Friday, June 29, 2012

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INSIGHT: In "Islamist" Egypt, generals still have final say

(Reuters) - Egypt's army will continue to be the guardian and ultimate arbiter of the state after moving to secure real power before the victory of Mohammed Mursi, the Islamist president who triumphed in last week's election run-off.

While the generals saw no alternative to respecting the popular vote for Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood, they see it as their obligation to forestall any attempt by Egypt's new leadership to create an Islamic state under sharia law, senior officers, intelligence officials and diplomats told Reuters.

But a reconstruction of the last two, dramatic weeks, in which Egypt looked primed to explode as the military-backed establishment gripped power more tightly and delayed the result of the presidential contest, also shows the army recognises that democracy should now be a permanent feature of Egyptian life.

Yet such is the military's mistrust of the Brotherhood, an organisation it vigorously repressed and forced underground for six decades, that a flurry of decrees, before, during and immediately after voting, aided by a dramatic court ruling, leave it unclear what powers President Mursi will really have.

The deep-seated antipathy between two historic rivals will be hard to smooth over and has already caused strains over the ceremonial formalities of the handover from military rule, under the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) led by Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, to an Islamist civilian head of state.

One sticking point for the generals, officers say, is that as head of the armed forces, Tantawi may during the ceremony to transfer power have to salute a leader from a movement the army has always portrayed as a fundamental threat to Egypt. Though purely symbolic, this matters to the military. At any rate, they said, Tantawi would not let himself be filmed saluting Mursi.

DISSOLUTION, DECREES

The legal framework that Mursi - and more senior Brotherhood figures around him - must work within is the product of a few hasty days of activity by SCAF, which pushed Hosni Mubarak aside to appease last year's street protests, and by judges who, like the military, were appointed under the old regime.

The "deep state" that lingers from the Mubarak dictatorship - the military, civil service, judiciary and big business - had reasserted itself, said one Western diplomat.

"This is about whether the 'deep state' will ever leave Egypt to govern itself," said the diplomat, after the powers of the president were curbed to let him appoint a cabinet while being hemmed in by the army-backed establishment.

For the Brotherhood, however, the diplomat added, "An imperfect presidency is better than none at all ... It's part of a new and delicate art of political compromise."

The new set-up dates back to June 14, a day after the SCAF-appointed government had shocked rights activists by effectively renewing martial law powers for the army to arrest civilians, and two days before the two-day presidential run-off election between Mursi and former air force commander Ahmed Shafik.

The constitutional court ruled that January's parliamentary election, won by the Islamists, violated rules. SCAF ordered the parliament dissolved two days later as the presidential vote was under way.

The following evening, on June 17 as polls closed, SCAF issued a "constitutional declaration", a super-decree of many parts, in which, notably, it took for itself the legislative powers of the parliament and raised the possibility that it might replace the parliamentary body drafting a constitution.

Subsequent details on Mursi's powers to form the government and presidential administration show a division of power that leaves full control of the powerful interior and defence ministries with SCAF. The army also retains sole oversight of the military budget, as well as its extensive commercial empire.

The Brotherhood, through Mursi, will have control of finance and foreign policy, worrying liberal officials appointed during the Mubarak era who now fear for their jobs. Tantawi will remain the head of the military council as well as defence minister.

TAKEOVER FEARS

This struggle for control had been months in the making.

Although it was the radical youth of Tahrir Square who toppled Mubarak, it was the army and the Brotherhood, as by far Egypt's best-organised opposition movement, which became rivals for his inheritance.

The unexpectedly large Islamist victory in the parliamentary election held over the winter - with the Brotherhood taking 46 percent of seats and its hardline Salafist allies a further 24 percent - spurred the generals into action.

One Arab intelligence official said SCAF had moved to clip the wings of the incoming president after listening in to meetings Brotherhood leaders held in Cairo, Istanbul and Doha, at which they had discussed plans to push aside the army after taking power.

"In one of the reports that military intelligence received," this source said, "the Brotherhood said ... the president will push the army out and will carry out a popular referendum to do that after the election."

Mursi and other Brotherhood officials insist they are committed to a pluralist democracy, reject comparisons with the clerical rulers of Iran and say they respect the rights of women and minorities, as well as Egypt's peace treaty with Israel. But an 84-year-old programme of establishing Islamic law - promoted energetically by Brotherhood members in parliament this year - leaves many Egyptians, and Western allies, suspicious.

Such suspicions mean it is not just the army in Egypt which has acted to curb the political power of the Islamists.

Some diplomats believe the judges who ruled against the parliamentary election were acting not under military pressure but in their own self-interest; many Mubarak-era appointees are fearful of a full-scale takeover of Egypt's institutions by the Brotherhood, and the judges had reason to believe their days on the bench would be numbered because the Islamist-led assembly had started drawing up legislation to replace them.

A Western diplomat said some members of the judiciary had indicated their opposition to the Brotherhood, and needed no direct instructions from the military on how to rein the group in. "They don't need SCAF to tell them," he said.

LIBERAL BACKLASH

The Brotherhood may now reflect on the breadth of the backlash against it in Egyptian society.

Many outsiders were startled at how little public resistance there was to Mubarak-era holdovers trampling on a democratically elected parliament. Yet that reflected how far liberals and the left had come to fear the Brotherhood's social agenda and apparent ambitions to spread its control across all the country's institutions - much as the military had done before.

At a time of national crisis and economic emergency, with a constitution yet to be written, Islamists in parliament had devoted much of their few months in office to drafting measures aimed at curbing social freedoms and the rights of women.

"Some of them stood up saying really awful things" about women's issues, said one Western diplomat, adding that it sent the wrong message about priorities when politicians needed to focus on rebuilding a shattered economy.

There were divisions between pragmatists in the Brotherhood and those hardliners bent on imposing sharia, said the diplomat. But the result was that it became army policy to prevent the transfer of any power to such a parliament, because its moderation could not be relied on.

"People felt parliament has not done anything," the diplomat said, noting a common complaint levelled against the Brotherhood during Mursi's election campaign. "But we all know that it did not have power to do anything."

ELECTION HONOURED

Parliament's poor performance in securing popular enthusiasm following its election may have emboldened the generals to act against it, and encouraged the deep state to throw its weight behind Shafik against Mursi in the presidential ballot.

Shafik, who was Mubarak's last prime minister, looked as though he might defeat Mursi right up to the moment officials announced the result a full week after the election. In a country with a history of vote-rigging, no one could be sure.

During that long week, SCAF debated intensively how to react to the result, once it became clear that Mursi was in the lead. Its ultimate reaction reveals a recognition of limits Egypt's new taste for democracy has set on its still sweeping powers.

Major-General Mohamed Assar, a member of SCAF, told Reuters two days after voting ended that the council had had nothing to do with the court decision to dissolve parliament, whose election he described as "one of the most important achievements of the military council".

"We were not happy with this court decision," he insisted. But, he added, the council's hands were tied: "We are working under the principle of the sovereignty of law and respect for the authority of the judiciary."

He went on to stress SCAF's commitment to respecting "the first president in the history of Egypt who was chosen by the people" and said: "The elected president will receive full powers with all due respect and he will lead."

The military council's legislative powers, an effective veto on any laws Mursi might want to pass, would last only until a new legislature could be elected, Assar added.

MILITARY ACCEPTANCE

Sources close to the military council also said Mursi would be free to choose many of the ministers he wanted and to propose new laws for implementation.

"The president will have the power to form the cabinet and choose the prime minister," one SCAF member said. "It is the cabinet which will submit the draft laws to the military council which then hands it over to the president who will make a decision on whether to pass the law or reject it."

The same member acknowledged that after a vote that was the most transparent in Egypt's history, the military would have risked conflict had it tried to oppose the will of the people.

"We have to accept that there is a reality that we cannot change," the military council member said. "The first election results showed Mursi winning, and where would Shafik get an extra 600,000 votes from?" In the event, the final tally gave Mursi a more decisive margin of 880,000 votes.

"There was no way we could annul the election," the senior officer told Reuters last week, as all Egypt was on tenterhooks waiting to see which way the army would jump.

"Democratic rules are the only guarantees for the Egyptian state that we don't become like Iran," he said - in other words, a state where Islamists used initial popularity, or electoral success, to perpetuate their rule by curbing voters' choice.

"This is the beginning of real and true democracy," he said. "This election will be followed by other elections; the people will have another chance."

TURKISH MODEL

The council member also gave a stark outline of the military's intention to go on steering Egyptian politics.

Not hesitating to offer counsel to the new president, he said Mursi ought to pursue reconciliation: "The president should extend his hand to those who have not elected him before he extends his hand to those who elected him," he said, adding that he expected Mursi to follow a moderate, pragmatic course now he is confronted by the enormous economic problems Egypt faces.

But there was also a military warning: should Mursi and the Brotherhood try to take Egypt in the direction of Iran, where clerical rulers decree who may stand for election and which laws parliament may pass, they would come up against an army that takes its lessons from the Turkey of Ataturk.

Recalling how the founder of the republic which followed the collapse of the Ottoman empire "banned the veil and imposed restrictions on religion" as he built a secular state to replace the religiously endowed emperor, the SCAF member told Reuters that Egypt's army stood ready to act, as Turkey's had done for nearly a century, in rejecting outright Islamic rule.

"They should know that the armed forces are the pillar of stability, and the constitution should say so," he said of the Muslim Brotherhood. "We don't want privileges; we don't want a political role for the military establishment," he said of criticisms the generals simply want to entrench their power and the extensive economic privileges built up under military rule.

But, the council member concluded: "If they want to impose Islamic sharia, the army will save the country. The army won't allow the country to be taken in the wrong direction."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-islamist-egypt-generals-still-final-084216134.html

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Google's New Cloud Messaging System Does More for Less [Google I/o 2012]

Google unveiled its newest messaging service iteration at the I/O conference today, aptly named Google Cloud Messaging. While it's obviously geared for app developers, users also will see significant performance improvements as the new standard is adopted. Here's what's in store. More »


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Sprint?s Delayed Galaxy S III Will Be Available On July 1: 16GB For $199, 32GB for $249

IMG_5273Sprint's version of the Galaxy S III has been a bit delayed due to some supply shortages, but the carrier has just confirmed that the Galaxy S III will be available in store on July 1. Pre-orders for the 32GB version started shipping yesterday. According to Sprint's official word (below), only the 32GB version will be available on the web, while the 16GB version requires a visit to a good old brick-and-mortar location. Pricing remains the same, with the 16GB version costing $199.99 on-contract, and the 32GB version going for $249.99.

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PSA: PS3 firmware update landing today

PSA PS3 firmware update landing todaySony's third-generation console is primed for new firmware, set to arrive later today and looking to be an audio-centric refresh. Version 4.20 improves support for Sony's PlayStation 3 Wireless Stereo Headset, which had some troubles with the last update. You can now turn off the option to hear your own voice ringing through your head, or pick from five different volume levels. There's also a new option to add virtual surround sound on Blu-ray and DVD playback to the ear-warmers, as well adjustments to how long the whole system will run before shutting itself down and the ability to save files in bulk. Hit up the official source for the full update rundown.

PSA: PS3 firmware update landing today originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Jun 2012 06:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

'Teen Mom's' Jenelle Evans and fiance land in jail

MTV

Jenelle Evans on season two of MTV's "Teen Mom 2."

?

By Us Weekly

Updated at 11:33 a.m. PT: "Teen Mom 2's"?Jenelle Evans and her on-again, off-again fiance Gary Head were both arrested and thrown in jail early Sunday morning -- and Head has been formally charged with assaulting Evans.

"Gary was charged with assault on a female, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and possession of a controlled substance," Evans' attorney Dustin R.T. Sullivan tells Us Weekly. "A restraining order was put in place by the judge ... Jenelle has already taken steps to try and protect herself from Gary."

Video from Us: 'Teen Mom 2's'most shocking moments?

The reality star, 20, was charged following her arrest as well for several misdemeanors, including "simple assault, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, and possession of a controlled substance," Sullivan says.?

Evans, for her part, posted her $500 bond and was released Monday afternoon. Sullivan says Head's bond has been set at $1,500, although he wasn't sure if the Marine had been released.?

Video from Us: Jenelle Evans explains why she gave her mom custody of Jace?

Following Head's vicious assault, a source close to the mom to Jace, 2, tells Us it was just a matter of time before she saw Head's true colors.?

"Gary had been extremely violent leading up to the event," the insider reveals. "He had been doing lots of yelling, and physical abuse, including pushing and shoving. This has gone on from the beginning (of their relationship)."?

Photos from Us: Adorable?'Teen Mom' tots?

As for how Evans is holding up after the weekend? "She is very shook up," the source says. "She has bruises, scratches and red marks all over her body. She's very fearful of what he is capable of doing."?

Adds the source, "For Jenelle to get charged in this mess, I'm just amazed, because she is [the victim]."?

What do you think about this latest "Teen Mom" run-in with the law??Tell us on our Facebook page!

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prostate cancer risk factors | cancer

prostate cancer risk factors: 1, tall individuals who have prostate cancer risk seemed to be higher. It really is unclear the precise cause are closely related towards the promotion of body human growth hormone will even promote abnormal cell division and cancer.
?2, a higher daily consumption of saturated essential fatty acids or animal oil to prostate cancer risk might be partly explained considering that the animal oil will modify the body?s hormonal changes.
3, testosterone can stimulate prostatic hyperplasia, men with higher testosterone levels for example those patients with gonadal dysgenesis or testosterone treatment than low testosterone levels almost certainly going to develop prostate cancer.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Supreme Court Year in Review

I see this as a fairly small but still significant step in expanding the definition of cruel and unusual punishment?the Eighth Amendment standard for declaring a sentence off limits. It?s incremental because two years ago, the court ruled unconstitutional mandatory LWOP for teenagers who commit crimes other than murder. Today, the court simply extended the reasoning of that ruling, Graham v. Florida, to teenage killers. Not surprising, right? Especially since the whole idea behind Graham was that minors are less culpable than adults in part because their brains aren?t fully developed. Once again today, the court relied on the research of Laurence Steinberg at Temple University, whose studies of the adolescent brain have been crucial to this line of cases. Steinberg has found that teenagers tend to have less impulse control and more proclivity for risk, and as Kagan says, these findings mean the court?s decisions rest ?not only on common sense?on ?what any parent knows??but on science and social science as well.?

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G-Technology kicks out USB 3.0 G-Drives for Macs, keeps your Retina MacBook Pro well-fed

GTechnology kicks out USB 30 GDrives for Macs, keeps your Retina MacBook Pro wellfed

If you've just picked up a MacBook Pro with Retina display or a 2012-era MacBook Air, you may be jonesing for a matching external hard drive to take advantage of that much-awaited USB 3.0 support. G-Technology has you covered -- and how. Updated versions of the laptop-oriented G-Drive Mini, Mobile and Slim (you're looking at the Mobile up top) all roll in the higher peak speeds and progressively trade raw speed as well as 1TB capacities for sleekness, while the twin-drive, 1.5TB G-RAID Mini will tax that 5Gbps bandwidth without becoming too ungainly. Not taking your external storage on the road? The single-disk G-Drive now climbs to 4TB in addition to jumping on the USB 3.0 bandwagon, and the dual-drive G-RAID will serve up as much as 8TB at the newly brisk speeds. All but the G-Drive Slim support FireWire to ease those jitters over transitioning from old to new, although they won't all arrive at the same time. Most of the G-Drive and G-RAID gear will be showing up in August at prices between $110 and $810, but the two Mini-labelled drives could be a bit late to the party with a less defined summer target. You can get the full scoop after the break.

Continue reading G-Technology kicks out USB 3.0 G-Drives for Macs, keeps your Retina MacBook Pro well-fed

G-Technology kicks out USB 3.0 G-Drives for Macs, keeps your Retina MacBook Pro well-fed originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jun 2012 03:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Exercise, even mild physical activity, may reduce breast cancer risk

Monday, June 25, 2012

A new analysis has found that physical activity ? either mild or intense and before or after menopause ? may reduce breast cancer risk, but substantial weight gain may negate these benefits. Published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the findings indicate that women can reduce their breast cancer risk by exercising and maintaining their weight.

While studies have shown that physical activity reduces breast cancer risk, many questions remain. For example, how often, how long, and how intense does physical activity have to be to provide benefits? Also, do women with all body types experience a reduced risk when they exercise, and does exercise reduce the risk of all types of breast cancer?

To investigate, Lauren McCullough, of the University of North Carolina Gillings School of Global Public Health in Chapel Hill, and her colleagues looked for a link between recreational physical activity, done at different time points in life, and the risk of developing breast cancer.

The study included 1,504 women with breast cancer (233 noninvasive and 1,271 invasive) and 1,555 women without breast cancer who were 20 to 98 years old and were part of the Long Island Breast Cancer Study Project, an investigation of possible environmental causes of breast cancer.

Women who exercised either during their reproductive or postmenopausal years had a reduced risk of developing breast cancer. Women who exercised 10 to 19 hours per week experienced the greatest benefit with an approximate 30% reduced risk. Risk reductions were observed at all levels of intensity, and exercise seemed to preferentially reduce the risk of hormone receptor positive breast cancer (ER or PR positive), which is the most commonly diagnosed tumor type among American women.

"The observation of a reduced risk of breast cancer for women who engaged in exercise after menopause is particularly encouraging given the late age of onset for breast cancer," said McCullough.

When the researchers looked at the joint effects of physical activity, weight gain, and body size, they found that even active women who gained a significant amount of weight ? particularly after menopause ? had an increased risk of developing breast cancer, indicating that weight gain can eliminate the beneficial effects of exercise on breast cancer risk.

###

Wiley-Blackwell: http://www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell

Thanks to Wiley-Blackwell for this article.

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

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Twin Probes to Investigate Mysteries of Space Weather

Artist illustration of events on the sun changing the conditions in Near-Earth space. Enlarge NASA

Artist illustration of events on the sun changing the conditions in Near-Earth space.

NASA

Artist illustration of events on the sun changing the conditions in Near-Earth space.

Late this summer, NASA plans to launch two very unusual weather satellites.

These satellites, known as the Radiation Belt Storm Probes (RBSP), won't be tracking cold fronts or thunderstorms on earth. They'll be studying the weather in space.

Space weather doesn't usually get much attention ? until it makes trouble here on earth.

That trouble starts when the sun ejects a massive cloud of particles and energy that heads toward our planet. When the cloud gets close enough, it begins to interact with the earth's magnetic field.

The result can be radiation so intense it threatens anything in orbit.

"We have communication satellites, we have navigation satellites in space," says Barry Mauk of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, the project scientist on the RBSP mission. "Those assets are strongly affected by radiation."

Satellites are especially vulnerable to highly energized electrons and protons that can "penetrate the boxes that comprise these spacecraft," Mauk says. "They can damage the circuitry. We have had failed spacecraft because of this space weather."

Space weather also can cause problems on the ground. Radio signals don't get through. GPS systems fail. Power grids go down.

And unfortunately, scientists aren't very good at predicting the impact of space weather.

One reason is a poor understanding of how solar storms affect the earth's radiation belts, high-energy particles held in place by the earth's magnetic field, Mauk says.

"Sometimes storms cause increases in radiation belts, sometimes they cause decreases in radiation belts, sometimes they have no effect at all," Mauk says.

If scientists can solve this mystery, he says predicting the impact of space weather could be more like predicting a hurricane's landfall.

But to study the problem, scientists need to see what's happening inside the radiation belts as a solar storm arrives. And that's where the new satellites come in.

They will be placed in an orbit that takes them through the radiation belts, says Jim Stratton, the mission systems engineer for the probes. Then, scientists will wait for a solar storm to arrive, he says.

"When one of these big storms comes in it can actually change and flex the magnetic field around the earth," Stratton says. "So we'll measure that and then we'll see how all of that energy that's coming out of the sun deposits into the earth's magnetic field, into the radiation belts."

Ordinary satellites wouldn't survive so much radiation. So Stratton and a large team at the Applied Physics Lab have spent years designing and building two very tough spacecraft.

Each of the spacecraft is an octagon about four feet tall. But once they are in space they will deploy booms that extend about the length of a football field.

The probes are protected by heavy shielding that will keep radiation away from sensitive electronic components. And they are designed to preserve data gathered by on-board instruments even if radiation temporarily knocks out the computers.

"Most spacecraft try to avoid flying through the radiation belts because radiation is harmful," Stratton says. "We're going right into the middle of the environment."

The mission should improve their understanding of space weather, Mauk says. But it also may help explain the origin of mysterious radiation bursts in distant galaxies, he says.

But all of this depends on getting the probes into orbit and then coaxing them into precisely the right position, one following the other at a specified distance.

That's the responsibility of scientists in the Applied Physics Lab's mission control center. And fine tuning an orbit is especially tricky when two satellites are involved, says Julia Andersen of the Mission Operations Team.

"Having two at the same time means you have to have two of everything," she says, including two separate "pits" in mission control that will accommodate two separate teams of scientists and technicians.

On launch day, those pits will be teeming with scientists and technicians who will take charge of the satellites once they leave the atmosphere, Andersen says.

"It's always fun knowing that you are in control of a spacecraft," she says.

Or in this case, two.

The probes are scheduled to launch from Kennedy Space Center on August 23.

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Former President and Pampanga Rep. Gloria Arroyo may be saving the former ruling...

Why?is she already proven guilty?people love to conclude when they have no first hand knowledge of evidences kundi puro accusations lang...masarap ba manira ng puri ng iba?if she is really what others accuse her of,then why don't you go on ...with the case against her...Sen Revilla,if you know any corruption deals she did,reveal it for everyone else to know...if none,please keep silent...and we will like you more if you act like a real gentleman....See More

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Sunday, June 24, 2012

Suspect Arrested In 1997 Slaying Of Former East Hartford Resident In Florida

In March, Fred Parlante of East Hartford went to Broward County, Fla., with the intention of telling the detectives working on his mother's 15-year-old murder to step aside and let the FBI's cold-case agents take over the dormant case.

"They showed me the boxes of evidence,'' Parlante recalled Saturday. "They didn't want to let it go.''

Last week, Parlante, an ex-boxer and retired truck driver, got the call he'd been waiting for since his mother, Olga Parlante, 71, a former East Hartford resident, was killed during a robbery in her Dania Beach, Fla., apartment in 1997.

"'Fred, we're going to make an arrest,''' Parlante quoted Broward Sheriff's Department Detective Frank Ilarraza as saying over the telephone.

A convicted felon named Bennie Hall, who has a history of robbery arrests, was charged on Thursday with first-degree murder in Olga Parlante's death.

"I was in seventh heaven; what a relief," said Parlante, 67.

Crime-scene investigators at the time of the homicide collected fingerprints and palm prints from the walls of the apartment, the inside of Olga's pocketbook and a dresser drawer. But the prints never matched a suspect; in any case, the database couldn't accept palm prints.

With the case stalled, Fred Parlante said, he consulted with psychics and hired private detectives.

"I pressed for 15 years,'' he said.

But it all led nowhere ? until now.

Recent advances in the huge national database of crime-scene prints made it possible for investigators to submit palm prints ? and the Broward County detectives hit pay dirt.

A palm print lifted from a wall in Olga Parlante's apartment in 1997 matched a print on file from Hall, who was serving time for other crimes in the Martin County, Fla., jail.

Officials told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel that Hall, 44, had been convicted of robberies against elderly victims inMiami-Dade County.

He will be charged in the killing of Olga Parlante, who was known throughout Broward County as the "Bingo Queen'' for her habit of playing the region's bingo halls nearly every day.

"The database grows, and the computer technology keeps improving year after year," Broward County Sheriff Al Lamberti told the Sun-Sentinel. "It doesn't matter how long it takes: We're going to get justice for the family, and this case is a perfect example of this."

Fred Parlante echoed those sentiments Saturday.

"I am so happy we were one of the first new cases,'' he said. "Not only for this family, but, God forbid, for the next family that can be helped by this technology. Losing a mother or a father ? that is the hardest thing in the world."

Olga Parlante moved to Florida in the mid 1960s with her husband, Anneo, who was suffering from emphysema. Olga drove tractor-trailers and worked as a waitress, Fred Parlante said. Anneo Parlante died about 10 years later, and Olga went on with a life filled with her grandchildren ? and bingo.

On March 13,1997, Parlante, who was living alone in her apartment Dania Beach, near Fort Lauderdale, was beaten, strangled with a blouse and dragged back into the home when she tried to crawl away, the Courant reported at the time. Stolen during the killing: a 20-inch television set, radio with cassette player, mantel clock and $53.

Her body was discovered by a granddaughter, who needed counseling after the ordeal.

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Saturday, June 23, 2012

Washington's Constitution Copy Sells For $9.5M

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George Washington's personal copy of the Acts of the First Congress set an auction record for American historical documents Friday when it was sold for $9.8 million.

Christie's auctioned off the 93-page book containing the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
It was only expected to bring in up to $3 million.

The winning bid went to the Mount Vernon Ladies? Association of the Union, which maintains the first president's home.

The book has Washington's signature on the title page and his notes near passages on the president's duties.

The book was printed in 1789, during Washington's first year in office.

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Coney Island To Host 30th Mermaid Parade

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The 30th annual Mermaid Parade was held Saturday in Coney Island.

Parade-watchers lined up along Surf Avenue to watch floats and colorful marchers dressed in their best sea creature and mermaid outfits.

Organizers were hoping to top the 500,000 people who lined the parade route last year.

This year's Queen Mermaid and King Neptune were actress Annabella Sciorra and comedian Jackie Martling.

The parade started at 21st Street and Surf Avenue.

It ran to 10th Street then along the boardwalk before wrapping up at 15th Street.

The over-the-top ocean-themed parade pays homage to Coney Island's Mardi Gras, which took place from 1903 to 1954.

For more information, go online to coneyisland.com.

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Sound off! One gym in Canada bans skinny people. The fitness club has a strict p...


Sound off! One gym in Canada bans skinny people. The fitness club has a strict policy that allows only plus-size women to join in an effort to help heavier women feel comfortable. Tell us -- would you feel better working out at a gym where people were larger? We'll read your comments on air at 6 & 9 a.m.

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Key European leaders meet to ease debt crisis

German Chancellor Angela Merkel stands behind a window with a reflection of the European flag as she waits for the President of Peru Ollanta Humala at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, June 12, 2012. Merkel will hold a speech with the title "Germany in Europe - Input for European Cohesion" at an economic council of her ruling Christian Democratic Party Tuesday afternoon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

German Chancellor Angela Merkel stands behind a window with a reflection of the European flag as she waits for the President of Peru Ollanta Humala at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday, June 12, 2012. Merkel will hold a speech with the title "Germany in Europe - Input for European Cohesion" at an economic council of her ruling Christian Democratic Party Tuesday afternoon. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

(AP) ? The leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Spain will gather in Rome to seek agreement on ways to ease the widening debt crisis in their currency union.

Any proposals agreed at Friday's summit will be brought to a wider gathering of EU leaders on June 28 and 29.

Among the items on the agenda are a proposal by Italian Premier Mario Monti to use a bailout fund to buy sovereign debt to bring down interest rates for countries like Spain and Italy and a possible tax on financial transactions.

The meeting caps an intense week, which included the downgrade by Moody's of 15 of the world's largest banks. Spain and Italy have seen their government borrowing costs rise amid market worries about their ability to handle their debt.

Associated Press

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Friday, June 22, 2012

Reconnecting Depressed Partners Despite Fear and Shame ...

Tense Couple Talking

Men and women have the same need and longing to connect with each other, but they also have different ways of reacting to stress that can drive them apart. Psychotherapist Patricia Love believes that these instinctive coping strategies can trigger the fear and shame that isolate partners from each other. Depression makes the disconnection that much worse.

These coping strategies can come up in relationships as a typically male sensitivity to shame and a typically female sensitivity to fear.

It?s always touchy to talk about gender differences, but Love and her colleagues approach this with the idea that differing male and female patterns are coping strategies, not fixed genetic traits. They recognize that individual men and women can exhibit behaviors across a broad spectrum.

There are no stereotypes that limit the roles of men and women, nor is there is a difference in their desire or need for feeling and relationships. But different styles of reacting to stress often lead to behaviors that create problems.

Fight-or-Flight or Tend-and-Befriend?

The differences that researchers have found relate to the ways in which humans have evolved to respond to threats and danger. For decades, scientists described the classic stress response of fight or flight as the basis for a lonely world of constant struggle for survival. It wasn?t until the 1990s that a group of social psychologists led by Shelley E. Taylor realized that all these observations had been based on human and animal studies that used mostly male subjects.

When they broadened research to include women in studies of stress, they identified another coping mechanism that was collaborative rather than competitive. Taylor summarized this research in her classic book, The Tending Instinct.

This alternative coping strategy is known as ?tend and befriend.? In times of distress, women take care of those close to them while seeking the support of others for protection of the group. It?s a highly social way of dealing with danger that depends on bonds of trust and connection. Researchers found that this pattern, like the fight or flight response, was rooted in neurobiology as well as behavior.

Patricia Love and other psychotherapists have found that these distinctively male and female reactions to stress can contribute to the problems of couples, especially in the presence of depression. Here is a nutshell version of what can happen.

The Fear-Shame Dynamic

For men, the important thing is to demonstrate their ability to remove a danger or solve a problem through action and reasoning. Words and feelings can get in the way and don?t get the job done. The almost instinctive response is to do something on their own, without seeking help. If their ability to handle a situation is called into question, men tend to feel shame.

Rather than take action on their own, women often need to feel connected to others to feel safe. Isolation triggers fear. Expressing their worries to their partners is a way of reassuring themselves that the connection for support is there. Talking and expressing feelings are part of the process of connecting and handling stress.

Hearing about his partner?s worries, however, can also trigger a man?s vulnerability to shame. Instead of understanding a woman?s concerns as the need for connection, he can hear them as criticism that he has failed to do his job of providing and protecting. Her distress comes across to him as an accusation that it?s his fault.

Instead of reaching out to connect, he reacts defensively and angrily pushes his partner away. She is left alone with her fear, which is now intensified by the withdrawal of her primary source of support.

Each keeps triggering the main vulnerability of the other. The man looks for the respect and praise he needs to feel he?s fulfilled his male role but gets only a response he experiences as shaming. As he pulls away in anger, the woman feels more alone and fearful than ever.

How Depression Makes It Worse

Depression adds the perfect storm of isolation and emotional withdrawal. Many men see depression itself as a source of shame, a weakness and sign of their inability to perform. In the majority of cases, they refuse to get treatment or even to acknowledge it. That leaves the woman alone and excluded from the relationship during the crisis of illness.

When a man hears from his wife that he is depressed, that may sound to him like ?you are a failure.? Anger is the typical response rather than feeling supported by his partner?s attentiveness. It?s very hard to get around the initial reaction that he?s hearing her words of concern as a criticism.

In depression, the man whom the woman looks to for reassurance and support can become himself the greatest threat to safety. This realization triggers an especially deep fear and vulnerability. She has to live in a constant state of alertness and easily gets angry. The stress level is high and can?t be relieved by the comfort of connection.

Connection Comes Before Communication

According to Pat Love and recent research, the fear-shame dynamic is an instantaneous reaction that begins well outside of our awareness through a process of emotional attunement. This is the reading of nonverbal signals in body language, facial expression and tone of voice. These communicate much faster than words. This nonverbal language comprised our primary method of evaluating and communicating the safety of situations, long before language and reasoning become so prominent in human development.

Because it is tied into neuro-circuitry, the dynamic of reactions is almost impossible to deflect simply by talking. Fear and shame keep you from hearing each other no matter how much mirroring and active listening you try to do.

It?s a lack of connection rather than a lack of communication that is the problem. Reconnecting on a non-verbal level is as important as finding the right words to get back together. This perception is behind the title of the book Love wrote with Steven Stosny, How to Improve Your Marriage Without Talking About It.

Their strategies for improving relationships include plenty of talking, but the words are secondary in importance to the level of interest and concern partners show each other through touch, looks and facial expressions.

Retraining to Reconnect

Love emphasizes that men and women are equally in need of love and intimacy and equally capable of experiencing it. Her approach is to train couples to be sensitive to their differing vulnerabilities and to practice ways of connecting without triggering fear or shame.

For example, she urges women to understand that for men relationship during a time of stress may not feel like a place of safety. Instead, it may seem more like a testing ground for their ability to perform and protect. If they feel they will face judgment about how well they?re doing their jobs as men, they might well try to avoid relationship when dealing with hard problems.

Men don?t realize that a woman?s fear of isolation and deprivation can be triggered by leaving her out of the important parts of his life. Men abandon their wives to manage their own dread of failure and inadequacy, leaving them alone with their needs. As Love and Stosny put it, ?A man needs to value the longing of a woman?s heart, or he will leave her alone in her dreams and become the failure he dreads.?

The key is to understand the core vulnerabilities and avoid setting them off while also offering assurance in response to the underlying fear or shame.

I?ll cover some of the specific strategies in another post. In the meantime, I?d like to know if you have found these general ideas about the ways men and women react to stress to be accurate in the context of your own relationship. Do you think they have added to the problems of depression?

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Ai Weiwei warned not to attend own court case

Andy Wong / AP

Ai Weiwei, second from left, stopped by a plain clothes policeman while he argues with another policeman, foreground, outside his home in Beijing on Wednesday.

By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

BEIJING ? While Ai Weiwei didn?t get his day in court Wednesday, he did get his case heard.

The Chinese artist and social activist was noticeably absent from opening arguments at a Beijing courtroom after he was warned off by police. Instead, Ai, 54, stayed home at his studio while his wife, Lu Qing, represented their design company, Beijing Fake Cultural Development Ltd., with a team of lawyers.

Ai and his wife are challenging a ruling by the tax office that rejected their appeal against a steep fine imposed for alleged tax evasion, a charge roundly rejected as false and trumped up by Ai and his supporters.


NBC News spoke to Ai Weiwei by phone late Wednesday afternoon, but he could not comment on how legal proceedings had gone.

The government previously ordered Ai?s company to pay a staggering 15 million yuan ($2.4 million) in alleged back taxes and additional fines. Surprisingly, Ai raised the money needed to pay an 8.45 million yuan ($1.3 million) bond needed to contest the tax charges through donations and contributions from around 30,000 supporters after he called for assistance through social media, a favored tool of his and other activists in China.

Stunts like these as well as his pokes at authority ? see the photo he posted yesterday on Twitter sporting a too-tight Chinese police uniform ? anger authorities who view Ai as a troublemaker.?

In April 2011, Ai was detained without charge during a national roundup of activists and dissidents following the many pro-democracy uprisings in the Middle East.

It was only after his 81-day detention that tax-evasion charges against Ai and his company were made, lending credence to claims made by human rights watchers and Ai supporters that the move was retaliation by the government.

The case against Ai has been shrouded in secrecy due to the government?s unwillingness, or inability, to reveal any original tax documents as evidence of tax evasion they purport to have.

Sharron Lovell / Polaris

Click to see a slideshow of photos of projects done by the Chinese artist and activist Ai Wei Wei.

A hearing held last July during which the government?s evidence would ostensibly have been revealed was closed and the company?s lawyers were barred from attending, a decision Ai?s lawyers claim was illegal.

It is a sensitive time politically in China as President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao are poised to step down later this year. Despite the political drama swirling around the fleeing of dissident Chen Guangcheng to the United States and the ongoing Bo Xilai scandal, Beijing desperately wants to make the transition peaceful and is doing everything possible this year to mitigate sensitive stories.

Yet, as has sometimes proven the case when it comes to Ai, attempts to muzzle or contain him can backfire.

While Beijing police have discouraged local dissidents from going to the courthouse to support Ai, security was said to be intense around the court with a ring of police cars around it and officers telling foreign press to stay away as well. Still, supporters of Ai were seen outside holding small signs that said ?Ai Weiwei, we love you? and ?No justice without a fight.?

Meanwhile, the detention of Ai?s legal consultant, Liu Xiaoyuan, by security forces Tuesday outraged Ai, who announced it on Twitter and called for Liu?s immediate release. Ai told NBC News that Liu?s phone had been turned off and that he had been ?taken away to the countryside for some sort of treatment by the police.?

Additionally, Ai has also been using Twitter to call attention to the heavy police presence outside his home. He pointed to a bust up at his home yesterday when someone in his studio took a photo of what Ai described as ?30-40 police cars.? Ai alleges that police rushed the photographer to grab the camera, causing some minor scratches and bruises which were tweeted here.

As part of his conditional release late last year, Ai?s travel rights were taken away and he was told to refrain from criticism of the government through social media.

Friday was supposed to be the day those restrictions would be lifted, but in lieu of Ai?s continued defiance, it is hard to believe local authorities won?t extend these restraints in order to rein him in.?

More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

?

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Thursday, June 21, 2012

Zimmerman re-enacts Trayvon shooting on video

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George Zimmerman's Reenactment of Trayvon Martin ShootingHe took my head and slammed it against the concrete several times, and each time I thought my head was going to explode and I thought I was going to lose consciousness," George Zimmerman told police the day after he shot and killed Trayvon Martin.


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Tablet Computers and Your Small Business | Founders Technology ...

You are doing everything you can for your small business. You have a website and a blog. You are getting your name out there via social media sites. Now you hear that you need a tablet to really help your company succeed. But tablets are very pricey and you are not actually sure why you would need one or how it could be helpful.

Reasons You Need a Tablet

It may come as a shock, but using a tablet can be very beneficial to your small business. We have outlined a number of the reasons below.

  1. Amazing presentations: In today?s topsy-turvy economy, finding faithful clients is no easy task. Consumers today are holding tightly onto their dollars. However, equipped with a tablet computer, you can wow even the most tight-fisted of customers. Say you have a landscaping company. When you show up at a potential client?s home for a business meeting, you can fire up your tablet and quickly show them before-and-after photos of your most current landscaping jobs. This visual evidence?all displayed without having to boot up a more burdensome laptop computer?might help you land a lucrative new client.
  2. State-of-the-Art: Many clients want to work with companies that are using the latest in technology. Today, the ?latest? is centered on tablet computers. If you are a freelance marketing consultant, you could use your tablet to show potential clients past instances of your marketing work. Clients will be reassured to see that you are using the latest technology to promote yourself.
  3. Information at your fingertips: If you need to have instantaneous information about something, such as, the cost of a house if you are in real estate, tablets give you immediate access to that information. Staying on top of information means that you can confidently provide clients with accurate information.
  4. Signing documents is a breeze: To close a deal, you might need your clients to sign necessary documents. Thanks to several easy-to-use applications that you can download to your tablet, there is no longer any need to fuss with reams of paper that can be easily lost. Instead, pull up your documents on your tablet and have your clients sign the paperwork right on the screen. You can then easily email it to the people that need it.

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Wednesday, June 20, 2012

West Africa: Lifesaving UK aid for a further 200,000 people

19 June 2012

Britain will help an additional 200,000 people survive the Sahel food crisis in West Africa, Stephen O?Brien said today during a visit to Niger.

The emergency aid will feed an extra 60,000 people across the region for six months. It will also provide food vouchers for 80,000 people and animal feed and vaccinations to keep over 60,000 farmers' livestock alive.

The Development Minister has been visiting Niger this week to see for himself how British aid is helping thousands of people survive the Sahel food crisis.

Mr O'Brien met mothers and children receiving lifesaving treatment at British-supported emergency feeding centres assisted by UNICEF, the World Food Programme and World Vision.

Lifesaving: Mr O'Brien sees the British-backed?emergency treatment in action near Niger's capital Niamey. Picture: Vigno Hounkanli/WFP-Niger

He also discussed with the heads of UN and other aid agencies what more the international community can do to avert a looming catastrophe before travelling to Senegal to see the impact of the food crisis there and meet heads of agencies managing the regional response.

International Development Minister Stephen O?Brien said:

"What I saw in Niger was the very real human face of this terrible food crisis.

"Britain will not sit back while children starve to death in the Sahel and the feeding centres I visited prove how our swift and early action is saving lives. Some very dedicated people are doing vital work to help those who are suffering through no fault of their own.

"Building on the work done in the last few months and the lessons learned from previous food and nutrition crises, I am confident that our intervention is extraordinarily effective.

"From what I have seen with my own eyes, the scale and urgency of the response from the British people is appropriate and means we are committing our full share.

"We are delighted that other donors have also stepped up their support but there is no room for complacency."

Britain is now helping a total of more than 1.6 million people at risk of hunger across the Sahel. More than 100,000 children at risk of starvation in these countries will receive immediate lifesaving treatment.

Support includes nutritional treatment, health, water and sanitation, animal feed and vaccinations to keep farmers livestock alive and seeds and tools for families to feed themselves next year.



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Today on New Scientist: 20 June 2012

Stealthy virus presents unique public health challenge

Coming up with ways to address the threat is difficult enough: explaining them to the public may be more difficult still

Plasmonic graphene controls rippling electrons

As if diamond-beating strength and high conductivity aren't enough, the wonder material has learned a new trick

Dairy farming in the Sahara - 7000 years ago

Milky residues on pottery shards found in the Libyan Sahara confirm that the first farmers there were cow herders not crop cultivators

Stealthy virus that robs years of life could be beaten

Most of us carry cytomegalovirus, a virus that ages our immune system and can cut four years off life - but the hunt for a vaccine is on

Infrared reveals lost Renaissance artistry

Science has come to the rescue of art with a new technique that reveals parts of Renaissance frescoes that past restorers just painted over

Human-powered helicopter breaks world record

Watch a pedalling pilot keep a helicopter in the air for 35 seconds

US and Israel developed Flame, says official

A report suggests the Flame malware was used as an advance spy in the US and Israeli cyberattacks on Iran

Andy Warhol's endangered species three decades on

In 1983 Andy Warhol produced Endangered Species, a series of prints in his iconic style. Here is a selection - and news of how the animals have fared since

Win tickets to ?ya Festival

We have a pair of tickets to give away for ?ya Festival in Oslo, Norway, where you can catch Bj?rk performing her Biophilia project. Here's your chance to win

Earthquake risk for carbon capture and storage schemes

Injecting carbon dioxide into underground repositories might trigger earthquakes that allow CO2 to leak back to the surface

What a way to go: prehistoric turtles died during sex

Pairs of 47-million-year-old turtles are the only vertebrates known to have been fossilised while mating

Special goggles reveal when babies see in 3D

Babies begin to see in three dimensions about four months after birth, regardless of their due date

The evidence for sea-level rises in North Carolina

North Carolina has passed a bill that tells its scientists to predict rising sea levels by assuming a linear rise. Are they right?

Rio+20 declaration talks fail almost before they begin

Even as ministers arrive for the Rio Earth Summit, the Brazilian hosts have called time on further talks to agree a declaration

Listen to the bowel cancer warnings

John Gilbey wonders why, after a lifetime of science, he ignored the mounting evidence of his own bowel cancer

Arresting creations of biodiversity

Whimsical and surreal works of art aim to explore interdependence in nature in the exhibition Nature's Toolbox, in Chicago

Pollen-coated sticky bullets track a gunman's DNA

A dusting of lily pollen mixed with titanium on a bullet casing can capture DNA and could help forensic teams identify a mystery gunman

Peak planet: Are we starting to consume less?

Some say humanity's ever-rising environmental impact is about to go into reverse. Fact or just fantasy, asks Fred Pearce

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Europe wants no lessons from Canada

As the G20 summit comes to a close in Los Cabos, Mexico, Prime Minister?

Here at Maclean's, we appreciate the written word. And we appreciate you, the reader. We are always looking for ways to create a better user experience for you and wanted to try out a new functionality that provides you with a reading experience in which the words and fonts take centre stage. We believe you'll appreciate the clean, white layout as your read our feature articles. But we don't want to force it on you and it's completely optional. Click "View in Clean Reading Mode" on any article if you want to try it out. Once there, you can click "Go back to regular view" at the top or bottom of the article to return to the regular layout.

As the G20 summit comes to a close in Los Cabos, Mexico, Prime Minister Stephen Harper is expected to announce on that his government has inched closer to China in trade talks, according to the CBC. The announcement probably involves support from the Obama administration on a deal to support Canada?s admission into the Trans-Pacific Partnership talks, a scoop the Globe and Mail?s Steven Chase and Bill Curry have learned from ?a Canadian official.?

The highlight of Monday in Los Cabos, however, was an answer from the president of the European Commission, Jos? Manuel Barroso, at a press conference. When the national bureau chief of Sun Media, Canadian journalist David Akin, asked why Canada should risk its financial good name to bail out European banks, Barroso blew up:

?Frankly, we are not coming here to receive lessons in terms of democracy and in terms of how to run an economy because the European Union has a model that we may be very proud of,??he said.

It wasn?t just Akin who reacted with surprised to Barroso?s snap answer.?The Guardian?s assistant editor, Michael White, was left wondering what on Earth, or rather, in Europe, was making Barroso proud:

?How much self-deluding error can you pack into a 50-word temper tantrum? It?s only a detail, but how hard must it have also been to choose a Canadian to pick on for your ?I?ve completely lost it? outburst?? wrote White, who added that he didn?t think Canada could be blamed for the problems of Greece or Barroso?s native Portugal.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

oodja: I want to see a show where Alton & Justin race from NY to California with a monkey @kmrobey @FoodNetwork @altonbrown @EatFellowHumans #star

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

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ECB's Kranjec says no need for Slovenian bank aid for now

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