Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Hugh Masekela melds S. Africa, jazz in cathartic Hub show

South African musician Hugh Masekela and his five-member ensemble delighted a crowd at the Berklee Performance Center on Sunday.

South African musician Hugh Masekela and his five-member ensemble delighted a crowd at the Berklee Performance Center on Sunday.(Mark Shoul photo)

South African musician Hugh Masekela brought his irresistible vein of music to Boston Sunday night. The show at the Berklee Performance Center, a presentation of World Music/CRASHarts, soothed an audience still reeling from last week?s heartbreaking events.

Befitting a star of international stature, Masekela, 74, delivered a polished production. Performing more than two hours nonstop, he and his five-member ensemble played well-known selections from a repertoire honed over more than 40 years that melds the musical styles of his native South Africa with elements of American jazz, blues and rock.

While the music was familiar to his fans, the tightly produced show was a platform for stirring improvisation that made each song new and encompassed the audience with the strength of a resilient, jubilant musical tradition.

Coming up as a gifted young trumpeter in Johannesburg and Cape Town, Masekela joined Dollar Brand (later known as Abdullah Ibrahim) in the first African jazz group to record an LP. He absorbed the whirling township styles, particularly mbaqanga, a stew of Zulu vocal and dance traditions seasoned by bebop and Bo Diddley. Simmering in urban bars, the music became a voice of protest against oppressive apartheid policies.

In 1960, as censorship tightened, Masekela and other talented musicians left South Africa only to return in the ?90s, after South Africa abolished its race laws. Arriving in New York in the ?60s, Masekela told an interviewer, he met ?the royalty of American music?Dizzy [Gillespie] introduced me to everybody. It was the golden age of music.?

Wearing a tent-shaped tan tunic over a green shirt and orange pants, Masekela first addressed the crowd with his flugelhorn, then added his baritone voice and soon, his whole body.

He presided with the bearing of an elder statesman and captivated the audience with humor and ageless energy. Constantly in motion, he danced with deep squats and demonstrated his prowess as a mime, evoking a bird or a monkey to accent a lyric. When not singing or playing his horn, he backed another?s solo by shaking a cabassa or beating an alo bell, at times doing three or more things at once.

Accompanying Masekela was his long-standing ensemble, who were all from South Africa except Sierra Leone percussionist Francis Manneh Fuster. He and bassist Abednigo ?Fana? Zulu have played with Masekela for more than two decades. Masekela showed paternal pride for the three young musicians ? lead guitarist Cameron John Ward, keyboardist Randal Skippers and drummer Lee-Roy Sauls.

With his ensemble providing tasty solos as well as backing vocals, Masekela began with the languages of his homeland, including Zulu, Tsonga, Sotho and an occasional tongue click of Xhosa.

He scatted assorted rasps and growls while Ward responded with sunny, swirling chords. In frequent rounds of give-and-take, Masekela issued forth rapid, short lines with his horn that Ward would transform into sweet, spiraling notes or a bluesy riff.

Masekela treated English as just one more vehicle for joyful self-expression. Urging the audience to join him, he led a call-and-response exchange with Zulu phrases. ?Be yourselves,? he told the audience, until the volume and enthusiasm of everyone?s cries satisfied him that all were ?healed and well.?

Masekela explored the visual and verbal pleasures of a Fela Kuti song, ?Lady,? a song of praise to modern women in Nigerian pidgin, a slang version of English. While singing, he moved to the song?s easygoing rhythmic pace and mimicked the stride of a proud woman.

No stranger to the poetry of the English language, Masekela conjured an encounter with a lovely woman at a vegetable stall with his song, ?Market Place.? ?I won?t forget the day when the sun came shining,? he sang, describing a woman ?floating through the market like a butterfly? with ?corn-row hair in a million braids.? ?

Masekela performed his epic song ?Stimela,? which renders the plight of his country?s conscripted mine workers by portraying the train that brings them to towns where they work ?16 hours a day for almost no pay.? He punctuated the somber lyrics with the sounds of a train?s whistle, belching steam and chugging engine. ?

After immersing the audience in his infectious musical world, Masekela spoke directly of Boston?s tragic events. He expressed his condolences to the friends and families of the victims of the Boston Marathon bombing. He asked us to also remember ?all those people all over the world who lose their lives from human violence and terrorism and natural disasters.?

Eventually, he moved into blockbuster hits, including his 1968 instrumental ?Grazing in the Grass.? Keyboardist Skippers navigated its lilting melody with a gorgeous contemplative solo in the style of Keith Jarrett.

Noting with pride that South Africa is celebrating its 19th anniversary as a non-racial democracy, Masekela introduced ?Bring Him Back Home (Nelson Mandela),? his anthem to the young nation?s first president. Masekela wrote the song in 1986, four years before Mandela was released from prison. Mandela memorably danced to the song in June 1990, before an audience of 220,000 at a concert in his honor along the Esplanade.

Masekela concluded his joyful concert with an encore and then departed with a final ululating cry.

Source: http://www.baystatebanner.com/masekela-africa-jazz-2013-04-25

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Shell fends off Total to become UAE's sour gas partner

DUBAI (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell will partner Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) in a multi-billion-dollar project to develop the Bab sour gas field, the partners said on Tuesday.

The choice of Shell ahead of rival bidder Total to help treat the potentially deadly gases in Bab offers Europe's largest energy company a chance to prove the effectiveness of its latest gas technology.

The 30-year Bab venture also puts the Anglo-Dutch giant in a strong position to renew its role in the UAE's largest onshore oil concession, on which the Bab field stands, when that contract comes up for renewal early next year.

"We value our long and successful partnership with ADNOC, and look forward to continuing to play a role in helping the United Arab Emirates meet its energy needs," Shell Chief Executive Peter Voser said in a statement.

Shell had been widely expected to win the contract to develop Abu Dhabi's Shah gas field in 2011, but lost out to Occidental Petroleum.

UAE state news agency WAM said earlier on Tuesday that ADNOC would own 60 percent of the Bab joint venture's equity and Shell would hold the rest.

Total was overlooked for the Bab project despite a French charm offensive which included a visit to the UAE by French President Francois Hollande in January.

Bab, and the almost as technically challenging Shah sour gas project, are vital to limit the UAE's growing gas imports over the next decade.

Shah, which was developed first because it is seen as less difficult than Bab to develop, is on track for completion by the end of 2014.

Because Bab sits in one of the fields that make up the UAE's onshore oil concession, some industry observers believe the selection of Shell is likely to support its efforts to continue operating the oil fields for decades.

The UAE oil concession system allows international energy companies to acquire equity in the OPEC member country's hydrocarbon resources.

Big western oil companies including Shell are long-standing partners with ADNOC in the Abu Dhabi Company for Onshore Oil Operations but face rival bids to run the fields, which produce about 1.5 million barrels per day from Asian companies.

Bids from international oil companies hoping to operate the onshore fields beyond 2014 are due by the start of October.

(Reporting by Yara Bayoumy and Daniel Fineren, writing by Daniel Fineren)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/shell-fends-off-total-become-uaes-sour-gas-125328934.html

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JPMorgan names Matt Zames sole chief operating officer

NEW YORK (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co. said on Sunday Matt Zames will fully assume the role of chief operating officer as his former partner in the job leaves, which was part of the latest management shakeup at the U.S. biggest bank.

Zames, who has been seen as a strong candidate to succeed the bank's chief executive and chairman Jamie Dimon, had been co-chief operating officer with Frank Bisignano, the New York-based bank said in a statement.

As earlier reported by the Wall Street Journal, Bisignano will leave JPMorgan's senior ranks to head payroll processor First Data Corp. Bisignano played a major role in the bank's effort to get back on track after suffering a loss of more than $6 billion due to soured, risky bets.

First Data announced Bisignano's appointment as its chief executive officer effective Monday, after the Journal report.

Zames "is a proven business executive, who has performed exceptionally well since coming into his corporate role in May of last year. He'll continue to have an important impact on our company," Dimon said in a statement.

Of Bisignano, Dimon said, "I have worked with Frank for many years, and he has proven himself time and again as a highly talented executive willing to take on difficult challenges and get the job done."

Other changes in the bank's latest management shuffle involved the co-chief administrative officers of corporate and investment banking, which have been held by Paul Compton and Louis Rauchenberger.

Compton will become the chief administrative officer of JPMorgan Chase and report to Zames, while Rauchenberger will become the sole chief administrative officer of corporate and investment banking, the bank said.

(Reporting by Richard Leong)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/jpmorgan-names-matt-zames-sole-chief-operating-officer-042253194.html

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Kelly Nash Self-Portrait: Heads Up!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/kelly-nash-self-portrait-heads-up/

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'Iron Man' Or Iron Mom? Gwyneth Paltrow's Son 'Psyched' To See Mom Suit Up

'I was really happy — not only that she was wearing the suit, but that you see her on equal ground with Tony,' Paltrow tells MTV News.
By Todd Gilchrist

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1706536/iron-man-3-gwenyth-paltrow-suit.jhtml

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The business case for monarchies - Fortune Management

By Jeroen Ansink

Queen Beatrix and Crown Prince Willem Alexander of The Netherlands

Dutch King Willem-Alexander and his mother, recently abdicated Queen Beatrix

FORTUNE ? It's good to be the king. But, when it comes to a nation's economic health, it's also good to have a king ? or queen ? on hand. Monarchs open economic doors.

"In the presence of royalty, companies can enter circles they wouldn't be able to get in by themselves," says Ang?lique Heijl, deputy director of international economic affairs at VNO-NCW, the largest employers' organization in the Netherlands. "This holds particularly true for countries where the government plays a large role in the economy."

Monarchs typically serve their respective nations longer than democratically elected heads of state: the recently abdicated Dutch Queen Beatrix was on the throne for 33 years, Elizabeth II of Britain has held her position for 61 years and counting. This kind of leadership stability gives these particular figures additional sway in the business community.

"The presence of the queen gives a mission just a little bit more cachet," says Erik Oostwegel, vice-chair at engineering consultancy Royal HaskoningDHV, who joined Queen Beatrix on visits to Oman, Qatar, and the UAE.

MORE: Offshore account holders win a victory in government tax case

While the impact of these visits is hard to quantify, they do generate cultural, political, and economic benefits, says architect Ben van Berkel, whose agency UNStudio went along on a royal trip to Singapore. "For companies who already have established contacts, an essential benefit is that your clients become aware that you have royal and political support in your own country. This is extremely beneficial in generating trust."

"The use of the Queen, in a dignified capacity, is incalculable," wrote the 19th-century British businessman and editor-in-chief of The Economist Walter Bagehot in The English Constitution.

In a 2007 study, Harry van Dalen, economist at the Dutch University of Tilburg, attempted to determine the effects of a royal head of state on real GDP growth. Comparing World Bank data from constitutional monarchies with other forms of government, he concluded that, on average, the presence of a royal house accounts for 0.8 to 1.0 percentage points of additional economic growth. According to van Dalen, a ruler in a constitutional monarchy adds stability, efficiency, and social capital in the form of trust. In the case of the Netherlands, this "monarchy bonus" has added an estimated 4 to 5 billion euros to its 2006 GDP. Not a bad investment, considering the royal family's budget of roughly 100 million euros a year.

Dual-nation firms like Anglo-Dutch oil giant Royal Dutch Shell and Unilever have the option of traveling with two monarchs. However, the royal bump will only take you so far, says Wim van de Wiel, spokesman for Royal Dutch Shell. "In the end, it is still up to us to prove ourselves."

Just the same, monarchies do offer a competitive edge when it comes to international trade, especially with other kingdoms, says Herman Matthijs, political scientist and monarchy expert at the Belgian Universiteit Gent. "Royal visits to monarchies such as Thailand, the Gulf States, or Brunei bring in much more government contracts than those to countries like Vietnam or China. For instance, when the British government organizes a trade mission to the Persian Gulf, they send Prince Charles. He always comes back with enormous orders for the defense industry."

MORE: Have headquarters, will travel

As members of an exclusive club, royals feel connected to each other, even though differences between countries and political systems may be enormous. "Autocratic rulers may not like democracies," Matthijs says, "but they do look up to royal titles. If King Willem-Alexander decides to go to Riyadh, the Saudi King will want to see him that very night. He will probably pick him up from the airport personally. I don't see that happening to, say, the president of Italy."

This diplomatic equality allows small European monarchies to punch above their weight. Although nothing trumps a trade mission led by a U.S. president. "That opens all doors," says Matthijs.

Royal families also offer several branding lessons to businesses, says Harvard Business School marketing professor Stephen Greyser, who collaborated in a study of monarchies as corporate brands. "Monarchy is a symbol of nationhood and has a target market of a wide range of stakeholders. In that respect, they almost behave like corporations themselves."

Businesses can profit when a royal family endorses high-end domestic brands. "These forms of co-branding show that the monarchy is supporting national products competing in a global market," Greyser says.

Monarchies also inspire businesses to do good. "Members of the royal family are making countless appearances in support of various organizations, especially in the philanthropic realm," says Greyser. "Corporations engaging in charitable causes can certainly learn from that."

Companies that operate within monarchies can also be awarded royal designations, a remnant of Napoleon's reign over large swaths of Europe. This royal stamp of approval indicates that an enterprise is of impeccable integrity, has national importance, is a leader in its field, and has been around for at least a century. Such companies can also incorporate a crown in their logos.

MORE: Suspicious spending: $605K for coffee with Apple's CEO

While a royal designation is considered somewhat old-fashioned in Western Europe, the effect is still tangible in the Middle East, says Oostwegel of Royal Haskoning. After designing the Port of Duqm in Oman, the company is aiming at developing its airports as well. "In those cases, it certainly helps to have a reputation as a solid and reliable partner."

Source: http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/04/30/the-business-case-for-monarchies/

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Samsung Galaxy Tab 3: Oh, Another One?

Just in case you thought Samsung didn't offer enough variety in its tablet range, its gone ahead and launched yet another. This 7-inch Galaxy Tab 3 is brand new and, um, like virtually every other Samsung tablet that's gone before it.

The third iteration of Samsung's first tablet attempt, this little seven-incher packs a 1.2GHz processor, 8GB or 16GB of storage, 3-megapixel rear camera, 1.3-megapixel front facer, and Android 4.1. A fairly bland spec list to accompany what is quite a bland product.

The Wi-Fi version of the Tab 3 will roll out across the world in May, with a 3G model following in June. There's currently no word on pricing, but it will probably be comparable to the existing Tab 2. Not that you'd notice the difference. [Samsung via Engadget]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5995498/samsung-galaxy-tab-3-yet-another-boring-new-android-slate

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Kim Kardashian's Pregnant Boobs ? Kim Flaunts The Girls In ...

Kim Kardashian Pregnant Boobs

SplashNews, FameFlynet

Woah, baby! While vacationing with her family in Greece, pregnant Kim sported a maternity dress that bared it all! Do you think the mom-to-be is revealing too much?

Just because you?re pregnant doesn?t mean you can?t be sexy, at least according to?Kim Kardashian! The 32-year-old reality star wore a burgundy pregnancy frock that showed off some major cleavage!

Kim Kardashian?s Cleavage On Display In Plunging Dress

Kim has taken some major maternity fashion risks, and this outfit definitely follows suit! Although she?s about to become a mom, Kim was not afraid to accentuate her famous curves while having dinner with her family in Greece.

Did Kim rock this skimpy maternity look, or should she be a bit more modest with her outfit choices?

Kim Shows Off Mom Skills On Family Vacation

While vacationing with her family in Greece, pregnant Kim had the opportunity to practice her mommy skills with her nephew,?Mason Disick!

While Kris Jenner,?Kendall Jenner, and?Kylie Jenner?spent their time relaxing on a yacht the family rented in the middle of the Greek Islands, Kim chose to spend some one-on-one time with her nephew! Giving up tanning time to hangout with a 3-year-old?Kim must really be ready for motherhood!

Lately, Kourtney Kardashian has had her hands full with Mason and baby Penelope. Luckily, Aunt Kimmy gave Kourt a little break by volunteering to watch adorable little Mason for the day! We think it?s so great Kim is getting in as much mommy practice as possible before the arrival of her little one!

HollywoodLifers, do YOU think pregnant Kim is revealing too much? Vote below!

WATCH:?Kim Kardashian Baby Bump Fashion Disasters


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More Kim Kardashian News:

  1. Kim Kardashian?s Pregnant Boobs ? Kim Flaunts Bump & Cleavage In Plunging Tuxedo Dress
  2. Kim Kardashian?s Pregnant Breasts Are HUGE ? Bust Baring Maternity Dress
  3. Kim Kardashian?s Breast Size ? Her Boobs Have Grown 4 Cup Sizes During Pregnancy

Source: http://hollywoodlife.com/2013/04/29/kim-kardashian-pregnant-boobs-dress-greece-family-vacation/

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Alexander Graham Bell speaks, and 2013 hears his voice

By Deborah Zabarenko

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nine years after he placed the first telephone call, Alexander Graham Bell tried another experiment: he recorded his voice on a wax-covered cardboard disc on April 15, 1885, and gave it an audio signature: "Hear my voice - Alexander Graham Bell."

The flimsy disc was silent for 138 years as part of the Smithsonian Museum's collection of early recorded sound, until digital imaging, computer science, a hand-written transcript and a bit of archival detective work confirmed it as the only known recording of Bell's voice.

Carlene Stephens, curator of the Smithsonian's National Museum of American history, first saw this disc and nearly 400 other audio artifacts donated by Bell when she joined the museum in 1974, but she didn't dare play them then.

"Their experimental nature and fragile condition ... made them unsuitable for playback," Stephens said by email.

"We recognized these materials were significant to the early history of sound recording, but because they were considered unplayable, we stored them away safely and hoped for the day playback technology would catch up with our interest in hearing the content," she wrote.

That day came in 2008, when Stephens learned that scientists at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California had retrieved 10 seconds of the French folk song "Au Clair de la Lune" from a 1860 recording of sound waves made as squiggles on soot-covered paper. That was nearly two decades before Thomas Edison's oldest known playable recording, made in 1888.

If the Berkeley scientists could coax sound out of sooty paper, Stephens reckoned, perhaps they could decipher those silent records she had guarded for decades.

She contacted Carl Haber at Berkeley and Peter Alyea, a digital conversion specialist at the Library of Congress. They chose six recordings from the collection, including the one that turned out to be the Bell audio, and made ultra-high-definition three-dimensional images of them.

The Berkeley lab's scanner captures gigapixels of information, and not just width and height but the depth of the grooves, with measurements down to 100 nanometers, or 250 times smaller than the width of a human hair, Haber said by telephone.

DEEP WIGGLES

Depth is important with these old recordings, Haber said, because a lot of the information about how it sounds is stored in the deep parts of the grooves.

"It's not necessarily a groove that wiggles from side to side, it wiggles up and down," he said. "If you just took a regular (two-dimensional) picture of it, you don't get the information you need."

Haber and Berkeley colleague Earl Cornell used an algorithm to turn that image into sound, without touching the delicate disc. The system is known as IRENE/3D, short for Image, Reconstruct, Erase Noise, Etc.

Most of the recording is Bell's Scottish-accented voice saying a series of numbers, and then dollar figures, such as "three dollars and a half," "seven dollars and 29 cents" and finally, "$3,785.56."

This suggests Bell was thinking about a machine for business recording, Stephens said.

"The recording on its own is historically interesting and important," Stephens wrote. "It answers questions about Bell personally - what kind of accent did he have? (he was a Scot who lived in England, Canada and the United States) ... How did he pronounce his middle name? ('Gray-hum' not 'Gram')."

The job of authenticating the disc began with a hand-written transcript of the recording signed by Bell (online at http://newsdesk.si.edu/photos/alexander-graham-bell-transcript-voice-recording).

In 2011, Patrick Feaster, an Indiana University sound-media historian, inventoried notations on the discs and cylinders in the Smithsonian's collection. Many were scratched on wax and all but illegible, Stephens recalled.

"We then matched up one wax-and-cardboard disc, from April 15, 1885," Stephens wrote. "When we recovered sound from the recording ... the content matched the transcript word for word. It is a recording of Bell speaking."

Similar scanners are used in quality assurance for micromanufactured products such as microchips, optical components and to assure the flatness of touch screens. Dentists use them to take three-dimensional pictures of cavities to aid in making custom fillings.

The Berkeley lab has worked with the Smithsonian and the Library of Congress to learn more about the earliest audio records, some on tinfoil or even paper. And while Haber and his colleagues now know how to authenticate the recordings, they cannot do all the records that may exist.

The Northeast Document Conservation Center in Massachusetts is working with the Berkeley lab on a digital reformatting service for early audio recordings. There could be as many as 46 million of these early recordings in the United States.

The Bell recording was made at a time of creative ferment, Haber said, as Bell, Edison and others invented devices to change the way Americans communicate.

"Those guys were creating the future," Haber said.

(Reporting by Deborah Zabarenko; editing by Marilyn W. Thompson and Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alexander-graham-bell-speaks-2013-hears-voice-193617970.html

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Ray J Releases Music Video for Kim Kardashian-Inspired Anthem

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/ray-j-releases-music-video-for-kim-kardashian-inspired-anthem/

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The iTunes influence, part one: How Apple changed the face of the music marketplace

The iTunes influence, part one How Apple changed the face of the music marketplace

"iTunes is a stepping stone along the way."
-- Jim Griffin, OneHouse LLC

On April 28th, the iTunes Store basked in a milestone 10th birthday. Two years before its 2003 launch (as the iTunes Music Store), Apple introduced the iTunes client as a desktop music management program and implemented it as the device manager for the first iPod later in 2001. In those two years, Apple laid the groundwork for what can reasonably be called the iTunes era of music.

Apple did not invent digital music, even though for many iTunes embodies 21st century music buying. However, during the past 10 years, it has become the US' top music retailer, with customers currently downloading 15,000 songs per minute from the app's library of 26 million songs, according to an Apple spokesperson. Since its launch, it has evolved into the hub of a powerhouse media / tech ecosystem that turned Apple into the world's most valuable company in 2012.

As a symbolic milestone, the iTunes anniversary encourages reflection on the past, a survey of the present and predictions of the future. Digital music continues to evolve, for businesses, consumers and musicians.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/29/the-itunes-influence-part-one/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Verizon Cloud backup service rolling out for Android, comes soon to iOS

Verizon Cloud sync app rolls out for Android, comes to iOS soon

Smartphone owners have no shortage of cloud-based safety nets, whether it's Google's services, iCloud or any number of file sync providers. Few of these come from the carrier, however, and Verizon is gambling that its now-deploying Verizon Cloud service will serve as a crutch for anyone replacing a phone on its network. The currently Android- and web-only release offers daily backups of the usual media libraries as well as call logs, contacts and messages. While that isn't special in itself, Verizon is also promising cross-platform safeguards: both an iOS app (available "soon") and future OS support should let customers fetch some of their data if they switch platforms. Just don't count on Verizon Cloud as an alternative to established rivals unless you're both loyal to Verizon and willing to spend. Users get a thin 500MB of space for free, and meaningful storage ranges from $3 per month for 25GB through to $10 for 125GB. Should there be little danger of leaving Big Red, though, Verizon's service and a matching Android app update are available today.

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Via: Verizon

Source: Verizon Cloud, Google Play

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/-ARv4mZ65-U/

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Monday, April 29, 2013

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Bill Gates sets South Korea abuzz with 'rude' one-handed shake

Bill Gates triggered a media uproar with a 'disrespectful' one-handed shake upon meeting the new South Korean president. What should Bill Gates have done?

By David Clark Scott,?Staff writer / April 23, 2013

South Korean President Park Geun-hye, left, shakes hands with Microsoft founder Bill Gates before their meeting at the presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, April 22, 2013. Gates has his left hand in his pocket.

(AP Photo/Lee Jin-man

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Global etiquette can be tricky. Just ask Bill Gates.

Skip to next paragraph David Clark Scott

Online Director

David Clark Scott leads a small team at CSMonitor.com that?s part Skunkworks, part tech-training, part journalism.

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The Microsoft chairman (who is also co-chair of one of the world's biggest charitable organizations)? is no stranger to international travel or meeting heads of state. But, on Monday, when he shook hands with South Korea's first female president, Park Geun-hye, Gates made a serious faux pas, which resulted in a cultural kerfuffle.

Gates shook her hand with just one hand. In South Korea, and much of Asia, that's only done in casual settings, with good friends. To top it off, Gates had his left hand in his pocket, signaling his superiority.

"How rude!" was the response in South Korea media. Almost every news organizations carried the photo on the front page.

The proper way to show respect would have been for Gates to clasp the South Korean leader's hand with both of his hands.

Was Gates sending a blunt signal of political disapproval to the new government leader? Was Gates ignorant of Asian etiquette??

There was enough media buzz that the South Korean president's office felt it needed to issue an official statement on the matter: "Bill Gates took a similar pose for a picture when he met former President Lee Myung-bak five years ago. Just think of it as an American style of greeting," according to Dong.com, the website of Dong-a Ilbo, a leading newspaper in Korea with daily circulation of more than 1.2 million.?

[Editor's note: Since publication, the president's office contacted The Christian Science Monitor to say that it had issued no official statement about the Bill Gates handshake.]

The first part of that statement is true. In fact, the Atlantic Wire compiled a series of Bill Gates One-Hand Shaking, One-Hand-in-Pocket photos from previous meetings with other world dignitaries, including UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, China's President Xi Jinping, and French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Apparently Gates is consistently casual about his handshakes ? with whomever he meets.

While the one-handed Western handshake has become more common in Asia, business etiquette also suggests that one never looks directly in the eyes of the person you're meeting. An exception to that rule is the Philippines. And in many places, a bow is also part of the greeting.

In Cambodia, for example, if you meet a prominent businessman, the proper way to show respect is to place your palms together at chest height and bow at your waist.

There's also a culturally correct way to exchange business cards in Asia, too. Each card should be in English on one side, and the recipient's native language on the other. You present your card with both hands, native language side up and readable to the recipient. When you receive a card, it's also a two-handed affair. Look at it, thank the person, and put in gently in a coat pocket.

For more tips on global etiquette, check out The Christian Science Monitor's quiz on the globally savvy traveler.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/d91YxxUq09w/Bill-Gates-sets-South-Korea-abuzz-with-rude-one-handed-shake

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Cyberattack suspect had 'bunker' in north Spain

MADRID (AP) ? A Dutch citizen arrested in northeast Spain on suspicion of launching what is described as the biggest cyberattack in Internet history operated from a bunker and had a van capable of hacking into networks anywhere in the country, officials said Sunday.

The suspect traveled in Spain using his van "as a mobile computing office, equipped with various antennas to scan frequencies," an Interior Ministry statement said.

Agents arrested him Thursday in the city of Granollers, 35 kilometers (22 miles) north of Barcelona, complying with a European arrest warrant issued by Dutch authorities.

He is accused of attacking the Swiss-British anti-spam watchdog group Spamhaus whose main task is to halt ads for counterfeit Viagra and bogus weight-loss pills reaching the world's inboxes.

The statement said officers uncovered the computer hacker's bunker, "from where he even did interviews with different international media."

The 35-year-old, whose birthplace was given as the western Dutch city of Alkmaar, was identified only by his initials: S.K.

The statement said the suspect called himself a diplomat belonging to the "Telecommunications and Foreign Affairs Ministry of the Republic of Cyberbunker."

Spanish police were alerted in March by Dutch authorities of large denial-of-service attacks being launched from Spain that were affecting Internet servers in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and the U.S. These attacks culminated with a major onslaught on Spamhaus.

The Netherlands National Prosecution Office described them as "unprecedentedly serious attacks on the nonprofit organization Spamhaus."

The largest assault clocked in at 300 billion bits per second, according to San Francisco-based CloudFlare Inc., which Spamhaus enlisted to help it weather the onslaught.

Denial-of-service attacks overwhelm a server with traffic, jamming it with incoming messages. Security experts measure the attacks in bits of data per second. Recent cyberattacks ? such as the ones that caused persistent outages at U.S. banking sites late last year ? have tended to peak at 100 billion bits per second, one third the size of that experienced by Spamhaus.

Netherlands, German, British and U.S. police forces took part in the investigation leading to the arrest, Spain said.

The suspect is expected to be extradited from Spain to face justice in the Netherlands.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyberattack-suspect-had-bunker-north-spain-110421618.html

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How does pregnancy reduce breast cancer risk?

Apr. 28, 2013 ? Being pregnant while young is known to protect a women against breast cancer. But why? Research in BioMed Central's open access journal Breast Cancer Research finds that Wnt/Notch signalling ratio is decreased in the breast tissue of mice which have given birth, compared to virgin mice of the same age.

Early pregnancy is protective against breast cancer in humans and in rodents. In humans having a child before the age of 20 decreases risk of breast cancer by half. Using microarray analysis researchers from Basel discovered that genes involved in the immune system and differentiation were up-regulated after pregnancy while the activity of genes coding for growth factors was reduced.

The activity of one particular gene Wnt4 was also down-regulated after pregnancy. The protein from this gene (Wnt4) is a feminising protein -- absence of this protein propels a fetus towards developing as a boy. Wnt and Notch are opposing components of a system which controls cellular fate within an organism and when the team looked at Notch they found that genes regulated by notch were up-regulated, Notch-stimulating proteins up-regulated and Notch-inhibiting proteins down-regulated.

Wnt/Notch signalling ratio was permanently altered in the basal stem/progenitor cells of mammary tissue of mice by pregnancy. Mohamed Bentires-Alj from the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, who led this study explained, "The down-regulation of Wnt is the opposite of that seen in many cancers, and this tightened control of Wnt/Notch after pregnancy may be preventing the runaway growth present in cancer."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by BioMed Central.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Fabienne Meier-Abt, Emanuela Milani, Tim Roloff, Heike Brinkhaus, Stephan Duss, Dominique S Meyer, Ina Klebba, Piotr J Balwierz, Erik van Nimwegen and Mohamed Bentires-Alj. Parity induces differentiation and reduces Wnt/Notch signaling ratio and proliferation potential of basal stem/progenitor cells isolated from mouse mammary epithelium. Breast Cancer Research, 2013 (in press) [link]

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

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

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/M01wkIKwjeM/130428230427.htm

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Microsoft working on redesigns for Xbox, Yammer, Skype and Bing

Microsoft working on redesigns for Xbox, Yammer, Skype and Bing

Considering Microsoft's efforts to rebrand, redesign and rebuild its Windows platform, it's no surprise to hear the company is tweaking the visual aesthetics of its other brands, too. Speaking at Design Day 2013, Wolff Olins creative director Todd Simmons and Windows Phone design studio manager Albert Shum talked about the challenges of rebranding a company like Microsoft. "We're still trying to figure out how to put a consumer face on this brand, as an ecosystem," Simmons said, explaining how the team wanted to get away from the idea of Microsoft being a top-down, monolithic entity. The discussion touched on the creation of the Windows 8 logo, but also shed light on efforts to revamp other Microsoft brands. "Other brands are coming along too," Simmons explained, teasing the audience with a pair of sketches. "Bing, Skype, Yammer, Xbox -- everything is under development." With Microsoft's next generation gaming hardware lurking just around the corner, the time for a new logo might just be nigh. Read on to see the pair's full 45-minute presentation for yourself.

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Via: Verge, Travis Lowdermilk (Twitter)

Source: Vimeo, Design Day 2013

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/L-Dt1TJwSJM/

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France's Hollande to slash capital gains tax to attract business ... - RT

Following protests against France?s President Fran?ois Hollande?s tax policies to increase budget income, his administration has announced plans to cut capital gains tax to attract business investment to the country and restore damaged relations.

The French government has admitted that a big increase in capital gains tax on business was a mistake, denying it had anything to do with the exodus of the rich.?

Hollande's popularity has seen its sharpest since his election last May. He is endeavouring to prove his Socialist government is open to reform and wants to reaffirm France?s attractiveness for business investment.?

Business leaders were left enraged by the 20 billion euro tax increases in the 2013 budget, and demanded lower taxes and labour costs. At the same time France?s eurozone partners are pressing for budget cuts, while households are protesting against austerity.

?The big picture is to give a strong sign that France is a good place to invest and that we are business friendly,? Fleur Pellerin, Minister for Small and Medium Enterprises, Innovation and the Digital Economy is quoted by the Financial Times as saying.?

The new plan to cut the tax introduced at the end of last year is expected to be announced at a meeting with entrepreneurs at the Elys?e Palace on Monday.?

According to the Financial Times, sources close to the negotiations with the government say the new regime will include enhanced rebates applied after just one year, with up to 85 percent exemptions for those investing in a start-up for over eight years, against today?s 40 percent rate.?

The total tax rate for an investor at the top marginal rate exiting a start-up after eight years is due to fall to 24 percent, from more than 40 per cent today.

Hollande is also expected to introduce easier terms of a so-called ??start-up visa? for foreign entrepreneurs and easier access to credit for failed business owners who wish to start over again.

Speaking to reporters from Reuters and Agence France Presse a week before the 1st anniversary of his election the President said he is ?aware how serious the situation is.?

?It?s a president?s duty to stay the course and to look beyond today?s squalls. It?s called perseverance,? Hollande said. ?People can criticise my decisions, think I am on the wrong track or have not taken the right route, but if there is one thing I am sure of it?s that I have taken major decisions for France - many more in 10 months than were taken in 10 years.?

?The way the government has listened to us over the past four months has been positive. They realised they made a mistake,? Jean-David Chamboredon, a leading figure in Les Pigeons groupe of young French web entrepreneurs told Financial Times.

Source: http://rt.com/business/taxes-investment-business-hollande-566/

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Higher expectations for digital media at NewFronts

FILE - This undated image released by Columbus 81 Productions shows comedians Jerry Seinfeld, left, and Michael Richards, former co-stars in the popular comedy "Seinfeld," in a scene from the finale of Seinfeld's web series, ?Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.? The Digital NewFronts will run Monday through Friday, as media companies like Google, Hulu and Vevo make presentations of their upcoming programming to advertisers in New York. Crackle, the Sony Pictures Entertainment digital network, is expected to promote the second season of Jerry Seinfeld?s Web series ?Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.? (AP Photo/Columbus 81 Productions)

FILE - This undated image released by Columbus 81 Productions shows comedians Jerry Seinfeld, left, and Michael Richards, former co-stars in the popular comedy "Seinfeld," in a scene from the finale of Seinfeld's web series, ?Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.? The Digital NewFronts will run Monday through Friday, as media companies like Google, Hulu and Vevo make presentations of their upcoming programming to advertisers in New York. Crackle, the Sony Pictures Entertainment digital network, is expected to promote the second season of Jerry Seinfeld?s Web series ?Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.? (AP Photo/Columbus 81 Productions)

(AP) ? Last year, the inaugural Digital NewFronts didn't skimp on the hype.

Google, Hulu, Yahoo and others made brash, glitzy presentations to advertisers trumpeting their ascendancy in a rapidly changing media landscape. Even Jay-Z dropped by.

There will be plenty of the same this week in New York at the second Digital NewFronts, the digital world's take on the annual TV "upfront" tradition. But ahead of this year's five-day-long overture to Madison Avenue, the talk is of both the great progress of digital entertainment and unrealized promises.

"It was absolutely a learning experience," Doug McVehil, senior vice president of content and programming for the music video destination Vevo, says about last year's NewFronts."I know there's some things we can do better this year both at the presentation itself and in terms of follow-up. But we're all fairly new at this. This is a young thing for the digital media industry."

In 12 months' time, the industry has come a long way. Netflix's first major original series, "House of Cards," proved that streaming video can compete with the most prestigious cable programs. Google's YouTube rolled out its 100-plus funded channels in a bid to bring higher quality videos (and thus advertisers) to its platform. One of the biggest TV stars, Jerry Seinfeld, launched a handsome Web series, "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee."

But some of the digital series touted last year have disappointed. Although Yahoo's "Bachelor"-spoof "Burning Love" has proved a modest hit, its Tom Hanks animated sci-fi series, "Electric City," didn't live up to its creator's reputation. While the top YouTube channels have grown considerably, several of its star-driven efforts have fizzled.

"Last year, there were some big promises about not only the quality but the volume of shows that people are going to make," says Eric Berger, executive vice president of digital networks for Sony Pictures TV, which owns the video site Crackle. "If you look back over the course of the year, as we talked to brands and agencies, there're some questions about quality and about the volume of things that were actually produced."

Crackle didn't participate in the NewFronts last year but will this year. It will be promoting, among other shows, an upcoming second season of Seinfeld's series.

Naturally, growing pains are inevitable, especially when so much is changing so fast. The wide array of NewFront presenters this year exhibits the evolving nature of media companies.

New presenters include The Wall Street Journal and Conde Nast, both venerable publishers known for their print products. But Conde Nast earlier this year launched online series slates for two of its magazines (GQ and Glamour), with plans to do the same for its other properties, including Vanity Fair and The New Yorker. The Journal, more than any other newspaper, has developed live video programing with its "WSJ Live" app.

"The Journal has really transformed itself since News Corp.'s acquisition into a complete content provider and not just business, finance and economics," says Michael Rooney, chief revenue officer for The Journal, explaining its entry to the NewFronts. "The world still needs to learn and understand about that and what we have to offer."

Yahoo will come into its presentation on the heels of acquiring the rights to archival clips to all 38 years of "Saturday Night Live." YouTube recently announced that in May it will begin a series of theme weeks to highlight its premium channels, starting with comedy. On Sunday night, Vevo will kick off the fourth year of its flagship program "Unstaged," a concert live stream. (Vampire Weekend will perform with Steve Buscemi directing the webcast.)

Performances will play a big part of Vevo's presentation, with appearances by Carly Rae Jepsen, Kendrick Lamar and Jessie Ware. But McVehil says at this year's NewFronts, brands want more than a good show.

"As we mature, I think it's going to be about people looking hard at real numbers and performance and judging companies based on that more than how sexy their presentation was," McVehil says.

Some companies are going it alone. NBCUniversal's digital division, having been a part of the NewFronts last year, held a separate event in New York last week, as did the gaming network Machinima. The talent agency CAA will preview its clients' digital projects this week, but not in an official NewFront.

Still, there are close connections for several of the 18 media companies in the NewFronts. Disney Interactive has several YouTube channels and in February partnered with Vevo to produce family friendly music content.

Ad agency Universal McCann predicted deals at the NewFronts could reach $1 billion. That's still a fraction of what broadcast upfront presentations pull in, but few don't expect digital media to continue to increase their share of the advertising pie.

"We're bigger this year, both in terms of the scope of the event and the amount of content," says Mark Walker, senior vice president of Disney Interactive Entertainment. "We had a few programs before and some speculation. Now, we have conclusively demonstrated that there's a robust audience demand for the kind of high quality video content that we're producing."

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-04-28-Digital%20NewFronts/id-7b16c6ad907f43458c4f8c847d28429d

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Of one mind about chemical weapons and protecting the innocent

Probable evidence of chemical-gas use in Syria may soon force world leaders to intervene. Their decision should be based on a principle enshrined in a global ban of such weapons ? a respect for the innocence of civilians in not being harmed by this indiscriminate tool of war.

By the Monitor's Editorial Board / April 26, 2013

In a March 21 speech in Jerusalem, President Obama gestured strongly as he said: "I?ve made it clear to Bashar al-Assad and all who follow his orders: We will not tolerate the use of chemical weapons against the Syrian people, or the transfer of those weapons to terrorists. The world is watching; we will hold you accountable."

AP Photo

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From afar, the probable use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime could seem like just more Middle East mayhem. Yet it is not. Which is why President Obama and other world leaders are contemplating stiff action in Syria based on evidence of at least one sarin-gas attack.

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More than other tools of war, chemical weapons are indiscriminate in what they strike. Poisonous gases can float anywhere. They can wipe out entire populations of civilians, either by design or a change of wind. Even the weapon?s users might be hit.

For these reasons, nations have gradually agreed since 1899, or at the dawn of modern warfare, to tougher sanctions against these tools of destruction. In 1997, the Chemical Weapons Convention came into force with the support of 188 states.

This steady toughening of rules is not simply because of the immense fear such weapons evoke by their effects. It is because enough people have made a conscious choice to protect the innocent ? or the very idea of innocence as the preferred condition of every human being.

As humanitarian scholar Hugo Slim wrote in a 2008 book about civilian protection, ?The main idea behind limited war and its civilian ethic is, of course, that of limited killing. This is because every human being?s life is precious to themselves, to those who love them and, if one is religious, to God as well.?

As the United States and others now debate their next steps in Syria, this century-long progress toward a near-universal acceptance of protecting the innocent from an indiscriminate weapon should be a guiding principle.

Obama and others, of course, have strategic and tactical concerns. Would outside intervention cause even more use of chemical weapons? Would a foreign invasion lead to high civilian casualties? Can an over-indebted and war-weary Europe or US afford to act?

Even deciding who is a civilian is often difficult. The Geneva Conventions define civilians for what they are not ? as not a warrior or someone directly helping a war. But what about a teacher of militant Islam? Or a teenage army conscript? What of the Syrian civilians who give bread to rebels?

And then there is the possibility that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad may have simply allowed a small chemical attack as a bargaining chip in possibly negotiating an end to this civil war.

Given the history of the Iraq invasion, Washington might not want to rely on its own evidence of gas having been used in Syria to lead a campaign for the United Nations to act. And the US has a mixed record of protecting civilians in war, although it is a record far better than that of its foes in recent wars.

As careful as the Obama administration has been in using predator drones to strike terrorists, for example, this aerial weapon is generally less effective than the use of soldiers on the ground in avoiding ?collateral damage? to civilians.

Obama has described the use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime as a ?game changer.? The killing of civilians with Syrian fighter jets and other conventional means ? more than 70,000 ? has not yet pushed the US or others to militarily intervene. But letting the regime break international norms on chemical weapons would set a big precedent and erode a global consensus on a major humanitarian rule of war.

Respect for innocent life lies at the heart of most rules of war. Not every intended war-time attack on civilians can be prevented. But some attacks matter far more than most. Knowing the principle at stake in chemical warfare should help world leaders make the right decision on Syria.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/h0mC8TH-ROI/Of-one-mind-about-chemical-weapons-and-protecting-the-innocent

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Gigabit Internet In Vermont Is Cheaper Than Google Fiber

There have been vague rumblings about ISPs stepping up to match Google Fiber's gigabit internet offering, especially since Google announced that the next Fiber city would be Austin. Now 600 residents of Vermont are actually getting those speeds at half the Fiber price. What gives? More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/2d63sn3BYeg/gigabit-internet-in-vermont-is-cheaper-than-google-fiber

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Tyler Bray, Marcus Lattimore show opposite emotions of 2013 NFL Draft (+video)

The fortunes of Tyler Bray and Marcus Lattimore showed the ups and downs of what was a historic 2013 NFL Draft for the Southeastern Conference.

By Mark Sappenfield,?Staff writer / April 28, 2013

Running back Marcus Lattimore speaks with the media during South Carolina's NFL football pro day on this spring in Columbia, S.C.

Rainier Ehrhardt/AP/File

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Somehow, University of Tennessee quarterback Tyler Bray ? a 6-foot-6 specimen with a cannon arm ? was not selected in the seven rounds of the 2013 NFL Draft.

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Somehow, University of South Carolina running back Marcus Lattimore found two knees to stand on at his pro workout earlier this spring ? enough to get him a standing ovation from the coaches and scouts present and a selection by the San Francisco 49ers in the fourth round.

In a draft where 63 players from the Southeastern Conference (SEC) were selected ? a record for any college football conference ? two of the SEC players who made the biggest splash on the last day of the three-day extravaganza Saturday did it for opposite reasons.

Bray was left standing at the altar. Admittedly, this was not a sterling draft for quarterbacks. But perhaps that's why he decided to leave Tennessee a year early year to go pro. According to one mock draft, NFLDraftScout.com, he was seventh best pick of the litter. In the end, he wasn't even among the 11 chosen.

It's a glimpse into a situation that plagued basketball for years. Many high school players, egos inflated by friends and hangers on, would enter the National Basketball Association draft, forgoing any college eligibility. When they were not drafted ? or drafted late and then let go ? they would be left in a limbo, not good enough to make a pro team, but not able to go to college to hone their skills.

The situation forced the NBA to institute a "one year in college" rule for all players, giving each time to assess his draft prospects with clearer eyes. The NBA has also started a developmental league akin to the baseball minor leagues to help those who fall through the cracks.

In the end, Bray was signed by the Kansas City Chiefs after the draft ? and as a junior, he had ample time to make an informed decision about his pro prospects. But the National Football League also has a Draft Advisory Board precisely for this reason. It offers undergraduate prospects an impartial assessment of where they're likely to land in the draft.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ds8ejW_XSh4/Tyler-Bray-Marcus-Lattimore-show-opposite-emotions-of-2013-NFL-Draft-video

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Are there more abortion doctors like Kermit Gosnell? And do we want to know? (Washington Post)

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

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Nadal beats Almagro to win 8th Barcelona Open

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? Rafael Nadal won the Barcelona Open for the eighth time Sunday, defeating Nicolas Almagro 6-4, 6-3 for his fourth title of the year.

After trailing 3-0 in the first set, Nadal found his form and broke his fellow Spaniard in three of his next four service games to take command.

Nadal has made six straight finals after returning from a knee injury that sidelined him since last summer. This title, the 54th of his career, comes one week after his eight-year reign at Monte Carlo ended with a loss to top-ranked Novak Djokovic.

Nadal has won all 10 of his matches against the 12th-ranked Almagro. He has won 39 straight matches on the red clay at Real Club de Tenis, his last loss coming 10 years ago.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nadal-beats-almagro-win-8th-barcelona-open-160656406.html

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Ethiopian Airlines first to fly 787 Dreamliner since grounding

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Ethiopian Airlines on Saturday became the world's first carrier to resume flights with Boeing Co's 787 Dreamliner passenger jets, a Reuters witness said, three months after they were grounded over battery meltdowns.

U.S. regulators approved a new battery design last week, clearing the way for installation and a resumption of Dreamliner flights by international carriers.

Saturday's flight was the first since regulators grounded the worldwide Dreamliner fleet on January 16 after two lithium-ion battery meltdowns that occurred on two jets within two weeks that month.

The battery faults raised fears of a possible mid-air fire, drawing worldwide attention to Boeing and denting the reputation of its flagship plane.

"I'm always worried about flying and I'm an insurance worker so I'm apprehensive. But I'm sure they've checked and double checked so we'll be fine," said Eunice Mbogo minutes before boarding Ethiopia Airlines' Dreamliner flight to Nairobi.

The aircraft was due to land in Kenya just before 1000 GMT.

The grounding of the Dreamliner fleet has cost Boeing an estimated $600 million, halted deliveries and forced some airlines to lease alternative aircraft.

(Reporting By Aaron Maasho; writing by Drazen Jorgic; editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ethiopian-airlines-flies-first-787-dreamliner-flight-since-081658780.html

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