal and other costs of that lawsuit amounted to about $250 million.

?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/29e97bd2/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C230C174312210Erussian0Etycoon0Eberezovsky0Efound0Edead0Ein0Elondon0Dlite/story01.htm

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Scientists reveal quirky feature of Lyme disease bacteria

Friday, March 22, 2013

Scientists have confirmed that the pathogen that causes Lyme Disease?unlike any other known organism?can exist without iron, a metal that all other life needs to make proteins and enzymes. Instead of iron, the bacteria substitute manganese to make an essential enzyme, thus eluding immune system defenses that protect the body by starving pathogens of iron.

To cause disease, Borrelia burgdorferi requires unusually high levels of manganese, scientists at Johns Hopkins University (JHU), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), and the University of Texas reported. Their study, published March 22, 2013, in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, may explain some mysteries about why Lyme Disease is slow-growing and hard to detect and treat. The findings also open the door to search for new therapies to thwart the bacterium by targeting manganese.

"When we become infected with pathogens, from tuberculosis to yeast infections, the body has natural immunological responses," said Valeria Culotta, a molecular biologist at the JHU Bloomberg School of Public Health. The liver produces hepcidin, a hormone that inhibits iron from being absorbed in the gut and also prevents it from getting into the bloodstream. "We become anemic, which is one reason we feel terrible, but it effectively starves pathogens of iron they need to grow and survive," she said.

Borrelia, with no need for iron,has evolved to evade that defense mechanism. In 2000, groundbreaking research on Borrelia's genome by James Posey and Frank Gherardini at the University of Georgia showed that the bacterium has no genes that code to make iron-containing proteins and typically do not accumulate any detectable iron.

Culotta's lab at JHU investigates what she called "metal-trafficking" in organisms??the biochemical mechanisms that cells and pathogens such as Borrelia use to acquire and manipulate metal ions for their biological purposes.

"If Borrelia doesn't use iron, what does it use?" Culotta asked.

To find out, Culotta's lab joined forces with Mak Saito, a marine chemist at WHOI, who had developed techniques to explore how marine life uses metals. Saito was particularly intrigued because of the high incidence of Lyme Disease on Cape Cod, where WHOI is located, and because he specializes in metalloproteins, which contain iron, zinc, cobalt, and other elements often seen in vitamin supplements. The metals serve as linchpins, binding to enzymes. They help determine the enzymes' distinctive three-dimensional shapes and the specific chemical reactions they catalyze.

It's difficult to identify what metals are within proteins because typical analyses break apart proteins, often separating metal from protein. Saito used a liquid chromatography mass spectrometer to distinguish and measure separate individual Borrelia proteins according to their chemical properties and infinitesimal differences in their masses. Then he used an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer to detect and measure metals down to parts per trillion. Together, the combined analyses not only measured the amounts of metals and proteins, they showed that the metals are components of the proteins.

"The tools he has are fantastic," Culotta said. "Not too many people have this set of tools to detect metalloproteins."

The experiments revealed that instead of iron, Borrelia uses that element's next-door neighbor on the periodic chart, manganese, in certain Borrelia enzymes. These include an amino peptidase and an important antioxidant enzyme called superoxide dismutase.

Superoxide dismutase protects the pathogens against a second defense mechanism that the body throws against them. The body bombards pathogens with superoxide radicals, highly reactive molecules that cause damage within the pathogens. Superoxide dismutase is like an antioxidant that neutralizes the superoxides so that the pathogens can continue to grow.

The discoveries open new possibilities for therapies, Culotta said. "The only therapy for Lyme Disease right now are antibiotics like penicillin, which are effective if the disease is detected early enough. It works by attacking the bacteria's cell walls. But certain forms of Borrelia, such as the L-form, can be resistant because they are deficient in cell walls."

"So we'd like to find targets inside pathogenic cell that could thwart their growth," she continued. "The best targets are enzymes that the pathogens have, but people do not, so they would kill the pathogens but not harm people." Borrelia's distinctive manganese-containing enzymes such as superoxide dismutase may have such attributes.

In search of new avenues of attack, the groups are planning to expand their collaborative efforts by mapping out all the metal-binding proteins that Borellia uses and investigating biochemical mechanisms that the bacteria use to acquire manganese and directs it into essential enzymes. Knowing details of how that happens offers ways to disrupt the process and deter Lyme Disease.

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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: http://www.whoi.edu

Thanks to Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/127404/Scientists_reveal_quirky_feature_of_Lyme_disease_bacteria

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