Saturday, March 30, 2013

Pope prays at Good Friday rite recalling Mideast

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Pope Francis praised the "friendship of so many Muslim brothers" during the Good Friday procession that re-enacts Jesus Christ's crucifixion and this year was dedicated to the plight of Christians in the Middle East.

The nighttime Way of the Cross procession at Rome's Colosseum is one of the most dramatic rituals of Holy Week, when Christians commemorate the death and resurrection of Christ. With torches lighting the way, the faithful carried the cross to different stations where meditations and prayers were read out recalling the final hours of Christ's life.

This year, the meditations read out were composed by young Lebanese faithful. Many of the prayers referred to the plight of Mideast Christians and called for an end to "violent fundamentalism," terrorism and the "wars and violence which in our days devastate various countries in the Middle East."

Francis, who became pope just weeks ago, chose, however, to stress Christians' positive relations with Muslims in the region in his brief comments at the end of the ceremony.

He recalled Benedict XVI's 2012 visit to Lebanon when "we saw the beauty and the strong bond of communion joining Christians together in that land and the friendship of our Muslim brothers and sisters and so many others," he said. "That occasion was a sign to the Middle East and to the whole world: a sign of hope."

Before becoming pope, Francis was Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, and he long cultivated warm relations with Muslim leaders in his native Argentina.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-prays-good-friday-rite-recalling-mideast-212021129.html

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Spy who foiled jet bomb plot to be MI5 chief

By Peter Griffiths

LONDON (Reuters) - A British counterspy who helped to thwart an al Qaeda plot to blow up planes with explosives hidden in soft drink bottles and led the response to the 2005 London transport bombings will be the new head of MI5, the government said on Thursday.

Andrew Parker has three decades' experience at MI5, countering Islamist militants, violent Irish republicans and organised criminals. He has been deputy chief since 2007, and once served as a British security liaison in the United States.

The 50-year-old, a keen birdwatcher and wildlife photographer, will be in charge of 3,800 staff investigating threats ranging from bomb plots and the spread of weapons of mass destruction to espionage and cyber attacks.

One of his first tasks will be to protect U.S. President Barack Obama, British Prime Minister David Cameron and other world leaders at the Group of Eight summit in Northern Ireland in June.

As Britain hosted the annual G8 meeting in 2005 in Gleneagles, Scotland, four suicide bombers killed 52 underground and bus commuters in London in coordinated attacks. Parker was in charge of the agency's response to the bombings and oversaw a significant expansion of its role.

Parker, who led MI5 teams that disrupted a 2006 conspiracy to attack several passenger jets with bombs hidden in soft drink bottles, said it was a "great honour" to be made head of the agency, also known as the Security Service.

"I look forward to leading the Service through its next chapter," he said in a statement.

The bespectacled father-of-two will replace the current head, Jonathan Evans, when he steps down in April after six years in the job during which Britain suffered no significant attacks.

Once so publicity-shy it officially did not exist and its director's identity was kept secret, MI5 now has a website which discusses its responsibilities and activities. On Thursday, the website posted an official biography of its new chief.

ENGLISH-SPEAKING MILITANTS

Counter-terrorism operations will remain at or near the top of MI5's priority assignments from the moment Parker takes the agency's helm.

European counter-terrorism officials have for years been concerned about British citizens and residents who travel to hot spots in the Middle East or South Asia, either to be indoctrinated and trained in militant ideology and guerrilla tactics before returning home, or to fight with local militants.

British authorities estimate that every year, 400,000 people travel from the U.K. to Pakistan. While only a tiny proportion of these travellers have any interest in militant activities, even a small number of recruits can cause disproportionate chaos, as occurred in London on July 7, 2005.

Among the hot spots which currently concern British and other European authorities most are Syria and Somalia. While travel by would-be militants to Somalia from Britain is relatively easy to trace, tracking movements of would-be recruits to anti-Assad forces in Syria is more difficult, since much such travel can be completed unobtrusively and over land.

European counter-terrorism officials have estimated that as many as 60 to 70 English-speaking militants with British citizenship or residence are currently fighting with rebel forces in Syria. There is concern that many of them may have joined up with al-Nusrah, an Islamist faction which U.S. officials describe as a front for Al Qaeda in Iraq.

CYBER-ESPIONAGE

While the signals intelligence agency Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) is Britain's main cyber-security unit, under Parker's leadership MI5 will be responsible for investigating specific cases of state-sponsored cyber-espionage directed against such critical targets as gas and power grids and defence and pharmaceutical manufacturers.

Based on what it learns from such cases and in consultation with other agencies, MI5 also advises potential targets on how to protect themselves against cyber attacks. MI5 does not have responsibility for cyber crime or dealing with hackers.

As part of its role in cyber security, Parker's agency will have to anticipate how to keep security measures ahead of technological innovation. And it will have to do so in an environment where greater productivity will have to be extracted from shrinking resources, including budgets.

(Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by Pravin Char and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spy-foiled-jet-bomb-plot-mi5-intelligence-chief-201443893.html

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?Life With A Relaxed Mind | YolBook.com

The health of a person depends on a healthy body as well as a mind that is strong enough. The mental health of a person must be provided with utmost importance to maintain a proper balance of activities.

Once the mental health gets spoiled the person becomes improper and starts viewing life from a different prospect. The mind needs proper relaxation and counseling if at any stage you feel that you are stressed out. If you feel that either you or any of your loved ones are suffering from anxiety you can approach the Siyan clinic in Santa Rosa for getting rid of all troubles.

Anxiety should be treated at an early stage. When a person starts to exhibit the symptoms immediate and quick action must be taken to treat the situation. If anxiety is not treated at the correct time the person might end up suffering from severe mental problems which in turn affects the physical health as well as the daily routines of the person. Once treated through proper medication and counseling the person can free the mind of all stresses and strains and be as cheerful as ever. People have a wrong notion that they might be taunted by the society as crazy if they go for a treatment.

This should not be encouraged as the mental health worsens if left untreated. A medical imbalance can prevent a person from carrying out his/her daily activities and also prevents the person from leading a normal life. Some of the services that can be availed from Siyan in relation to maintaining a perfect mental health include:

  • Mood disorders
  • Cognitive disorders
  • Anxiety disorders
  • Dual Diagnosis
  • Psychotherapy
  • Complicated kind of psychiatric issues
  • Elderly people suffering from cognitive disorders and much more
  • Mood disorders

Some of the common problems that are seen in people who exhibit mood disorders include:

  • Bipolar disorders
  • Disorders resulted from medical conditions
  • Depression
  • Chronic depressions
  • Anxiety disorders

Stress, nervousness, worry are some of the common factors that trigger anxiety. The following kinds of symptoms are usually seen and they are:

  • Dissociative disorder
  • Panic disorders
  • Phobias
  • Social anxiety disorders
  • Post traumatic stress disorder
  • Generalized anxiety disorders
  • Elderly people with cognitive troubles

Usually elderly people happen to lose their memory as they age. Alzheimer?s and dementia are among the most common problems seen in elderly people. Elderly people tend to forget many things including how to perform their daily routines and they are in need of assistance or help for moving forward their lives.

Behavioral disorders

Behavioral disorder is yet another kind of disorder that is seen in people of all ages. This might arise due to a feeling of inferiority complex, to gain attention they start abusing or harassing and even damaging things and people to attain self satisfaction.

All these kind of disorders can be cured at the Siyan clinic for mental health in Santa Rosa.

Source: http://www.yolbook.com/article/health-and-fitness-topic/2734/%EF%BB%BFlife-with-a-relaxed-mind

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Americans oppose paying for storm-ravaged beaches

(AP) ? More than 4 out of 5 Americans want to prepare now for rising seas and stronger storms from climate change, a new national survey says. But most are unwilling to keep spending money to restore and protect stricken beaches.

The poll by Stanford University released Thursday found that only 1 in 3 people favored the government spending millions to construct big sea walls, replenish beaches or pay people to leave the coast.

This was the first time a large national poll looked at how Americans feel about adapting to the changes brought on by global warming, said survey director Jon Krosnick, a professor of political science and psychology at Stanford.

The more indirect options the majority preferred were making sure new buildings were stronger and reducing future coastal development. New building codes rated the highest with 62 percent of those surveyed favoring it.

Three in 5 people want those who are directly affected by rising seas to pay for protection, rather than all taxpayers.

Krosnick said the low favorability of sea walls and sand replenishment "reflect the public's fatalistic sense that it's more realistic to just give up the beach than to try to save it when other storms in the future will just wash it away again."

The nationally representative survey of 1,174 Americans conducted online by GfK Custom Research has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.

University of Miami geology professor Harold Wanless, who wasn't involved in the survey, said he was at a Miami Beach meeting on Thursday with business and political leaders on how to try to keep from losing their "hugely expensive" land. But they are afraid of spending money in vain attempts that won't work.

There are three ways the public can deal with the effects of rising seas on beaches, said coastal geology professor S. Jeffress Williams of the University of Hawaii. He is an expert on sea level rise and methods of adapting to it. You can "hold the line" with expensive sea walls, retreat and leave the beach, or compromise with sand dunes and beach replenishing.

Sand dunes helped protect the New Jersey town of Seaside Park more than its dune-less neighbor Seaside Heights when Superstorm Sandy hit last fall, said Laurie Mcgilvray, a government coastline science expert.

Williams said the public's attitude about not doing much to protect current beach development would be fine if it were 100 years ago. "But we've got tremendous trillions of dollars of a tourist economy that depends on the coast.

"You should expect that if you are going to use the coast, you need to put some money in to maintain it," he said.

But people surveyed said money is an issue.

When it came to the general question of who should pay to protect the coast, 60 percent of the public said it should be paid for by local property owners and businesses, not the general taxpayers. And when it comes to specific solutions, about 80 percent of those surveyed said the money should come from local property taxes, not federal or state income taxes.

Nearly half, 47 percent, said the government should prohibit people from rebuilding structures damaged by storms.

The survey also found that 82 percent of the public believes global warming is already happening. About 3 out of 4 people said rising sea levels caused by global warming is a serious problem.

___

Online:

Stanford study: http://stanford.io/16kTvKo

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-28-Climate%20Poll/id-4bb2c34e6cdc4a05b7f40cf5d7fcfb03

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

'World Dream,' Business on Chinese President's First Overseas Trip ...

BEIJING ? Even as President Barack Obama was wrapping up a Mideast trip ? his first to Israel as president ? during which he discussed war and peace, a new world leader, Xi Jinping, had begun his first overseas trip as the Chinese president, amid talk of dreams, business and even ?a new type of inter-power relations.?

His destinations? Russia, with which China shares a long border (the two nations have been both close allies and bitter enemies in the six-plus decades since China?s revolution in 1949), and Africa, where Chinese investment is soaring, from less then $100 million in 2003 to about $14.7 billion now, according to the International Business Times. China?s annual trade with Africa has boomed to around $200 billion, the report said, citing China?s Ministry of Commerce, compared with just $10.5 billion in 2000. China overtook the United States as Africa?s largest trading partner in 2009, it said.

In Russia, Mr. Xi called for closer cooperation in foreign policy and the economy, my colleagues David M. Herszenhorn and Chris Buckley reported, saying China and Russia had shared goals as they ?seek to offset the influence of the developed West.? Mr. Xi also called for closer military cooperation.

In Africa, ?Xi is signaling a long-term commitment,? Ross Anthony, research fellow at the Center for Chinese Studies at Stellenbosch University in South Africa told the International Business Times.

On Sunday, Mr. Xi was due to arrive in Tanzania for the second leg of his nine-day, four-nation tour, which will continue to South Africa and Republic of Congo.

Given the scale of the strategic and business interests involved, it?s probably safe to say that the trip ?will reveal some important features of Xi?s concept of world order,? as Shi Yinhong, a professor of international relations at Renmin University of China, said in a story by Xinhua, the state-run news agency. Mr. Shi is close to China?s foreign policy establishment, which makes his views significant.

What is that world order?

At home, Mr. Xi has often talked about his ?China dream.?

The new president spelled it out in his inaugural address last Sunday. Here?s how Hong Kong?s South China Morning Post analyzed it: ?In his maiden speech as head of state, Xi Jinping invoked his favorite concept of the ?China dream? and laid out a vision of a stronger nation with a higher standard of living for its 1.3 billion people during his administration.?

?Painting his vision of a great renaissance of the nation, Xi stressed that the ?China dream? could only be realized by seeking ?China?s own path,? cultivating patriotism and following the Communist Party?s leadership. ?We must continue to strive to achieve the China dream and the nation?s great revival,? he said.?

That?s Mr. Xi?s vision in China.

?Pursuing the ?Chinese dream? of the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation is conducive to realizing the ?world dream,? and if the ?world dream? comes true, it could offer a sound external environment for the country to achieve the ?Chinese dream,? Mr. Shi said,? according to Xinhua.

Confused?

Mr. Shi was more specific, sort of: ?From the destinations of Xi?s first foreign trip, we can tell that China is committed to promoting democratization in international relations as well as a more just and reasonable international order and system,? Xinhua quoted him as saying.

A comparison with former President Hu Jintao?s first overseas tour in 2003, which included Russia, other neighbors Kazakhstan and Mongolia, and a European nation, France, highlights China?s shifting geopolitical interests and Mr. Xi?s determination to improve China?s image abroad, other Chinese analysts said.

In fact, at play is nothing less than ?a new type of interpower relations? that Mr. Xi hopes will upend old, zero-sum theories by promoting win-win cooperation, Xinhua reported.

?China now advocates a new type of cooperative relationship among all major powers, including leading powers among developing countries,? Xinhua wrote, citing the views of Ruan Zongze, deputy head of the China Institute of International Studies. (Mr. Ruan is also considered close to China?s foreign policy establishment.)

?We should adopt a new and open attitude toward all powers,? Mr. Ruan said.

It sounds promising, though it?s worth noting that in Africa, there is already a roiling discussion about the benfits and drawbacks of China?s intense interest in the continent, which many say is aimed at securing resources it needs to feed its fast-growing economy back home.

?China is not trying to colonize Africa in a 19th-century way, but economically, the trade pattern with Africa resembles something of a colonial era, whether they like it or not,? said Mr. Anthony, the Stellenbosch University scholar, according to the International Business Times.

In Tanzania, Mr. Xi?s first stop (he will also attend a summit meeting of leader of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa in South Africa this week), expectations of the trip are running high. But there are warnings.

?These are key issues to crosscheck: They are looking for resources to feed their industries, which Tanzania can provide,? said Abdallah Safari, the former director of the Tanzania-Mozambique Center for Foreign Relations, in an article in The Citizen, a Tanzanian newspaper. ?But what does Tanzania get in return??

?The bulk of stuff going out is raw material and the bulk of stuff coming in is manufactured goods, which is bad for African countries because they are not adding any value to the economy,? he said.

And Bashiru Ally, of the University of Dar es Salaam, called for a new approach to relations between China and Tanzania, ?given that they are currently based on resources,? the newspaper wrote.

?It is a one-way relationship,? said Mr. Ally. ?That means giving more while receiving less. All they are doing is defining their intentions towards our resources. The ideal situation would be for the relationship to change to an equal profits one,? he said.

Source: http://rendezvous.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/24/talk-of-world-dreams-and-business-on-chinese-presidents-first-overseas-trip/

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Auburn's Poetry at The Station Bistro features big lineup - Auburn ...

Poetry at The Station Bistro is having a one-year anniversary party on Monday, April 1, featuring the Quill and Parchment Poets and others.

The lineup includes poets Joannie Stangeland, Mary Eliza Crane, Jane Alynn, Laura L. Snyder, Tanya McDonald and James Rodgers.

The program is from 7-9 p.m. at the Bistro, 110 Second St. SW, No. 125, one block south of West Main Street, on the east side of the Auburn Transit Center.

Coffee and conversation follow readings. It is an open mic opportunity. The public is invited.

About the poets

Jane Alynn is a poet, writer and fine art photographer. She is the author of "Necessity of Flight" (Cherry Grove, 2011) and a chapbook, "Threads & Dust" (Finishing Line Press, 2005). In addition to taking second in New South's 2012 Poetry Contest, she received a William Stafford Award from Washington Poets Association in 2004. Her poems have appeared in numerous journals as well as in many anthologies. Recently, her poems, written in collaboration with visual artists, have been exhibited in galleries. Her photographic art explores the synergy between the two arts.

Mary Eliza Crane grew up in the Northeast and fell madly, passionately and desirously in love with the natural world in the Adirondack Mountains. A transplant to the Cascade foothills of the Pacific Northwest, she is a regular feature at poetry venues in the Puget Sound region, and has read her poetry from Woodstock to Los Angeles. Mary has two volumes of poetry, "What I Can Hold In My Hands" and "At First Light", published by Gazoobi Tales. Her work also has appeared in Quill and Parchment, The Cartier Street Review, the Far Field and Cradle Songs: An Anthology of Poems on Motherhood from Quill and Parchment Press.

Joannie Stangeland's third book of poems, "Into the Rumored Spring", was published by Ravenna Press, and she's donating author proceeds to Seattle Cancer Care Alliance. She's also written two poetry chapbooks: "A Steady Longing for Flight", which won the Floating Bridge Press Chapbook Award, and "Weathered Steps". Joannie's poems have appeared in Crab Creek Review, Floating Bridge Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Fire On Her Tongue and other publications and anthologies, as well as on the bus. Joannie's taught writing at Richard Hugo House and LiTFUSE, and she helps edit the online journals The Smoking Poet and Cascadia Review.

Laura L. Snyder keeps a slanted profile so weighted words pour out in South Seattle's rainy winters. She's a grandmother, gardener, self-taught naturalist, botanical illustrator, basket weaver and spinner of natural fibers born in Tacoma. In the last six months she's been published in Windfall, Baseball Bard, Switched on Gutenberg, Faultlines, and the anthologies: American Society: What Poets See, Hot Summer Nights, Cradle Songs: An Anthology of Poems on Motherhood, From Glory to Glory: Anthology by Poetry in the Cathedral, Manifest West: Eccentricities of Geography, and in two chapbooks: "Winged from Flutter Press" and "Witness", winner of the 2012 Willet Press contest. You are likely to find her with an open journal in art museums or wherever trees and bears hang out.

Tanya McDonald is a published poet and as-yet-unpublished fiction writer who resides in Woodinville with her husband and their cat. Once upon a time, she sugared jelly doughnuts, sang lullabies to chickens, and stayed up all night DJing on a college radio station. At present, she prefers tea to coffee, acts younger than she is, and when not scribbling poems, is hard at work on the second draft of her YA urban fantasy novel.

James Rodgers has lived in Pacific since 1997. He is a member of Striped Water Poets in Auburn, and has read poems throughout the state. He has been published in multiple magazines and chapbooks, including: HA!, WPA collections, Prism, and many more. He has won first prize twice, along with two third prizes, and multiple honorable mentions in the Charles Proctor category for the Washington Poets Association's poetry contests. James also has a blog called "Haikooky" that is a daily shot of humorous haiku. It can be found at: jamesrodgershaikooky.blogspot.com.

=====

LINKS: Presented by The Station Bistro: www.auburnstationbistro.com

Northwest Renaissance, and Auburn Striped Water Poets?sites.google.com/site/stripedwaterpoets

Source: http://www.auburn-reporter.com/entertainment/199573681.html

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A DOMA Confrontation was Inevitable (Poliblogger)

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, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/294133071?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Links We Love: Ryan Gosling Can't Give Up Acting & More

From all the reasons (in GIFs!) why Ryan Gosling can't quit acting to big career moves that the stars of Saved by the Bell have made over the years, these are stories that we were loving this week!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/why-ryan-gosling-cant-give-acting-saved-bell-flashback-more-links-we-love/1-a-529533?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Awhy-ryan-gosling-cant-give-acting-saved-bell-flashback-more-links-we-love-529533

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Duhamel ready to be slimed at Kids' Choice Awards

FILE - In this Feb. 11, 2013 file photo, actor Josh Duhamel attends the premiere of "Safe Haven" at the Sunshine Landmark in New York. The "Transformers" star is hosting Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on Saturday, March 23, 2013, and says the ceremony's traditional dumping of the green stuff on celebrities isn't as bad as it looks. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 11, 2013 file photo, actor Josh Duhamel attends the premiere of "Safe Haven" at the Sunshine Landmark in New York. The "Transformers" star is hosting Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on Saturday, March 23, 2013, and says the ceremony's traditional dumping of the green stuff on celebrities isn't as bad as it looks. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 11, 2013 file photo, actor Josh Duhamel attends the premiere of "Safe Haven" at the Sunshine Landmark in New York. The "Transformers" star is hosting Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on Saturday, March 23, 2013, and says the ceremony's traditional dumping of the green stuff on celebrities isn't as bad as it looks. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File)

(AP) ? Josh Duhamel doesn't mind the slime.

The "Transformers" star is hosting Nickelodeon's Kids' Choice Awards on Saturday and says the ceremony's traditional dumping of green goo on celebrities isn't as bad as it looks.

"I got slimed and I thought that it was going to be disgusting," said Duhamel on a break from rehearsing for the show earlier this week. "But it was actually almost soothing in a way. It's this warm goo that comes over you, and then it's a matter of just getting it all off. They have showers in the back."

Still, Duhamel hasn't been able to convince his pregnant wife, Black Eyed Peas singer Fergie, to take part in a sliming.

"I think, in fact, she put in a request not to be," he said, laughing.

Duhamel will be joined on stage at the University of Southern California's Galen Center by such famous attendees as Sandra Bullock, Steve Carell and Chris Pine, with Pitbull, Ke$ha and Christina Aguilera scheduled to perform.

Nickelodeon said a record-breaking 326 million votes have already been cast for the show, which honors kids' favorites in film, music, sports and TV.

___

Online:

http://www.nick.com/kids-choice-awards/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-23-US-Kids'-Choice-Awards/id-c0295a1f19994f2f8c9b37654ed6ad78

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Who Is The Most Fascinating Person In The Automotive World?

Cars are fascinating, but at the end of they day, they're just machines that people create. They're nothing without the fascinating people behind them. It takes a dedicated person -- or more often than not, a team of people working together -- to make an extraordinary automobile.

So let's stop talking about design and horsepower figures for a moment and talk about the men and women behind the machines. That's our question this weekend: who is the most fascinating person in the automotive world, past or present?

You can name someone current, like Bob Lutz or Elon Musk, or someone long dead, like Hans Ledwinka. Go nuts!

I don't know if he's the most interesting in the entire realm of car-dom, but I've always had a soft spot for Ferruccio Lamborghini, myself. The guy was a hugely successful industrialist and sports car enthusiast, but when he meets with fellow titan of industry Enzo Ferrari to complain about the clutch in his car, Ferrari tells him where to stick it.

So what does Lamborghini do? Out of spite, the legend goes, he makes his own exotic car which he names after himself. And bullfighting. Because he was a badass like that. I just love that story.

Who's your favorite interesting person from the world of cars?

Photo credit Wikipedia/Philipp L?cke

Source: http://jalopnik.com/who-is-the-most-fascinating-person-in-the-automotive-wo-458466964

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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Grandfather of African literature, Chinua Achebe, dies aged 82

LAGOS (Reuters) - Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe, widely seen as the grandfather of modern African literature, has died at the age of 82.

From the publication of his first novel, "Things Fall Apart", over 50 years ago, Achebe shaped an understanding of Africa from an African perspective more than any other author.

As a novelist, poet, broadcaster and lecturer, Achebe was a yardstick against which generations of African writers have been judged. For children across Africa, his books have for decades been an eye-opening introduction to the power of literature.

Describing Achebe as a "colossus of African writing", South African President Jacob Zuma expressed sadness at his death.

Nelson Mandela, who read Achebe's work in jail, has called him a writer "in whose company the prison walls fell down."

Achebe's "Things Fall Apart", published in 1958, told of his Igbo ethnic group's fatal brush with British colonisers in the 1800s - the first time the story of European colonialism had been told from an African viewpoint to an international audience. The book was translated into 50 languages and has sold more than 10 million copies worldwide.

He later turned his sights on the devastation wrought to Nigeria and Africa by military coups and entrenched dictatorship.

?"Anthills of the Savannah," published in 1987, is set after a coup in a fictional African country, where power has corrupted and state brutality silenced all but the most courageous.

The pain at Achebe's death was felt across Nigeria, and particularly in the southeast homeland of the Igbos.

"Our whole household is crying out in grief," a cousin and traditional chief, Uba Onubon, told Reuters in Ikenga village.

WAR

Born at Ogidi in southeast Nigeria on November 16, 1930, Achebe was the son of a Christian evangelist. He went to mission schools and to University College, Ibadan, and taught briefly before joining the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation, where he was director of external broadcasting from 1961 to 1966.

When his homeland broke away from Nigeria in a disastrous bid for independence, Achebe launched a publishing company in Enugu, capital of the self-declared republic of Biafra.

After the war, which cost a million lives along with Biafra's hopes of statehood, Achebe returned to Enugu to teach at the nearby Nsukka University.

In 1972 he moved to Massachusetts and since then spent much of his time in the United States, with occasional spells in Nigeria. His last post was at Brown University in Rhode Island.

Through tears, former government minister and friend Dora Akunyili said Achebe's death "leaves a void in Nigeria, Africa and globally."

Although Achebe never won the Nobel literature prize like fellow Nigerian Wole Soyinka, his works won praise for their vivid portrayal of African realities and their accessibility for all readers.

His contribution was recognised when he won The Man Booker International Prize in 2007.

CORRUPTION

He never hesitated to turn harsh words on his home country, publishing a pamphlet in 1983, "?The Trouble With Nigeria", excoriating its corruption and condemning it as "dirty, callous, noisy, ostentatious, dishonest and vulgar. In short it is among the most unpleasant places on earth."

"The Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the responsibility," he wrote, words which chimed with the feelings of many Nigerians.

In 2004, he turned down the title 'Commander of the Federal Republic' offered to him by then President Olusegun Obasanjo, replying that he was appalled by the cliques who had turned Nigeria into "a bankrupt and lawless fiefdom".

Undaunted, President Goodluck Jonathan also tried to confer a national honour on him in 2011. He snubbed that one too.

A car accident put Achebe in a wheelchair in 1990 and he wrote no books for more than 20 years.

His last, "There Was a Country" was a deeply personal account, in prose and poetry, of the horrors of the 1967-70 Biafra war, lifting decades of silence on the loss of friends, family and countrymen that forever shaped his life.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/grandfather-african-literature-chinua-achebe-dies-aged-82-120902420.html

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

PFT: Cowboys closing in on extension with Romo

Robert Griffin III, Mike ShanahanAP

Whenever Washington quarterback Robert Griffin III is ready to play again, he?s going to have to be a more cautious player.

That?s the word from coach Mike Shanahan, who said at the league meeting that Griffin, who is recovering from major knee surgery, will have to learn to slide and throw the ball away to protect himself.

?You can?t take shots consistently,? Shanahan said, via Mark Maske of the Washington Post.

Still, that doesn?t mean Shanahan plans to take the running element out of Griffin?s game. In fact, Shanahan said that the read-option forces defensive linemen to read and react and slows down their rush.

?The option will help a quarterback stay healthy,? Shanahan said.

Shanahan reiterated that Griffin is ahead of schedule on his recovery, although he cautioned that he doesn?t want Griffin to go overboard with his workouts and re-aggravate the injury.

?If hard work has anything to do with it, he?ll be ready,? Shanahan said. ?You?re always optimistic.?

And Shanahan is optimistic not only about Griffin?s recovery from this injury, but about Griffin?s ability to change his game to avoid future injuries.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/20/cowboys-closing-in-on-extension-for-tony-romo/related/

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Gmail updated with actionable notifications for Jelly Bean users

Gmail notification

Google has just updated its Gmail app to include new actionable notifications for incoming email on devices running Jelly Bean. This means that incoming email can be archived, deleted or replied to directly from the notification pane, rather than by entering the app first. Since being introduced in Android 4.1, actionable notifications have been seemingly underutilized compared to simple expandable notifications. It's good to see Google putting the new functionality to use in its own apps.

Many users are unfortunately reporting that this update to Gmail is causing Light Flow -- which controls LED flashing for notifications -- to crash uncontrollably. The only fix seems to be to uninstall the app for the moment, and hopefully the developer can be quick with a fix.

The update also enables faster search on devices with Ice Cream Sandwich, and performance improvements for users on Froyo and up. You can grab a download or update of the official Gmail app from the link above.

Source: Official Gmail Blog



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/1QkZ_74ki7Y/story01.htm

Is The World Going To End

Microsoft lets companies buy Surface tablets in bulk

Microsoft lets companies buy Surface slates in bulk

As often as Microsoft pitches the Surface and Surface Pro as tablets for getting work done, corporate customers haven't had an easy way to order the devices by the bushel. We know that the process is now considerably smoother for eager large-scale adopters thanks to a ZDNet peek at a Commercial Order page. "Commercial customers" can spring for large quantities of either slate model, along with an Extended Hardware Service Plan that bumps support to three years for North American buyers. Microsoft isn't saying just who's eligible, although the order system is more likely to center on firms that are already comfortable buying all things Windows in volume. You'll know how far it reaches if there's a Surface at every cubicle on Monday morning.

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Via: ZDNet

Source: Microsoft

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/tZKbUY-XvVs/

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Amid tensions, Chinese fruit a turnoff in Vietnam

In this March 9, 2013 photo, porters unload boxes of Chinese oranges at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. Around half of the produce at the market is trucked in from China, arriving in the city in the middle of the night and distribute for Hanoi and neighbor areas. China has emerged as one of the world's leading exporters of fruit and vegetables, and is increasingly taking market share from U.S. producers in Asian markets. It grows more apples than any other country. There are no figures on how much of the crop Vietnam imports. Chinese fruit is often cheaper than Vietnamese, and offers more variety.(AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

In this March 9, 2013 photo, porters unload boxes of Chinese oranges at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. Around half of the produce at the market is trucked in from China, arriving in the city in the middle of the night and distribute for Hanoi and neighbor areas. China has emerged as one of the world's leading exporters of fruit and vegetables, and is increasingly taking market share from U.S. producers in Asian markets. It grows more apples than any other country. There are no figures on how much of the crop Vietnam imports. Chinese fruit is often cheaper than Vietnamese, and offers more variety.(AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

In this March 9, 2013 photo, porters unload boxes of Chinese fruits near traders at work at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. Around half of the produce at the market is trucked in from China, arriving in the city in the middle of the night and distribute for Hanoi and neighbor areas. While fears about the safety of Chinese food products are often well founded, in Vietnam they are so tangled up with anti-Chinese sentiment it is hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. More than 1,000 years of occupation, a bloody border war in 1979 and renewed assertiveness by China in pushing territorial claims in the South China Sea mean that tales of Chinese perfidy find fertile soil in which to grow.(AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

In this March 9, 2013 photo, porters unload boxes of Chinese fruits near traders at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. While fears about the safety of Chinese food products are often well founded, in Vietnam they are so tangled up with anti-Chinese sentiment it is hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. More than 1,000 years of occupation, a bloody border war in 1979 and renewed assertiveness by China in pushing territorial claims in the South China Sea mean that tales of Chinese perfidy find fertile soil in which to grow.(AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

In this March 9, 2013 photo, a truck driver loads bags of Chinese carrots at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. China has emerged as one of the world's leading exporters of fruit and vegetables, and is increasingly taking market share from U.S. producers in Asian markets. It grows more apples than any other country. There are no figures on how much of the crop Vietnam imports. Chinese fruit is often cheaper than Vietnamese, and offers more variety. (AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

In this March 9, 2013 photo, a porter, top, unloads boxes of Chinese red apples at Long Bien wholesale market for fruits and vegetables in Hanoi, Vietnam. China has emerged as one of the world's leading exporters of fruit and vegetables, and is increasingly taking market share from U.S. producers in Asian markets. It grows more apples than any other country. There are no figures on how much of the crop Vietnam imports. Chinese fruit is often cheaper than Vietnamese, and offers more variety. (AP Photo/Na Son Nguyen)

(AP) ? Jack Nguyen had sold 20 of his 30 containers of imported American grapes when a fresh round of rumors hit the Internet and state-run media: Chinese fruit on sale in Vietnam might look good, but it contains deadly levels of preservatives and pesticides. Shoppers quickly stopped buying imported fruit altogether, believing it all tainted or falsely labeled. The remaining 10 containers rotted.

While fears about the safety of Chinese food products are often well founded, in Vietnam they are so tangled up with anti-Chinese sentiment it is hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. More than 1,000 years of occupation, a bloody border war in 1979 and renewed assertiveness by China in pushing territorial claims in the South China Sea mean that tales of Chinese perfidy find fertile soil in which to grow.

Vietnam's authoritarian government tries to stop direct criticism of China, or discussion of its relationship with Beijing, because it is vulnerable to charges by nationalists and democracy activists that it lacks the guts to stand up to its fellow Communist country. As a result, anger at its giant northern neighbor China is increasingly showing up in consumer behavior.

Nguyen says sales at his firm, one of the largest fruit importers in the country, were down to $6 million last year from $11 million in 2011. While he and others in the trade say Vietnam's economic slowdown is partly to blame, he complains the constant media reports of toxic fruit are strangling businesses, even for those like him who no longer import from China.

"It's all about how they can sell more newspapers. Nowadays if you write an article about Chinese products, you immediately get millions of hits online," he said by phone from Australia, where he was buying up part of that country's grape harvest. "We lost a lot of money just because someone was writing something fancy."

Chinese companies selling computer games and Internet chat programs have faced online boycotts from anti-China activists. In December, Paulo Thanh Nguyen launched a website called "No China Shop", which sells only goods made in Vietnam ? children's clothes, shoes and vegetables ? and offers to source others. He says sales are good, but his decision to launch the business was as much about harnessing and spreading anger against China as it was about making money.

"Chinese made products are killing Vietnam's economy and Vietnam could become China's economic slave," he said. "I want to lend a hand in preventing this."

Territorial tensions have been finding their way into other markets in the region.

An ugly spat between China and Japan over contested islands late last year led to a drop in demand for Japanese cars, makeup and consumer electronic devices by Chinese consumers. Nervous Japanese investors are not pulling back on China, but are stepping up investments elsewhere in Asia as a way of hedging against more turbulence.

A restaurant in Beijing recently put up a sign saying that Vietnamese, Japanese and Filipinos ? whose government also opposes the Chinese claims ? and dogs were not welcome. The owner, who gave a single name of Wang, said he put it up to "release my anger" over the island dispute but took it down after fielding so many calls from reporters.

Given China's size, few countries in the region could contemplate locking economic horns with it for long. It remains Vietnam's largest trading partner, and that will not change anytime soon, regardless of the bad press its fruits get.

Business between the two countries has increased since they normalized relations in 1991 following a frontier war. Trade between the two reached $35.7 billion last year, more than triple the figure back in 2006, according to government figures. Cheap Chinese goods dominate markets. Many of its factories that make goods for exports must first import raw materials from China.

Fruit and vegetable imports from China are especially vulnerable to consumer backlash because of that country's well-documented instances of food tampering, overuse of pesticides and lax regulations on everything from baby milk, dried fruit to meat products. Moreover, Vietnam's recently minted middle class, like their brethren elsewhere, are increasingly concerned about the provenance and quality of what they put on their plates in general.

China has emerged as one of the world's leading exporters of fruit and vegetables, and is increasingly taking market share from U.S. producers in Asian markets. It grows more apples than any other country. There are no figures on how much of the crop Vietnam imports. Chinese fruit is often cheaper than Vietnamese, and offers more variety.

Nguyen Quang Bach, a customs official at Tan Thanh, one of the major entry points for Chinese goods into Vietnam, said last year daily imports peaked at 2,100 metric tons of fruit a day in the run up to the Lunar New Year, when demand for fruits is at its highest. He said this year the busiest day saw half that cross the border.

"The information (about alleged dangers) has affected people's psychology," he said. "Consumers don't eat Chinese fruits and importers can't sell them."

The media stories on Chinese food scares are laced with rumor and statistics as alarming as they are dubious. The Pioneer, one of the country's largest circulation papers, repeated rumors about leeches in milk and watermelons imported from China. It went on to report on the case of a woman from northern Vietnam who was admitted into a hospital after suffering from stomach ache. The doctor apparently fainted when he saw the leeches squirming inside stomach.

Hoang Trung, a deputy director at the agriculture ministry, said tests found excessive levels of pesticide in four samples of Chinese grapes, apricots and pomegranate in the first 8 months of last year. Since then, random tests at border checkpoints and on Chinese and Vietnamese fruits at major fruits markets came out clean.

"There are no grounds for the people to panic," he said.

Few people seem to be listening, a reflection perhaps of a lack of trust in Vietnamese government authorities.

At Hanoi's Long Bien market on the banks of the city's Red River, traders selling Vietnamese fruits occupy one half, with those hawking imports on the other. Around half of the produce at the market are trucked in from China, arriving in the city in the middle of the night. They disparage each other's products, but there doesn't appear to be any resentment.

"The Chinese are wicked, and their goods should be banned," said Xuan, who was sitting in front a stall selling tiny oranges from Southern Vietnam. "They are dangerous."

Those selling Chinese fruits note people are still buying the fruit, albeit in smaller quantities. They suggested Vietnamese food was as likely to be as toxic as Chinese, and dismissed the stories of dangerousc fruit as unfounded rumors.

One suggested that the campaign was being orchestrated by the Vietnamese fruit producers as a form of protectionism. Nguyen, the fruit importer, said that didn't make sense because the whole industry was suffering as a result.

"If people truly boycott Chinese food, what else can they buy?" said Dung, who along with his wife was selling tiny Chinese, green apples, which he first told a reporter were from central Vietnam. "In reality, local fruit can't meet demand."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-18-Vietnam-China%20Pushback/id-dbf561f465fb4764b772c3f0c6f8b00a

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Cyprus Hell: Insane in the bank (Unqualified Offerings)

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Monday, March 18, 2013

JTT On 'Last Man Standing': Watch Clips Of His 'Home Improvement ...

This week, it's finally happening: JTT is stopping by "Last Man Standing" and reuniting him with his former TV dad Tim Allen.

Believe us, this mini-"Home Improvement" reunion does not disappoint.

Fans have buzzing about Jonathan Taylor Thomas and Allen together again on screen and in the two sneak peeks clips below, there are plenty of allusions to the actors' Tool Time days.

In the March 22 episode of "Last Man Standing," titled "College Girl," Thomas plays Jon, a friend of Kristin's (Amanda Fuller) who used to work with her at the diner. While out on a special date at a trendy, upscale restaurant with Ryan (Jordan Masterson), Kristin is surprised to see Jon, who now owns the restaurant.

In the first clip above, Kristin and Jon reunite and there's some banter about being a middle child, which is where Thomas' "Home Improvement" character Randy fell in the birth order. "A lot of times, that middle child ends up being the funny one becomes he wants the attention," Jon says with a smile

In the second clip below, Kristin introduces Jon to her parents and Mike (Allen) can't help but think they've met before. "Man, you look familiar," Mike says to Jon when he walks in the door.

Tune in to see the full "Home Improvement" reunion when JTT guest stars on "Last Man Standing" on Fri., Mar. 22 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

  • Joshua Jackson, Michelle Williams & Katie Holmes On "Don't Trust The B---- In Apartment 23"

    While we're very excited to see Busy Philipps and James Van Der Beek back together on the ABC comedy, a "Dawson's Creek" reunion is just not the same with the rest of the gang. Van Der Beek, Jackson and Williams have been teasing a reunion for a while now, but Holmes seemed iffy. However, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/03/katie-holmes-dawsons-creek-reunion-tom-cruise_n_1647000.html" target="_hplink">after her divorce from Tom Cruise, it was reported that he was the one who didn't want the Capeside crew to reconnect</a>. But now that Holmes is a single lady, someone needs to get this started!

  • Christina Applegate On "Modern Family"

    It would be heartwarming to see the "Married With Children" father and daughter reunited on "Modern Family" after all these years. Maybe Applegate could make a cameo as a wacky cousin from Jay's ex-wife's Dede's side of the family.

  • Elizabeth Berkley and Lark Voorhies on "White Collar"

    It's beyond time the ladies of "Saved by the Bell" reunite. Elizabeth Burke's (Tiffani Thiessen) high school friends (Elizabeth Berkley and Lark Voorhies) come calling and need the FBI's help. Good thing Peter and Neal are available.

  • John Stamos On "90210"

    Uncle Jessie and Aunt Becky back together again? Yes please! "90210" could stage a full-blown "Full House" reunion with Lori Loughlin making an appearance. Why not have John Stamos play her new love interest?

  • Sarah Michelle Gellar On "Bones"

    Before Stefan/Elena/Damon, Bill/Sookie/Eric or Edward/Bella, there was Buffy and Angel, the couple who made dating a bloodsucker look glamorous and tragic way before those copycats. Nowadays, David Boreanaz has traded in his fangs for an FBI badge on "Bones," but we'd still like to see SMG swooping in to try and seduce him while Brennan's on the lam, or at least commenting how good he looks with a tan, next season.

  • James Franco On "Cougar Town"

    James Franco is long overdue to reunite with his bad-girl "Freaks And Geeks" co-star Busy Phillips, and Laurie (Busy's character) could use a tall, dark handsome stranger in her life. Let's bring back Daniel and Kim!

  • Tom Hanks On "Girls"

    On the upcoming season of "Girls," "Bosom Buddies" alum Tom Hanks could show up as Hannah's dad's (Peter Scolari) old friend from college who Hannah develops an irrational crush on. Papa Horvath needs his bosom buddy!

  • Max Casella on "How I Met Your Mother"

    "Doogie Howser, M.D." veterans gotta stick together. Max Casella could pop up on "How I Met Your Mother" as a doctor Barney turns to when the threat of an STI rears its ugly head.

  • Jared Leto On "Homeland"

    There's no time like the present for Jordan Catalano to make a comeback, and where better to do it than in his "My So-Called Life" co-star Claire Danes' hit show? Leto can play eccentric pretty well, so we suggest Leto should appear as a fellow psychiatric patient Carrie meets following her ECT therapy -- she already has a great track record with dating unstable guys.

  • Fred Savage On "Sullivan & Son"

    Dan Lauria plays Steve Sullivan's father on the new TBS bar comedy "Sullivan & Son." You know what'd be funny? If Lauria's other TV son, Fred Savage from "The Wonder Years," showed up in a cameo as a drunk, rowdy customer who had to be thrown out of their establishment.

  • Jurnee Smollett on "Baby Daddy"

    It's been a few years, but we bet Michelle Tanner's "Full House" BFFs still keep in touch. Jurnee Smollett could pop up on "Baby Daddy" as Tucker's (Tahj Mowry) old flame. Could it be rekindled?

  • Jaleel White On "Hart Of Dixie"

    Reginald VelJohnson -- the artist formerly known as Carl Winslow from "Family Matters" -- plays Bluebell, AL theatre expert Dash DeWitt on "Hart of Dixie." He runs an arts blog on the town's website, and do you know what every local theatre blog needs? A nerdy intern, preferably played by Jaleel White. Make it happen, CW.

  • Mario Lopez On "Franklin & Bash"

    We think Mario Lopez should take a break from hosting and return to his perfectly permed roots by reuniting with "Saved By The Bell" BFFrenemy Mark-Paul Gosselaar. The erstwhile A.C. Slater could turn up as a client for Gosselaar's Peter Bash, or continue that antagonistic streak by appearing as a law school rival with an ax to grind.

  • Judith Light On "Mistresses"

    Remember the ladies of "Who's the Boss?" Alyssa Milano starred as a housekeeper's (Tony Danza) daughter and Judith Light was the matriarch of the family they lived with and are employed by -- Milano's new series "Mistresses" seems like the perfect opportunity to find a brand new TV reunion around the bend. Light, who recurs on "Law & Order: SVU," could play a legendary famous mistress who helps Milano and the other newbies get through their experiences ... or, she could play the mother of one of the cheating men, who blames it all on his mistress.

  • Kel Mitchell On "Saturday Night Live"

    When "Kenan & Kel" returned to TeenNick and Kenan hosted its opening night on the orange couch, #WheresKel was trending on Twitter. Kenan, an "SNL" cast member, has maintained a steady career after the success of their show and "Good Burger," but we haven't seen much of Kel lately -- he's done a lot of voice work in the past decade and has stuck to the kid market, guest-starring on Disney's "Good Luck Charlie." But maybe it's time for Kel to grow up and reunite with Kenan on "SNL." Will the orange soda jokes translate?

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/16/jtt-last-man-standing_n_2891929.html

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Disney's "Oz" keeps magic spell on movie box office

By Lisa Richwine and Chris Michaud

(Reuters) - Walt Disney Co's "Oz the Great and Powerful" worked more box office magic in its second weekend, following up its strong debut a week earlier with $42.2 million in U.S. and Canadian ticket sales.

The "Wizard of Oz" prequel starring James Franco topped a stronger-than-expected performance from "The Call," a new thriller about a 911 operator played by Halle Berry who tries to save a kidnapped teenager. "The Call" earned $17.1 million from Friday through Sunday, according to studio estimates.

"The Incredible Burt Wonderstone," a new comedy featuring Steve Carrell and Jim Carrey as dueling Las Vegas magicians, finished the weekend in third place. It conjured up $10.3 million at North American (U.S. and Canadian) theaters - several million less than expected.

Domestic ticket sales for the big-budget, effects-filled "Oz" dropped 47 percent from its opening weekend, according to the box office division of Hollywood.com. Movies typically see a 40 percent to 60 percent decline in their second weekend of release.

"Oz" added $46.6 million over the weekend from international markets. Its global total after 10 days reached $282 million, a strong start for a movie that cost $200 million to make plus up to $100 million more to market.

"The Call" handily beat pre-weekend forecasts of a debut of around $10 million. The $15 million production overperformed on strong word-of-mouth, showing itself to be "a real crowd-pleaser," said Rory Bruer, president of worldwide distribution for Sony Corp's Sony Pictures studio, which acquired the film from Troika Pictures.

"People like this film a lot, and it's going to be a big success for us," Bruer said, adding that "the film could end up doing anywhere from $40 million to $50 million, which would be huge."

"Burt Wonderstone," meanwhile, fell short of some pre-weekend forecasts, which had pegged the debut at $12 million to $15 million. The film had a modest budget of about $30 million, according to Warner Bros.

"Obviously we didn't want to come in number-three this weekend, but it's not for lack of trying," said Dan Fellman, Warner Bros. president of theatrical distribution.

The executive said the studio harbored hopes that upcoming school spring breaks would stoke the film's box office, adding that "with the budget being as reasonable as it was, I'm sure at the end of the day that we'll be okay."

Rounding out the top of the charts, the big-budget film "Jack the Giant Slayer" took fourth place with $6.2 million domestically. The global total for the March 1 release, which is trying to make back a $189 million production cost, reached nearly $90 million.

In fifth place, Melissa McCarthy comedy "Identity Thief" added $4.5 million to its impressive $123.7 million total.

"Jack the Giant Slayer" was released by Warner Bros. "Identity Thief" was distributed by Universal Pictures, a unit of Comcast Corp.

(Reporting by Lisa Richwine and Chris Michaud; Editing by Will Dunham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/disneys-oz-keeps-magic-spell-movie-box-office-160810022--sector.html

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Ban Ki-moon wants Ireland's Robinson for key Africa post: sources

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The former President of Ireland Mary Robinson is the top candidate for the post of U.N. special envoy to Africa's Great Lakes region, where she would help implement a peace deal to end the conflict in eastern Congo, U.N. sources said on Monday.

"She is the front-runner and is very likely to get the job, but it's not a done deal yet," a U.N. official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

A U.N. Security Council diplomat also told Reuters about Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's desire to name Robinson to the post.

In addition to having been Ireland's president from 1990-97, Robinson, 68, was the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights from 1997-2002.

The sources said that Ban hoped to make an announcement soon, though they said there was a slight possibility that Robinson would decide for some reason not to take the post.

U.N. peacekeepers in Congo have been stretched thin by the "M23" rebellion in the resource-rich east. A U.N. expert panel has said that M23 was supported by Rwanda and Uganda, though the two countries have vehemently denied it.

The U.N. Security Council is considering creating a special intervention force, which one senior council diplomat has said would be able to "search and destroy" the M23 rebels and other armed groups in the country.

M23 began taking parts of eastern Congo early last year, accusing the government of failing to honor a 2009 peace deal. That deal ended a previous rebellion and led to the rebels' integration into the army, but they have since deserted.

African leaders signed a U.N.-mediated regional accord late last month aimed at ending two decades of conflict in eastern Congo and paving the way for the intervention force.

The Congolese government said on Monday it hoped to sign a peace deal with the M23 rebels on March 15, but a rebel leader said more talks were needed.

(Reporting by Michelle Nichols and Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ban-ki-moon-wants-irelands-robinson-key-africa-024607083.html

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How To Promote Your Coaching Business On the web: 2

Many of my coaching customers are coaches themselves chiropractic coaching, and fairly a couple of of them have asked me how to promote their coaching business online. Right here is some of the details I have shared with them. Use these tips and tips to promote your personal coaching practice on the web chiropractic marketing, get more clientele and make more cash:

- Have a Skilled Internet Website. In order to attract online customers, you require to present a quite expert image on the web. Folks who uncover your internet internet site will equate the specialist appear and really feel of the internet website to your personal professionalism, considering that the internet site is the only piece of details they have to evaluate your organization.

The internet web site should have professional look and really feel and have details about your business, as effectively as your goods and services. There really should be a way for clients to get in touch with you, as well as subscribe to your newsletter.

- Explain What You Do on Your Internet Internet site. Not everybody knows what a coach is, so in addition to calling your self a coach, make sure you explain what a coach does. For example, if you are a dating coach, explain that you assist males and girls find that a single ideal person.

If you are a career coach, tell your internet internet site visitors that you help them figure out the excellent profession, and then you aid them locate a job that reflects their career choice. And if you are a enterprise coach, tell them how you can help their enterprise succeed.

- Publish a Newsletter. Not everyone who comes to your internet website will right away become a coaching client. Not everybody who comes to your internet internet site will buy your items instantly. You need indicates to preserve in touch with men and women who come to your internet website, but are not prepared to hire you or obtain your items.

A newsletter is a fantastic tool to keep in touch with your internet web site visitors, share details with them and educate them about your goods and services. Make sure that you have a newsletter subscribe form on every page of your net internet site, and that you supply a compelling cause for your internet website guests to subscribe to it.

- Optimize Your Internet Internet site for Search Engines. Search engine optimization is the procedure of modifying web page content material and meta-info to boost the search engine ranking of the page. Profitable search engine optimization will significantly improve the number of visitors that come to your web website given that over 70% of individuals who are seeking for items and services use search engines to find them.

- Publish Your Articles On-line. Publishing articles is a wonderful way to show off your coaching expertise, as properly to drive traffic to your net web site. When you write and publish your articles, other net website owners pick them up and publish them on their internet sites, while giving you a link back to your net internet site.

Use the 5 methods we outline above to drive targeted clients to your coaching practice. Effective promotion of your coaching practice online will make a distinction between your coaching net web site sitting idly and a coaching internet web site that drives leads and clientele for your company each single day.

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Source: http://wiki.maritimecharter.org/groups/msgiancaterino/revisions/ec473/2/

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