Monday, August 5, 2013

Exhibit honors Vietnam's heroes from Texas

Jim Cruz made his way through the crowd that assembled in front of a wall of shiny military-style dog tags. He grabbed one, felt it, read the inscription and took a picture of it.

Cruz, 64, was one of dozens who made it to Saturday's premiere of the Texas Vietnam Heroes Exhibit at the UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures, which included state Sen. Leticia Van De Putte and other dignitaries. The exhibit features commemorative dog tags bearing the names of the 3,417 Texans killed or declared missing in the Vietnam War.

?I don't have no hair, but what I do have stands up,? said Cruz, showing goose bumps on one arm and pointing to the memorial with the other. ?Those are the heroes right there.?

Cruz, who retired in San Antonio after 23 years in the Army, first photographed the dog tag of a man he never met, a favor for a woman who previously stopped him to shake his hand and thank him for his service.

?It was of her father. I told her I was going to blow (the photo) up big and bring it to her,? Cruz said. ?Now I'm going to take pictures of my buddies, the ones I was with ... who didn't make it home.?

He said he lost four friends from Texas in the Vietnam War, and 26 total from all over the country.

Each of the people in the memorial is individually represented by commemorative dog tags embossed with the name, rank, branch of service, home of record and date of death. Black dog tags honor Texans missing in action, such as Army Staff Sgt. Manuel R. Puentes of El Paso.

Don Dorsey, a sniper in the Marine Corps during the war, embossed the dog tags with the help of fellow Marine James Hart. It took about 400 hours.

?As I was doing it ... I had to wonder how they were killed,? Dorsey said. ?I got to introduce myself to everyone and learn a little about them. I could relate to some of them from their ages or where they were from. Some I knew from high school.?

?Emotionally, it is a closure we believe a lot of the families and veterans need,? said Jim Cisneros, whose brother, Roy Cisneros, was killed Sept. 11, 1968, defending his platoon.

Roy Cisneros has an elementary school named after him in the Edgewood School District. More than 50 of the district's students died or were declared missing in Vietnam.

Cisneros was awarded posthumously the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor, and Jim Cisneros said his brother's legacy lives on in the memorial.

?It represents the sacrifices of one of the most horrific wars in American history,? Cisneros said. ?What it represents to me is the courage of all of the veterans who sacrificed their lives.?

Albert Martinez, retired from the Navy, came to see the dog tags of two elementary school friends killed when the trio served in Vietnam: Basilio Gomez and Joe Pierce Jr. They were killed within a couple of months of arrival there, Martinez said.

?For me, I know where they died, but I don't know the circumstances,? Martinez said. ?I got their pictures in uniform and medals they won. But this is like holding their own real dog tags ... It's long overdue.?

The dog tags match a set to be entombed next year at the Texas Capitol Veterans Monument. The traveling exhibit was designed by Excalibur Exhibits' Eriq Moquin, whose father served in the Army in Vietnam. Valero helped bring it to San Antonio, its first stop, where it will be on display at the institute through August.

?I think it helps people get closure because they get to touch and feel and see, and tell their grandchildren, 'This was my war,'? said Robert Floyd, chairman of the monument. ?We hope that it will help in healing and let people across the state know that we're not going to forget about these guys.?

Source: http://www.stripes.com/news/veterans/exhibit-honors-vietnam-s-heroes-from-texas-1.233771

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Union: Bus strike in parts of metro Phoenix ends

by Jacques Billeaud, Associated Press

Video report by Jason Volentine

Posted on August 4, 2013 at 1:38 PM

Updated today at 5:52 PM

PHOENIX (AP) -- A union leader said Sunday that bus drivers in the suburbs east of Phoenix have tentatively reached an agreement with a national bus company to end a four-day strike by the drivers.

Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1433 president Bob Bean says the union reached a favorable agreement early Sunday afternoon with First Transit to end the strike and let bus service resume in time for Monday morning's commute.

Bean declined to provide details of the agreement and said union members will have to ratify the agreement within the next week and a half.

First Transit didn't immediately return calls and emails seeking comment.

Bean says the picket lines have now ended.

The agreement was reached after a 32-hour negotiating session that was aimed at resolving the dispute between the 560 drivers and the company.

Some 40 routes in Chandler, Gilbert, Mesa and Tempe were shut down when the work stoppage began Thursday. Express routes from those cities to Scottsdale and Phoenix were also affected.

The routes serve some 57,000 riders daily, including many workers without cars who can't walk miles to work in the summertime heat.

First Transit took over operations July 1 after winning a three-year contract from the Valley Metropolitan Regional Transit Authority with options for seven additional years in January.

The new contract combined operations in Mesa and Tempe that serve the eastern Phoenix suburbs and involved savings of $36 million over the previous contract by operating both parts of the system together and streamlining operations. Union officials said it cut $77 million over 10 years.

Drivers have said job security has been their biggest issue with First Transit since the new transit contract would override First Transit's proposed deal with the union.

First Transit has said it also offered higher wages and lower health care costs.

In March 2012, a strike crippled bus service in metropolitan Phoenix for six days before it was settled.

Source: http://www.azfamily.com/news/local/Union-Bus-strike-in-parts-of-metro-Phoenix-ends-218293851.html

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Va. diocese: Woman who worked for Catholic church near DC among Spain train crash victims

Catholic church officials say an employee of a diocese outside Washington, D.C., was among the 80 people who died in the Spain trash crash this week.

The Diocese of Arlington says on its Facebook page that Ana Maria Cordoba, an administrative employee from northern Virginia, died in the wreck.

Catholic News Service, a division of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, reports that Cordoba, a benefits specialist, was traveling with her husband, Philippe, and her daughter, Christina, a rising high school senior in Arlington.

CNS reports that Philippe and Christina Cordoba were in stable condition at a hospital.

Family members were on their way to see the Cordobas' son, who had completed a pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela.

Messages left for the diocese late Thursday were not immediately returned.

Source: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/DqZfbUA4rFI/

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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Moldova: probe into doctor using 'household' drill

CHISINAU, Moldova (AP) ? Officials at a hospital in Moldova are investigating a surgeon's claim that he had to use a handyman's drill to perform an operation because proper equipment was unavailable.

Grigore Rusanovschi, a doctor at the Valentin Ignatenco Hospital in Chisinau, says he posted a video online Monday showing him using the drill. He accused management of failing to respond to his requests to buy equipment.

Hospital director Nicolae Starciuc said, however, that drills he purchased were not being used.

Health Minister Andrei Usatii told The Associated Press Wednesday that investigators had found three proper drills at the hospital, but had not found the drill that Rusanovschi says he used.

Viorel Soltan, former deputy health minister, said Wednesday that the video was accurate.

"It is genuine what happened and there are other cases that happen in Moldova where doctors use household drills," Soltan said.

Moldova is one of Europe's poorest countries with an average monthly salary of euros 225 euros ($300).

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/moldova-probe-doctor-using-household-drill-124715365.html

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Join us for a live chat Monday with Boise State football's Joe Southwick, Charles Leno

By Chadd Cripe
ccripe@idahostatesman.com
? 2013 Idaho Statesman

LAS VEGAS ? The Mountain West football media days event begins Monday ? and we?ll get you started with a new feature in the morning.

Boise State senior quarterback Joe Southwick and senior left tackle Charles Leno Jr. will join me for a live chat with Idaho Statesman readers. The chat will begin at 10:30 a.m. MT with me and likely columnist Brian Murphy. We?ll answer questions for 30 minutes and begin collecting questions for the players.

Southwick will join us at 11 a.m. MT and answer questions for about 15 minutes. Leno will take over at 11:15 a.m. for about another 15 minutes.

You can access the live chat through IdahoStatesman.com in the morning or by going to my blog page, blogs.idahostatesman.com/broncobeat.

Southwick and Leno meet with the media Monday. Coach Chris Petersen has sessions Monday and Tuesday. Mountain West Commissioner Craig Thompson speaks Tuesday. The event ends at 1 p.m. Tuesday.

We?ll have in-depth coverage throughout the two days. I should have some comments from Southwick and Leno posted this evening and I?ll have a story in tomorrow?s paper.

???

Just a head?s up: I am working off an iPad because my laptop crashed shortly after I arrived in Las Vegas. So don?t be surprised if you see a few technical glitches over the next couple days.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IdahostatesmancomSports/~3/nHPN-LvQfjs/

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Monday, July 22, 2013

Financial services recovery would drive UK economy and jobs - PwC

LONDON | Mon Jul 22, 2013 12:05am BST

LONDON (Reuters) - A properly run financial services industry would generate a quarter of a million new British jobs by 2020, oiling the wheels of sectors such as manufacturing and retail, a new report says.

Research published on Monday by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) suggests that robust regulation and benign economic conditions that help the embattled financial sector to recover would also spur 2-3 percent growth in the economy by the end of the decade.

An alternative scenario, in which the financial services sector continues to languish, would bring an unimpressive 0.2 percent rise in gross domestic product and create only 12,000 more jobs, the report said.

"In addition to providing credit, (the financial services industry) creates demand in other sectors and helps improve the flow (of) capital around the economy," said Nick Forrest, an economist at PwC.

"A well-functioning financial services sector improves both capital efficiency and overall UK productivity."

PwC's report says that good regulation coupled with a robust economic backdrop would generate 47,500 new jobs in financial services such as banking and insurance by 2020.

The knock-on effect of a recovery in the financial industry, would be 45,900 more manufacturing jobs, 41,600 in retail and 67,400 in general services, it said.

The region benefiting most from this level of job creation would be London, with 132,800 new jobs by 2020. The region to benefit least would be Northern Ireland, creating only 2,900 new jobs.

(Reporting by Chris Vellacott; Editing by David Goodman)

Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/07/21/uk-pwc-report-idUKBRE96K0DK20130721?feedType=RSS&feedName=domesticNews

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Mexico defeats Trinidad, reaches Gold Cup semis

The Catalan club will appoint a successor to outgoing coach Tito Vilanova next week, with the former Blaugrana midfielder and the ex-Newell's boss the two preferred options

July 21 (Infostrada Sports) - Results and standings from the Finnish championship matches on Sunday Sunday, July 21Lahti 2 IFK Mariehamn 1 Saturday, July 20RoPS Rovaniemi 0 HJK Helsinki 0 Friday, July 19VPS 4 MyPa Myllykoski 1 Standings P W D L F A Pts 1 HJK Helsinki 19 11 4 4 37 15 37 -------------------------2 FC Honka 19 11 3 5 26 18 36 3 VPS 19 9 5 5 20 16 32 -------------------------4 Jaro Pietarsaari 18 7 5 6 28 22 26 -------------------------5 TPS Turku 17 7 5 5 19 17 26 6 MyPa Myllykoski 19 8 2 9 24 25 26 7 KuPS 19 7 4 8 21 20 25 8 IFK Mariehamn 20 7 4 9 27 35 25 9 Inter Turku 19 5 7 7 ...

SOFIA, July 21 (Reuters) - Bulgarian champions Ludogorets have fired coach Ivaylo Petev after a surprise defeat in the opening round of the domestic league season, the club said on Sunday. Ludogorets, who have won back-to-back league titles, slumped to a 1-0 loss on Saturday to newcomers Lyubimets 2007, whose home town has a population of less than 8,000. "Ivaylo Petev is no longer coach of Ludogorets," the club said in a statement. "The decision was taken after consultations immediately after the match in Lyubimets. ...

Source: http://www.fantasysp.com/news/scr/1607165/mexico-defeats-trinidad-reaches-gold-cup-semis

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

One year later, survivors recall Aurora shooting

AURORA, Colo. (AP) ? It is not a small club, the survivors of the shootings at Theater 9.

The Century 16 auditorium was packed ? 421 men, women and children who had turned out for a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight Rises." When a bizarre figure, helmeted and clad in black, appeared before them in a cloud of smoke, they reacted with bemusement and amazement, shock and confusion and ? finally ? horror.

Twelve people died, 70 were injured, and more than 300 fled into the night and into the arms of loved ones.

A year later, the survivors cannot forget their terror, or the injuries they suffered, or their losses. But they search for meaning, and sometimes find it: the victims whose faith has strengthened; the father who lost his son but found a cause; the couple who believe that the anniversary of a hateful act can be transformed by love.

___

Pierce O'Farrill was sitting a few rows up on the right side of the theater when he saw a tear gas canister fly in front of the movie screen, followed by the silhouette of the gunman and a green laser shining from the scope of one of his weapons.

"My heart just kind of stopped," O'Farrill said. "I can still in my head hear the (gunman's) footsteps. Everything went quiet for me."

A blast from a shotgun hit him in the chest and the left foot as he tried to take cover. Moments later, the gunman came closer and shot him with a .40-caliber pistol, shattering his left arm. The shot barely missed a nerve that controls hand function, doctors told him.

O'Farrill, 29, still has shotgun pellets in his chest and a bullet lodged in his arm. It aches when he exercises or when a storm is approaching.

Still, he said, as a devout Christian ? a worker for the Denver Rescue Mission ? he forgives the man charged in the shootings.

O'Farrill said he saw James Holmes for the first time in the hospital, on television news.

"When I saw him, I saw a lost soul," he said. "I saw a guy who was lost and the darkness got him.

"Everybody deserves a chance to be forgiven."

O'Farrill said he hopes Holmes, if convicted, spends the rest of his life in prison ? but that he would even like to meet him one day to see if he is remorseful.

"I would want him to know that there are people in this world that do not hate him," he said. "I want to tell him there is hope in this world, even in the darkest place where he is going to live the rest of his life."

That hope ? and a lot of counseling ? drive O'Farrill forward and make him stronger.

He has begun to play basketball and lift weights again, and now he has bigger goals on his horizon. O'Farrill got engaged July 2 and plans to get married sometime next year. Children, he hopes, will follow.

He feels incredibly lucky to be alive. "The last year's been a blessing," he said.

? By Thomas Peipert

___

When word of the shootings spread, Tom Sullivan rushed to the staging area at the high school parking lot. His son Alex had gone to see the new Batman movie to celebrate his 27th birthday, two days before his first wedding anniversary.

When he learned that Alex was gone, Tom cried out and embraced his wife and daughter ? a moment captured in a photo that ran on dozens of newspaper front pages and websites.

Weeping in the parking lot, Sullivan realized he had no regrets about his relationship with his son. Each knew how much he was loved by the other. They went on guys-only Super Bowl trips to Las Vegas, celebrating craps wins with Jameson whiskey and cigars. When Alex turned 18 and wanted to get a tattoo, Tom got one too, even though he admitted the experience left him a little pale and sweaty.

"There were no unspoken words," said Sullivan.

He laughs easily when remembering his son. He's drawn comfort over the past year from talking about Alex, and the lesson he had learned: We must appreciate what we have.

He also has testified in favor of gun control laws at the state Capitol and went to the reopening of the Aurora movie theater, an event many other victims' families boycotted, including Alex's widow. His son loved going to the movies and the theater is part of the community ? a place where people come together, where kids can ride to on their bikes.

Sullivan has been back to the theater about a half dozen times, sometimes watching movies in the revamped auditorium where his son was killed. He sits in the seat and row where he believes Alex was sitting and leaves an empty seat for him.

It hasn't always been easy. Each Friday and the 20th of each month have been a reminder of loss. His wife Terry, a school bus driver, didn't want summer vacation to come even as the children around her grew more excited.

"Some days we're not moving forward, some days we're just making it through," he said.

July 20 has been a day Tom Sullivan has celebrated his whole life ? his mother's birthday, and then Alex's. This year, he'll probably participate in some of the public events marking the event, though he said he won't be going for his own sake. He wants to show people that he's OK ? and that they, too, can try to go back to normal life.

And he'll probably have some Jameson and cigars, to remember Alex.

? By Colleen Slevin

___

As the sun rose over the beach at South Padre Island, on the last day of an April vacation, Eugene Han asked Kirstin Davis if she would be his wife ? and she said yes.

He followed with another idea: They should be married on July 20.

"It took me a second. I didn't understand where he was coming from," Davis said.

Their wedding would take place on the anniversary of the night when they and their friends went to the Century 16 theater. Davis and Han were just kids when they met at church in Aurora; they had been dating for two years. Now, they settled into the second row to watch the feature.

Han, sleepy from work, spotted someone entering through an exit door near the screen. He saw that two guns were strapped to the intruder's body, and he dropped from his seat and pulled Davis to the floor: "All I was thinking was, if anything, I could put myself between her and the bullets."

Both were injured ? Han seriously. He was shot at close range in his hip and leg. Davis had bullet fragments in her back. A friend also was shot in the leg, which had to be amputated.

Han spent five days at a hospital and the next three months bedridden, his parents and brother tending to him. A year later, his right leg is marked by purplish, coin-size scars.

Davis recovered from her wounds and started a job as a teaching assistant at an elementary school. Then came the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Newtown, Conn., which "sent me over the edge." She eventually quit her job. These days, she is sleeping better, but she fears big crowds.

Someday, the 22-year-old Davis sees herself once again working with children. Han, 21, wants to return to college, write a book ? and let the shooter know he forgives him.

Their wedding is scheduled for Saturday. Three friends who survived the Aurora shootings will take part; the idea is to make July 20 a happy day, at least for one couple.

"Someone has to be the first person to take the first step to make it a better day," Han said.

? By Catherine Tsai.

___

Marcus Weaver said he thinks God had a plan for him that night.

He was sitting in the fifth row next to his friend Rebecca Wingo when the shooting began ? "so loud, and you could see the white spray of the gun, and that's the image that is the one that is hard to get out of my head," he said.

Weaver was hit in the right shoulder by shotgun pellets. Wingo, a 32-year-old former Air Force linguist, was killed.

Weaver, 42, of Denver, described trying to grab his friend, and plunging through a horrific scene of bodies blocking the rows and aisles of the theater.

"In the 30 days after the shootings, every morning I got up and I prayed about it. And the Lord kept bringing people my way that would help," he said.

It was that faith, Weaver said, that helped him cope with the loss of Rebecca and to decide to forgive James Holmes, the man charged in the shootings.

"There's a lot of pain, a lot of hurt for him to execute something like that," he said. "And my whole thing was, if I carry that same hate and that same pain around for the rest of my life because of what he's done, then I'm going to be just like him. And my faith was telling me to just let it go."

Weaver also said that a few days after the shooting he read a passage in the Bible that explains how to be a light in the darkness.

"I thought, man, the darkness of the theater. How can I be a point of light?" he asked.

So Weaver began to speak to youth groups, students and prisoners about his story.

"It seemed the more I told it, the more it would help people," he said. "So I realized that God started using me as a point of light. ...

"Is God using me for a higher purpose? Absolutely."

? By Thomas Peipert.

___

Jerri Jackson tried to return to her job as a trucking company claims adjuster a few weeks after her son, Matthew McQuinn, was killed. But the pain was too much to bear. She has yet to return to work. Getting out of bed and out of the house to buy groceries is hard some days.

"I just don't want to be around people," Jackson said in a phone interview from her home in Springfield, Ohio.

McQuinn, 27, was sitting with his girlfriend, Samantha Yowler, in the first row of the second level of the theater's stadium seating when the firing began.

As Jackson tells it, McQuinn said "Ow, that hurts," before he jumped on Yowler to shield her from gunfire.

Yowler survived. McQuinn didn't.

Jackson remembers a conversation she had with her son, hours before the shooting. He talked about plans to move back to Ohio to work at a car parts factory near St. Paris; perhaps he would marry Yowler. He was homesick after struggling for a year to find full-time work in Colorado. Jackson offered to let him live with her to get started.

Then McQuinn said he had to go. He was going to the movies.

"I told him, 'Be careful,'" Jackson said. "He said, 'I know. ... I'll talk to you later, mom. I love you.' And that was it."

Now, she keeps close at hand the blanket in which she wrapped Matthew when he was a baby ? she found it in his apartment, among his things.

After he died, she bought a Mitsubishi Eclipse because her son had wanted one. "I tell people that the car belongs to my son, but I get to drive it," Jackson said.

Painted on the rear of the car is the legend, "Real Heroes Don't Wear Capes." And: "Matt McQuinn RIP."

And the letter "M'' ? Superman-style.

? By P. Solomon Banda.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/later-survivors-recall-aurora-shooting-141949411.html

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Biden hints at possibility of a presidential run in 2016

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President Joe Biden says he might run for president in 2016, and one of the factors he will consider in making his decision is whether he has as much energy then as he does now.

Biden, 70, gave his thoughts on the possibility of a race for the Democratic presidential nomination in an interview with GQ magazine.

Most Democrats have their eyes on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, watching to see if she launches a second run for the White House, and Biden's comments reflected a view that he wants to be in the discussion as well.

"I can die a happy man never having been president of the United States of America," Biden told GQ. "But it doesn't mean I won't run."

Many political analysts doubt Biden will run if Clinton enters the race. She has made clear she is pondering a bid for the White House, and most polls have her as the runaway favorite to win the party's nomination should she run. But she was considered the favorite in 2008 and was beaten by Barack Obama.

Biden noted that in his office he has two portraits, each of them of vice presidents who later became president, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.

"The judgment I'll make is, first of all, am I still as full of as much energy as I have now ? do I feel this?" he said. "Number two, do I think I'm the best person in the position to move the ball? And, you know, we'll see where the hell I am."

(Reporting by Steve Holland; editing by Jackie Frank)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/biden-hints-possibility-presidential-run-2016-141757838.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

T Magazine: On View | Why You Should Visit a 13-Foot-Long Art Museum in Southern California

Like the courtyard houses of Marrakesh, Los Angeles?s residential architecture turns inward, away from the busy boulevards. The result is a lot of inhospitable public space, but it can also produce a special kind of pleasure. There?s a thrill, specific to L.A., in finding an amazing restaurant in a strip mall, or venturing down an alleyway past a chain-link fence to encounter the Los Angeles Museum of Art.

Not to be confused with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), the gleaming institution on Wilshire Boulevard, 10 miles to the west, this museum, known as LAMOA, is a hand-built, 13-foot-long wooden structure. It sits in a paved yard near a small cluster of art studios in Eagle Rock, a neighborhood where many artists live and work. When visitors arrive, the museum?s founder and sole staff member, the sculptor Alice K?nitz, greets them with a friendly wave.

?There?s a scale difference? between LAMOA and other L.A. museums, K?nitz explained, with considerable understatement. ?It?s, like, me running it, instead of hundreds of professionals.? As a result, Konitz adds, though LAMOA is public, ?it?s also really private.?

K?nitz came to L.A. from D?sseldorf 15 years ago to attend Cal Arts, and her work reveals a sensitivity to her surroundings that perhaps only a transplant could have. LAMOA is not her first crack at redefining public space: since 2001, she has been intermittently working on a scheme to build an elevator to an abandoned section of the Glendale freeway overpass, so that visitors can experience its vast, concrete emptiness. (The project is still in need of financing.)

While it may be an art piece in itself, LAMOA is primarily an exhibition space for K?nitz?s artistic community, a way of ?stepping away from art making and just seeing what other people are doing; seeing if I offer this to the community, what ideas would generate.?

One member of that community is Katie Grinnan, whose sculpture ?TMI? is on view at LAMOA until early August and will travel to the Print Center in Philadelphia in September. The work consists of a lime-green steel structure that holds a collection of hanging files filled with all kinds of printed matter. Grinnan asked her personal contacts for ?information? that they would like to share and created a filing system around their contributions. Visitors are invited to add their own information or simply browse what?s there already.

As a constellation of niche interests and a display of free association (one sequence of files includes ?Crafts,? ?Trucker?s Hitch Knot,? ?Jacknifing & Iron Lungs,? ?Building & Machines? and ?Noise & Capitalism?), ?TMI? evokes social media or Web surfing. The floor, in fact, is tiled with pictures pulled from YouTube. But in an aggressively bricks-and-mortar gesture, the screen grabs are printed on concrete. ?I wanted you to stand on those images,? Grinnan explained. ?I didn?t want to mirror the space of the computer.?

To K?nitz, ?TMI? is ?a little bit like Facebook but completely different. It?s like an archaic version of it.? So archaic that in order to share, you have to show up: ?You have to walk down this alley,? she said. ?You can find it on the Internet, everyone can come, but you don?t really come as an anonymous guest. You sort of have to deal with me, and you will deal with the art.?

The museum is open Sundays from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. and by appointment; ?TMI? is on view through August 11. 4328 Eagle Rock Blvd.,
Los Angeles;?losangelesmuseumofart.blogspot.com

Source: http://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/07/17/on-view-why-you-should-visit-a-13-foot-long-art-museum-in-southern-california/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Changes to Carlsbad's New Mexico Air flights irks some flyers

New Mexico Airlines, the carrier that provides federally subsidized air service between Carlsbad and Albuquerque, has changed its flight schedule, and some flyers say the changes are making it inconvenient to attend business meetings in Albuquerque and Los Alamos.

The airline came into Carlsbad seven years ago under the U.S. Department of Transportation's. Essential Air Service program and receives a federal subsidy. The EAS program was started so that small communities such as Carlsbad can maintain a minimal level of scheduled air service.

As a general rule, this is accomplished by subsidizing two- to- four round trips a day, with three being the norm, with 19-seat aircraft to a major hub airport. The DOT currently subsidizes commuter airlines to serve approximately 163 rural communities across the country that otherwise would not receive any scheduled air service.

Ned Elkins, project manager for Los Alamos National Laboratory Carlsbad Office, said his staff has voiced concern over the schedule change. He said it has become difficult for them to get to a one-day meeting and return home the same day.

"We are done (with the airline) if we can't get to Albuquerque or Los Alamos earlier," Elkins said. "With the schedule the way it is now, by the time we get to Los Alamos, half the day is over. We can't arrive at a meeting in the middle of the business day and then leave early to catch a 3 p.m. flight."

New Mexico Airlines Chief

Executive Officer Greg Kahlstorf said when contacted that he is not aware of any major schedule changes on the Carlsbad-Albuquerque route.

"I have not received a bona fide complaint," he said. "The only change I am aware of in our air service is between Los Alamos and Carlsbad. We tweaked the schedule so people in Los Alamos could buy a ticket and get to Carlsbad."

Flight schedules found online Friday showed the daily flight from Carlsbad to Albuquerque is at 7:50 a.m., arriving in Albuquerque at 9:11 a.m. with return flights leaving Albuquerque just before 3 p.m.

The former schedule allowed passengers to board in Carlsbad at 6:30 a.m., returning to Carlsbad from Albuquerque on a 6:30 p.m. flight.

New Mexico Airlines now offers service between Los Alamos and Albuquerque, but the departure and arrival times are not compatible with the flight times to and from Carlsbad.

According to the airline's booking site, the departure time from Albuquerque to Los Alamos is at 10:10 a.m., arriving in Los Alamos at 10:30 a.m. On the return flight, the last flight from Los Alamos is at 4 p.m., arriving in Albuquerque at 4:20 p.m.

Among the primary users of the air service are officials, contractors and employees associated with the U.S Department of Energy's Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, a nuclear waste repository located about 27 miles east of Carlsbad.

The two national laboratories with offices in Carlsbad are associated with WIPP and staff frequently travels to Albuquerque and Los Alamos for required meetings.

Mayor Dale Janway said he has heard about the schedule change but thus far, he has received no complaints.

"Although no one has really complained to me about it, I imagine it is especially difficult for people who go up to Albuquerque and come back the same day," Janway said.

Heather Clark, public information officer for Sandia National Laboratory, declined to comment on the schedule change and its impact on lab employees who use the air service.

"It's a business decision by New Mexico Airlines and we decline further comment," she said.

Elkins said when New Mexico Airlines came into Carlsbad seven years ago as the essential air service carrier, he was serving on the Carlsbad City Council and was the Mayor Pro Tem.

He said he worked with Kahlstorf to design a schedule to meet the needs of WIPP and the contractor agencies associated with it that have personnel who frequently travel to Albuquerque and Los Alamos.

"We fought hard for that. It was all about the schedule," Elkins said. "With the original flight schedule, we were able to attend to business and be back in Carlsbad by 8 p.m. the same day," Elkins said.

Source: http://www.currentargus.com/ci_23667333/changes-carlsbads-new-mexico-air-flights-irks-some?source=rss_viewed

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

BPA-Free Plastics Going On Trial In Texas

PlastiPure helps manufacturers create water bottles and other plastic products that have no estrogenic activity.

PlastiPure

PlastiPure helps manufacturers create water bottles and other plastic products that have no estrogenic activity.

PlastiPure

Scientists and lawyers are scheduled to debate the safety of certain "BPA-free" plastics this week in a U.S. District Court in Austin, Texas.

At issue is whether a line of plastic resins marketed by Eastman Chemical contains chemicals that can act like the hormone estrogen, and perhaps cause health problems.

The court battle has attracted attention because the Eastman resins, sold under the name "Tritan," have been marketed as an alternative to plastics that contain an additive called BPA. BPA has been shown to act a bit like estrogen, though it's not clear whether people are affected by the small amounts that come from plastic water bottles or food containers.

Eastman has sued two small companies based in Austin, Texas that published a study showing that a wide range of plastic products exhibit what's known as estrogenic activity. Some of the products were made from Eastman's Tritan.

Eastman's suit says PlastiPure and CertiChem, have made false or misleading statements about Tritan in marketing their own services. CertiChem tests plastic products for estrogenic activity. PlastiPure, a sister company, helps manufacturers make plastic products with no estrogenic activity.

Both companies were founded by George Bittner, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin and an author of the study that found estrogenic activity in most plastics. The study included tests of plastic products that had been subjected to heat, wear, and radiation intended to mimic exposure to sunlight.

"We certainly thought the results were not going to be greeted with favor by at least some plastic manufacturers," Bittner says. But, he says, "by bringing suit, Eastman Chemical has effectively put its Tritan product on trial."

Eastman Chemical wouldn't comment for this story. But in an interview last year, Lucian Boldea, a vice president of the company, said Bittner's study used a screening test for estrogenic activity that is known to produce false positives.

"To misrepresent a screening test as conclusive evidence is what we have the issue with," he said.

Bittner responds that the study included a second test that ruled out false positives.

Expert testimony about the various tests is likely to be a big part of the trial, says Rebecca Tushnet, a law professor at Georgetown. "I think it really depends what the evidence shows about these tests," she says. "And that really is a matter for experts."

This case includes some complex and competing scientific arguments, Tushnet says, which are often difficult to present in court. And even when the science is less nuanced, she says, it can be a challenge for judges and juries.

"Courts have a very ambiguous relationship to science," she says. "Sometimes they really defer to it and sometimes they are really skeptical of it. So it can be hard to predict what's going to happen in any particular case."

At least one piece of evidence likely to come up during the trial could prove embarrassing to Eastman. A supposedly independent study that appears to vindicate Tritan was actually paid for by Eastman, even though that wasn't disclosed in the published article, according to court documents.

If Eastman prevails, it will probably mean the end of PlastiPure and CertiChem. The suit has already caused big problems for the companies, says Mike Usey, the CEO of PlastiPure. "More than half the people that were at Certichem and Plastipure before the suit are now gone," he says

Even so, Usey says he's optimistic about the companies' future. "One of the good things that should come out of this suit is more consumer awareness of what the real issues are and what solutions are immediately available."

Whether or not that happens, the suit is a strong indication that the public debate is no longer about BPA alone, but about whether plastics contain any chemicals with enough hormonal activity to affect people.

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/07/15/201523240/bpa-free-plastics-going-on-trial-in-texas?ft=1&f=1007

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Pasco changes animal control policies, procedures

Pasco County, Florida -- Following the tragic incident where a 10-year-old family cat that got out of its home was put down by an animal control officer, Pasco County decided to re-evaluate its policies and procedures.

After its review, the County decided the officer had acted in accordance with their policies, however, they also decided to make some changes to their policies that will be implemented immediately.

They are as follows:

* There will be no euthanasia in the field by Animal Control officers.

* An attempt will be made to locate the owner in the immediate vicinity prior to transport.

* If unable to return the injured animal to its owner, the officer will either take the animal to the Land O' Lakes shelter or to a participating veterinarian, if closer, to be medically evaluated.

* If the owner is not identified through microchip, tag or neighborhood locale, and the animal has been severely injured, it will be humanely euthanized at the shelter.

* The remains of any such animals will be held at the shelter for seven days.

* We will also be conducting additional training for the staff on the new?procedures and will continue to look for additional improvements.

The County says it will evaluate the impact of these changes over the next 90 days and then determine if they will remain in effect or need further modifications. It is also inviting all Pasco County veterinarians to a forum to discuss creating a network of emergency care for when injured strays are found.

The County says it would like to use this sad experience as a teaching moment to remind all pet owners to tag, microchip or tattoo their pet, to help ensure they can be reunited if they are separated.

Right now, the shelter is currently closed as the County deals with overcrowding and lack of volunteers they desperately need to help staff care for abandoned animals. The County hopes to reopen the shelter for dog adoptions on July 23.

Source: http://zephyrhills.wtsp.com/news/news/388432-pasco-changes-animal-control-policies-procedures

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Sunday, July 14, 2013

Former Mayor Richard M. Daley subpoenaed to testify in police-torture case

Former Mayor Richard M. Daley was served with a subpoena Friday to testify at an evidentiary hearing for a rape convict who says he was framed decades ago when Daley was Cook County?s elected state?s attorney.

The legal move involves a post-conviction petition by Stanley Wrice, who was found guilty in a 1982 gang rape but says he was tortured by Chicago Police into giving a false confession.

Daley, the county?s top prosecutor from 1980 to 1989, was subpoenaed through Katten Muchin Rosenman, the law firm with which he is now affiliated.

Wrice, 59, is serving a 100-year prison sentence at the downstate Pontiac Correctional Center after being convicted of charges including rape.

In January, Cook County Circuit Judge Evelyn Clay granted Wrice a hearing on his claims that two detectives from the Chicago Police Department working for then-Cmdr. Jon Burge beat the confession out of him.

Burge is serving a four-year federal prison sentence for perjury in connection with his testimony in a civil case involving allegations that he and his detectives tortured suspects.

The hearing for Wrice is scheduled for Sept. 23. His attorneys plan to ask Daley under oath about what he knew about allegations of torture by police.

?This is not a witch hunt,? said attorney Heidi Lambros, who is handling Wrice?s post-conviction petition without compensation along with New York lawyer Jennifer Bonjean. ?Daley was the boss. His prosecutors took the lead from him. Maybe he truly didn?t know, but he should have.?

Also Friday, Wrice?s attorneys served Illinois Appellate Judge Bertina Lampkin with a subpoena to testify at the hearing. Lampkin, who was served with the subpoena at her state office in the Loop, prosecuted Wrice as an assistant state?s attorney working under Daley, Bonjean said.

In 2011, former Gov. Jim Thompson, former U.S. Sen. Adlai Stevenson III and other legal and political heavyweights filed a ?friend of the court? brief with the Illinois Supreme Court in support of a hearing for Wrice.

The state?s high court ruled last year that Wrice should receive a hearing because the use of torture to extract a confession ?is an egregious violation? of the justice system and ?is never a harmless error.?

Prosecutors had unsuccessfully argued that even if Wrice was indeed physically coerced into confessing, that this amounted to a harmless legal error because there was enough evidence to convict him without his confession.

The case was sent back to Clay, who decided that Wrice ?successfully established a substantial showing of actual innocence.?

She pointed to an affidavit from witness Bobby Joe Williams recanting his trial testimony that Wrice had been involved in the rape. Northwestern University students, working with David Protess of the Chicago Innocence Project, obtained the sworn statement.

The judge also cited an affidavit from Wrice?s co-defendant Rodney Benson, who admitted he was involved in the rape but said Wrice wasn?t.

In 2011, a federal judge ruled that Daley could be sued as a defendant in another case, a lawsuit involving allegations of police torture. The plaintiffs in that case wanted Daley to testify under oath about what they asserted was a citywide conspiracy to cover up torture.

That case involved a lawsuit by Michael Tillman, who spent 23 years in prison for murder. Tillman claimed Burge?s detectives tortured him into a confession. But in 2012, Tillman received a $5.3 million legal settlement from the city ? so Daley never had to sit for a deposition in the case.

Source: http://www.suntimes.com/news/crime/21273547-418/former-mayor-richard-m-daley-subpoenaed-to-testify-in-police-torture-case.html

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Jeff Bezos to open Center for Innovation this fall, aims to inspire young would-be entrepreneurs

Bezos Center for Innovation to open this fall

What's an e-commerce tycoon to do after funding everything from nuclear fusion startups to commercial spaceflight ventures? Why, help develop a museum exhibit to inspire young folks and teach them about innovation, of course. After more than two years of development and $10 million from Jeff Bezos' own pockets, the Museum of History and Industry will open the doors to the Bezos Center for Innovation on October 12th. Not only does the center aim to help visitors learn about "the importance of innovation" through interactive exhibits, but it will toot Seattle's horn for being "the birthplace of so many trailblazing companies." If you can't make it to The Emerald City, we're sure Bezos has a few learning alternatives in mind.

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Source: Museum of History and Industry

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

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Examining the Labor Concerns in Bangladesh | Almost 30,000 Inmates Go on Hunger Strike in California | Maternal Antibodies May Be Connected to Autism

For nearly five centuries, doctors classified nostalgia as a disease, even a form a psychosis. Recent research has shed new light on nostalgia,?John Tierney,?science columnist?for Takeaway partner The New York Times, explains. Over the last ten years, Tierney says, scientists have found that "people who actually indulge in these wistful memories...actually end up feeling more optimistic and more inspired about the future."

Source: http://www.thetakeaway.org/2013/jul/11/

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Transit Times in NYC, Visualized

Transit Times in NYC, Visualized

As cities grow and populations expand, people move further and further away from the center. That's definitely happened in New York?and this visualization shows how the shift to more distant neighbourhoods affects travel time.

The interactive maps lets you click on a location and then gives a color-coded insight into transit times across the entire city. It's a little like Trulia's Google Maps mash up?in fact it almost certainly shares some data sources with it?though it collapses data down instead of giving results by transport type. And it looks prettier, too. [WNYC via Flowing Data]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/transit-times-in-nyc-visualized-752731586

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Retained Executive Search Firms in Mumbai| Executive Recruitment in India

Retained Executive Search is the fast growing arm of HR Reflections, which has been specially formed to address requirements of diverse organizations for searching and acquiring talent at senior level.

Choosing the right executive search firm can be a task by itself. We at HR Reflections recognize this and encourage our prospective clients to look at our testimonials that highlight why we are different and why clients choose us as their executive search solutions provider.

Retained Search is mostly used for hiring senior, and difficult to find skills. Typically used for senior level executive positions those are extremely urgent & critical. When you need to hire key leadership positions, our dedicated search consultants with extremely focused approach are able to recruit the most talented executives from the best fit recruiting target.

HR Reflections is an independent, retained executive search firm with highly researched methodologies, core value systems and strong client relationships which has been built on personal service, trust and success. We provide our clients with aggressive timing, technical competence, and commitment to communication, follow-through, and delivery of a quality service and thereby support our clients in all of their market searches. We believe in our ability to provide innovative, yet consistent executive recruitment solutions across diverse business cultures which make us the best executive search firm with whom to partner. Our retained executive search consulting services is appropriate when it is critical to hire not just any qualified person, but the most qualified and appropriate person to meet the challenges of the positions in question.

We are selective in the search assignments that we accept, a selectivity that enables us to meet and exceed our clients? expectations.

Source: http://www.hrreflections.com/retained-executive-search.html

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Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Egypt's protesters give Morsi deadline to go

CAIRO (AP) ? The organizers of anti-government protests that brought millions of Egyptians into the streets this weekend gave Islamist President Mohammed Morsi until Tuesday afternoon to step down or else it will hike up its campaign, as protesters overran and ransacked the headquarters of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood.

In a sign of Morsi's growing isolation, five Cabinet ministers met Monday to consider resigning their posts and joining the protest movement, the state news agency said. The meeting gathered the communications, legal affairs, environment, tourism and water utilities ministers, MENA reported.

The ultimatum issued Monday by Tamarod, the protest organizers, increases pressure on Morsi a day after the opposition's massive show of force on the streets, with millions packing Cairo's Tahrir Square, the streets outside the presidential palace and main squares in cities around the country on the anniversary of Morsi's inauguration.

The main rallies in Cairo were largely peaceful, but deadly violence broke out in several parts of the country, often when marchers came under gunfire, apparently from Islamists. At least 16 people were killed and more than 780 injured, Health Ministry spokesman Yehya Moussa told state television.

Tamarod, Arabic for "Rebel," issued a statement giving Morsi until 5 p.m. (1500 GMT) on Tuesday to step down and pave the way for early presidential elections or else it would bring the crowds back out, march on more palaces and launch "complete civil disobedience." Protesters were already gearing up for new rallies Monday.

The group also called on the powerful military and the police to clearly state their support for the protesters. Police mostly stayed on the sidelines Sunday, and some officers have vowed they will not protect the Brotherhood. The army has sent reinforcements to bases on the outskirts of Cairo and other cities across the nation. Its chief, Defense Minister Abdel-Fattah el-Sisisi, had given Morsi and the opposition a week to work out their differences ? a deadline that passed Sunday.

The call reflected opposition hopes that a sign from the military could tip the balance against Morsi and avert what could be a destabilizing standoff.

Morsi has said he will not quit, saying that street action must not be allowed to remove an elected president or else the same could happen to future presidents. At the same time, he has offered no concessions ? though his opponents appear in no mood to accept anything short of his removal anyway. His Islamist supporters, some of them hard-liners who belong to formerly armed militant groups, have vowed to defend him.

The concern is that violence could escalate with the two sides dug in and anger mounting on both sides. Morsi's Islamist supporters showed Sunday they were willing to unleash deadly force when protesters approached their positions, with clashes erupting in multiple cities.

In Cairo, protesters Sunday night attacked the Brotherhood's main headquarters, pelting it with stones and firebombs. Brotherhood backers barricaded inside opened fire on them in clashes that went on for hours and left eight dead. In the early hours Monday, protesters breached the walls of the six-story luxury villa and stormed inside.

They carted off furniture, files, rugs, blankets, air conditioning units and portraits of Morsi, according to an Associated Press journalist at the scene. One protester emerged with a pistol and handed it over to a policeman outside.

Footage on local TV networks showed smashed windows, blackened walls and smoke billowing out of the fortified villa in the Muqatam district in eastern Cairo. A fire was still raging on one floor hours after the building was stormed. One protester tore down the Muslim Brotherhood sign from the building's front wall, while another hoisted Egypt's red, black and white flag out an upper-story window and waved it in the air in triumph.

It was not immediately clear whether the Brotherhood supporters holed up inside fled. One witness account spoke of the gunmen running out of the building under the cover of heavy gunfire. Another said they fled through a back door.

Morsi's critics view the Brotherhood headquarters as the seat of real power in Egypt, consistently claiming that the Islamist group's spiritual leader, Mohammed Badie and his powerful deputy, Khairat el-Shater, actually call the shots behind Morsi. Morsi and Brotherhood officials have denied this and say they have tried to give opponents a greater voice, only to be spurned.

If the five Cabinet ministers resign, it would show the further paring down of Morsi's backing outside the Brotherhood. The five are among the non-Islamists in a Cabinet where Brotherhood members hold 11 of more than 30 spots and Brotherhood sympathizers hold several more.

On Monday, anti-Morsi protesters were gearing up for a second day of demonstrations.

Some protesters spent the night in dozens of tents pitched in the capital's central Tahrir Square and in front of the president's Ittihadiya Palace. They have vowed to stay there until Morsi resigns. The president's supporters, meanwhile, continued their sit-in in front of a major mosque in another part of Cairo.

The anti-Morsi demonstrators are calling for widespread labor strikes in an attempt to ratchet up the pressure on the president, but it was not immediately clear whether unions would respond to the call. Organizers are also calling for sit-ins at the Cabinet building, interim parliament, and another presidential place where Morsi has been working since late last week instead of Ittihadiya.

Sunday's protests were the largest seen in Egypt in the 2? years of turmoil since the ouster of autocrat Hosni Mubarak in February 2011.

For weeks, Morsi's supporters have depicted the planned protest as a plot by Mubarak loyalists to return to power. But their claims were undermined by the extent of Sunday's rallies. In Cairo and a string of cities in the Nile Delta and on the Mediterranean coast, the protests topped even the biggest protests of the 2011's 18-day uprising, including the day Mubarak quit, Feb. 11, when giant crowds marched on Ittihadiya.

The mood was largely festive as protesters at giant anti-Morsi rallies in Tahrir and outside the Ittihadiya palace spilled into side streets and across boulevards, waving flags, blowing whistles and chanting.

Fireworks went off overhead. Men and women, some with small children on their shoulders, beat drums, danced and sang, "By hook or by crook, we will bring Morsi down." Residents in nearby homes showered water on marchers below ? some carrying tents in preparation to camp outside the palace ? to cool them in the summer heat, and blew whistles and waved flags in support.

"Mubarak took only 18 days although he had behind him the security, intelligence and a large sector of Egyptians," said Amr Tawfeeq, an oil company employee marching toward Ittihadiya with a Christian friend. Morsi "won't take long. We want him out and we are ready to pay the price."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypts-protesters-morsi-deadline-134428624.html

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Review: Vizio 42-inch 5.1 Home Theater System

Review: Vizio 42-inch 5.1 Home Theater System
Vizio's new system is inexpensive and efficient -- it delivers the performance of a 5.1 system without a bunch of damn cords running everywhere.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/75kOV6xPCAo/

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Nokia?s Future Survival is With Android

Nokia vs. Android

Nokia vs. Android

Nokia was once the largest cellphone manufacturer in the world, until Apple?s iPhone struck the first blow, and Google?s Android the second. Nokia used the most popular OS at the time, Symbian, until Android took over that top spot in 2010. Nokia sales plummeted and they started looking for ways to survive, but a funny thing happened on the way to their rebirth ? they decided to go with yet another struggling OS, Windows, rather than the more popular Android.

Bernstein Research?s Pierre Ferragu has been a busy person dealing with BlackBerry?s Q1 report, but still found the time to analyze Nokia?s woes, as well. He believes Nokia?s stock is overpriced even though it is down 10-cents or 2.6-percent at $3.81 per share. ?He concludes that Nokia cannot afford to continue offering only Windows Phone:

Our second conclusion is about how Nokia should consider it?s near term future. The company is facing two structural challenges: its exposure to the disappearing feature phone market and the lack of traction of Windows phones. Both could cost Nokia a lot of cash in the near term, in restructuring, marketing / distribution support, and operational losses, which means it could be too late to address the problem in a couple of years. From that perspective, a decision concerning a new platform strategy appears urgent. Better to take the pill before one cannot afford to do so anymore. We wouldn?t be surprised to see Nokia adopting Android as its new low-end platform by year end.
Nokia is hesitant about switching for two reasons ? one, even though Nokia pays Microsoft for the right to use their OS, it is far less than the approximately $1 billion a year that Microsoft pays Nokia, and secondly, Google does not advertise the Android system, but Microsoft spent $400 million dollars to advertise WP7?dollars that Nokia does not have to spend. According to their agreement, the fewer Windows Phones that Nokia sells, the more they would have to pay Microsoft. It is a tough situation for Nokia, their initial decision was based strictly on survival at the time and it may be too late for them to start making Android phones to survive into the future.

Let us know in the comments if you would like to see Nokia make an Android phone ? with Nokia?s quality and design coupled with Android OS, it could be a forced to be reckoned with.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/briefmobile/~3/-QzmrsHeRcs/nokias-future-survival-is-with-android

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Exploring dinosaur growth

Exploring dinosaur growth [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Hannah Johnson
hannah.johnson@bristol.ac.uk
44-117-928-8896
University of Bristol

Psittacosaurus, the 'parrot dinosaur' is known from more than 1000 specimens from the Cretaceous, 100 million years ago, of China and other parts of east Asia. As part of his PhD thesis at the University of Bristol, Qi Zhao, now on the staff of the Institute for Vertebrate Paleontology in Beijing, carried out the intricate study on bones of babies, juveniles and adults.

Dr Zhao said: "Some of the bones from baby Psittacosaurus were only a few millimetres across, so I had to handle them extremely carefully to be able to make useful bone sections. I also had to be sure to cause as little damage to these valuable specimens as possible."

With special permission from the Beijing Institute, Zhao sectioned two arm and two leg bones from 16 individual dinosaurs, ranging in age from less than one year to 10 years old, or fully-grown. He did the intricate sectioning work in a special palaeohistology laboratory in Bonn, Germany.

The one-year-olds had long arms and short legs, and scuttled about on all fours soon after hatching. The bone sections showed that the arm bones were growing fastest when the animals were ages one to three years. Then, from four to six years, arm growth slowed down, and the leg bones showed a massive growth spurt, meaning they ended up twice as long as the arms, necessary for an animal that stood up on its hind legs as an adult.

Professor Xing Xu of the Beijing Institute, one of Dr Zhao's thesis supervisors, said: "This remarkable study, the first of its kind, shows how much information is locked in the bones of dinosaurs. We are delighted the study worked so well, and see many ways to use the new methods to understand even more about the astonishing lives of the dinosaurs."

Professor Mike Benton of the University of Bristol, Dr Zhao's other PhD supervisor, said: "These kinds of studies can also throw light on the evolution of a dinosaur like Psittacosaurus. Having four-legged babies and juveniles suggests that at some time in their ancestry, both juveniles and adults were also four-legged, and Psittacosaurus and dinosaurs in general became secondarily bipedal."

The paper is published today in Nature Communications.

###

Notes to editors

Paper

'Histology and postural change during the growth of the ceratopsian dinosaur Psittacosaurus lujiatunensis' by Zhao, Q., Benton, M.J., Sullivan, C., Sander, P.M., and Xu, X. in Nature Communications.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Exploring dinosaur growth [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Hannah Johnson
hannah.johnson@bristol.ac.uk
44-117-928-8896
University of Bristol

Psittacosaurus, the 'parrot dinosaur' is known from more than 1000 specimens from the Cretaceous, 100 million years ago, of China and other parts of east Asia. As part of his PhD thesis at the University of Bristol, Qi Zhao, now on the staff of the Institute for Vertebrate Paleontology in Beijing, carried out the intricate study on bones of babies, juveniles and adults.

Dr Zhao said: "Some of the bones from baby Psittacosaurus were only a few millimetres across, so I had to handle them extremely carefully to be able to make useful bone sections. I also had to be sure to cause as little damage to these valuable specimens as possible."

With special permission from the Beijing Institute, Zhao sectioned two arm and two leg bones from 16 individual dinosaurs, ranging in age from less than one year to 10 years old, or fully-grown. He did the intricate sectioning work in a special palaeohistology laboratory in Bonn, Germany.

The one-year-olds had long arms and short legs, and scuttled about on all fours soon after hatching. The bone sections showed that the arm bones were growing fastest when the animals were ages one to three years. Then, from four to six years, arm growth slowed down, and the leg bones showed a massive growth spurt, meaning they ended up twice as long as the arms, necessary for an animal that stood up on its hind legs as an adult.

Professor Xing Xu of the Beijing Institute, one of Dr Zhao's thesis supervisors, said: "This remarkable study, the first of its kind, shows how much information is locked in the bones of dinosaurs. We are delighted the study worked so well, and see many ways to use the new methods to understand even more about the astonishing lives of the dinosaurs."

Professor Mike Benton of the University of Bristol, Dr Zhao's other PhD supervisor, said: "These kinds of studies can also throw light on the evolution of a dinosaur like Psittacosaurus. Having four-legged babies and juveniles suggests that at some time in their ancestry, both juveniles and adults were also four-legged, and Psittacosaurus and dinosaurs in general became secondarily bipedal."

The paper is published today in Nature Communications.

###

Notes to editors

Paper

'Histology and postural change during the growth of the ceratopsian dinosaur Psittacosaurus lujiatunensis' by Zhao, Q., Benton, M.J., Sullivan, C., Sander, P.M., and Xu, X. in Nature Communications.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/uob-edg062613.php

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