Friday, May 24, 2013

Technique to detect breast cancer in urine developed

May 23, 2013 ? A Missouri University of Science and Technology researcher has developed a new screening method that uses urinalysis to diagnose breast cancer -- and determine its severity -- before it could be detected with a mammogram. A study to confirm this technique's effectiveness is under way at Mercy Breast Center in Springfield, Mo.

Dr. Yinfa Ma, Curators' Teaching Professor of chemistry at Missouri S&T, uses a device called a P-scan, to detect the concentration of certain metabolites called pteredines in urine samples. These biomarkers are present in the urine of all human beings, but abnormally high concentrations can signal the presence of cancer. Ma believes the levels continue to rise as the cancer advances.

Ma has had good results in limited testing and is now expanding testing in a larger study to prove that the technique works. This blind study is part of the validation process required by the FDA to eventually make the P-Scan available in clinics across the country as an inexpensive, non-invasive test that could be used during routine physical examinations.

In April, Ma began a clinical trial with Mercy Breast Center and commercialization partner Emergence BioScreening of St. Louis. The study focuses on 300 breast cancer patients and a control group of 100 individuals who have been clinically tested and found to be free of cancer. He hopes to conclude the study within a year.

Nearly one in eight women will develop invasive breast cancer during her lifetime. Around 85 percent of women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history of the disease.

"When we heard about this study, we were excited to be a partner," said Dr. Roger Holden, Mercy hematologist and oncologist. "We know early detection is the key to beating cancer, and if we can detect it in the very earliest stages, before we can see it, there is such a potential for successful treatment and even new treatments."

This is a blind study, which means that Ma doesn't know which samples he tests are those of cancer patients and which are from healthy individuals. All patients are assigned a number and their diagnosis and personal information are kept confidential.

"We are hoping more and more cancer patients will assist us with this project," Ma says. "It might not help current patients, but it will help millions of people in the future. Using this technology for early cancer screenings in the future could save many lives."

Using the P-scan, Ma will be able to detect the presence of cancer and its level of advancement -- often before it could be detected on a mammogram.

"Mammogram technology is not sensitive," Ma says. "Some early cancer cannot be detected by a mammogram. If this P-Scan technology works, it will be much easier to incorporate into regular physical screening.

"A patient donates urine and 10 minutes later I have a result. If this works, it will be an amazing diagnostic tool."

The P-scan works by using a capillary to pass a small sample of urine into the device, separate different pteredine molecules and then pass the sample through a light source. The researchers then use a spectrophotometer to identify and measure the pteredines in the sample.

Pteredines are normal metabolites that are present in the urine of all human beings. But when cancer is present, the levels rise.

"Cancer cells grow much faster than normal cells," Ma explains. "So they release more waste into the urine and we begin to see a rise in the metabolite levels."

Ma believes these markers are indicators of specific types of cancer and he hopes to prove that in future trials. Once he and his fellow researcher prove the technology works for breast cancer, they can begin to determine if studying pteredine levels in urine samples is an accurate way to detect and diagnose other types of cancers as well.

"We will go cancer by cancer until we know," Ma says.

Currently all testing is done manually. But once the validation study is complete, Ma will work with Emergence BioScreening in St. Louis on the next step in the process -- building an automated, FDA-approved instrument that can be manufactured for clinical use. Ma and his students plan to build the prototype P-scan instrument with funding from the University of Missouri System Intellectual Property Fast Track Funding Program.

"I want people to realize that their help is so important for the development of technology that can save more lives in the future," Ma says. "I hope they will consider participating in this study to help many others in the future.

"I am very excited about this project," Ma says. "If it works, it will save lives. That's my motivation."

For more information about participation in the study, contact Adrianna Moore or Pearlena Hamlet at the Mercy Breast Center.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/TLw9Z37zgM4/130523180316.htm

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Suspect killed by the FBI was an MMA fighter

Early Wednesday morning, an FBI agent shot and killed someone they were questioning for his connections with the Boston Marathon bombers. Ibragim Todashev, the suspect, was an MMA fighter with a 1-0 professional record.

Todashev, who was reportedly a friend of deceased bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev, fought in July of 2012. He submitted Bradford May with a guillotine in the first round of their bout at Real Fighting Championships in Florida.

Khusen Taramov, a friend of Todashev's, said that Tsarnaev and Todashev trained together in Boston. Tsarnaev trained and competed as a boxer.

"He used to talk on the phone with him (Tsarnaev)," said Taramov. "They talked last time a month ago. After the bombing, I couldn't believe it."

Todashev was reportedly being questioned about a triple-murder in Massachusetts in September of 2011. The FBI said in a statement Todashev posed an imminent threat to the agent.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/suspect-killed-fbi-mma-fighter-194231412.html

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Microsoft's Don Mattrick talks Xbox One, calls backwards compatibility backwards

One of the more controversial bits of news to come out of yesterday's Xbox One reveal was the discovery that the newly christened console would not be able to play Xbox 360 games. Backwards compatibility has been a sore subject for some gamers but Microsoft's Don Mattrick says the company is looking forward, not back. "If you're backwards compatible," he told The Wall Street Journal, "you're really backwards."

While the news was met with some chagrin, it's not terribly surprising. The Xbox One's architecture -- equipped with a new x86 CPU -- prevents it from being able to run games designed for the 360's eight year old Xenon processor. Additionally, Mattrick claims that players making use of backwards compatibility were a negligible percentage of their consumer base. While Mattrick's words are sure to stick in more than one craw, they reflect the reality of the market. With Nintendo struggling to juggle Wii games on the Wii U and Sony's Playstation 4 abandoning current gen PSN games, it looks like backwards compatibility is a thing of the past.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: The Verge

Source: The Wall Street Journal

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/22/don-mattrick-backwards-compatibility/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Stone Temple Pilots, Linkin Park Fans Clash Over Chester Bennington Joining STP

'Stone Temple Pilots just aren't the same without Scott Weiland," writes a fan about the news.
By Gil Kaufman

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707729/stone-temple-pilots-chester-bennington-linkin-park-fans-react.jhtml

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Joplin marking 2nd anniversary of deadly EF-5 tornado

by Associated Press

Associated Press

Posted on May 22, 2013 at 9:05 AM

Updated today at 9:05 AM

JOPLIN, Mo. -- Joplin on Wednesday was set to mark the second anniversary of a tornado that killed 161 people and injured hundreds more.

The EF-5 tornado hit the southwest Missouri city on May 22, 2011, destroying thousands of homes and businesses.

On Wednesay, Joplin officials say tents will be set up throughout the city?s Cunningham Park. The tents will highlight efforts to restore various elements of the community, including its housing, schools, trees and businesses.

Starting around 4 p.m., representatives will be available in the tents to talk about the recovery work, progress and plans for the future.

A program will begin at 5 p.m. and conclude with a moment of silence at 5:41 p.m. That?s the time that the tornado touched down in the western limits of Joplin.

Here are a couple videos that show just how massive and devasting the tornado was when it hit.
?

1.

Click here if you're a mobile user.

2.

Click here if using your mobile device.

Source: http://www.kvue.com/news/208481051.html

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5 Grisly Decades of Workplace Safety Posters

Worker compensation is a fairly new thing, dating only back to the Labor Movement in the early 1900s. Before that, injuries on the job were usually treated with either indifference or cheap payoff?after all, the average factory worker was making mere cents a day, so half a year's pay was chump change for large companies.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-TjApOm_LQI/5-grizzly-decades-of-workplace-safety-posters-509302656

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CA-NEWS Summary

PM says growing expenses scandal a distraction

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Tuesday dismissed a mushrooming expenses scandal as a distraction, but also said he was "very upset" that members of his Conservative Party had apparently tapped the public purse for personal gain. Harper, facing the biggest crisis since he won power in early 2006 with promises to clean up government, urged legislators to focus on the economy, which the Conservatives see as their strongest suit.

Survivors pulled from Oklahoma tornado debris as toll falls

MOORE, Oklahoma (Reuters) - Emergency workers pulled more than 100 survivors from the rubble of homes, schools and a hospital in an Oklahoma town hit by a powerful tornado, and officials lowered the death toll from the storm to 24, including nine children. The 2-mile (3-km) wide tornado tore through Moore outside Oklahoma City on Monday afternoon, trapping victims beneath the rubble, wiping out entire neighborhoods and tossing vehicles about as if they were toys.

Syrian foes move towards talks but fighting rages

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syria's opposition and the government of President Bashar al-Assad seem to be preparing to take part in an international peace conference against a background of some of the worst fighting this year. On Tuesday, Lebanese Hezbollah fighters and Syrian soldiers, backed by air strikes and artillery, renewed an offensive aimed at driving Syrian rebels from the town of Qusair near the Lebanese border, opposition activists said.

Rafsanjani, Ahmadinejad ally barred from Iran election

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranian authorities on Tuesday barred former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a relative moderate, from running in the June 14 election, along with a prot?g? of the current president, leaving mainly hardliners left to contest the vote. Rafsanjani and Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, a close aide to current President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, failed to make it onto a list of candidates approved by the Guardian Council, state news agencies and television reported.

World Bank boosts funds for Syria refugees, Africa

GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Bank plans substantial new funds to help Jordan cope with the influx of refugees from the civil war in Syria, and hopes new funds for central Africa will cement a peace deal there, the bank's President Jim Yong Kim said on Tuesday. "There will be significant amounts of new funding going to Jordan in the very near future to deal with this crisis," he said in an interview, after a speech at the U.N. World Health Assembly in Geneva.

Car bomb near Sunni mosque in west of Baghdad kills 11: police

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A car bomb exploded near a Sunni mosque in the west of Baghdad killing 11 people on Tuesday, police and medics said. The blast, which took place in Abu Ghraib, also wounded 21 people. Earlier on Tuesday, several bomb blasts killed at least 12 people in Iraq, where Sunni-Shi'ite tensions are running high.

Algeria's Bouteflika convalescing in France

ALGIERS (Reuters) - Algeria's prime minister, reacting to reports that President Abdelaziz Bouteflika is seriously ill, said the 76-year-old was recovering in France but had been ordered by his doctors to rest. Since he was rushed to hospital in Paris on April 27 with what was officially described as a minor stroke, Bouteflika has been neither heard nor seen in public, raising widespread speculation about his state of health.

Gay marriage opponent kills himself in Paris' Notre Dame

PARIS (Reuters) - An 78-year-old French far-right activist committed suicide at the altar of the Notre Dame cathedral on Tuesday by shooting himself in the mouth, three days after a law legalizing same-sex marriage came into effect. Police evacuated the cathedral, one of Paris' biggest tourist draws, after Dominique Venner - a historian known for his hard-right political essays and a fierce opponent of gay marriage - shot himself, sending tourists fleeing in panic.

Britain asks EU to put Hezbollah armed wing on terror list

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Britain said on Tuesday it had asked the European Union to put Hezbollah's military arm on its list of terrorist organizations, urging Europe to respond robustly to evidence of the Islamist group's involvement in an attack that killed five Israelis. Britain's request came after Bulgaria accused the Lebanese militant movement in February of carrying out a bomb attack on a bus in the Black Sea city of Burgas that killed the Israelis and their Bulgarian driver in July last year.

Pope criticizes 'savage capitalism' on visit to food kitchen

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis criticized what he called "savage capitalism" on a visit to a food kitchen on Tuesday, in an address in which he called for the values of generosity and charity to be revived. "A savage capitalism has taught the logic of profit at any cost, of giving in order to get, of exploitation without thinking of people... and we see the results in the crisis we are experiencing," the pope said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ca-news-summary-162224859.html

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Inside Microsoft's ?Geek 2 Chic' Fashion Show, Where Tech Types Strike A Pose For Charity [TCTV]

Screen shot 2013-05-20 at 2.01.12 PMThe tech-dominated San Francisco Bay Area isn't exactly known as a hub for high fashion -- Facebook's new James Perse staff hoodies are about as fancy as things get around here -- and fashion shows aren't typically in our purview here at TechCrunch TV. So when we were invited to attend the Geek 2 Chic fashion show, an event hosted by Microsoft benefiting the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE, which is pronounced "nifty") which mentors at-risk youth and teaches them business basics and encourages technology careers, we had to check it out.

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

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Tornadoes tear through central U.S. [VIDEO]

A tornado is spotted in South Haven, Kansas, May 19, 2013. (Jeremy Wilkins/YouTube)

Less than a week after a string of tornadoes killed six people in north Texas, a massive storm system that tore through the center of the country on Sunday spawned at least a dozen tornadoes, killed at least one person, injured a dozen others and caused extensive damage from Georgia to Minnesota.

A tornado at least a half-mile wide was spotted near Pink, Okla., outside Oklahoma City, prompting the National Weather Service in Norman to issue an unusually dire warning:

You could be killed if not underground or in a tornado shelter. Complete destruction of neighborhoods, businesses and vehicles will occur. Flying debris will be deadly to people and animals.

"Large tornado west of Pink!" a tweet from the Norman office read. "Take cover RIGHT NOW in Pink! DO NOT WAIT!"

"Overpasses are NOT tornado shelters!" read another. "Do not park under them! You are keeping others from getting to safety!"

According to CNN, a man was killed in a trailer park in Pottawatomie County, Okla., during the storm. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin declared states of emergency in 16 counties.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said hailstones as large as baseballs were seen throughout the region.

Videos of several tornadoes that touched down in Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri were posted to YouTube:

As well as plenty of hail footage:

According to the National Weather Service, more severe weather is expected in Oklahoma on Monday, "with very large hail, damaging winds and perhaps tornadoes impacting the region."

From the National Weather Service's Facebook page in Norman:

We are very concerned that we could be dealing with dangerous storms?possibly including tornadoes?around school dismissal time today, and certainly during afternoon rush hour. Please stay very alert today and think about how you might need to change your plans this afternoon. Please share this with your family and friends.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/tornadoes-oklahoma-video-132831345.html

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Bloom.fm Is A Mobile-First Music Streaming Service That's Playing To A Different Tune

mzl.ycaxqman.320x480-75It's nice to see a startup trying something different and garnering some promising traction along the way. The UK's Bloom.fm is a mobile-first music streaming service -- it currently exists as an iOS app only -- that launched four months ago out of the ashes of the deadpooled music social network mflow.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/rV9njprA0Ls/

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Split-second choice ended with NY student dead

NEW YORK (AP) ? The college student was being held in a headlock by a masked intruder with a loaded gun to her head, police said. Then the gunman took aim at an officer.

A moment later both Hofstra University junior Andrea Rebello and the intruder were dead ? killed after a split-second decision that is perhaps the most harrowing in law enforcement: when to pull the trigger.

"The big question is, how do you know, when someone's pointing a gun at you, whether you should keep talking to them, or shoot?" said Michele Galietta, a professor of psychology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice who helps train police officers. "That's what makes the job of an officer amazingly difficult."

She spoke Sunday as Hofstra University students honored Rebello, a popular 21-year-old public relations major, by wearing white ribbons at their graduation ceremony.

Rebello's funeral is scheduled for Wednesday in Sleepy Hollow, north of New York City.

The news that she died from a police bullet came as "a second shock" for the already devastated family, said Henry Santos, Rebello's godfather.

Her life ended in the seconds that forced the veteran police officer to make a fatal decision, but the questions surrounding the student's death are just beginning, along with an internal investigation by the Nassau County Police Department.

Rebello and the intruder, Dalton Smith, died early Friday when the officer fired eight shots, hitting him seven times and her once in the head, according to county homicide squad Lt. John Azzata.

With a gun pointed at her, Smith "kept saying, 'I'm going to kill her,' and then he pointed the gun at the police officer," according to Azzata.

The officer acted quickly, saying later that he believed his and Rebello's lives were in danger, according to authorities.

No doubt, he was acting to try to save lives ? his own and that of the young woman, Galietta said.

"What we're asking the cop to anticipate is, 'What is going on in the suspect's mind at the moment?'" she said. "We're always trying to de-escalate, to contain a situation, but the issue of safety comes in first, and that's the evaluation the officer has to make."

Eugene O'Donnell, a former New York City police officer and professor of law and police studies at John Jay College, said the crucial issue may be whether or not police had deemed it a hostage situation. If so, he said, there are protocols police follow to buy time, slow down, isolate and assess.

But O'Donnell said the officers may have had few options because of "an eyeball to eyeball confrontation between the officer and the offender."

"It may have been too fluid to deteriorate for the officers to do anything else," O'Donnell said. "It underscores that there's no two of these that are exactly alike."

Police tactical manuals are meant to assist officers in making the best decision possible, but in the end, "they're not 100 percent foolproof," Galietta said. "In a situation like that, you can follow procedure, and it doesn't mean it comes out perfectly."

Hofstra student John Kourtessis told the New York Post that he'd gone to a bar with Rebello and a few other friends to celebrate the end of school. When they got back to Rebello's house, she asked him to move his car and he went upstairs to get his keys.

When he came back down, he said, Smith was there. He said Smith kept talking about "the Russian guy," insisting the house's residents owed a Russian man money and that he was outside waiting.

"He was saying ... that he just needed us to cooperate. I said, 'Listen, we have all this money here.'"

Kourtessis said the students offered Smith computers, jewelry and other items from the house but that Smith kept demanding more money.

The officer who fired the shots is an eight-year NYPD veteran and has been with Nassau County police for 12 years.

He is now out on sick leave, Azzata said.

Procedurally, the Nassau County district attorney would determine whether an officer's use of deadly force was justified, O'Donnell said. A spokesman for the prosecutor's office said Monday it is monitoring the ongoing police investigation.

___

Associated Press writers Frank Eltman in Mineola, N.Y., and Jake Pearson in New York City contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/split-second-choice-ended-ny-student-dead-062837730.html

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Lawyer for accused singer: steroids had ill effect

(AP) ? The lawyer for a California heavy metal singer accused of trying to hire someone to kill his estranged wife says the singer's mind has been ravaged by steroid use.

U-T San Diego (http://bit.ly/16EWVKZ) reports that the detail came to light during a Friday hearing for 32-year-old Timothy Lambesis, who has pleaded not guilty to solicitation for murder. A judge at the hearing reduced Lambesis' bail from $3 million to $2 million.

Prosecutors say Lambesis, frontman for Grammy-winning band "As I Lay Dying," paid $1,000 cash to an undercover detective posing as a hitman and gave instructions on how best to kill his wife.

Lambesis' attorney Thomas Warwick said in court that his client had gotten into body building and steroid use. He said Lambesis' thoughts were "devastatingly affected" by the drugs.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-05-18-Metal%20Singer-Murder%20For%20Hire/id-71f2d1d6cce945a7bb4219a9ab68af71

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Dior presents cruise fashions amid stars in Monaco

MONACO (AP) ? The glittering star power of Cannes migrated up the coast to Monaco for front-row seats at Dior's colorful, sexy cruise fashion show.

With the Mediterranean Sea the picturesque backdrop, Dior showcased its 2014 collection on Saturday night. It was a wet, cold and generally miserable outside the white stage, but Raf Simons' designs provided the shimmering summery lift for the evening.

Among those on hand were Oscar-winner and Dior spokeswoman Marion Cotillard, actresses Ruth Wilson and Jessica Biel, and Prince Albert of Monaco, along with his fashionable wife, Princess Charlene.

Before the show, Biel called Dior's fashions beautiful, saying she also appreciated them because they were made for real woman. If that was the case, such women are dynamic gazelles who even in their downtime have multiple agendas.

There were sheer lace cover-ups, brightly colored dresses, and jackets and coats made of wool.

In press materials provided at the show, Simons explained his inspiration to prominently feature lace in the collection.

"I never worked with lace before," he said. "It was about transforming the meaning of the material; not romantic, not historical, not old, to something light, playful, colorful and modern ? with energy."

Many of the pieces had an effervescent feel, like the metallic blended with sheer lace and a strip of a coral floral print in one dress; a wool jacket and pants were made vibrant with bright red color.

But there were other outfits that had a more traditional look, like a flowing spaghetti-strap red dress that hit mid-calf at the front but draped near the floor in the back, and the one-piece bathing suits that harkened back to old-style Hollywood glamour ? particularly a brilliant blue piece with ruching in the back.

After an enthusiastic ovation for the show, guests such as Liv Tyler were shuttled to the Oceanographic Museum nearby as Prince Albert and his wife threw a reception that showcased some of the fashions ? including Dior ? worn by his late mother, Princess Grace.

___

http://www.dior.com

___

Follow Nekesa Mumbi Moody at http://www.twitter.com/nekesamumbi

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dior-presents-cruise-fashions-amid-stars-monaco-123933061.html

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Obama agenda seems to be weathering controversies

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Despite Democratic fears, predictions of the demise of President Barack Obama's agenda appear exaggerated after a week of cascading controversies, political triage by the administration and party leaders in Congress and lack of evidence to date of wrongdoing close to the Oval Office.

"Absolutely not," Steven Miller, the recently resigned acting head of the Internal Revenue Service, responded Friday when asked if he had any contact with the White House about targeting conservative groups seeking tax-exempt status for special treatment.

The president's re-election campaign?" persisted Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif.

"No," said Miller.

The hearing took place at the end of a week in which Republicans repeatedly assailed Obama and were attacked by Democrats in turn ? yet sweeping immigration legislation advanced methodically toward bipartisan approval in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The measure "has strong support of its own in the Senate," said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., a member of the panel.

Across the Capitol, a bipartisan House group reported agreement in principle toward a compromise on the issue, which looms as Obama's best chance for a signature second-term domestic achievement. "I continue to believe that the House needs to deal with this," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who is not directly involved in the talks.

The president's nominee to become energy secretary, Ernest Moniz, won Senate confirmation, 97-0. And there were signs that Republicans might allow confirmation of Sri Srinivasan to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, sometimes a stepping stone to the Supreme Court.

Separately, a House committee approved legislation to prevent a spike in interest rates on student loans on July 1. It moves in the direction of a White House-backed proposal for future rate changes to be based on private markets.

Even so, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said, "It's been a bad week for the administration."

Several Democratic lawmakers and aides agreed, and expressed concern about the impact on Obama's agenda ? even though much of it has been stymied by Republicans for months already.

At the same time, Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., voiced optimism that the IRS controversy would boost the push for an overhaul of the tax code, rather than derail it. "It may make a case for a simpler tax code, where the IRS has less discretion," he said.

Long-term budget issues, the main flash point of divided government since 2011, have receded as projected deficits fall in the wake of an improving economy and recently enacted spending cuts and tax increases.

Even before Obama began grappling with the IRS, the fallout from last year's deadly attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, and from the Justice Department's secret seizure of Associated Press phone records, the two parties were at odds over steps to replace $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts. In particular, Obama's call for higher taxes is a nonstarter with Republicans.

Other high-profile legislation and presidential appointees face difficulties that predate the current controversies.

Months ago, Obama scaled back requested gun safety legislation to center on expanded background checks for firearms purchasers. That was derailed in the Senate, has even less chance in the House and is unlikely to reach the president's desk.

Republicans oppose other recommendations from the president's State of the Union address, including automatic increases in the minimum wage, a pre-kindergarten program funded by higher cigarette taxes and more federal money for highways and bridge repair.

In a clash that long predates the IRS controversy, Senate Republicans seem intent on blocking Obama's nomination of Tom Perez as labor secretary. Gina McCarthy's nomination to head the Environmental Protection Agency is also on hold, at least temporarily, and Democrats expect Republican opposition awaits Penny Pritzger, Obama's choice for commerce secretary.

Rhetorically, the two parties fell into two camps when it came to the White House troubles. Democrats tended to describe them as controversies, Republicans often used less flattering terms.

Speaking on the Senate floor, Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., accused the administration of fostering a "culture of intimidation." He referred to the IRS, the handling of the Benghazi attack and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius' "fundraising among the industry people she regulates on behalf of the president's health care law."

Two days later, Camp, a 23-year veteran lawmaker, opened the IRS hearing by calling the agency's actions part of a "culture of cover-ups and intimidation in this administration." He offered no other examples.

Rep. Trey Radel, a first-term Florida Republican, said in an interview, "What we're looking at now is a breach of trust" from the White House.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California offered a scathing response when asked if the controversies would hamper Obama's ability to win legislation from the Republican-controlled House. "Well, the last two years there was nothing that went through this Congress, and it was no AP, IRS or any other (thing) that we were dealing with."

"They just want to do nothing. And their timetable is never," she said of GOP lawmakers.

Similarly, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid gave no ground on Benghazi, a dispute that increasingly centered on talking points written for administration officials to use on television after the attack last September in which U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans were killed.

"It's obvious it's an attempt to embarrass President Obama and embarrass Hillary Clinton," he said of Republican criticism that first flared during last year's election campaign.

On a third front, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., resurrected legislation that would requiring a judge to approve subpoenas for news media communications records when investigating news leaks said to threaten the national security. It was a response to the FBI's secret, successful pursuit of Associated Press phone records in a current probe.

While Democrats counterattacked on Benghazi and parried on leaks, they bashed the IRS' treatment of conservative groups as improper if not illegal ? and warned Republicans not to overplay their hand.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-agenda-seems-weathering-controversies-072617076.html

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

Samsung advertising barrage said to ?mentally enslave? Indian consumers

By Alasdair Fotheringham TREVISO, Italy, May 16 (Reuters) - Britain's Mark Cavendish racked up the 100th win of his career on stage 12 of the Giro d'Italia on Thursday but Bradley Wiggins's hopes of overall victory were in tatters when he lost time on the main bunch. Tour de France champion Wiggins, who has been suffering from a chest infection, was dropped in the final hour of the 134-km stage to Treviso after being caught on the wrong side of a split in the bunch. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/samsung-advertising-barrage-said-mentally-enslave-indian-consumers-202033807.html

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Stacking 2-D materials produces surprising results

May 16, 2013 ? New experiments reveal previously unseen effects, could lead to new kinds of electronics and optical devices. Graphene has dazzled scientists, ever since its discovery more than a decade ago, with its unequalled electronic properties, its strength and its light weight. But one long-sought goal has proved elusive: how to engineer into graphene a property called a band gap, which would be necessary to use the material to make transistors and other electronic devices.

Now, new findings by researchers at MIT are a major step toward making graphene with this coveted property. The work could also lead to revisions in some theoretical predictions in graphene physics.

The new technique involves placing a sheet of graphene -- a carbon-based material whose structure is just one atom thick -- on top of hexagonal boron nitride, another one-atom-thick material with similar properties. The resulting material shares graphene's amazing ability to conduct electrons, while adding the band gap necessary to form transistors and other semiconductor devices.

The work is described in a paper in the journal Science co-authored by Pablo Jarillo-Herrero, the Mitsui Career Development Assistant Professor of Physics at MIT, Professor of Physics Ray Ashoori, and 10 others.

"By combining two materials," Jarillo-Herrero says, "we created a hybrid material that has different properties than either of the two."

Graphene is an extremely good conductor of electrons, while boron nitride is a good insulator, blocking the passage of electrons. "We made a high-quality semiconductor by putting them together," Jarillo-Herrero explains. Semiconductors, which can switch between conducting and insulating states, are the basis for all modern electronics.

To make the hybrid material work, the researchers had to align, with near perfection, the atomic lattices of the two materials, which both consist of a series of hexagons. The size of the hexagons (known as the lattice constant) in the two materials is almost the same, but not quite: Those in boron nitride are 1.8 percent larger. So while it is possible to line the hexagons up almost perfectly in one place, over a larger area the pattern goes in and out of register.

At this point, the researchers say they must rely on chance to get the angular alignment for the desired electronic properties in the resulting stack. However, the alignment turns out to be correct about one time out of 15, they say.

"The qualities of the boron nitride bleed over into the graphene," Ashoori says. But what's most "spectacular," he adds, is that the properties of the resulting semiconductor can be "tuned" by just slightly rotating one sheet relative to the other, allowing for a spectrum of materials with varied electronic characteristics.

Others have made graphene into a semiconductor by etching the sheets into narrow ribbons, Ashoori says, but such an approach substantially degrades graphene's electrical properties. By contrast, the new method appears to produce no such degradation.

The band gap created so far in the material is smaller than that needed for practical electronic devices; finding ways of increasing it will require further work, the researchers say.

"If ? a large band gap could be engineered, it could have applications in all of digital electronics," Jarillo-Herrero says. But even at its present level, he adds, this approach could be applied to some optoelectronic applications, such as photodetectors.

The results "surprised us pleasantly," Ashoori says, and will require some explanation by theorists. Because of the difference in lattice constants of the two materials, the researchers had predicted that the hybrid's properties would vary from place to place. Instead, they found a constant, and unexpectedly large, band gap across the whole surface.

In addition, Jarillo-Herrero says, the magnitude of the change in electrical properties produced by putting the two materials together "is much larger than theory predicts."

The MIT team also observed an interesting new physical phenomenon. When exposed to a magnetic field, the material exhibits fractal properties -- known as a Hofstadter butterfly energy spectrum -- that were described decades ago by theorists, but thought impossible in the real world. There is intense research in this area; two other research groups also report on these Hofstadter butterfly effects this week in the journal Nature.

The research included postdocs Ben Hunt and Andrea Young and graduate student Javier Sanchez-Yamagishi, as well as six other researchers from the University of Arizona, the National Institute for Materials Science in Tsukuba, Japan, and Tohoku University in Japan. The work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the National Science Foundation.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electronics/~3/HeXraUY5CA0/130516182025.htm

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Perfect Colorless Diamond Auctioned For Record $23.5 Million

  • Under yet another parking lot in England, the same team that found the final resting place of King Richard III discovered an ancient 1,700-year-old Roman cemetary containing the remains of 13 bodies and various artifacts. (Photo: University of Leicester) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/04/ancient-roman-cemetery-parking-lot-leicester_n_3215830.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A temple from 300 B.C. discovered in the valley of Oaxaca, Mexico may have been used for human sacrifice. Archeologists found the remains of a human limb along with animal sacrifice remains an obsidian blades in a temple room. (Image courtesy of Charles Spencer and Elsa Redmond) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/23/mexico-temple-discovery-human-sacrifice_n_3140287.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Amateur excavators discovered large parts of a World War II-era British Bristol Beaufighter near the small northern town of Gusano di Gropparello, Italy. The plane was nicknamed "Whispering Death," and was believed to have crashed in September 1944. (Photo by Charles E. Brown/Royal Air Force Museum/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/10/whispering-death-wwii-plane-remains-bristol-beaufighter-_n_3053392.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • In the ruins of a Byzantine settlement near Ashkelon, Israel, archeologists found a well-preserved 1,500 lantern that projects crosses on the wall when lit. A large wine press was also found. (DAVID BUIMOVITCH/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/05/byzantine-artifacts-unear_n_3022162.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Archeologists examining the ruins of ancient Phrygian city of Hierapolis in Turkey found what they believe to be the Plutonium, which ancient Greeks believed to be the entry to the underworld. The gate is actually a small cave, and derives its association with death from the deadly carbon monoxide gases it emanates. (Photo: Francesco D'Andria) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/01/plutos-gate-hierapolis-plutonium-gate-to-hell-hierapolis_n_2994297.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A large sapphire ring found by metal detector enthusiast Michael Greenhorn in a field near Escrick, England is thought to have originated in the 5th or 6th century and may have even belonged to a king. Greenhorn sold the ring to the Yorkshire Museum for $50,000. (Photo: Kippa Matthews/York Museums Trust) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/29/escrick-ring-england_n_2979126.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Glacial melt resulting from global warming will have untold negative consequences for our planet, but for the time being, it is a boon for archeologists, as valuable artifacts emerge from the ice. In south Norway, it helped to reveal a pre-Viking tunic estimated to be from around the year 300 AD. (Photo: Alister Doyle/Reuters) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/22/pre-viking-tunic-found-glacier-climate-change_n_2932431.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • In separate incidents, two Americans found class rings from U.S. high schools at jewelry shops in Vietnam. One of them, a 1970 Montgomery County High School ring, was returned to the school, but its original owner has yet to be found. (Photo: Dan Cherry/AP) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/22/vietnam-1970-high-school-rings_n_2931820.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Archeologists discovered the bones of a donkey from 3,500 years ago in southern Israel. Based on its age, positioning, copper bridle, and location in the sacred precinct of ancient city Tel Haror, they speculated that it had been a ritual sacrifice. (Photo: PLOS ONE) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/11/donkey-sacrifice-bronze-age-tel-haror_n_2852288.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A small, angular calcite crystal recovered from a 16th century British shipwreck off the coast of Alderney is suspected to be a legendary Viking 'sunstone,' used to navigate the high seas before the invention of the magnetic compass. (Photo courtesy of the Alderney Museum) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/06/sunstone-british-shipwreck-viking-navigation_n_2818858.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Fossils found on Ellesmere Island in northern Canada were determined to belong to an ancient ancestor of modern camels that stood 9 feet tall and roamed the arctic during a time of global warming. An artists' rendering suggests what the High Arctic Camel might have looked like in its forest environment. (Photo via Julius Csotonyi) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/06/camel-fossils-arctic-ellesmere-island_n_2812034.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A hat belonging to Korea's greatest emperor, Sejong the Great, was recovered 500 years after being stolen by Japanese raiders. The hat was said to have documents sewn into it that could help explain the origin of the Korean Hangeul alphabet. (Photo: Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/27/ancient-korean-kings-hat-found_n_2772056.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A French team discovered a 2,300-year-old graveyard near Troyes, France containing the remains of Gallic warriors and women, with brooches still on their arms and shields still in their hands. (FRANCOIS NASCIMBENI/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/12/gaul-burial-site-france-gallic_n_3069978.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Archeologists found eleven skeletons in a pre-Hispanic tomb at the Huaca Tupac Amaru B site, just feet from Peru's national soccer stadium in Lima. The remains were buried on a bed of woven reeds and tied in braided rattan. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/pre-hispanic-skeletons-peru-sports-center_n_2769932.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A Viennese archeologist claims to have discovered the remains of Arsinoe IV, sister to the infamous Cleopatra. She says the remains were found in Ephesus, where Arsinoe was said to have died, but others have criticized her lack of hard evidence to back up her claims. A reconstruction of Arsinoe's face was created from the skeleton's skull, which was itself lost in Germany during World War II. (Photo: University of Dundee) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/cleopatra-half-sister-bones-murdered_n_2766739.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Archeologists in Luxor unearthed a pyramid that once topped the tomb of Khay, the vizier of Ramses II. Ramses II, who expanded the Egyptian empire across the modern Middle East, was known as one of the greatest pharaohs in ancient Egyptian history. (Photo: KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/ancient-egypt-pyramid-discovered_n_2735819.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Researchers in the Caucasus Mountains found a 2,200-year-old necropolis containing the remains of a warrior, replete with weapons, gold jewelry, iron mail, three horses, a cow, and a wild boar. (Photo Courtesy Valentina Mordvintseva) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/warrior-grave-russia-tomb-treasure_n_2732854.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed#slide=1721054" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • For four decades, the original cast stone version of the Marine Corps Memorial statute of soldiers raising the American flag over Iwo Jima was hidden under a tarp in the backyard of its sculptor, Felix de Weldon. In 1990, World War II buff Rodney Brown discovered the statute and procured it from de Weldon, and in 2013 it was sold at auction. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/20/iwo-jima-statue-for-sale-rodney-brown-wwii-memorabilia_n_2725858.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Critics cast renewed doubt on the claim that a mummified skull found in a retired collecter's attic belonged to French King Henri IV after two of its discoverers published a book chronicling their investigation. The skull was used to create a 3D model of what Henri's face looked like. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/17/henri-iv-skull-uncovered-attic-critics-dispute_n_2706837.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • The suitcase of a World War I-era nurse was found in a cupboard in the psychology department at the University of Abertay Dundee. The suitcase, which belonged to Margaret Maule, was filled with memorabilia such as a diary and photographs, and it is not known how it got there. (Photo: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/15/wwi-nurse-suitcase-university-abertay-dundee_n_2688310.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Peru's Temple of Fire

    An ancient temple believed to be about 5,000 years old was discovered at the archaeological site of El Paraiso. If the date is confirmed, it would be among the oldest sites in the world. (ERNESTO BENAVIDES/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/13/peru-ancient-temple-discovered_n_2674631.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • A sarcophagus believed to belong to a five-year-old was uncovered by Spanish archeologists while searching the tomb of Djehuty, an important official of Queen Hatshepsut. (Photo: KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/04/luxor-sarcophagus-unearthed_n_2618343.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Skeleton of King Richard III Found

    An archeological excavation under a parking lot in Leicester turned up the remains of King Richard III, the last king of the Plantagenet dynasty. (AP Photo/ University of Leicester) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/04/king-richard-iii-skeleton-found_n_2614269.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • 81 gold goins dating back to the 1600s were discovered beneath the floorboards of a Irish pub in Carrick-on-Suir after a building fire. The find was considered one of the most important in Ireland's history, and the coins were turned over to the National Museum. (South Tipperary Museum/PA) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/30/gold-coins-found-irish-pub-cooneys_n_2581575.html" target="_blank">Read more here.</a>

  • Hans Sachs Posters

    Seized by the Nazis in 1938 from a Jewish man on the orders of Hitler's Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels, then held behind the Iron Curtain in Communist East Berlin, thousands of rare posters are finally back in the hands of collector Hans Sachs' family. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/17/hans-sachs-posters_n_2495902.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed">Read more here. </a>

  • Wang Xizhi Calligraphy

    An extremely rare copy of a work by fourth century Chinese calligraphy legend Wang Xizhi has been unearthed in Japan, the first such discovery in four decades. (AP Photo/Tokyo National Museum) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/08/wang-xizhi-calligraphy-japan-found_n_2431445.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed">Read more here. </a>

  • Afghan Genizah

    Ancient manuscripts or Afghan Genizah discovered inside caves in a Taliban stronghold in northern Afghanistan provided the first physical evidence of a vibrant Jewish community that thrived in that region a thousand years ago. (AP Photo/The National Library of Israel, HO) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/03/afghan-genizah-manuscripts_n_2403893.html">Read more here.</a>

  • WWII Jewish Tombstones

    Police in northern Greece say they recovered more than 600 marble headstones and other fragments from Jewish graves destroyed during the Nazi occupation in World War II. (AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis) <a href="https://editorial.huffingtonpost.com/tmp/2337540_97.html?preview=yes">Read more here. </a>

  • World War II Carrier Pigeon With Coded Message

    A British pensioner came across an encrypted World War II message strapped to the remains of a dead pigeon. (AP Photo/Royal Pigeon Racing Association ) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/01/world-war-ii-carrier-pigeon-surrey_n_2057149.html">Read more here.</a>

  • Soviet Submarine Wreck

    The Swedish Military found the wreckage of a Soviet submarine lost during World War II in the Baltic Sea, seven decades after it sank. (Youtube) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/17/soviet-submarine-wreck-baltic-sea-wwii_n_2316099.html">Read more here.</a>

  • Qin Dynasty Palace Ruins

    Chinese archeologists in the central city of Xi?an discovered the ancient ruins of a massive palace complex at the tomb of China?s first emperor, Qin Shi Huang. (AP Photo) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/03/china-qin-dynasty-palace_n_2233322.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed">Read more here.</a>

  • Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes

    Spanish authorities unveil shipwreck treasure worth an estimated $500 million from the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes gallon which sank off Portugal's Atlantic in 1804. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/30/nuestra-senora-de-las-mercedes-treasure_n_2217132.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed">Read more here. </a>

  • WWII Internment Camp Letters

    Remarkable internment camp letters dating back to World War II is found at a former pharmacy in Denver. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/21/internment-camp-letters-f_0_n_2172502.html">Read more here. </a>

  • War-Torn Ancient City On Syria-Turkey Border

    Located on the Syria-Turkey border, the ancient city of Karkemish is the scene of extensive excavations against a backdrop of raging conflict. (AP Photo/Joint Turco-Italian Archaeological Expedition, File) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/08/karkemish-syria-turkey-_n_2092613.html">Read more here. </a>

  • Amazing Mammoth Skeleton Discovery

    In a rare milestone, French archeologists dug up a near complete skeleton of a mammoth along the Changis-sur-Marne riverbanks near Paris. (AP Photo/Denis Gliksman/Inrap.) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/06/mammoth-skeleton-discover_n_2083219.html?1355264218">Read more here. </a>

  • Napoleonic Soldiers Buried

    Belarus oversaw the excavation and burial of 110 Napoleonic soldiers who died in a major battle in 1812 against the Russian army. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/02/napoleonic-soldiers-buried_n_2065770.html">Read more here. </a>

  • Mayan Tomb Discovered

    Archaeologists uncovered the tomb of an early Mayan ruler, complete with rich jade jewelry and decoration at the Tak'alik Ab'aj temple site in Guatemala. (AP Photo/Tak'alik Ab'aj Archaeological Project) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/25/guatemala-mayan-ruler-tomb_n_2019460.html">Read more here. </a>

  • Rare WWII Planes Discovery

    Archeologists dug up as many as 140 World War II Spitfire fighter planes in Myanmar. (AP Photo) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/18/spitfire-wwii-fighter-plane-myanmar_n_1978923.html">Read More Here</a>

  • Aztec Skulls Found In Temple

    Mexican archaeologists dug up the largest number of skulls ever found in one offering at the most sacred temple of the Aztec empire. (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/05/mexico-finds-50-skulls-in-aztec-temple_n_1943940.html">Read more here.</a>

  • A 'Mammoth' Discovery

    An 11-year-old Russian boy stumbled upon a well-preserved mammoth estimated to be 30,000 years old in northern Russia. (AP Photo/Sergei Gorbunov, International Mammoth Committee in Russia, HO) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/04/zhenya-mammoth-find-russia_n_1940791.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed">Read more here. </a>

  • Mass Graves Of Communist Soldiers

    Vietnamese farmers found a grave containing the remains of at least 20 communist soldiers killed during the Vietnam War. (HOANG DINH NAM/AFP/Getty Images) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/20/philippines-tombs-discovery_n_1899750.html">Read more here. </a>

  • Tomb In Philippines

    Archaeologists unearthed remnants of what they believe is a 1,000-year-old village on a jungle-covered mountaintop in the Philippines. (TED ALJIBE/AFP/GettyImages) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/20/philippines-tombs-discovery_n_1899750.html">Read more here. </a>

  • Famed 17th Century Warship

    The a 17th century Vasa warship, which was raised nearly intact from Stockholm's harbor, has become one of the country's top tourist attractions. (AP Photo/Scanpix Sweden, Anders Wiklund, File) <blockquote><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/13/vasa-sweden-deteriorating_n_1881220.html">Read more here. </a></blockquote>

  • Lost Grave Of King Richard III

    Archeologists say they have found the long lost grave (and possible remains) of King Richard III. (AP Photo/ University of Leicester) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/12/king-richard-iii-grave-discovered-uk_n_1877290.html?utm_hp_ref=unearthed#comments">Read more here.</a>

  • Found In The French Alps

    The long lost wreckage of an Air India plane crash in 1966 was found on the slopes beneath Mont Blanc. (AP Photo/Arnaud Christmann/OHM) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/31/air-india-plane-wreckage-found_n_1846053.html?">Read More Here</a>

  • Amazing Find Near Jerusalem

    Israeli archeologists unearthed two 9,500-year-old figurines near Jerusalem. (AP Photo/Yael Yolovitch, Israel Antiquities Authority) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/29/israeli-archeologists-find-rare-stone-age-figures_n_1839961.html" target="_hplink">Read more here.</a>

  • Bathing Children Find Ancient Buddha Statues

    Children found six ancient Buddha statues which are believed to be around 1,000 years old while bathing in a newly dug pond in Khleng Por. (Photo: AP Photo/Heng Sinith) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/17/cambodia-ancient-buddha-statues_n_1795600.html" target="_hplink">Read more here. </a>

  • 100-Year-Old Mystery Package Opened

    Norwegians opened a 100-years-old mysterious package which was handed over to administrators in 1912 with the message that its contents would "benefit and delight future generations." (Photo: VG TV) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/24/100-year-old-package-open_n_1827839.html" target="_hplink">Click here to find out what the package included. </a>

  • Pilot And Jet Share Amazing Survival Story

    Ex-Navy pilot Bob Besal survived a mid-air jet collision in 1974 and later became a decorated war hero. Besal discovered that the plane from which he ejected had a happy ending, too -- as a reef at the bottom of the Atlantic. (Photo: Bob Besal/TISIRI) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/22/bob-besals-jet-found-in-a_n_1821793.html" target="_hplink">Read more here. </a>

  • Major Discovery Off Italian Coast

    Scuba divers have found what is believed to be an ancient bronze sculpture of a lion's head along with a complete suit of armor off the coast of Italy near Calabria. (Photo: KSEE24) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/21/ancient-artificats-discovered-italy_n_1819263.html" target="_hplink">Read more here. </a>

  • Rare WWII Dispatch Sells For How Much?

    A rare military cable that announced the end of U.S. hostilities with Japan during WWII was auctioned for more than $20,000. (AP Photo/Michael Rubinkam) <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/16/wwii-naval-dispatch_n_1790837.html" target="_hplink">Read more here. </a>

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/15/perfect-colourless-diamond-auctioned_n_3281185.html

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    Grizzlies go from uncertain future to West finals

    Memphis Grizzlies head coach Lionel Hollins gestures during the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    Memphis Grizzlies head coach Lionel Hollins gestures during the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series against the Oklahoma City Thunder in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    Memphis Grizzlies Marc Gasol shoots as Oklahoma City Thunder's Kevin Durant defends during the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    Memphis Grizzlies Marc Gasol reacts to a call against him during a play against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    Oklahoma City Thunder head coach Scott Brooks reacts during the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    Oklahoma City Thunder forward Serge Ibaka (9), guard Thabo Sefolosha (2) and center Hasheem Thabeet (34) watch from the bench during the second half of Game 5 of their Western Conference Semifinals NBA basketball playoff series against the Memphis Grizzlies in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. Memphis won 88-84. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

    (AP) ? Midway through the season, the Memphis Grizzlies came through Oklahoma City and left with questions swirling about the franchise's future after leading scorer Rudy Gay was traded away in the club's second big deal in just over a week.

    Months later, the Grizzlies left town with a far different feeling.

    Memphis is headed to the Western Conference finals for the first time in franchise history after beating the Oklahoma City Thunder 88-84 on Wednesday night, finishing off the second-round series in five games.

    Not bad for a team that seemed to be slashing salary in a bid to stay competitive for years to come.

    "We were struggling that day, obviously," said point guard Mike Conley, who had 13 points and 11 assists in Game 5. "We thought we lost a family member in Rudy here in Oklahoma City. We played the game with seven players and got blown out. We didn't know what to expect the rest of the year, but we pulled it together.

    "Somehow we pulled it together, we trusted each other, we just played as hard as we could and now we're one step closer to getting where we want to go."

    There have been some giant leaps in the past four years.

    Back in 2009, the Grizzlies were finishing off a miserable three-year run ? twice winning 22 games and then 24 ? before hiring Lionel Hollins as coach. Before 2011, the team had never even won a playoff game. And before this current run, it only won one playoff series.

    But there's no sense of satisfaction for just making it this far.

    "We're trying to do something really special. We want to go as far as we can go," Hollins said. "To get there, we had to get through Oklahoma City. And now, we have to get through either Golden State or San Antonio to get further."

    The West finals will start no earlier than Sunday, and Hollins said players would have the day off Thursday before returning Friday to work toward making even more history.

    "This is the first time, so it definitely means a lot. I'm happy, but we've still got work to do," said All-Star power forward Zach Randolph, who had 28 points and 14 rebounds in the clincher. "I want to win a ring."

    It hasn't been easy getting this far.

    The Grizzlies rebounded from the emotional blow of losing Gay and reserves Marreese Speights, Wayne Ellington, Josh Selby and Hamed Haddadi to earn the fifth seed in the West, then fell behind the Los Angeles Clippers 2-0 in the first round of the playoffs.

    Memphis reeled off four straight wins to advance, then did it again after losing Game 1 to the Thunder.

    It was a series filled with games that went down to the wire, and the finale fit right in ? even though the Thunder trailed by 12 with 3 minutes left. Oklahoma City came back with a 16-6 rally, and Reggie Jackson's 3-pointer cut the deficit to 86-84 with 14.3 seconds remaining.

    Randolph missed two free throws with 11.3 seconds on the clock to give the Thunder one last chance to save their season. Durant got the ball beyond the 3-point line on the left wing and navigated around Tony Allen before missing a 16-foot jumper with 6 seconds left.

    He ended up 5 for 21 from the field, the third-worst shooting performance in his playoff career.

    "I gave it all I had for my team. I left it all out there on the floor," said Durant, who scored 21 points and committed three of his seven turnovers in the fourth quarter. "I missed 16 shots, but I kept fighting, I kept being aggressive. That's all I can ask for."

    Durant was the hero in Game 1, hitting six of nine shots in the fourth quarter, including the go-ahead jumper with 11.1 seconds left. After that, Hollins started including Tony Allen ? the top vote-getter for the NBA's all-defensive team ? among those guarding Durant. The three-time scoring champion's effectiveness declined as the series progressed.

    "They had to play him and he had to be the go-to guy, and we knew that," Hollins said. "We just tried to just make him work for everything."

    Durant's only two worse shooting performances in the playoffs came in Game 6 against the Lakers in the 2010 first round (5 for 23, 21.7 percent) ? also an elimination game ? and in Game 6 of the 2011 West semifinals against Memphis (3 for 14, 21.4 percent).

    He faced increasing pressure after All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook had knee surgery two games into the first round and was lost for the rest of the playoffs. Durant averaged 45.6 minutes during the series and played all 48 minutes in Game 5.

    "He wasn't going down. He didn't want to sit and watch and go down," Thunder coach Scott Brooks said. "He wanted to play."

    Oklahoma City trailed by as many as 14 before it got a breath of life with a bizarre play midway through the third quarter when Derek Fisher's missed 3-pointer turned into a four-point possession. Allen, who was on the bench, waved his arms to try and distract Fisher on his shot and a shirt slipped out of his hands and onto the floor near Fisher's feet.

    Referee Marc Davis ruled that Fisher's 3-pointer should count, and Durant hit the free throw resulting from a technical against Allen to get the Thunder within 60-53. Oklahoma City got as close as 64-62 by the end of the quarter, after Fisher's 3-pointer and a layup by Thabo Sefolosha.

    But the Thunder missed eight of their first nine shots to start the fourth quarter to fall behind 76-64, then couldn't quite recover with their star struggling so badly.

    NOTES: NBA Commissioner David Stern attended the game and sat eight rows from the court. ... Sefolosha wore a brace on his sore left hand. He played just six minutes in the first half, then played the entire third quarter. ... It was the second straight game the Thunder scored the first seven points, only to give up the lead a few minutes later. ... Nick Collison picked up three fouls in the first 2:35 of the second quarter and got pulled. ... After the third-quarter buzzer, Jerryd Bayless made a shot from three-quarters court that did not count.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-16-BKN-Grizzlies-Thunder-Folo/id-86919b7aa53246c7b77a026b6c325c34

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    Thursday, May 16, 2013

    Completely Redesigned Google+ Adds a Whopping 41 New Features

    Google is overhauling Google+ with 41?yes, forty-one?new features. They're based around three areas of the Chrome experience: Stream, Hangouts, and Photos. The new design is rolling out today, and it looks beautiful enough to actually use.

    Your Stream is getting a beautiful-looking redesign based on cards. There's a three column view that looks as though it responds organically to your gestures and touch.

    Google also introduced the new Hangouts app that we've been hearing about. All in-one chat across all of Google's services: Google Talk, Hangouts, Voice, Google+ Messenger all in one place. (Check out our whole post on that.)

    Finally, Google made a huge play on Photos. This started earlier this week when Google upped the total storage for Google accounts to 15GB. And you'll need it because Google is letting you upload much higher resolution photos than you're used to from Facebook or Twitter.

    And since most of us are terrible smartphone photographers, Google is adding a whole bunch of automatic photo adjustment features that fall under Auto Highlight, Auto Enhance, and Auto Awesome, which the company claims will turn all of you terrible photos into good ones. There are a lot of little features, but the long and the short is that they're trying to implement brain-free versions of Photoshop features.

    It's a compelling idea: You upload your photos and they automatically get better. The demos Google showed off are very impressive, but it sounds a little too good to be true so we'll believe it when we see it. (Check out our full photo post.)

    All in all though, it's nice to see Google innovating impressive features in Google+. Don't give up, Google!

    Source: http://gizmodo.com/completely-redesigned-google-adds-41-new-features-506803700

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    Obama honors 'tough compassionate' cop

    Speaking at the 32nd annual National Peace Officers Memorial Service on Wednesday, President Barack Obama publicly honored, among others, officer Bruce St. Laurent, who died last year assisting Obama's motorcade in Florida.

    Laurent, a husband and father of four, was killed Sept. 9 when his police motorcycle was struck by a pickup truck as he was closing access to a highway in Palm Beach County.

    "He was, according to a friend, 'just what a cop should be: tough compassionate, caring and brave.' But to his community, he was more than a cop," Obama said, noting that St. Laurent had survived cancer, served as a high school teacher and an unofficial snake wrangler, and enjoyed playing Santa Claus for children at Christmastime.

    Obama delivered his remarks as part of a memorial held annually on Capitol Hill for National Police Week in Washington, which began in 1982 as a gathering in Senate Park to honor fallen officers. A total of 143 officers were honored at this year's ceremony.

    In addition to St. Laurent, Obama noted by name fallen officers Barbara A. Pill of Brevard County, Fla., who Obama said long worked to help her community; Bradley Michael Fox of Plymouth Township, Pa., who served two tours in Iraq; and Scott Ward of Baldwin County, Ala., a military veteran whose funeral procession "stretched for miles," the president said.

    Obama urged the country to honor officers not "only in the wake of tragedy. We should do it every day."

    The president on Saturday hosted an annual Police Week ceremony at the White House where he honored 43 officers designated as "Top Cops" by their peers.

    There, Obama invoked those who helped bring the Boston Marathon suspects to justice:

    Our entire country saw once again the strong stuff that these men and women in uniform are made of?police officers, first responders who were running towards explosions, not knowing if there was something more on the way?law enforcement from different agencies and different parts of the country working together as one united team to identify suspects and bring them to justice, and in a moment that few of us will ever forget, the citizens of Watertown, Mass., lining their streets to cheer on and high-five and hug the officers as they headed home after a job well done.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/obama-honor-fallen-police-officers-143113114.html

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