Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Sponsors help women reach executive ranks





 Mentors can dispense sage wisdom over endless cups of coffee, but it takes a sponsor's relentless advocacy to propel a woman to a seat on a corporate board and a desk in a corner office.


That's the message that will be presented Tuesday when the Forum of Executive Women releases its annual report on women in business leadership.


"Sponsorship goes beyond mentoring," said Nila G. Betof, president of the businesswomen's association. "Sponsorship is where the sponsor puts his or her capital on the table in advocating for a woman."


"Sponsorship is like mentoring on steroids," said Deanna Byrne, a partner in the Philadelphia office of PricewaterhouseCoopers L.L.P. She credits one of her sponsors for positioning her to land her current assignment providing accounting services for one of the company's Fortune 500 clients.




The forum has been studying the influence of women on the leadership of the region's publicly traded companies since at least 2005.


In that time, there has been progress, but not enough, leaders say.


For example, women held 12 percent of board seats in 2012 (103 out of 829), a 30 percent increase since 2005. There is also a higher percentage of female executives - 12 percent in 2012, up 33 percent from 2005.


Significantly, women also are commanding more money. In 2012, one in 10 of the top earners (50 of 491) were women, up 67 percent from 2005.


But a third of the region's top 100 publicly traded companies have no women on their boards.


One in five companies have no women board members, no women executives, and no women among the company's top earners.


Only six of the 100 chief executives are women, and only eight companies have three or more women on their boards.


"The progress continues to be very, very slow," said Betof, chief operating officer of the Leader's Edge/Leaders by Design, a Bala Cynwyd company that grooms executives to advance their careers.


The issue of female corporate leadership is attracting more attention. Catapulting the topic onto talk shows and radio programs was Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead, a book by Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer of Facebook.


In September, Mayor Nutter signed a law that will require companies doing business with Philadelphia to disclose the number of women in their executive ranks.


"Female employees who work hard and play by the rules are often overlooked when it comes to the 'big' assignments and large promotions," said P. Edward Lovelidge, managing director of PricewaterhouseCoopers in Philadelphia.


"It is relationships with sponsors that can make the difference," he said.


Titled The Power of Sponsorship: A Call to Action, the forum's report lists companies and their female executives (or lack of them), and tells the stories of sponsors and their protégés.


For example, F. William McNabb 3d is the chief executive officer and chairman of the Vanguard Group of Mutual Funds - the top job in one of the nation's top financial companies. Martha G. King is a managing director at Vanguard and head of U.S. financial intermediaries - one of the company's top positions. She heads Vanguard's second biggest line of business.


McNabb and King are related, but not in the family sense. Shortly after King began at Vanguard as a college hire, McNabb recognized her as a potential leader, and took aggressive and substantial measures to sponsor her rise through the company. Their relationship is now 25 years old.


McNabb sponsored King to head institutional sales for the western region, though she wasn't the obvious choice of the selection committee, the report said. He also transferred her back early to the company's headquarters to lead the institutional investment only business. That was a large, integrated business unit, compared with her earlier more-focused responsibilities.


"Someone did it for me, and I have an absolute obligation to do it for others," McNabb said in the forum report.


Helen F. Giles-Gee president of the University of the Sciences, described how she sponsored Emile "Mel" Netzhammer, now chancellor of Washington State University, Vancouver, when Giles-Gee was president of Keene State College in New Hampshire.


She hired him as provost and then assigned him to chair a finance committee. Netzhammer would have preferred a more academic assignment, but ended up with important skills.


Giles-Gee nominated Netzhammer for his current job.


 



jvonbergen@phillynews.com


215-854-2769


@JaneVonBergen


www.inquirer.com/jobbing


 


Source: http://www.philly.com/r?19=961&43=166721&44=227757391&32=3796&7=195342&40=http://www.philly.com/inquirer/front_page/20131015_Sponsors_help_women_reach_executive_ranks.html
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Exhibit to show Connally's clothing when JFK shot

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Your eyes instinctively seek the holes in the vintage 1960s black wool men's business suit. The white cotton dress shirt with now-faded blood stains more vividly illustrates the horror of a half century ago.


Emergency room staff at Dallas' Parkland Memorial Hospital removed the clothing from seriously wounded Texas Gov. John Connally, in the rush to save his life from the same burst of gunfire that also had left President John Kennedy mortally wounded.


Texas state archivists now have readied the suit and shirt worn by Connally that day as the centerpiece of an exhibit to mark next month's 50th anniversary of Kennedy's assassination.


It will be the first public display since 1964 for the clothing Connally wore Nov. 22, 1963, during Kennedy's visit. Connally and his wife gave the clothing to the state archives.


"It makes an impact, it's pretty dramatic and it kind of gives you pause," Sarah Norris, conservator at the Lorenzo de Zavala State Archives and Library where the exhibit opens next week, said Tuesday. "It creates the sense of immediacy about what happened that day."


John Anderson, preservation officer at the archives, said the display tells an important aspect of a well-known story.


"For Texans, this is something that maybe gets forgotten by some of the rest of the world, that Gov. Connally was shot at the same time," he said, noting that Connally's chest wound could have been fatal.


"The first thing that jumps out at you is the damage," said Norris, who has been assembling the exhibit for several months. "The most dramatic is the shirt."


The white Arrow brand shirt, size 16 with a 35-inch sleeve, has faded over the years and the now-brown blood stains and spatters cover nearly all of it. There are bullet holes in the shirt's chest, back shoulder and right cuff. Three buttons are missing, presumably due to emergency medical responders ripping the garment away to reach Connelly's chest wound.


The damage to the three-button Oxford Clothes suit from John L. Ashe of Fort Worth is less pronounced.


Nellie Connally had it cleaned before it was presented to the state archives, Anderson said, so there's no evidence of blood. But the coat has bullet holes that match those on the shirt, plus a hole on the left leg just above and toward the inside of the knee.


The items will be displayed through Feb. 14 in the library lobby in a glass case that will allow visitors to see them from all sides.


Connally and his wife were in the jump seat of the open convertible limousine, Kennedy and wife Jacqueline were in the back seat. Connally died in 1993. He was 75. His wife died in 2006 at age 87.


Arguably the most famous clothing from that infamous day is the blood-stained pink suit worn by Jacqueline Kennedy, who died in 1994. It's with the National Archives in Maryland and never has been displayed.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exhibit-show-connallys-clothing-jfk-shot-210915107.html
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

U.S. fiscal talks stumble as lawmakers race against clock


By Richard Cowan and Thomas Ferraro


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Negotiations in Congress to end the fiscal impasse sputtered on Tuesday, leaving both chambers grasping for a way to reopen the government and raise the country's borrowing authority with a Thursday deadline drawing near.


The Senate halted discussions on its own plan, as it waited for the fractious Republican-controlled House of Representatives to come up with an alternative proposal ahead of the October 17 deadline, when the U.S. Treasury says the government will reach its borrowing limit.


Senate leaders had been close to a deal that would reopen the government and raise the debt limit until early 2014, while the initial alternative plan proposed by House Republican leaders failed to gain enough support in a closed-door meeting for the House to proceed.


"There are a lot of opinions about what direction to go. There have been no decisions about exactly what we will do," House Speaker John Boehner told reporters after the meeting.


"We're going to continue to work with our members on both sides of the aisle to try to make sure that there is no issue of default, and to get our government reopened," he said.


The disarray among House Republicans raised questions about what the House will be able to pass. Conservative House members, driven by support from Tea Party small-government activists, have demanded changes to Obama's signature healthcare law as part of any budget deal.


Those demands sparked the shutdown that began with the dawn of the new fiscal year on October 1, temporarily throwing hundreds of thousands of government employees out of work.


If Congress fails to reach a deal by Thursday, checks would likely go out on time for a short while for everyone from bondholders to workers who are owed unemployment benefits. But analysts warn that a default on government obligations could quickly follow, potentially causing the U.S. financial sector to freeze up and threatening the global economy.


Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell halted talks while House Republicans tried to sort out what they would support, Richard Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, told reporters.


"We were on track and Boehner stepped in," he said. "McConnell is waiting on Boehner and Boehner is waiting on his caucus."


After Durbin's comments, markets got increasingly nervous about the prospects of a last-minute deal.


The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.55 percent in late afternoon trade. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was trading down 0.4 percent.


The House Republican proposal initially floated on Tuesday would have funded the government through January 15, and raised the $16.7 trillion debt ceiling by enough to cover the nation's borrowing needs through February 7, similar to the Senate plan, aides said.


But unlike the Senate, it would include a two-year suspension of the medical device tax included in Obama's healthcare law, and a requirement that members of Congress and the administration be covered under the law.


The House version also would not allow the U.S. Treasury to renew its extraordinary cash management measures to stretch borrowing capacity for months, which had tentatively been allowed under the Senate plan.


The White House and Senate Democrats quickly rejected the House draft plan as not workable.


'PARTISAN ATTEMPT' TO APPEASE TEA PARTY


Reid said the Republican plan was "partisan attempt to appease a small group of Tea Party Republicans who forced the government to shut down in the first place."


"I am very disappointed with John Boehner who once again tried to preserve his role at the expense of the country," Reid said.


But Republican Senator John McCain of Arizona, who has blamed House Republicans for the shutdown, blasted the White House and Senate Democrats for promptly rejecting Boehner's latest plan.


"I urge my Democratic colleagues, let's sit down and work this out," McCain declared, his voice rising. "Let's get this resolved."


"To categorically reject what the House of Representatives and the speaker are doing - and I think he is pretty courageous in what he's doing - in my view is not serving the American people," McCain said.


Obama was due to meet with House Democratic leaders at 3:15 p.m. (1915 GMT) to discuss their options.


Before the House action, Reid had said he was optimistic about reaching a final deal this week.


"There are productive negotiations going on with the Republican leader. I'm confident that we'll be able to reach a comprehensive agreement this week in time to avert a catastrophic default on the nation's bills," Reid said on the Senate floor.


Ratings firms have not yet revealed any plans to downgrade U.S. government debt.


Marie Cavanaugh, S&P's managing director for sovereign ratings, said on Tuesday during a panel discussion hosted by Democratic Representative Maxine Waters, "Standard & Poor's thinks that the current impasse over the debt ceiling and the continuing resolution is unlikely to change our rating, which is AA+ with a stable outlook."


Numerous polls show Republicans have taken a hit in opinion polls since the standoff began and the government shutdown October 1. A Washington Post/ABC News poll released on Monday found that 74 percent of Americans disapprove of the way congressional Republicans have handled the standoff, compared with a 53 percent disapproval rating for Obama.


Another survey released by Gallup on Tuesday showed American confidence in the U.S. economy fell another five points last week as the government shutdown continued.


The crisis is the latest in a series of budget battles in recent years that have hurt consumer confidence and weighed on the economy. A Monday estimate by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, a think tank, said the uncertainty from the frequent showdowns had boosted the unemployment rate by 0.6 of a percentage point, or the equivalent of 900,000 jobs since late 2009.


(Additional reporting by David Lawder, Susan Heavey, Amanda Becker; Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Karey Van Hall, Grant McCool and Tim Dobbyn)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-senators-hint-possible-fiscal-deal-tuesday-004610122--sector.html
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Top Senate Democrat 'confident' of deal this week to avoid default


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said on Tuesday he was confident that Senate Democrats and Republicans can reach a comprehensive fiscal agreement this week that avoids a U.S. default on debt and other obligations.


"There are productive negotiations going on with the Republican leader. I'm confident we'll be able to reach a comprehensive agreement this week in time to avert a catastrophic default on the nation's bills," Reid said on the Senate floor.


"The Republican leader and I will keep our members informed as to how negotiations are going. And I express my appreciation to everyone for their patience," Reid said.


(Reporting By David Lawder; Editing by Bill Trott)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/top-senate-democrat-confident-deal-week-avoid-default-142757316--business.html
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All Aboard! Stocks Fast Tracked to Profit After Government ...



Brian Belski of BMO Capital Markets has reassuring words for those losing faith in elected officials: "The government will be turned on again, ladies and gentlemen." When that blessed day comes there is going to be a flood of economic activity taking place as merchants nationwide try to make up for lost time. Despite that ramp in demand, the number of shippers will remain the same as it was before the shutdown. In economics too much demand for a limited service is called scarcity. In the language of investing, scarcity means pricing power and profits.


As Belski sees it, the industry poised to benefit most from scarcity for both the short and long term is the railroads. No matter what happens with the shutdown their aren't enough railway shippers to meet demand. The industry has been consolidating since 1959, most notably with Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK-B) 2009 acquisition of Burlington Northern. That means good things for the remaining players.


Related: What's it Like to Be Backed by Buffett?


To be sure, trucking and air cargo has picked up a lot of rail demand, but not all of it. The economy is cyclical on the margins, but from building supplies, to coal and natural gas, the macro trend of American manufacturing has reversed. The country is growing again almost despite the best efforts of Washington, D.C. The rails benefit from that recovery.


Whatever earnings risk there is in the current quarter will be unwound once the country gets cranked back into action. With QE presumably extended thanks to the appointment of Janet Yellen, Belski is optimistic about the outlook for these companies.



Under QE, so far the economy has been on an extremely slow rate of positive growth. That's a QE friendly (i.e., no taper) environment. Whatever you think of the stimulus program, Belski says it's an "exquisite" set up for industries like the rails.


Belski doesn't offer specific names but the group is pretty well concentrated. Union Pacific (UNP), CSX Corp. (CSX), Canadian National Railway (CNI), and Norfolk Southern (NSC) are the most likely plays.


More from Breakout:


Retailers’ Warning to Congress: You’re Killing Christmas!


Wall Street Isn't Buying Obama's Doomsday Scenario: Najarian


Why Janet Yellen Means Easy Money Is Here to Stay



Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/breakout/aboard-stocks-fast-tracked-profit-government-shutdown-112929003.html
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Perry group launching national anti-Washington ads

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- A nonprofit aiming to help Gov. Rick Perry gear up for another possible presidential run announced Monday he is appearing in a national advertising campaign blasting Washington while promoting GOP leadership in states around the country.


Amid the federal government shutdown and a looming debt-ceiling crisis in Congress, Americans for Economic Freedom on Tuesday will begin airing 10 days of 30-second spots on CNBC, Fox News and MSNBC. It also will have ads on the nationally syndicated radio shows of Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh and Mark Levin.


Americans for Economic Freedom spokeswoman Sara Marie Kinney would not say exactly how much the campaign would cost, only that it involved a "high six-figure media buy."


The ads suggest that while the gridlock in Washington is hurting the economy, conservative governors are balancing budgets, creating jobs and cutting taxes. The television versions show President Barack Obama addressing Congress while Perry says in a voice-over: "Washington needs to change. But the president keeps playing politics."


A beaming Perry then appears flanked by the Texas Capitol and continues: "When I look around this country, there's another story. Conservative governors are reforming taxes and regulations, helping small businesses grow. Cutting and balancing budgets."


As images cut to people at work Perry says: "We need more of that, and less of Washington."


"This is Rick Perry trying to play politics," Texas Democratic Party Gilberto Hinojosa said Monday. "They created the mess and now they're trying to blame Barack Obama for what their own people in Congress did."


Americans for Economic Freedom is using $200,000-plus left over from a political action committee that raised millions during Perry's failed 2012 presidential bid. Perry announced the creation of the group meant to raise his national profile last month, during a trip to Missouri to lure job-creating firms from that state to Texas.


The group's CEO is Jeff Miller, a former chief financial officer for the California Republican Party, and includes board member Marc Rodriguez, chairman of the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and a fellow Texan. Also on the board are St. Louis beer baron August Busch III, economist Art Laffer and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, whose endorsed Perry in 2012 after dropping out of the White House race himself.


Appearing on conservative radio host Mike Gallagher's radio show Monday, Perry said of Americans for Economic Freedom: "These are some folks that wanted to highlight the differences in policies between the states, and identify what works to create jobs, freedom and opportunity."


He talked about how mobile the American population now is, adding that over the past decade, New York and California have led the nation in lost personal wealth per-capita, while traditionally more conservative states like Florida, Arizona and Texas have seen personal wealth per capita spike.


Perry said the U.S. should let "the states be where the real competition is. Not Washington being the be-all, end-all nanny state that they are today."


Hinojosa countered that Texans and voters across America "are tired of these games."


"I doubt very seriously that anyone will take him seriously on a national campaign in the event he decides to run for president," Hinojosa said.


The governor isn't seeking a fourth full term in office next year but hasn't ruled out a second run for president in 2016.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/perry-group-launching-national-anti-104718999.html
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Former 'Dancing' pros expecting a baby boy

Celebs











7 hours ago

IMAGE: Edyta Sliwinska and Alec Mazo

Angela Weiss / Getty Images file

Former 'Dancing with the Stars' pros Edyta Sliwinska and Alec Mazo are expecting a baby.

Talk about a baby who's likely to have some graceful genes. Former "Dancing With the Stars" pro Edyta Sliwinska, 32, who is married to former "DWTS" pro Alec Mazo, 35, is expecting the couple's first child, she confirmed on Twitter last week.

Sharing a photo of herself with a slight baby bump, Sliwinska tweeted, "There it is, my little secret. Less than 2lbs little :)."

Sliwinska told People magazine that the baby, due in January, is a boy. "We’ve been together for 13 years; married for six," she said. "We were both so ready for it, and we’ve been planning on this for the past couple of years."

When congratulated on Twitter by former "DWTS" celeb dancer Natalie Coughlin, who danced with Mazo on his last season, Sliwinska replied, "Thank you! Can't wait to be a mommy." And Mazo thanked fans by tweeting, "Thanks to everyone for the warm wishes regarding the new family addition!"

Both dancers were on "Dancing With the Stars" when it debuted in 2005. Sliwinska danced for 10 seasons and Mazo for five. Mazo and celebrity partner Kelly Monaco were the show's first-season winners.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/former-dancing-stars-pros-expecting-baby-boy-8C11391279
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Egypt: Jihad-martyrdom suicide bomber murders three troops, one policeman

“My comrade-in-arms, my pal, my buddy.”
Oriana Fallaci

“Robert Spencer incarnates intellectual courage when, all over the world, governments, intellectuals, churches, universities and media crawl under a hegemonic Universal Caliphate’s New Order. His achievement in the battle for the survival of free speech and dignity of man will remain as a fundamental monument to the love of, and the self-sacrifice for, liberty.”

Bat Ye’or

“A leader in this war for over a decade, documenting not just what is happening but explaining why.”
PJ Media

"Perhaps the foremost Catholic expert on Islam in our country."
Fr. C. John McCloskey, National Catholic Register

“You simply cannot seriously argue about the question of the conflict between Islam and modernity if you have not carefully read his work.”
Standpoint Magazine

“Robert Spencer is indefatigable. He is keeping up the good fight long after many have already given up. I do not know what we would do without him. I appreciate all the intelligence and courage it takes to keep going despite the appeasement of the West.”

Ibn Warraq

“America's most informed, fearless, and compelling voice on modern jihadism.”
Andrew C. McCarthy, Senior Fellow at National Review Institute

“Robert Spencer is the leading voice of scholarship and reason in a world gone mad. If the West is to be saved, we will owe Robert Spencer an incalculable debt.”
Pamela Geller, Atlas Shrugs

"The consummate Islam critic and expert." — Bruce Bawer

“Over the years, we have become friends, and I have received his assistance on several pieces of legislation I proposed.”
Former Congressman Tom Tancredo

“Few people are capable of applying scholarship, analytical reasoning, and objectivity to their topic -- while simultaneously being readable and witty -- as can Robert Spencer.”
Raymond Ibrahim

“A national treasure...The acclaimed scholar of Islam.”
Frank Gaffney, Center for Security Policy

“I am indeed honored to call him my friend.”
Brad Thor, novelist

“A top American analyst of Islam....A serious scholar...I learn from him.”
Daniel Pipes

“A brilliant scholar and writer.”
Douglas Murray

"One of my best teachers."
Ashraf Ramelah, Voice of the Copts

“Thank God there’s at least one man with balls left in the West.”
Kathy Shaidle, Five Feet of Fury

“I read people like [Mark Steyn] and Bob Spencer and the rest of them, and I say, ‘Boortz, you’re pretending you’re an author. These people really are. They really write some entertaining, some standup stuff.’”
Neal Boortz

“Robert Spencer is the Stephen King of Jihad.”
Chris Gaubatz, Muslim Mafia

“Armed with facts and fearlessness, Spencer stands up for Western civilization.”
Michelle Malkin

“Widely read in conservative foreign policy circles.”
New York Times

“Widely read in many quarters in Washington.”
Washington Post

“A canny operative who likely has the inside track on the State Department’s Middle East affairs desk should the tea party win the White House.”
New York Magazine

“A hero of the American right.”
Karen Armstrong

"Spencer’s comprehensive understanding of his Christian faith and Islam along with lucidly insightful writing give the lie to his international notoriety as a bigoted 'Islamophobe.'"
Institute on Religion & Democracy

"A renowned anti-Islam scholar."
PolicyMic

"The leading anti-Islamic intellectual in the United States....The go-to Islam expert for the right wing."
Salon Magazine

“Robert Spencer is an Edward Said turned upside down.”
Stephen Suleyman Schwartz

“One of the nation's most notorious Islamophobes.”
Hamas-linked CAIR

"Geller and Spencer are probably the most important propagandizing Islamophobes in the world. These people's voices speak very loudly — not just here in the United States but overseas."

Heidi Beirach, Southern Poverty Law Center

“Satanic ignoramus.”
Khaleel Mohammed

“The Likud anti-Christ.”
Dar al-Hayat newspaper (Saudi Arabia)

“Zionist Crusader, missionary of hate, counter-Islam consultant.”
Al-Qaeda’s Adam Gadahn, “Azzam the American”

Source: http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/10/egypt-jihad-martyrdom-suicide-bomber-murders-three-troops-one-policeman.html
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Friday, October 11, 2013

Kentucky Clock Tower Damaged in 2012 Tornado Replaced

A new 3,400-pound clock tower has been placed atop the old Morgan County Courthouse in West Liberty, more than a year and a half after tornadoes devastated the town.


The Lexington Herald-Leader says the copper-covered clock tower was built in Campbellsville and designed to resemble the one damaged March 2, 2012.


Twenty-five people died throughout Kentucky in the outbreak of tornadoes that hit several Kentucky counties, damaging or destroying thousands of homes and businesses. Six people died in Morgan County, and damage estimates there reached about $250 million.


Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.claimsjournal.com/news/southeast/2013/10/11/238305.htm
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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Syria spillover violence threatens cease-fire with Israel - World News

NBC News' John Ray interviews Israeli air force officials about the continuing movement to monitor around the Golan Heights as tensions heighten along the Syrian border.

By John Ray, Correspondent, NBC News

NORTHERN ISRAEL ??The spillover of violence from the Syrian conflict into the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights is threatening to jeopardize the decades old cease-fire between the two countries and spark a regional conflict.

A series of mighty Israeli airstrikes, apparently on weapons convoys heading from Syria towards President Bashar Assad?s allies in the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon, has shattered the fragile truce that has existed along the border since 1973. ?

In a rare opportunity, we were invited to an Israeli air base in the north of the country ? the Israelis wanted to make a public point about the heightened tension along the border.

As it turned out, just as the crew arrived, a deafening siren sounded and pilots raced to their aircraft.

Within a few moments, F-16 aircraft thundered down the runway.

?It?s the kind of thing happening more and more,? one of the uniformed escorts explained.

For an F-16, the base is a two minute flight from the Golan Heights.

?We have for 40 years been training for this exact moment. And we are ready for anything,? said a pilot that can be identified under Israeli military rules only as ?Major L.?

The pilots at the base are not permitted to talk about the attacks. Officially, Israeli will not acknowledge responsibility.

"We are searching for peace, but preparing for war,?? is all Pilot L would say. When asked if he had already flown missions across the border, he shook his head slowly:? no comment.

But Israel?s leaders have said loud and long they will use whatever force is necessary to stop Hezbollah ? their country?s sworn enemy ? gaining advanced armaments from Syria.

A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

?We don't know what will come the day after Assad,? explained a second officer, ?Commander M,? referring to a potential post-Assad world.

?It could be that weapons that are pointed internally in Syria at the moment might be pointed at us in the future and that's what we need to be ready for," he said.?

Israel has attacked Syria three times. After the last time, in May, Assad was finally moved to threaten retaliation in the event of a fourth.

This presents Israel with a dilemma and the world with a very obvious danger of escalation.

?We might be close to exhausting the number of opportunities we have to launch strikes into Syria without generating a response,? said Alon Ben-David, senior defense correspondent with Israel?s Channel 10.

?So if there is a next time ? and I believe there will be a next time, perhaps very soon ? Israel will have to count to a hundred before it decides to take action.??

The next time would certainly arrive if Russia fulfills what it calls an existing order from Syria for S-300 air defense missiles.

It?s a sophisticated system with a range that could threaten Israel?s international airport near Tel Aviv.?

Israel says it will destroy the missiles before they become operational in Syrian hands, never mind allowing them to transfer to Hezbollah.

So far, Russia has held off, but Israel fears an arms race. It is just about comfortable with the U.S. shipping rifles and ammunition to the rebels, but not much more.

For the past several days, Israeli troops, sailors and airmen have been taking part in a massive military exercise in the north.? We?re told it?s a routine war game. But the message is again clear.

Until now, Israel has counted on its vastly superior forces acting as a deterrent. For Assad to look for confrontation with his southern neighbor would be to sign a suicide note for his regime.

But in times of crisis, calculations that once held good can break down.

?It might be reasons of pride, or dignity, or strategy he turns the civil war into an Arab-Israeli conflict,? said Ben-David.

?Then we would be going into a new game and we don?t know how it ends. Both sides could be dragged into a war they didn?t intend,? he said.

At the airbase, the F-16s we watched take off a few minutes earlier soon safely returned.? A false alarm, this time. But the warning signs are real enough.

Related stories:

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This story was originally published on

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/06/20/19060599-syria-spillover-violence-threatens-cease-fire-with-israel?lite

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Kerry trip starts with tough Syrian, Afghan issues

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Secretary of State John Kerry begins an overseas trip plunging into two thorny foreign policy problems facing the Obama administration: unrelenting bloodshed in Syria and efforts to talk to the Taliban and find a political resolution to the war in Afghanistan.

Midway through his two-week trip to at least seven countries, Kerry also will try to make progress on an elusive peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians and will visit India, the world's biggest democracy and a rising power often viewed as a counterweight to China. He ends his trip attending a Southeast Asia security conference in Brunei.

Kerry lands Saturday in Doha, Qatar, where representatives of 11 nations in the so-called Friends of Syria group will discuss how to coordinate military and other aid to rebels trying to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad and "change the balance" on the ground, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Friday.

Earlier this month, President Barack Obama announced that in addition to nonlethal aid, the United States would begin sending arms and ammunition to the rebels, who are engaged in a tough fight against Assad's better-equipped air and ground forces. That announcement came after Assad's military dealt the rebels serious setbacks and a U.S. intelligence assessment claimed the regime had used chemical weapons ? a "red line" for the Obama administration.

On Thursday, Kerry went to Capitol Hill to brief members of Congress on the two-year civil war that has claimed an estimated 93,000 lives. The meeting in Doha also aims to gain momentum for starting peace talks in Geneva to end the crisis.

Obama's deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, said that as long as there's a conflict, there remains a need to find a framework for a dialogue because ultimately the Syrian opposition and some parts of the government are going to have to find a political solution. Geneva is the only framework that exists right now.

"We are trying to find a way for the Russians to play some type of constructive role and to stay engaged in the process," Rhodes said, referring to Moscow's continued support of Assad's government.

Kerry arrives in Qatar ahead of planned U.S. talks with representatives of the Taliban at a new political office they opened this week in Doha. The secretary himself was not expected to meet with the Taliban, but other U.S. officials are to sit down with members of the militant group in coming days. The discussions would be the first U.S.-Taliban talks in nearly 1 1/2 years.

The way the Taliban unveiled their new political office, however, angered Afghan President Hamid Karzai. At a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Tuesday, the Taliban hoisted their flag and a banner emblazoned with "Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan." That was the name the Taliban used when they were in power more than a decade ago and made it appear that the office was an embassy and rival to the Afghan government.

The U.S. said it was disappointed with the rollout, which the administration believes was a Taliban game of one-upmanship. In response, Karzai halted negotiations with the U.S. on a bilateral security agreement governing America's future military footprint in his country and said he would not send members of his peace council to Doha to talk with Taliban representatives. Kerry called Karzai twice this week to allay his concerns.

The diplomatic rift temporarily delayed James Dobbins, the U.S. special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan, from leaving for Doha, but State Department officials say he will hold talks with the Taliban there in coming days. It's unclear if Afghan officials will be talking with the Taliban in Doha following the group's discussions with the Americans.

In India, Kerry will be giving a policy speech and meeting with officials to discuss economic, trade, energy, climate change, education and security and counterterrorism issues. It will be his first visit to India as secretary of state. Talks in New Delhi also are to address India's cooperation with Pakistan's new prime minister, Nawaz Sharif.

Pakistan and India are nuclear-armed archrivals, but while they have fought three major wars since their partition in 1947, they have taken steps to improve relations in recent years.

Kerry also is to hold meetings with officials in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan and Israel.

In Saudi Arabia, senior State Department officials told reporters in a pre-trip briefing that Kerry would talk about how the U.S. can address concerns over extremists inside Syria, the intervention of foreign fighters from Iran and from Hezbollah. U.S. officials estimate that 5,000 Hezbollah members are fighting alongside Assad's regime, while thousands of Sunni foreign fighters are also believed to be in Syria ? including members of Jabhat al-Nusra, an al-Qaida affiliate that is believed to be among the most effective rebel factions.

___

Associated Press writer Bradley Klapper in Washington contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-trip-starts-tough-syrian-afghan-issues-074720292.html

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Stanford's Cookie Clearinghouse adds another layer of security to ...

Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society Launches "Cookie Clearinghouse" to Enable User Choice for Online Tracking

STANFORD, Calif., June 19, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Center for Internet and Society (CIS) at Stanford Law School launched a new online privacy initiative today called the "Cookie Clearinghouse," which will empower Internet users to make informed choices about online privacy. The Cookie Clearinghouse is being spearheaded by Aleecia M. McDonald, the Director of Privacy at CIS.

Websites may place small files called "cookies" on an Internet user's machine, and some types of cookies can be used to collect information about the user without his or her consent. The Cookie Clearinghouse will develop and maintain an "allow list" and "block list" to help Internet users make privacy choices as they move through the Internet. The Clearinghouse will identify instances where tracking is being conducted without the user's consent, such as by third parties that the user never visited. To establish the "allow list" and "block list," the Cookie Clearinghouse is consulting with an advisory board that will include individuals from browser companies including Mozilla and Opera Software, academic privacy researchers, as well as individuals with expertise in small businesses and in European law, and the advisory board will continue to grow over time. The Clearinghouse will also offer the public an opportunity to comment. With this input, the Clearinghouse will develop an objective set of criteria for when to include a website's cookies on the lists. The Clearinghouse will create and maintain the lists. Browser developers will then be able to choose whether to incorporate the lists into the privacy options they offer to consumers. Company websites with cookies that have been included on the "block list" will be able to respond to the Clearinghouse to correct any mistakes in classification.

"Internet users are starting to understand that their online activities are closely monitored, often by companies they have never heard of before," said McDonald, "But Internet users currently don't have the tools they need to make online privacy choices. The Cookie Clearinghouse will create, maintain, and publish objective information. Web browser companies will be able to choose to adopt the lists we publish to provide new privacy options to their users."

The need for the Clearinghouse evolved out of an effort by CIS fellows called Do Not Track. Initially, Stanford's Do Not Track work raised consumer awareness about the way in which "tracking cookies" are used by websites--and by unaffiliated third parties--to compile extensive individual browsing histories that provide those companies with data about individual consumer behavior. This effort has since progressed to a global standards effort led by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C.) More recently, CIS researchers began a new effort to prevent companies from tracking without the user's consent. CIS student affiliate Jonathan Mayer wrote a software patch for use in Mozilla's Firefox browser that limits third-party tracking through cookies. Mayer's patch mimics existing functionality in the Safari browser, which already prevents tracking from websites users have not visited. While Do Not Track efforts continue into their third year, the Cookie Clearinghouse is a new opportunity to accelerate Internet users' ability to make effective online privacy choices.

For more details, please visit the Cookie Clearinghouse: http://cch.law.stanford.edu

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/21/stanford-mozilla-cookie-clearinghouse/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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The Calling

Saul of Tarsus? path to sainthood began when a celestial light enveloped him on the road to Damascus. He heard Jesus? voice, inaudible to his companions, saying: ?I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting. Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.? The conversion experience of Father James Martin was less dramatic. Once a corporate finance grunt, he came home one night after a particularly frustrating day at the office and flipped on the television. PBS was airing a documentary called Merton: A Film Biography, about Thomas Merton, a Trappist monk who had chucked his dissolute New York life to serve God in rural Kentucky. Onscreen, Merton?s face glowed with an otherworldly peace; Martin was so stressed and miserable at work that he regularly suffered stomach aches and migraines. ?I still remember his expression, so much happier than the one I saw in the mirror every morning,? the priest [or Jesuit] recalls. ?His life?the monastic life?seemed exotic, mysterious, romantic.?

A seed was planted. The next day, 25-year-old Martin unearthed Merton?s autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain, at a local bookstore. It was, Martin writes in his spiritual memoir, My Life With the Saints, ?a beautiful book. ?When I finished [it] late one night and set it on my nightstand, I knew with certainty that this was what I wanted to do ? that?s what the ?call? was for me.?

Martin has spent 25 years as a Jesuit, 14 of them as an ordained priest. (The Jesuits, formally the Society of Jesus, are a Roman Catholic religious order devoted to poverty, chastity, and obedience.) He is one of several top editors at Americamagazine, the country?s largest-circulation Catholic weekly, where, he jokes with some pride, his spacious corner office boasts three panelsof fluorescent light bulbs. (In Dante?s Paradiso, the more dazzlingly bright the angel, the closer he sits to God.) He also appears frequently on The Colbert Report, in the capacity of the show?s ?official chaplain,? and has contributed to Slate. ??

But Father Martin took a rather unorthodox path to the priesthood. After an undergraduate degree from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania?he?d studied finance?he worked for six years in accounting and human resources. He lived a fast life of clubbing and boozy lunches in New York City before relocating to Stamford, Conn., where the nightlife was tamer but the paychecks were fatter and the work more interesting.

How did Martin get from the often ruthless, hedonistic world of business to the Society of Jesus? What did he have to cast away?and what could he carry over?as he undertook something that was both a career gutting and a spiritual renovation?

To start at The Beginning: He grew up in a mildly observant Roman Catholic family, attending Mass on the major holidays but rarely reciting the rosary or saying grace before meals. By the age of 10, he was a Sunday school dropout.

In college, Martin went to church almost every week but avoided extracurricular clubs for Catholic students. His scattershot approach to faith persisted after he joined the corporate world in 1982.

?I was a bit of a grind,? Martin admits, using a characteristically self-deprecating term to describe his strong work ethic. He?d decided to study business because it seemed respectable and lucrative. The Wharton classes were moderately interesting. But once he entered the professional sphere, logging frequent overtime hours on painfully involved accounting projects, he found that something wasn?t clicking. Martin remembers watching his friends flip through business magazines in their free time. He couldn?t comprehend it?how could they read that stuff for fun?

He also began to notice a cruel streak in some of his supervisors, an unscrupulous selfishness that pricked him with moral disgust. At one point, a manager informed Martin that he planned to fire another man, ?Joe,? even though Joe had just earned an award for excellent performance. When Martin, protesting that the move was unnecessary and undeserved, begged the manager to show a little compassion, he got a simple answer: ?Fuck compassion.? Another time, he overheard a colleague making grossly sexist remarks about a female co-worker. He developed stomach problems from excess anxiety. ?It started to seem so circular,? he says. ?I was going to work so that I could afford food, shelter, and clothes, so that I could go to work. I remember sitting at my desk and realizing no one at Wharton had ever asked me, ?What do you want to do with your life? Are you sure?? ?

Into this fog came Thomas Merton, the priest in the documentary, whose example offered Martin a way out. But being called is one thing; answering the call is something else entirely. ?At that time, joining the priesthood would have been like becoming an opera singer or running away to the circus,? Martin says. He consulted a psychologist instead.

?What would you do if you could be doing anything?? the doctor asked him, a year or so into his therapy.

?I?d be a priest,? Martin replied.

?Well, why don?t you??

The next day, Martin was on the phone with the local office of the Jesuits.

The formation program for Jesuit priests takes its roots in the plan originally laid out by St. Ignatius of Loyola, who founded the order. You start off with a two-year sprint through ?spiritual boot camp??called the novitiate?during which you learn about Jesuit history and spirituality, and perform charitable works. This period is capped by a 30-day silent retreat and officially ends when you pronounce the vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. Next up are ?first studies,? a two-year curriculum of philosophy and theology taken at a Jesuit university (Martin did his at Loyola in Chicago); then dawns a three-year period called the regency, devoted to work of a nonstudious nature. (Martin flew to East Africa to work with refugees.) Four years of intense theological study follow, crowned?whew?by ordination, first as a deacon and then as a priest. Last of all comes tertianship, the ultimate stage in formation, a stretch of contemplation about Jesuit spirituality that closes with another 30-day retreat. Final vows are then made, including a special vow of obedience to the pope.??

The whole process took 21 years, and Martin?s family and friends spent the early portion of that time being horrified. His parents fretted that their promising young businessman had been swallowed whole by a cult. Former colleagues at his corporate job weren?t shy about voicing their skepticism. (A typical conversation: ?You should see a psychologist.? ?I am.? ?You should see another psychologist.?) But eventually Martin?s family came to terms with his new life: ?They thought I would be lonely, which is ironic because I have more friends now than ever,? Martin explains. ?They held this old-fashioned idea of Jesuits being cloistered.?

When asked about the priesthood?s greatest challenges, Father Martin doesn?t hesitate. ?Chastity,? he says. ?It?s difficult living without sexual intimacy, the intimacy that comes with having one person you can rely on. You?re never going to be the most important person in anybody?s life.? And yet he describes the stricture as a blessing, a way of becoming close to many people at once?of more fairly rationing out finite stores of time and emotion. It?s our noble hope that we can love lots of people simultaneously, but in practice that gets harder once you start factoring in life partners. Plus, ?people open up to you quicker when they know you don?t have a sexual agenda,? Martin says. ?

His inner HR manager has found an afterlife of sorts, as a dispenser of professional tough love. Not infrequently, Jesuit brothers present him with human-resource-related dilemmas. (?How do I deal with very sweet employees who waste too much time chatting with each other?? was a query a few years back. ?What would you do if you ran a McDonald?s? Tell them to get to work,? Martin replied.) He is thankful that his time in the business sphere taught him the secular virtues of setting goals, working hard, and being efficient. Such values have a place in faith, too: St. Ignatius, he observes, ?basically ran a multinational corporation?he had to hire and fire, train recruits, raise money, and get things done.? Occasionally Martin finds religious institutions too forgiving of lackluster performance. Holy folk tend to mistake niceness for competence. Still, he says, ?the corporate world could learn a lot from the religious one in terms of the dignity of every human person.?

My Life With the Saints highlights an almost preternaturally apt Whitman quote: ?Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself. (I am large, I contain multitudes.)? Martin?s story is a collecting basin for contradictions: the earthly and the sacred, the supposedly pre-ordained and the supposedly freely chosen.

He looks at his second start with a kind of double vision. On one hand, he felt bored and unhappy in the corporate world, intellectually intrigued by religious life and desperate for escape?that?s the natural explanation. But he proposes a supernatural narrative, too, in which God fills his heart with longing, ?the happy inability to think of anything else.?

S?ren Kierkegaard dubbed the man who can hold two paradoxical ideas in his mind at once and still remain at peace the ?knight of faith.? In Martin?s case, perhaps we should just call him ?Father.??

This month, Slate is sharing stories of people who started over?like budget wonk Ina Garten,?better known as the Barefoot Contessa?in our "Second Acts" Hive. We want to hear your tales, too. Please hit the "Enter your proposal" button or?go here?to submit your story about starting over.

  • I am a high school dropout. School just wasn't my thing. I loved animals, I loved to read, and I loved people. So what does a high school dropout do ? opens a pet shop at 24 years old. Read More?



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Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/briefing/second_acts/2013/06/the_calling.html

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How cancer cells avoid cell death

June 21, 2013 ? A new study by a team of researchers from the University of Notre Dame provides an important new insight into how cancer cells are able to avoid the cell death process. The findings may suggest a chemotherapeutic approach to prevent the spread of cancers.

Metastasis, the spread of cancer from one organ to other parts of the body, relies on cancer cells ability to evade a cell death process called anoikis, according to Zachary T. Schafer, Coleman Assistant Professor of Cancer Biology at Notre Dame. Metalizing cancer cells are able to survive anoikis, which normally results from detachment from the extracellular matrix. However, Schafer notes that the molecular mechanisms cancer cells detached from the extracellular matrix use to survive has not been well understood.

"This paper reveals that cancer cells that are detached from their normal environment, as they would be during metastasis, relay on the activity of antioxidant enzymes to facilitate their survival," Schafer said. "This class of enzymes is critical for neutralizing oxidative stress and function much like the compounds that are present in a variety of foods."

The paper describes a prominent role for antioxidant enzymes in facilitating the survival of breast cancer cells after detachment from the extracellular matrix. Conversely, the researchers report, silencing antioxidant enzyme expression reduced tumor formation.

"The results in this paper suggest that targeting antioxidant enzymes with novel therapeutics may selectively kill off metastasizing cancer cells," Schafer said.

The paper appears in the journal Cancer Research, which is the most frequently cited cancer journal in the world.

The researchers collaborated with Matthew Leevy in Notre Dame's in vivo imaging facility.

Other authors of the paper include doctoral student Calli Davison, rising junior Sienna Durbin, 2011 alum Matthew Thau, graduate student Victoria Zellmer, and Sarah Chapman, Justin Diner and Connor Wathen from the Notre Dame Integrated Imaging Facility.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/sSIam7aQM7s/130621141806.htm

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Iraq, Lebanon alarmed at spreading Syria war

By Samia Nakhoul and Dominic Evans

BAGHDAD/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Neighboring Iraq warned that Syria's civil war is tearing the Middle East apart and Lebanon's president urged his country's Hezbollah movement on Thursday to pull its fighters out of the conflict.

After two years of fighting that has killed more than 93,000 people, Syria's turmoil is dragging its neighbors into a deadly confrontation between Shi'ite Iran supporting President Bashar al-Assad and Sunni Arab Gulf nations backing the Syrian rebels.

The insurgents have suffered a series of setbacks on the battlefield and are besieged in the outskirts of Damascus facing a slow but steady advance by Assad's forces, which have begun to regain the upper hand.

In a sign of the devastation being wrought by the war, the United Nations cultural agency UNESCO put the six World Heritage Sites in Syria on its danger list of imperiled monuments on Thursday, urging international efforts to protect them.

Both Iraq and Lebanon have suffered growing violence at home as the Syrian conflict turns increasingly into a proxy war along confessional lines.

"Iraq is in the most difficult position in this regional turmoil and the conflict in Syria has become a regional conflict by all standards," Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told Reuters in an interview in Baghdad.

"We are doing our best to maintain a neutral position, but the pressures are enormous and for how long we can hold really is a matter of further developments in Syria."

With Russia and Iran arming Assad's government forces, and Lebanon's Hezbollah fighters joining the war on his behalf, Western powers have agreed in the last week to step up aid to the mainly Sunni rebels, who were driven out of the strategic town of Qusair, north of Damascus.

Foreign ministers of the "Friends of Syria" group of nations backing the opposition are to meet in Qatar on Saturday to discuss assistance to try to help the rebel Free Syrian Army defend the key northern city of Aleppo.

Those countries include the United States, Britain, France, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt and Qatar.

MILITARY SUPPORT

Rebel prospects for reversing Assad's gains in Damascus may now hinge on military support from Western and Arab backers.

"If the northern front were to receive enough material and non-material support quickly, it could soon be equivalent to thousands of men, or even tens of thousands," a Western diplomat involved in the talks said.

In a further sign that violence is spreading in one of the most diverse countries in the Middle East, Islamist Arab rebels have clashed with Kurds in northeastern Syria, sources on both sides said. The death toll from fighting and assassinations in the last few days has reached at least 30 people, with dozens more held in tit for tat kidnappings.

Russian President Vladimir Putin rebuffed Western pressure at a Group of Eight summit in Northern Ireland this week to stop arming Assad's government and warned the West against supplying Islamist rebels he said ate human organs.

The rebels believe last week's U.S. decision to give them military support will re-open arms deliveries through Jordan that were curbed as the United States and Russia negotiated a planned "Geneva 2" peace conference.

They seek anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons to help them fight back against Assad's air force and armor.

Lebanese President Michel Suleiman appealed to Hezbollah, the main Lebanese Shi'ite movement, to pull its guerrillas out of Syria, saying any further involvement in its neighbor's civil war would fuel instability in Lebanon.

"If they take part in a battle for Aleppo, and more Hezbollah fighters are killed, it will lead to more tension," Suleiman told the Lebanese newspaper As-Safir in an interview published on Thursday.

"This should end in Qusair, and (Hezbollah) should return home."

Suleiman, a Maronite Christian, originally had Assad's backing to become president but has become increasingly assertive in criticizing Syria, which dominated its smaller neighbor militarily and politically for three decades.

The Syrian conflict has aggravated Lebanon's own complex sectarian rivalry, triggering fighting between Alawite pro-Assad and Sunni anti-Assad gunmen in the northern city of Tripoli that has killed dozens.

In Iraq, a wave of sectarian attacks in Shi'ite and Sunni areas aggravated by the Syrian fighting has put the country's fragile ethnic and confessional make-up under severe strain.

Baghdad's Shi'ite dominated government says it supports no side in the war, calling for a negotiated settlement. Western powers say Iraq allows Iranian flights carrying weapons to Assad's forces through Iraqi airspace, a charge Baghdad denies.

U.S. and European officials say Iraq is not doing enough to stop Iran using its airspace to ferry arms to Damascus.

Asked about this, and the movement of Iraqi Shi'ite fighters across the border, Zebari said: "From our knowledge of the dynamics of the Syrian conflict, we have taken a more cautious position. Not for any love for the regime ... but out of serious concerns for Iraqi national interests."

In Paris, UNESCO said its World Heritage Committee had decided to place the six historic sites in Syria on its list of World Heritage in Danger to draw attention to the risks they are facing because of the conflict in the country.

"The danger listing is intended to mobilize all possible support for the safeguarding of these properties which are recognized by the international community as being of outstanding universal value for humanity as a whole," UNESCO said in a statement.

The sites concerned are the old city of Damascus; the Greco-Roman ruins at Palmyra; the old city of Bosra; the old city of Aleppo; the Crac des Chevaliers castle and Qal'at Salah El-Din; and the ancient villages of Northern Syria.

(Additional reporting by Erika Solomon in Beirut, Patrick Markey in Baghdad and John Irish in Paris; Writing by Paul Taylor)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraq-lebanon-alarmed-spreading-syria-war-052010882.html

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A Calculating Win for China's New Supercomputer

China's "Tianhe-2" (Milky Way 2) supercomputer took first place in one recent speed test, clocking in at 30 quadrillion calculations per second?about twice as fast as the best American machines. The U.S. still has more supercomputers than any other nation, but some experts say computer speed is a measure of a country's scientific innovation, and worry the U.S. is lagging behind.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/06/21/194230816/a-calculating-win-for-chinas-new-supercomputer?ft=1&f=1007

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

You're Better Off Spending the Next 40 Minutes in Lego Heaven

You've got emails to check, bills to pay, coffee to drink. That mole still needs checking out. Your hairline has ceded yet more ground to your scalp. You know what's better than all that? Touring a world of unrivaled Lego treasures. Like, say, this one.

Brickworld Chicago may be over?it was this past weekend, and besides, you don't live in Chicago?but the good people at BeyondTheBrickTV have blessed us with a complete tour of the 50,000 square foot soiree. It's inspiration, it's relaxation, but mostly: It's a life of bricks, when yours feels like it's made of straw.

Source: http://lego.gizmodo.com/youre-better-off-spending-40-minutes-in-lego-heaven-514260591

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NCAA nears Judgment Day

I was reading an article from the Wall Street Journal the other day and after reading it got me thinking. This article talked about college athletes getting a share of the revenue that the universities get from their individual sports. Sports like Football and Basketball at the college level yield millions of dollars for universities and Ed O?Bannon and his lawyers think that the college player, who is using their talents to bring attention to that specific university, should have a share in the revenue that these colleges get.

?

The argument that O?bannon and his cronies are putting forth is that the NCAA violates U.S. antitrust law by limiting the compensation that players can receive for the use of their name, image and likeness. The NCAA asserts that the plaintiffs are aimed at destroying amateurism in college athletics. The case centers on one question: What is amateurism?

?

This article goes on to talk about what went down in 1920?s and 30?s when some college athletic conferences prohibited the awarding of scholarships. This case was filed by Stanford economic Professor emeritus Roger Noll and whereas some universities give out sports scholarships now, today many Ivy League schools still do not give out athletic scholarships.

?

As I read through this article one thread kept going through my mind, what really is the purpose of colleges anyway. I know for myself it was an opportunity for me to higher my education and acquire skills that would make me marketable in the job market. I went to college to learn how to think and yea I used my ability in Track and Field as my calling card to many Universities and I choose Rutgers University as the place I wanted to learn.

?

Now I am going to cut through the chase here. Personally I thought this case has died a few years ago but I guess it hasn?t. What really is fueling this case? GREED, and in this case it could kill our future generations ability to go to colleges. Why do I say that? Let?s assume that the Supreme Court comes back and says that O?Bannon and his cronies are right and that all amateur athletes should be getting a cut of what the universities profit. Then each year college athletes will be asking for more and more of a cut and the more they get the less the universities will be willing to give, in the form of scholarships, to future athletes. These attorneys are forgetting one thing? they too have gone through the university system and gotten something priceless? an education. Yea, Something that no one can ever take away from them and those same attorneys are now crying fawl and tell those same universities that the athlete needs to get more.

?

Please note this, besides an education that these athletes are getting, as a D1 athlete you also get food allowances on the weekends for games. You get free travel to other states. You get to see the country without spending a dime out of your own pocket. You get free room and board even after the school year is over if your sport is coming into season, you get a free education given by the best professors in the world, you get the best medical care known to man while in your sport, you get the best clothing by the major sport clothing manufacturers that if the average person were to buy would cost them hundreds of dollars. The fun a college D1 or D2 athlete has cannot be even measured in dollars and cents. College was the best four years of my life. To this day nothing besides my marriage to my wife is comparable.

?

I have noticed that many universities have been using their athletics as calling cards to get people to think about possibly attending. What?s wrong with that? I see nothing wrong a university utilizing its assets to further the longevity of their school and as a thank you to all those athletes that they have used as advertisements, in return, those athletes get something that will last them way passed their times years in sports, a great education. A means to make themselves marketable to the job force when they can no longer play that professional sport. Did you know that a college graduate earns more over a lifetime than one who doesn?t have that diploma?

?

We need to put sports in proper perspective. We need to remember that our minds our education should always be in the forefront of our minds and sports, college sports, should only be a means for us to get that priceless gift of intelligence. Now you know how I feel. ???

Source: http://ulocal.wisn.com/_NCAA-nears-Judgment-Day/blog/6535972/63262.html

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UN says 45.2 million refugees and displaced people

GENEVA (AP) ? The Syrian civil war contributed to pushing the numbers of refugees and those displaced by conflict within their own nation to an 18-year high of 45.2 million worldwide by the end of 2012, the U.N. refugee agency said Wednesday.

Those are the highest numbers since 1994, when people fled genocide in Rwanda and bloodshed in former Yugoslavia.

By the end of last year, the world had 15.4 million refugees, 937,000 asylum seekers and 28.8 million people who had been forced to flee within the borders of their own countries, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said in a report.

Of those, 17 percent were new to their situations in 2012: 1.1 million new refugees and 6.5 million internally displaced people ? many from conflicts in Mali, Congo and Sudan.

That translates into someone becoming a new refugee or internally displaced person somewhere in the world every 4.1 seconds during the last year, said Antonio Guterres, head of the Geneva-based agency, also known as UNHCR.

"Which means each time you blink, another person is forced to flee," he told reporters in Geneva.

The overall numbers rose by 6 percent from the 42.5 million refugees and internally displaced people at the end of 2011.

Children below the age of 18 accounted for 46 percent of refugees worldwide. There were 21,300 asylum applications by children who were either unaccompanied or separated from their parents ? the highest such number the agency has recorded.

Most of the refugees in the world have fled from five war-affected countries: Afghanistan, Somalia, Iraq, Syria and Sudan. Of those, Afghanistan has for the past 32 years held the top spot; one of every four of the world's refugees is an Afghan ? and nearly all of them have fled to Pakistan or Iran.

The next biggest source of refugees is Somalia's long-running conflict, but the rate slowed a bit last year. Iraqis and Syrians were the next biggest refugee populations.

It's the poorer countries that generally show the most generosity ? Germany being a major exception ? in a trend that keeps accelerating. Some 81 percent of the world's refugees are hosted by developing countries, up from 70 percent a decade ago.

Pakistan, the home for 1.6 million refugees, continues to be the biggest host. Next is Iran, with 868,200 refugees, followed by Germany, with 589,700.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-says-45-2-million-refugees-displaced-people-082430598.html

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Thursday, June 13, 2013

Virtuix Omni VR treadmill shows up at E3, we go feet-on (video)

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I'm a little nauseous and a bit sweaty. This was my first time using the Oculus Rift. It's the sort of thing you've got to ease into, really -- sitting stationary, letting your brain adjust to the whole experience. Or you could just pop the thing on and run in place on a treadmill in a downtown Los Angeles hotel suite. Your call, really. Just don't come crying to me when you're having a bit of trouble standing up straight, as you attempt to step down from the slippery surface at the end of your session. Have I seen the future? Hard to say, of course, but whatever it was that just happened was neat -- and if you were one of the 2,000 or so folks who got in on Virtuix's Kickstarter, it'll be heading your way in January.

The company's CEO, Jan Goetgeluk took me through the paces of the system, a stationary design he settled on after toying around with a more traditional treadmill model. The Omni is really quite a simple thing at its heart, a concave, slick surface attached to two bars that converge in a circle. The company's designed special soles, as well -- plastic pieces raised at the heel and ball of the foot, with a fabric friction surface on the toe. Walk around and your feet slip. That's about it, really. Of course, it takes some getting used to, and Goetgeluk stood aside as I learned to walk again: lean forward, step down on the heel and let the rest of your foot slide with it. It took a few minutes, and I'm still not exactly an expert

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/11/virtuix-omni/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Len Blavatnik gives the Russian eCommerce sector a major boost ...

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Blavatnik, who made his original $8 billion fortune in the highly profitable yet not so glamourous ?metal processing sectors diversifying later into the oil and gas industries, has in recent years expanded his business interests into music and media acquiring Warner Music and the Parlophone record label. Now it appears that he wants to embrace e-commerce sector in his native Russia, having recently invested $I30 million in Lamoda, one of Russia?s largest online fashion retailers.

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LEN BALVATNIK

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/ By Stanley Green /

International business superstar Len Blavatnik?s decision to invest in Lamoda should be regarded as a major vote of confidence for the fast-growing e-commerce sector in Russia in general and Lamoda in particular. In recent months Blavatnik, has shown an increasing desire to invest in online retailing, having also taken a substantial interest in Germany?s Rocket Internet online retailing business.

Blavatnik?s agreement with Lamoda makes for largest injection of venture capital raised by a Russian eCommerce site in history, $30 million more than raised by Ozon, a Russia bookselling website similar to Amazon, and almost double the $75 million raised by Avito, an online classified site similar to Craigslist last year.

The people behind Lamoda welcomed the $130 million to be invested by the group headed by Blavatnik with open arms, stating that such significant capital injection will open the door for considerably more rapid expansion, especially in the fields of logistics and delivery services, with the company admitting to have been struggling to keep up with demands in the periphery of Russia itself, whilst unable to offer any form of service in the other Russian speaking countries in the former Soviet bloc

Although Blavatnik provided the bulk of the funding through his Access Industry conglomerate, other parties involved in the funding arrangement were U.S. based Summit Partners as well as Engelmann of Germany.

Significant about this particular investment is that it is Blavatnik?s first since he raised more than $7 billion in cash through selling his stake in oil group TNK-BP in March of this year.

Lamoda has previously received financial backing from Germany?s Rocket Internet, where Len Blavatnik also has a financial interest, as well as from U.S.-based merchant bankers JPMorgan Chase and AB Kinnevik, the Swedish investment group.

With the management team at Lamoda were reluctant to disclose specific figures, they were prepared to admit that annual sales on the site ran into hundreds of millions of Euros annualy, and that they had been enjoying triple-digit growth rates. However thanks to the Blavatnik group?s finance, Lamoda expect to grow both their turnover and profitability dramatically,

The increased appetite for investors to take a share of the ecommerce sector in Russia is again an indication of how rapidly it is gaining ground force with the online retail sector in the US as well as that of Western Europe, particularly in the fashion sector, estimated to be as high as ?50 billion as well as growing at the rate of between 5 to 7% annually.

Neils Tonsen, co-founder and CEO of Lamoda pointed out that relative to income levels, there is a considerable demand for fashion products in Russia, especially among women who make up close to two thirds of the company?s client base.

One of the largest challenges that Russian online retailers have had to cope with is the country?s large size and underdeveloped transport infrastructure.

Tonsen, however, was quick to point out that thanks to the injection of capital from Blavatnik, Lamoda would be handed considerable tools to help them circumvent these problems, particularly in the speeding up of the development of the recently introduced express delivery service, which offers next-day delivery to the ten major cities in Russia, through using a delivery service owned and operated by the company, instead of staking their reputation for reliability in the hands of a third party.

With the new infrastructure in place Tonsen expects to see a major spurt in growth, driven by sales from Russia?s provinces where traditional retail stores are few and far between and are liable to be expensive and limited choice, a situation that is liable to make online shopping much more attractive.

For someone sitting on a personal fortune estimated to be around $8 billion, Len Blavatnik?s investments have been prudent in the extreme as well as being strategically placed to further the interests of the communities and business sectors that he obviously cares more about.

Source: http://jewishbusinessnews.com/2013/06/12/len-blavatnik-gives-the-russian-ecommerce-sector-a-major-boost/

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