Thursday, May 23, 2013

It's Time To Kill Google Voice

Even if it's not quite as amazing as it could be, Google Voice does some wonderful things. That's what makes it hard to admit the truth: It's time for Google Voice to die.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ux11VBa8fMM/its-time-to-kill-google-voice-508956713

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Burmese optimistic after historic White House visit

Burmese are celebrating an end to their long international isolation with the first state visit to the US by a Myanmar president in almost 50 years.

By Simon Roughneen,?Correspondent / May 21, 2013

US President Obama gestures toward Myanmar's President Thein Sein during their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday. Thein Sein is the first Myanmar president to be welcomed to the White House in almost 50 years.

Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Enlarge

Myanmar President Thein Sein's historic Monday meeting with US President Obama has been well-received at home, with Burmese seemingly happy that the country is gaining some positive recognition on the world stage after decades of isolation.

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Myanmar and the United States signed a new trade and investment promotion agreement on Tuesday, which they hope will boost the currently-miniscule commerce between the two countries, currently valued at $90 million.?

?We are happy that our country is changing to democracy,? says Kyaw Moe Tha, an artist from Mandalay, Myanmar's second-largest city. ?And it is important for us that America and other Western countries increase contact with us.?

The last time Myanmar's top leader made a state visit to the United States, the country was called "Burma" and Lyndon Johnson was in the White House. That was in 1966. Myanmar was four years into what became five decades of military dictatorship. As repression worsened, particularly after student protests in 1988, Myanmar was deemed an ?outpost of tyranny,? prompting the US and other Western countries to impose sanctions on exports and investment.?

Now, two years into political and economic reforms that won praise from President Obama, Myanmar is seeking increased American investment and official aid, which it hopes will kick-start the country's economy and create jobs.?Though?Myanmar is rich in natural resources, only some 25 percent of the 60 million population?have regular electricity. Tens of millions of rural Burmese depend on subsistence agriculture.

Zaw Zaw, a high-profile Myanmar businessman who has faced US sanctions because of his close ties to Myanmar's former military regime, says that Mr. Thein Sein's visit to Washington is going down well at home.

?This is a very good thing for our country and I hope for both countries,? says Mr. Zaw Zaw, whose wide-ranging business interests include construction, hotels, timber, and gems.

After a transfer of power to a nominally civilian government in 2011, and reforms that included freeing hundreds of political prisoners and loosening restrictions on freedom of speech, the US responded by removing many sanctions.

Still, some remain in place,?including financial and trade restrictions on figures close to the Myanmar military ? such as Zaw Zaw.?

The Myanmar government wants the slate wiped clean, however.?Speaking in Washington on Monday, Thein Sein told students at Johns Hopkins University?s School of Advanced International Studies, ?we are trying hard to end Myanmar?s isolation, see the removal of all sanctions, and make the contributions we can to both regional and global security and development.?

Critics point out that the Myanmar government has stalled on reforms in recent months. They want the US to keep restrictive measures against the country intact ? until there?s an end to ethnic fighting and sectarian discrimination in the country.

In Washington on Monday Thein Sein pledged to work for peace -- though on the same day the US State Department published its annual review of religious freedom around the world. Buddhist-majority Myanmar appeared with eight countries where discrimination against minorities is among the worst.

In June 2011, as Myanmar undertook reforms that earned Thein Sein his White House visit this week, the military resumed a decades-old war with ethnic Kachin fighters in a mountainous, resource-rich region in the country's north.

More than 100,000 mostly Christian Kachin have been driven from their homes by the fighting, while a similar number of Muslims ? many of them from a stateless group known as the Rohingya ? sit in makeshift camps on the country's west coast, close to the border with Bangladesh.

Also in recent weeks, Buddhist mobs have attacked Muslims in the center of Myanmar.

Maung Zarni, a fellow at the London School of Economics from Burma, says the US is playing a wider strategic game in Myanmar, which has in recent decades fallen under increasing Chinese influence, something he believes the US hopes to push back against.

?The USA is pursuing what it considers its 'core interests' in and around Burma at the expense of the Rohingya, the Kachin,? he says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/tiimqMGa_gE/Burmese-optimistic-after-historic-White-House-visit

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Prog Bots Into Darkness Edition

Listen to Culture Gabfest No. 244 with Stephen Metcalf, Dana Stevens, and June Thomas with the audio player below.

The sponsors of today?s show are Stamps.com?and Shutterstock.com. Go to Stamps.com?and use the promo code ?CULTUREFEST? for your no-risk free trial and bonus offer. Go to Shutterstock.com and use the offer code ?SLATE5? for 30 percent off new accounts.

Culturefest is on the radio! ?Gabfest Radio? combines Slate?s Culture and Political Gabfests in one show?listen on Saturdays at 7 a.m. and Sundays at 6 p.m. on WNYC?s AM820.

On this week?s episode, our critics discuss the joyfully unkillable Star Trek franchise with Slate?s own Matthew Yglesias. They are then joined by music critic Jonah Weiner to review Random Access Memories, the much-hyped new album from the space-helmet-sporting French electronica duo Daft Punk. Lastly, the Gabfest crew takes a look at Google?s new smartphone for your face, Google Glass: Will it extend our human powers or finally debauch them for good?

Here are links to some of the things we discussed this week:

Dana: Scottish-born singer, songwriter, poet, and humorist Ivor Cutler.

June: Syfy?s dystopian, future-frontier-town based, alien-infused series Defiance.

Outro: ?I?m Walking to a Farm? by Ivor Cutler

You can email us at culturefest@slate.com.

This podcast was produced by Julia Furlan. Our intern is Sam McDougle.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=31b235c7a2c178e603e13c879487ad9a

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PFT: Goodson says gun not his? |? Schedule conflict

BarbreAP

Lost in the question of whether the Seahawks face fines for future player suspensions is the reality that, based on the policy created by the NFL in 2008, they likely paid more than $60,000 for suspensions that happened in 2012.

The NFL has declined comment on the question of whether and to what extent the Seahawks have been fined for past suspensions, explaining that this information isn?t disclosed for any team.? But the league office has confirmed that the formula developed in 2008 still applies, and it?s public knowledge that three Seahawks were suspended during the 2012 season:? offensive lineman Allen Barbre, safety Winston Guy, and cornerback Brandon Browner.

Barbre came first, suspended the first four games of the season under the performance-enhancing drugs policy.? He was cut after the suspension ended in October.

Under the league?s policy, the Seahawks faced fines for the second suspension (Guy) and the third (Browner).? Based on their salaries for 2012, Guy lost $97,500 in salary during his four-week suspension.? The policy converts 25 percent of that into a fine, which equates to $24,375.

Next up was Browner, who served a four-game suspension and forfeited $109,411 in base salary.? Since Browner?s suspension was the third of the year, one third of his lost salary became a fine.? That?s $36,470.

The total of the two fines is $60,845.

This year, the Seahawks will be fined if there?s another suspension under the substance-abuse policy, the policy regarding steroids and related substances, or the personal-conduct policy, given that defensive end Bruce Irvin already will miss the first four games of the year after testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs.

It?s unclear whether fines will make teams more careful about acquiring players who carry the red flag of a possible violations.? Former Chiefs G.M. Scott Pioli said on Tuesday?s PFT Live that the league has discussed the possibility of stripping draft picks as an alternative to fines.

That could be the best way to handle the situation.? Team?s view fines as a cost of doing business; losing draft picks impacts competitive interests, and thus are more likely to get the franchise?s attention.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/21/lawyer-goodson-to-plead-not-guilty-gun-wasnt-his/related/

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Fernando Henrique Cardoso: Time to Explore How to Regulate Drugs

Co-signed by the following members of the Global Commission on Drug Policy:
George P. Shultz, former Secretary of State, United States, honorary chair
Paul Volcker, former Chairman of the United States Federal Reserve and of the Economic Recovery Board
Louise Arbour, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, President of the International Crisis Group

***

After more than four decades of a failed war on drugs, calls for a change in strategy are growing louder by the day. In Latin America, the debate is positively deafening. Statesmen from Colombia, Guatemala, Mexico and Uruguay are taking the lead for transformations in their own drug regime, which has set a strong dynamic of change across the region and around the world. Their discussion has expanded to the United States, where public opinion toward regulation is also changing.

For the first time, the majority of Americans support regulated cannabis for adult consumption. Nowhere has this support been more evident than in Colorado and Washington, states that recently approved new bills to this effect. This shift in public opinion presents a direct challenge to the U.S. federal law, but also to the United Nations Drug Conventions and the international drug policy regime.

The Global Commission on Drug Policy, building on the call for a paradigm shift formulated by the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy, has called loudly for precisely these kinds of changes since 2011. Twenty global leaders have highlighted the devastating consequences of repressive drug policies on people, governance and economies not just in Latin America, but around the world.

Our flagship report -- War on Drugs -- sets out two main recommendations: (i) replace the criminalization of drug use with a public health approach, and (ii) experiment with models of legal regulation designed to undermine the power of organized crime. By brokering a genuinely global conversation on drug policy reform, we broke a century-old taboo.

A new unexpected voice was added to the debate on drug policy reform. The Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS) Jos? Miguel Insulza presented Colombian President Santos with the findings of a much anticipated report on alternative scenarios for drug control and regulation for the Americas. The study itself was originally the idea of President Santos and endorsed by all heads of American States at the 2012 Summit of the Americas in Cartagena.

The OAS-backed study proposes four possible scenarios for future drug policy reflecting an emerging consensus across Latin America. Fortunately, none of the scenarios call for the status quo. Most experts endorse the first three scenarios -- the shift from repressive approaches to ones that privilege citizen security, the experimentation with different approaches to regulating illegal drugs, and the strengthening of community resilience. Obviously, all serious leaders agree that the fourth scenario, the threat of creating narco-states, is to be avoided at all costs. Taken together, the report represents the first comprehensive treatment of drug policy reform from a multilateral organization.

The OAS study sets out complementary, rather than mutually excluding paths. They are based on the realistic expectation that demand for psychoactive substances will continue to exist over the coming decade and that only a small proportion of users will become dependent. In fact, many states are already decriminalizing drug use and experimenting with cannabis regulation, while also investing in harm reduction programs including the medical supply of harder drugs. Rather than causing problems as predicted by their critics, they are generating positive and measurable results.

The OAS and countries across Latin America are positively contributing to the breaking of the taboo that blocked for so long the debate on more humane and efficient drug policy. It is time that governments around the world are allowed to responsibly experiment with regulation models that are tailored to their realities and local needs. The leadership demonstrated by President Santos and the OAS Secretary General is welcomed. But the report is just the start -- leaders across the Americas need to take this study seriously and consider how their own policies can be improved. In doing so, they will be breaking the vicious cycle of violence, corruption, and over-crowded prisons and will put people's health and security first.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/fernando-henrique-cardoso/global-leaders-drug-war_b_3306302.html

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A Free Term Life Insurance Quote Is Just Easy To Obtain | Travel ...

By searching online for life insurance, you will get a term life insurance offer without duty to purchase. To be able to get the free term life insurance price, you fill in the form on the appropriate page of the life insurance business site. You do have to make sure you provide honest answers to all or any the questions as a way to get the life insurance you need.

Once your request is received by the company for a totally free term life insurance quote, then a realtor will carefully review the program and mail a quote to you depending on the number of the death benefit and the term of the plan. You shouldn?t base the quote because every individual differs in his/her needs you receive on that of a friend or another relative. You do have to request free quotes from at least three companies, because you are looking for low cost term life insurance.

Term life insurance is only good for the life of the period. By the end of the term, you?ve the option to continue the policy, but you might not obtain it for the same free term life insurance estimate as you started with. It is because your actual age has certainly changed and your requirements in terms of a settlement also have changed. However, you still would like to get the very best prices possible for low cost term life insurance.

That you do not need to be in excellent health to obtain a free term life insurance quote. In fact, you may get low cost life insurance without also having a medical examination. You could possibly get a free of charge offer for term life insurance, even when you do have lethal diseases however it might not be the reduced cost term life insurance you?re hoping for. This is because you are in-a higher risk group because your chances of dying inside the period are much larger. Even though the rates are a little higher, you?re still making some thing for your family and to cover for your funeral.

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Source: http://www.irs-2011.de/a-free-term-life-insurance-quote-is-just-easy-to-obtain/

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Monday, May 20, 2013

PWR99 ? Advice On How To Get Good Auto Insurance Rates

Protecting your car is not the only reason to have auto insurance. It?s also designed to protect you and other people that are out there driving. You need to make sure your insurance covers all you need it to. You can use your auto insurance policy to its greatest benefit by applying the ideas in this article.

You need to understand the different coverage types offered when you are searching for an auto insurance policy. There is more involved in the cost of your insurance policy, than just the number of cars you have covered. For example, bodily injury coverage is important, as it covers any injury that is your fault in case of an accident.

If you?re insuring a teenager, check what it would cost to add them to a current policy, and then compare that to what their own policy would cost. Depending on the type of car your teenager drives, it might be cheaper to have them on a separate policy.

Most people incorrectly believe that insurance rates will definitely decrease as a person reaches the age of 25. The fact is that insurance rates actually drop as soon as a driver turns eighteen if he or she is a safe driver.

There are optional protections past legal protections that can further protect you. Your premium might be more expensive, but the extra options are often worth it. If you get into an accident with someone who does not have insurance or you are the victim of a hit-and-run, you?ll be sorry if you don?t have uninsured motorists coverage.

The person who drives the car on the car insurance policy is the only one being insured ? you should always remember that. Sometimes, people allow a friend to borrow their vehicle, but if this friend wrecks, your insurance company will not pay for the damage. You can alter your car insurance policy to cover other drivers that use your car, although you will need to pay an additional charge.

Property damage liability coverage is an important feature of your car insurance policy that you must get. This liability will cover damages your car causes during an auto accident. Most states require this sort of coverage, anyway. If you get in a car accident, you will save money on replacing a vehicle or parts if you have damage liability.

To start saving money right away, raise your deductibles. Although your premiums will be lower each month, this action can be chancy if you don?t have the self-control to save money for your deductible. In the event that you are involved in an auto accident, the out-of-pocket cost can be high. The higher you set the deductible, the lower your insurance premiums will be.

Now that you have learned a bit more about auto insurance, use the skills you have learned to examine your existing policy. It is possible that your policy lacks some coverages you need, and has some that you don?t.

Source: http://www.pwr99.com/advice-on-how-to-get-good-auto-insurance-rates/

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U.S. chides Russia over missiles as peace plans suffer

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-chides-russia-over-missiles-peace-plans-suffer-115030682.html

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Authorities: Hofstra student was killed by police

MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) ? A New York college student being held by an armed home intruder was shot and killed by a Nassau County police officer who had responded to a report of a home invasion at an off-campus home, police said Saturday.

Andrea Rebello was shot once in the head Friday morning by an officer who opened fire after the masked intruder, Dalton Smith, pointed a gun at the officer while holding the 21-year-old junior in a headlock, Nassau County homicide squad Lt. John Azzata said.

The Nassau County police officer fired eight shots at Smith, who has what police have described as an "extensive" criminal background, Azzata said. Smith was hit by seven bullets and died. Rebello was shot once in the head, Azzata said.

Nassau County Police Commissioner Thomas Dale said he had traveled to Rebello's Tarrytown, N.Y., home to explain to Rebello's parents what happened.

Earlier Saturday, police announced that Smith, 30, was wanted on a parole violation related to a first-degree robbery conviction and had an arrest history dating back nearly 15 years.

The shooting came just days before the school's commencement ceremonies, which are scheduled to take place Sunday.

A university spokeswoman said Saturday students will be handed white ribbons to wear in memory of Rebello.

Rebello was in the two-story home with her twin sister Jessica, another woman and another man were when the Smith, wearing a ski mask, walked into the house through an open front door, Azzata said. The intruder allowed the third unidentified woman to leave and collect money from an ATM, and she called 911.

Two police officers arriving at the home encountered Smith holding onto Rebello.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/authorities-hofstra-student-killed-police-003456565.html

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Someone Animated Patton Oswalt's Epic Star Wars/Avengers Mashup Rant

Not too long ago, Patton Oswalt riffed on his idea for a great plot for the upcoming Star Wars: Episode VII film on Parks and Recreation. Now, it's got a whole bunch of..."digital effects" that turn it into the film we all deserve. It's alright JJ, we've got this one on lock. But thanks for throwing your hat in the ring! [iZacLess via Patton Oswalt]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-is-everything-star-wars-episode-vii-should-be-508521585

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

How Building Muscle Mass Helps You With Fat Loss | Body Health ...

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Build Muscle f?r F?t Loss

M??t bodybuilders h??? th? ultimate goal ?f gaining muscle wh??? losing f?t. Th?? ?? a challenging goal ?n? ?f n?t followed w?th a ??rr??t ???n ?f action, ??n leave bodybuilders frustrated w?th failure. Th? real challenge lies ?n th? fact th?t bodybuilders need t? eat a lot ?n order t? build th? muscle mass th???re looking f?r. It?s hard t? ?? th?? wh??? ???? trying t? lose f?t. Th?r? usually m??t b? a compromise ?f ??m? sort.
Muscle Building Science

In recent years, science h?? shown ?? better h?w th? various systems ?f th? body function ?n? w? ??n take th?? information ?n? apply ?t t? th?? goal ?f building muscle mass wh??? losing f?t. Using ??rr??t exercise ?n? nutritional timing ?? ??rt ?f a very extreme muscle training program ??n h??? ??? see results. If ????re dedicated t? ???r goal, ????ll b? willing t? m?k? th? sacrifices.
Cardio & F?t Loss

In order t? really take advantage ?f th? body?s systems ?? a way ?f boosting f?t loss w?th muscle building, ??? need t? focus ?n th? body?s hormonal state ?? ?t pertains t? rhythms, exercise, ?n? nutritional timing. Y?? need t? underfeed f?r f?t loss f?r periods ?f time ?n? th?n overfeed f?r muscle gain ?t ?th?r periods ?f time. Th?? eating ???n ?? paired w?th cardio (f?r f?t loss) ?n? weight training (f?r muscle gain).

Essentially, a ???n ??k? th?? puts ??? ?n f?t burning mode m??t ?f th? time (w?th cardio ?n? underfeeding), ?n? th? rest ?f th? time ????re spending sleeping, weight training, ?r overfeeding t? stimulate protein synthesis f?r muscle growth.

In order f?r th?? ???n t? truly work, ????ll need t? ?? cardio f?r up t? six days a week. S?m? days ??? ?h???? focus ?n long ?n? ???w workouts wh??? ?th?r days need t? feature high intensity interval training. Weight training m??t obviously ???? b? done ?n order t? see those muscle mass gains. Wh?t ??? ?? f?r a weight-training program isn?t nearly ?? ?m??rt?nt ?? wh?n ??? ?? ?t. Y??r programs ?h???? b? done ?n th? afternoons ?r evenings. Th?? w??? allow ??? t? burn f?t throughout th? day, ?? ?t ?? b? th? time ?f th? day th?t ???r nutritional ???n w??? h??? ??? eating low calorie meals. Th??? sessions shouldn?t b? done ?? late th?t th?? interfere w?th ?t ????t eight hours ?f sleep ?t night.

Following th? science behind th?? ???n ??n h??? ??? lose f?t wh??? still building muscle mass.

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Source: http://mybodyhealth.net/how-building-muscle-mass-helps-you-with-fat-loss/

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Jamie Oliver's Restaurant Fined for Mistakenly Serving Gluten Pasta ...

A woman who was celebrating her wedding anniversary at Jamie's Italian, Jamie Oliver's UK-based chain, found herself violently ill for five hours after her meal. The reason? The restaurant served her ordinary pasta though she suffers from Celiac disease and had requested a gluten-free version. As a result, the restaurant has been slapped with a ?9,212 ($14,000) fine for the error.

More From Delish: Jamie Oliver's Recipes from Jamie's Food Revolution Cookbook

According to the Telegraph, in 2011, Kristy Richardson notified three staff members at the celebrity chef's restaurant that she could not consume gluten. Gluten is a natural protein found in wheat, barley, rye, and certain other cereal grains. If eaten by someone diagnosed with Celiac disease, they can experience gastrointestinal distress because their bodies prevent the food from absorbing properly. Over time, eating gluten will cause Celiac sufferers severe damage to the small intestine, which eventually could lead to brain dysfunction, bone damage, and damage to other internal organs. As such, Celiac sufferers cut gluten from their diets.

More From Delish: Treasures Worth $1.7 Million Found in Jamie Oliver's New Restaurant

Richardson reportedly contacted the restaurant before her arrival to ensure they could accommodate her restrictive diet. According to the Telegraph, a maitre d' assured her that gluten-free pasta could be provided. After dining at the restaurant, the Telegraph reports, she suffered severe illness. When Richardson phoned up the restaurant, she discovered that they had mixed up her order and served her pasta that contained wheat.

Richardson took her case to court. Last month the restaurant chain pleaded guilty, which, reports the Telegraph "is a breach of the Food Safety Act." So what really happened at the restaurant to cause such a grave error? The defendants claim that they thought Richardson ordered a vegetarian option, not a gluten-free and vegetarian one. Their lawyer, Henry Vann, told the Telegraph, "Jamie's Italian sincerely apologizes that it has fallen short of its food safety obligations." He continued, "The failure to provide a customer what was ordered is made out and the company fully and frankly accepts that." In addition to the fine paid and legal fees, Richardson has also received a court settlement, however she was unable to speak to the press as part of her legal agreement with the restaurant.

How much money do you think Richardson should be paid due to the restaurant's mistake?

Find more great food content on Delish:

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Source: http://www.delish.com/food/recalls-reviews/celiac-woman-sues-jamie-oliver-restaurant-for-being-served-gluten-based-pasta?src=rss

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Mystery of moon's magnetic field deepens

The moon generated a surprisingly intense magnetic field until at least 3.56 billion years ago, 160 million years longer than previously thought, a new study reports.

These findings could shed light not just on the magnetic field of the moon, which is now extremely weak, but on that of asteroids and other distant worlds, investigators added.

Earth's magnetic field is created by its internal dynamo, which itself is generated by the planet's churning molten metal core. Research increasingly suggests that the moon once had a dynamo as well, with evidence of magnetism found in lunar rocks returned by Apollo astronauts. [10 Surprising Moon Facts]

Models of the moon's core suggest its dynamo should have lasted only until about 4.1 billion years ago. However, last year, scientists revealed that the moon possessed a magnetic field for much longer than previously thought, with a powerful dynamo in its core from 4.2 billion years ago to at least 3.72 billion years ago.

Researchers have proposed two possibilities to explain why the moon's dynamo lasted so long. One possible explanation is that giant cosmic impacts set the moon lurching enough to drive its dynamo. Another explanation has to do with how the moon's core spins around a slightly different axis than its surrounding mantle layer, generating wobbles ? known as precession ? that could dramatically stir its core.

The cosmic-impact idea is supported by the fact that the moon experienced massive collisions until around 3.7 billion years ago, such as the one that created the 715-mile-wide (1,150 kilometers) Mare Imbrium, among other craters.

However, the dynamo generated by each impact would have lasted for a mere 10,000 years or so, scientists say. In contrast, if precession drove a lunar dynamo, the moon could have continuously possessed a magnetic field until as late as 1.8 billion years ago.

Now, a new analysis of the biggest lunar rock brought back to Earth by Apollo 11 astronauts in 1969 reveals the moon's dynamo lasted about 160 million years longer than previously thought, well after the last of the largest crater-forming impacts hit the moon.

Scientists investigated a 5-gram (0.18 ounces) sample taken from a 3.56-billion-year-old volcanic moon rock from the Sea of Tranquility.

"When rocks solidify from a lava, they capture a record of the magnetic field in their environment," said study lead author Cl?ment Suavet, a geoscientist at MIT. "By studying rocks of different ages, we can reconstruct the history of lunar-surface magnetic fields."

The analysis revealed the intensity of the lunar magnetic field was exceptionally strong 3.56 billion years ago, "almost identical to the field measured in a previous study of 3.7-billion-year-old rocks," Suavet told SPACE.com. "This seems to indicate that the lunar magnetic field was remarkably stable."

The ancient magnetic field of the moon was about as intense as Earth's current surface magnetic field. This makes it about 1,000 times stronger than the moon's present surface magnetic field, researchers said.

Learning more about how the moon's dynamo originated and developed could yield insights into the dynamos of smaller objects, such as asteroids, and larger bodies, such as planets.

"The moon is like a giant laboratory where we can test our theories about how planets form and evolve," Suavet said.

Many questions remain about the moon's magnetic field, such as why it was so intense late into lunar history and how it disappeared over time.

"The question is, when and how did the dynamo decay?" Suavet said.

The scientists detailed their findings online May 6 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published on SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mystery-moons-magnetic-field-deepens-141216996.html

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7 Egyptian security personnel abducted in Sinai

CAIRO (AP) ? Suspected militants in Egypt's Sinai abducted seven security personnel as they headed to Cairo for holidays early Thursday, security officials said. It was the first such kidnapping of security forces in the lawless peninsula.

The officials said masked gunmen ambushed two taxis at gunpoint outside the city of el-Arish, the capital of North Sinai governorate, fleeing with five policemen and one border guard captive. None of those abducted were in uniform, officials said.

Four of the policemen work in the Rafah border terminal leading to the Gaza Strip, and one was in a riot police unit deployed in Sinai. The border guard was a member of the military. The taxi drivers reported that a seventh member of the security forces was also kidnapped, but authorities said they are still trying to identify him.

Security in the Sinai has deteriorated sharply in the two years since the overthrow of longtime authoritarian ruler Hosni Mubarak, as it has elsewhere across the country. A surge in crime as well as clashes between Islamist backers of President Mohammed Morsi and his opponents have combined with economic woes to feed the sense of insecurity.

A new poll released by the Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Projects said only 30 percent of Egyptians polled see the country on the right track, compared to 53 percent surveyed in 2012, and 65 percent in 2011.

"Today's level of satisfaction is comparable to the level observed in spring 2010," almost a year before the uprising, the Center's report said.

In the poll, 44 percent of Egyptians surveyed say law and order in the country was getting worse. Conducted in March, the poll describes a divided nation, with 53 percent viewing Islamist President Mohammed Morsi favorably, and only 46 percent expressing confidence that upcoming elections would be fair.

Morsi's opponents are planning rallies Friday in which they demand that he step down and that early presidential elections be held.

The poll surveyed 1,000 Egyptians with a 4.3 percent margin of error.

The abduction in the Sinai is the latest incident to highlight the rise of Islamist militant groups there. Along with Bedouin tribal gangs involved in smuggling and other criminal activity, they have taken advantage of the security vacuum there to step up attacks on police stations, security convoys and other targets.

Security officials say Thursday's kidnapping was carried out by militant groups known to the authorities who are hiding in North Sinai's rugged mountains. Two officials said the kidnapping came after the mother of an imprisoned militant claimed that her son was tortured in detention, causing his eyesight to fail. The imprisoned militant is sentenced to death for attacking a police station in the early days after Mubarak's ouster.

The officials said authorities were sending the family to visit their son in prison again and provide him with necessary medical attention in a bid to defuse anger over his treatment, and secure the safety of the captive security personnel.

They said contact was established with the kidnappers, adding that representatives of the presidency and the military are reaching out to militants and mediators to secure the hostages' release. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the new instructions with the media.

Egypt's state news agency MENA reported that negotiations with the kidnappers were underway through mediators, but also didn't elaborate. It reported that Morsi held an emergency meeting with the defense and interior ministers to discuss the kidnapping. In a statement, his office said the presidency was closely following the developments in the case.

The security officials said forces in the Sinai were on high alert, particularly along the border with the Gaza Strip. Movement was restricted for the multinational forces stationed in Sinai since the peace treaty between Egypt and Israel was signed in 1979, the officials added.

Egypt's military has carried out sweeps in the peninsula since a militant attack against its troops that left 16 soldiers killed in August 2012. It was the most brazen militant assault on Egyptian troops in modern history. Still, the attackers have not been apprehended or publicly identified.

The volatile northern Sinai borders Hamas-ruled Gaza as well as Israel. Weapons flowed into the peninsula from Libya to the area, adding to the security challenge.

Complicating the situation is a longtime resentment by local tribes toward the central government, which they accuse of discrimination, neglect, and police brutality. Tribal Bedouins have briefly kidnapped foreigners to use them as bargaining chips with authorities, urging them to release imprisoned relatives. Drugs, immigrants and arms are smuggled through the mountainous terrain.

Morsi had pledged to restore security to the peninsula. Officials from the presidency at one point negotiated with locals to ease off on the crackdown and the pursuit of fugitives. In exchange, locals were to refrain from attacks on authorities or cross-border raids on Israel.

The U.S. has repeatedly discussed the situation in Sinai with Egyptian authorities and offered security and border control advice.

________

Associated Press Writer Ashraf Sweilam contributed to this report from southern Sinai.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/7-egyptian-security-personnel-abducted-sinai-142304724.html

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Prison Planet.com ? U.S. Appeals Court Denies Asylum to German ...

Dave Bohon
New American
May 17, 2013

A German homeschool family that has been battling to remain in the United States because of religious persecution in their homeland has lost a major court battle. On May 14, the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a 2012 decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals denying a request by Uwe and Hannalore Romeike to remain in the United States with their six children.

The?Romeikes fled to the United States in 2008 following several years of fines and harassment from the German government because of their insistence on educating their children at home. In 2010, U.S. Immigration Judge Lawrence O. Burman ruled that the Romeike family could remain in the United States, citing Germany?s record of persecuting homeschool families, as well as the Romeikes? religious motivation in wishing to keep their children out of Germany?s aggressively secular schools.

Since then the Obama administration?s Department of Justice has taken a particular interest in targeting the Romeikes for deportation, succeeding last year in convincing the immigration appeals board to overturn Judge Burman?s initial ruling in favor of asylum for the family. The Romeikes have been represented by the?Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA) whose president, Michael Farris, expressed his disappointment over the Court of Appeals? ruling. ?We believe the Sixth Circuit is wrong and we will appeal their decision,? Farris said in a statement. ?America has room for this family and we will do everything we can to help them.?

In its ruling the Appeal Court rejected the argument that the Romeikes represented a persecuted group because of their plight at the hands of a German government, which has instituted laws aggressively vindictive against homeschool families. ?There is a difference between the persecution of a discrete group and the prosecution of those who violate a generally applicable law,? wrote Judge Jeffrey S. Sutton in his opinion for the court. ?As the Board of Immigration Appeals permissibly found, the German authorities have not singled out the Romeikes in particular or homeschoolers in general for persecution. As a result, we must deny the Romeikes? petition for review and, with it, their applications for asylum.?

In his opinion Sutton wrote that the United States has not ?opened its doors to every victim of unfair treatment, treatment that our laws do not allow. That the United States Constitution protects the rights of ?parents and guardians to direct the upbringing and education of children under their control? does not mean that a contrary law in another country establishes persecution on religious or any other protected ground.? He referred to an earlier opinion by Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito to point out that ?the concept of persecution does not encompass all treatment that our society regards as unfair, unjust, or even unlawful or unconstitutional. If persecution were defined that expansively, a significant percentage of the world?s population would qualify for asylum in this country ? and it seems most unlikely that Congress intended such as a result.?

HSLDA has been monitoring the aggressive attack against German homeschool families since 2006. As the group announced that it would appeal the ruling against the Romeike family, the HSLDA?s director of international affairs, Mike Donnelly, confirmed that ?Germany continues to persecute homeschoolers. The court ignored mountains of evidence that homeschoolers are harshly fined and that custody of their children is gravely threatened ? something most people would call persecution. This is what the Romeikes will suffer if they are sent back to Germany.?

Meanwhile, the HSLDA has launched a?petition drive asking the Obama administration to grant the asylum the Romeike family is seeking. While the petition has surpassed the 100,000 signatures required for an official response, the White House has thus far refused to offer a statement.

The HSLDA?s Michael Farris said that as his group continues to battle in the courts on behalf of the Romeikes, ?there is no doubt of the ability of the Obama Administration to use its discretion to immediately grant this family permanent asylum. We urge the Administration to do so at once. If our Administration is willing to explore a policy of leniency for millions of immigrants, it is simply inexplicable why they cannot find room for one homeschooling family from Germany.?

Related posts:

  1. German home schooling family seeks asylum in U.S.
  2. Obama Bid to Deport Homeschool Refugees May Threaten U.S. Rights
  3. Parents have no ?right? to homeschool their kids, says Justice Department
  4. Federal appeals court strikes down Defense of Marriage Act
  5. Appeals Court Rules Obamacare Is Unconstitutional

This article was posted: Friday, May 17, 2013 at 4:21 am





Source: http://www.prisonplanet.com/u-s-appeals-court-denies-asylum-to-german-homeschool-family.html

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

New craters abound: Mars camera reveals hundreds of impacts each year

May 15, 2013 ? Taking before and after pictures of Martian terrain, researchers of the UA-led HiRISE imaging experiment have identified almost 250 fresh impact craters on the Red Planet. The results suggest Mars gets pummeled by space rocks less frequently than previously thought, as scientists relied on cratering rates of the moon for their estimates.

Scientists using images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, or MRO, have estimated that the planet is bombarded by more than 200 small asteroids or bits of comets per year forming craters at least 12.8 feet (3.9 meters) across.

Researchers have identified 248 new impact sites on parts of the Martian surface in the past decade, using images from the spacecraft to determine when the craters appeared. The 200-per-year planetwide estimate is a calculation based on the number found in a systematic survey of a portion of the planet.

The University of Arizona's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, or HiRISE camera, took pictures of the fresh craters at sites where before and after images had been taken. This combination provided a new way to make direct measurements of the impact rate on Mars and will lead to better age estimates of recent features on Mars, some of which may have been the result of climate change.

"It's exciting to find these new craters right after they form," said Ingrid Daubar of the UA, lead author of the paper published online this month by the journal Icarus. "It reminds you Mars is an active planet, and we can study processes that are happening today."

These asteroids or comet fragments typically are no more than 3 to 6 feet (1 to 2 meters) in diameter. Space rocks too small to reach the ground on Earth cause craters on Mars because the Red Planet has a much thinner atmosphere.

HiRISE targeted places where dark spots had appeared during the time between images taken by the spacecraft's Context Camera, or CTX, or cameras on other orbiters. The new estimate of cratering rate is based on a portion of the 248 new craters detected. If comes from a systematic check of a dusty fraction of the planet with CTX since late 2006.

The impacts disturb the dust, creating noticeable blast zones. In this part of the research, 44 fresh impact sites were identified.

The meteor over Chelyabinsk, Russia, in February was about 10 times bigger than the objects that dug the fresh Martian craters.

Estimates of the rate at which new craters appear serve as scientists' best yardstick for estimating the ages of exposed landscape surfaces on Mars and other worlds.

Daubar and co-authors calculated a rate for how frequently new craters at least 12.8 feet (3.9 meters) in diameter are excavated. The rate is equivalent to an average of one each year on each area of the Martian surface roughly the size of the U.S. state of Texas. Earlier estimates pegged the cratering rate at three to 10 times more craters per year. They were based on studies of craters on the moon and the ages of lunar rocks collected during NASA's Apollo missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

"Mars now has the best-known current rate of cratering in the solar system," said UA's HiRISE Principal Investigator Alfred McEwen, a co-author on the paper.

MRO has been examining Mars with six instruments since 2006. Daubar is an imaging targeting specialist who has been on the HiRISE uplink operation s team from the very beginning. She is also a graduate student in the UA's department of planetary science and plans on graduating with her doctorate in spring 2014.

"There are five of us who help plan the images that HiRISE will take over a two-week cycle," she explained. "We work with science team members across the world to understand their science goals, help select the image targets and compile the commands for the spacecraft and the camera."

"The longevity of this mission is providing wonderful opportunities for investigating changes on Mars," said MRO Deputy Project Scientist Leslie Tamppari of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/nasa/~3/mFjMtBuwz-8/130515165025.htm

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Equipment Failure Imperils Kepler?s Quest for Other Earths

[unable to retrieve full-text content]If engineers cannot restore a mechanism that keeps the Kepler spacecraft?s telescope pointed, one of the most romantic and successful of NASA?s missions could end.
    


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/16/science/space/equipment-failure-may-cut-kepler-mission-short.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Panasonic P51 breaks into the Indian market with a 5-inch screen and stylus

Panasonic brings smartphones to India with the 5-inch P51

Although Panasonic's cellphones have traveled far from Japan, the company has left the hot Indian market relatively untapped -- until today, that is. The company is staking its first proper claim in the country with the launch of the P51. The Android 4.2-toting smartphone reflects the local market's taste for big-screened yet modest phones between its 5-inch, 720p LCD and quad-core 1.2GHz MediaTek processor, but comes across as a sort of Galaxy Note lite: Panasonic bundles both a capacitive stylus and a magnetic flip cover in the box. The remaining hardware is a slightly unusual mix of budget and premium components, with the so-so 1GB of RAM and 4GB of expandable storage buffered by an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 1.3-megapixel front camera and support for both HSPA+ and dual SIM cards. The P51 will be comparatively expensive for India at 26,900 rupees ($517) contract-free when it's available next week, but it should be a bargain next to its pen-packing Samsung counterpart.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/16/panasonic-p51/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Tiny camera in Illinois offers bug's eye view

In this May 10, 2013 photo, Viktor Malyarchuk adjusts a small camera lens that mimics the bulging eyes of insects before begins a photo sequence of an insect in the optics lab in the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois, in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

In this May 10, 2013 photo, Viktor Malyarchuk adjusts a small camera lens that mimics the bulging eyes of insects before begins a photo sequence of an insect in the optics lab in the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois, in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

In this May 10, 2013 photo, Young Min Song holds a camera lens that mimics the bulging eyes of insects in a lab in the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths of field. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

In this May 10, 2013 photo, a camera lens that mimics the bulging eyes of insects is shown next to a penny in a lab in the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths of field. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

In this May 10, 2013 photo, John A. Rogers, director of the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois, displays a camera lens that mimics the bulging eyes of insects in a lab in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths of field. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

In this May 10, 2013 photo, Young Min Song displays a flexible membrane that forms the lenses that will form a camera that mimics a insect's eye in the Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois in Urbana, Ill. The camera features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths of field. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

(AP) ? A tiny new camera developed at an Illinois university is giving researchers a bug's eye view.

The camera created by a research team at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is about the size of a penny and mimics insects' bulging eyes. It features 180 micro-lenses, giving it a panoramic field of view and the ability to focus simultaneously on objects at different depths.

Team leader John Rogers is a professor of material science and chemistry and says he's been fascinated by bug's eyes since childhood. Their wide field of view helps insects like bees and flies escape dangers like humans who want to swat them.

The bug's eye camera is likely to be developed for uses ranging from security cameras to surgical endoscopes.

___

Watch the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7xWnZJq4fM

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-05-15-US-Bug's-Eye-Camera/id-a91495a5f7cb4d74ae27d963780de350

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It's Europe Day, but Europeans don't seem to know

With the very idea of a united Europe under debate amid the economic crisis, it's hard to find people who know what 'Europe Day' is, let alone celebrate it.

By Sara Miller Llana,?Staff writer / May 9, 2013

A huge European Union flag is installed in front of the Romanian parliament building in Bucharest, Romania, Thursday. The flag, with a weight of 800 kg and measuring 100 by 140 meters, was placed at the parliament to mark Europe Day.

Vadim Ghirda/AP

Enlarge

Today is Europe Day. It marks a pivotal declaration by French foreign minister for foreign affairs, Robert Schuman, on May 9, 1950, that led to the formation of the European Coal and Steel Community and essentially the foundation of the European Union.

Skip to next paragraph Sara Miller Llana

Europe Bureau Chief

Sara Miller Llana?moved to Paris in April 2013 to become the Monitor's Europe Bureau?Chief. Previously she was the?paper's?Latin America Bureau Chief, based in Mexico City, from 2006 to 2013.

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In theory, Europe Day should be comparable to Bastille Day in France or the Fourth of July in the US. Instead, it?s hard to find people who actually know what it is.

One history professor did, but this was his take: ?It?s nothing.? Pieter Lagrou, a contemporary European history professor at the Free University of Brussels, says he likes to tell his students the obscurity of the holiday marks "the symbolic deficit of Europe.?

The central question of "What is Europe?" is being picked apart across and beyond the continent. In the midst of debt crisis, nations are fighting to get in, questioning getting out and even splitting in two, and bickering over banking unions and political control and sovereignty.

On the ground ? the level at which citizens take time to raise a flag and celebrate, or at least ponder, their national founding ? it?s also an exceedingly hard question to answer.

Dr. Lagrou used himself as an example. He?s a Dutch-speaking Belgian, living in bilingual Brussels, with a French employer. His regional government and federal government are accountable to him. But so are his EU representatives.

If he, for example, cared deeply about a jobs-creation program, would it be his federal government or the EU that he should contact, and among the latter, who holds the control among the European Commission, the European Council, and the European Parliament?

?The political landscape is increasingly difficult,? he says.

As a journalist new to Europe, I made Brussels, the heart of the European Union, my first stop on the European circuit. Perhaps it would have been better to visit the EU capitals first and then Brussels, where it?s harder than most places to know whom you need to talk to, who holds the power, and how it all works.

I walked through the city, which is the first thing I usually do when I arrive somewhere new. I went to the European district, past the European Parliament and the Commission. I went to the daily Commission press briefing. There were only a few questions asked: about funding proposals in Spain for the unemployed, EU representation at the International Monetary Fund, and Macedonia. All answers were about the same: ?We can?t speculate, we can?t answer at this point.? None of them shed any light on how the EU works.

I told many people that I couldn?t get my head around it. Without fail, they all replied, ?Don?t worry, neither can most Europeans.?

They were joking to a certain extent (at least those who work for the EU). But Lagrou says there is a risk here. To many, the EU has become a giant bureaucracy ?without a face or identity,? he says. In the face of crisis ? as real fault lines are forming between nations, especially over austerity ? many are increasingly losing faith in the project.

Each year, around Europe Day, the EU opens its doors to the public, so citizens get an inside look at the European Parliament, the European Council, the Council of the European Union, the Commission, the Economic and Social Committee, the Committee of the Regions, and the Office of the Ombudsman. These kinds of events, of any governmental institution, are often disregarded as hokey. But it might be as important a time as ever to sign up for the tour. I know I wish I had.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/SlyPw3vRIq4/It-s-Europe-Day-but-Europeans-don-t-seem-to-know

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From ocean to land: The fishy origins of our hips

May 14, 2013 ? New research has revealed that the evolution of the complex, weight-bearing hips of walking animals from the basic hips of fish was a much simpler process than previously thought.

Tetrapods, or four-legged animals, first stepped onto land about 395 million years ago. This significant change was made possible by strong hipbones and a connection through the spine via an ilium -- features that were not present in the fish ancestors of tetrapods.

In a study published in the journal Evolution and Development, Dr Catherine Boisvert of the Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute at Monash University, MacQuarie University's Professor Jean Joss and Professor Per Ahlberg of Uppsala University examined the hip structures of some of human's closest fish cousins.

They found the differences between us and them are not as great as they appear -- most of the key elements necessary for the transformation to human hips were actually already present in our fish ancestors.

Dr Boisvert and her collaborators compared the hip development -- bones and musculature -- of the Australian lung fish and the Axolotl, commonly known as the Mexican Walking Fish. The results showed that, surprisingly, the transition from simple fish hip to complex weight-bearing hip could be done in a few evolutionary steps.

"Many of the muscles thought to be 'new' in tetrapods evolved from muscles already present in lungfish. We also found evidence of a new, more simple path by which skeletal structures would have evolved," Dr Boisvert said.

The researchers found that the sitting bones would have evolved by the extension of the already existing pubis. The connection to the vertebral column could have evolved from an illiac process already present in fish.

"The transition from ocean-dwelling to land-dwelling animals was a major event in the evolution of terrestrial animals, including humans, and an altered hip was an essential enabling step," Dr Boisvert said.

"Our research shows that what initially appeared to be a large change in morphology could be done with relatively few developmental steps."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/lQ7TrrLQ-X8/130514101501.htm

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Selena Gomez on Miley Cyrus: She's Beautiful!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/selena-gomez-on-miley-cyrus-in-maxim-shes-beautiful/

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Driving Safely on Arizona Roadways to Avoid Accidents | Personal ...

By Breyer Law Offices on May 14, 2013 -

As a motorist you know the general rules about driving safely. You know that you must watch where you are going, avoid distractions, and follow the speed limit. You know that everyone in your vehicle should always wear a seat belt and that you should avoid acting or reacting with rage against other drivers.

But you may not understand all of the different safety rules that have been set out for drivers in the Arizona law, such ARS 28-729, which sets out rules for driving on streets that are lined for two lanes or more. Drivers are required to remain within the lane they are driving in unless they are passing other vehicles on the roadway. According to this law, drivers are prohibited from driving in the middle lane on a three-lane road unless it is necessary to make a turn or to facilitate overtaking another vehicle.

Arizona Traffic Collision Statistics

Drivers who fail to remain in their proper lane while driving are responsible for nearly 3,250 Arizona traffic collisions each year, according to recent reports by the Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT). Nearly 60 of these collisions result in fatalities and an additional near 900 of these accidents result in injuries to the people who are involved. The remaining of these collisions cause only property damage, but this damage is often severe and costly, leaving the victims and the at-fault drivers with significant economic losses.

Who to Call For Help After an Arizona Traffic Collision

An Arizona traffic collision caused by a driver who did not stay in the proper lane can cause serious injuries, and victims should contact a skilled personal injury attorney. The Husband and Wife Law Team helps victims by working out the details of fair settlements to cover the costs of recovery, including replacing lost wages during recovery, taking care of hospital and other medical bills, and for non-economic costs like pain and suffering. Our attorneys will help you understand your case and your rights beginning with a free consultation. For help with your personal injury accident case contact the Breyer Law Offices, P.C.

Source: http://www.breyerlaw.com/blog/auto-accident/driving-safely-arizona-roadways-avoid-accidents/

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