Friday, May 31, 2013

Bomb and shooting kill 7 in Iraq

BAGHDAD (AP) ? A bomb exploded amid Sunni worshippers leaving a mosque in west Baghdad, one of two attacks Friday that left seven dead in Iraq, officials said.

Iraqi security forces are struggling to contain the country's most relentless round of violence since the 2011 U.S. military withdrawal. Over 30 Sunni mosques have been hit in the past two months and over 100 worshippers killed, in addition to attacks on Shiite neighborhoods, security forces, and other targets.

Police officials said the bomb left by the side of the road at the Omar mosque killed four people and wounded 11 others as they were walking away after Friday prayers.

Meanwhile, police said that two carloads of gunmen attacked a security checkpoint in the city of Fallujah early Friday policemen, killing three. Two other policemen were also wounded in the attack in Fallujah, a former al-Qaida stronghold 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad.

Health workers confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to media.

The surge of attacks has sparked fears that the country could spiral into a new round of widespread sectarian bloodshed similar to that which brought the country to the edge of civil war in 2006-2007. Tension stemming from months of protests against the Shiite-led government by Iraq's Sunni minority, many of whom feel they've been marginalized and unfairly treated since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, escalated sharply last month after a deadly crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest camp.

In a show of national unity, Shiite and Sunni worshippers held joint prayers Friday in a Shiite mosque in downtown Baghdad amid tight security measures.

Sunni cleric Khalid al-Mulla urged the government and the Iraqi people to stop the bloodshed by uniting against "the terrorists who want to kill our sons in the name of Islam."

Sunni militants, including al-Qaida, have long targeted Iraq's Shiite majority and government security forces. But the attacks on Sunnis mosques have raised the possibility that Shiite militias are also growing more active.

"The blood that is being shed is precious Iraqi blood ... so we should say 'Enough' to these killings," al-Mulla said. Worshippers chanted, "Shiites and Sunnis are brothers."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bomb-shooting-kill-7-iraq-122856148.html

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Water-rock reaction may provide enough hydrogen 'food' to sustain life in ocean's crust or on Mars

May 30, 2013 ? A chemical reaction between iron-containing minerals and water may produce enough hydrogen "food" to sustain microbial communities living in pores and cracks within the enormous volume of rock below the ocean floor and parts of the continents, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder.

The findings, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, also hint at the possibility that hydrogen-dependent life could have existed where iron-rich igneous rocks on Mars were once in contact with water.

Scientists have thoroughly investigated how rock-water reactions can produce hydrogen in places where the temperatures are far too hot for living things to survive, such as in the rocks that underlie hydrothermal vent systems on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. The hydrogen gases produced in those rocks do eventually feed microbial life, but the communities are located only in small, cooler oases where the vent fluids mix with seawater.

The new study, led by CU-Boulder Research Associate Lisa Mayhew, set out to investigate whether hydrogen-producing reactions also could take place in the much more abundant rocks that are infiltrated with water at temperatures cool enough for life to survive.

"Water-rock reactions that produce hydrogen gas are thought to have been one of the earliest sources of energy for life on Earth," said Mayhew, who worked on the study as a doctoral student in CU-Boulder Associate Professor Alexis Templeton's lab in the Department of Geological Sciences.

"However, we know very little about the possibility that hydrogen will be produced from these reactions when the temperatures are low enough that life can survive. If these reactions could make enough hydrogen at these low temperatures, then microorganisms might be able to live in the rocks where this reaction occurs, which could potentially be a huge subsurface microbial habitat for hydrogen-utilizing life."

When igneous rocks, which form when magma slowly cools deep within Earth, are infiltrated by ocean water, some of the minerals release unstable atoms of iron into the water. At high temperatures -- warmer than 392 degrees Fahrenheit (200 degrees Celsius) -- scientists know that the unstable atoms, known as reduced iron, can rapidly split water molecules and produce hydrogen gas, as well as new minerals containing iron in the more stable, oxidized form.

Mayhew and her co-authors, including Templeton, submerged rocks in water in the absence of oxygen to determine if a similar reaction would take place at much lower temperatures, between 122 and 212 degrees Fahrenheit (50 to 100 degrees Celsius). The researchers found that the rocks did create hydrogen -- potentially enough hydrogen to support life.

To understand in more detail the chemical reactions that produced the hydrogen in the lab experiments, the researchers used "synchrotron radiation" -- which is created by electrons orbiting in a humanmade storage ring -- to determine the type and location of iron in the rocks on a microscale.

The researchers expected to find that the reduced iron in minerals like olivine had converted to the more stable oxidized state, just as occurs at higher temperatures. But when they conducted their analyses at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource at Stanford University, they were surprised to find newly formed oxidized iron on "spinel" minerals found in the rocks. Spinels are minerals with a cubic structure that are highly conductive.

Finding oxidized iron on the spinels led the team to hypothesize that, at low temperatures, the conductive spinels were helping facilitate the exchange of electrons between reduced iron and water, a process that is necessary for the iron to split the water molecules and create the hydrogen gas.

"After observing the formation of oxidized iron on spinels, we realized there was a strong correlation between the amount of hydrogen produced and the volume percent of spinel phases in the reaction materials," Mayhew said. "Generally, the more spinels, the more hydrogen."

Not only is there a potentially large volume of rock on Earth that may undergo these low temperature reactions, but the same types of rocks also are prevalent on Mars, Mayhew said. Minerals that form as a result of the water-rock reactions on Earth have been detected on Mars as well, which means that the process described in the new study may have implications for potential Martian microbial habitats.

Mayhew and Templeton are already building on this study with their co-authors, including Thomas McCollom at CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, to see if the hydrogen-producing reactions can actually sustain microbes in the lab.

This study was funded by the David and Lucille Packard Foundation and with a U.S. Department of Energy Early Career grant to Templeton.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/P_rYgzb5klo/130530132541.htm

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Olloclip companion app for iPhone review: Control the distortion effects created by your Olloclip 3-in-One lens system

Olloclip companion app for iPhone review: Control the distortion effects created by your Olloclip 3-in-One lens system

If you're the owner of an Olloclip 3-in-One lens system, the awesome photography accessory that converts your iPhone's camera lens into a macro, wide angle, or fisheye, then the Olloclip companion app is a great choice for taking photos when using the Olloclip. It includes a mesh editor that lets you adjust the distortion effects created by olloclip as well as some other useful tools.

When taking a photo with the Olloclip app, you can choose to separate the exposure and focus, a feature that is becoming quite popular in camera apps. There are also three different modes: Video, Normal, and Macro. In the Macro mode, you can trigger a loupe that zooms in even more so you can make sure you get your focus just right.

After you've taken a photo (or opened one that's saved in your Photo Library), you can head into the Mesh Editor tool to adjust distortion and curvature. Although it's not the most interesting of photos, the screenshots above show how this tool can help correct distortion created when using the wide-angle lens. And if you're interested in emphasizing the curvature and distortion, you can do that too.

The good

  • Great companion to the Olloclip 3-in-One lens system
  • Mesh Editor tool lets you adjust distortion
  • Video mode
  • Macro mode include loupe to perfect focus
  • Split exposure and focus into two separate reticles
  • Access photos from photo library

The bad

  • I'm not a fan of red on black/dark, especially in the settings screen

The bottom line

If you have an Olloclip 3-in-One lens system, there's no reason you shouldn't pick this one up. It's the perfect companion to an awesome accessory.

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/qgF9ILPSPWQ/story01.htm

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House Republicans assail Eric Holder on leak testimony

By Lawrence Hurley

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two Republican lawmakers asked U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder on Wednesday to clarify testimony he gave Congress this month about his role in the targeting of journalists in a leak probe.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte of Virginia and colleague James Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin sent a letter to Holder saying recent media reports "appear to be at odds with your sworn testimony."

At the May 15 hearing, Holder said he had never been involved in any decision to pursue a criminal investigation of a journalist and said it would not be "wise policy" to do so.

Last week, news outlets reported that Holder had approved a decision to seek a search warrant for Fox News email records as part of a leak investigation. Reuters later reported Holder signed off on a subpoena for telephone records as well.

The Fox News reporter involved, James Rosen, was described as a "co-conspirator" by investigators, but was not charged.

The House Republicans asked Holder for a "full and accurate account of your involvement in and approval of these search warrants."

Rosen reported in 2009 that U.S. intelligence officials believed North Korea would conduct more nuclear tests in response to U.N. sanctions. Stephen Kim, a former State Department analyst suspected of being Rosen's source, faces trial on charges he violated an anti-espionage law.

The Republicans' letter asks Holder to give a detailed account of his role and to respond to eight questions, including whether the Justice Department ever intended to prosecute Rosen.

A Justice spokesman was not available for comment.

U.S. Representative John Conyers, the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said in a statement that Holder had been "forthright and did not mislead the committee."

(Editing by Howard Goller and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/house-republicans-assail-eric-holder-leak-testimony-173927307.html

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Wardrobe surgery: upcycled clothing in London's Hackney

When they were teenagers in the late nineties, Kerry Seager and Annika Sanders wanted clothes that would make them look unique, but they didn?t have any money so they started remaking old clothes into new styles.?

Today, their Junky Stylings?line has been labeled "high fashion street couture" by Vogue and has been worn by celebrities like Gwen Stefani, Kate Moss, Sadie Frost and Sienna Miller.

Partly responsible for bringing attention to the current movement for upcyling, or refashioning, clothing, Seager and Sanders also perform wardrobe surgery for clients who bring in old clothing they want to make new again. They upcycled one of Colin Firth?s moth-eaten suits for his wife Livia to wear at the ?King?s Speech? premiere in Paris.

Wanting to help others re-make old clothes new again, Sanders and Seager are eager to give away their secrets. In their book Junky Styling: Wardrobe Surgery, they not only document their personal journey, but they offer a how to section full of details so readers can make some of their trademark designs, like a suit-sleeve scarf or a "shirt wrap halter top".?

In a very open-source spirit, they have published patterns in The Guardian. With the step-by-step instructions for their popular "fly top", they show you in six steps- with just trousers?, T-shirt, scissors?, pins? and needle and thread- how to "turn any pair of trousers into a fitted top with a wide structured neckline and a zip detail".

We visited their shop in London?s Hackney district to see an operation in process.

Source: http://www.faircompanies.com/videos/view/operation-wardrobe-upcycled-clothing-in-londons-hackney/

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Assad says Syria has received Russian missile shipment: report

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syria has already received the first shipment of an advanced Russian air defense system and will soon get the rest of the S-300 missiles, President Bashar al-Assad was quoted as saying on Thursday.

"Syria has received the first shipment of Russian anti-aircraft S-300 rockets," Lebanese newspaper al-Akhbar newspaper quoted Assad as saying in an interview due to be broadcast later in the day. "The rest of the shipment will arrive soon."

An interview with Assad will be released on Al Manar, a television station linked to Assad's ally, the Shi'ite Muslim militant group Hezbollah.

Russia has said it would deliver the missile system to the Syrian government over Western objections, saying the move would help stabilize the regional balance.

The United States, France and Israel have all called on Russia to stop the delivery.

Moscow, ally of Assad's government, appeared to grow more defiant after the European Union let its arms embargo on Syria expire earlier this week, opening up the possibility of arming the rebels battling to topple the president.

More than 80,000 people have died in Syria since peaceful protests against four decades of Assad family rule led to a civil war that has pitted the president's forces and his ally, Hezbollah, against Syrian rebels and a flow of Sunni Islamist militants who have come to help them from abroad.

Moscow says the lapsing of the EU embargo complicates U.S. and Russian-led efforts to set up a peace conference between the Syrian government and its opponents, who want an immediate end to four decades of Assad family rule.

The Syrian leader said he planned to go to the "Geneva 2" conference, al-Akhbar reported, though he was unconvinced of a fruitful outcome and said he would continue to fight militants seeking his ouster.

Officials in Israel, the United States's main ally in the region, say the S-300 could reach deep into the Jewish state and threaten flights over its main commercial airport near Tel Aviv.

Al-Akhbar said Assad also stressed ties between his forces and Hezbollah militants now openly fighting on the Syrian side of the Lebanese-Syrian frontier.

"Syria and Hezbollah are part of the same axis," al-Akhbar quoted him as telling al-Manar "The Syrian army is the one fighting and leading the battles against the armed group, and this fight will continue until all those who are called terrorists are eliminated."

(Editing by John Stonestreet)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/assad-says-syria-received-russian-missile-shipment-lebanese-062304204.html

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Solar Industry Anxious Over Defective Panels

[unable to retrieve full-text content]When defects are discovered, confidentiality agreements keep the manufacturer?s identity secret, making accountability difficult.
    


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/29/business/energy-environment/solar-powers-dark-side.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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UFC 160?s Three Stars: T.J. Grant, Junior dos Santos, Glover Teixeira and some boxer

UFC 160 was one of the year's best cards. Who stood out among even these great fights?

No. 1 star -- T.J. Grant: All he needed to do to earn a title shot was perform impressively at UFC 160. However, this is no small feat when you consider he was up against Gray Maynard. Grant came through by wrecking Maynard in the first round and earning a $50,000 Knockout of the Night bonus.

No. 2 star -- Junior dos Santos: He threw everything his hands could offer at Mark Hunt, but Hunt somehow withstood them. JDS was winning, but he wasn't content to just take the decision. Instead, he involved his legs and gave us a third-round knockout kick of Hunt to remember. He also pocketed an extra $50,000 as he and Hunt won Fight of the Night honors.

No. 3 star -- Glover Teixeira: He extended his winning streak to 19 by running through James Te Huna like a tractor-trailer. Teixeira owned every second of the short fight, right up until he submitted him with a guillotine halfway through the first round. Like the other stars, he also walked away with $50,000 extra, earning a bonus for Submission of the Night.

Honorable mention -- Mike Tyson: The boxing legend played a big part at UFC 160. He cheered on a weigh-in scuffle, congratulated Teixeira in the cage after his big win, plus helped UFC president Dana White decide to give the Knockout of the Night bonus to T.J. Grant.

Who stood out for you? Speak up on Facebook or Twitter.

Related coverage on Yahoo! Sports:
? How Mike Tyson helped T.J. Grant become $50K richer at UFC 160
? Fan thwarts carjacker after watching UFC 160
? UFC president Dana White Wants B.J. Penn to retire

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-160-three-stars-t-j-grant-junior-133512838.html

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Engadget HD Podcast 351 - 05.28.13

Engadget HD Podcast 347 - 04.30.13

It was a holiday weekend, but news takes no vacations, and so the HD Podcast soldiered on. Aside from following up on the Xbox One, Ben recalls his time in the import racing scene, while Richard analyzes the totally believable fake physics in Tokyo Drift. All that and the top HD stories from the past week are ready for your listening pleasure below.

Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh (@bjdraw), Richard Lawler (@rjcc)

Producer: Joe Pollicino (@akaTRENT)

Hear the podcast

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/Vg0NNshpfM8/

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'Spellbound' star reflects on a Spelling Bee life

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Of the 85 kids who have won the National Spelling Bee, only one became an instant movie star.

For the millions who watched back in 1999, her face is frozen in time. She'll always be the 14-year-old girl from Tampa, Fla., with the glasses and dark shoulder-length hair, her arms raised while leaping for joy.

But that was a half-life ago for Nupur Lala. Like all bee winners, she's since had to deal with the perks, drawbacks and stereotypes that come with the title ? all magnified because she won the same year the competition was featured in an Oscar-nominated documentary.

She became a role model for those who realized it's OK to be nerdy. She became a trend-setter, starting a run in which 10 of 14 national bee winners have been Indian-American, including the last five.

Today, she's 28 and finishing up a master's degree in cancer biology with plans to enroll in the University of Texas Medical School in Houston, having changed course from a career plan that had her researching memory and the brain for three years at MIT. She now aspires to be a physician scientist.

"My intellectual inspirations are so meandering. I blame that on the Spelling Bee sometimes," Lala said with a laugh. "There are so many interesting things in the dictionary to study."

Lala will be watching this week when the 86th Scripps National Spelling Bee takes place near the nation's capital ? her friends tease that her life "shuts down" during the bee ? but she'll see a spectacle that's changed much since she graced the stage. The finals are now broadcast in prime time. A vocabulary test is being added this year for the first time. And the bee's popularity has skyrocketed, in part because of Lala and the other spellers featured in the documentary "Spellbound," a film that made smart people cool long before "The Big Bang Theory."

"I'm amazed at the sea change," Lala said in a telephone interview. "Because when I was a speller, that was one thing you totally hid. I remember like not even wanting to tell people what I was doing over the weekend when I was competing in the regional spelling bee. It was that big of a liability. And now I see that, yeah, people want to be nerds. I think that's great."

Lala is the first to say that winning the national bee has been an overwhelming positive in her life, even if does get tiresome to have people repeatedly asking her to spell her winning word ? "logorrhea" ? or to realize that her reputation can unfairly put her on a pedestal in an academic setting.

"I've had people say 'I expect more of you because I've seen what you are capable of,'" Lala said. "And that's a huge honor ? and also very daunting."

Then there's another set of emotions she feels every year when her name is mentioned by the Indian-Americans youngsters who now dominate the national bee. All of the recent winners, to some degree, have cited Lala as an inspiration.

"It's absolutely overwhelming," she said. "And I think especially as I've grown older and seeing how much I've wanted to emulate people in my life. Yeah, it's very humbling every time I hear that. It feels like a lot of responsibility, to be perfectly honest. You become very conscious of that."

There have also been a disproportionate number of recent winners interested in the brain and medicine, including several who said they wanted to grow up to be neurosurgeons. Lala pursued an undergraduate degree in brain, behavior and cognitive sciences at the University of Michigan, in part because of her experiences from the bee.

"Why do I remember certain words and not others? Why isn't my memory so good for everything else?" she said. "That question sort of drew me into research."

At least much of the terminology was familiar. After studying all those big words for the bee, a standard vocabulary test is a breeze.

"I remember taking the GRE years ago," she said, "and how I had such an edge over other competitors because I basically studied the vocabulary component for the Spelling Bee."

National Spelling Bee champions are a small and tight-knit group ? Lala keeps tabs with many of her fellow winners ? and she marvels that she had the nerve to pull off her win all those years ago. She turned down a chance to be featured on an MTV reality show that wanted to follow her through college; she wasn't comfortable with the idea and didn't feel she was crazy enough to be interesting.

Besides, there is life beyond the bee ? and the public perception of what a bee winner should be ? and that's where Lala prefers to keep her focus, at least during the 51 weeks a year when she's not glued to the television to see another successor crowned. Like Lala, this week's champion will have a winning moment etched in America's collective conscious and immortalized on the Internet, lasting long after he or she has grown up to pursue an impressive degree or career.

"It's something that you fight quite a bit," Lala said. "Especially now that I feel like I'm on a career path, it's becoming a little bit easier. ... People always thought of me as this nerdy, excitable, just-an-awkward kid. Now they can see me as somebody beyond that, I hope."

___

Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spellbound-star-reflects-spelling-bee-life-131213228.html

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

World markets mixed after Japan market dip

AMSTERDAM (AP) ? With U.S. markets closed, world stocks ended Monday mostly higher ? with Japan the notable exception as the Nikkei sold off sharply for the second time in a week.

The decline came after Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Karoda said over the weekend Japanese interest rates could rise without causing instability, despite the country's large national debt.

The Nikkei 225 shed 3.2 percent to close at 14,142.65, with exporters hit hardest due to the rising yen. That's the reverse of the picture for most of this year, as yen losses have helped propel the index to a 36 percent gain since January.

Among major losers Monday, Nissan Motor Corp. dropped 6.8 percent. Yamaha Motor Co. tumbled 7.9 percent. Sony Corp. slid 6.3 percent.

The index also lost 7.3 percent on May 23, as investors have begun to wonder whether potential benefits of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's aggressive campaign to lift consumer prices and encourage borrowing and spending have already been priced in.

In European trading, Germany's DAX rose 0.9 percent to 8,381.30. France's CAC-40 advanced 0.9 percent to 3,994.25. Markets in Britain and the U.S. were closed for public holidays.

European Central Bank board member Joerg Asmussen said in a speech in Berlin that with the Eurozone countries in recession, the bank would continue to pursue easy monetary policy "as long as necessary."

Cees Smit, director at Amsterdam brokerage Today's Vermogensbeheer in Amsterdam, said most of the excitement in European stocks came in the morning.

"We were looking at Japan earlier and it was surprising how well European markets were reacting," he said.

He said trade had quieted by the afternoon and stocks drifted off their earlier highs as investors began contemplating U.S. May unemployment figures due out Tuesday.

Other global markets were mixed.

Hopes for a global economic recovery were undermined last week when a survey on China's monthly manufacturing pace showed a bigger-than-expected decline. Less-than-clear indications from the U.S. Federal Reserve on whether it might scale back its aggressive bond-buying program, dubbed quantitative easing or QE, also caused investors to curb their enthusiasm.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index reversed early losses Monday to rise 0.3 percent to 22,686.05 after pledges by China's leaders to pursue sustainable growth helped push up alternative energy stocks. China Everbright International jumped 5 percent. Anton Oilfield Services, which is pursuing shale gas development in China, surged 8.3 percent.

"We have seen a lot of funds buying into shale gas, wind power and environmental protection," said Jackson Wong, vice president at Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong. Wong also said that a recovery in mainland Chinese stocks helped the Hang Seng.

South Korea's Kospi gained 0.3 percent to 1,979.97. Benchmarks in mainland China and Taiwan rose. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.5 percent to 4,959.90. Benchmarks in the Philippines, New Zealand and Indonesia fell.

Benchmark oil for July delivery was down 55 cents to $93.60 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 10 cents to $94.15 a barrel on the Nymex on Friday.

In currencies, the euro dropped slightly to $1.29324 from $1.2934 late Friday in New York. The dollar was at 101.09 yen, down from last week's high of more than 103 yen per dollar.

___

AP Business Writer Pamela Sampson contributed to this story from Bangkok

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/world-markets-mixed-japan-market-dip-143116240.html

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Century High students create FAME Night celebrating senior art and ...

Century High School senior Madeline Watkins stood in front of her classmates, holding up a poster of a clinched fist behind red-orange flames, the words "Catching Fire" across the top.

The expression wasn't borrowed from a novel in the Hunger Games saga. Seniors in Century's Fine Arts and Media Entertainment class (FAME) chose the title for their senior art showcase tonight because it represents the desire they have to pursue their artistic passions after they graduate in June.

FAME Night, a compilation of senior projects ranging from visual arts to theater, music and media, is planned entirely by students, the final piece of the senior portfolio required of all seniors in public high schools in Oregon. These portfolios are created in a focused program or senior seminar.

Century students have a variety of seminars they can choose from, depending on their career interests: health services, business and marketing, culinary arts and hospitality, early childhood education, human resources, technology or FAME, a program that combines humanities with an artistic focus.

If you go

What: FAME Night senior art showcase ?

When: Public reception begins at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, May 29

Where: Century High School, 2000 S.E. Century Blvd. ?

Info: The event is free and open to the public. FAME Night is produced by Century seniors in the Fine Arts and Media Entertainment senior seminar class.


Watkins, along with 60 other seniors, chose FAME because she believes art will play a role in her future career -- right now, she wants to be an art teacher or art-based therapist. She can't remember a time when she didn't love to draw. With the exception of economics, all the classes she's taking this semester are art related.

The workload for FAME hasn't been easy, according to Watkins, who helped design the FAME Night poster and also completed a series of paintings inspired by dancers in movement for her portfolio.

"With homework for some classes you know the answers are right or wrong," Watkins said. "It's not the same for art. With art, it's up to me when it's completed. When I create something, it's important that I'm inspired. I'd rather stay up the night before and be inspired than do it over a week without any inspiration."

Chaz Stobbs, 17, who specializes in 2-dimensional art, was in charge of creating banners and wooden flats for the FAME Night.

He said he has always been determined to go to art school and will begin classes at the Pacific Northwest College of Art in the fall. His dream is to make books and magazines, maybe even doing graphic design work for bands.

"I tend to stay as far away from normal as possible, not on purpose, though," Stobbs said. "I like doing what feels good, and I'm happier when I'm creating art that I can be proud of."

Kyla Mazhary-Clark didn't anticipate choosing art for her senior seminar when she first started at Century, but when she enrolled in a broadcast journalism class her freshman year, something clicked.

"Could this be my job someday?" Mazhary-Clark remembers asking herself. "I know that it's hard to get into film school, but it's what I really love. I want a job that I will enjoy going to every day."

For her portfolio piece, she created a promotional video for the Hillsboro School District showing the effects of recycling on the environment. Her film will be played to faculty and staff at the schools in the Hillsboro School District teaching them about the districts' new method of recycling.

For FAME Night, Mazhary-Clark directed a video promoting the event.

"Directing it was like herding cats," Mazhary-Clark laughed. "Everyone has their own opinions about how something should look."

But she said it was good preparation for her future. She wants to be a film director someday and will be attending California State University in Long Beach, where she hopes being close to the film industry will provide her with good connections.

FAME co-teacher Lydia Laurence, who has been teaching language arts at Century for 14 years, said FAME Night will be a chance for the community to celebrate the students success, simulating a real gallery opening.

"The students work really hard at this," Laurence said. "They need to learn how to self promote and what it takes to put on an event. They need to be leaders, and it's great to be able to watch them do this in the class and in the community. "

-- Taylor Smith

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/hillsboro/index.ssf/2013/05/century_high_students_create_f.html

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'Arrested Development': First-Episode Cameo Had Jason Bateman Frazzled

Bateman admits to mistaking 'Workaholics' trio for athletes while filming.
By Chris Kim


"Arrested Development" cast
Photo: FOX

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1708022/arrested-development-workaholics-jason-bateman.jhtml

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Climate researchers discover new rhythm for El Ni?o

May 27, 2013 ? El Ni?o wreaks havoc across the globe, shifting weather patterns that spawn droughts in some regions and floods in others. The impacts of this tropical Pacific climate phenomenon are well known and documented.

A mystery, however, has remained despite decades of research: Why does El Ni?o always peak around Christmas and end quickly by February to April?

Now there is an answer: An unusual wind pattern that straddles the equatorial Pacific during strong El Ni?o events and swings back and forth with a period of 15 months explains El Ni?o's close ties to the annual cycle. This finding is reported in the May 26, 2013, online issue of Nature Geoscience by scientists from the University of Hawai'i at Manoa Meteorology Department and International Pacific Research Center.

"This atmospheric pattern peaks in February and triggers some of the well-known El Ni?o impacts, such as droughts in the Philippines and across Micronesia and heavy rainfall over French Polynesia," says lead author Malte Stuecker.

When anomalous trade winds shift south they can terminate an El Ni?o by generating eastward propagating equatorial Kelvin waves that eventually resume upwelling of cold water in the eastern equatorial Pacific. This wind shift is part of the larger, unusual atmospheric pattern accompanying El Ni?o events, in which a high-pressure system hovers over the Philippines and the major rain band of the South Pacific rapidly shifts equatorward.

With the help of numerical atmospheric models, the scientists discovered that this unusual pattern originates from an interaction between El Ni?o and the seasonal evolution of temperatures in the western tropical Pacific warm pool.

"Not all El Ni?o events are accompanied by this unusual wind pattern" notes Malte Stuecker, "but once El Ni?o conditions reach a certain threshold amplitude during the right time of the year, it is like a jack-in-the-box whose lid pops open."

A study of the evolution of the anomalous wind pattern in the model reveals a rhythm of about 15 months accompanying strong El Ni?o events, which is considerably faster than the three- to five-year timetable for El Ni?o events, but slower than the annual cycle.

"This type of variability is known in physics as a combination tone," says Fei-Fei Jin, professor of Meteorology and co-author of the study. Combination tones have been known for more than three centuries. They where discovered by violin builder Tartini, who realized that our ear can create a third tone, even though only two tones are played on a violin.

"The unusual wind pattern straddling the equator during an El Ni?o is such a combination tone between El Ni?o events and the seasonal march of the sun across the equator" says co-author Axel Timmermann, climate scientist at the International Pacific Research Center and professor at the Department of Oceanography, University of Hawai'i. He adds, "It turns out that many climate models have difficulties creating the correct combination tone, which is likely to impact their ability to simulate and predict El Ni?o events and their global impacts."

The scientists are convinced that a better representation of the 15-month tropical Pacific wind pattern in climate models will improve El Ni?o forecasts. Moreover, they say the latest climate model projections suggest that El Ni?o events will be accompanied more often by this combination tone wind pattern, which will also change the characteristics of future El Ni?o rainfall patterns.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/8uaxbC6Z_5Y/130527100628.htm

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Paul Graham: 37 Y Combinator Companies Have Valuations Of Or Sold For At Least $40M

Twitter _ paulgY Combinator co-founder Paul Graham just Tweeted an interesting data point about the valuations of YC startups. As of now, Graham says that 37 Y Combinator companies, out of 511 startups, have valuations of or sold for at least $40 million.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/9FGYb37ANks/

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Kerry makes 1st official sub-Saharan Africa visit

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) ? Making his first official trip to sub-Saharan Africa, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Saturday demanded that Nigeria respect human rights as it cracks down on Islamist extremists and pledged to work hard in the coming months to ease tensions between Sudan and South Sudan.

Kerry, attending the African Union's 50th anniversary, backed the Nigerian government's efforts to root out Boko Haram, an al-Qaida-linked radical sect. But he said there is no excuse for abuses by armed forces in Nigeria's long-neglected north, where President Goodluck Jonathan has declared emergency rule.

"We defend the right completely of the government of Nigeria to defend itself and to fight back against terrorists," Kerry said. He added, however, that he has raised his concerns with Nigerian officials to insist on the military "adhering to the highest standards and not itself engaging in atrocities."

"One person's atrocities do not excuse another's," said Kerry, who later made his case directly to Jonathan over lunch. "Revenge is not the motive. It's good governance, it's ridding yourself of a terrorist organization so that you can establish a standard of law that people can respect."

Amnesty International says Nigeria's military has committed "grave human rights violations" over the last three years, including executions and kidnappings. It is reporting continued wrongdoing, while Human Rights Watch says satellite images showed "massive destruction of civilian property" in a military raid last week.

Speaking to reporters alongside Ethiopian Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Kerry also blamed Sudan's government for much of the tension along its volatile border with South Sudan. He says residents in the contested areas of Blue Nile and South Kordofan don't want to be subjected to strict Islamist rules.

Both areas border the new nation of South Sudan, which gained independence in 2011 under an agreement that ended decades of civil war. Many residents are sympathetic to the South, and both areas have experienced regular violence in recent years.

"There are very significant border challenges, but they're bigger than that," Kerry said. "You have people who for a long time have felt that they want their secular governance and their identity respected."

"They don't want independence; they are not trying to break away from Sudan," he said. But he said the response from Sudan's government has been to "press on them through authoritarian means and violence an adherence to a standard that they simply don't want to accept with respect to Islamism."

"That's the fundamental clash," Kerry said.

He acknowledged, however, the North's concerns that the South is fueling rebels in the areas and said the U.S. would try to work with Ethiopia and other international partners to ease tensions. He said he'd soon appoint a new American envoy to both countries.

Kerry met Sudan's foreign minister later Saturday.

His meetings in Ethiopia's capital also included the U.N. and African Union chiefs and Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerry-makes-1st-official-sub-saharan-africa-visit-181521622.html

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Obama: Gov't with Oklahoma 'every step' of the way

MOORE, Okla. (AP) ? President Barack Obama visited tornado-devastated Moore, Okla., Sunday, consoling people staggered by the loss of life and property and promising that the government will be behind them "every step of the way."

"I'm just a messenger here," the president said, saying "folks are behind you" across America. He offered moral and monetary support in the wake of the monstrous EF5 tornado that killed 24 people, including 10 children, last Monday afternoon.

Standing with Gov. Mary Fallin and other state and federal officials, Obama noted a substantial rebuilding job ahead and said that "our hearts go out to you."

"This is a strong community with strong character. There's no doubt they will bounce back," he said. "But they need help."

The White House said the Federal Emergency Management Agency has already provided $57 million in rebates and incentives to help build about 12,000 storm shelters in Oklahoma. "These storm shelters can be the difference between life and death," presidential spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters accompanying Obama to Oklahoma on Air Force One.

For Obama, Sunday's visit had an all-too-familiar ring.

Only five months into his second term, he has traveled to the northeast to console people in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing, and visited Connecticut and Arizona to comfort people traumatized by shooting rampages. He also has undertaken his consoler-in-chief role at the site of plant explosions and mine disasters, not to mention a series of natural disasters including Joplin, Mo., and the Jersey Shore, which was heavily damaged by Superstorm Sandy last year.

Once on the ground, Obama urged the American people to make contributions, saying the damage was "pretty hard to comprehend."

Shortly after his arrival on a partly cloudy day, Obama rode past grassy fields strewn with scattered debris, witnessing devastation so awesome that it appeared as if garbage had literally rained from the sky. His first stop was the demolished site of the Plaza Towers Elementary School, where seven students were killed when the tornado turned the one-story building into a heap of bricks, broken concrete and twisted metal.

"I know this is tough," he told superintendent Susie Pierce as he gripped her hand. As he walked, the demolished school was on his left and on his right, homes as far as the eye could see were reduced to piles of rubble. Vehicles were turned upside down and toys like a pink doll carriage and children's books were strewn with furniture and ripped out wall insulation. Every tree had been stripped of its leaves and bark.

Obama at one point joined the Lewis family, which lost their home behind the school. He said the important thing was that they survived and could replace their things.

"What a mess," he told their son Zack, a third grader at the shattered school. Zack's father, Scott, ran into the school just before the storm hit and ran with his terrified son back to their home's storm shelter.

"You've got some story to tell," Obama told the boy. "This is something you'll remember all your life."

Obama later met privately with victims' families at Moore Fire Department Station (hash)1, which has turned into a command center with dozens of first responders sitting at folding tables where fire trucks are normally parked. Obama marveled that they saved so many lives "given the devastation."

"I know this is tough," he told superintendent Susie Pierce as he gripped her hand.

As he descended the stairs upon landing at Tinker Air Base near here, Obama was greeted first by Fallin, who had said earlier she appreciated the visit, but that her state also needed quick action from FEMA.

The Republican governor said that so far, the agency has done a great job of speeding relief and cash assistance to affected families, but said she's concerned about the long run.

"There's going to come a time when there's going to be a tremendous amount of need once we begin the debris clearing, which we already have, but really get it cleared off to where we need to start rebuilding these homes, rebuilding these businesses," she said on CBS' "Face the Nation." ''And we know at different times in the past, money hasn't come always as quickly as it should."

Fallin said the money is particularly vital for the victims. "A lot of people lose their checkbooks, they lose their credit cards, they lose their driver's license, their birth certificates, their insurance papers, they lose everything, and they have no cash. And some of the banks were even hit, the ATM machines, so people need cash to get immediate needs," she said on CBS.

Earnest touted the federal contributions so far, including Obama's signing of a disaster declaration within hours of the storm to speed aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Earnest said that 450 FEMA personnel were working on the ground in Oklahoma and have delivered 43,000 meals, 150,000 liters of water and thousands of cots, blankets and tarps. He said 4,200 people have applied for disaster assistance, and $3.4 million in payments have been approved.

Among the tornado victims were 10 children, including two sisters pulled by the strong winds out of their mother's grasp, an infant who died along with his mother trying to ride out the storm in a convenience store and seven students at Plaza Towers. Many students were pulled from the rubble after the school was destroyed.

After Obama departed, Fallin hosted an interdenominational religious service that drew 2,000 people.

"God will give us the ability to mend our broken hearts," Fallin said at the end of the 80-minute service. "We may be knocked down, but we will rise up again, and for that we thank God."

___

Associated Press Writer Justin Juozapavicius contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nedra Pickler on Twitter at https://twitter.com/nedrapickler

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-govt-oklahoma-every-step-way-190037040.html

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What's an "Ugly" Building, Anyway?

The Carbuncle Cup is the annual U.K. award for the ugliest buildings in the country. Above you can see some of this year's nominees, submitted by readers of the Guardian. It's fun to point out a blight on a skyline! But there's also a problem: ugly isn't a great way to discuss architecture.

Was the building irresponsibly planned? Is it a bad use of space? Those are a few of the totally valid criticisms leveled by the Carbuncle Cup against these buildings. But referring to them as "ugly?" That's a bit of a generalization?and it's not adding anything to the conversation.

For example, the 2007 winner of the cup was the Liverpool Ferry Terminal. By itself it's not so bad, right?

But this is the Liverpool Ferry Terminal in context of its surroundings. It completely ruined the continuity of a UNESCO World Heritage site!

So a modern building might be really interesting on its own, but when dropped into a historic district, it just doesn't make sense. What do you think? What makes a building ugly? Show us your submissions below. [Guardian via DesignTaxi]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/whats-an-ugly-building-anyway-509702634

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Hemorrhoids What Are They ? Hot Article Depot

Hemorrhoids appear when the veins inside of the anus begin to swell.

If they develop close to the anal opening they are called external hemorrhoids.

Hemorrhoids are very common in pregnancy and immediately after childbirth .

No one really knows what causes hemorrhoids but evidence suggests that sitting for long periods, pregnancy,poor diet, poor hydration all play a major part .

Hemorrhoids occur when pressure builds up in the veins of the anus due to excess straining to eject a hard faeces.

Blood and pain on defacation are the main things to look out for.

Prolapsing hemorrhoids produce a mucous discharge and severe itching around the outside of the anus.

One of the complications of a prolapse is thrombosis and strangulation which is where a clot forms in the vein not allowing it to spring back into the position of the anus.

A complication of prolapse is thrombosis and strangulation in which a clot forms in the vein, and does not spring back into the position of the anus.

Below are a few guidelines to help you with your diet .

Make sure you eat foods that are high in fibre e.g brown rice,cereals, brown bread.

Consume plenty of vegetables like lettuce,turnips, potatoes,greens.

Eat vegetables, lettuce,potatoes,turnips,

carrotts.

4/ Yogurts especially pro biotic are fantastic for giving relief from the symptoms of hemorrhoids.

It is important to drink plenty of water throughout the day to keep yourself hydrated.

We now know all the things that are good for us so it must be time to list the bad.

Below are the things that we all love but are bad in the world of hemorrhoids.

Alcohol,coffee,soda drinks,energy drinks

Cereals that are high in sugar.

Products made from white flower e.g bread, pasta, pastries cakes, cookies

Although the diet seems a little harsh you will benefit if you stick it out.

Once under control you can then slip in the odd treat now and again.

Want to find out more about hemorrhoids, then visit www.hemorrhoidcureinformation.com for tips and advice.

Source: http://hotarticledepot.com/hemorrhoids-what-are-they-2/

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Graduates in tornado-raked Oklahoma town vow to stay

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) ? Seven tornadoes have swept through their town since they were born, but as new graduates donned caps and gowns to say goodbye to their high schools Saturday, they vowed they wouldn't say goodbye to Moore.

"I wouldn't want to be in any other place. It's our roots. Tornadoes are a part of life here," said 18-year-old Brooke Potter, whose current college aspirations take her to two neighboring towns.

Saturday's graduations for Westmoore, Southmoore and Moore high schools are another step toward normalcy for this Oklahoma City suburb ravaged by an extremely strong tornado. Monday's twister killed 24, including seven children at Plaza Towers Elementary School.

"I want to end up back here," Madison Dobbs, 18, said. "I've been here my whole life and can't picture myself anywhere else. Tornadoes happen anywhere."

While that's true, few other places have the amount and severity of tornadoes like Oklahoma ? and no other place has had a tornado like Moore. The Storm Prediction Center in Norman says the Oklahoma City area has been struck by more tornadoes than any other U.S. city, citing records that date to 1893.

When the current graduating class was in second grade, Moore experienced an EF4 tornado with winds approaching 200 mph. And three months before they started pre-kindergarten, a twister with the highest winds on record ? 302 mph ? sliced through their town.

"Crazy storms happen; the goods outweigh the bads," said Potter, who wants to attend Oklahoma City Community College, and then transfer to the University of Oklahoma in neighboring Norman.

With graduates wearing red, blue or black caps and gowns, Westmoore was the first of three schools to hold commencement ceremonies Saturday at the Cox Convention Center in Oklahoma City.

A teacher in the district said despite being big enough to have three high schools, the 56,000-strong community is still tightly knit.

"This is such a big district, but this is a small town," said Tammy Glasgow, a second-grade teacher at Briarwood Elementary, which was also destroyed but didn't have any deaths. "When you see somebody in the street, it's not a 'hi' and a handshake, it's a hug."

Some students lost everything in the violent storm. Southmoore senior Callie Dosher, 18, said she sifted through the debris of her family's destroyed home in the past few days, looking to recover precious possessions ? her mom's two Bibles and the teddy bear Callie's granddad gave her shortly before he passed away.

But Dosher, too, wants to stay: "These people, I've grown up with them. I have all my friends here," she said.

Miranda Mann, an 18-year-old Southmoore grad whose family also lost their home, couldn't recognize her own neighborhood because of the damage. Yet the family has vowed to rebuild on the same ground.

"We loved the house we were in," she said. "But we get to make new memories in the new house."

Westmoore Senior Alex Davis, 18, will attend University of Oklahoma after graduation partly so he can stay close to friends and family.

"It speaks to how the community's banded together," he said. "We're not going to let a natural disaster beat us."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/graduates-tornado-raked-okla-town-vow-stay-172714819.html

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For the Private and Confidential Use of the Recipient

Emily Yoffe. Emily Yoffe

Photo by Teresa Castracane.

Get Dear Prudence delivered to your inbox each week; click here to sign up. Please send your questions for publication to prudence@slate.com. (Questions may be edited.)

Got a burning question for Prudie? She?ll be online at Washingtonpost.com at noon on the Tuesday after Memorial Day. Submit your questions and comments here before or during the live discussion.

Dear Prudence,
I am a young attorney at a solid law firm. I work very hard, have received stellar reviews, and seem to be well-liked. I'm also happily married to a beautiful woman I adore. And now I am worried about losing the love of my life, my job, or both. Despite my great marriage, I sometimes peruse Craigslist personal ads, just for kicks. Sometimes I even reply?always from an anonymous email?but it never goes any further than that. It?s just a fun fantasy for me. No hookups, no chat, nothing. I have not and would not cheat on my wife. Unfortunately, this past weekend I replied to an ad from my iPhone and I accidentally used my work email account. Although the email wasn't explicit, it makes me look very bad. I feel absolutely awful. I pay for the phone, but the email goes through the firm's server, which I know has monitoring software. I'm wondering whether and who I should tell about this. I'm afraid if I bring it up at work, what may have gone unnoticed will become an issue. Also, should I give my wife a head's up, in case I lose my job? I'm worried that what I thought was a fun little secret is now going to turn into a very public nightmare.

Dear Saboteur,
Please tell me your cheeky reply did not have an attachment with a photograph of you in the bathroom, bare-chested and flexing your biceps. Yes, you messed up, but at least you?re not running for mayor of New York, so you don?t have to babble to the world about the embarrassing things you did with your electronic devices. Counselor, I counsel that you just sit tight. Sure, for the foreseeable future every time someone from the firm says, ?Can we talk?? you?ll wish you were wearing Depends. But you just need to live with your anxiety and hope that your little missive didn?t include any key words that would alert your company?s no-no software. There?s a good chance nothing will happen. So staying quiet and hoping that?s the case will be a lot better than pre-emptively confessing and forcing your firm to deal with your poor judgment. If someone does come to you, then of course you have to own up. Explain this was a one-time, accidental misuse of company email and that it will never happen again. You may be able to walk away with a reprimand. As for your wife, I?m going all in on keeping your mouth shut. I believe you when you say you get a kick from reading naughty ads and occasionally sending a naughty reply, but that you don?t follow up and exchange numbers let alone bodily fluids. One great thing about my job is that people reveal to me their private acts, and I have heard from married men who say they blow off steam, as it were, by cruising sex ads, but nothing more. Even so, if my husband came to me with this confession, I?d probably be suspicious it was something of a cock-and-bull story and that he was withholding the most interesting details. If your job goes kablooey, of course you have to tell your wife all. But right now I don?t see a reason to shake the foundation of your marriage. As it is, you?re getting a good dose of punishment for your transgressions. If you find yourself contemplating your fate at 3:00 a.m. night after night, get a prescription for Ambien. In order to carry on as if nothing?s wrong, you need a good night?s sleep.

Dear Prudie,
I'm a successful and happily married woman in my early 30s with my first child on the way. However, growing up wasn't the easiest for me. From a young age my bad skin, thick glasses, and gawkiness brought ridicule from my classmates. I immersed myself in studying, which made me more of a target. I've realized children can be cruel and have worked to get over the taunting I suffered. What I am not able to forgive is the teacher who bullied me for three years starting when I was 11 years old. She was a young teacher who seemed to be interested in appearing cool to the popular kids. This woman took every opportunity to publicly humiliate me. If I was the only one to raise my hand, she'd call me a know-it-all. If I didn't raise my hand, she would make a snide remark about my not knowing everything. She made sure to point out to the entire class every time I didn't get 100 on her tests and read aloud the questions I got wrong. My mother was a teacher at the school and I told her about this, but she said I was being too sensitive. It didn't help that my older sister had a wonderful relationship with this teacher. For a long time I thought maybe I was too sensitive, but after reading your column I've come to realize that there are people like this teacher who find the lone outcast child and bully them. This teacher was diagnosed with cancer last year and my church did a fundraiser for her. I refused to attend or donate. My mother said I was being cheap and spiteful. Then recently I saw this teacher at church. She looked terrible. She came over to my family and hugged my mother and sister. When she stepped in to hug me, I backed away and excused myself. My mother is now very upset with me for being rude, saying I embarrassed the family, and I should just get over whatever I "think" she did to me. In my anger, I told my mother this woman probably got cancer as punishment for being a horrible person, and the sooner she dies the sooner she can go to hell. Now my mother isn't speaking to me. My husband is on my side and says I should not apologize to my mother, since I didn't wrong her in any way. This isn?t the first time I?ve not been on speaking terms with my mother, but she and my sister are planning a baby shower for me. I want to get past this, but how can I mend things with my mother without apologizing?

?Former Bullying Victim

Dear Victim,
I can understand your anger; it was as if both your mother and this teacher conspired during your childhood to make your life a misery. What a betrayal on your mother?s part to side with her colleague over her own daughter without even investigating your complaints. As for this awful teacher, I don?t blame you for refusing to contribute to her fund and shrinking from her touch. But where you could start in reconciling with your mother is in addressing what you said about her colleague. You?re a well-read woman, so you know that suffering is often unjust?you were a victim of it yourself. This woman?s cancer is not a punishment for her acts. As inexcusably dreadful as she was to you, to wish aloud for her death is ugly to hear and poisonous for you to say. Your troubled relationship with your mother encompasses more than just this teacher. Particularly now that you?re about to be a mother yourself, it would be a good idea to unspool your feelings with a counselor. But for the sake of smoothing over this situation, you can say to your mother that while it?s simply a fact that your former teacher treated you abominably, you do regret wishing her ill. If that?s not enough to get your mother talking to you again, then you have a lot of thinking to do about another bully in your life.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=bacb9d2baf081183f8bc14d2e7432432

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'Before Midnight' is the richest movie of director Richard Linklater's romantic trilogy

'Before Midnight' captures a couple whose ardor has run its course.

By Peter Rainer,?Film critic / May 24, 2013

Celine (Julie Delpy) and Jesse (Ethan Hawke) find each other again in Richard Linklater?s ?Before Midnight.?

Sony Pictures Classics

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Movie sequels rarely work. Trilogies even less so. The rare exception is Richard Linklater?s three-peat: ?Before Sunrise? (1994), ?Before Sunset? (2004), and now, ?Before Midnight.?

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In that first film, Ethan Hawke?s cynical 20-something Jesse picks up Julie Delpy?s wide-eyed Celine on a train while backpacking through Europe, and they spend the night in Vienna. In the morning, still full of talk and hopes, they arrange to meet again in six months.

Jesse and Celine reunite in the sequel not having seen each other since Vienna, 10 years before. He has written a well-regarded novel based on their night together, and Celine shows up at his reading in a Paris bookstore. She?s single; he has a son back in America and a bad marriage. As in ?Before Sunrise,? they spend much of the movie airing their ideas and walking and walking and walking. It?s a love duet without being explicit about it, and in the end Jesse misses his plane back to America in order to be with her.

Both of these films captured like no other American movie (and precious few foreign-language ones) the iridescent, melancholy tone of youthful ardor. Although scripted (largely by Linklater and the two actors), they had an impeccable improvisatory feel. It was as if the actors were discovering their emotions right before our eyes.

In ?Before Midnight,? we discover right away that Jesse is divorced and living in Paris with Celine and their twin daughters (played by Jennifer and Charlotte Prior). We pick up with them on the last day of their month-long summer vacation on the Greek island of Crete. Jesse has just packed his moody son, Hank (Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick), off to Chicago and his mother.

The drive back from the airport is an extended scene, shot in a single take, in which Jesse and Celine immediately boil up their worries: She thinks he wants her to sidetrack her career as an environmental activist and relocate to Chicago so he can be closer to his son.

Celine and Jesse must be the most vocal movie couple since the heyday of Ingmar Bergman. They hash everything out, but the jabber often dips and wheels in directions that catch each of them (and us) by surprise.

The back-and-forth is so recognizable from the buzz and hum of our own lives and relationships that at times I felt I wasn?t watching a movie at all. But, of course, this transparent realism is the highest form of artifice. Just ask any actor or director.

The film?s major set piece occurs near the end, when Jesse and Celine, that same day, slip away to a nearby hotel for their last night together in Greece. Approaching middle age now, they reminisce about their pasts together and apart. But the tensions of the here and now swamp their affections and soon they are going after each other in ways that are startlingly hurtful.

This extended sequence, lasting perhaps 30 minutes, cuts so deep because we have been made to care for these people ? we have, in a sense, grown up with them. And because both of them have burned off the youthful glow they had in the earlier films, their harder-edged transformations can seem alienating to us, a renunciation of youthful dreams.

Linklater is no starry-eyed idealist, even though he earlier captured supremely well the blush of early romance. Here he and his actors capture equally well the backwash of those dreams. But this is nothing to be sorry about. ?Before Midnight? is the fullest and richest and saddest of the three movies in the trilogy.
Make it a quartet, I say. Grade: A (Rated R for sexual content/nudity and language.)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/IEEdxuB_KBM/Before-Midnight-is-the-richest-movie-of-director-Richard-Linklater-s-romantic-trilogy

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Solar Impulse setting solar-powered flight record in Texas

innovation

2 hours ago

Image: Solar Impulse

Solar Impulse

The Solar Impulse airplane takes off from Phoenix for Dallas-Fort Worth on Wednesday.

The Swiss-made Solar Impulse plane went after a distance record for solar-powered flight on Wednesday as it sailed from Phoenix to Dallas-Fort Worth, on the second leg of its coast-to-coast odyssey across America.

The super-light, super-wide plane rose from its runway at Phoenix's Sky Harbor International Airport at 4:47 a.m. MST (7:47 a.m. ET) with Andre Borschberg, Solar Impulse's co-founder and CEO, at the controls. He guided the plane through Arizona, New Mexico and West Texas, conducting a string of interviews from the air.

"It's flying very well," Borschberg told NBC News a couple of hours after takeoff.

Although the cockpit had room for only one flier, many more people were looking over his shoulder, thanks to a live video link. "They're all with me virtually," Borschberg said.

Flight controllers said the plane was making such good time that Borschberg would have to fly in a holding pattern before landing at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. The latest word was that touchdown might come earlier than scheduled, perhaps before midnight CT (1 a.m. ET Thursday).

That would make for a 17-hour flight, which wouldn't break any speed records.You could drive between Phoenix and Dallas in less time, and most commercial jets make the trip in two hours. But the 830-mile trek would break the distance record for a single solar-powered flight. Borschberg set the current record, 693 miles (1,116 kilometers), a year ago during a Solar Impulse flight from Switzerland to Spain.

The Solar Impulse project began in 2003 with a 10-year budget of 90 million euros ($115 million), backed by Swiss sponsors. The plane is designed to demonstrate a host of clean-energy technologies, ranging from lightweight carbon composites to the 12,000-solar-cell system that powers the plane. The airplane is as light as a typical passenger car, but its wingspan matches the width of a jumbo jet.

On Wednesday, the plane ranged as high in altitude as 27,000 feet, soaking up the sun's energy as it went. "The more I fly, the more energy I have aboard the airplane," Borschberg said.

In addition to the technical challenges, mission planners had to coordinate their itinerary with the Federal Aviation Administration and airport authorities to avoid conflicting with regular air traffic. "It's not easy," Borschberg admitted.

Famed adventurer Bertrand Piccard piloted the plane on the first leg of its cross-country journey on May 3, from Moffett Field in the San Francisco Bay Area to Phoenix. Piccard and Borschberg are taking turns in the cockpit as Solar Impulse makes its way eastward. After Dallas-Fort Worth, the plane is scheduled to move on to St. Louis, and then to Washington, D.C. The final leg of the trip, from Washington to New York, is expected to come sometime around the Fourth of July.

Updates on Wednesday's flight are being provided via Solar Impulse's website and its Twitter account (@solarimpulse).

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2c478e4a/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Csolar0Eimpulse0Esetting0Esolar0Epowered0Eflight0Erecord0Etexas0E6C10A0A18466/story01.htm

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