Thursday, 21 February 2013

Sunni protesters dig in as tensions flare in Iraq

RAMADI, Iraq (AP) ? Sunni protesters are camped out in dozens of tents festooned with tribal banners on the edge of this one-time Iraqi insurgent stronghold. They are digging in and growing more organized, vowing to keep up their demonstrations against a Shiite-led government they feel has left them behind.

The protesters will seek to bring down the government if their demands aren't met, warns a prominent Sunni sheik who once helped Americans battle al-Qaida in Iraq. He speaks ominously that armed militants who once fought U.S. troops could rally to the cause.

"When we give up hope that the government can reform itself, we will call for toppling it," Sheik Ahmed Abu Risha said in his well-guarded family compound near the banks of the Euphrates. "If this government does not disband itself, we will head to Baghdad and stage protests in the streets and paralyze the government's work until it falls apart."

When the last U.S. troops withdrew from Iraq in December 2011, there was hope that majority Shiites and minority Sunnis and Kurds would learn to work together, resolve their differences and create a healthy democracy in a country with a history of strong-arm rule.

But as the 10th anniversary of the March 20, 2003 U.S.-led invasion approaches next month, the same sectarian tensions stirred up by the war are flaring again ? in no small part, many Sunnis say, because of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's attempts to consolidate power.

Nobody is predicting a return to open warfare. The Sunnis know they stand little chance of overpowering the Shiites, who dominate the government, army and police. Nor do the majority of Iraq's Sunni Arabs, including protesters, support al-Qaida and its frequent widespread bombings of Shiite targets.

But Abu Risha's comments in an interview on Monday with The Associated Press point to growing impatience among demonstrators in the vast western province of Anbar and other predominantly Sunni areas. Their bitterness has only increased since the shooting deaths of several demonstrators by Iraqi security forces in nearby Fallujah late last month.

Abu Risha carries considerable weight in Anbar. He took over leadership of the province's Sahwa movement, a Sunni tribal militia that joined the U.S.-led fight against insurgents, after his brother was assassinated in 2007. The Sahwa members' decision to fight alongside American forces is widely credited with helping turn the tide against al-Qaida.

Cars heading to the border with Jordan and Syria detour along a well-worn dirt path to avoid a tent city straddling the highway outside Ramadi that has become the focus for nearly two months of rallies. The more than 50 tents now have cinder-block foundations built directly on the pavement to keep the rainwater out.

During a visit this week, power generators hummed as backhoes prepared for the next round of mass prayers and accompanying rally that are likely to draw tens of thousands again on Friday.

The arrest of bodyguards assigned to Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi was the spark that set off the protests in late December. Al-Issawi hails from Anbar and is one of the power-sharing government's most senior Sunni politicians.

The demonstrations have little to do with the move against his staff anymore.

Sunni protesters complain they suffer from discrimination by the Shiite-dominated government. They accuse Baghdad of arbitrarily detaining members of their sect and say they are being targeted unfairly by a tough anti-terrorism law and policies designed to weed out members of Saddam Hussein's former regime.

Al-Maliki's government has called on security forces to show restraint toward the protesters and has set up a panel to consider their demands. It has taken some steps to address the grievances, like releasing detainees and moving to restore the pensions of some former state employees under Saddam.

Abu Risha said he and other senior protest figures are doing their best to keep the demonstrations peaceful. Protesters have occasionally thrown stones ? including at a senior Sunni politician not long after the rallies erupted ? but they appear to be heeding tribal and religious leaders' appeals not to take up arms for now.

"Horrible things would have happened if we hadn't been able to control these people," said Iraqi opposition lawmaker Ahmed al-Alwani.

That could change the longer protesters' rage simmers. Leaders of the demonstrations are demanding that the government hand over soldiers involved in the shooting deaths of five stone-throwing protesters late last month ? the first such deaths since the protests began. Soldiers have since been killed in apparent retaliatory attacks.

Abu Risha told the AP that if another Fallujah-style shooting happens, armed militants will likely get involved.

"There were armed groups that wanted to attack the army, but we prevented them," he said. "If the army continues such acts, we will not stop the resistance groups from dealing with the army. ... The national resistance will take over the task of protecting the protesters."

Asked to specify which militant groups might take up arms, Abu Risha named the Islamic Army in Iraq and the 1920 Revolution Brigades.

The two Sunni insurgent groups targeted American forces after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion. They do not share al-Qaida's fundamentalist ideology and some in their ranks have actively clashed with the jihadist group.

Both have voiced support for the protests. So has al-Qaida's local franchise. That has prompted concern from Iraqi and U.S. officials, who fear that extremists could draw support from the demonstrators' feelings of alienation and hostility toward the Shiite-led government.

The prime minister's spokesman, Ali al-Moussawi, dismissed Abu Risha's comments as being "outside the framework of the law and the constitution." He said the influential clan leader does not represent all the protesters and is seeking personal gain from the demonstrations.

But regional experts at the Eurasia Group believe the government's handling of the Sunni opposition is fostering a longer-term security threat in Iraq's west. Analysts Crispin Hawes and Ayham Kamel wrote in a recent report that al-Maliki's approach "plays into the hands of Sunni extremists."

Michael Hanna, a Middle East expert at the Century Foundation, said Sunni political leaders have not done enough to stem political violence and terrorism. But he questioned whether Sunni militants would try to confront Iraqi troops head on.

"The leaders are probably pretty dubious of where that leads. The security forces, for all their shortfalls, have become a real fighting force," he said.

Some protesters say the Fallujah shooting marked a turning point that has galvanized their call for reform. An empty coffin commemorating the "martyrs of Fallujah" lies in the middle of the Ramadi protest grounds.

"The shooting shows that the government has become more repressive against the Sunnis," said Sunni cleric Fakhir al-Taie, who was one of at least 20 wounded during the Fallujah melee. "Now we view the government as an enemy to us. ... The core problem is that we have no confidence in this government."

Fear of further clashes with security forces is one reason that protesters have not yet tried to march on the capital. Organizers considered holding mass prayers in Baghdad last week but later decided against it. The government sealed off approaches to the capital just in case.

Baghdad has been spared large-scale protests so far. Several hundred worshippers rally in the courtyard of a prominent mosque after prayers each Friday but do not take their protests any further.

Demonstrators have taken to the streets in other cities with large Sunni communities, including Samarra, Tikrit and Mosul.

Abdul-Hameed Younis Hamouda, a 60-year-old tribal leader and one of the organizers in Mosul, acknowledges that the government has addressed some of the protesters' grievances, but says it still has a long way to go.

"The delay in meeting our demands is not in the government's interest," he said. "Our patience is running out."

___

Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed reporting.

___

Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://twitter.com/adamschreck

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sunni-protesters-dig-tensions-flare-iraq-185606341.html

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Wednesday, 20 February 2013

Hip replacements more likely to fail in women

CHICAGO (AP) ? A new study shows that hip replacements are more likely to fail in women than in men.

Researchers found that a small number of the hip implants failed overall, but women were 29 percent more likely than men to need a repeat surgery within the first three years.

Researchers looked at more than 35,000 surgeries at 46 hospitals in the Kaiser Permanente health system. The study is being published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine. It was funded by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Some experts say more research is needed to determine which models of hip implants perform best in women.

Women make up the majority of the more than 400,000 Americans who have full or partial hip replacements each year.

___

Online:

Journal: http://www.jamainternalmed.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hip-replacements-more-likely-fail-women-225823764.html

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Dueling bobcats caught on camera in Texas

CARROLLTON, Texas A neighborhood in Carrollton, Texas is on edge after two bobcats were caught on video nearly fighting. The amateur video, posted online to YouTube, shows the wild cats in a stare-down before they simply walk their separate ways. Homeowners in the area have seen bobcats and coyotes before, but rarely has anyone been so close to the wild animals.

Kevin Martuscello used his smartphone to shoot the video from the safety of a car, CBS Dallas / Fort Worth reports. His father, Mike Martuscello, actually saw the wild cats first, near his front yard. They were both surprised by the size of the animals.

Before the camera was rolling, Mike witnessed the two cats fighting. "They got in a physical fight with each other over there," said the elder Martuscello. "They were clawing and scratching, biting at each other, jumping up and down in the air. It was a wild scene."

"Literally, it was a real cat fight," Mike Martuscello added.

When asked if he was afraid of encountering the bobcats, Mike Martuscello explained, "I was when I first saw them, when I was by myself, because I had never been that close to bobcats before. I really didn't know what the reaction was going to be. To see them this close, it was kind of scary at first. But they were so preoccupied with each other that they ignored us pretty much."

Other homeowners have seen bobcats and coyotes in the area before. Stan Firebaugh lives next to a creek that runs through the neighborhood, and he recently took photographs of two coyotes in a neighbor's yard.

Jenny Garoutte also lives in the neighborhood, and said that the homeowner's association has warned that this is mating season for the animals. She is concerned about smaller animals in the area, particularly pets. Wildlife experts at Cornell University called bobcats "opportunistic predators" that feed on poultry, housecats, small dogs and exotic birds.

Animal Control officials in Carrollton said that there have been no reports of injuries to either pets or people and community leaders said that they will set out traps for the cats next to the nearby creek.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsNational/~3/gFB-hOr3qrE/

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A Frightening Prospect: War in the East China Sea http://thediplomat.com...

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Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Burger King apologizes after Twitter hacking

This frame grab taken Monday, Feb. 18, 2013, shows what appears to be Burger King's Twitter account after it was apparently hacked. Starting just after noon Eastern time on Monday, the fast-foot company's Twitter picture was changed to a McDonald's logo, and the account tweeted that it had been sold to rival McDonald's. (AP Photo)

This frame grab taken Monday, Feb. 18, 2013, shows what appears to be Burger King's Twitter account after it was apparently hacked. Starting just after noon Eastern time on Monday, the fast-foot company's Twitter picture was changed to a McDonald's logo, and the account tweeted that it had been sold to rival McDonald's. (AP Photo)

Somebody hacked Burger King's Twitter account on Monday, posting obscene messages and changing its profile picture to a McDonald's logo.

The tweets stopped after a little more than an hour, and Burger King said it had reached out to Twitter to suspend the account. A Twitter spokesman did not immediately respond to a phone message left on Monday.

Late Monday, Burger King tweeted: "Interesting day here at BURGER KING, but we're back! Welcome to our new followers. Hope you all stick around!"

Burger King, which usually tweets several times a week, typically does so to promote sales on chicken sandwiches, or to ask questions such as how many bites it takes to eat a chicken nugget.

But just after noon EST on Monday, someone tweeted via Burger King's account, "We just got sold to McDonalds!" They also changed the icon to rival McDonald Corp.'s golden arches and the account's background picture to McDonald's new Fish McBites.

About 55 tweets and retweets followed over the next hour and a quarter, including some that contained racial epithets, references to drug use and obscenities. The account tweeted: "if I catch you at a wendys, we're fightin!"

Monday's appropriation of Burger King's Twitter account was a relatively mild example of cybersecurity problems, which are causing increasing concern in Washington and for industry. Media outlets including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post have all said this year that their computer systems were breached, while several NBC websites were briefly hacked in November. White House officials and some lawmakers are pursuing legislation that would make it easier for the government and industry to share information on how to defend against hacking.

Burger King didn't know who hacked the account, and no other social media accounts were affected, said Bryson Thornton, a spokesman for Miami-based Burger King Worldwide Inc. Its social media team and an outside agency manage the Twitter account, but Thornton declined to say how many people knew the account's password. Late Monday, Thornton issued an apology to the company's Twitter followers.

"Earlier today, our official BK Twitter Account was compromised by unauthorized users," Thornton said in a statement. "Upon learning of this incident, our social media teams immediately began working with Twitter security administrators to suspend the compromised account until we could re-establish our brand's official Twitter page. We apologize to our loyal fans and followers, whom might have received unauthorized tweets from our account. We are pleased to announce that the account is now active again."

Twitter acknowledged on Feb. 1 that cyber attackers may have stolen user names and passwords of 250,000 users. It said at the time that it notified users of the breach.

Competitors were sympathetic.

McDonald's responded on Twitter that it empathized with its Burger King counterparts. "Rest assured, we had nothing to do with the hacking."

"My real life nightmare is playing out" on Burger King's twitter feed, wrote Wendy's social media worker Amy Rose Brown.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-02-19-Burger%20King-Twitter%20Hacked/id-d439bcd01b1845e8a1f1686c51c946c4

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Monday, 18 February 2013

Round-the-world UK cyclists killed in Thailand

In this undated family photo supplied Monday Feb. 18, 2013, showing British couple Peter Root and Mary Thompson, both 34, who were killed in Thailand Wednesday Feb. 13, 2013, in a road accident during their round-the-world cycling odyssey. The couple from Britain's Guernsey in the Channel Islands, left Britain in July 2011 and had cycled through Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and China, a journey chronicled on the website Two on Four Wheels, until tragedy struck.(AP Photo/Jerry Root) NO SALES

In this undated family photo supplied Monday Feb. 18, 2013, showing British couple Peter Root and Mary Thompson, both 34, who were killed in Thailand Wednesday Feb. 13, 2013, in a road accident during their round-the-world cycling odyssey. The couple from Britain's Guernsey in the Channel Islands, left Britain in July 2011 and had cycled through Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and China, a journey chronicled on the website Two on Four Wheels, until tragedy struck.(AP Photo/Jerry Root) NO SALES

(AP) ? A British couple's round-the-world cycling odyssey ended in tragedy when both of them were killed in a road accident in Thailand.

Peter Root and Mary Thompson, who had been chronicling their journey in a blog, died Wednesday when they were hit by a pickup truck in a province east of Bangkok, Thai police said Monday.

The couple, both 34 and from Guernsey in the Channel Islands, left Britain in July 2011 and had cycled through Europe, the Middle East, Central Asia and China.

The trip was a once-in-a-lifetime experience for the couple, who met in art school and spent six years saving money and planning their journey, Peter's father Jerry Root told the Associated Press in an interview.

"They were both inspirational," Jerry Root said. "They didn't just talk about it, they did it. I couldn't be prouder of them."

He said they were both experienced cyclists who knew the rigors and risks of extended bicycle travel.

"They were camping wild, as they called it," he said. "What helps me is to think of how happy they were with each other. They were leading the life they wanted to. It was the happiest, the most fruitful of lives."

The couple had been posting photos and details of their trip on the website Two on Four Wheels. They also had many followers on Twitter and Facebook who were tracing their journey and vicariously enjoying their adventure, which included a trip through remote parts of Central Asia.

A video they posted from that part of the journey shows them camping in the desert, riding through hills, stopping to swim in rivers and lakes, and braving heavy snowstorms. They also cycle through tense situations as armed conflict breaks out during their journey through Tajikistan.

There is also footage showing Thompson suffering a gash to her knee after an apparent collision with a truck.

The couple look tanned, joyous and relaxed ? if a bit windblown ? in the footage. It is apparent life on the road agreed with them.

"They never talked about the trip as having a destination or a deadline or a time scale," said Ben Thompson, Mary's brother. "They didn't have firm plans, they had rough ideas. They just loved people. They were always dragging people to the campfire to share a story and a beer and some food."

After Southeast Asia, the couple were planning to make their way to New Zealand for a brief respite, he said.

Thai Police Lt. Col. Supachai Luangsukcharoen said Monday that investigators found their bodies, their bicycles and their belongings scattered along a roadside, along with a pickup truck that crashed between some trees.

Supachai said the truck driver, 25-year-old Worapong Sangkhawat, was seriously injured in the crash. He told police his truck hit the cyclists as he was reaching down to pick up a cap from the vehicle's floor, Supachai said.

The driver has been released on bail and faces charges of causing death by dangerous driving, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in jail.

Police said the couple's bodies were being kept at a rescue unit in Chachoengsao, 20 miles (30 kilometers) east of Bangkok, until they could be repatriated.

___

Writers Jill Lawless in London and Thanyarat Doksone in Thailand contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-18-Thailand-Cyclists%20Killed/id-693b91dcc5be41b98f1e089d753ff7c1

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French leader Hollande's approval rating dips: poll

PARIS (Reuters) - French President Francois Hollande's approval rating slipped to 37 percent in February as pessimism about the economy overtook satisfaction with his military intervention against Islamist rebels in Mali, a poll showed on Sunday.

The IFOP survey published in weekly paper JDD showed that Hollande's backing had dropped by one percentage point since the previous month, giving him the same popularity rate as that of Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault.

Dissatisfaction with the Socialist president was strongest among small business owners, 73 percent of whom were unhappy; blue-collar workers, with 70 percent; and private sector workers, with 66 percent, the pollster said.

The findings show negative views on Hollande's economic policies overshadowing feelings that he displayed strong leadership last month in sending French troops to Mali to help its government push back an offensive by Islamist rebels.

Grim economic news has dogged him since the start of 2013 as factory closures kept up pace, unemployment hovered near 15 percent and the national auditor, La Cour des Comptes, published a report highlighting lax management of state funds.

Meanwhile, the government has yet to find a buyer for the Petit-Couronne oil refinery in Normandy, which is set to close in April, and strife has worsened at Peugeot PSA's Aulnay plant, which is set to close in 2014.

The government also said for the first time that it was unlikely to bring the public deficit down to 3 percent of GDP by the end of 2013 in line with European targets, acknowledging doubts expressed by independent economists.

Cour des Comptes chief Didier Migaud said politicians' unwillingness to strip popular programs and attack niches in government was feeding "addiction" to public spending - which is higher in France as a percentage of GDP than any Western country aside from Denmark.

However, Migaud said the European Commission should allow for cyclical variations in the way it measures how countries have performed with regard to deficit targets, as EU-wide austerity policies had crimped activity.

"It's clear that we cannot think without taking the economic context into consideration," he told Europe 1 radio. "You see that growth is weak. Should we be taking that into consideration? Probably."

(Reporting by Nicholas Vinocur; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/french-leader-hollandes-approval-rating-dips-poll-135521421--business.html

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Sunday, 17 February 2013

Game on! New Windows 8 laptops feature Sega console-inspired ...

Sega may no longer make game consoles anymore, but there are still lots of gamers out there who have their Sega Genesis/Mega Drive, Saturn and Dreamcast machines in full working order. Today, it was announced that Sega has given its approval for the Japanese PC retailer Ebten to sell a series of Windows 8 laptops with shells that are inspired by those great old Sega consoles.

The Ebten website has the details (in Japanese, naturally) on these very cool looking Sega Note PC laptops. As you can see, they all have special shells that make them look, erm, sort of, like the Genesis, Saturn and Dreamcast, plus one that has a more generic Sega logo look. The laptops will all have Windows 8-based wallpapers, icons and audio cues based on Sega-esque themes. Unfortunately, it looks like the laptops won't come with any emulated Sega games installed.

You can check out the hardware specs for the four different versions of the Sega Note PCs on Ebten's website. If you want to buy one, the site is taking pre-orders until March 31, with plans to launch the notebooks in June... but only for those in Japan; there are no plans to sell these notebooks outside that country.

Source: Ebten | Image via Sega
Via Eurogamer

Source: http://www.neowin.net/news/game-on-new-windows-8-laptops-feature-sega-console-inspired-designs

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Paranoid Movie Watches You Watch It and Changes to Your Liking

If Choose Your Own Adventure books weren't your go-to in fourth grade there's something seriously wrong with you. But you're going to have another chance to dictate the creative process thanks to a movie that chooses its ending based on sensor data from the audience. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/lx3q_rGBdh0/paranoid-movie-watches-you-watch-it-and-changes-to-your-liking

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Obama attempting to change face of the judiciary (The Arizona Republic)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

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Saturday, 16 February 2013

Meteor warning system ready by 2015

Yekaterina Pustynnikova / AP

In this photo provided by Chelyabinsk.ru, a meteor contrail is seen over Chelyabinsk on Friday, Feb. 15, 2013.

By Suzanne Choney

There aren't yet any advance warning systems that could give Earthlings a heads-up before an untracked space rock hits. But a telescope project in Hawaii aims to change that, and potentially provide a chance for those in threatened areas to evacuate. A meteor alert might have made a difference to Russia's Chelyabinsk region on Friday.

Read:?Nuclear-like in its intensity, Russia meteor blast is largest since 1908

"There are excellent ongoing surveys for asteroids that are capable of seeing such a rock with one to two days' warning, but they do not cover the whole sky each night, so there's a good chance that any given rock can slip by them for days to weeks. This one obviously did," astronomer John Tonry of the?Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii?told NBC News Friday.

Tonry is one of the key players in a NASA-backed effort to build ATLAS (Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System), two observatories in Hawaii that can simultaneously scan the entire visible?sky twice a night.

"If ATLAS were up and running we might very well have seen" the meteor that hit Russia, he said, and "could have provided one to two days' warning."

However, he adds, the success of detection "depends on a couple of assumptions." One is that it's not cloudy. Another is that the asteroid doesn't go over the South Pole, "where ATLAS cannot see."

Telescopes, Tony said, "can only see the sky above the horizon, obviously. A telescope that's sited in the northern hemisphere (which ATLAS will be) cannot see all the way to the South Pole of the sky." And, "if the asteroid were coming from that direction, there's a good chance that it would never rise above the horizon for a northern telescope before it hits."

While it would "easy to build multiple copies of ATLAS and put some in the south, and spread them out so they see different weather patterns ... that's for the future," he said.

Dozens were hospitalized and nearly 1,000 residents suffered minor injuries from fallen debris and the impact of the meteor's powerful landing. NBC's Tom Costello reports.

The ATLAS telescopes are "just now" being built, Tonry said; ATLAS should "start running around the end of 2014 and be fully operational by the end of 2015." NASA has provided $5 million in funding for ATLAS.

At one time, NASA considered launching an asteroid-hunting probe, but that didn't go forward because of the cost, estimated at $500 million almost a decade ago.

Other private efforts are in the works, too.

Last year, leaders of the nonprofit?B612 Foundation,?including Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart, started a campaign to fund and launch a space telescope that will?hunt for potential killer asteroids?over the course of five and a half years.

Another venture, from a group called?Planetary Resources, ultimately wants to do asteroid mining, but says its first step is to "launch an orbital fleet of 'personal space telescopes' capable of looking out into the heavens or back down on Earth," wrote Alan Boyle, NBC News.com's Science editor?last year.

More about cosmic hits (and near misses):

Suzanne Choney is a contributing writer for NBC News.com.?You can follow her on?Twitter.

NASA looks at the flyby of asteroid 2012 DA14 from several amateur observatories across Australia.

?

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/15/16977795-meteor-warning-system-in-the-works-but-not-ready-yet?lite

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The World's Loneliest Post Office Still Loves Postcards (PHOTOS)

In the middle of the South Pacific, one of the world's most remote post offices continues to do brisk business in stamps, as tourists from around the globe flock to pay their respects to the postcard, a much-maligned, antiquated but great form of expression.

The small building is hardly a palace, like the greatest post offices around the world, but the trappings of the global shipping business are there. A small bank of post office boxes stands ready. A scale is prominently displayed on the counter. A variety of commemorative stamps are on display and on sale. A small damp sponge in a plastic container is available so that customers can wet the backs of their postage without licking.

In other words, but for the tropical music playing on the radio and a small classroom-style globe with a fluorescent star marking the remote location of this island in the South Pacific, this could be a small-town post office anywhere. It isn't and that is why your letter may take a while to arrive. Fortunately, when the recipient finally picks it up they will likely be rather impressed by the Easter Island postmark.

Business on a Wednesday morning was relatively brisk for a town of only about 5,000 people. Locals picked up bills and correspondence; a couple from the mainland came in to get their passports stamped with an unofficial proof of entry. This reporter mailed three honest-to-God postcards back to the United States, at a cost of C$500 each.

A logbook of visitors -- from many countries and written in many languages -- was evidence of the worldwide appeal of this place, and the irreplaceable service it provides, even in an era of email, Skype and Instagram.

Asked if people still send lots of postcards from Easter Island, a clerk replied with a drawn out "Siiii," that indicated the glaringly obvious question fell somewhere between idiotic and offensive.

Moments later, a couple of foreign visitors with fanny packs and wide-brimmed hats to keep of the sun wandered in, probably to mail a letter home.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/15/the-worlds-most-remote-post-office_n_2690865.html

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Russian meteor + Apple at Staples + Pistorius sobs

Paul Brinkmann
Reporter- South Florida Business Journal
Email ?|?LinkedIn ?|?Twitter

South Florida Weather

Numerous showers, possible thunderstorm, mostly cloudy in the 70s.

National weather

Cold front brings snow showers to Mid-Atlantic and Northeast.

Today?s Talkers

Russian meteor videos show fire in the sky, explosions

Hedge funds lost faith in Apple?

Staples to start selling Apple products

Pistorius sobs as court hears murder charge

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Miami Heat defeat Oklahoma City 110-100

Paul Brinkmann covers law, accounting, automotive, energy and environmental issues.

Industries:

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Source: http://feeds.bizjournals.com/~r/bizj_southflorida/~3/CWeH3yhrz9Y/russian-meteor-apple-at-staples.html

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Why good hair matters: First animal model of recent human evolution reveals that mutation for thick hair does much more

Feb. 14, 2013 ? The first animal model of recent human evolution reveals that a single mutation produced several traits common in East Asian peoples, from thicker hair to denser sweat glands, an international team of researchers reports.

The team, led by researchers from Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Massachusetts General Hospital, Fudan University and University College London, also modeled the spread of the gene mutation across Asia and North America, concluding that it most likely arose about 30,000 years ago in what is today central China. The findings are reported in the cover story of the Feb. 14 issue of Cell.

"This interdisciplinary approach yields unique insight into the generation of adaptive variation among modern humans," said Pardis Sabeti, associate professor in the Center for Systems Biology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, and one of the paper's senior authors.

"This paper tells a story about human evolution in three parts," said Cliff Tabin, head of the HMS Department of Genetics and co-senior author. "The mouse model links multiple traits to a single mutation, the related association study finds these traits in humans, and computer models tell us where and when the mutation likely arose and spread."

Previous research in Sabeti's lab had identified the mutation as a strong candidate for positive selection. That is, evidence within the genetic code suggested the mutant gene conferred an evolutionary advantage, though what advantage was unclear.

The mutation was found in a gene for ectodysplasin receptor, or EDAR, part of a signaling pathway known to play a key role in the development of hair, sweat glands and other skin features. While human populations in Africa and Europe had one, ancestral, version of the gene, most East Asians had a derived variant, EDARV370A, which studies had linked to thicker scalp hair and an altered tooth shape in humans.

The ectodysplasin pathway is highly conserved across vertebrates -- the same genes do the same thing in humans and mice and zebrafish. For that reason, and because its effects on skin, hair and scales can be observed directly, it is widely studied.

This evolutionary conservation led Yana Kamberov, one of two first authors on the paper, to reason that EDARV370A would exert similar biological effects in an animal model as in humans. The HMS research fellow in genetics developed a mouse model with the exact mutation of EDARV370A -- a difference of one DNA letter from the original, or wild-type, population. That mouse manifested thicker hair, more densely branched mammary glands and an increased number of eccrine, or sweat, glands.

"This not only directly pointed us to the subset of organs and tissues that were sensitive to the mutation, but also gave us the key biological evidence that EDARV370A could have been acted on by natural selection," Kamberov said.

The findings prompted the team to look for similar traits in human populations. When co-first author Sijia Wang and the team including collaborators at Fudan examined the fingertips of Chinese volunteers at colleges and farming villages, they found that the sweat glands of Han Chinese, who carry the derived variant of the gene, were packed about 15 percent more densely than those of a control population with the ancestral variant.

At the same time, Wang and the team including collaborators at University College London were working to zero in on when and where the mutation arose. Computer models suggested that the derived variant of the gene emerged in central China between 13,175 and 39,575 years ago, with a median estimate of 30,925 years. Researchers concluded the derived variant is at least 15,000 years old, predating the migration from Asia by Native Americans, who also carry the mutation.

That time span suggests that different traits could have been under selection at different times. The mutation's many effects, known as pleiotropy, only complicate the question. If changes to the sweat glands conferred an advantage in new climates -- one of the theories the researchers plan to explore further -- changes to hair and to mammary glands could have conferred other advantages at other times.

Not all of these advantages need be direct effects on fitness. "When Pardis started this work, I would not have predicted that a gene that makes good hair would top of a list of mutations that confer evolutionary advantage among humans," said Bruce Morgan, HMS associate professor of dermatology at Massachusetts General Hospital and co-senior author on the paper. "However, in this case 'good hair' may have a biological meaning because it is genetically linked to a physiologically adaptive trait like increased sweating capacity. A cultural preference for a physically obvious trait like hair type could have arisen because individuals with it were more successful, and this would help increase selection on the new variant."

"That (pleiotropy) makes it harder for us to make a guess," Wang said. "If there were only one associated trait, we could say with confidence that's where the selective advantage comes from. But with many traits, we don't know which is the target of selection, and which are just hitchhiking." Wang intends to focus on that question in his new role, as a Max Planck independent research group leader in dermatogenomics at Chinese Academy of Sciences -- Max Planck Partner Institute for Computational Biology in Shanghai.

By leveraging the power of diverse fields, the team is piecing together the foundation for understanding how selected mutations like EDARV370A have impacted human diversity. But, they say, this is only the beginning.

"These findings point to what mutations, when, where and how," said Daniel Lieberman, a professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University and a co-senior author on the study. "We still want to know why."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Harvard Medical School. The original article was written by R. Alan Leo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Yana G. Kamberov, Sijia Wang, Jingze Tan, Pascale Gerbault, Abigail Wark, Longzhi Tan, Yajun Yang, Shilin Li, Kun Tang, Hua Chen et al. Modeling Recent Human Evolution in Mice by Expression of a Selected EDAR Variant. Cell, 14 February 2013 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2013.01.016

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/j8uDUZCu53s/130214133924.htm

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Fewer Afghan troops could mean more Taliban violence

Reducing the number of Afghan security forces could lead to an increase in Taliban violence inside that country as U.S. forces prepare to leave by the end of 2014, Army Gen. Lloyd Austin said Thursday.

Austin was testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee during a hearing to confirm him as the next top U.S. commander to oversee military operations in the Middle East. Austin said keeping a larger Afghan force would allow the Afghan government to mature under a bigger security umbrella.

Currently, the U.S.-led NATO operation has plans to reduce the number of Afghan forces from about 352,000 to around 230,000 after U.S. troops leave in 2014.

Afghan security forces were beefed up to improve security in tandem with the surge of U.S. troops in 2009. The larger number of Afghan troops would be too expensive to maintain and would eventually have to be reduced as security improved around the country, according to the NATO plan.

"A larger Afghan force would help to hedge against any future Taliban mischief, and you could reasonably expect that an enemy that has been that determined, that agile, that very soon after we transition will begin to test the Afghan security forces," Austin told the Senate panel Thursday.

Austin, who did not participate in the Obama administration's recent decision to reduce the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan by 34,000 within the next year, refused to give his opinion on whether the plan was a good idea when lawmakers asked.

In what has become a typical show with recent Obama nominees vetted by the Senate Armed Services Committee, Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, offered some political theater as he asked Austin his opinion on the reduction of American troops in Afghanistan.

Austin was cut off mid-sentence by McCain when he said he would defer to the current commander's assessment. After sarcastically asking Austin the question again, McCain turned to Army Gen. David Rodriguez, who was also at the hearing as the nominee to be the next commander of U.S. military operations in Africa, what he thought of the Afghan plan because he used to be the commander in Afghanistan.

Rodriguez also refused to answer, saying he had left the command some 18 months ago and did not have a current assessment of the country.

Exasperated, McCain let out a giant sigh in what appeared to be disbelief that he could not get an answer.

Source: http://www.wdsu.com/news/national/Fewer-Afghan-troops-could-mean-more-Taliban-violence/-/9853500/18555300/-/pkfwie/-/index.html?absolute=true

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Thursday, 14 February 2013

Plex Android app gets a makeover and media server abilities, beta launches soon (video)

Plex Android app gets a makeover and media server abilities, beta launches soon video

Users of the Plex media server and its suite of client apps can expect an all-new app for Android soon, rebuilt two years after its debut for a vastly improved UI and feature set. While musing about the progress of Android as a platform for users and developers alike -- a good read if you'd like a peek behind the curtain to find out more about multiplatform coding life -- a Plex blog post details everything that's added in the new version, and one major thing taken away: compatibility with any Android OS before 3.2 (retained to keep working with Google TV.) According to the devs, almost 90 percent of users are on at least Ice Cream Sandwich, and focusing on newer platforms means support for newer features like Cloud Messaging, lock screen music player controls and global search integration.

As revealed in a preview video (embedded after the break) the new "Kepler" build also lets it act as a media server, so any media stored on your Android device can be played back on other Plex clients. The company says it set out to make the "most beautiful Android app, period" -- PlexPass subscribers can get a taste of the beta when it launches in Google Play later this week, all others will need to wait until after the test period.

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Source: Plex

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/12/plex-android-kepler-beta/

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Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Obama takes shine to Apple, gives CEO seat of honor at address

A year after President Barack Obama gave a shout-out to the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, and a nod to his widow Laurene, Apple CEO Tim Cook will have a place of honor at Tuesday's State of the Union address. Cook will join NASA's "Mohawk Guy" and 22 others in special box seats set aside for the first lady and Dr. Jill Biden.

But why is Cook there? (Spoiler alert: The answer's at the bottom.) Is Obama flashing his fanboy credentials? Maybe hoping this will score him an early glimpse of the iPhone 6? The Obama administration does show more than its fair share of respect to Apple, and the fate of the company rests on Cook's shoulders. That still doesn't explain his presence amid the distinguished soldiers, civic heroes, survivors of tragedy and rising-star politicians.

Or better yet, how does Apple fit into the president's priorities? Those who are seated are honored, but they remain silent. In fact, when we asked Apple why Cook would be there, a spokesman referred us to the White House, which of course told us to just watch the speech.

So until that begins, we have to guess a bit.

During last year's State of the Union address, President Obama invoked the late Jobs when he sang the praises of American entrepreneurialism:

? An economy built to last is one where we encourage the talent and ingenuity of every person in this country. That means women should earn equal pay for equal work. It means we should support everyone who?s willing to work, and every risk-taker and entrepreneur who aspires to become the next Steve Jobs. After all, innovation is what America has always been about.

Despite the fact that he was inseparable from his BlackBerry at the beginning of his first term, we know Obama is an avid fan of iPods, iPhones and iPads.

We also know Obama sought out Jobs while the tech icon was alive. In one instance, in February, 2011, the president paid a visit to Silicon Valley, and sat between Steve Jobs and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg during dinner. The topic of that discussion? Applying the success of the tech industry to other fields, according to coverage in the New York Times.

Sure, Cook could represent a thriving economy and a sterling American brand, but given the past few months the Cupertino, Calif., company wouldn't exactly be a top choice at the moment, having experienced a significant drop in stock price and a loss in brand-related customer loyalty.

Maybe the clues lie with Cook's fellow honored members of the audience.

The only other CEO in the box will be Peter Hudson, who founded a health care smartphone app startup called iTriage. If Obama's second-term goals include seeing his health care initiative through, perhaps he is signaling that personal technology will play a key role. (The other health care reformer in the crowd is Oregon Governor John Kitzhaber, who according to the White House press statement, has worked "to show how government can do more with less.")

And then there's Bobak Ferdowsi, better known outside NASA as "Mohawk Guy." NASA's Mars Curiosity flight director lit up the Internet when the rover landed on the Red Planet back in August, 2012. He is a proponent of science and technology education, and despite any recent setbacks, Apple is indisputably once again a key player in education technology. Perhaps that's the connection.

We may never know. Until the speech, that is. Here's how we plan to watch the State of the Union via NBC News.

Update,9:35 p.m. ET: And the answer is ... "This year this year, Apple will start making Macs in America again," the president said.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/obama-takes-shine-apple-gives-ceo-seat-honor-address-1C8349538

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Minecraft now available for free on the Raspberry Pi

SCHLADMING, Austria, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Even without their two biggest names, Lindsey Vonn and Bode Miller, the American ski team are enjoying a great world championships, with two golds for Ted Ligety and a bronze for Julia Mancuso. Behind their success lies a well-financed back-up scheme, launched more than a decade ago for the Salt Lake City Olympics, that makes the United States Alpine ski team one of the richest in the world. Since the scheme was set up ahead of the 2002 Winter Games, money has been pouring into the sport in the U.S. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/minecraft-now-available-free-raspberry-pi-042348626.html

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Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Colorful Tet parade leaves gays on sidelines

WESTMINSTER ? Where there were dark clouds there were also rainbows, lots of them, in the hands of members of a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender group and their supporters.

They waved tiny flags and large flags and held up large metal hearts each a bright red, orange, yellow, green, blue and purple on the sidelines of the annual Tet parade held Sunday morning in Westminster's Little Saigon neighborhood to celebrate the Vietnamese new year.

Miniature lion dancer Nicholas Vu, 4, delights the crowd with his cuteness during the 2013 Tet parade in Westminster Sunday.

MINDY SCHAUER, ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

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A thank you

Despite the exclusion of the Partnership of Viet Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Organizations from Sunday's Tet parade, the group delivered typed thank-you notes in embellished red envelopes to parade-goers.

"We respect your feelings, and also we thank you for respecting our differences," according to the note, translated by the group's Phuc Van, 36.

The letter wished the reader a prosperous new year, thanked community organizations for supporting the group's inclusion in parade and noted that members of the group are the community's children, sisters, brothers, fathers, etc.

The letter also said that violence against the LGBT community has led to suicide in some cases, including 14-year-old David Phan, a Utah teen who was reportedly bullied.

The group gathered as spectators since the parade's organizer had barred the Partnership of Viet Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Organizations from walking in the event as it had for the past three years. A court ruling recently upheld the organizer's decision.

Click here to watch a video of the colorful Tet Parade.

Parade-goers lining the route stretching from Magnolia to Bushard streets along Bolsa Avenue waving to men and women dressed in military fatigues, elected officials riding in the back of convertibles, rows of martial artists and even mariachis riding on Midway City's entry for its Sanitary District.

Luis Grajeda, of Garden Grove, helped his daughter Vanessa, 5, place a dollar bill in the mouth of one of the costume dragons dancing along the route. He's been bringing his family to the Tet parade for three years and numerous other parades to introduce his daughters to new cultures.

He said he wouldn't have a problem with the LGBT group participating in the parade.

"I think all the people have the same rights," he said. "Why not?"

Thuy Vo Dang, a professor and director of the Vietnamese American Oral History Project at UC Irvine, had been to the parade before, but this year brought her children ? 2-year-old Austen and 6-year-old Allyse ? to support the LGBT group.

"I didn't want to miss the opportunity to teach my children about social justice," she said. "There's no one way to be a Vietnamese American."

She said the decision to bar the group was disheartening and regressive since it had successfully fought to be included a few years ago. The decision also didn't reflect the community's diversity, she said.

Assemblyman Tom Daly, D-Anaheim, and Jose Solorio, vice president of the Rancho Santiago Community College District board of trustees, each got out of their parade convertibles to greet the LGBT group.

Solorio ultimately let his convertible continue without him after he joined the group on the sidelines.

"I thought it was important for me to convey a message of inclusiveness and equality," he said afterward. Before the parade, he said every one should be able to ring in the new year, regardless of whether the organizers of the event are a public agency or, in this case, a private group.

"Looks pretty public to me," he said of the parade as he walked toward the staging area.

The city of Westminster had funded and organized the parade until this year, when city officials said their budget couldn't handle it. A private group of community members ? coordinated as the Vietnamese Federation of Southern California ? took it on.

When the LGBT group submitted its application to participate in the parade as it had the three years prior, the new organizers said no.

Organizers believed the LGBT group's purpose and theme strayed from that of the Tet parade, to a lawyer representing the Vietnamese Federation of Southern California said in a court brief.

The Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California, which sponsors the popular Tet Festival, had invited some of the LGBT group's members to march alongside them.

But that act of solidarity didn't occur quite as planned.

Natalie Newton, leader of the LGBT group, said the parade's organizers pressured the students Saturday night to ditch the invitation or risk boycotts of their festival.

The student sponsored Tet Festival is unaffiliated with the parade.

"This kind of bullying, this is not community leadership," Newton said. "We insist that we belong here."

Calls seeking comment from a festival organizer and the student group weren't returned.

Newton said the student group usually has 50 or so people marching with it in the parade, but by the time the student group made its appearance on Sunday, there were just a handful.

"I truly believe they were making a statement," Newton said of the small number of marching students. As the students walked by, the LGBT group released clusters of pink balloons with rainbow flags attached.

With the parade over, Newton said the group would gather all the evidence of support it garnered from the city and elected leaders and take it to Westminster's mayor and city attorney to argue for inclusion in next year's event.


  • Tet Parade brings out thousands with gays on sidelines

Related:

Source: http://www.ocregister.com/news/group-495399-parade-lgbt.html

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US believes Japan?s evidence on China radar incident

US believes Japan?s evidence on China radar incident

As the territorial dispute between Japan and China continues to escalate, the United States has stated that it believes Japan?s allegation that China activated its weapons-guiding radar last month. China has denied this, but the US stands by the Japanese claims that Chinese naval vessels locked their radar onto a Japanese destroyer and helicopter.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Monday that the U.S. was briefed by its ally Japan, and said, ?We have satisfied ourselves that it does appear to have happened.? Earlier this week, Japan has revealed that it was mulling over the release of the recorded radar data that will serve as evidence that the Chinese vessels indeed trained their aggressive weapons radar on the Japanese units. While the U.S. has taken no sides in the ongoing dispute, Washington has declared that it opposes any ?unilateral action? undermining Japan?s administration of the islands. China and Japan?s row over a cluster of tiny islands called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese have intensified in the past few weeks, with both Japan and China throwing verbal rhetoric at each other.

China has accused Japan of fabricating reports to smear China, and has urged the Japanese to not inflame the situation further. The Japanese appear to have taken to preparations seriously however, as the Japanese Ground Self-Defense Forces trained with the U.S. Marines in California recently, doing island recapturing exercises.

[ via UT San Diego ]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/JapanDailyPress/~3/9eWbB3SGhv4/us-believes-japans-evidence-on-china-radar-incident-1223163

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Mountain hunt for ex-LAPD cop enters fourth day in mountains

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. (AP) ? The hunt for a former Los Angeles police officer suspected in three killings entered a fourth day in snow-covered mountains Sunday, a day after the LAPD chief ordered a review of the disciplinary case that led to the fugitive's dismissal and new details emerge of the evidence he left behind.

Officials will re-examine the allegations by Christopher Dorner, 33, that his law enforcement career was undone by racist colleagues, Police Chief Charlie Beck announced Saturday. While he promised to hear out Dorner if he surrenders, Beck stressed that he was ordering a review of his 2007 case because he takes the allegation of racism in his department seriously.

"I do this not to appease a murderer. I do it to reassure the public that their police department is transparent and fair in all the things we do," the chief said in a statement.

Authorities suspect Dorner in a series of attacks in Southern California over the past week that left three people dead. Authorities say he has vowed revenge against several former LAPD colleagues whom he blames for ending his career. The killings and threats that Dorner allegedly made in an online rant have led police to provide protection to 50 families, Beck said.

A captain who was named a target in the manifesto posted on Facebook told the Orange County Register he has not stepped outside his house since he learned of the threat.

"From what I've seen of (Dorner's) actions, he feels he can make allegations for injustice and justify killing people and that's not reasonable," said Capt. Phil Tingirides, who chaired a board that stripped Dorner of his badge. "The end never justifies the means."

On Saturday, the scaled-back search party took advantage of a break from stormy weather to look for Dorner in the San Bernardino mountains, about 80 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles, where his burned-out pickup truck was discovered Thursday.

A law enforcement officer told The Associated Press authorities found weapons in the truck. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity because the probe is ongoing.

Investigators have been examining the truck to determine if it broke down or was set ablaze as a diversion. Police say the truck had a broken axle. Investigators are trying to determine whether it was already broken when they found it, or whether it was damaged when it was towed away.

Also, newly released surveillance video showed Dorner tossing several items into a Dumpster behind an auto parts store in National City on Monday. The store's manager told FOX5 in San Diego that an employee found a magazine full of bullets, a military belt and a military helmet. Majid Yahyai said he and the employee took the items across the street to a police station.

On Friday night, authorities served a search warrant and collected evidence from a Buena Park storage unit as part of their investigation. Irvine police Lt. Julia Engen wouldn't elaborate on the nature of the evidence or say who had rented the unit.

Earlier Friday, another warrant was served at a La Palma house belonging to Dorner's mother. Officers collected 10 bags of evidence, including five electronic items.

In his online manifesto, Dorner vowed to use "every bit of small arms training, demolition, ordnance and survival training I've been given" to bring "warfare" to the LAPD and its families.

Dorner served in the Navy, earning a rifle marksman ribbon and a pistol expert medal. He was assigned to a naval undersea warfare unit and various aviation training units, according to military records. He took leave from the LAPD for a six-month deployment to Bahrain in 2006 and 2007.

The flight training that he received in the Navy prompted the Transportation Security Administration to issue an alert, warning the general aviation community to be on the lookout for Dorner. The extent of his potential flying skills wasn't known, the bulletin said.

Feb. 1 was his last day with the Navy and also the day CNN's Anderson Cooper received a package that contained a note on it that read, in part, "I never lied." A coin riddled with bullet holes that former Chief William Bratton gave out as a souvenir was also in the package.

Police said it was a sign of planning by Dorner before the killing began.

On Feb. 3, police say Dorner shot and killed a couple in a parking garage at their condominium in Irvine. The woman was the daughter of a retired police captain who had represented Dorner in the disciplinary proceedings that led to his firing.

Dorner wrote in his manifesto that he believed the retired captain had represented the interests of the department over his.

Hours after authorities identified Dorner as a suspect in the double murder, police believe Dorner shot and grazed an LAPD officer in Corona and then used a rifle to ambush two Riverside police officers early Thursday, killing one and seriously wounding the other.

The crime spree spanned across a wide swath of Southern California, prompting several police agencies, including the FBI and US Marshall Service, to form a joint investigative task force.

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Christopher Weber, Greg Risling, Haven Daley, Michael Blood, John Antczak, Mark Evans and Julie Watson.

Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LATams.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mountain-hunt-ex-lapd-cop-enters-4th-day-084438786.html

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Monday, 11 February 2013

Israel gives final approval for 90 new settler homes

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel gave final approval on Monday for 90 new settler homes in the occupied West Bank, driving another wedge into a rift with Washington ahead of a visit by U.S. President Barack Obama.

The dwellings will be built in Beit El, a major Jewish settlement north of Jerusalem, and will house educational staff, the Defense Ministry said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has pledged that 300 new homes will eventually be erected in Beit El, where 30 settler families were evicted last June after the Supreme Court ruled they were living illegally on private Palestinian land.

Israel has come under international criticism, including from its main ally the United States, over its construction policy in the West Bank, territory it captured in the 1967 war and which the Palestinians want for their future state.

Settlement expansion has been an irritant in a testy relationship between Netanyahu and Obama, who is due to visit Israel, the West Bank and Jordan this spring.

Both Israel and the United States have played down speculation that the trip could result in the revival of U.S.-hosted peace talks with the Palestinians that collapsed over the settlement issue in 2010.

"The Palestinian position is clear. There can be no negotiation while settlement continues," Nabil Abu Rdainah, a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said in response to the new Beit El construction.

Most countries consider Israel's settlements illegal. Israel disputes this, citing historical and Biblical links to the land.

In Washington, U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said she had not seen the announcement but repeated the Obama administration's opposition to such settlement building.

"Our position on this has not changed. We don't think it's helpful," Nuland told reporters at her daily briefing.

There are now more than 325,000 settlers in the West Bank, with a further 200,000 living in East Jerusalem, which was annexed by Israel after 1967 in a move not recognized internationally.

It is claimed by the Palestinians as their capital city.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta in Ramallah and by Arshad Mohammed in Washington; writing by Jeffrey Heller; Editing by Crispian Balmer and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-gives-final-approval-90-settler-homes-215136128.html

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