Friday, May 31, 2013

Four dead after planes collide and crash near Phoenix

PHOENIX (AP) ? Authorities say two small planes collided and then crashed in the desert north of Phoenix on Friday, killing all four people aboard the two aircraft.

Phoenix and Daisy Mountain Fire Department officials said the collision and crash involved two single-engine planes with two people in each aircraft.

An initial report said three people were killed and two people were injured. Fire officials with the Peoria Fire Department and Daisy Mountain Fire Department later announced four people had died and there were no survivors.

Television news footage showed only charred wreckage left from one of the planes, while the other was fairly intact.

A Federal Aviation Administration spokesman says the National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA will investigate.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/arizona-fire-officials-planes-collide-4-dead-185152407.html

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Gene Therapy May Protect Against Flu

"Bhe ivfvba vf gb fcrrq hc gvzr, riraghnyyl ryvzvangvat vg." -- Nyrk Fpuher % Cnenyyry yvarf arire zrrg, hayrff lbh oraq bar be obgu bs gurz. % Cnegf gung cbfvgviryl pnaabg or nffrzoyrq va vzcebcre beqre jvyy or. % Crbcyr jub tb gb pbasreraprf ner gur barf jub fubhyqa'g. % Cuvybtlal erpncvghyngrf rebtral; rebtral erpncvghyngrf cuvybtlal. % "Cvpgher gur fha nf gur bevtva bs gjb vagrefrpgvat 6-qvzrafvbany ulcrecynarf sebz juvpu jr pna qrqhpr n pregnva genafsbezngvbany frdhrapr juvpu tvirf hf gur grezvany irybpvgl bs n ehoore qhpx ..." % Cvr ner abg fdhner. Cvr ner ebhaq. Pbeaoernq ner fdhner. % Cbylzre culfvpvfgf ner vagb punvaf. % Cbhaq sbe cbhaq, gur nzbron vf gur zbfg ivpvbhf navzny ba rnegu. % Cbjre pbeehcgf. Naq ngbzvp cbjre pbeehcgf ngbzvpnyyl. % Cebterff zrnaf ercynpvat n gurbel gung vf jebat jvgu bar zber fhogyl jebat. % Cebgbglcr qrfvtaf nyjnlf jbex. -- Qba Ibanqn % "Cebgbmbn ner fznyy, naq onpgrevn ner fznyy, ohg ivehfrf ner fznyyre guna gur obgu chg gbtrgure." % Dhnaghz Zrpunavpf vf n ybiryl vagebqhpgvba gb Uvyoreg Fcnprf! -- Bireurneq ng ynfg lrne'f Nepuvzrqrnaf' Tneqra Cnegl % Dhnaghz Zrpunavpf vf Tbq'f irefvba bs "Gehfg zr." % Dhnex! Dhnex! Orjner gur dhnaghz qhpx! % Enqvbnpgvir pngf unir 18 unys-yvirf. % Ernyvgl zhfg gnxr cerprqrapr bire choyvp eryngvbaf, sbe Zbgure Angher pnaabg or sbbyrq. -- E.C. Srlazna % Erzrzore Qnejva; ohvyqvat n orggre zbhfrgenc zreryl erfhygf va fznegre zvpr. % Erfrnepu vf gb frr jung rirelobql ryfr unf frra, naq guvax jung abobql ryfr unf gubhtug. % Erfrnepu vf jung V'z qbvat jura V qba'g xabj jung V'z qbvat. -- Jreaure iba Oenha % Ebhaq Ahzoref ner nyjnlf snyfr. -- Fnzhry Wbuafba % Fnyvin pnhfrf pnapre, ohg bayl vs fjnyybjrq va fznyy nzbhagf bire n ybat crevbq bs gvzr. -- Trbetr Pneyva % Fpvrapr naq eryvtvba ner va shyy nppbeq ohg fpvrapr naq snvgu ner va pbzcyrgr qvfpbeq. % Fpvrapr vf ohvyg hc bs snpgf, nf n ubhfr vf jvgu fgbarf. Ohg n pbyyrpgvba bs snpgf vf ab zber n fpvrapr guna n urnc bs fgbarf vf n ubhfr. -- Whyrf Uraev Cbvapne'r % Fpvrapr vf jung unccraf jura cerpbaprcgvba zrrgf irevsvpngvba. % Fpvrapr znl fbzrqnl qvfpbire jung snvgu unf nyjnlf xabja. % Fpvragvfgf ner crbcyr jub ohvyq gur Oebbxyla Oevqtr naq gura ohl vg. -- Jvyyvnz Ohpxyrl % Fragvrag cynfzbvqf ner n tnf. % Fvzcyvpvgl qbrf abg cerprqr pbzcyrkvgl, ohg sbyybjf vg. % Fbyhgvbaf ner boivbhf vs bar bayl unf gur bcgvpny cbjre gb bofreir gurz bire gur ubevmba. -- X.N. Nefqnyy % Fcnpr vf gb cynpr nf rgreavgl vf gb gvzr. -- Wbfrcu Wbhoreg % Fcnpr gryyf znggre ubj gb zbir naq znggre gryyf fcnpr ubj gb pheir. -- Jurryre % Fgngvfgvpf ner ab fhofgvghgr sbe whqtrzrag. -- Urael Pynl % Fgngvfgvpf zrnaf arire univat gb fnl lbh'er pregnva. % Fgryyne enlf cebir svoovat arire cnlf. Rzormmyrzrag vf nabgure znggre. % Fhccbeg onpgrevn -- vg'f gur bayl phygher fbzr crbcyr unir! % Gnxr na nfgebanhg gb ynhapu. % Grpuabybtvpny cebterff unf zreryl cebivqrq hf jvgu zber rssvpvrag zrnaf sbe tbvat onpxjneqf. -- Nyqbhf Uhkyrl % Grpuabybtl vf qbzvangrq ol gubfr jub znantr jung gurl qb abg haqrefgnaq. % Gur nvz bs fpvrapr vf gb frrx gur fvzcyrfg rkcynangvbaf bs pbzcyrk snpgf. Frrx fvzcyvpvgl naq qvfgehfg vg. -- Juvgrurnq. % Gur nzbhag bs gvzr orgjrra fyvccvat ba gur crry naq ynaqvat ba gur cnirzrag vf cerpvfryl 1 onanabfrpbaq. % Gur nzbhag bs jrvtug na rinatryvfg pneevrf jvgu gur nyzvtugl vf zrnfherq va ovyyvtenunzf. % Gur orfg qrsrafr ntnvafg ybtvp vf vtabenapr. % Gur ovttre gur gurbel gur orggre. % Gur ovttrfg qvssrerapr orgjrra gvzr naq fcnpr vf gung lbh pna'g erhfr gvzr. -- Zreevpx Shefg % Gur obzo jvyy arire tb bss. V fcrnx nf na rkcreg va rkcybfvirf. -- Nqzveny Jvyyvnz Yrnul, H.F. Ngbzvp Obzo Cebwrpg % Gur pynfu bs vqrnf vf gur fbhaq bs serrqbz. % Gur pyrnerfg jnl vagb gur Havirefr vf guebhtu n sberfg jvyqrearff. -- Wbua Zhve % Gur qrivy svaqf jbex sbe vqyr pvephvgf gb qb. % Gur qvssrerapr orgjrra ernyvgl naq haernyvgl vf gung ernyvgl unf fb yvggyr gb erpbzzraq vg. -- Nyyna Furezna % Gur qvssrerapr orgjrra fpvrapr naq gur shmml fhowrpgf vf gung fpvrapr erdhverf ernfbavat juvyr gubfr bgure fhowrpgf zreryl erdhver fpubynefuvc. -- Eboreg Urvayrva % Gur rnegu vf yvxr n gval tenva bs fnaq, bayl zhpu, zhpu urnivre. % Gur rpbabzl qrcraqf nobhg nf zhpu ba rpbabzvfgf nf gur jrngure qbrf ba jrngure sberpnfgref. -- Wrna-Cnhy Xnhssznaa % Gur rkcynangvba erdhvevat gur srjrfg nffhzcgvbaf vf gur zbfg yvxryl gb or pbeerpg. -- Jvyyvnz bs Bppnz % Gur sbyybjvat fgngrzrag vf abg gehr. Gur cerivbhf fgngrzrag vf gehr. % Gur Sbepr vf jung ubyqf rirelguvat gbtrgure. Vg unf vgf qnex fvqr, naq vg unf vgf yvtug fvqr. Vg'f fbeg bs yvxr pbfzvp qhpg gncr. % "Gur sbhe ohvyqvat oybpxf bs gur havirefr ner sver, jngre, teniry naq ivaly." -- Qnir Oneel % Gur shapgvba bs gur rkcreg vf abg gb or zber evtug guna bgure crbcyr, ohg gb or jebat sbe zber fbcuvfgvpngrq ernfbaf. -- Qe. Qnivq Ohgyre, Oevgvfu cfrcubybtvfg % Gur trarengvba bs enaqbz ahzoref vf gbb vzcbegnag gb or yrsg gb punapr. % Gur tbny bs fpvrapr vf gb ohvyq orggre zbhfrgencf. Gur tbny bs angher vf gb ohvyq orggre zvpr. % Gur ureq vafgvapg nzbat rpbabzvfgf znxrf furrc ybbx yvxr vaqrcraqrag guvaxref. % "Gur vqragvpny vf rdhny gb vgfrys, fvapr vg vf qvssrerag." -- Senapb Fcvfnav % Gur vafgehzragf bs fpvrapr qb abg va gurzfryirf qvfpbire gehgu. Naq gurer ner frnepuvatf gung ner abg pbapyhqrq ol gur pbvapvqrapr bs n cbvagre naq n znex. -- Serq Fnoreuntra, "Gur Orefrexre Jnef" % Gur xrl ryrzragf va uhzna guvaxvat ner abg ahzoref ohg ynoryf bs shmml frgf. -- Y. Mnqru % Gur yvtug bs n uhaqerq fgnef qbrf abg rdhny gur yvtug bs gur zbba. % Gur zneiryf bs gbqnl'f zbqrea grpuabybtl vapyhqr gur qrirybczrag bs n fbqn pna, jura qvfpneqrq jvyy ynfg sberire ... naq n $7,000 pne juvpu jura cebcreyl pnerq sbe jvyy ehfg bhg va gjb be guerr lrnef. % Gur zbba vf n cynarg whfg yvxr gur Rnegu, bayl vg vf rira qrnqre. % Gur zbba vf znqr bs terra purrfr. -- Wbua Urljbbq % Gur zbba znl or fznyyre guna Rnegu, ohg vg'f shegure njnl. % Gur zber gurl bire-guvax gur cyhzovat gur rnfvre vg vf gb fgbc hc gur qenva. % Gur zbfg rkpvgvat cuenfr gb urne va fpvrapr, gur bar gung urenyqf arj qvfpbirevrf, vf abg "Rherxn!" (V sbhaq vg!) ohg "Gung'f shaal ..." -- Vfnnp Nfvzbi % Gur angvba gung pbagebyf zntargvfz pbagebyf gur havirefr. -- Purfgre Tbhyq/Qvpx Genpl % Gur bayl shapgvba bs rpbabzvp sberpnfgvat vf gb znxr nfgebybtl ybbx erfcrpgnoyr. -- Wbua Xraargu Tnyoenvgu % Gur bayl cresrpg fpvrapr vf uvaq-fvtug. % Gur bayl crefba jub nyjnlf tbg uvf jbex qbar ol Sevqnl jnf Ebovafba Pehfbr. % Gur bayl cbffvoyr vagrecergngvba bs nal erfrnepu jungrire va gur `fbpvny fpvraprf' vf: fbzr qb, fbzr qba'g. -- Rearfg Ehguresbeq % Gur bccbfvgr bs n pbeerpg fgngrzrag vf n snyfr fgngrzrag. Ohg gur bccbfvgr bs n cebsbhaq gehgu znl jryy or nabgure cebsbhaq gehgu. -- Avryf Obue % Gur creirefvgl bs angher vf abjurer orggre qrzbafgengrq ol gur snpg gung, jura rkcbfrq gb gur fnzr ngzbfcurer, oernq orpbzrf uneq juvyr penpxref orpbzr fbsg. % Gur engr ng juvpu n qvfrnfr fcernqf guebhtu n pbea svryq vf n cerpvfr zrnfherzrag bs gur fcrrq bs oyvtug. % Gur ernfba gung rirel znwbe havirefvgl znvagnvaf n qrcnegzrag bs zngurzngvpf vf gung vg'f purncre guna vafgvghgvbanyvmvat nyy gubfr crbcyr. % Gur ehyr ba fgnlvat nyvir nf n sberpnfgre vf gb tvir 'rz n ahzore be tvir 'rz n qngr, ohg arire tvir 'rz obgu ng bapr. -- Wnar Oelnag Dhvaa % Gur Fuhggyr vf abj tbvat svir gvzrf gur fbhaq bs fcrrq. -- Qna Engure, svefg ynaqvat bs Pbyhzovn % Gur fbyhgvba bs ceboyrzf vf gur zbfg punenpgrevfgvp naq crphyvne fbeg bs ibyhagnel guvaxvat. -- Jvyyvnz Wnzrf % Gur fbyhgvba bs guvf ceboyrz vf gevivny naq vf yrsg nf na rkrepvfr sbe gur ernqre. % Gur fbyhgvba gb n ceboyrz punatrf gur angher bs gur ceboyrz. -- Crre % Gur fcrrq bs nalguvat qrcraqf ba gur sybj bs rirelguvat. % Gur fghql bs aba-yvarne culfvpf vf yvxr gur fghql bs aba-ryrcunag ovbybtl. % "Gur fhofcnpr _J vaurevgf gur bgure 8 cebcregvrf bs _I. Naq gurer nera'g rira nal cebcregl gnkrf." -- W. ZnpXnl, Zngurzngvpf 134o % Gur fhz bs gur Havirefr vf mreb. % Gur grfg bs vagryyvtrag gvaxrevat vf gb fnir nyy gur cnegf. -- Nyqb Yrbcbyq % Gur gerr bs erfrnepu zhfg sebz gvzr gb gvzr or erserfurq jvgu gur oybbq bs orna pbhagref. -- Nyna Xnl % Gur gehgu bs n cebcbfvgvba unf abguvat gb qb jvgu vgf perqvovyvgl. Naq ivpr irefn. % Gur gjb zbfg pbzzba guvatf va gur Havirefr ner ulqebtra naq fghcvqvgl. -- Uneyna Ryyvfba % Gur hasnpgf, qvq jr unir gurz, ner gbb vzcerpvfryl srj gb jneenag bhe pregvghqr. % Gur havirefr qbrf abg unir ynjf -- vg unf unovgf, naq unovgf pna or oebxra. % Gur havirefr vf nyy n fcva-bss bs gur Ovt Onat. % Gur havirefr vf na vfynaq, fheebhaqrq ol jungrire vg vf gung fheebhaqf havirefrf. % Gur havirefr vf yvxr n fnsr gb juvpu gurer vf n pbzovangvba -- ohg gur pbzovangvba vf ybpxrq hc va gur fnsr. -- Crgre QrIevrf % Gur Havirefr vf cbchyngrq ol fgnoyr guvatf. -- Evpuneq Qnjxvaf % Gur havirefr frrzf arvgure oravta abe ubfgvyr, zreryl vaqvssrerag. -- Fntna % Gur havirefr, gurl fnvq, qrcraqrq sbe vgf bcrengvba ba gur onynapr bs sbhe sbeprf juvpu gurl vqragvsvrq nf punez, crefhnfvba, hapregnvagl naq oybbql-zvaqrqarff. -- Greel Cengpurgg, "Gur Yvtug Snagnfgvp" % Gur Havirefvgl bs Pnyvsbeavn Fgngvfgvpf Qrcnegzrag; jurer zrna vf abezny, naq qrivngvba fgnaqneq. % Gur jbeyq vf zbivat fb snfg gurfr qnlf gung gur zna jub fnlf vg pna'g or qbar vf trarenyyl vagreehcgrq ol fbzrbar qbvat vg. -- R. Uhooneq % Gur Jevtug Obguref jrera'g gur svefg gb syl. Gurl jrer whfg gur svefg abg gb penfu. % Gurbel vf tenl, ohg gur tbyqra gerr bs yvsr vf terra. -- Tbrgur % Gurer *__vf* ab fhpu guvat nf n pvivy ratvarre. % Gurer ner ab qngn gung pnaabg or cybggrq ba n fgenvtug yvar vs gur nkvf ner pubfra pbeerpgyl. % "Gurer ner guerr cevapvcny jnlf gb ybfr zbarl: jvar, jbzra, naq ratvarref. Juvyr gur svefg gjb ner zber cyrnfnag, gur guveq vf ol sne gur zber pregnva." -- Oneba Ebgufpuvyq, pn. 1800 % Gurer ner gjb xvaqf bs fbyne-urng flfgrzf: "cnffvir" flfgrzf pbyyrpg gur fhayvtug gung uvgf lbhe ubzr, naq "npgvir" flfgrzf pbyyrpg gur fhayvtug gung uvgf lbhe arvtuobef' ubzrf, gbb. -- Qnir Oneel, "Cbfgcrgebyrhz Thmmyre" % Gurer pna or ab gjvfgrq gubhtug jvgubhg n gjvfgrq zbyrphyr. -- E. J. Treneq % Gurer vf ab yvxryvubbq zna pna rire gnc gur cbjre bs gur ngbz. -- Eboreg Zvyyvxna, Abory Cevmr va Culfvpf, 1923 % Gurer vf ab bcvavba fb nofheq gung fbzr cuvybfbcure jvyy abg rkcerff vg. -- Znephf Ghyyvhf Pvpreb, "Nq snzvyvnerf" % Gurer vf ab eblny ebnq gb trbzrgel. -- Rhpyvq % Gurer'f n jubyr JBEYQ va n zhq chqqyr! -- Qbht Pyvssbeq % Gurer'f ab shgher va gvzr geniry. % Gurer'f ab frafr va orvat cerpvfr jura lbh qba'g rira xabj jung lbh'er gnyxvat nobhg. -- Wbua iba Arhznaa % Guvatf rdhny gb abguvat ryfr ner rdhny gb rnpu bgure. % Guvf vf pyrneyl nabgure pnfr bs gbb znal znq fpvragvfgf, naq abg rabhtu uhapuonpxf. % Guvf vf gur gurbel gung Wnpx ohvyg. Guvf vf gur synj gung ynl va gur gurbel gung Wnpx ohvyg. Guvf vf gur cnycnoyr ireony unmr gung uvq gur synj gung ynl va... % Guvf cynpr whfg vfa'g ovt rabhtu sbe nyy bs hf. Jr'ir tbg gb svaq n jnl bss guvf cynarg. % Guvf havirefr fuvccrq ol jrvtug, abg ol ibyhzr. Fbzr rkcnafvba bs gur pbagragf znl unir bppheerq qhevat fuvczrag. % Gubfr jub pna, qb; gubfr jub pna'g, fvzhyngr. % Gubfr jub pna, qb; gubfr jub pna'g, jevgr. Gubfr jub pna'g jevgr jbex sbe gur Oryy Ynof Erpbeq. % ... gubhtu uvf vairagvba jbexrq fhcreoyl -- uvf gurbel jnf n pebpx bs frjntr sebz ortvaavat gb raq. -- Ireabe Ivatr, "Gur Crnpr Jne" % Guhf zngurzngvpf znl or qrsvarq nf gur fhowrpg va juvpu jr arire xabj jung jr ner gnyxvat nobhg, abe jurgure jung jr ner fnlvat vf gehr. -- Oregenaq Ehffryy % Gvzr vf na vyyhfvba crecrgengrq ol gur znahsnpgheref bs fcnpr. % Gvzr vf angher'f jnl bs znxvat fher gung rirelguvat qbrfa'g unccra ng bapr. Fcnpr vf angher'f jnl bs znxvat fher gung rirelguvat qbrfa'g unccra gb lbh. % Gb pbairefr ng gur qvfgnapr bs gur Vaqrf ol zrnaf bs flzcngurgvp pbagevinaprf znl or nf angheny gb shgher gvzrf nf gb hf vf n yvgrenel pbeerfcbaqrapr. -- Wbfrcu Tynaivyy, 1661 % Gb vairag, lbh arrq n tbbq vzntvangvba naq n cvyr bs whax. -- Gubznf Rqvfba % Gbqnl'f fpvragvsvp dhrfgvba vf: Jung va gur jbeyq vf ryrpgevpvgl? Naq jurer qbrf vg tb nsgre vg yrnirf gur gbnfgre? -- Qnir Oneel, "Jung vf Ryrpgevpvgl?" % Gbedhr vf purnc. % Gjb vf abg rdhny gb guerr, rira sbe ynetr inyhrf bs gjb. % Gjb creprag bs mreb vf nyzbfg abguvat. % Gjb jevtugf qba'g znxr n ebat, gurl znxr na nvecynar. Be ovplpyrf. % HSBf ner sbe erny: gur Nve Sbepr qbrfa'g rkvfg. % Haqrefgnaqvat vf nyjnlf gur haqrefgnaqvat bs n fznyyre ceboyrz va eryngvba gb n ovttre ceboyrz. -- C.Q. Bhfcrafxl % Hgvyvgl vf jura lbh unir bar gryrcubar, yhkhel vf jura lbh unir gjb, bchyrapr vf jura lbh unir guerr -- naq cnenqvfr vf jura lbh unir abar. -- Qbht Ynefba % Jr ner rnpu ragvgyrq gb bhe bja bcvavba, ohg ab bar vf ragvgyrq gb uvf bja snpgf. -- Cngevpx Zblavuna % Jr pna qrsrng tenivgl. Gur ceboyrz vf gur cncrejbex vaibyirq. % Jr pna cerqvpg rirelguvat, rkprcg gur shgher. % Jr pnaabg pbzznaq angher rkprcg ol borlvat ure. -- Fve Senapvf Onpba % "Jr qba'g pner. Jr qba'g unir gb. Jr'er gur Cubar Pbzcnal." % Jr qba'g xabj bar zvyyvbagu bs bar creprag nobhg nalguvat. % Jr qba'g xabj jub vg jnf gung qvfpbirerq jngre, ohg jr'er cerggl fher gung vg jnfa'g n svfu. -- Znefunyy ZpYhuna % Jr tnir lbh na ngbzvp obzo, jung qb lbh jnag, zreznvqf? -- V. V. Enov gb gur Ngbzvp Raretl Pbzzvffvba % Jr unir n rdhny bccbeghavgl Pnyphyhf pynff -- vg'f shyyl vagrtengrq. % Jr zhfg oryvrir gung vg vf gur qnexrfg orsber gur qnja bs n ornhgvshy arj jbeyq. Jr jvyy frr vg jura jr oryvrir vg. -- Fnhy Nyvafxl % Jr jnea gur ernqre va nqinapr gung gur cebbs cerfragrq urer qrcraqf ba n pyrire ohg uvtuyl hazbgvingrq gevpx. -- Ubjneq Nagba, "Ryrzragnel Yvarne Nytroen" % Jr jub eriry va angher'f qvirefvgl naq srry vafgehpgrq ol rirel navzny graq gb oenaq Ubzb fncvraf nf gur terngrfg pngnfgebcur fvapr gur Pergnprbhf rkgvapgvba. -- F.W. Tbhyq % Jr jvyy unir fbyne raretl nf fbba nf gur hgvyvgl pbzcnavrf fbyir bar grpuavpny ceboyrz -- ubj gb eha n fhaornz guebhtu n zrgre. % Jr'ir frag n zna gb gur zbba, naq gung'f 29,000 zvyrf njnl. Gur pragre bs gur Rnegu vf bayl 4,000 zvyrf njnl. Lbh pbhyq qevir gung va n jrrx, ohg sbe fbzr ernfba abobql'f rire qbar vg. -- Naql Ebbarl % Jreaure iba Oenha frggyrq sbe n I-2 jura ur pbhyqn unq n I-8. % "Jung V'ir qbar, bs pbhefr, vf gbgny tneontr." -- E. Jvyyneq, Cher Zngu 430n % Jung vf nytroen, rknpgyl? Vf vg bar bs gubfr guerr-pbearerq guvatf? -- W.Z. Oneevr % Jung vf zvaq? Ab znggre. Jung vf znggre? Arire zvaq. -- Gubznf Urjvgg Xrl, 1799-1875 % Jung vf abj cebirq jnf bapr bayl vzntva'q. -- Jvyyvnz Oynxr % Jung vf erfrnepu ohg n oyvaq qngr jvgu xabjyrqtr? -- Jvyy Uneirl % Jung vf jnagrq vf abg gur jvyy gb oryvrir, ohg gur jvyy gb svaq bhg, juvpu vf gur rknpg bccbfvgr. -- Oregenaq Ehffryy, "Fxrcgvpny Rffnlf", 1928 % Jung gur qrhpr vf vg gb zr? Lbh fnl gung jr tb nebhaq gur fha. Vs jr jrag nebhaq gur zbba vg jbhyq abg znxr n craaljbegu bs qvssrerapr gb zr be zl jbex. -- Fureybpx Ubyzrf, "N Fghql va Fpneyrg" % Jung gur fpvragvfgf unir va gurve oevrspnfrf vf greevslvat. -- Avxvgn Xuehfpuri % Jung gur jbeyq *ernyyl* arrqf vf n tbbq Nhgbzngvp Ovplpyr Funecrare. % Jura n zna fvgf jvgu n cerggl tvey sbe na ubhe, vg frrzf yvxr n zvahgr. Ohg yrg uvz fvg ba n ubg fgbir sbe n zvahgr -- naq vg'f ybatre guna nal ubhe. Gung'f eryngvivgl. -- Nyoreg Rvafgrva % Jura Nyrknaqre Tenunz Oryy qvrq va 1922, gur gryrcubar crbcyr vagreehcgrq freivpr sbe bar zvahgr va uvf ubabe. Gurl'ir orra ubabevat uvz vagrezvggragyl rire fvapr, V oryvrir. -- Gur Teno Ont % Jura fbzr crbcyr qvfpbire gur gehgu, gurl whfg pna'g haqrefgnaq jul rirelobql vfa'g rntre gb urne vg. % Jura fcrphyngvba unf qbar vgf jbefg, gjb cyhf gjb fgvyy rdhnyf sbhe. -- F. Wbuafba % "Jura gur tbvat trgf gbhtu, gur gbhtu trg rzcvevpny." -- Wba Pneebyy % Jura gur jrvtug bs gur cncrejbex rdhnyf gur jrvtug bs gur cynar, gur cynar jvyy syl. -- Qbanyq Qbhtynf % Jurer ner gur pnyphyngvbaf gung tb jvgu n pnyphyngrq evfx? % Jurer vg vf n qhgl gb jbefuvc gur fha vg vf cerggl fher gb or n pevzr gb rknzvar gur ynjf bs urng. -- Puevfgbcure Zbeyrl % Juvgr qjnes frrxf erq tvnag sbe ovanel eryngvbafuvc. % Jul qba'g lbh svk lbhe yvggyr ceboyrz... naq yvtug guvf pnaqyr? -- Nyna Furcureq, gur svefg zna vagb fcnpr, Trzvav cebtenz % Jvgu nyy gur snapl fpvragvfgf va gur jbeyq, jul pna'g gurl whfg bapr ohvyq n ahpyrne onyz? % Jvgubhg yvsr, Ovbybtl vgfrys jbhyq or vzcbffvoyr. % Ln'yy urne nobhg gur trbzrgre jub jrag gb gur ornpu gb pngpu fbzr enlf naq orpnzr n gnatrag ? % "Lrnu, ohg lbh'er gnxvat gur havirefr bhg bs pbagrkg." % Lbh pna abg trg nalguvat jbegujuvyr qbar jvgubhg envfvat n fjrng. -- Gur Svefg Ynj Bs Gurezbqlanzvpf % Jung rire lbh jnag vf tbvat gb pbfg n yvggyr zber guna vg vf jbegu. -- Gur Frpbaq Ynj Bs Gurezbqlanzvpf % Lbh pna abg jva gur tnzr, naq lbh ner abg nyybjrq gb fgbc cynlvat. -- Gur Guveq Ynj Bs Gurezbqlanzvpf % Lbh pna'g purng gur cubar pbzcnal. % Lbh pnaabg unir n fpvrapr jvgubhg zrnfherzrag. -- E. J. Unzzvat % Lbh xabj lbh'ir ynaqrq trne-hc jura vg gnxrf shyy cbjre gb gnkv. % Lbh zrna lbh qvqa'g *xabj* fur jnf bss znxvat ybgf bs yvggyr cubar pbzcnavrf? % Lbh fubhyq arire org ntnvafg nalguvat va fpvrapr ng bqqf bs zber guna nobhg 10^12 gb 1. -- Rearfg Ehguresbeq % Lbh jvyy arire nzbhag gb zhpu. -- Zhavpu Fpubbyznfgre, gb Nyoreg Rvafgrva, ntr 10 %

Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/z937ACm-5tA/story01.htm

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Winfrey to speak at Harvard commencement exercises

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) ? Media mogul Oprah Winfrey is the featured speaker during afternoon exercises at Harvard University's commencement.

Harvard's 362nd commencement begins Thursday morning with the annual conferring of degrees and honorary degrees. Winfrey and Harvard President Drew Faust will both address attendees during afternoon exercises, which serve as the annual meeting of the Harvard Alumni Association.

Faust calls Winfrey's rise to global prominence one of the great American success stories.

Winfrey's private foundation has awarded hundreds of grants to organizations that promote education and support women, and children and families worldwide.

Forbes listed Winfrey as the 11th most powerful woman in the world last year. She has a net worth of $2.7 billion.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/winfrey-speak-harvard-commencement-exercises-065644930.html

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

NVIDIA Shield handheld gaming console hits the FCC, ships by ...

NVIDIA?s Shield made a stop at the FCC this week on its way to store shelves. NVIDIA started taking pre-orders for its first handheld gaming console a few weeks ago, and it?s expected to ship to customers by the end of June.

While the FCC documents don?t tell us much we didn?t already know, there is one interesting detail.

NVIDIA Shield at the FCC

The label drawing refers to the game console by its code-name, ?Project Thor.? When NVIDIA CEO Jen Hsung Huang introduced the device during a speech at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, he accidentally referred to the device by that name at one point.

He then brushed it off, saying that it?s hard to remember which code-name goes with which project, and I wasn?t the only one who thought he?d accidentally let the name of a?different top-secret project slip. But apparently he didn?t. He just accidentally used the name people had been using behind the scenes instead of the new official name for the gaming device.

The NVIDIA Shield looks like an Xbox-style game controller with a 5 inch, 720p display attached to it. The device is powered by an NVIDIA Tegra 4 processor, supports HDMI output so you can play games on your TV, and also lets you stream PC games over a wireless network so that you can play games installed on a computer with an NVIDIA graphics card on a mobile device that you can carry around the house.

NVIDIA?s game console is up for pre-order for $349.

Source: http://liliputing.com/2013/05/nvidia-shield-handheld-gaming-console-hits-the-fcc-ships-by-june-30th.html

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Former Saab chairman to be questioned in Swedish tax inquiry

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Former Saab Chairman Victor Muller will be called in to answer questions related to a Swedish inquiry into alleged tax offences at the bankrupt carmaker, the country's Economic Crime Authority said on Tuesday.

Muller, chief executive of the Spyker sports-car group that bought Saab from General Motors in 2010, is not suspected of wrongdoing.

"The Gothenburg district attorney has confirmed that Mr Muller is not a suspect and may be invited for an interview after summer, possibly in October," Spyker said in a statement.

Prosecutors are looking into allegations that executives at Saab, which collapsed in 2011, obstructed proper tax checks over the years 2010 to 2011.

The period being examined was a turbulent time for the company, taking in its sale by General Motors and subsequent emergence of problems that led to its collapse.

Katinka Wall, a spokeswoman at the Swedish Economic Crime Authority, confirmed that Muller would be summoned as part of the wider investigation and that he is not being served as a suspect.

She declined to provide further details.

Swedish prosecutors last week questioned Saab's former Chief Executive Jan-Ake Jonsson and two other executives as part of its tax investigation.

(Reporting by Mia Shanley; Editing by David Goodman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/former-saab-chairman-questioned-swedish-tax-inquiry-163051527.html

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Google Apps Admins Finally Get An Android App To Manage Their Users, Services And Devices On The Go

google_admin_logoGoogle has continuously made its Google Apps Admin Console for IT professionals who manage large Google Apps for Business, Education and Government deployments in their companies more powerful. But one thing it never offered these administrators was a mobile app to manage at least a subset of the Admin console's features. Today, however, Google finally released its first official Android app that allows admins to perform many common tasks right on their phones and tablets.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/5wN2BhAhzgE/

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Report: Plans for Australia spy HQ hacked by China

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) ? Australian officials on Tuesday refused to confirm or deny whether Chinese hackers had stolen the blueprints of a new spy agency headquarters as a news report claims. A tiny party essential to the ruling coalition's government demanded an inquiry into how much damage may have been done.

Australian Broadcasting Corp. television reported on Monday night that the plans for the 630 million Australian dollar ($608 million) Australian Security Intelligence Organization building had been stolen through a cyberattack on a building contractor. Blueprints that included details such as communications cabling, server locations and security systems had been traced to a Chinese server, the network reported.

Des Ball, an Australian National University cybersecurity expert, said China could use the blueprints to bug the building, which is nearing completion in Canberra, the capital, after lengthy construction delays.

Ball told the ABC that given the breach, ASIO would either have to operate with "utmost sensitivity" within its own building or simply "rip the whole insides out and ... start again."

Attorney General Mark Dreyfus, the minister in charge of the spy agency, on Tuesday refused to confirm or deny the report, citing a longstanding government policy of declining to comment on security matters.

He later said the lakeside glass and concrete structure did not need to be redesigned, and that ASIO will move in this year.

"This building is a very secure, state-of-the-art facility," said Dreyfus, adding that the ABC report contained "unsubstantiated allegations."

"I'm not going to comment on operational matters involving the Australian Security Intelligence Organization or any security matters," he said.

Questioned about the alleged security breach in Parliament, Prime Minister Julia Gillard described the ABC report as "inaccurate" but refused to go into detail.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China opposed hacking in any form and questioned what evidence the ABC report relied on.

"Since it is technically untraceable, it is very difficult to find the source and identify the hacker," Hong said. "Therefore we have no idea what is the evidence for their report in which they make the claim with such certainty."

He said countries needed to cooperate to fight hacking. "Groundless accusations won't solve the problem," Hong said.

The minor Greens party, which the center-left Labor Party relies on to maintain its minority government, has demanded an inquiry into the future of the troubled building, which has been plagued by cost blowouts from an original budget of 460 million Australian dollars.

"It is time that we had an independent inquiry into the whole sorry history of the ASIO building and the extent to which the current hacking has compromised its capacity to ever be the building and serve the purpose for which it was intended," Greens leader Christine Milne told reporters.

She said no more money should be spent on the building until an inquiry was held into the truth of the hacking allegation and the extent of the alleged security compromise.

The alleged hacking would appear to be "an extremely serious breach" to Australia's intelligence-sharing allies, including the United States, Milne said.

Dreyfus didn't immediately respond to the Greens' call for an inquiry.

ASIO, Australia's main spy agency, has grown rapidly since the al-Qaida attacks on the United States on Sept. 11, 2001, and needs the new headquarters to house its growing staff that has trebled to almost 1,800 in a decade.

Tobias Feakin, a security analyst with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said that if a security breach has occurred, it could affect intelligence sharing with allies.

"There is no doubt that instances like this, if proved true, create a period of difficulty," Feakin said. "But one thing that would happen is that there would be mutual assistance provided to be able to plug that gap and no intelligence agency could possibly allow that kind of breach to continue."

Foreign Minister Bob Carr refused to discuss the allegations but said the claims do not jeopardize Australia's ties with its most important trading partner, China.

"It's got absolutely no implications for a strategic partnership," Carr said. "We have enormous areas of cooperation with China."

____

AP researcher Zhao Liang contributed to this report from Beijing

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/report-plans-australia-spy-hq-hacked-china-061636428.html

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Google Wallet in-app payment feature for Chrome's packaged apps revealed

Inapp payment feature for Chrome revealed

Bringing its Chrome packaged app family closer in line with the functionality of Android programs, Google's prepared a new Chrome Wallet App to offer in-program payments. If you're looking to try it out early (and you don't already know the drill), ensure you're running Google's Chrome Canary iteration and install the In-App Payments sample files found over at Github -- we've collected all the necessary links below.

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Comments

Source: Francois Beaufort (Google+), Chromium code review, Google Wallet Service (Chrome), In-app payments sample app (GitHub)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/28/google-wallet-in-app-payment-feature-chrome/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Dad banned, Tomic retires from 1st match at French

Australia's Bernard Tomic is treated for an injury in his first round match against Romania's Victor Hanescu at the French Open tennis tournament, at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Tomic retired later in the match. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Australia's Bernard Tomic is treated for an injury in his first round match against Romania's Victor Hanescu at the French Open tennis tournament, at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Tuesday, May 28, 2013. Tomic retired later in the match. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Australia's Bernard Tomic returns against Romania's Victor Hanescu during their first round match at the French Open tennis tournament, at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Tuesday, May 28, 2013. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Romania's Victor Hanescu returns against Australia's Bernard Tomic during their first round match at the French Open tennis tournament, at Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Tuesday, May 28, 2013. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Australia's Bernard Tomic returns the ball to Romania's Victor Hanescu during their first round match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium Tuesday, May 28, 2013 in Paris. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

(AP) ? Australian tennis player Bernard Tomic squeezed his upper left arm with his right hand, looked straight ahead and spoke in a level tone about his father, who is also his coach ? and was banned from attending the French Open because of a pending assault case.

"He's here right now in Paris, so, you know, he's still working with me, he's still my dad, he's still my coach," the 20-year-old Tomic said Tuesday. "And, you know, I love him a lot."

That was part of a 40-second opening statement Tomic delivered at his news conference after retiring from his first-round match at Roland Garros in the third set because of a torn right hamstring. Tomic's father, John, is due in a Spanish court in October, accused of head-butting Bernard's hitting partner in Madrid this month.

The ATP and International Tennis Federation both barred John Tomic from receiving credentials for tournaments. The French tennis federation announced Monday it had told the ATP, Bernard Tomic and his agent that the father would not be allowed onto the grounds of the clay-court Grand Slam tournament, even as a paying spectator.

"Nothing's changed between my dad and I," Bernard said. "It's still the same."

After the 61st-ranked Tomic stopped while trailing 7-5, 7-6 (8), 2-1 against Victor Hanescu of Romania, a reporter asked what it was like to not have a coach courtside Tuesday.

"It's a little bit different, but, you know, my dad's still my coach, and he'll always be, because, you know, I grew up with him and he knows me better than everyone else," Tomic said, while also noting he is considering adding another person to help work with them.

Tomic began playing tennis at age 7. In 2011, at only 18, he became the youngest quarterfinalist at Wimbledon since Boris Becker in the 1980s. Viewed as Australia's most promising player, he's taken a step back, though, making only one fourth-round appearance in the seven Grand Slam tournaments since.

And his nascent career has been marked by off-court issues. In November, he was fined and put on a 12-month good-behavior bond after twice being stopped by Australian police for driving offenses near his Gold Coast home.

"I showed that I can play, but this is the problem at a young age ? you're up and down," he said. "So I've got to just keep working hard, keep trying, because once I get there and get to where I want to be, then there's no stopping me."

A moderator began Tomic's postmatch news conference by saying: "Before we start, Bernard has a few things to say, and we won't be taking questions after his comments, other than on the match, OK?"

Tomic then began: "Hello, guys. I hope you're well. You know, I'd like to say some things before you guys ask me about them ? obviously involving my father."

He added: "Involving the incidents that happened, I don't want to talk about it a lot ? at all, if I should say. And it's a very difficult thing for me, you know, to put my words into that. If you can respect all I have to say about this, you know, I'm happy to talk about the match."

John Tomic had not been seen at the Roland Garros complex Tuesday, French federation spokesman Christophe Proust said.

"We've taken maximum precautions not to let him in," Proust said, adding that the younger Tomic "was playing on Court No. 6, which is a small court, so it's easy to see who's in the stands."

The hitting partner that John Tomic is accused of injuring, Thomas Drouet, is now working with French player Marion Bartoli, who won in the first round at the French Open on Tuesday.

"During training and during the match, he helped me a lot," Bartoli said.

After only three games against Hanescu, Bernard Tomic called for a trainer to work on his right leg. After getting his hamstring massaged, Tomic continued to play but was limping.

"It's very unlucky. I prepared very good to come play here, and the second point, I felt my leg sort of tear and didn't know what it was. It was very strange. I never felt this pain before," Tomic said.

When he headed to the locker room during a rain delay, a doctor told him the muscle was torn.

"Lucky it's not huge. It's not eight weeks, it's not six weeks; probably just a week or two. So I'm going to try as much as I can to recover" in time for Wimbledon, Tomic said.

Clearly, there is a lot on this college-age kid's mind at the moment.

By the end of his potentially awkward 10-minute session with reporters ? a son discussing his in-trouble father ? Tomic was making himself smile.

When he was asked whether he felt a bit lost without support Tuesday, he replied with a chuckle: "No, I just didn't feel my leg at all. That's all I didn't feel. So if I hadn't done what I did to my leg, maybe I would have thought about that. But considering that I couldn't feel my leg, that's all I was thinking about."

___

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

___

Associated Press Writer Trung Latieule contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-28-TEN-French-Open-Tomic/id-1f7ed4f366514c44a11fb1824d40ac88

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

IRS Blunder Gives Republicans Ammunition in Effort to Defund the Agency

The Internal Revenue Service?s admission that it inappropriately targeted conservative political groups for special scrutiny during the 2012 presidential election only gives congressional Republicans more ammunition as they try to defund and weaken the agency.

For the past few years, Republican lawmakers have sought to slash the?funding of the IRS. Reducing the agency?s budget makes it more difficult for it to collect taxes and audit individuals. (Score one for Republicans who dislike high taxes).

But, more importantly, the IRS is also one of the key agencies that will implement the Affordable Care Act. Much of the funding stream for the incoming health care law, arguably the president?s signature legislative achievement, comes from?two tax increases: a 3.8 percent hike on investment income for wealthy individuals, estates, and trusts, as well as an additional Medicare tax.

By stripping the IRS of money, the Republicans are indirectly trying to attack the roll-out of the health care law that begins in 2014.

Now, the news that rogue, low-level IRS agents in Ohio investigated conservative groups improperly just adds fuel to the Republicans? bashing. The agents investigated these organizations to see if they had miscast themselves as tax-exempt groups while actually doing political work. About 75 groups were targeted, according to the Associated Press.

An IRS official admitted that this was wrong and inappropriate at a Friday conference sponsored by the American Bar Association, in a speech that should reverberate throughout the political world for the next several days.

Quickly, inboxes in D.C. filled with statement after statement from Republican lawmakers, expressing outrage at the agency and calls for more accountability and investigations.??As several Senators and I wrote to the IRS last year, there can be no tolerance for the IRS being turned into a political weapon,? Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah said in a statement. ?The American people deserve to know who at the IRS learned about this unlawful activity, when they learned about it, and what they did, or did not, do when they did learned about it.?

The former Republican head of the Office of Management and Budget, Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, also chimed in: ?How were 'low-level workers in Cincinnati' able to initiate practices that completely undermine the IRS?s promise to treat all groups with an even hand?? he said in a statement. ?Even more, what were they hoping to do with the copious personal information they obtained from these groups??

The IRS Commissioner in 2012, Douglas Shulman, left the agency in November when his tenure ended. President Obama has not yet named a replacement.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irs-blunder-gives-republicans-ammunition-effort-defund-agency-120836516.html

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Dave Brubeck Tribute Held In New York City After Musician's Death

NEW YORK ? A celebration of Dave Brubeck's life and music turned into an ode to joy as family, friends and fans paid tribute to the groundbreaking pianist and composer who became the best known ambassador of jazz to the world.

Brubeck died Dec. 5, a day before his 92nd birthday, and a private funeral was held near his home in Wilton, Conn., shortly afterward. On Saturday afternoon, the only Brubeck family sponsored tribute took place before more than 2,000 people at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine featuring performances by Chick Corea, Branford Marsalis, Roy Hargrove, Roberta Gambarini, Hilary Kole and other jazz stars.

Former President Bill Clinton, in a statement read by Brubeck's longtime manager Russell Gloyd, recalled being "utterly captivated" at age 15 after hearing Brubeck's quartet in concert and then going home to play "Take Five" until his lips gave out. "I consider myself lucky to have known Dave and to have experienced his music in such a profound way," Clinton said.

Iola Brubeck, the pianist's wife of 70 years and lyricist, opened the tribute by acknowledging the hundreds of letters she had received from people throughout the word in the five months since her husband's death.

"I noticed that one word `joy' kept coming into those letters over and over," she said. "They expressed the deep joy his music had brought to their lives. I hope that this afternoon we can capture some of that joy."

Daughter Catherine Brubeck Yaghsizian shared warm memories of how her tired father would return home from a tour and relax by holding a jam session with his growing sons. She'd take part as a toddler by wriggling into a blue tutu her mother had given her and "twirling around trying to dance to the crazy time signatures."

Her dancing inspired her father to write "Kathy's Waltz," which ended up on his double-platinum 1959 album, "Time Out," which experimented with using odd time signatures in jazz. She then introduced her four musician brothers ? Darius (piano), Chris (electric bass), Dan (drums) and Michael (cello), who performed "Kathy's Waltz" and would appear in different configurations throughout the program.

Darius Brubeck recalled his father's 1958 State Department tour that he said "inspired a lasting interest in music from other cultures." Alto saxophonist Paul Winter and flutist Deepak Ram then performed Brubeck's "Koto Song" based on a Japanese scale, and later trumpeter Randy Brecker and saxophonist Paquito D'Rivera were the soloists on "The Golden Horn," which used a modal-like theme characteristic of Turkish music.

The most emotional moment came when bassist Eugene Wright, who turns 90 this month and is the last surviving member of the classic Brubeck quartet with alto saxophonist Paul Desmond and drummer Joe Morello ? took the stage. Host Mark Ruffin of Sirius XM recalled the dignity displayed by the African-American bassist as the Brubeck quartet challenged racial segregation in the 1950s.

Wright performed a duet with Darius Brubeck on "King For A Day," a song written by Dave and Iola Brubeck for Louis Armstrong for their 1962 musical "The Real Ambassadors," which dealt with allegations of hypocrisy for the State Department using jazz musicians as symbols of democracy while the civil rights struggle was raging at home. Brubeck and Wright performed that same tune during a performance at the 1988 Reagan-Gorbachev summit in Moscow, which U.S. diplomats credited with helping break the ice at a tense moment in arms control negotiations.

The audience was also treated to a sneak preview of a recently discovered tape of Tony Bennett and Brubeck performing the standard "There Will Never Be Another You" at a 1962 White House-sponsored concert that will be released on CD this month. Bennett told the audience that on those few occasions he performed with Brubeck, "it was always spontaneous, always unexpected and never to be forgotten."

Other musical highlights included husband-and-wife pianists Bill Charlap and Renee Rosnes doing a four-handed version of "The Duke," Brubeck's tribute to mentors Duke Ellington and French composer Darius Milhaud; saxophonist Marsalis tenderly performing the romantic ballad "For Iola"; and pianist Corea doing a solo version of "Strange Meadowlark," a lesser-known tune from the "Time Out" album that Corea recorded with Gary Burton on their Grammy-winning "Hot House" CD.

Newport Jazz Festival founder George Wein, whose ties with Brubeck go back to 1952 when he introduced the unknown West Coast band at his Boston jazz club, closed the tribute by noting that Brubeck "had respect for everyone" and thanked Iola Brubeck for giving her husband "the support, love and strength that every great man needs."

Starting in 1955, Brubeck ended up playing the Newport festival more than any other musician, and the celebration ended with trumpeter Jon Faddis and Chris Brubeck on trombone blowing up a storm on "Blues For Newport," a tune Brubeck composed backstage at the festival.

___

Online:

http://www.davebrubeck.com

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/12/dave-brubeck-tribute-death_n_3263416.html

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West Wing of White House Evacuated Due to Overheated Transformer (ABC News)

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UFC gives details on deals with Fox Sports 1, BT Sport in the UK and YouTube

Remember when the only way to watch the UFC was on pay-per-view? And even then, the preliminary fights were only available to the people in the arena? It wasn't that long ago. On Thursday, the UFC announced three deals that will give fans more ways to watch their fights.

-- Fox Sports 1 is going to launch in August, and the new station will devote plenty of airtime to the UFC. It will start with UFC on Fox 1 1, an event name that needs work. The program covering this show will run seven and a half hours, meaning that an entire UFC event will be on one channel.

-- That will just be the start of the UFC presence on this channel, that will be a rebrand of the Speed network. A live show is planned for August 28, and another live show leading into "The Ultimate Fighter" will run on Sept. 4, with TUF starting at 10 p.m. ET.

-- Cagereaders in the United Kingdom will start watching BT Sport, as the UFC agreed to a three-year deal with that station. Like with Fox Sports 1, it's a new station, and will air live events and programming specifically for the UK market. Let's all hope for a Michael Bisping reality series.

-- The UFC also announced a new channel on YouTube. The promotion will offer a pay-for subscription channel that will give fans the option to watch some of their best known fights, and shows like "UFC Unleashed" and "Best of PRIDE" for $5.99 a month.

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
? Filomena Tobias, fan who flipped off Joakim Noah, has crazy backstory
? Orioles flying up the MLB Power Rankings
? Iron man Ronde Barber retires after 16 seasons | Watch: Hall of Famer? | Photos
? Columbia football player charged with hate crime, hateful tweets revealed

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-gives-details-deals-fox-sports-1-bt-134953704.html

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Alt-week 5.11.13: drones, more drones and dual perspective advertising

Alt-week takes a look at the best science and alternative tech stories from the last seven days.

Altweek 51113 drones, more drones and dual perspective advertising

There was a time when young, engineering minds were content with putting together radio controlled vehicles for leisurely amusement. Now, they're using their clever brains to make UAVs fly longer and land anywhere. At least we know who to blame when robopocalypse finally rolls around. This is alt-week.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/11/alt-week-5-11-13-drones-more-drones/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Scientists demonstrate pear shaped atomic nuclei

May 9, 2013 ? Scientists at the University of Liverpool have shown that some atomic nuclei can assume the shape of a pear which contributes to our understanding of nuclear structure and the underlying fundamental interactions.

Most nuclei that exist naturally are not spherical but have the shape of a rugby ball. While state-of-the-art theories are able to predict this, the same theories have predicted that for some particular combinations of protons and neutrons, nuclei can also assume very asymmetric shapes, like a pear where there is more mass at one end of the nucleus than the other.

The experimental observation of nuclear pear shapes is important for understanding the theory of nuclear structure and for helping with experimental searches for electric dipole moments (EDM) in atoms.

The Standard Model of particle physics predicts that the value of the EDM is so small that it lies well below the current observational limit. However, many theories that try to refine this model predict EDMs that should be measurable. In order to test these theories the EDM searches have to be improved and the most sensitive method is to use exotic atoms whose nucleus is pear-shaped. Quantifying this shape will therefore help with experimental programmes searching for atomic EDMs.

Professor Peter Butler, from the University's Department of Physics who carried out the measurements, said: "Our findings contradict some nuclear theories and will help refine others. The measurements will also help direct the searches for atomic EDMs currently being carried out in North America and in Europe, where new techniques are being developed to exploit the special properties of radon and radium isotopes.

"Our expectation is that the data from our nuclear physics experiments can be combined with the results from atomic trapping experiments measuring EDMs to make the most stringent tests of the Standard Model, the best theory we have for understanding the nature of the building blocks of the universe."

Most nuclear isotopes predicted to have pear shapes have been out of reach of experimental techniques to measure them.

Now, at the ISOLDE facility at CERN, beams of very heavy, radioactive nuclei can be produced in high-energy proton collisions with a uranium carbide target. They are then selectively extracted using their chemical and physical properties before being accelerated to 8% of the speed of light and allowed to impinge on a target foil of isotopically pure nickel, cadmium or tin.

When this happens the relative motion of the heavy accelerated nucleus and the target nucleus creates an electromagnetic impulse that excites the nuclei. By studying the details of this excitation process it is possible to understand the nuclear shape.

This method has been used successfully to study the shape of short-lived isotopes 220Rn and 224Ra. The data show that while 224Ra is pear-shaped, 220Rn does not assume the fixed shape of a pear but rather vibrates about this shape.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/physics/~3/F9OQ5q1lXaw/130509104352.htm

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Senators defeat border security provision

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Bipartisan authors of a sweeping immigration bill agreed to Republican-authored amendments to boost border security, as they tried Thursday to show they're open to changes to attract more GOP support for their landmark legislation.

The bill's authors also stuck together to defeat a Republican amendment that would have barred anyone from seeking citizenship until the U.S.-Mexico border had been secured for six months. Supporters of the bill charged that the real effect of that provision would have been to delay citizenship indefinitely for the estimated 11 million people living here illegally.

The fast-paced action unfolded as the Judiciary Committee convened the first of what's expected to be two weeks of meetings to plow through some 300 amendments to legislation backed by President Barack Obama to remake the nation's immigration laws. The bill would toughen border security, overhaul legal immigration to allow tens of thousands of new high- and low-skilled workers into the country, require all employers to check their workers' immigration status and create a 13-year path to citizenship for the millions already here.

The debate and votes Thursday provided a window into the possibilities and challenges before the immigration bill as it faces an uncertain fate on the Senate floor in June and then in the GOP-controlled House. A handful of Republican senators appeared unwavering in opposition. In his opening comments, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, charged that the bill does little more than repeat mistakes of the past.

"It falls short of what I want to see in a strong immigration reform bill, so you will hear me say many times that we shouldn't make the same mistakes that we made in 1986," the last time Congress passed a major immigration overhaul bill, Grassley said. "You'll hear me say many times that we ought to move ahead with a bill that does it right this time."

Supporters of the bill countered that the legislation represents the country's best hope to change the immigration system and a chance to break through the partisanship that's riven Congress and the country. They pleaded with opponents and senators who might be wavering to give the bill a chance and try to improve it ? not just look to kill it.

"We have come up with a fair bill where no one gets everything they want, but at the end of the day, it will mean dramatic improvement for the American economy, the American people, and will make our immigration policy much more in sync with what is good for jobs and America," said Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., one of the bill's eight authors.

The hearing room where the senators met was packed with lobbyists and immigration activists, some of whom stood with their hands clasped in prayer before the proceedings began Thursday. Outside, relatives of people who've been deported gathered to call for fair restructuring.

The bill survived an early test as the committee voted 12-6 to defeat a Grassley amendment to require border security for six months before legalization programs could begin. Republicans Jeff Flake of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina voted with Democrats to bring it down. Flake and Graham are among the Republican authors of the bill.

"This amendment would set a standard that basically would delay, probably forever, any legalization, bringing people out of the shadows," said Schumer.

Grassley said the goal was to ensure real border security, something he charged the bill lacks.

"If we pass the bill as-is, there will be no pressure on this administration or future administrations to secure the border," he said.

But in a concession by Democrats, the committee agreed to a Grassley amendment to require that new border security standards in the bill ? calling for 90 percent of would-be crossers to be stopped or turned back ? must apply to the entire southern border, not just "high-risk" sectors with the most crossings as the bill now says. Schumer called it a positive change, and the committee agreed to it by voice vote.

The bill was written during months of private negotiations by eight senators equally divided between the two parties. Four of these lawmakers sit on the Judiciary Committee ? Schumer, Graham, Flake and Dick Durbin, D-Ill. ? and the focus was on them Thursday to see if they would stick together to defeat amendments from either side that could strike at the bill's central provisions, upending the fragile compromises at its core.

The vote on the Grassley amendment requiring six-month control of the border before unauthorized immigrants could begin to legalize their status was likely the first of several in which the Republican authors sided with committee Democrats to vote down amendments from their own side. Schumer and Durbin also are expected to lend their votes to the Republican side to defeat Democratic amendments that could improve the bill for immigrant families but cost Republican support.

Although the bill allows citizenship to go forward only after certain border security goals have been met, those "triggers" haven't proven convincing enough for many GOP lawmakers, and even one of the bill's authors, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., has said border measures need to be stronger. Although Rubio does not sit on the Judiciary Committee, he has pushed for some changes to be accepted, and the authors of the bill who do sit on the committee were going along with some of them Thursday.

The committee also agreed to Grassley amendments to require more auditing of money collected under the bill, and to an amendment by Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, to add certain forms of trafficking in persons to a the list of violent crimes that must be reported by the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program.

An amendment by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, to give Congress a bigger role in signing off on border security steps in the bill was defeated, again by a 12-6 vote with Flake and Graham joining the Democrats on the panel.

Democrats have the votes to ensure the bill passes the Judiciary Committee, but from its future is less clear, especially in the House. Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who's been cautious in his public comments on how to proceed on immigration, promised Thursday that the House would act.

"I just want to say this: the House is going to work its will on immigration reform," Boehner said at a news conference. "This is an issue that has been around far too long and needs to be dealt with. And I intend to see that it is dealt with."

__

Follow Erica Werner on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ericawerner.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/senators-defeat-border-security-provision-162928495.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Perfectly doped quantum dots yield 'colors to dye for'

May 10, 2013 ? Quantum dots are tiny nanocrystals with extraordinary optical and electrical properties with possible uses in dye production, bioimaging, and solar energy production. Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have developed a way to introduce precisely four copper ions into each and every quantum dot.

The introduction of these "guest" ions, called doping, opens up possibilities for fine-tuning the optical properties of the quantum dots and producing spectacular colors.

"When the crystallinity is perfect, the quantum dots do something that no one expected-they become very emissive and end up being the world's best dye," says Preston Snee, assistant professor of chemistry at UIC and principal investigator on the study.

The results are reported in the journal ACS Nano, available online in advance of print publication.

Incorporating guest ions into the crystal lattice can be very challenging, says UIC graduate student Ali Jawaid, first author of the paper.

Controlling the number of ions in each quantum dot is tricky. Merely targeting an average number of guest ions will not produce quantum dots with optimal electrical and optical properties.

Jawaid developed a procedure that reliably produces perfect quantum dots, each doped with exactly four copper ions. Snee believes the method will enable them to substitute other guest ions with the same consistent results.

"This opens up the opportunity to study a wide array of doped quantum dot systems," he said.

Donald Wink and Leah Page of UIC and Soma Chattopadhyay of Argonne National Laboratory also contributed to the study.

Support for the research came from UIC and the UIC Chancellor's Discovery Fund and the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund. The Materials Research Collaborative Access Team, a consortium for building and operating x-ray beamlines at Argonne's Advanced Photon Source, is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy and the MRCAT member institutions. The use of the Advanced Photon Source was supported by the DOE Office of Basic Energy Sciences under contract DE-QC02-06CH11357.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/J3_MgTdImmo/130510124556.htm

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Deal of the Day: LLOYD FX Case for Samsung Galaxy S3

Deal of the Day The May 10 ShopAndroid.com Deal of the Day is the LLOYD FX Case for Samsung Galaxy S3. Made from a shock absorbent and scratch resistant TPU, the LLOYD FX Case provides great protection for the Galaxy S3 from day to day use and drops. Flexible, easy to apply and remove, this affordable case features Android Central's LLOYD in front of a blue and white background.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/aYIeg6-i0Pc/story01.htm

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News Analysis: China Dips a Toe Into Mideast Diplomacy

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Back-to-back visits from the Palestinian and Israeli leaders hinted that China had given some thought to playing a more energetic, if very limited, role as mediator in the conflict. ? ? ? ? ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/09/world/asia/china-dips-a-toe-into-mideast-diplomacy.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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How Internet Explorer 10 was inspired by iPad users

Microsoft has been heavily promoting its touch-centric browser since the launch of Windows 8. Internet Explorer 10 features a "chrome-less" interface intended to remove browser distractions and keep the user focused on the content. It's also gesture enabled, enabling users to pan, zoom, and swipe between pages. To get the browser to this point, Microsoft had to discover what exactly consumers were looking for from a tablet browser. The answer lay with iPad users.

Why ?touch? first?

The goal behind making the browser touch-centric was to give it the same appeal and functionality of applications on tablets. "We did some research on consumer browsing and interaction," said Roger Capriotti, director of marketing at Microsoft, in a phone call with Ars Technica. His team had discovered that many users spend most of their time browsing and reading websites on the iPad through Safari rather than using an application that was available for a specific site.

"When folks read news sites on iPad, they're more likely, for example, to go the New York Times website in Safari than to download the [app] for iPad," explained Capriotti. "We realized that the tablet browsing experience is often left unstellar compared to the apps experience that you might have on these devices."

So Microsoft set its sights on creating a "touch-first" browser that could cater to tablet users. "When you look at the increasing popularity of tablets... speed is important, of course, but the most important feature for consumers isn't page load time but how quickly you can interact with it." Capriotti added that while elements like the speed of a browser are?important, many browser developers haven't taken the difference in interaction between a desktop version of a browser and a mobile version into consideration.

Microsoft's next step was to commission a few research reports to validate the theory that tablet browsing is what matters to users. Microsoft worked with Penn Schoen Berland to query iPad users on their current browsing experience. Of 1,500 surveyed iPad users, 80 percent admitted that they had problems browsing the Web on their iPad. "They talked about how they preferred to have a better browsing experience on their iPad than they currently had with Safari," added Capriotti.

Redmond then worked with the Mozaic Group to show the iPad users the touch-enabled Internet Explorer 10 on a Windows 8 tablet to gauge their interest. Many said they would be interested in trading in their iPad just for the Windows 8 tablet's browsing experience. "If you take an iPad user... and show them [Windows 8] browsing, they get super excited about things like full-screen... the fact that my website is front and center and I'm not sharing it with a bunch of tabs along the side," said Capriotti. He added that those users were also interested in the browser's multitasking capabilities, where they could bring up a webpage and an app side-by-side and perform common tasks simultaneously.

The last study had been conducted with Principled Technologies?and focused on performance, looking at common browser-based tasks like booking an airline ticket, sharing a website on Facebook, and shopping on an e-commerce site. "We were faster at doing those common tests?60 to 65 percent faster?than the iPad," said Capriotti, adding that much of that could be attributed to Internet Explorer's multitasking capabilities. "It was clear we needed to provide this solution to the Web that was above and beyond what was currently available."

Getting developers on board

To encourage this type of "touch-based" browsing, Microsoft created the "modern.IE" tool for developers to test their websites.?The free tool includes developer resources for building websites that work across browsers rather than just prioritizing Internet Explorer.?All developers have to do is plug in the URL of a site to retrieve results about how touch-compatible it is.

Microsoft has also submitted a standard to the W3C,?called?Pointer Events,?that would enable developers to write to one set of input mechanisms that would work cross-platform. W3C states it does the following:

To reduce the cost of coding to multiple input types and also to help with the above described ambiguity with Mouse Events, this specification defines a more abstract form of input, called a?pointer. A pointer can be any point of contact on the screen made by a mouse cursor, pen, touch (including multi-touch), or other pointing input device. This model makes it easy to write sites and applications that work well no matter what hardware the user has.

"The last thing you want to do if you're a developer is have to write a mobile site for iOS, a mobile site for Android, a mobile site for someone else, and then a desktop site," said?Capriotti. "If they write the common Web standards and they take advantage of something like Pointer Events, they can actually build a site that works across all of these devices." Right now, it's in the Last Call Working Draft status at the W3C.

Let?s not forget the robots

Microsoft's promotional video on how it built Internet Explorer 10.

In a promotional video, Microsoft illustrates how it employs a robotic probing tool called the PT3, a high-precision machine with sub-millimeter accuracy and a fake hand for drawing lines, tracing curves, and performing gestures?over and over again. The PT3 is part of the "Magic Fingers Robot," which is a fully automated system that runs these types of tests on a tablet device.

Currently, the touch-centric IE10 only works on Windows 8-capable devices and there are no plans to bring it to other platforms at this time. You can read more about how Microsoft worked on Internet Explorer 10 at its official blog.

Source: http://feeds.arstechnica.com/~r/arstechnica/microsoft/~3/mydQ2UsseoU/

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