Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Everything Wrong With Star Trek

Like us, you probably couldn't be more excited for Star Trek: Into Darkness. Well, ahead of the flick's release on May 17th, our favorite flaw-counting nerds have taken their nitpicking scalpels to the many instances of narrative discontinuity, faulty logic, and all-around flawed filmmaking in JJ Abrams' remake from a few years back.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/htCev-mU-pM/everything-wrong-with-star-trek-493991869

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Football team building another stellar recruiting class ...

Football team building another stellar recruiting class

Monday, May, 6, 2013; 10:33 PM | | |

Chase Williams (36) tackles Michael Holmes (20) in the backfield.

While the spring was about the football team?s coaches working with the players they have, the summer will challenge them to look to who they could have.

Recruiting in college football is a 24/7 business these days, and although the spring brought a fresh round of a commitments for the 2014 class, the race for the country?s top recruits will intensify in the coming months.

Last year?s recruiting class was among the best the Hokies have ever brought to Blacksburg, ranking in the top 25 of most scouting services? evaluations, so expectations will be high for the coaches to match 2013?s haul.

However, the team is already off to a good start. Tech has snagged eight commitments for the 2014 cycle so far, and some of them have the potential to be impact players.

C.J. Reavis, a four-star safety out of Chester, Va., headlines the list of commits so far. The 6?2?, 200-pound defensive back chose Tech over teams like Tennessee, Nebraska and Oklahoma, and made his decision shortly after attending the team?s Spring Game.

Although he played safety in high school and figures to play rover for the Hokies once he gets to campus, he has the size to shift to whip linebacker if need be.

Regardless of where he plays, he?s a solid player close to the line of scrimmage in run support and an aggressive ball hawk in coverage. He may struggle with faster receivers, but he can absolutely cover slot receivers or provide deep help.

Reavis isn?t the only highly rated secondary player the team will be bringing on. Defensive backs coach Torrian Gray was able to convince another four-star safety, Javon Harrison of Lakeland, Fla., to join the squad.

Rivals ranks Harrison as the 19th safety in the country, but he also played wide receiver in high school and could see time there in college. He?s drawn some interest from big schools like Florida since he committed to Tech, but he insists he still plans to become a Hokie.

On the offensive side of the ball, the team also scored a commitment from three-star quarterback/athlete Travon McMillian.

He chose the Hokies over both California and Georgia Tech, and despite the uncertainty from many scouting services over what he?ll position he?ll play, he insists that Tech?s coaches plan to try him out at quarterback.

Continue Reading: 12?Next ??

A version of this article appeared in the May 7 issue of the Collegiate Times.

Source: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/stories/22084/football-team-building-another-stellar-recruiting-class

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Lauryn Hill sentenced to 3 months in prison

13 hours ago

Image: Lauryn Hill

AP

Eight-time Grammy Award winning singer Lauryn Hill, center, leaves federal court in Newark, N.J., Monday, May 6, 2013, after sentencing in her tax evasion case.

Lauryn Hill was sentenced to three months in prison during a hearing at a Newark, N.J., federal court on Monday, May 6, despite paying off her long-overdue taxes just ahead of her court appearance.

According to The Associated Press, Hill will not only serve time behind bars, but will also be sentenced to three additional months of home confinement. During the hearing Monday, the singer reportedly reiterated her intentions to pay off her debt.

Hill, 37, shelled out more than $970,000 to cover the three years' worth of taxes that she owed in both state and federal taxes, her attorney Nathan Hochman told the Associated Press in an email Monday. The singer still faced up to a year in prison for each of the three tax evasion counts despite meeting the deadline, however.

Photos from Us: Stars at court

Earlier this year, the former Fugees member filed papers asking the judge to reexamine her reasons for failing to pay taxes for three years back in 2005. According to Hill's documents, "she withdrew from society at large due to what she perceived as manipulation and very real threats to herself and her family."

The judge was less than sympathetic at an Apr. 22 hearing, however, telling Hochman that Hill was "not someone who stands before the court penniless."

Photos from Us: Celebrity mug shots

"This is a criminal matter," U.S. Magistrate Judge Madeline Cox Arleo scolded. "Actions speak louder than words, and there has been no effort here to pay these taxes."

Arleo then postponed the hearing to May 6. At the time, Hill had only paid $50,000 of the total $554,000 that she owed in retribution. When the case was first brought to court in June 2012, Hill and her attorney had argued that the heavy sentence -- a potential three years behind bars -- was only brought up because of Hill's celebrity status.

Photos from Us: Stars in concert

"There are many people who fail to file their taxes on time who only face civil liability," Hochman told The New Jersey Star-Ledger at the time. "They chose Ms. Hill in particular because of who she was."

To further complete her return to the spotlight, Hill recently revealed that she will be making a comeback to the music scene with her first album since 1998's influential "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill."

"Yes, I have recently entered into an agreement with Sony Worldwide Entertainment, to launch a new label, on which my new music will be released," she wrote on her Tumblr on Apr. 25. "And yes, I am working on new music."

The singer released a new single, "Neurotic Society (Compulsory Mix)" on Friday, May 3, telling fans via her Tumblr: "I love being able to reach people directly, but in an ideal scenario, I would not have to rush the release of new music ? but the message is still there."

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/lauryn-hill-sentenced-3-months-prison-not-paying-taxes-6C9801256

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George Zimmerman's lawyer challenges use of voice experts at trial

By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - A lawyer for a Florida man charged in the shooting death of unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin is asking a judge to bar voice-recognition experts from testifying at his murder trial on grounds their techniques are not scientifically valid.

Prosecutors are expected to call audio experts to testify in the trial of George Zimmerman to analyze a 911 call made during the night when Martin was shot and killed. Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain, goes on trial June 10 on charges of second-degree murder.

One potential piece of evidence is expected to be a 911 call in which screams for help can be heard in the background during an altercation between Zimmerman and Martin before the shooting.

Zimmerman's family and supporters claim the voice is his, while Martin's parents insist the voice belongs to their son.

Last year, an FBI expert said a voice analysis of the call was inconclusive.

In a written motion made public on Monday, Mark O'Mara, Zimmerman's lawyer, argued against allowing voice analysts to testify.

"Scientific evidence presented to the court must be interpreted by the court as "generally accepted" by a meaningful segment of the scientific community in the particular field in which it belongs," O'Mara wrote.

O'Mara, who could not immediately be reached for comment, also wrote that the testimony could confuse the jury.

Ben Crump, lawyer for Trayvon Martin's parents, told Reuters the evidence is "absolutely" important for jurors to hear.

"The defense is concerned with the expert testimony because it supports what most have concluded, that Trayvon was screaming for help," Crump said.

Prosecutors say Zimmerman profiled and confronted Martin despite a police dispatcher telling him not to pursue the 17-year-old. Zimmerman, 29, has said the two fought and that he shot Martin because he feared for his life.

Two voice-identification experts retained by the Orlando Sentinel newspaper shortly after the killing ruled out Zimmerman as the person crying for help. Both experts quoted by the newspaper subsequently were added to the state's witness list.

Tom Owen, a nationally recognized audio expert who previously qualified as a court expert witness, used biometric software to analyze the cries for help. Owen told the Sentinel that he concluded "with reasonable scientific certainty that it's not Zimmerman."

The newspaper also retained Ed Primeau, a Michigan-based audio engineer and forensics expert, who used a combination of audio enhancement and human analysis based on forensic experience. Primeau told the Sentinel that the voice on the 911 tape was "a young man screaming."

"I believe that's Trayvon Martin in the background, without a doubt," the Sentinel quoted Primeau as saying.

Kenneth Marr, a specialist with the FBI's digital evidence laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, wrote in a report last year that the call was of insufficient voice quality and duration to conduct a meaningful voice comparison."

Of 18.82 seconds of screaming in the distance, only 2.53 seconds went uninterrupted by the conversation between the woman who called 911 and the dispatcher, Marr said.

Martin's father initially told investigators the voice was not his son's, although he subsequently identified the voice as Trayvon's after hearing it played through better equipment.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Philip Barbara)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/george-zimmermans-lawyer-challenges-voice-experts-trial-001154780.html

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Italy's Andreotti, politician accused of murder and mafia ties, dead at 94

By Philip Pullella

ROME (Reuters) - Giulio Andreotti, who served as Italian prime minister seven times and whose name was synonymous with political survival and cunning in the land that gave the world Machiavelli, died on Monday at the age of 94.

Andreotti, who for more than half a century was known as "Mr Italy" because of the many offices he held, died at home, family sources said. He had suffered from respiratory problems for years and had been in hospital several times.

A leading member of the defunct Christian Democrat party which dominated Italian politics for almost fifty years after World War Two, Andreotti was a lawmaker in every Italian parliament since 1945. He was made a senator for life in 1991.

He was a complex figure who embodied the contradictions and intrigues of Italy's often shady politics.

His enemies called him Beelzebub but he was deeply religious and took communion from popes. He was accused and acquitted both of being a member of the mafia and of ordering the murder of a muck-raking journalist.

His supporters said he served his country like few others, helping transform Italy from a war-devastated agricultural backwater to a leading industrial power in the space of a generation.

But many Italians believed he was the quintessential back-room wheeler-dealer, overseeing a political system riddled with cronyism and corruption.

He held nearly every political post in Italy short of the presidency. His leadership of seven post-war governments was beaten only by his mentor, Alcide De Gaspari, who led eight.

At the end of a sensational trial and two appeals, Andreotti was cleared in 2004 of charges that he had been a member of the mafia and had protected the mob in the corridors of power.

However, Italy's highest court said he had ties until 1980 with mafia gangsters, which were covered by the statute of limitations.

The most shocking allegation was that he once exchanged a kiss of respect with "boss of bosses" Salvatore "Toto" Riina, then Italy's most wanted man and now in jail.

Andreotti denounced the accusations, based on testimony from mafia turncoats, and in the end, the courts believed him.

He embodied Italy's so-called first republic, dominated by the Christian Democrats and a bewildering string of "revolving door" governments.

Their eternal political rivalry with the Communist Party, the largest in the West at that time, was sharpened by the Cold War and American fears of a communist takeover, which also fuelled violent political conflict between right and left.

The so-called years of lead in the 1970s culminated in the far-left Red Brigades kidnap and murder of Christian Democrat president Aldo Moro when Andreotti was prime minister in 1978.

BRIBES SCANDAL

But the party was swept away by a huge bribery scandal in 1992, together with much of the old order, although corruption is now said to be worse than ever and Italy is in a renewed period of political instability which has worsened a deep economic recession.

A fervent Catholic who went to Mass every morning, Italians called him the "the eternal Giulio" because of his political longevity and his mastery of intrigue.

He was the subject of more than 20 parliamentary investigations on suspicion of under-the-counter dealings, ranging from corruption to links with shady financiers.

On every occasion he was cleared and the investigations did not dent his power with voters in Rome, his constituency.

"Apart from the Punic Wars, for which I was too young, I have been blamed for everything," he once said in one of his famous, cutting quips.

"Faith helps me a lot," Andreotti told Reuters during one of trials in 2002.

"The justice that counts is that which will be carried out in the next world. I will not have a place of honour in the next world because I too have been a moderate sinner in my life, but I certainly have not committed sins of mafia or sins of murder."

A bespectacled, stooping figure with protruding ears, he was meat and drink for two generations of editorial cartoonists.

He said his appetite for work was helped by insomnia but detractors said it stemmed from a lust for power.

"Power wears out those who don't have it," he once said in a famous retort.

As a life senator Andreotti attended parliament regularly until recently when his health failed.

Andreotti, who was married with four children, got his first taste of power in May 1947 when he was named cabinet secretary.

His introduction to politics came when he went to the Vatican library and asked for an obscure book on the military power of the Vatican in the 19th century.

"Have you nothing better to do?" grumbled the librarian, who turned out to be De Gasperi, the future Christian Democrat leader and prime minister. Andreotti became De Gasperi's personal assistant and never looked back.

He helped write Italy's new constitution after World War Two and assumed his first cabinet post, as interior minister, in 1954.

Before his health failed, he worked though most of the night, slept only a few hours and spent the rest of the time before dawn reading files and writing books.

(Editing by Barry Moody and Sonya Hepinstall)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/giulio-andreotti-7-times-italian-prime-minister-dies-113502264.html

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GOP seeks alternative to overtime pay

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., left, accompanied by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, speaks about the Boston Marathon explosions during a news conference of House Republican Leadership on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., left, accompanied by House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, speaks about the Boston Marathon explosions during a news conference of House Republican Leadership on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, April 16, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? It seems like a simple proposition: give employees who work more than 40 hours a week the option of taking paid time off instead of overtime pay.

The choice already exists in the public sector. Federal and state workers can save earned time off and use it weeks or even months later to attend a parent-teacher conference, care for an elderly parent or deal with home repairs.

Republicans in Congress are pushing legislation that would extend that option to the private sector. They say that would bring more flexibility to the workplace and help workers better balance family and career.

The push is part of a broader Republican agenda undertaken by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., to expand the party's political appeal to working families. The House is expected to vote on the measure this week, but the Democratic-controlled Senate isn't likely to take it up.

"For some people, time is more valuable than the cash that would be accrued in overtime," said Rep. Martha Roby, R-Ala., the bill's chief sponsor. "Why should public-sector employees be given a benefit and the private sector be left out?"

But the idea Republicans promote as "pro-worker" is vigorously opposed by worker advocacy groups, labor unions and most Democrats. These opponents claim it's really a backdoor way for businesses to skimp on overtime pay.

Judith Lichtman, senior adviser to the National Partnership for Women and Families, contends the measure would open the door for employers to pressure workers into taking compensatory time off instead of overtime pay.

The program was created in the public sector in 1985 to save federal, state and local governments money, not to give workers greater flexibility, Lichtman said. Many workers in federal and state government are unionized or have civil service protections that give them more leverage in dealing with supervisors, she added. Those safeguards don't always exist in the private sector, where only about 6.6 percent of employees are union members.

Phil Jones, 29, an emergency medical technician in Santa Clara, Calif., said he's wary of how the measure would be enforced.

"Any time there's a law that will keep extra money in an employer's bank account, they will try to push employees to make that choice," said Jones, who regularly earns overtime pay. "I know how we get taken advantage of and I think this bill will just let employers take even more advantage of us."

But at a hearing on the bill last month, Karen DeLoach, a bookkeeper at a Montgomery, Ala., accounting firm, said she liked the idea of swapping overtime pay for comp time so she could travel with her church on its annual mission trip to Nicaragua.

"I would greatly appreciate the option at work to choose between being compensated in dollars or days," she said.

The GOP plan is an effort to change the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, which requires covered employees to receive time-and-a-half pay for every hour over 40 within a work week. The proposal would allow workers to bank up to 160 hours, or four weeks, of comp time per year that could be used to take time off for any reason.

The bill would let an employee decide to cash out comp time at any time, and forbids employers from coercing workers to take comp time instead of cash.

Republicans and business groups have tried to pass the plan in some form since the 1990s.

Democrats say the bill provides no guarantee that workers would be able to take the time off when they want. The bill gives employers discretion over whether to grant a specific request to use comp time. Opponents also complain that banking leave time essentially gives employers an interest-free loan from workers.

___

Follow Sam Hananel on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SamHananelAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-06-US-Overtime-Alternative/id-a51721b87d4d4a24a24f2d73cd443afd

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IDIBELL license to Minoryx a patent of a product to treat a rare neurodegenerative disease

IDIBELL license to Minoryx a patent of a product to treat a rare neurodegenerative disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Arantxa Mena
comunicacio@idibell.cat
34-932-607-129
IDIBELL-Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute

A drug already on market to treat other diseases has been successful in laboratory against X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy

The Bellvittge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) has signed a licensing agreement with the Spanish biotechnology company Minoryx of a patent for the treatment of X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, a rare serious neurodegenerative disease which has no effective treatment.

The Neurometabolic Diseases group led by ICREA researcher Aurora Pujol, has developed an animal model to study this disease. Studies using this model have shown that the patented product, a repositioned drug, may be effective against X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy.

The obtaining of the patent and the license has been managed by the Technology Transfer Office of IDIBELL. The license represents an opportunity not only to get this invention into the market and patients, but also to initiate a partnership of trust between the company and IDIBELL in developing new solutions to improve the quality of life of patients with adrenoleukodystrophy.

Hereditary disease

The X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is an inherited disease that destroys the myelin (white matter that coats the nerves) at the central or peripheral nervous system and causes hormonal changes. Patients have a genetic mutation that impedes the properly degradation of very long chain fatty acids within cells. This causes the accumulation of this type of fat in plasma and tissues, especially in the brain and adrenal gland, causing irreversible damage.

This is a rare disease that affects only male subjects, although female carriers may also experience some symptoms. Its incidence is one case per 17,000 men. It is the most common type of leukodystrophy and the main peroxisome disorder. The peroxisome is the part of the cell responsible for eliminating toxic products. The disease became famous in 1992 with the film Lorenzo's oil, starring by Nick Nolte and Susan Sarandon.

Pioglitazone acts on the nuclear receptor PPAR-gamma and to a lesser extent, on PPAR-alpha. These are proteins that regulate the storage of fatty acids and the glucose metabolism and also enhance peroxisome proliferation in cells.

More studies

The drug has been successful in animal experiments, but more studies will be needed before the product can be applied to X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy patients. In this sense, the signing of the license agreement with Minoryx is an important step to use the drug for this purpose in the future.

###

Minoryx is a biotechnology company located in the TecnoCampus Matar-Maresme, Barcelona, dedicated to develop therapeutic solutions to treat rare diseases, especially those affecting children and adolescents. Minoryx has two complementary strategies: drug repositioning and identification of a new drugs generation of pharmacological chaperones, through a proprietary technology platform.

The development of the patent transferred to Minoryx has been possible thanks to the support of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, Instituto de Salud Carlos III and European regional development funds (ERDF). The ELA Foundation, which has a small stake in the patent, has also collaborated.


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

?


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


IDIBELL license to Minoryx a patent of a product to treat a rare neurodegenerative disease [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 7-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Arantxa Mena
comunicacio@idibell.cat
34-932-607-129
IDIBELL-Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute

A drug already on market to treat other diseases has been successful in laboratory against X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy

The Bellvittge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL) has signed a licensing agreement with the Spanish biotechnology company Minoryx of a patent for the treatment of X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, a rare serious neurodegenerative disease which has no effective treatment.

The Neurometabolic Diseases group led by ICREA researcher Aurora Pujol, has developed an animal model to study this disease. Studies using this model have shown that the patented product, a repositioned drug, may be effective against X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy.

The obtaining of the patent and the license has been managed by the Technology Transfer Office of IDIBELL. The license represents an opportunity not only to get this invention into the market and patients, but also to initiate a partnership of trust between the company and IDIBELL in developing new solutions to improve the quality of life of patients with adrenoleukodystrophy.

Hereditary disease

The X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is an inherited disease that destroys the myelin (white matter that coats the nerves) at the central or peripheral nervous system and causes hormonal changes. Patients have a genetic mutation that impedes the properly degradation of very long chain fatty acids within cells. This causes the accumulation of this type of fat in plasma and tissues, especially in the brain and adrenal gland, causing irreversible damage.

This is a rare disease that affects only male subjects, although female carriers may also experience some symptoms. Its incidence is one case per 17,000 men. It is the most common type of leukodystrophy and the main peroxisome disorder. The peroxisome is the part of the cell responsible for eliminating toxic products. The disease became famous in 1992 with the film Lorenzo's oil, starring by Nick Nolte and Susan Sarandon.

Pioglitazone acts on the nuclear receptor PPAR-gamma and to a lesser extent, on PPAR-alpha. These are proteins that regulate the storage of fatty acids and the glucose metabolism and also enhance peroxisome proliferation in cells.

More studies

The drug has been successful in animal experiments, but more studies will be needed before the product can be applied to X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy patients. In this sense, the signing of the license agreement with Minoryx is an important step to use the drug for this purpose in the future.

###

Minoryx is a biotechnology company located in the TecnoCampus Matar-Maresme, Barcelona, dedicated to develop therapeutic solutions to treat rare diseases, especially those affecting children and adolescents. Minoryx has two complementary strategies: drug repositioning and identification of a new drugs generation of pharmacological chaperones, through a proprietary technology platform.

The development of the patent transferred to Minoryx has been possible thanks to the support of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, Instituto de Salud Carlos III and European regional development funds (ERDF). The ELA Foundation, which has a small stake in the patent, has also collaborated.


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/ibri-ilt050713.php

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RainyGenes: Cancer Doesn't Discriminate - One Family's Battle With ...

Mesothelioma is a cancer caused from being exposed by asbestos.? Often times symptoms do not appear until several years after exposure, which makes it difficult for doctors to make an early diagnosis.

I was contacted recently through my RainyGenes blog by a man named Cameron?whose wife was diagnosed with mesothelioma 8 years ago.? He asked if I would share is story on my blog.? I am more than happy to spread awareness of any type of cancer whether it be breast cancer, lung cancer, brain cancer or mesothelioma.? Cancer doesn't discriminate no matter what form it comes in.

Here is Cameron's story... How My Wife's Cancer Changed Our LivesMy wife Heather and I were an ordinary couple with an infant daughter Lily in November of 2005. ?That was when our life took a most unexpected turn after Heather was diagnosed with mesothelioma. ?It was a frightening time, since neither of us knew how the disease would proceed, but I did my best to stay strong for her and to support her as best I could as she began to undergo the necessary treatments.A cancer diagnosis throws a monkey wrench into a typical life. ?Instead of going to work every day, our hours became consumed with traveling to see doctors and specialists for consultations and treatments. ?It was time-consuming and scary, and Heather had to endure the physical challenges of surgery, chemotherapy and radiation. ?Meanwhile, I had to take care of her and Lily and provide her with the emotional strength that she needed in order to get through this difficult period. ?My perspective changed, and my ideas about what was important in life altered radically.Throughout the whole process, I became much more aware of how precious time with our loved ones is. ?Now that Heather has miraculously come through her ordeal and is cancer-free, I treasure every moment that we have together. ?I also have taken the opportunity to return to school and study Information Technology, a challenge for which Heather's illness equipped me, since I learned so many lessons about time management and dealing with stress during her illness.I also learned that as much as I wanted to provide everything that Heather needed, I could only do so much. ?That is something that every caregiver should keep in mind, especially when an illness comes up unexpectedly as this one did. ?I had no qualifications or expectations that I would be assisting my wife in this manner, but it became my daily reality. ?While I don't regret that for a minute, I learned that a caregiver has to be willing to count on others for support during these times. ?We would have had a hard time managing if it hadn't been for all of the friends and relatives who generously offered their time and resources. ?Allow others to help in a time of crisis is not weakness. ?It is merely a part of being human. ?As terrible as Heather's cancer was for both of us, it brought us a deeper appreciation for the bonds of friendship and love that exist among us and so many other people. ?Despite the terrifying odds that come with a mesothelioma diagnosis, Heather is still here, healthy and cancer-free over seven years later.? She refused to take her diagnosis as a death sentence, and because of that she has been able to see our baby daughter grow into a beautiful little girl.? We are so thankful for everything we?ve been blessed with, and we hope that our story of success over cancer can be a source of hope and inspiration to all those currently fighting cancer today.

?

For more information on mesothelioma:


?

Source: http://rainygenes.blogspot.com/2013/05/cancer-doesnt-discriminate-one-familys.html

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HSBC reaps benefit of cost-cutting efforts

By Steve Slater

LONDON (Reuters) - HSBC aims to keep the pressure on costs after first-quarter earnings nearly doubled due to the bank's three-year efficiency drive and a halving in bad debts charges.

The jump in profits reinforces HSBC's position as one of the strongest global banks after the financial crisis partly as a result of a radical overhaul to simplify its sprawling structure and improve profitability.

Its strong focus on Asia, which generated around two-thirds of profit in the first quarter, has also helped offset a harsh business environment, particularly in the euro zone.

Europe's largest bank moved faster and more aggressively than many of its peers to cut costs after the crisis. And it will continue to wield the knife - with a further 6,000 job cuts expected this year from businesses already put up for sale, on top of 40,000 already culled. HSBC has closed or sold more than 50 businesses since 2011.

"We're moving into calmer waters but there are still challenges ahead," Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver told reporters on a conference call.

Gulliver declined to say whether he would announce any additional cost savings at a strategy update for investors on May 15. But he said: "Clearly you can expect us to continue to focus on our cost base."

The CEO said HSBC still expected the euro zone economy to contract during 2013 and that UK economic growth remained muted.

Across Europe, HSBC's smaller rivals are playing catch-up with cost cuts to help offset rising bad debts and weak loan demand. French banks Societe Generale and Credit Agricole on Tuesday said they would keep making cuts to cope with a weak domestic economy.

In Germany, the cost of thousands of job cuts contributed to a net first-quarter loss at Commerzbank , which warned that earnings would be under pressure this year as loan-loss provisions rise.

In contrast, HSBC posted a pretax profit of $8.4 billion, up from $4.3 billion a year ago and above the average forecast of $8.1 billion from analysts polled by the company.

"We see these results as an endorsement of the strength of the franchise and its ability to generate earnings even in a sluggish macro environment," said Chirantan Barua, analyst at Bernstein. He said HSBC's strong capital position and capital generation meant it could increase its dividend by at least 30 percent this year.

COSTS

HSBC shares rose more than 3.3 percent to 737.4 pence, their highest level since mid-March, helping to drive the European benchmark <.sx7p> nearly three percent higher.

A $1.1 billion gain from disposals aided HSBC earnings as did a halving of bad debt provisions to $1.2 billion - its lowest quarterly level since before the financial crisis.

The bad debt charge fell across all regions and in particular in the United States, where HSBC is winding down its consumer business. The U.S. consumer book saw a decline in loan-loss provisions of $430 million to $544 million.

Costs in the first quarter were down 10 percent from a year ago and the bank is now saving $4 billion a year on an annualized basis, above the top end of its own target range of $3.5 billion.

HSBC wants to get costs below 52 percent of income by the end of the year from just over 53 percent on an underlying basis currently. Analysts say the bank should be able to raise its cost savings target by $1 billion a year.

The bank's investment banking division posted a 16.5 percent increase in first-quarter pretax profit from a year ago, helped by a strong performance at its equities division.

This mirrors strong results from Europe's other major investment banks such as Deutsche Bank , Barclays , UBS and Credit Suisse .

(Writing by Carmel Crimmins. Editing by Jane Merriman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hsbc-says-first-quarter-profits-jump-8-4-082552495.html

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Mark Sanford just might win South Carolina seat (Washington Post)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/303660713?client_source=feed&format=rss

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There was enough evidence to convict Casey Anthony, judge says

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) ? The judge who presided over the trial of Casey Anthony said Monday he believed there was enough evidence to convict the Florida mother who was acquitted of murdering her 2-year-old daughter.

Judge Belvin Perry told NBC's "Today" show that he thought there was sufficient evidence for a conviction on a first-degree murder charge, even though much of the evidence was circumstantial.

Anthony was acquitted almost two years ago of killing her daughter, Caylee, following a trial that attracted worldwide attention. She was convicted of making false statements to police and got credit for time served.

When he read the jury's verdict, Belvin said he felt "surprise, shock, disbelief" and read it twice.

"I just wanted to be sure I was reading what I was reading," Perry said.

Anthony's attorney, Jose Baez, refused to say anything to The Associated Press about the interview when reached by phone. He said he would comment after a request had gone through his Los Angeles-based spokesman.

A spokeswoman for the Judicial Qualifications Commission, which oversees Florida judges, didn't immediately return a phone call.

The judge said he saw two sides to Anthony. The one she showed to jurors was a wrongfully accused mother grieving for her child. The other was a woman wasn't afraid to shout and swear at her attorneys, as she did when they talked to her about a possible plea deal for aggravated murder.

"There were always two sides to Casey," Perry said. "The public persona that she wanted the jury to see and there was a side that she showed when the jury wasn't there."

Perry also said he thought prosecutors were better attorneys than Baez, who the judge described as "personable." All the defense had to do was create reasonable doubt, which they did, he said.

"He came across as someone you would like," Perry said of Baez. "Like someone trying to sell a used car. Who are you going to buy from? The most likable salesman."

The judge also said he thought justice had been served with a jury verdict.

"Justice will finally be served one day by the Judge of Judges," Perry said. "She is going to have to live with this and deal with this for the rest of her life."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/casey-anthony-judge-enough-convict-153906749.html

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Reduce for iPhone and iPad review: Automatically, perfectly resize your photos for the web

Reduce for iPhone and iPad review: Batch resize your photos optimized for the web

Reduce is an iPhone and iPad app that lets you batch resize your photos and images to be optimized for the web. You simply select the photos you wish to resize, set the dimensions and file size limit, and Reduce will batch-process them for you and drop them into a new album in the Photos app.

When choosing the sizing options for your photos, Reduce lets you set the number of pixels for width, height, longest side, or shortest side. You can also set the max file size or jpeg quality as well as automatically sharpen the images to avoid softness that is often associated with resizing.

If you'd like to add a simple text watermark to your image, Reduce lets you do that as well. You can choose the font type and size, location, border and more for your watermark. And if you plan to use Reduce for multiple purposes, say two different blogs, you can create presets to quickly apply the settings that are appropriate for your intended use.

Once you've got all the settings how you want, you simply hit Start and Reduce gets to work. It processes all your images and drops them into a new folder in the Photos app that you can then use with any other app.

The good

  • Batch-process multiple images
  • Resize the image to a specific dimension
  • Auto-detection of the needed jpeg quality for a given file size
  • Alternatively use a fixed jpeg quality
  • Optionally sharpen the image to avoid softness caused by the resizing
  • Choose if you want to remove EXIF data like GPS position or the used camera settings
  • Add a watermark or description to your photos
  • Use a border to separate your photos from the background

The bad

  • Reduce integrates with your photo albums, but the albums are not named

The bottom line

Reduce is a fantastic tool for bloggers who regularly use their iPhone or iPad to share photos to their website. Correctly sizing photos has always been one of the annoying aspects of blogging with my iOS device, but now it's easy with Reduce!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/pxfNVSSF7bM/story01.htm

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Monday, May 6, 2013

Bats use blood to reshape tongue for feeding

Bats use blood to reshape tongue for feeding [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Orenstein
david_orenstein@brown.edu
401-863-1862
Brown University

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] Nectar-feeding bats and busy janitors have at least two things in common: They want to wipe up as much liquid as they can as fast as they can, and they have specific equipment for the job. A study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences describes the previously undiscovered technology employed by the bat Glossophaga soricina: a tongue tip that uses blood flow to erect scores of little hair-like structures exactly at the right time to slurp up extra nectar from within a flower.

The bat's "hemodynamic nectar mop," as the paper dubs the tongue tip, features speed and reliability that industrial designers might envy, said lead author Cally Harper, a graduate student in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Brown University. As a matter of what nature can evolve, she said, the tongue tip is surprisingly clever.

"Typically, hydraulic structures in nature tend to be slow like the tube-feet in starfish," Harper said. "But these bat tongues are extremely rapid because the vascular system that erects the hair-like papillae is embedded within a muscular hydrostat, which is a fancy term for muscular, constant-volume structures like tongues, elephant trunks and squid tentacles."

In other words, the bat's cylindrical tongue has a mesh of muscle fibers that contract so that the tongue becomes thinner but longer (extending farther into the flower). The discovery reported in the paper is that the same muscle contraction simultaneously squeezes blood into the tiny hair-like papillae.

As blood is displaced to the tongue tip, the papillae flare out perpendicular to the axis of the tongue. In their erect state, they not only add exposed surface area, but also width, allowing the tongue to function as a highly effective nectar gathering device.

The entire extension and retraction of the tongue tip occurs within an eighth of a second. Hovering requires a lot of energy, so nectar-feeding bats must get a lot of calories quickly for it to be worthwhile.

Scientists knew about the papillae before this paper, but had always thought they were as passive as the strings on a floor mop. Recent insights by other scientists into the mechanics of hummingbird tongues prompted Harper to take a closer look at the shape of the tongue tip in bats and how it is involved in gathering nectar.

In detailed anatomical studies, Harper was able to observe clear vascular connections between the main arteries and veins of the tongue and the papillae. In experiments she could get them to erect by pumping in saline.

But the color videos of bats feeding on nectar, while challenging to create, Harper said, were especially convincing.

"That was one of my favorite parts of the study the Aha moment," she said. "We shot color high-speed video of the bats gathering nectar, which is challenging to obtain because color cameras require a lot of light and the one thing that bats don't like is a lot of light."

But along with professors and senior co-authors Beth Brainerd and Sharon Swartz, Harper figured out how to focus a lot of light right where the tongue tip would be without shining any of that light into the bats' eyes.

What Harper could then see is that when the papillae extend, they turn from a light pink to a bright red as they fill with blood.

"That was really the icing on the cake as far as nailing this vascular hypothesis," Harper said.

Harper said she does not know for sure whether other nectar-feeding bats also have blood-activated papillae on their similar-looking tongues. The honey possum might also employ the idea, the authors speculate in PNAS.

Other species such as hummingbirds and bees employ different rapid means of morphing their tongues for improved nectar feeding. Any or all of these highly evolved designs, the authors speculate, could give people technological inspiration.

"Together these three systems could serve as valuable models for the development of miniature surgical robots that are flexible, can change length and have dynamic surface configurations," Harper, Brainerd and Swartz wrote.

Or maybe the discovery can just be applied to making one heck of a mop.

###

Funding for the study came from Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society, the American Microscopical Society, The Bushnell Graduate Research and Education Fund, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-07-1-0540) and the National Science Foundation (1052700 and 0723392).


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

?


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


Bats use blood to reshape tongue for feeding [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: David Orenstein
david_orenstein@brown.edu
401-863-1862
Brown University

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] Nectar-feeding bats and busy janitors have at least two things in common: They want to wipe up as much liquid as they can as fast as they can, and they have specific equipment for the job. A study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences describes the previously undiscovered technology employed by the bat Glossophaga soricina: a tongue tip that uses blood flow to erect scores of little hair-like structures exactly at the right time to slurp up extra nectar from within a flower.

The bat's "hemodynamic nectar mop," as the paper dubs the tongue tip, features speed and reliability that industrial designers might envy, said lead author Cally Harper, a graduate student in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Brown University. As a matter of what nature can evolve, she said, the tongue tip is surprisingly clever.

"Typically, hydraulic structures in nature tend to be slow like the tube-feet in starfish," Harper said. "But these bat tongues are extremely rapid because the vascular system that erects the hair-like papillae is embedded within a muscular hydrostat, which is a fancy term for muscular, constant-volume structures like tongues, elephant trunks and squid tentacles."

In other words, the bat's cylindrical tongue has a mesh of muscle fibers that contract so that the tongue becomes thinner but longer (extending farther into the flower). The discovery reported in the paper is that the same muscle contraction simultaneously squeezes blood into the tiny hair-like papillae.

As blood is displaced to the tongue tip, the papillae flare out perpendicular to the axis of the tongue. In their erect state, they not only add exposed surface area, but also width, allowing the tongue to function as a highly effective nectar gathering device.

The entire extension and retraction of the tongue tip occurs within an eighth of a second. Hovering requires a lot of energy, so nectar-feeding bats must get a lot of calories quickly for it to be worthwhile.

Scientists knew about the papillae before this paper, but had always thought they were as passive as the strings on a floor mop. Recent insights by other scientists into the mechanics of hummingbird tongues prompted Harper to take a closer look at the shape of the tongue tip in bats and how it is involved in gathering nectar.

In detailed anatomical studies, Harper was able to observe clear vascular connections between the main arteries and veins of the tongue and the papillae. In experiments she could get them to erect by pumping in saline.

But the color videos of bats feeding on nectar, while challenging to create, Harper said, were especially convincing.

"That was one of my favorite parts of the study the Aha moment," she said. "We shot color high-speed video of the bats gathering nectar, which is challenging to obtain because color cameras require a lot of light and the one thing that bats don't like is a lot of light."

But along with professors and senior co-authors Beth Brainerd and Sharon Swartz, Harper figured out how to focus a lot of light right where the tongue tip would be without shining any of that light into the bats' eyes.

What Harper could then see is that when the papillae extend, they turn from a light pink to a bright red as they fill with blood.

"That was really the icing on the cake as far as nailing this vascular hypothesis," Harper said.

Harper said she does not know for sure whether other nectar-feeding bats also have blood-activated papillae on their similar-looking tongues. The honey possum might also employ the idea, the authors speculate in PNAS.

Other species such as hummingbirds and bees employ different rapid means of morphing their tongues for improved nectar feeding. Any or all of these highly evolved designs, the authors speculate, could give people technological inspiration.

"Together these three systems could serve as valuable models for the development of miniature surgical robots that are flexible, can change length and have dynamic surface configurations," Harper, Brainerd and Swartz wrote.

Or maybe the discovery can just be applied to making one heck of a mop.

###

Funding for the study came from Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society, the American Microscopical Society, The Bushnell Graduate Research and Education Fund, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (FA9550-07-1-0540) and the National Science Foundation (1052700 and 0723392).


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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/bu-bub050213.php

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Rioting and rubble: What's behind the turbulent times in Bangladesh?

Tens of thousands of Islamists rampaged through Bangladesh's capital today, countering even larger crowds that turned out earlier this year to oust conservative forms of Islam from Bangladeshi politics.

By Ben Arnoldy,?Staff writer / May 5, 2013

Bangladeshi protesters throw stones at policemen during a protest in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sunday. Police in Bangladesh's capital fired rubber bullets to disperse Islamic activists during a protest to demand that the government enact an anti-blasphemy law.

Ashraful Alam Tito/AP

Enlarge

Islamists rampaged in the streets of Bangladesh?s capital today, wielding sticks, stones, and crude explosives to protest the government?s refusal to institute an anti-blasphemy law.

Skip to next paragraph Ben Arnoldy

Deputy International Editor

Ben Arnoldy is the Deputy International Editor at The Christian Science Monitor. He has served as the Monitor's bureau chief in India and Northern California.?

Recent posts

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The street violence is the latest pushback by some Islamists against a secularist mass movement that began earlier this year and threatens to sideline conservative forms of political Islam in Bangladesh.

Against this dramatic fight for the political and religious soul of the nation, the foundations of Bangladesh?s recent economic successes are suddenly facing international scrutiny. More than 700 people have died in the past half year in two horrific garment factory disasters, both caused by the lax regulation and oversight that helped fuel Bangladesh?s rapid rise as a garment exporter.

For decades, Bangladesh was regarded internationally as a quiet basket case, then as a quiet turnaround story on the fringes of the Muslim world. But the world is starting to listen more to the noises coming out of Bangladesh over the past six months. A LexisNexis search reveals that ?major newspapers? in the company?s archives have increased mention of the country during this time by 25 percent over the previous six months, and 31 percent over the same time period a year prior.

Some reasons for Bangladesh's ferment include the country's women-driven economic growth?and a younger generation's secular view on the country's war for independence. At the moment, upcoming elections due to be held by January are also stirring the pot.?

The country is currently headed by a center-left party with a secularist bent known as the Bangladesh Awami League. The opposition is led by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), a center-right party that emphasizes Islamic identity. The recent events grabbing global headlines have been amplified within Bangladesh by the competing factions.

Bangladesh?s political turbulence began in February with street protests over a court decision drawing hundreds of thousands. A war crimes tribunal handed a life sentence to a leader of the Islamist Jamaat-e-Islami party for crimes he committed during Bangladesh?s war of independence from Pakistan. Crowds that gathered to call for the man to be put to death touched off something much bigger, the Monitor reported at the time:

This soon galvanized a vibrant protest movement against the ongoing influence of conservative, politicized Islam in one of the world's most populous Muslim nations.?

?The current movement is aimed very explicitly at the Jamaat's role in 1971,? says Zafar Sobhan, editor of the Dhaka Tribune.?But ?it was clear that the future that the youths protesting ... envision is one without Islamist politics, returning to Bangladesh's secular roots, and recognition that religion-based politics had poisoned the society."

The secularist spirit of what would become known as the Shahbag movement this spring seemed to redound to the ruling party?s benefit and posed a challenge to the opposition BNP and fringe Islamists further to the right.

At first, Jamaat-e-Islami supporters rioted. Then, a new radical religious party named Hifazat-e-Islam gained prominence as it pushed back against the Shahbag movement and the atheist bloggers at its forefront. The group demanded the government implement 13 demands, including an anti-blasphemy law and a ban on men and women mixing freely. The secular government did not oblige. Tens of thousands of Hifazat-e-Islam supporters blocked Dhaka?s roads today and battled with police.

The ruling Awami League also faces criticism for presiding over the two garment factory disasters and its ties to the owner of the building that collapsed last month. The New York Times describes how Sohel Rana capitalized on his past as a minor official in the Awami League?s student wing to become a wealthy industrialist above the law and ?the most hated Bangladeshi.??

The loose regulation and attendant catastrophes have worried Western clothing companies contracting labor there about the risk to their reputations. Disney announced last week that it will not source apparel from the South Asian nation. If others followed suit, rather than staying and stepping up oversight, the upward mobility of Bangladesh ? and the revolutionary gains made by its women in particular ? could be jeopardized.?

For a brief moment a week ago, all the political turmoil and uncertainty seemed to be set aside. The ultimately failed effort to rescue a survivor named Shahinur from the rubble of Mr. Rana?s building had transfixed the nation and brought people together, reported Saad Hammadi for the Monitor:

Bangladesh is passing through one of its gloomiest national moments. Civilians extending help in the rescue effort were anxiously looking forward to Shahinur?s rescue, as were those away from the site, who remained glued to television and mobile phones.?

For now, [political] tensions have receded. Bangladeshis from all walks of life, besides extending their support to the rescue efforts, are largely united in calling for the maximum punishment for the owner of the building and the factory owners ??for what many call a ?mass murder.?

A week later, the death toll from the building collapse now stands at 620 dead, and the streets are filling again with partisans fighting to define this young nation?s future.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/DhOG7x7MqZo/Rioting-and-rubble-What-s-behind-the-turbulent-times-in-Bangladesh

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Tensions spike after new Israeli strikes in Syria

In this image taken from video obtained from the Ugarit News, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, smoke and fire fill the the skyline over Damascus, Syria, early Sunday, May 5, 2013 after an Israeli airstrike. Israeli warplanes struck areas in and around the Syrian capital Sunday, setting off a series of explosions as they targeted a shipment of highly accurate, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be on their way to Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, officials and activists said. The attack, the second in three days, signaled a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syria's state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near the Syrian capital and caused casualties. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video)

In this image taken from video obtained from the Ugarit News, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, smoke and fire fill the the skyline over Damascus, Syria, early Sunday, May 5, 2013 after an Israeli airstrike. Israeli warplanes struck areas in and around the Syrian capital Sunday, setting off a series of explosions as they targeted a shipment of highly accurate, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be on their way to Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, officials and activists said. The attack, the second in three days, signaled a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syria's state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near the Syrian capital and caused casualties. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video)

In this image taken from video obtained from the Ugarit News, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, a Israeli airstrikes hit Damascus, Syria, early Sunday, May 5, 2013. Israeli warplanes struck areas in and around the Syrian capital Sunday, setting off a series of explosions as they targeted a shipment of highly accurate, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be on their way to Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, officials and activists said. The attack, the second in three days, signaled a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syria's state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near the Syrian capital and caused casualties. (AP Photo/Ugarit News via AP video)

In this image taken from video obtained from Shaam News Network, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, smoke and fire fill the skyline over Damascus, Syria, early Sunday, May 5, 2013 after an Israeli airstrike. Israeli warplanes struck areas in and around the Syrian capital Sunday, setting off a series of explosions as they targeted a shipment of highly accurate, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be on their way to Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, officials and activists said. The attack, the second in three days, signaled a sharp escalation of Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syria's state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near the Syrian capital and caused casualties. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via AP video)

FILE -- In this Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012 file photo, the Iron Dome defense system fires to intercept an incoming missiles from Gaza in the port town of Ashdod, Israel. Israel's military has deployed Iron Dome defense system to the north of the country following Israeli airstrikes in neighboring Syria targeting weapons believed to be destined for Lebanon's Hezbollah militants. Iron Dome protects against short-range rockets and Hezbollah has thousands of such projectiles. (AP Photo /Tsafrir Abayov, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012 file photo, an Israeli Iron Dome missile is launched near the city of Be'er Sheva, southern Israel, to intercept a rocket fired from Gaza. Israel's military has deployed Iron Dome defense system to the north of the country on Sunday May 5, 2013 following Israeli airstrikes in neighboring Syria targeting weapons believed to be destined for Lebanon's Hezbollah militants. Iron Dome protects against short-range rockets and Hezbollah has thousands of such projectiles. (AP Photo/Ahikam Seri, File)

(AP) ? Israeli warplanes struck targets in the Syrian capital Sunday for the second time in three days, officials and activists said, unleashing a series of massive explosions and raising fears of possible wider conflict in the region.

The attacks, which Israeli officials said targeted sophisticated, Iranian-made guided missiles believed to be bound for Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, marked a sharp spike in Israel's involvement in Syria's bloody civil war. Syrian state media reported that Israeli missiles struck a military and scientific research center near Damascus and caused casualties.

Syria's government called the attacks against its territory a "flagrant violation of international law" that has made the Middle East "more dangerous." It said "Israel should know that our people and state do not accept humiliation" and warned Syria has the right "to defend its people by all available means."

The generally muted response, read out by the information minister after an emergency government meeting, and appeared to signal that Damascus did not want the situation to escalate.

Instead, it tried to use the strikes to taint the opposition, claiming the attacks were evidence of an alliance between Israel and Islamic extremist groups trying to overthrow President Bashar Assad.

The air raids pose a dilemma for the regime: Failure to respond could make it look weak and open the door to more strikes, but retaliating militarily against Israel would risk dragging the Jewish state and its powerful army into a broader conflict.

The tempo of the new strikes added a dangerous dynamic to the conflict, fueling concerns that events could spin out of control and spark a regional crisis.

Israel's military, possibly bracing for Syrian retaliation, deployed two batteries of its Iron Dome rocket defense system to the north of the country on Sunday. It described the move as part of "ongoing situational assessments."

A senior Israeli official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to disclose information about a secret military operation, confirmed that Israel launched an airstrike in the Syrian capital early Sunday but did not give more precise details about the location. The target was Fateh-110 missiles, which have precision guidance systems with better aim than anything Hezbollah is known to have in its arsenal, the official told The Associated Press.

The airstrikes come as Washington considers how to respond to indications that the Syrian regime may have used chemical weapons in its civil war. President Barack Obama has described the use of such weapons as a "red line," and the administration is weighing its options ? including possible military action.

The White House declined for a second day to confirm or comment directly on the airstrikes in Syria, but said Obama believes Israel has the right to defend itself against threats from groups like Hezbollah.

"The Israelis are justifiably concerned about the threat posed by Hezbollah obtaining advanced weapons systems, including some long-range missiles" White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters aboard Air Force One as Obama traveled to Ohio.

Iran, a close ally of the Assad regime and Hezbollah, condemned the airstrikes, and a senior official hinted at a possible response not from Tehran but rather its proxy, Hezbollah.

Gen. Masoud Jazayeri, assistant to the Iranian chief-of-staff, told Iran's state-run Arabic-language Al-Alam TV that Tehran "will not allow the enemy (Israel) to harm the security of the region" and that "the resistance will retaliate against the Israeli aggression against Syria."

Israel has said it wants to stay out of the Syrian war on its doorstep, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly stated the Jewish state would be prepared to take military action to prevent sophisticated weapons from flowing from Syria to Hezbollah or other extremist groups.

Israel and Hezbollah have a long history of enmity, and fought a punishing monthlong war in mid-2006. The militant group fired thousands of rockets at Israel, while Israeli warplanes destroyed large areas of southern and eastern Lebanon during a conflict that ended in stalemate.

With Syria now engulfed in an internal conflict, Israel is especially concerned that Hezbollah will take advantage of the chaos and try to smuggle advanced weapons into Lebanon, particularly those that could hamper Israel's ability to operate in Lebanese skies.

Officials in Israel say they have identified several "game changing" weapons that would trigger military intervention in Syria: chemical weapons, long-range Scud B missiles, the Fateh-110s, land-to-sea Yakhont missiles and SA-17 anti-aircraft missiles.

Israeli officials believe that Iran and Hezbollah are stepping up their efforts to smuggle weapons because they think Assad's days are numbered. They also think the Syrian leader is cooperating because he is weak and he owes Hezbollah, which is understood to be sending men to fight alongside government troops, for its support.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media, said Israel will continue to strike Syria if the smuggling attempts continue.

An amateur video said to be shot early Sunday in the Damascus area showed a massive explosion followed by fire lighting up the night sky. The video appeared genuine and corresponded to other AP reporting.

The state news agency said the Jamraya military and scientific research center near Damascus was hit. It added that there were casualties but did not give a number.

Damascus-based activist Maath al-Shami said the strikes occurred around 3 a.m. and that one of them hit near Qasioun mountain that overlooks Damascus. He added that the raid targeted a military position for the elite Republican Guards unit that is in charge of protecting the capital.

Mohammed Saeed, another activist who lives in the Damascus suburb of Douma, said "the explosions were so strong that earth shook under us." He said the smell of the fire caused by the air raid near Qasioun was noticeable kilometers (miles) away.

In Jerusalem, Israeli media reported that Netanyahu held an emergency meeting of his inner Security Cabinet. The prime minister's office declined comment.

The strikes are a calculated risk for Israel. Officials there say they do not think Assad will retaliate in the immediate future, but they hedged their bets with the deployment of Iron Dome batteries to Israel's north.

Earlier this year, the Iron Dome system was credited with shooting down hundreds of rockets during a round of fighting against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip.

Amos Yadlin, a former head of Israel's military intelligence, said the strikes on Syria are a signal to Damascus' ally, Tehran, that Israel is serious about the red lines it has set.

"Syria is a very important part in the front that Iran has built. Iran is testing Israel and the U.S. determination in the facing of red lines and what it sees is in clarifies to it that at least some of the players, when they define red lines and they are crossed, take it seriously," he told Army Radio.

Like the Syrian regime, Iran also portrayed the strike as evidence of collusion between Israel and Syria's rebels.

Iranian Defense Minister Gen. Ahmad Vahidi was quoted by the official IRNA news agency as saying the attacks show a growing alliance of convenience between the Syrian opposition and Israel.

"These vain moves are not a sign of Israel's power," he said. "It rather shows the (Israeli) regime's despair in the face of regional developments."

Iran has provided both financial and military support to Hezbollah for decades, and has used Syria as a conduit for both. If Assad were to fall, that pipeline could be cut, dealing a serious blow to Hezbollah's ability to confront Israel.

The Fateh-110, or "Conqueror" in Farsi, is a short-range ballistic missile developed by Iran and first put into service in 2002. The Islamic Republic unveiled an upgraded version in 2012 that improved the weapon's accuracy and increased its range to 300 kilometers (185 miles).

Vahidi said at the time that the solid-fueled missile could strike with pinpoint precision, making it the most accurate weapon of its kind in Iran's arsenal.

Israeli officials say that Hezbollah managed to get an older version of Fateh-110s back in 2010, but the missiles that were destroyed in the recent airstrikes are an upgraded version. Israeli intelligence thinks Hezbollah has not succeeded in getting any of these game changing weapons since the Syrian civil war erupted, according to the officials.

An Israeli airstrike in January also targeted weapons apparently bound for Hezbollah, Israeli and U.S. officials have said.

Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV said the research center in Jamraya was not hit, but instead an army supply facility that produced food products for the military. It quoted unnamed Syrian security officials as saying that three sites including military barracks, arms depots and air defense center were targeted by the strike.

The station aired footage showing a heavily damaged building as well as what appeared to be a chicken farm with some chickens pecking around in debris scattered with dead birds.A road apparently next to the site was filled with debris, and shell casings were strewn on the ground.

Lebanon's Al-Mayadeen TV, which has several reporters around Syria, said one of the strikes targeted a military position in the village of Saboura, west of Damascus and about 10 kilometers (six miles) from the Lebanon border.

___

Deitch reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Ryan Lucas in Beirut and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-05-Israel-Syria/id-e3d6615ad24849a7bb6197349a88ab83

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