Thursday, February 28, 2013

Boeing to cut jobs at second Dreamliner plant: report

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Boeing Co will cut hundreds of jobs at a South Carolina plant that makes 787 Dreamliners over the course of this year, but the move has nothing to do with the recent grounding of the troubled jetliner, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.

The cuts, which chiefly target contract workers, are not uncommon as productivity improves on a new airplane program and were conceived before major problems with the 787s battery surfaced, the Journal said. Two high-profile battery malfunctions led to international aviation regulators grounding the jetliner in mid-January.

The cuts could account for up to 20 percent of the workforce in some teams at the plant in North Charleston, South Carolina, the Journal reported, citing an unnamed source familiar with the plan. Overall, the plant employs more than 6,000 people.

Boeing did not confirm the layoffs, but did tell Reuters it plans to reduce reliance on contract workers at the South Carolina plant.

"Boeing regularly uses contract labor and 'industry assist' to supplement its workforce during surge activities and on development programs that require a production ramp up - that's standard practice in the aerospace industry," said Marc Birtel, a Boeing spokesman. "As we progress in improving efficiencies in our processes, training our entry-level employees and growing the experience of our team in South Carolina, we expect to continue to reduce reliance on contract labor/industry assist to meet our production objectives."

The South Carolina plant is the second Boeing facility where 787s are assembled after the larger Everett, Washington, facility north of Seattle. Between them, Boeing turns out five Dreamliners per month.

So far, the plane maker has said production has not been slowed by the grounding of the 787 and it aims to fulfill its plan to ramp up to 10 787s per month by the end of 2013.

(Reporting By Bill Rigby. Editing by Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boeing-cut-jobs-second-dreamliner-plant-report-003501387--sector.html

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Illegal music file-sharing down 'significantly'

Illegal music file-sharing "declined significantly," down by 17 percent in 2012 compared to 2011, according to The NPD Group.

With more services available, such as Spotify, Last.fm and Pandora for streaming and buying music, and giant digital music retailers like Amazon and Apple, consumers have more choices than ever for getting music legally, easily and relatively cheaply.

"For the music industry, which has been battling digital piracy for over a decade, last year was a year of progress," said Russ Crupnick, NPD's senior vice president of industry analysis, in a statement about the research group's findings, part of its "Annual Music Study 2012" report.

NPD's findings come on the heels of a recent report that says music sales actually saw a small gain, 0.3 percent, in 2012 to $16.5 billion, the industry's first revenue increase in 13 years, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.

Meanwhile, a new, U.S.-based Copyright Alert System is kicking in this week to target consumers who use peer-to-peer software to illegally share music, as well as movies and TV shows. The alert system will be used by five major Internet service providers to notify a customer whose Internet address has been detected sharing files illegally.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing peaked in 2005, NPD said, when about 20 percent of Internet users ages 13 and older used P2P services, such as LimeWire (now shut down), to download music. In 2012, "that number fell to 11 percent."

P2P services are still out there, of course. But The NPD Group notes that the volume of illegally downloaded music files from P2P sites "also declined 26 percent, compared to the previous year."

Also down: the "number of music files being burned and ripped from CDs owned by friends and family fell 44 percent, the number of files swapped from hard drives dropped 25 percent, and the volume of music downloads from digital lockers decreased 28 percent."

The NPD Group says the main reason for the reduced sharing is the "increased use of free, legal music streaming services. In fact nearly half of those who stopped or curtailed file sharing cited the use of streaming services as their primary reason for stopping or reducing their file-sharing activity."

"In recent years, we?ve seen less P2P activity, because the music industry has successfully used litigation to shut down Limewire and other services," said Crupnick. "Many of those who continued to use P2P services reported poor experiences, due to rampant spyware and viruses on illegal P2P sites."

NPD's research was based on 5,406 completed online surveys in the U.S., a spokesman told NBC News. The survey was done between Dec. 12, 2012 and Jan. 9, 2013.

Check out Technology, GadgetBox, Digital Life and In-Game on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/illegal-music-file-sharing-dropped-significantly-2012-says-npd-1C8590466

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

As atrocities pile up, Syrians collect evidence

FILE - In this Wednesday, March. 7, 2012 file photo, relatives care for Mohammed Obed, who is recovering in a hospital after being captured and allegedly tortured by Syrian Army soldiers, in Idlib, north Syria. A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime?s war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it?s all laid out in the country?s own courtrooms. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, March. 7, 2012 file photo, relatives care for Mohammed Obed, who is recovering in a hospital after being captured and allegedly tortured by Syrian Army soldiers, in Idlib, north Syria. A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime?s war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it?s all laid out in the country?s own courtrooms. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, March. 7, 2012 file photo, relatives care for Mohammed Obed, who is recovering in a hospital after being captured and allegedly tortured by Syrian Army soldiers, in Idlib, north Syria. A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime?s war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it?s all laid out in the country?s own courtrooms. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd, File)

FILE - In this Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 file photo, Syrians stand near the body of a man, local residents say was an activist, and tortured to death by Syrian government forces in Idlib, northern Syria. A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime?s war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it?s all laid out in the country?s own courtrooms. (AP Photo, File)

In this Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 file photo, Syrians stand near the body of a man, local residents say was an activist, and tortured to death by Syrian government forces in Idlib, northern Syria. A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime?s war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it?s all laid out in the country?s own courtrooms. (AP Photo, File)

(AP) ? Syrian activist Yashar hopes the security agents who tormented him during five months of detention will one day be put on trial. In detention, he says, he was locked naked in a tiny box for a week, beaten daily during marathon interrogations and blindfolded for 45 days.

A whole range of groups have accelerated a campaign to gather evidence of war crimes including torture, massacres and indiscriminate killings in the Syrian regime's war against rebels, hoping to find justice if President Bashar Assad falls. Some talk about referring the cases to the International Criminal Court or forming a special tribunal, but many in Syria hope that it's all laid out in the country's own courtrooms.

"I want to take my case to a Syrian court and a Syrian judge who will put my torturers in the same jail where I was held," Yashar, 28, told The Associated Press. He declined to give his full name for security reasons.

Some 70,000 people have been killed and thousands of others maimed, injured or missing in Syria since the uprising against Assad began in March 2011, according to the United Nations. Both the U.N. Human Rights Council and the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Syria have published multiple reports documenting crimes committed during the civil war, including the slaughter of more than 100 civilians in the central region of Houla last May blamed on pro-regime militiamen.

A recent U.N. report accuses both sides in the war of atrocities but says those committed by rebel fighters have not reached the "intensity and scale" of the regime's.

The amount of data is massive, and the challenges are immense. The Syrian government has not given permission to the U.N. commission to visit Syria and has largely closed the country to independent journalists, further complicating the work of rights groups.

Even so, groups of determined Syrian activists continue quietly to collect the evidence.

One group, the Violations Documentation Center in Syria, has documented 49,763 deaths excluding soldiers, 35,508 detentions and 982 people missing in lists that include the name of the deceased, status, the region they come from, date of death and cause of death.

Razan Zaytouni, the general coordinator, said the group collects its material through interviews with families, eyewitness accounts and activist videos as well as photos documenting evidence of beatings, torture and other violence.

Among the difficulties her group and others face is getting people inside Syria to come forth, particularly in Damascus where the regime is still strong, and obtaining evidence that would stand up in court.

"All these lists and information would serve two purposes in the future," Zaytouni, who has been living in hiding since shortly after the uprising began, said via Skype. "First is to prosecute the criminal regime and second to keep our country's collective memory and history alive through videos, photos and names."

Representatives from Zaytouni's group along with others doing similar work held a meeting in Turkey last month during which they launched the National Preparatory Committee for Transitional Justice, tasked with collecting all the dates and information available from all the groups.

"Collecting evidence in Syria is now being done by activists, and there is a need for practitioners to categorize the crimes," such as torture, rape, arbitrary arrest and random shelling, said Radwan Ziadeh, the Washington-based director of the Damascus Center for Human Rights Studies.

David M. Crane, a former prosecutor at the Sierra Leone tribunal, which indicted former Liberian President Charles Taylor in 2003, said among the challenges is the multitude of inexperienced activists collecting a flood of evidence in an uncoordinated way.

To help with building a case for a future prosecutor, Crane created an organization called the Syrian Accountability Initiative.

"We have mapped the entire conflict, we have built a crime base and we have actually sample indictments for whoever will get the case, be it a Syrian or international prosecutor," said Crane, an international law professor at Syracuse University in New York state. He said that the information is being shared with the International Criminal Court, the United Nations and the Syrian opposition.

On Feb. 18, U.N. investigators called on the Security Council to refer Syria to the International Criminal Court. Because Syria is not party to the Rome Statutes that established the ICC, the only way the court can investigate the situation is if it receives a referral from the Security Council, which has been paralyzed by divisions when it comes to Syria.

Some Council members argue that such a move would further encourage Assad's regime to dig in and resist to the end.

Syrians themselves disagree on whether to go to the ICC to prosecute those responsible for atrocities or resort to domestic prosecutors.

"We know that international courts are not that neutral and politics play an important role in the process ... but it is still less negative than local unqualified courts," said Zaytouni. "We watched the comedy of trials of officials in Iraq. Such trials would never help in enforcement of the principles of justice," she said.

Experts say Syrians have several options, including taking after the model of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, which last year sentenced Taylor to 50 years imprisonment for war crimes and crimes against humanity for aiding and abetting murderous rebels.

Other international tribunals have been less successful, including the U.N.-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon that is still investigating the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Eight years following Hariri's assassination, the tribunal has indicted only four people in the case and they are at large. And even though an international court sought Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir's arrest on charges of war crimes in Darfur, he has not been shy about traveling abroad.

More recently the paths taken by Egypt and Libya following their own revolutions have not been encouraging.

In Libya, Moammar Gadhafi was captured and killed by the rebels fighting to topple him, complicating the transition to democracy. A year on, bitterness and rage lingers and Libyans are settling old scores themselves in vigilante justice.

In Egypt, there is little confidence in the post-revolution system now trying former strongman Hosni Mubarak.

"The first thing the Syrian opposition needs to do is secure freedom and control of the country and take their time to build their structures over the next year or two, and then prosecute," Crane said. "They don't have to prosecute immediately."

Yashar, the activist, says Syrian intelligence agents beat him up and then dragged him from a public garden in Damascus before jailing him for five months. But he is waiting for Assad's fall before he gives his testimony to one of the activist groups, fearing retribution against him and his family. He believes it's important for Syria's reconciliation process to see justice served by Syrian courts.

"I want justice, but I do not wish to see my torturers tortured like I was," he said.

___

A journalist in Damascus contributed to this report, as did Associated Press writer Zeina Karam in Beirut.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-26-Syria-War%20Crimes/id-e19d63b980784d8ab6c6ed360619c706

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Hungary says its press freedom is 'completely perfect.' Europe disagrees.

Europe continues to criticize Hungary over its restrictive media laws, which give Prime Minister Victor Orb?n's governing party vast control over the regulation of press outlets.

By Peter Teffer,?Correspondent / February 26, 2013

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orb?n presents his annual state-of-the-nation speech in Budapest, Hungary, last week.

Bernadett Szabo/Reuters

Enlarge

When the European Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee called last week for Europe to regularly investigate journalist freedom across the EU, it didn't name any particular country to watch. But if there has been one European nation that has been criticized for changing its media laws in the past years, it's Hungary.

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Since coming to power in 2010 with a two-thirds majority in parliament, right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orb?n has pushed through a series of unopposed changes to the Central European country's constitution and laws. Among those were revisions to Hungary's media laws and regulations that included huge fines for "imbalanced" or "insulting" coverage, weakened protections for journalistic sources, and a regulatory Media Council to enforce the law with a minimum of checks to its power.

As a result, Hungary has come under ongoing criticism from both representatives of European organizations and various press freedom advocates. Although the criticism has prompted Mr. Orb?n's government to temper the laws somewhat ? it says it has responded accurately to criticism about its media laws ? it has not been able to persuade everyone, more than two years after the laws' implementation.

European Commissioner Neelie Kroes, one of the most vocal critics of Hungary's media policies, is ?still not happy? with the media situation in Hungary, according to a spokesperson.? Ms. Kroes, who spoke to the Civil Liberties Committee to advise on press freedom issues, wrote last year that Hungarian democracy is "at risk if rule of law and access to information are not guaranteed. News reporting should not be censored or controlled by a government?s actions." She added that she had "serious" concerns about Hungary's media laws, despite the modest reforms it implemented.

Another critical voice came recently from Reporters Without Borders. The Paris-based media monitor downgraded the Central European country last month with 16 points on its 2013 Press Freedom Index. Hungary, which dropped on the ranking from 40 to 56, ?is still paying the price of its repressive legislative reforms, which had a major impact on the way journalists work.?

'Just as free as it was'

But government spokesman Ferenc Kumin laughs off the suggestion that he gets tired of having to answer questions about Hungary's media atmosphere.

?Oh you know, I'm not tired of them?, says Mr. Kumin, whose official job title is deputy state secretary for international communications. Speaking in Hungary's prime ministerial office, which is based in the capital's immense parliament building on the shore of the Danube river, he says ?Whenever there is a question, that's fine, we are happy with that. The problem is when there are no questions.?

?We always ask the critical voices to focus on the facts. In many cases we see that these critical voices are more emotion-based and not that much interested in the actual facts,? Kumin says.

Kumin also waves off Reporters Without Borders' criticism. ?That's an organization of journalists, of activists ? journalist-activists. With all due respect, they have a unique perspective. Journalists are always very sensitive whenever a regulation changes. The press is just as free as it was,? he says.

Many Hungarian journalists write freely without fear of persecution, says journalist K?sa Andr?s in a basement caf? in Budapest, where some of the visitors dance to typical gypsy music. ?I have never felt any kind of restriction or pressure,? says Mr. Andr?s, who works for the online version of HVG, an economic weekly magazine. HVG discovered last year that then-President Pal Schmitt had copied most of his dissertation, but ?none of us felt any kind of pressure? not to report the story.

What could happen if a Hungarian journalist wrote a critical article? ?Practically nothing,? says economist ?gnes Urb?n, a member of Hungarian media watchdog M?rt?k. Nevertheless, self-censorship for fear of government retribution seems quite strong in Hungary, especially in public media. This phenomena was widespread and perhaps even logical during the repressive communist era, but now? ?It is really absurd. Self-censorship is much stronger than is required,? Mrs. Urb?n says.

'Embodiment of arbitrary power'

P?ter Moln?r, a researcher at the Center for Media and Communication Studies at Central European University, sees two reasons why self-censorship exists in Hungary's press environment.

One, he says, is the concentration of power in the Media Council, which is among other things responsible for allocating radio frequencies. The other is the way that advertisements are used to pressure media.

The Media Council, the body that was set up to enforce the new Hungarian media law that came into effect in 2011, ?is an embodiment of arbitrary power,? Mr. Moln?r says. Critics like Moln?r say the council lacks independence and transparency ? all five board members are affiliated with Orb?n's governing party Fidesz. ?The Media Council has been using its power to allocate airwaves almost exclusively to government-friendly radio stations,? thereby ensuring positive coverage for itself, says Moln?r.

Since the new media laws came into effect, Hungary has received criticism from both the European Commission ? the executive body of the European Union ? and the Council of Europe, a regional organization that promotes human rights and democracy in its 47 member states, though the Council is more positive about the improvements in Hungary's media law than the EU. ?Significant progress has been made,? Secretary General Thorbj?rn Jagland said in a press conference late last month.

One example of that progress: Originally, the Hungarian government had wanted to give police officials the power to demand the name of journalist's source. Budapest has promised to change that provision and make sure only a judge can decide whether a journalist must name his source. The Council says that journalistic sources are now ?adequately protected.?

While the Hungarian government sees the Council of Europe's report as proof that ?the Media Authority is completely perfect how it is now? ? per Judit Pach, head of the department of the international communications office ? the Council itself emphasizes that ?cooperation between the Council of Europe and Hungary will continue on Media Acts to further improve the legislation.?

Advertisers' clout

Another problem in Hungary that predates Orb?n's government, says Moln?r, is the power of Hungary's many state-owned companies to sway coverage through their allocation of advertisement money.

According to Hungarian journalists, there used to be an arrangement for allocating these ad funds called the "70-30 system": Newspapers that supported the governing party would receive 70 percent of the ads, while the newspapers that were affiliated with the opposition would get 30 percent.

Atilla Mesterh?zy, leader of the Hungarian Socialist Party, admits the existence of such an arrangement. ?Before, it was quite usual that state-owned companies' advertisements were balanced between the right-wing and the left-wing media,? Mr. Mesterh?zy says. The Hungarian Socialist Party was part of a coalition government between 2002 and 2010.

But now that system is a thing of the past. ?Now you cannot find any penny that they spend on the opposition media,? he says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/tgOyEMQFPGU/Hungary-says-its-press-freedom-is-completely-perfect.-Europe-disagrees

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Landmark civil rights law faces critical Supreme Court test

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images, file

U.S. Supreme Court members (first row L-R) Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Associate Justice Antonin Scalia, Chief Justice John Roberts, Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy, Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, (back row L-R) Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Associate Justice Stephen Breyer, Associate Justice Samuel Alito and Associate Justice Elena Kagan.

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By Pete Williams, NBC News Justice Correspondent

The U.S. Supreme Court this week will consider whether a landmark civil rights law, the Voting Rights Act, remains constitutionally valid, given the growth in the political power of minority voters and candidates.

Civil rights groups fear the court's conservatives are prepared to gut what the ACLU calls "the most important piece of civil rights legislation Congress has ever enacted."

The justices will hear oral arguments in the case Wednesday and rule sometime before the current court term ends in late June.

Passed by Congress in 1965 and renewed four times since then, most recently in 2006, a key provision of the law requires states with a history of discrimination at the polls to get federal permission before making any changes to their election procedures ? from congressional redistricting to changing the locations of polling places.

The law was at the core of last year's successful efforts to block strict voter photo ID laws in Texas and South Carolina and to prevent Texas from redrawing its legislative and congressional boundaries in a manner that challengers claimed would have discriminated against minority voters.

"The last election vividly showed that voter suppression and voting discrimination are not just problems of the past. They continue to undermine our democratic process," says the ACLU's Steve Shapiro.

The challenge to the law comes from Shelby County, Alabama, a mostly white suburb south of Birmingham.? It argues that the pre-clearance requirement ? which covers nine entire states and 66 counties or townships in seven others ? is unconstitutional.

The areas covered by the law, it says, include some localities that have made substantial reforms but leave out other parts of the country that have failed to root out discrimination at the polls.

"Florida has been forced into pre-clearance litigation to prove that reducing early voting from 14 days to 8 is not discriminatory, when states such as Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Pennsylvania have no early voting at all," says Bert Rein of Washington, DC, the lawyer for the county.

While the history of blatant discrimination at the polls justified renewing the law in the past, Shelby County says, Congress failed to marshal enough evidence in 2006 to justify extending it for another 25 years.? "At most, the 2006 legislative record shows scattered and limited interference with voting rights, a level plainly insufficient" to sustain the pre-clearance requirement, Rein says.

Since 1990, adds Alabama?s Attorney General, Luther Strange, African Americans in the state have registered and voted in larger percentages than in states outside the South.

?African Americans hold seats in the legislature at percentages that are roughly commensurate with Alabama?s 26 percent African-American population,? Strange says.

But the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund says the current map is a close enough fit to cover the areas of greatest concern.? "Congress is not a surgeon with a scalpel when it acts to legislate across the fivty states, but it can reasonably attack discrimination where it finds it," the group says.

If the law were struck down, civil rights groups fear the areas covered by the law would revert to their old habits.

Warns the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human rights, ?There is a significant risk of backsliding and a likelihood that millions of minority voters will face new barriers to the exercise of their most fundamental human right.?

President Obama expressed a similar sentiment in a radio interview last week. If covered jurisdictions no longer had to defend their electoral changes in advance, Obama said, civil rights groups would be forced to file lawsuits after voting changes were already in place.

?There are some parts of the country where obviously folks have been trying to make it harder for people to vote. So generally speaking, you?d see less protection before an election with respect to voting rights,? Mr. Obama said.

The Justice Department, which is defending the law before the Supreme Court, argues that the coverage formula is flexible, allowing local governments to bail out of the pre-clearance requirement if they can demonstrate they have not discriminated against minority voters for at least ten years.

During the past three decades, 38 bailouts have been granted, freeing 196 local jurisdictions of the preclearance requirement, the Justice Department says.? They include the first ever granted from parts of Alabama, Georgia, Texas, and Virginia, four of the states that are otherwise covered by the law.

Four years ago, the Supreme Court strongly suggested that several justices had doubts about its constitutionality, given recent electoral reforms. "Things have changed in the South," the court said in 2009.? "Blatantly discriminatory evasions of federal decrees are rare."

The court then went on to reject a constitutional challenge to the pre-clearance requirement, but it strongly suggested Congress should update the coverage formula.? Because, however, no changes have since made, the court may prepared to go the rest of the way this time.

Source: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/26/17077448-landmark-civil-rights-law-faces-critical-supreme-court-test?lite

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Bryan Cave Adds New York Real Estate Lawyer

February 21, 2013-The international law firm Bryan Cave LLP announced today that Sonia Kaur Bain has joined the firm?s New York office as a partner. She will practice within the Real Estate Group.

Bain has nearly 20 years of experience representing developers in all types of real estate transactions. She has a focus on commercial real estate, handling the preparation and negotiation of leases, purchase agreements, joint venture agreements, transactions in the hotel, retail, development and office sectors, condominium offering plans, property management and leasing agreements, easement and restriction agreements, and development agreements. She also handles acquisitions dispositions, financings and building conversions including residential, commercial and mixed-use properties.

?We are thrilled to welcome Sonia to the firm,? said New York Partner Andy Auerbach, who is the Deputy Leader of Bryan Cave?s Real Estate Client Service Group. ?Her extensive experience will further strengthen the firm?s versatile Real Estate Practice and is a tremendous asset to our New York office.?

Bain is recognized as a ?rising star? in the 2012 Special Annual Edition of New York?s Sokol Media Inc.?s ?Top Women in Real Estate? issue. She received her J.D. from New York Law School in 1994 and her B.A. from Stony Brook University in 1991.

Bain will add further depth to Bryan Cave?s substantial New York Real Estate Practice. Bryan Cave?s Chambers USA-rated New York Real Estate Group handles some of the largest and most complex real estate transactions in the country. Identified as one of the 10 largest real estate and land use practices in New York, the group provides comprehensive legal services addressing all facets of real estate ownership, development, use, investment and financing.

Bryan Cave LLP has a diversified international legal practice. The firm represents a wide variety of business, financial, institutional and individual clients, including publicly held multinational corporations, large and mid-sized privately held companies, partnerships and emerging companies. Subsidiary Bryan Cave International Consulting provides trade and customs consultancy. Aided by extensive investments in technology, Bryan Cave?s more than 1,100 lawyers and other professionals in over 30 offices across the United States, the United Kingdom, Continental Europe and Asia efficiently serve clients? needs in the world?s key business and financial markets.

?

POSTED BY LAWDRAGON NEWS

Source: http://www.lawdragon.com/press-releases/bryan-cave-adds-new-york-real-estate-lawyer/

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Texas Points To Need For Voting Rights Act, Say Latino Legislators, Groups

NBC Latino:

As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to hear oral arguments on the Voting Rights Act, a group of Latino legislators and legal rights groups in Texas said if you want to know why it is important to keep this legislation, just look at the Lone Star State.

?Texas is the poster child of why we need to keep the Voting Rights Act,? says Luis Figueroa, a legislative attorney for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEF.) In 2011, Texas enacted a voter ID law which groups like MALDEF fought, alleging it would make it harder to Latinos and other minorities to vote. Among those who testified were 18-year-old Nicole and Victoria Rodriguez, Texan twins who did not have driver?s licenses ? their parents could not afford to pay for their car insurance ? but had valid high school IDs, birth certificates and social security identification.

Read the whole story at NBC Latino

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/texas-points-to-need-for-_n_2764756.html

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Polycom updates RealPresence app for Android tablets

RealPresence

Polycom has updated their RealPresence application for Android, bringing support for even more tablets, and new features like smart pairing technology, content sharing, and SVC (Scalable Video Coding) format support. Before you click the link to install this one, take a few minutes to see exactly what the RealPresence app is.

Android Central at Mobile World Congress

This isn't regular video chat where you goof off with your friends or talk dirty to each other. RealPresence is an enterprise video conferencing solution, and it requires and it requires the proper infrastructure to run on. It's designed for professionals who need to speak with each other, in real-time, securely. As the video you'll find after the break explains, industries from healthcare to construction have a need to conference remotely, and when video is involved things are more efficient. When things get more efficient, we all benefit.

Android adoption for the enterprise has always paled when compared to the consumer space, or to Apple's iOS. Applications like RealPresence can change that, and expand the choices made when it's time to buy equipment. Jump past the break to see the mentioned video, and read the press release.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/8HSI48H9oZg/story01.htm

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Syrian opposition says captures former nuclear site

AMMAN (Reuters) - Syrian rebels have captured the site of a suspected nuclear reactor near the Euphrates river which Israeli warplanes destroyed six years ago, opposition sources in eastern Syria said on Sunday.

Al-Kubar site, around 60 km (35 miles) west of the city of Deir al-Zor, became a focus of international attention when Israel raided it in 2007. The United States said the complex was a North Korean-designed nuclear reactor geared to making weapons-grade plutonium.

Omar Abu Laila a spokesman for the Eastern Joint Command of the Free Syrian Army said the only building rebels found at the site was a hangar containing at least one Scud missile.

"It appears that the site was turned into a Scud launch base. Whatever structures it had have been buried," he said, adding that three army helicopters airlifted the last loyalist troops before opposition fighters overran the area on Friday.

The Syrian military, which razed the site after the Israeli raid, said the complex was a regular military facility but refused to allow the International Atomic Energy Agency unrestrained access, after the agency said the complex could have been a nuclear site.

The U.N. investigation appears to have died down since the national revolt against Preident Bashar al-Assad broke out in 2011, with the armed opposition increasingly capturing military sites in rural areas and on the edges of cities.

U.N. inspectors examined the site in June 2008 but Syrian authorities has barred them access since.

Abu Laila said Scuds appear to have been fired from Kubar at rebel-held areas in the province of Homs to the west.

The complex, he said, had command and control links with loyalist troops in the city of Deir al-Zor, where Assad's forces have been on the retreat and are now based mainly in and around the airport in the south of the city.

Footage showed fighters inspecting the site and one large missile inside a hangar. One fighter pointed to what he said were explosives placed under the missile to destroy it before attacking forces got to it.

Abu Hamza, a commander in the Jafaar al-Tayyar brigade, said in a YouTube video taken at Kubar that various rebel groups, including the al Qaeda linked al-Nusra front, took part the operation and that U.N. inspectors were welcome to come and survey the site.

In the last few months, opposition fighters have captured large swathes of the province of Deir al-Zor, a Sunni Muslim desert oil producing region that borders Iraq, including most of a highway along Euphrates leading to Kubar.

The province is far from the Assad's main military supply bases on the coast and in Damascus. Long-time alliances between Assad, who belongs to the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Islam, and Sunni tribes in Deir al-Zor have also largely collapsed since the revolt.

But Assad's forces remain entrenched in the south of the city of Deir al-Zor and armed convoys guarded by helicopters still reach the city from the city of Palmyra to the southwest, according to opposition sources.

(Editing by Stephen Powell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-rebels-capture-nuclear-reactor-bombed-israel-162103290.html

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Samsung takes on iPad Mini, expands lineup pen-based tablets with Galaxy Note 8.0

BARCELONA, Spain ? Samsung Electronics is beefing up its tablet range with a competitor?

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BARCELONA, Spain ? Samsung Electronics is beefing up its tablet range with a competitor to Apple?s iPad Mini that sports a pen for writing on the screen.

The Korean company announced on Sunday in Barcelona that the Galaxy Note 8.0 will have an 8-inch screen, putting it very close in size to the Apple?s tablet, which launched in November with a 7.9-inch screen. It?s not the first time Samsung has made a tablet that?s in the Mini?s size range: it?s very first iPad competitor had a 7-inch screen, and it still makes a tablet of that size, but without a pen.

Samsung will start selling the new tablet in the April to June period, at an as yet undetermined price. It made the announcement ahead of Mobile World Congress, the wireless industry?s annual trade show, which starts Monday in Barcelona, Spain.

The Note 8.0 fills a gap in Samsung?s line-up of pen-equipped devices between the Galaxy Note II smartphone, with its 5.5-inch screen, and the Galaxy Note 10.1, a full-size tablet. Samsung has made the pen, or more properly the stylus, one of the tools it uses to chip away at Apple?s dominance in both tablets and high-end smartphones. Apple doesn?t make any devices that work with styluses, preferring to optimize its interfaces for fingers, mice and touchpads.

On Samsung?s Note line, the pens can be used to write, highlight and draw. The screens also sense when the mouse hovers over the screen, providing an equivalent to the hovering mouse cursor on the PC. However, few third-party applications have been modified to take full advantage of the pens.

Source: http://www2.macleans.ca/2013/02/23/samsung-takes-on-ipad-mini-expands-lineup-pen-based-tablets-with-galaxy-note-8-0/

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Fidel Castro surprises with parliament appearance amid leadership speculation

HAVANA (Reuters) - Retired Cuban leader Fidel Castro made a rare public appearance Sunday by joining the opening session of the National Assembly, state media reported amid speculation the gathering could give clues on planning for a future leadership succession.

Since falling ill in 2006 and ceding the presidency to his brother, Fidel Castro has given up all official positions except as a deputy in the National Assembly. At Sunday's session, he took his seat beside brother President Raul Castro, only the second time he has graced the assembly chambers since his illness and the first since 2010.

Fidel Castro's surprise appearance added to expectations, fueled by his brother, that the usually routine session might shed light on future leadership of the communist-run nation.

In a back and forth with reporters on Friday, Raul Castro joked about his eventual retirement and urged them to pay attention to Sunday's conclave, which is closed to foreign journalists.

"I'm going to turn 82; I have a right to retire already," he said. "You don't believe me? Why are you so incredulous?" he said.

The 612 deputies, who were elected in an uncontested vote February 3, are expected to name a new 31-member Council of State with Raul Castro as president, despite his quip.

The National Assembly meets for just a few weeks each year and delegates its legislative powers between sessions to the Council of State, which also functions as the nation's executive through the Council of Ministers it appoints.

Governments, Cuba watchers and Cubans will be watching to see if there are any new, and younger, faces among the Council of State members, in particular its first vice president and five vice presidents, with an average age over 70.

The new government is almost certain to be the last headed up by the Castro brothers and the generation that has ruled Cuba since they swept down from the mountains in the 1959 revolution that led to a long-running feud with Washington.

Raul Castro, 81, would begin his second term on Sunday, theoretically leaving him free to retire in 2018, aged 86.

Eighty percent of the parliament's 612 members, with an average age under 50, were born after the Revolution.

EFFORT TO PROMOTE YOUNGER GENERATION

Raul Castro, who officially replaced his ailing brother as president in 2008, has repeatedly called for senior leaders to hold office for no more than two, five-year terms.

"Although we kept on trying to promote young people to senior positions, life proved that we did not always make the best choice," Castro said at a Party Congress in 2011.

"Today, we are faced with the consequences of not having a reserve of well-trained replacements....It's really embarrassing that we have not solved this problem in more than half a century," he said.

The 2011 party summit adopted a more than 300-point plan to "update" Cuba's Soviet-style economic system, designed to transform it from one based on collective production and consumption to one where individual effort and reward play a far more important role.

Across-the-board subsidies are being replaced by the country's first comprehensive tax code and targeted welfare.

Fidel Castro, these days referred to as the "historic leader of the revolution," is no longer seen as wielding real power, but he has maintained a public presence through his writings, meetings with important visitors and rare appearances.

Esteban Lazo, member of the political bureau of the Community Party and vice president of the Council of State, 68, was named parliament president Sunday to replace a retiring Ricardo Alarcon, who served for 20 years.

(Reporting By Marc Frank; Editing by David Adams and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/fidel-castro-makes-rare-appearance-parliament-161318515.html

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Pope makes last St. Peter's Square window appearance of his pontificate

MARANA, Arizona, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Matt Kuchar derailed Hunter Mahan's bid to win back-to-back titles at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship with a 2&1 victory over his fellow American in the final on Sunday. Four up after nine holes on a chilly afternoon of biting winds at Dove Mountain, Kuchar fended off a late Mahan fightback before sealing the win at the par-four 17th where his opponent took four shots to reach the green. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-makes-last-st-peters-square-window-appearance-110327192.html

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Dr. Michael J. Breus: Sleep: The Key to a Long-Term, Loving Relationship?

It is one of the most common struggles that couples face: Over the life of a relationship, partners can lose a sense of appreciation for one another. Holding onto a sense of gratitude for each other is one of the hallmarks of couples who stay content in their relationships over the course of many years. On the other hand, loss of gratitude and appreciation between partners can jeopardize a relationship's long-term success.

A new study suggests that poor sleep may contribute to a lack of appreciation between romantic partners. Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley conducted a multi-part study to examine how sleep may affect people's feelings of gratitude and the ability to value and appreciate romantic partners. The study was presented recently at the annual conference of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. The study included more than 60 heterosexual couples between the ages 18-56. They participated in three separate exercises designed to measure how sleep affects individual levels of gratitude and sense of appreciation between partners:

  • After a night of sleep, people were asked to make a list of five things for which they were grateful. Those with poor sleep demonstrated less of a sense of appreciation than those with better sleep quality and sleep quantity.
  • Participants were asked to keep a daily record for two weeks of both their sleep and their feelings of gratitude -- and lack thereof. Researchers identified a decline in levels of gratitude that was associated with poor sleep. People were more likely to report feelings of selfishness after a night of sleeping poorly.
  • The third section of the study looked specifically at how sleep affects the dynamic of gratitude and appreciation between couples. Their results showed that people tended to feel less appreciated by their partners if either they or their partner slept poorly.

The last finding is particularly interesting: A lack of sleep by one person in the relationship resulted in greater likelihood of diminished feelings of appreciation by both partners. This suggests just how deeply sleep can influence the emotional dynamic of a relationship.

Sleep can pose a number of challenges to relationships. Poor sleep can make for difficult sleeping conditions for couples. The tossing and turning of insomnia and the noisy, disrupted sleep of snoring and sleep apnea don't just diminish the quality of sleep for the individuals with the disorder. They also rob partners of restful sleep. Night owls and larks who share a bed may also have difficulty marrying their sleep schedules. If you're an early-to-bed, early-to-rise type, having a partner who likes to read or watch television late into the night can interfere with sleep.

These may be among the reasons why an increasing number of couples are choosing to sleep in separate beds. Research shows as many as 25 percent of couples are sleeping separately, and this is a number that's been rising for years. The separate-bed strategy may seem like an attractive option for couples struggling to sleep together well. But it's important to consider what might be lost in this choice. I'm talking about the intimacy created by sharing a bed. And I'm not only talking about sexual intimacy, although that's certainly a risk of sharing separate beds. (At the very least, couples are much less likely to have spontaneous sex if they're not sleeping together.) I'm also talking about the sense of togetherness and emotional connection that comes from sleeping together.

What's more, sleeping together can actually reinforce good sleep habits. Partners who sleep together can be a positive influence when it comes to keeping reasonable bedtimes and not falling asleep to the television. Studies have shown that sleep apnea patients who use CPAP therapy are 60 percent more likely to stick with the treatment if their partners continue to share a bed, rather than sleeping separately.

This latest research makes sense given what we know about how sleep affects mood and outlook, as well as emotional and mental health. Poor quality sleep and insufficient sleep can negatively affect mood and judgment, making us cranky and less apt to greet the inevitable ups and downs of life with perspective and an even keel. Research shows that poor sleep increases the likelihood of depression and anxiety, conditions that themselves can interfere with sleep. So it's not surprising that gratitude might diminish when we're short on sleep, and that the people closest to us -- our partners -- might bear the brunt of this diminished sense of appreciation.

I'd like to see more studies like this, both for the specific knowledge and insights they provide us about the functions of sleep, but also for the way they highlight the very central role that sleep plays in the quality of our waking lives and the lives of those we love.

Sweet Dreams,
Michael J. Breus, PhD
The Sleep Doctor?
www.thesleepdoctor.com

The Sleep Doctor's Diet Plan: Lose Weight Through Better Sleep

Everything you do, you do better with a good night's sleep?
Twitter: @thesleepdoctor
Facebook: www.facebook.com/thesleepdoctor

For more by Dr. Michael J. Breus, click here.

For more on sleep, click here.

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Follow Dr. Michael J. Breus on Twitter: www.twitter.com/thesleepdoctor

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-michael-j-breus/sleep-relationships_b_2687131.html

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My name is Helen. I go to college, where I learn things and occasionally have fun. I blog lots of personal posts, fangirling, good music, space, pretty things, and also waterfalls when I am stressed. I constantly listen to strange electronic noises and also guitary noises and my life's ambition is to be a cat lady.

Adventures in Germany??Adventures in Cooking??
Ask

Source: http://amatterofunimportance.tumblr.com/post/43797919431

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Surrey selected to represent Canada in softball bid

Softball Canada has announced that the Canadian Open Fastpitch Society, located in Surrey, has been awarded the honour of representing Canada as the Canadian bid city for the 2016 ISF Women?s World Championship.

The bid will go forward to the International Softball Federation (ISF) Congress scheduled for October 2013 in Cartagena, Colombia. At that time, the full membership of the ISF will vote on the awarding of the host city.

This event would be the first world championship ever hosted in the City of Surrey, and the first fastpitch world championship ever to be held in B.C.

?We?re excited and well-prepared to host the softball world championship, as we have a long history of? hosting successful large-scale sporting events in Surrey,? said Mayor Dianne Watts.? ?This event would help us advance softball in our community, provide a unique opportunity to highlight our tremendous athletes, and provide significant economic benefits to Surrey.?

Surrey hosts annually the Scotiabank Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship, the largest international softball tournament in Canada and the third largest in the world.? The event brings 80-100 teams and 1,300 athletes to the city.

The Canadian Open Fastpitch Society is made up of volunteers who have a long history of hosting successful major softball events dating back to the early 1990s. They currently operate the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship, which is slated to run from July 12 to 22, 2013. This event features International Women?s Teams and Senior Women?s Club Teams, as well as Futures U19 and Showcase 16U teams.

?Softball Canada is very pleased to be going forward with this bid,? said Softball Canada CEO Hugh Mitchener. ?We will be working with a very experienced organizing committee in a city which is well-renowned in the softball world for hosting major international softball tournaments, which speaks volumes to the talents and abilities of this volunteer organization. Many of the teams that will be participating are familiar with the City of Surrey as a result of previous trips. There is a very positive feeling around this bid.?

Greg Timm, chairman of the Canadian Open Fastpitch Society, calls the nomination an honour.

"It is a tremendous privilege to represent Canada as the bid city for this important international event," Timm said. "As an organization we are known worldwide for hosting superior events, thanks to the dedicated group of over 400 individuals from throughout the community who volunteer annually at the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Championship. Our vision is to run the best softball World Championship ever run in the history of ISF World Championships. This will help us to reach our goal of promoting and encouraging young athletes from our country to become involved in this sport by showcasing the world?s elite as well as by providing a spotlight on the up and coming stars of tomorrow. ?

The 2016 event will be the first time since 1994 that the Women?s World Championships has been operated as an Open Championship. Previously, the event has been a qualified tournament with participation capped at 16 teams.

Softball Canada has previously hosted Women?s World Championships in St. John?s, Newfoundland (1994), Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (2002), and Whitehorse, Yukon (2012). Canada finished fourth at the World Championship this past July in Whitehorse. ISF World Championships are on a two-year cycle. The next Women?s World Championship will be held in Haarlem, Netherlands in 2014.

On Monday, the City of Surrey unveiled a new Sport Tourism Strategy, designed to attract new sporting events to the city.? For more information, visit: http://www.surrey.ca/files/Sport_Tourism_Plan__web.pdf

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Source: http://www.cloverdalereporter.com/sports/191858731.html

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The Note's Must-Reads for Friday February 22, 2013

The Note's Must-Reads are a round-up of today's political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News' Carrie Halperin, Jayce Henderson and Will Cantine

FISCAL BATTTLE ABC News' Chris Good: " 57 Terrible Consequences Of The Sequester" If the heads of 20 federal agencies are to be believed, disastrous consequences await if President Obama and Congress fail to reach a budget deal, triggering the automatic, across-the-board cuts known as "sequestration." The cuts are slated to begin March 1, and earlier this month, the Senate Appropriations Committee asked agency heads to explain what would happen in such a scenario. LINK

USA Today's David Jackson: " Obama Speaks To GOP Leaders Amid Sequester Campaign" President Obama took some time off from his sequester campaign Thursday to speak with his top two Republican rivals in Congress, House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Obama and GOP aides had little to say about the conversations. The White House announced that Obama would travel to Virginia next week to discuss what effects automatic budget cuts would have on the defense industry. LINK

The Wall Street Journal's Sudeep Reddy: " Sudden Spending Cuts Likely To Bleed Slowly" The political jousting over the federal spending cuts set to start March 1 largely comes down to how much of an economic blow they could deal. But it may take a while to assess whether it feels more like a punch or a pinch, because the reductions will take effect over many months. LINK

The New York Times' Jeff Zeleny and Jonathan Weisman: " For Obama and Team, Calm, Not Crisis, in Latest Fiscal Battle" President Obama is just seven days away from the first significant test of his second term as deep spending cuts loom, yet inside the White House a clear sense of confidence stands in contrast to the air of crisis that surrounded previous fiscal showdowns with Republicans. The confrontation holds peril for both the president and Republicans. But for now, Mr. Obama believes he is acting from a greater position of strength, advisers say, pointing to several recent polls that show he holds an upper hand in the budget debate. Yet his standing would be at risk if the so-called sequester caused economic growth to collapse. LINK

The Washington Post's Ernesto Londono and Lisa Rein: " Military service chiefs warn budget cuts will undermine readiness" After staying largely on the sidelines of the debate over deficit reduction, the U.S. military's service leaders have begun painting a stark picture of the toll a congressionally mandated budget cut could take on the readiness of the world's largest armed forces. The $46 billion dent to the Pentagon's fiscal 2013 budget, long considered by the brass as nothing more than a political pawn, has taken on an air of inevitability, forcing commanders across the military to plan for painful reductions and argue that American lives and livelihoods are hanging in the balance. LINK

Politico's Darren Samuelsohn and Scott Wong: " Sequestration: Excuses, excuses, excuses" President Barack Obama and members of Congress have dubbed sequestration "stupid," "dumb" and "irresponsible." But here's one thing none of them are calling it: "My fault." With across-the-board spending cuts about to start March 1 absent a last-minute breakthrough, the excuses are piling up for how the country is yet again on the brink of a new fiscal fiasco that has everything to do with the other guy. LINK

PRESIDENT OBAMA AND HIS ADMINISTRATION The New York Daily News' Dan Hirschhorn: " Jimmy Carter says President Obama 'profusely' thanked his grandson following release of Mitt Romney's '47 percent' footage" Mitt Romney's presidential campaign may never have sunk the way it did were it not for the disclosure of his notorious "47 percent" comments - and President Obama is apparently quite grateful for the opposition researcher who helped unearth the video. Former President Jimmy Carter, whose grandson James helped bring the video to light, says Obama thanks James Carter "profusely" when the two met last week. LINK

The Hill's Jeremy Herb: " Inhofe pushes against proceeding to final up-or-down vote on Hagel" The top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee is calling for Republican senators to block former Sen. Chuck Hagel's (R-Neb.) confirmation once again when the Senate returns next week. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) sent a "Dear Colleague" letter to senators Thursday lobbying for them to vote against cloture on Hagel, saying that voting to end debate is the equivalent of voting to confirm Hagel for the top Pentagon post. LINK

AFGHANISTAN The Los Angeles Times' Shashank Bengali and David S. Cloud: " U.S. drone strikes up sharply in Afghanistan" One morning recently, a teenager named Bacha Zarina was collecting firewood on her family's small farm in eastern Afghanistan. About 30 yards away, as family members recall, two Taliban commanders stood outside a house. LINK

IMMIGRATION Univision/ABC News' Ted Hesson: " Business And Labor Reach An Agreement On Future Immigration" Business and labor leaders have come to an agreement in principle about one of the thorniest parts of immigration reform - what to do with future flows of immigrant workers. LINK

ABC NEWS VIDEO " Will Sequestration Turn US Into 'Second-Rate Power'" LINK " Biden Urges Stricter Gun Laws At Connecticut Conference" LINK

BOOKMARKS The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-friday-february-22-2013-080030608--abc-news-politics.html

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Mardi Gras Indian Super Sunday 2013 parade

Photo by Marcello Amari

For the uninitiated visitor, we?ll break it down: Super Sunday is the day when tribes of Mardi Gras Indians from across New Orleans don their newest suits and take to the streets to show off these elaborate, wearable works of art handmade with beads, feathers, rhinestones and sequins, challenging Indian chiefs from other tribes over whose suit is the ?prettiest? (the highest compliment for these masterpieces).

The annual Super Sunday parade hosted by the New Orleans Mardi Gras Indian Council will take place on Sunday, March 17, 2013, with tribes gathering at A.L. Davis Park at Washington & LaSalle Streets around 12 noon.

After Mardi Gras, Super Sunday and St. Joseph?s night (March 19) are the only other times of year when New Orleans? famous Mardi Gras Indians roam the streets in full regalia. Parading on St. Joseph?s night has been a Mardi Gras Indian tradition in New Orleans for more than a century, and Super Sunday always falls on the Sunday closest to St. Joseph?s. Few agree about the connection between the Italian celebration of St. Joseph?s day and the Indians? Super Sunday ? opinions vary even among Indian chiefs.

Where can I find Mardi Gras Indians on Super Sunday?
Super Sunday music and activities?start around 12 noon at A.L. Davis Park (Washington/LaSalle Streets).

Parade route: A.L. Davis Park at Washington Avenue and LaSalle Street ? LaSalle to Simon Bolivar. Left on Martin Luther King Boulevard to S. Claiborne Avenue. Left on Claiborne Avenue to Washington Avenue. Left on Washington Avenue. End: A.L. Davis Park

Where can I find Mardi Gras Indians on St. Joseph?s Night?
Indians parading on St. Joseph?s night are more difficult to track down. Indians as a rule parade without a designated route, except on Super Sunday. In general, Uptown Indians parade around the Central City area and Downtown Indians stick to the Seventh Ward area. For locals, searching for the Indians is considered part of the fun of the experience; finding them is the reward!

Source: http://www.neworleans.com/blog/2013/02/mardi-gras-indian-super-sunday-2013-parade/

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Adblock Plus gets shins kicked by Google "security measures" - Hexus

Google has made it much more difficult to use the ad-blocking utility Adblock Plus on its latest Android OS and in its desktop Chrome browser. Adblock developers observed recent software changes implemented by Google and made some workarounds utilising automatic proxy server configuration, so that people could still use its ad-blocking utility. Google seems to have reacted to this and made Adblock Plus?s new workarounds on Android much more complicated and manual - in the name of system security. It sounds like this is a high stakes game (advertising revenue) of internet cat and mouse.

Android

The Adblock Plus Android app will no longer work on non-rooted Android 4.1.2 or 4.2.2 devices without going through an eight-stage configuration of a proxy server.

Till Faida, co-founder of the Adblock Plus project told The Register that ?We are not opposed to the fix per se. We just think Google shouldn't deliberately break any functionality when fixing something?. Faida went on to say that Adblock coders have raised the issue on Google code forums and hope that the ?do no evil? company will help ?provide a solution that addresses security concerns and still respects user's choices?.

some of the fiddly manual proxy config stages

Chrome

Google also seems to have taken part in snake-like, body-swerving, goalpost-moving behaviour regarding Adblock Plus running within its Chrome browser. First of all the Adblock Plus extension stopped appearing in searches of web browser extensions/apps available to Chrome users, as the updated search function only looked at ?apps?. Then, when Adblock was made into a Chrome app, it was only available for 12 hours before being removed.

Honesty is the best policy

If Google wants to stop the use of Adblock Plus on its platforms on commercial grounds, as it is a major online advertising industry player, it should just come out and say so. I think most people could understand that action and the business motives behind it. Are all these Adblock shenanigans really just about the security of end users?

Source: http://hexus.net/business/news/internet/51997-adblock-plus-gets-shins-kicked-google-security-measures/

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