Friday, May 31, 2013

How to instantly share files between Macs with AirDrop

How to instantly share files between Macs with AirDrop

AirDrop is a convenient way to share files between Macs without the need for email, Dropbox, or any other file sharing service. As long as both parties are using a supported Mac and running OS X Lion or later, using AirDrop to share and transfer files between computers is as simple as dragging and dropping.

Not sure where to find AirDrop or how to use it? Follow along and we'll show you how.

How to share a file from another Mac using AirDrop

  1. Open a finder window on your Mac by holding down on the Finder icon in your dock and selecting New Finder Window.
  2. In the left hand navigation, click on AirDrop.
  3. Any other Mac users that have AirDrop open will automatically populate in the AirDrop window. They'll need to have it open too in order to accept a file.
  4. Now just simply drag the file you'd like to share to the icon for their Mac.
  5. You'll be asked to confirm that you'd like to share the specified file, simply click Send.
  6. You'll see a message saying AirDrop is waiting for the user to accept it. Once they do, you'll see a blue circle go around their icon as the data transfers. Once the circle makes its way all the way around and disappears, the file transfer is complete.

How to accept a shared file from another Mac using AirDrop

  1. Open a finder window on your Mac by holding down on the Finder icon in your dock and selecting New Finder Window.
  2. In the left hand navigation, click on AirDrop.
  3. Any other Mac users that have AirDrop open will automatically populate in the AirDrop window. Both parties must have it open in order to send and receive files.
  4. If you've received a file, a notification will show up by that person's icon. Either click on Save or Save and Open.
  5. If you selected the regular save option, the file will be automatically stored in the Downloads folder of your Mac. You can access it there anytime you'd like.
    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/XR1JHXamfpw/story01.htm

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SLA-NY Joblog: F/T - Science Reference Librarian - Drew Univ. (NJ)

Science Reference Librarian; Drew Univ ? NJ



Drew University Library in Madison, NJ seeks a user-centered and collegial librarian to support the research needs of a small, selective university, with responsibility for outreach to science students and faculty. The successful candidate will work collaboratively within the Reference and Research Services Department to promote use of library resources, and participate in planning and providing a full range of instruction and reference services to the University, with advanced reference, liaison, and collection development responsibilities in the sciences. The Science Reference Librarian will work 10 months a year, with some evening and weekend duties. Competitive 10-month salary.Required: An ALA-accredited MLS/MLIS, strong academic background in the sciences, ability to provide effective instruction in scientific scholarship and literature, solid interpersonal and communication skills, facility applying emerging technologies in an academic environment, ability to work independently and collaboratively in a collegial environment.



Preferred: Undergraduate or graduate degree in the sciences, knowledge of instructional design and technology, ability to contribute to the development of an assessment program, demonstrated familiarity with e-science initiatives and GIS, 1-2 years experience with academic reference and library instruction.



To apply, please submit a letter of application and curriculum vitae, with the names and email addresses of three references to: HR0513-8@drew.edu .



A detailed position description is available at: http://www.drew.edu/library/2013/05/science-lib . For fullest consideration, apply by July 5, 2013. To enrich education through diversity, Drew University is an AA/EOE. In accordance with Department of Homeland Security regulations, successful applicant must be legally able to work in the United States.



For more information please see http://www.indeed.com/viewjob?jk=30753bf94705abf4&q=%28library+or+librarian+or+%22library+science%22%29&l=07675&tk=17rplskg00mqi3ue&from=web

Source: http://slanyjobs.blogspot.com/2013/05/ft-science-reference-librarian-drew.html

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Wildfire north of L.A. sparks evacuations

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. (AP) ? A fast-growing wildfire was burning out of control Thursday night near power stations and utility lines north of Los Angeles and homes in a mountain community were being evacuated, officials said.

The fire in the Angeles National Forest surged to 1,000 acres after burning for about four hours, the U.S. Forest Service said, sending out big clouds of black smoke amid temperatures in the high 80s and winds gusting at more than 20 mph.

"The growth potential of this fire is great. It's burning medium to thick brush on steep slopes," said Sherry Rollman, a forest service spokeswoman.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department was helping residents evacuate in the community of Green Valley. It was not clear how many homes are threatened, but about 1,000 people live in the area.

Both Southern California Edison and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power said the fire was threatening their facilities and they were monitoring the blaze for potential outages, though none had been reported. Power was being rerouted away from the threatened lines.

The blaze broke out at about 3:30 p.m. Thursday, just north of Powerhouse No. 1, a hydroelectric plant near the LA aqueduct that was the first to bring municipal power to the city and has been operating for nearly a century.

One structure has burned but it was not immediately clear what it was.

Further north near Santa Barbara, a fire that burned nearly 2,000 acres in the Los Padres National Forest and forced the evacuation of thousands of campers when it broke out on Memorial Day was fully contained Thursday.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wildfire-sparked-near-power-stations-north-la-012818398.html

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

A Chandelier Light Bulb Is Unreasonably Adorable

A Chandelier Light Bulb Is Unreasonably Adorable

There are things that are adorable but make complete sense: babies, puppies, kittens, small phones, you get the point. Then there are things that are cute that make no sense: monkeys eating bananas, a ball of yarn and so on. A miniature chandelier would usually be sensibly cute. But putting that miniature chandelier in a light bulb? Boy, I don't know why I love this so much.

And you're going to have to love this a lot because the tiny chandelier will run you more than $600 (?480). Still, if chandeliers are now marks of excess, tiny chandeliers poke fun of that excess (and $600 tiny chandeliers poke fun at you for poking fun at excess).

Called the King Edison and designed by Young & Battaglia it combines the ornate old world with the simplicity of a bulb. The chandelier is made from brass, the glass is hand blown and the cable is braided. It's fun, in a I will never pay 600 bucks for you kind of way. [Mineheart via DesignTAXI]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-chandelier-light-bulb-is-unreasonably-adorable-510589417

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Free Language Learning Service Duolingo Comes To Android, Expects This Will Double Its User Base To Over 6M

duolingo_androidDuolingo, the popular free language learning service, just launched its first mobile app for Android in Google's Play store. Until now, the service was only available on the web and iPhone, but as the company's founder Luis von Ahn told me earlier this year, the Android version has long been on the roadmap.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/em7eyq0gxSE/

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Tim Cook talks about 'the future of iOS / OS X' Ive, Cue have been working on

Tim Cook talks about 'the future of iOS  OS X' Ive, Cue have been working on

During an interview tonight at the D11 conference, Apple CEO Tim Cook made a few references to what we can expect at his company's WWDC 2013 event in a few weeks. As expected, he mentioned we'll see the future of iOS and OS X revealed there, and directly referenced the recent management shakeup. Craig Federighi is running both teams, and Cook mentioned designer Jony Ive has been "really key" to this version of iOS. He left it up to interviewer Kara Swisher to decide if the changes made are as dramatic as have been reported, stating only that collaboration has been enhanced, with an "amped up" intersection of hardware, software and services.

Another name dropped is that of Eddy Cue, who is busy heading up work on services since Scott Forstall's departure. We'll have to wait until WWDC to find out the fruits of the various executives' labor but Cook did leave us with this to chew on: "The whole concept was to tighten the groups even more, so we could spend more time finding magic in intersections. Seven months later, give or take, I think it has been an incredibly great change."

Follow along with our D11 liveblog right here.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/28/tim-cook-talks-about-the-future-of-ios-os-x-ive-cue-have-be/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

The Business And Science Of Storm Shelters

Larry Tanner, manager of the Debris Impact Test Facility for the Wind Science and Engineering Research Center at Texas Tech University
Bill Stegman, owner, American Tornado Master in Dallas, Texas

There are no definitive numbers on how many people were saved by storm shelters in the deadly tornado in Moore, Okla. There's little doubt that those who sought cover in previously-installed underground shelters and safe rooms were protected. Still, most people in high-risk areas don't have them.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/05/28/186922983/the-business-and-science-of-storm-shelters?ft=1&f=1007

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Four in five Japanese fiddle while walking, one in five while riding

Advertisement

Do you use your mobile phone while cycling? graph of japanese statisticsjapan,internet.com recently reported on a survey by goo Research into mobile phones in daily life, concentrating in the article on the use of mobile phones when walking and cycling.

Demographics

Between the 14th and 17th of March 2013 1,071 members of the goo Research online monitor group completed a private internet-based questionnaire. 52.8% of the sample were male, 16.8% in their teens, 18.4% in their twenties, 21.3% in their thirties, 16.4% in their forties, 15.4% in their fifties, and 11.7% aged sixty or older.

This is a quite timely survey, as just a couple of days ago there was the news that a 10-year-old boy fell off a Tokyo station platform while using his mobile phone.

Research results

First of all, the sample were asked if they currently had a mobile phone (including smartphone), to which 78.6% said yes. Note that this question as expressed in the article is a bit to decipher; ownership figures for mobile phones are usually around 90%, and since given the wording and the demographics this survey was most likely conducted via their normal PC-targetted method, 78.6% answering the question on their mobile phone seems too high to me. Perhaps the question was closer to ?do you usually (or ?always?) carry your mobile phone when you go out?? Anyway, these 842 people who said yes to whatever question was asked were then asked the following.

Q1: Do you use your mobile phone while walking? (Sample size=842)

Often use (to SQ1) 23.8%
Sometimes use (to SQ1) 56.3%
Never use 20.0%

When these users were asked what they use while walking, 70.2% (of 674) said voice calls, 57.0% checked their mail, 42.0% viewed maps, 24.0% checked Twitter or other SNS, and do on.

Q1SQ1: Have you ever bumped into anyone while using your mobile phone while walking? (Sample size=674)

Q1SQ2: About how many people have you bumped into? (Sample size=56)

One or two people 64.3%
Three to nine people 28.6%
Ten or more people 7.1%

Q2: Do you use your mobile phone while cycling? (Sample size=842)

Often use (to SQ1) 1.2%
Sometimes use (to SQ1) 12.8%
Never use 50.8%
Don?t ride a bicycle 35.2%

Note that it is illegal to use a mobile phone while riding a bicycle.

Q2SQ1: Have you ever had an accident while using your mobile phone while cycling? (Sample size=118)

Read more on: bicycle,goo research,walk

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/WhatJapanThinks/~3/Sl_wZz5KqME/

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New on DVD, Blu-ray: May 28 - Montreal Gazette

The Magic Christian

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars

Despite an all-star cast headlined by Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr, this black comedy bombed on release in theatres in 1969, and now it bombs again on Blu-ray and DVD. Sellers plays Sir Guy Grand, a filthy rich Londoner who adopts a homeless young man (Starr) and takes him on all sorts of outings to show how everyone can be bought off with wads of cash. To the tune of Badfinger's "Come and Get It" (written and produced by Paul McCartney) and Thunderclap Newman's "Something in the Air," the duo crash Sir Guy's company board meeting, go out on a grouse hunt, take a train ride, bid wildly at an art auction, and finally steam off to New York on a luxury ocean liner, The Magic Christian. Curiosity at all the celebrity cameos is the only reason to screen this unfunny exercise in sketch satire written by Terry Southern (Dr. Strangelove, Easy Rider). There's Raquel Welch, Christopher Lee, Richard Attenborough, Roman Polanski, Yul Brynner, Spike Milligan, Wilfrid Hyde-White, John Cleese, Graham Chapman and Laurence Harvey, who subverts a performance of Hamlet by turning it into a striptease. Ha-ha. The outdoor scenes are marred by amateurish studio post-dubs of dialogue, adding to the unreality. No extras or subtitles on the Olive discs. Jeff Heinrich

Life is Sweet

Rating: 4 out of 5

This third feature film by Mike Leigh (Topsy-Turvy, Naked, Secrets & Lies) marked the British writer-director's big international breakthrough with the critics. Released in 1990, it's a family dramedy about wildly different 22-year-old twin sisters in a working-class suburb of London: Natalie (Claire Skinner) is the good but rather boring old soul, Nicola (Jane Horrocks) is the screwed-up one with a bulimia problem. Jim Broadbent and Alison Steadman play their well-meaning parents, Andy and Wendy, who struggle to get into food-vending and the restaurant business but don't have much luck. The acting is first-rate and true, the story having been sketched out Leigh-style through improvisation and long rehearsals prior to filming, lending an authenticity to the high and lows of "normal" family life that makes this movie instantly accessible and memorable. Roger Ebert, may he rest in peace, called it "funny, spontaneous and free" and "close to the stuff of life itself," and said watching it "made me realize how boring and thin many movies are." See for yourself with this fine-looking Criterion Blu-ray (also available on DVD), whose extras include a director's commentary, an-hour long audio interview with Leigh from 1991, five short films by the director totalling 28 minutes, and an illustrated booklet. JH

Dark Skies

Rating: 2.5 stars

Is it the house? Is it the people? Or is it an alien presence that's haunting the nice family down the street? In the end, it doesn't really matter what plasma force is circulating through the frames in Dark Skies because the movie handles the horror in a completely generic fashion. From strange noises and bizarre stunts with canned food, the paranormal symptoms are ramped up over the course of the film until someone starts levitating. Because the movie handles a great deal of the weirdness in broad daylight, and offers two grown-ups (Keri Russell and Josh Hamilton) who recognize how psychotic they appear to the rest of the world, the audience has a pretty sympathetic touchstone, and enough intellectual distance, to make this camp trip worth the deja-vu view. Special features include commentary with director Scott Stewart, deleted scenes and more. Katherine Monk

Becoming Redwood

Rating: 3 stars

Vancouver director Jesse James Miller brings a long-gestating script to the big screen with the bittersweet Becoming Redwood, a coming of age story set against the neon-green world of golf. Young Redwood (Ryan Grantham) is having a hard time accepting the separation of his parents, not to mention the recent incarceration of his hippie dad on drug charges, so he imagines a fantasy golf showdown that pits his nascent skills on the links with the Golden Bear himself, Jack Nicklaus. Though heavily contrived and frequently sappy, Becoming Redwood still boils the heartbreak of youth down to a tasty syrup. Special features include cast and crew interviews, behind the scenes footage. KM

Hellbound

Rating: 3.5 stars

Is there a Hell or isn't there? Thank goodness none of us knows the answer for sure, but eternal damnation is still a surprisingly fun topic to chew on all the same. Writer-director Kevin Miller takes a look at the whole burning ball of wax in this ambitious, fragmented but perpetually fascinating discussion that explores the religious fundamentals, and why we're so focused on an abstract version of retribution instead of figuring out the pragmatics of justice in the here and now. It all boils down to personal responsibility, but also our understanding of the basic mechanics of storytelling. One of the more interesting sources quoted in the film is screenwriting "guru" Robert McKee, who happily describes himself as an atheist. McKee says dealing with the consequences of one's actions is the basis of good storytelling; it keeps suspense in the picture. Hell is an example of what he calls "junkie logic" - and the urge to deal with things later instead of now. Thoughtful and provocative, if entirely too broad to say anything specific, Hellbound still has plenty of sizzle. Special features include outtakes, featurette and commentary. KM

Open Road

Rating: 2 stars

Put on your travelling pants, sisterhood! A politically correct estrogen-fuelled vehicle just pulled up to the DVD drive, and it's looking for some company. Granted, it's not going anywhere too fast. And it's not exactly a turbo-charged dream machine with plenty of curb value. Open Road is a sensible sedan of a movie starring Camilla Belle as a young painter who takes to the road in a quest to find her long lost father. She meets an interesting cast of predictable characters, including a wise old man named Chuck (Andy Garcia) - whom she paints in various poses. The two form a tender bond, but the outside world has a habit of intruding on such pastoral, campfire moments among the homeless. Quaint but completely clich?d - right down to the art show climax - the only thing that redeems this oddly shot feature is the supporting cast. Garcia does wonders with the throat-closing lines and Juliette Lewis hands in yet another little gem of a turn as a diner waitress diva. Belle is watchable, but a little too mushy when it really matters. Special features include digital copy, the making-of and trailer. KM

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/movie-guide/New+on+DVD+Blu+-+ray+May+28/8443463/story.html

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Outside India, Manmohan growls. PM talks tough on economy, in Japan

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Tuesday said the Indian government was committed to taking "hard and difficult decisions" in the long term interest of the country's economy.

"I want to assure you that our government is committed to take hard and difficult decisions in the long term interest of our economy," the prime minister said in an address to business and industry leaders at a luncheon hosted by Nippon Keidanren, Japan's business federation.

"In recent months, we have taken a number of steps to revive the economy. We have started to bring the fiscal deficit under control and also outlined a medium term path for fiscal consolidation. We have accelerated the implementation of large infrastructure projects by setting up special mechanisms to ensure that various regulatory clearances do not lead to delays. We have taken tangible steps to enhance incentives for investments," he said.

"We have liberalised foreign investments in areas like multi-brand retail, power exchanges and civil aviation and further rationalization and simplification is being planned. We have introduced further reforms in the financial markets. The central bank has indicated that it will start the process of expanding grant of new bank licenses," he pointed out.

Aiming to give a boost to trade and investment between India and Japan, the prime minister said that Japanese banks were being given licenses to open branches in metropolitan areas in India and added that his government was willing to resolve problems relating to long term swap arrangements.

Hoping for a turnaround on investment from Japan to India and trade between both countries, the prime minister said that this was much less than the available potential.

Sounding an optimistic note, Manmohan Singh said: "A number of priority projects for implementation from the first tranche of $4.5 billion provided by Japan for the project have been listed. We have resolved the issues of priority sector lending treatment to Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) projects. Restrictions on foreign currency borrowings have been relaxed.

"I understand a few problems remain relating to long term swap arrangements. We are willing to consider innovative suggestions to resolve these problems. I am also happy to say that Japanese banks are being given licenses to open branches in metropolitan areas.

"I am told that Japanese companies rank India the most promising long term destination. However, India accounts for only four percent of total Japanese outward investment flow into Asia. I am sure you will agree that this percentage should be much higher. We on our part will work hard to turn promise into reality."

Manmohan Singh, who is on a three-day visit to Tokyo to boost strategic, economic and energy ties, said the present bilateral trade of $18 billion "does no justice to our potential".

"We must harness the full potential of our Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement to expand our trade and make it more broad-based and balanced. I hope that Japan would be more open and accessible for Indian companies in our areas of strength, such as pharmaceuticals and IT services," the prime minister said.

He pointed out that two ongoing flagship projects of the India-Japan partnership, the Western Dedicated Rail Freight Corridor between Mumbai and Delhi and the associated DMIC were making good progress.

Calling upon Japanese business and industry leaders to invest in India's infrastructure sector, where it has targeted an investment of around $1 trillion, Manmohan Singh said: "I understand that Japan has also offered financial and technical support for a Detailed Project Report for the Mumbai-Ahmedabad High Speed Railway route.

"This is an ambitious project and we will need to take a holistic view, based on our infrastructure needs, commercial viability, overall national priorities and the availability of financial resources. We are willing for Japan and India to co-finance a joint feasibility study on this."

"For many years, Japan has been our largest bilateral donor and we are grateful for the assistance we have received. Japanese assistance has financed some of our most iconic infrastructure projects such as the Delhi Metro and now the Dedicated Freight Corridor...

"The Maruti-Suzuki partnership is a household name in India. There are other similar examples," he pointed out.

Source: http://indiatoday.feedsportal.com/c/33614/f/589699/s/2c82b0ae/l/0Lindiatoday0Bintoday0Bin0Cstory0Cmanmohan0Esingh0Etalks0Etough0Eon0Eeconomy0Ein0Ejapan0C10C2734870Bhtml/story01.htm

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

College Football Hall of Fame construction underway

Biggest longshots in Derby history
Along with the hats, the song and the roses, the Kentucky Derby is famous for the horses who defied the Churchill Downs odds and hit it big. Here is a list of the 10 biggest long shots to ever win.

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Source: http://atlantageorgiacondos.us/05-college-football-hall-of-fame-construction-underway-10-atlanta-georgia-condos.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Huge crowd cheers Argentine leader's 10-year rule

The government house is bathed in purple light as fireworks explode overhead during a government rally in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Cristina Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

The government house is bathed in purple light as fireworks explode overhead during a government rally in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Cristina Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez gestures to supporters at a rally outside the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. Her voice breaking, the president called it a victorious decade, "won not by a government but by the people." (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Supporters of Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez listen to her speak outside the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez tries on a hat given to her by a supporter at a government event outside the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. This year's election will determine whether she has the votes in congress to undo constitutional term limits and extend her rule beyond 2015. But she suggested Saturday night that she won't try. She said ?I'm not eternal, nor do I want to be.? (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez gestures to supporters at a rally outside the government house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Saturday, May 25, 2013. Fernandez's government and supporters are celebrating 10 years since she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner have held office, and the 203th anniversary of the Argentina's May Revolution. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)

(AP) ? Argentine President Cristina Fernandez rallied a huge crowd Saturday night celebrating the 10-year government that she and her late husband Nestor Kirchner began in 2003. Her voice breaking, she called it a victorious decade, "won not by a government but by the people."

This year's election will determine whether Fernandez has enough votes in congress to undo constitutional term limits and extend her rule beyond 2015. But she suggested Saturday night that she won't try. She said "I'm not eternal, nor do I want to be."

Putting human rights violators on trial and pushing to put more of Argentina's wealth in the hands of its poorest people will continue to be the pillars of this government, she said. "Equality is the grand symbol of this decade and of those to come," she vowed.

Her opponents took aim at the "decade won" theme, noting that the years of strong economic growth have ended, and saying that if this is what victory looks like, Argentina is in big trouble.

Whether the Kirchners' decade will be remembered for its historic achievements or its missed opportunities depends on whom you talk with in Argentina, where society is bitterly divided over their legacy.

Analysts consulted by The Associated Press said they deserve credit for fostering 7 percent average growth and restoring power to the presidency. Kirchner was inaugurated on May 25, 2003 at a chaotic time; the country was still suffering from its 2001 crisis, and poverty was extreme.

The Kirchners began an era of social inclusion, external debt reduction and state intervention that was the exact opposite of the privatization binge and anything-goes capitalism that characterized Argentina in the 1990s.

Ten years later and going it alone after her husband died of a heart attack, Fernandez has intensified her government's control over the economy and diverted billions of dollars more to subsidizing the poor.

"This is an extraordinarily significant decade in Argentine history," said philosopher Ricardo Forster, a supporter. The transformations have managed to enrich the social, cultural, political and economic life."

But Fernandez's approval ratings have dropped sharply recently amid rising inflation and crime, corruption allegations involving top appointees and allied businessmen; increasingly heavy-handed economic controls; and efforts to transform the justice system. Critics say the real goal is eliminating challengers to presidential power.

"This decade represents a tremendous missed opportunity, which you can see by looking at what other countries in the region have done with similar possibilities and limitations," said sociologist and attorney Roberto Gargarella, a government critic.

Thousands of citizens have joined a series of pot-banging protests in recent months, and the crowd gathering in the Plaza de Mayo to hear Fernandez speak Saturday night was intended to provide a powerful counterpoint. Hundreds of thousands of people were bused in by the "organized and united" network of pro-government groups, and their flags and huge TV screens were installed in nearby streets.

"This is the government I always dreamed of and fought for in the 1970s," said Paloma Perez Galdos, a 58-year-old bank worker. "It's time that we have a justice system for everyone, not just for the rich."

"Social inclusion" under the Kirchners has involved providing billions of dollars in cash welfare payments families with children and people working in the informal economy. The government has raised pensions and minimum wages, and directed vast amounts of government revenue to keep the economy moving.

"Unemployment has gone from 25 percent to 7 percent ten years later ... in an economy that grew as fast as China," said Ramiro Castineira, an economic analyst with the Econometrica firm.

Castineira and Gargarella disagree on many aspects of the Kirchners' legacy, but they both say intervening in the government statistics service in 2007 was a critical mistake. Ever since, official annual inflation has refused to budge over 10 percent, even as Argentine shoppers watch prices double and triple each year. Many other statistics based on consumer prices have become widely disregarded.

"All the numbers on unemployment, poverty, inflation and inequality are falsified," Gargarella said.

"Misrepresenting the numbers was a strong blow to market confidence; that raised the country risk and made it impossible for Argentina to take on foreign debt. That's why the government turned to expanding the money supply," Castineira agreed.

Since 2008, the government has sought to capture more of the windfall profits from soy exports. But that alone couldn't finance the spending, so it printed more money and changed currency and tax rules forcing businesses to keep profits inside Argentina. That dissuaded investors, spurred capital flight and pushed annual inflation to as much 30 percent right now, private analysts say.

Economic instability now threatens to undo much of what the Kirchners accomplished.

"Today it's clear that Argentina, under the leadership of the Kirchners, has not known how to take advantage of the opportunity that this first decade of the 21st century has represented for Latin America, which is the strongest growth in two centuries of history," political analyst Rosendo Fraga said. "Instead of taking the path of Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, Peru, Chile and Uruguay, it's taking that of Venezuela."

___

Associated Press Writer Damian Pachter contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-26-LT-Argentina-Kirchners'-Decade/id-e7c09a66bf0b41ffa9850e71c2e7cee5

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Owners should attend to ugly online reviews, not melt down | The ...

(AP Photo/Matt York) After a particularly ugly TV experience and negative online reviews, the owners of Amy's Baking Co. in Scottsdale, Ariz., allegedly cursed out critics on their Facebook page.

Social media ? Businesses? calm, focused response to posts key to winning back customers, experts say.

Scottsdale, Ariz. ? It was the customer service disaster heard around the Internet.

An Arizona restaurateur, fed up after years of negative online reviews and an embarrassing appearance on a reality television show, allegedly posted a social media rant laced with salty language and angry, uppercase letters that quickly went viral last week, to the delight of people who love a good Internet meltdown.

?

The art of staying cool

No matter how bad the reviews get, experts say businesses need to be willing to admit mistakes and offer discounts to assuage skeptical customers. Still, they acknowledge, the wave of digital feedback can be especially challenging for small businesses with small staffs.

"I AM NOT STUPID ALL OF YOU ARE," read the posting on the Facebook wall of Amy?s Baking Co. in Scottsdale, Ariz. "YOU JUST DO NOT KNOW GOOD FOOD."

It was, to put it kindly, not a best business practice. Add to that an appearance earlier this month on the Fox reality TV show "Kitchen Nightmares" ? where celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay gave up on trying to reform the restaurant after the owners refused to listen to his advice ? and you have a recipe for disaster.

"That?s probably the worst thing that can happen," said Sujan Patel, founder and CEO of Single Grain, a digital marketing agency in San Francisco.

In the evolving world of online marketing, where the power of word of mouth has been wildly amplified by the whims and first impressions of anonymous reviewers posting on dozens of social media websites, online comments, both good and bad, and the reactions they trigger from managers, can make all the difference between higher revenues and empty storefronts.

Hotels, restaurants and other businesses that depend on good customer service reviews have all grappled in recent years with how to respond to online feedback on sites such as Twitter, TripAdvisor, Foursquare, Yelp, Facebook and Instagram, where comments can often be more vitriol than in-person reviews because of the anonymous shield many social media websites provide.

No matter how ugly the reviews get, businesses need to be willing to acknowledge mistakes and offer discounts to lure unhappy customers back, digital marketing experts said.

"In the past, people just sent bad soup back. Well, now they are getting on social media and telling all their friends and friends of friends how bad the soup was and why they should find other places to get soup in the future, so it takes the customer experience to another level," said Tom Garrity of the Garrity Group, a public relations firm in New Mexico.

"The challenge becomes ? how do you respond when someone doesn?t think your food or product is as great as you think it is?"

story continues below

Fighting back ? In Amy and Samy Bouzaglo?s case, the bad reviews were compounded by their reality TV experience. The couple said during a recent episode of "Kitchen Nightmares" that they needed professional guidance after years of battling terrible online reviews. They opened the pizzeria about six years ago.

"Kitchen Nightmares" follows Ramsay as he helps rebuild struggling restaurants. After one bite, he quickly deemed Amy?s Baking Co. a disaster and chided the Bouzaglos for growing increasingly irate over his constructive feedback. Among his many critiques: The store-bought ravioli smelled "weird," a salmon burger was overcooked and a fig pizza was too sweet and arrived on raw dough.

"You need thick skin in this business," Ramsay said before walking out. It was the first time he wasn?t able to save a business, according to the show.

Amy?s Baking Co. temporarily closed last week after the episode aired. A Bouzaglo spokesman said the couple wasn?t available for an interview. The restaurant?s answering machine was full. Emails and Facebook messages were not returned.

A wall post published last week claimed the restaurant?s Facebook, Yelp and Twitter accounts had been hacked, but hundreds of commenters expressed doubt. Social media sites show someone posting as a member of the Bouzaglo family had been insulting customers over negative reviews since at least 2010.

The story bounced across the Internet, generating thousands of comments on Facebook, Yelp and Twitter, and prompting nearly 36,000 people to sign a petition on Change.org that asks the Department of Labor to look into the Bouzaglo?s practice of pocketing their servers? tips.

Although many corporations hire communications experts to respond to every tweet, Facebook message and online review, the wave of digital feedback can be especially challenging for small businesses with small staffs, digital consultants said.

For one thing, there is so much online content to wade through. Roughly 60 percent of all adults get information about local businesses from search engines and entertainment websites such as Yelp or TripAdvisor, according to a 2011 study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

"Customer service is a spectator sport now," said Jay Baer, president of Convince & Convert, a social media marketing consultancy in Indiana. "It?s not about making that customer happy on Yelp. That?s the big misunderstanding of Yelp. It?s about the hundreds of thousands of people who are looking on to see how you handle it. It?s those ripples that make social media so important."

In their "Kitchen Nightmares" episode, Amy and Samy Bouzaglo are seen yelling and cursing at customers inquiring about undercooked food or long delays. They blame online bullies.

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Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/56355416-79/reviews-businesses-online-amy.html.csp

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Difficult to Broach (talking-points-memo)

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Perry collapses, Idoki takes Senior PGA

ST. LOUIS (AP) ? Kohki Idoki erased a five-stroke deficit against a fading Kenny Perry with room to spare, charging to a two-stroke victory Sunday in the Senior PGA Championship.

It was the third bitter final-round major tournament failure for the 52-year-old Perry, who led by three strokes with six holes to play but settled for a second-place tie with Jay Haas.

The 51-year-old Idoki closed with a 6-under 65 to finish at 11 under at Bellerive Country Club and win $385,000 and become the first player to win the tournament on his first attempt since Michael Allen in 2009.

Idoki got a beer shower from fellow Japanese players Joe Osaki and Kiyoshi Murota after finishing ahead of Perry's final group.

Perry shot a 72, and Haas had a 70. Perry squandered a two-stroke lead with two holes to go in the 2009 Masters and also let victory slip away in the 1996 PGA.

Mark O'Meara was fourth, three strokes back after 65 including an eagle on No. 17. Murota was another shot behind after a 67.

Perry staggered to the finish line, beginning with a double bogey on No. 13 that dropped him into a tie with Idoki. Another bogey on No. 16 dropped him out of the lead he held or shared since the end of the second round and he bogeyed No. 17 after shooting sideways out of deep rough in trees on No. 17.

Perry lost his lead three-putting from the fringe up against the edge of the rough on No. 13, running it past the cup from about 3 feet before holing out to put him at even par for the day.

He arched his back in disappointment after leaving a long birdie putt just short on No. 14.

Idoki climbed into contention with four birdies and no bogeys on the front nine, and added two more birdies in a flawless finish.

Jim Rutledge closed with a 64 for the best round of the tournament. He tied for sixth with fellow Canadian Rod Spittle, Russ Cochran, Kirk Triplett and Duffy Waldorf. Rutledge had seven birdies, five on the front nine, with no bogeys and no long putts to save par.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/perry-collapses-idoki-takes-senior-pga-220440563.html

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Errani advances on opening day at French Open

PARIS (AP) ? An hour into the French Open, 2012 runner-up Sara Errani was into the second round.

The tenacious Italian beat Arantxa Rus 6-1, 6-2 Sunday in the opening match on Court Suzanne Lenglen.

Errani reached a Grand Slam final for the first time a year ago at Roland Garros, then lost to Maria Sharapova.

"Last year was an unbelievable tournament, the best tournament of my life," Errani said. "But I don't want to think about that. I just want to come here and play another tournament. I try to concentrate on my tennis, not too much about last year."

Now ranked a career-best No. 5, Errani dominated Rus from the baseline and won four games at love. Rus double-faulted seven times and lost her 13th consecutive match on the WTA Tour.

No. 14-seeded Ana Ivanovic, the 2008 champion, beat Petra Martic 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. Ivanovic improved to 30-4 in the first round of Grand Slam tournaments.

In men's play, No. 14 Milos Raonic hit 16 aces, won 32 points at the net and defeated Xavier Malisse, 6-2, 6-1, 4-6, 6-4. Malisse, ranked 56th, fell to 0-5 this year on clay.

No. 23 Kevin Anderson beat lucky loser Illya Marchenko 6-3, 7-5, 6-4.

Serena Williams and Roger Federer were among others on the first day's schedule. Play began under cloudy skies with the temperature in the mid-50s.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/errani-advances-opening-day-french-open-103058316.html

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The Destruction of the Oklahoma Tornado As Seen by Google Maps

This is beyond sad. If you've been keeping up with the tornado that leveled Moore, Oklahoma, you probably saw the destruction it left behind. It looked like a movie set war zone or the aftermath of the apocalypse. But it was real. Google released satellite imagery showing what the destruction looked like from above. It's not pretty.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-UK1-YO5WCE/the-destruction-of-the-oklahoma-tornado-as-seen-by-goog-509820270

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Obama sees terror threat reduced to pre-9/11 level (The Arizona Republic)

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Detection of the cosmic gamma ray horizon: Measures all the light in the universe since the Big Bang

May 24, 2013 ? How much light has been emitted by all galaxies since the cosmos began? After all, almost every photon (particle of light) from ultraviolet to far infrared wavelengths ever radiated by all galaxies that ever existed throughout cosmic history is still speeding through the Universe today. If we could carefully measure the number and energy (wavelength) of all those photons -- not only at the present time, but also back in time -- we might learn important secrets about the nature and evolution of the Universe, including how similar or different ancient galaxies were compared to the galaxies we see today.

That bath of ancient and young photons suffusing the Universe today is called the extragalactic background light (EBL). An accurate measurement of the EBL is as fundamental to cosmology as measuring the heat radiation left over from the Big Bang (the cosmic microwave background) at radio wavelengths. A new paper, called "Detection of the Cosmic ?-Ray Horizon from Multiwavelength Observations of Blazars," by Alberto Dominguez and six coauthors, just published today by the Astrophysical Journal -- based on observations spanning wavelengths from radio waves to very energetic gamma rays, obtained from several NASA spacecraft and several ground-based telescopes -- describes the best measurement yet of the evolution of the EBL over the past 5 billion years.

Directly measuring the EBL by collecting its photons with a telescope, however, poses towering technical challenges -- harder than trying to see the dim band of the Milky Way spanning the heavens at night from midtown Manhattan. Earth is inside a very bright galaxy with billions of stars and glowing gas. Indeed, Earth is inside a very bright solar system: sunlight scattered by all the dust in the plane of Earth's orbit creates the zodiacal light radiating across the optical spectrum down to long-wavelength infrared. Therefore ground-based and space-based telescopes have not succeeded in reliably measuring the EBL directly.

So, astrophysicists developed an ingenious work-around method: measuring the EBL indirectly through measuring the attenuation of -- that is, the absorption of -- very high energy gamma rays from distant blazars. Blazars are supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies with brilliant jets directly pointed at us like a flashlight beam. Not all the high-energy gamma rays emitted by a blazar, however, make it all the way across billions of light-years to Earth; some strike a hapless EBL photon along the way. When a high-energy gamma ray photon from a blazar hits a much lower energy EBL photon, both are annihilated and produce two different particles: an electron and its antiparticle, a positron, which fly off into space and are never heard from again. Different energies of the highest-energy gamma rays are waylaid by different energies of EBL photons. Thus, measuring how much gamma rays of different energies are attenuated or weakened from blazars at different distances from Earth indirectly gives a measurement of how many EBL photons of different wavelengths exist along the line of sight from blazar to Earth over those different distances.

Observations of blazars by NASA's Fermi Gamma Ray Telescope spacecraft for the first time detected that gamma rays from distant blazars are indeed attenuated more than gamma rays from nearby blazars, a result announced on November 30, 2012, in a paper published in Science, as theoretically predicted.

Now, the big news -- announced in today's Astrophysical Journal paper -- is that the evolution of the EBL over the past 5 billion years has been measured for the first time. That's because looking farther out into the Universe corresponds to looking back in time. Thus, the gamma ray attenuation spectrum from farther distant blazars reveals how the EBL looked at earlier eras.

This was a multistep process. First, the coauthors compared the Fermi findings to intensity of X-rays from the same blazars measured by X-ray satellites Chandra, Swift, Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer, and XMM/Newton and lower-energy radiation measured by other spacecraft and ground-based observatories. From these measurements, Dominguez et al. were able to calculate the blazars' original emitted, unattenuated gamma-ray brightnesses at different energies.

The coauthors then compared those calculations of unattenuated gamma-ray flux at different energies with direct measurements from special ground-based telescopes of the actual gamma-ray flux received at Earth from those same blazars. When a high-energy gamma ray from a blazar strikes air molecules in the upper regions of Earth's atmosphere, it produces a cascade of charged subatomic particles. This cascade of particles travels faster than the speed of light in air (which is slower than the speed of light in a vacuum). This causes a visual analogue to a "sonic boom": bursts of a special light called ?erenkov radiation. This ?erenkov radiation was detected by imaging atmospheric ?erenkov telescopes (IACTs), such as HESS (High Energy Stereoscopic System) in Namibia, MAGIC (Major Atmospheric Gamma Imaging ?erenkov) in the Canary Islands, and VERITAS (Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems) in Arizona.

Comparing the calculations of the unattenuated gamma rays to actual measurements of the attenuation of gamma rays and X-rays from blazars at different distances allowed Dominquez et al. to quantify the evolution of the EBL -- that is, to measure how the EBL changed over time as the Universe aged -- out to about 5 billion years ago (corresponding to a redshift of about z = 0.5). "Five billion years ago is the maximum distance we are able to probe with our current technology," Dom?nguez said. "Sure, there are blazars farther away, but we are not able to detect them because the high-energy gamma rays they are emitting are too attenuated by EBL when they get to us -- so weakened that our instruments are not sensitive enough to detect them." This measurement is the first statistically significant detection of the so-called "Cosmic Gamma Ray Horizon" as a function of gamma-ray energy. The Cosmic Gamma Ray Horizon is defined as the distance at which roughly one-third (or, more precisely, 1/e -- that is, 1/2.718 -- where e is the base of the natural logarithms) of the gamma rays of a particular energy have been attenuated.

This latest result confirms that the kinds of galaxies observed today are responsible for most of the EBL over all time. Moreover, it sets limits on possible contributions from many galaxies too faint to have been included in the galaxy surveys, or on possible contributions from hypothetical additional sources (such as the decay of hypothetical unknown elementary particles).

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/b7W2astoR00/130524104644.htm

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Video shows British police shooting soldier's suspected killers

LONDON (Reuters) - Dramatic video footage showing the moment when police shot the two men suspected of hacking to death a soldier in London was published on a British newspaper's website on Friday.

The shaky, 10-second clip shows one of the men sprinting towards a police car with a knife in his hand before he is shot and tumbles to the ground. The second man appears to aim a gun at the police and is then shot.

Soldier Lee Rigby, a 25-year-old who served in Afghanistan, was hacked to death near an army barracks in south London on Wednesday.

The Daily Mirror newspaper, which published the first footage of the suspects' shooting, said the video was filmed by a resident in a nearby block of flats using a camera phone.

It shows the first suspect, thought to be Michael Adebolajo, a British-born convert to Islam, charging towards the police and coming within a few feet of the officers before they have time to get out of their car.

The first shots send him sprawling to the ground in the middle of the road. About eight shots and screams from bystanders can be heard.

The two men are in hospital under armed guard.

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/video-shows-british-police-shooting-soldiers-suspected-killers-072026712.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Battle-bruised King Richard III hastily buried

University of Leicester

The remains of King Richard III showed a curved spine and signs of battle trauma. He apparently was hastily buried -- the grave was irregularly shaped, with sloping sides, and too small for the 5-foot-8-inch skeleton. That may have been because he had already spent days dead in the summer heat. .

By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience

The body of King Richard III was buried in great haste, a new study finds ? perhaps because the medieval monarch's corpse had been out for three days in the summer sun.

The new research is the first academic paper published on the discovery of Richard III, which was publicly announced in February 2013. A team of archaeologists from the University of Leicester found the body beneath a parking lot in Leicester that was once the site of a medieval church. The full study will be available online on Friday evening.

The archaeological analysis contains details only alluded to in the initial announcement of the findings. In particular, the archaeologists found that Richard III's grave was dug poorly and probably hastily, a sharp contrast to the neat rectangular graves otherwise found in the church where the king was laid to rest. [Gallery: The Discovery of Richard III]

Richard III's journey to Leicester
Richard III ruled England from 1483 to 1485, when he was killed during the Battle of Bosworth Field, the definitive fight in the War of the Roses.

University of Leicester

The skull of the skeleton found at the Grey Friars excavation in Leicester, identified as that of King Richard III.

Historical records reveal that after the battle, Richard's body was stripped and brought to Leicester, where it remained on public display for three days until burial on Aug. 25, 1485. The church where the body was interred, a Franciscan friary called Grey Friars, was eventually demolished around 1538. A former mayor of Leicester built a mansion on the site, but by the 1700s, the land had been subdivided and sold off, the location of the church lost.

With it went all memory of where one of England's most famous kings was buried. Richard III was immortalized by a Shakespeare play of the same name and made out to be a villain by the Tudor dynasty that followed his rule. Today, however, there are societies of Richard III enthusiasts called Richardians?who defend the dead king's honor. One of these Richardians, a screenwriter named Philippa Langley, spearheaded the excavation that discovered Richard III's body.

Digging for Richard
The new paper, published in the journal Antiquity, outlines how archaeologists dug three trenches in a city government parking lot, hoping to hit church buildings they knew had once stood in the area. They soon found evidence of the friary they were looking for: first, a chapter house with stone benches and diamond-pattern floor tiles. This chapter house would have been used for daily monastery meetings.

South of the chapter houses, the excavation revealed a well-worn cloister walk, or covered walkway. Finally, the researchers found the church building itself. The church was about 34 feet (10.4 meters) wide. It had been demolished, but the floors (and the graves in the floor) were left intact. Among the rubble were decorated tiles and copper alloy letters that likely once marked the graves.

Brick dust suggested the outer church walls may have been covered with a brick fa?ade, which would have created a striking red-and-white look with the church's limestone-framed windows, the researchers wrote.

A hasty grave
Most of the graves in the Grey Friars church floor?are neat and orderly, with squared-off rectangle sides. Richard III's is an exception. The grave is irregularly shaped, with sloping sides. It was also too small for the 5-foot-8-inch (1.7 m) skeleton interred within: Richard's torso is twisted and his head propped up rather than laid flat. The body was also crammed against the north wall of the grave, perhaps because someone stood against the south wall to guide the body into its resting place. Whoever it was did not spend time afterward rearranging the body into a more symmetrical position.

"The haste may partially be explained by the fact that Richard?s damaged body had already been on public display for several days in the height of summer, and was thus in poor condition," the researchers wrote.

There was no coffin in the grave, and likely no shroud, judging by the loose position of the skeleton's limbs. However, the corpse's hands were crossed and perhaps tied in front of him.

The study also delineates the 10 injuries on the corpse's skeleton. Most are likely battle wounds, including two fatal blows to the back of the head. Two wounds on the face, one to the ribs and one to the buttock were likely delivered post-mortem, after Richard III was stripped of his armor, the researchers wrote. These "humiliation wounds" may have been designed to disrespect the king in death.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter?and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook?and Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

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

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2c54af7c/l/0Lscience0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A50C230C184530A990Ebattle0Ebruised0Eking0Erichard0Eiii0Ehastily0Eburied0Dlite/story01.htm

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