Thursday 23 May 2013

How To Select The Best Drug Addiction Treatment Centers ? Hot ...

Dependence on drugs and alcohol warrants immediate treatment since if neglected, it can lead to serious or fatal problems. When looking for centers for drug addiction treatment San Diego residents can choose from the many private and governmental facilities that offer substance abuse these programs. The following are guideline which can be used in finding the best program and facility.

Finding an addiction rehabilitation facility offering a suitable program can be a challenging task. You should make sure that you find a facility that specializes in the type of need you have. Finding a specialized facility is beneficial since you are sure of obtaining specialized attention from therapists who are amicably qualified in the same.

The level of education, qualification and experience of their staff is equally important. Check if the center also offers other activities that other rehabs do not. These can include activities such as yoga, music, art, equine and participation in group projects.

Some substance abuse programs are more successful in treating particular disorders than others. The measure of success depends on the duration of the whole program and follow up care and also the mechanism of diagnosis used. Make sure you know if there are follow up services offered after completing the program.

The success of a particular medication program revolves about how equipped the facility is. One important characteristic of a suitable center is the staff to client ratio. It is an important thing to find a center with a low staff to patient ratio since this means that patients get more personalized care by therapists

The task of choosing the right substance abuse rehabilitation center and program should always be done with care. You should ensure that a thorough background check is done on a prospective facility before settling for their services. While selecting a facility for Drug Addiction Treatment San Diego residents should consider the specialization area of that center, credentials of the personnel and the success rate of that facility.

You can visit the website www.addictionrecoverysandiego.com for more helpful information about How To Select The Best Drug Addiction Treatment Centers

Source: http://hotarticledepot.com/how-to-select-the-best-drug-addiction-treatment-centers-2/

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Wednesday 22 May 2013

Heinrich Rohrer, Physicist Who Won Nobel, Dies at 79

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Dr. Rohrer helped invent the scanning tunneling microscope, which made it possible to see individual atoms and move them around.
    


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/22/science/heinrich-rohrer-physicist-who-won-nobel-dies-at-79.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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And Super Bowl 50 goes to ...

BOSTON (AP) ? The 50th Super Bowl will be held in the San Francisco Bay Area and the NFL championship will go to Houston the following year.

Team owners voted Tuesday for the 49ers' new stadium as host of the 2016 game. That facility in Santa Clara, Calif., is due to open for the 2014 season.

San Francisco beat out South Florida, which was stymied in its bid to stage an 11th Super Bowl when the Florida Legislature did not support financing to renovate Sun Life Stadium.

"After losing a Super Bowl (to Baltimore last February), it feels really good to win a Super Bowl," 49ers CEO Jed York cracked.

Houston, which also beat out Miami, was awarded the 2017 title game. It has hosted once before, in 2004.

"I think a lot of them just felt like, hey, it's Houston's time," Texans owner Robert McNair said of his colleagues, who selected his city on the first ballot, requiring at least 24 of 32 votes. "They knew we could do a good job. From 2004 to '17, that's 13 years. So I agree, I think it's Houston's time."

The only previous Super Bowl played in northern California was at Stanford Stadium in 1985.

When NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced the 2016 decision, members of the San Francisco bid committee let out a roar of approval, then toasted each other with champagne.

"We are so excited to be able to be able to put on the 'Golden Super Bowl' in the Golden State," York said.

Asked what he believed swayed the owners to vote for San Francisco, York added: "It's the will power of an entire area that gave an overwhelming push for us."

It was the first time in a decade that a Super Bowl was awarded on the first ballot.

"The Bay Area has been waiting for a (title) game since 1985. We have a stadium now ... we are just thrilled and couldn't be happier about this," said Daniel Lurie, a leader of the San Francisco bid.

"We are going to get to highlight the best the Bay Area has to offer."

That includes donating 25 percent of the proceeds from the game to fight poverty in the San Francisco Bay Area, York said.

The Dolphins were denied public money for a stadium upgrade in South Florida following widespread complaints about the public investment sunk into the Marlins' new baseball home.

Multibillionaire Dolphins owner Stephen Ross contends $350 million in stadium improvements are badly needed, but he doesn't want to pay for them by himself. Nor does he want a scaled-down renovation of the 26-year-old facility.

"I suspect there's a couple of state reps down in Miami-Dade County where I live who are going to look at this and realize this was a huge mistake," Ross said. "We had the better bid. I could just look at the body language from the NFL staff. It's a shame. We may not see another Super Bowl for another 10 years."

But, Ross said, South Florida "won't stop trying" to get one.

Miami has hosted 10 Super Bowls, tied with New Orleans for the most. But neither will get the 50th.

49ers owner John York suggested that San Francisco's winning effort offered a different lesson in politics.

"If this Super Bowl can show the state of California and other communities the opportunity with a new stadium to bring in fresh business, it could be a catalyst that stadiums can be built for Oakland and San Diego, which are in need of new ones," he said. "This may be the impetus to get one of those done."

For years, it was thought the NFL would seek to stage the 50th Super Bowl in Los Angeles, where the first one was played (but did not sell out) on Jan. 15, 1967. But with no franchise in LA and no suitable stadium projects approved, that hope disappeared.

Next Feb. 2, the game goes outdoors in a cold-weather site for the first time, at MetLife Stadium in the New Jersey Meadowlands. If that gamble pays off for the NFL, look for other cities in similar climates ? Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Chicago, Denver ? to bid for future Super Bowls.

The 2015 game will be played in the Phoenix area.

Earlier Tuesday, owners approved a $200 million loan for stadium construction in Atlanta. The multipurpose stadium could cost as much as $1 billion, with team owner Arthur Blank committed to funding most of it. Blank, speaking at the NFL's spring meetings, called the decision by the team owners an "important milestone" in moving the project forward.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/50th-super-bowl-goes-san-francisco-bay-area-185913921.html

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Tuesday 21 May 2013

Besieged Mexican town cheers arrival of soldiers

Mexican army soldiers enter the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20, 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. A growing number of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Mexican army soldiers enter the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20, 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. A growing number of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Mexican army soldiers enter the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20, 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. Hundreds of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Mexican army soldiers enter the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20, 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. Hundreds of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Local self-defense squads watch as Mexican army soldiers enter the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20, 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. Hundreds of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

A group of armed guards stand with their weapons at the entrance of the town of La Ruana, Michoacan, Mexico, Monday, May 20 2013. Residents of western Mexico towns who endured months besieged by a drug cartel are cheering the arrival of hundreds of Mexican army troops. A growing number of people in the state of Michoacan have taken up arms to defend their villages against drug gangs, a vigilante movement born of frustration at extortion, killings and kidnappings in a region wracked by violence. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

(AP) ? Residents of a western Mexico area who endured months besieged by a drug cartel cheered the arrival of hundreds of Mexican soldiers Monday.

People in La Ruana in Michoacan state lined the main road to greet more than a dozen troop transports and heavily armed Humvees with applause and shouts of joy.

The town's supplies had been blocked after the Knights Templars cartel declared war on the hamlet. The cartel dominates much of the state, demanding extortion payments from businessmen and storeowners, and even low-wage workers.

In February, the town formed self-defense squads to kick the cartel out, drawing the wrath of the gang. Convoys of cartel gunmen attacked the town, which was forced to throw up stone barricades and build guard posts.

Supplies like gasoline, milk and cooking gas began to run low as cartel gunmen threatened to burn any trucks bringing in goods.

On Monday, hundreds of soldiers moved in, erecting checkpoints on the highway leading into La Ruana and setting up an operating base in the town.

"This war has been won!" Hipolito Mora, leader of the self-defense movement, told hundreds of cheering townspeople gathered along the main road, including dozens of self-defense patrol members wearing white T-shirts and carrying shotguns.

Mora said the town had agreed to stop community patrols and let the army take over security in La Ruana. But he said the community would keep its weapons and would start patrols again if the army left.

The idea that troops might come in and seize a town's weapons, or stay only a few weeks, worried people throughout the crime-ridden area. So in town after town along the main highway through Michoacan's hot lowlands known as the Tierra Caliente, self-defense squads welcomed the army's arrival, but vowed to keep their guns.

The highway is littered with the charred hulks of supply trucks, the smoking remains of burned-out sawmills and the fire-blackened walls of fruit warehouses set afire by the Knights Templars cartel in retaliation for the towns' rebellion.

In the nearby town of Buenavista, many of the masked, lightly armed self-defense patrol members manning a highway checkpoint said they welcomed the army ? but vowed to resist any attempts to take their guns.

They hung a banner beside the roadway: "Gentlemen of the federal police and the Mexican army, we would prefer to die at your hands, than at those of these stupid, stinking scum," it said, referring to the cartel.

A healthy dose of skepticism remained about the chances of success for sending the army into Michoacan ? a tactic that then-President Felipe Calderon used to launch his offensive against drug cartels in 2006.

The Michoacan-based Knights Templar is, by all accounts, at least as strong today as its predecessor cartel, the La Familia gang, was in 2006. Instead of attacking the cartel's strongholds in nearby cities like Apatzingan, the troops are fighting a sort of rear-guard action, protecting towns outside the main urban areas without going to the root of the problem.

Rafael Garcia Zamora, mayor of Coalcoman, a town largely cut off from the outside world after it formed its own self-defense force last week, said residents welcomed the arrival of troops, but worried the force might soon leave again and expose the town to the cartel's wrath.

"We don't doubt their ability," he said of the army. "But we need them to help us" root out the criminals and not let the cartel continue to grow.

"The government should have mobilized the army to do this 10 or 12 years ago," Garcia Zamora said.

"We have had temporary raids, with three or four thousand soldiers, but they come and they leave. And you know what? Every time after there is a raid, severed heads show up," he said, referring to drug cartel retaliation against those who help the army.

"People have the courage to speak up, but that has its consequences," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-21-Drug%20War-Mexico/id-5d209e0089184090b2766e9921c8da90

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Myanmar leader making landmark White House visit (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306968918?client_source=feed&format=rss

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'Undercover Angel' singer Alan O'Day dies

Celebs

2 hours ago

Songwriter and singer Alan O'Day, who wrote tunes for such artists as the Righteous Brothers and Helen Reddy, then went on to land his own No. 1 hit in 1977, died at his home in Westwood, Calif. He was 72.

His label, 1st Phase Records, reported his death from cancer on Friday.

"Alan continued to write and perform until his last days," said a statement from the record company. "Alan was a generous man who gave his heart and soul to the music industry."

O'Day first signed with Warner Bros. in 1971 and wrote "Train of Thought" for Cher, "Rock and Roll Heaven" for the Righteous Brothers, and the No. 1 single "Angie Baby" in 1974 for Helen Reddy. Three years after that, he also topped the charts with his own single, "Undercover Angel."

In the next decade he paired with Janis Liebhart to share writing credits on many songs for the "Muppet Babies" cartoons. During his career, his songs were performed by other artists, including Tom Jones, Dusty Springfield and Tony Orlando.

The Hollywood Reporter quoted a statement from O'Day's friend and fellow songwriter Diane Warren: "My dear dear friend and mentor Alan O'Day has passed away. 'If you believe in forever, then life is just a one-night stand. If there's a rock and roll heaven, well you know they've got one hell of a band.' (From Alan's song 'Rock And Roll Heaven'). Well the band just got better. Rest in peace my friend."

He is survived by his wife, Yuka.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/angie-baby-songwriter-undercover-angel-singer-alan-oday-dies-1C9992098

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Monday 20 May 2013

How To Trademark Your Brand | MiSS V INC? We Brand You?

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After a trademark battle with Florida-based cosmetics company Kroma, the Kardashian sisters changed the name of their makeup line from Khroma Beauty to Kardashian Beauty.

The name of Kourtney, Khloe and Kim Kardashian?s new makeup line was recently tangled up in a legal battle.

It was a beauty battle for a name and the Kardashians lost.

Sisters Kourtney, Kim and Khloe renamed their Khroma Beauty line to Kardashian Beauty after nearly a yearlong trademark battle with a Florida cosmetics company similarly named Kroma.

The brand is managed by Santa Monica, a California based Boldface Licensing and Branding firm. It will be allowed to sell out its existing products under the Khroma name.

Boldface will pay about USD 5 million in royalties to Lee Tillet Inc that owns Kroma Makeup.

?We?re confident that it?s not the name that matters to our fans, but the Kardashian sisters? commitment to making this line a true reflection of their love for cosmetics, said Nicole Ostoya, Boldface?s chief executive officer.

Trouble for the reality star sisters began last June, when Kroma sent a cease-and-desist letter, demanding the Kardashians drop the Khroma name.

Boldface responded by filing suit against Kroma, seeking affirmation their name was not a trademark infringement. Kroma countersued, claiming the Kardashians? brand was costing them millions in lost sales.

Here is advice on how to correctly ?trademark and protect your brand legally to avoid the same pit falls as the Kardasians.

While the best defense against copycat competitors is to stay ahead of them with a continuous stream of innovative, highly differentiated, and superior products and services, it is equally important to seek as much legal protection as possible for your brand.

Trademark Law
As a brand steward, you must be aware of the laws under which legal protection is available.? First, trademark law protects a brand?s identity.? That is, it protects names, titles, taglines, slogans, logos, other designs, product shapes, sounds, smells, colors or any other features that distinguish one source of products or services from another. Trademarks that protect services are often called service marks (?SM?).? There are also ?collective membership marks? (Boy Scouts of America) and ?certification marks? (UL approved).

Trademarks, like brands, build in strength over time.? The test for trademark infringement is ?confusing similarity.?? Put another way, if the average consumer believes both products to have come from the same source, there is infringement. Obviously, the more a consumer is familiar with a particular brand, the more defendable its mark.? That?s why it behooves a company to do the following:

?choose a distinctive mark, including a ?coined? name. (brand names range from generic and descriptive to suggestive and arbitrary or fanciful (?coined?).? Obviously it takes longer to build meaning for ?coined? names, but they are also more distinctive and easiest to protect legally.? Kodak, Xerox, and Exxon fall in that category.? Suggestive marks are the next most protectable.? Examples include Coppertone, Duracell, and Lestoil.? Even common words can be used as trademarks as long as they are not used descriptively.? These common words/phrases are also suggestive marks: Amazon (big), Road Runner (fast) and Apple (different, offbeat).? Descriptive marks are not protectable unless the brand creates a secondary meaning for the word.? Examples include Weight Watchers, Rollerblade, and Wite-out.? Generic marks, such as Shredded Wheat and Super Glue, are not protectable at all.)

?? ? avoid geographic names as a part of your mark ? they can be the basis of trademark refusal
?? ? register the mark
?? ? be consistent in its use of the mark
?? ? create strong trade dress (mentioned below)
?? ? widely advertise and distribute its trademarked products
?? ? do all of this over a long period of time.

Because the strength of a mark is dependant upon consumers? familiarity with it, it is much easier for a competitor to neutralize your mark soon after it has been introduced than after it has been in use for a long period of time.

Courts use the following tests to determine infringement:
?? ? strength of the trademark claiming infringement
?? ? similarity of the two marks
?? ? evidence of consumer confusion
?? ? care a consumer takes in comparing products
?? ? intent of the organization in using the potentially infringing mark. (Some drug and grocery stores have used generic brands that emulate a leading brand?s package shape, colors, typestyle, formulation, etc. side-by-side with the leading brand to imply that there are no differences between the two, encouraging consumers to purchase the lower priced generic item.? In this situation, there is clearly intent to emulate the leading brand and reduce the perceived differentiation and value advantage of that brand, but it is not clear that there is intent to deliberately cause confusion as to source.)
?? ? relatedness of the two businesses
?? ? overlap between communication and distribution channels

By using the mark in association with your products and services over time, you gain trademark protection.? Registering your mark (marks can be registered at the state and federal levels) provides additional protection. While common law and federal trademark statute protect an unregistered mark, registering your mark transfers the burden of proof to the second comer in challenging a mark?s registration.? With federal registration, you can sue infringers in Federal court.? Also, after five years of registration, the mark becomes incontestable.? Federal trademark registrations last ten years and can be renewed every ten years ad infinitum.

You can acquire trademark rights in one of two ways.? To acquire trademark rights based on use in commerce, you must be the first person or organization that uses the mark in conjunction with the products or services for which trademark protection is sought.? To acquire the mark base upon intent to use, you must apply to register the mark through the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Before choosing a trademark, first conduct a simple search to weed out marks that are not available.? This search can be done online for free.? (See online resources at the end of this chapter.)? After that, for the remaining candidates, conduct a full search through a law firm specializing in trademark law or an experienced trademark search firm.

Strong brands run the danger of becoming category descriptors.? Always use trademarks as adjectives, not verb or nouns.? If your brand is in danger of becoming a category descriptor, consider talking about your brand in the following way: ?Jell-O? gelatin,? ?Kleenex? facial tissue? and ?Xerox? photocopier? to differentiate the brand from the category.

?

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Source:?

Source: http://www.missvinc.com/?p=1789

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Tunisia security blocks salafi conference

A Tunisian security officer stands guard in the city of Kairouan where ultraconservative Islamic group, Ansar al-Shariah's, annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

A Tunisian security officer stands guard in the city of Kairouan where ultraconservative Islamic group, Ansar al-Shariah's, annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

A Tunisian security officer stands guard in the city of Kairouan where ultraconservative Islamic group, Ansar al-Shariah's, annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

Tunisian security officers stand guard, in the city of Kairouan, where ultraconservative Islamic group Ansar al-Shariah's annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

Tunisian security officers check vehicles in the city of Kairouan where ultraconservative Islamic group, Ansar al-Shariah's, annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

Tunisian security officers stand guard in the city of Kairouan where ultraconservative Islamic group, Ansar al-Shariah's, annual conference was supposed to be held, Sunday May 19, 2013. A massive Tunisian security presence has surrounded the country?s main religious center of Kairouan and prevented hardline Muslims from holding their annual gathering. Some 11,000 police surrounded the city this weekend and patrolled inside to prevent the conference from taking place because ?of the threat it represented to security and public order.? (AP Photo/ Amine Landoulsi)

(AP) ? Massive numbers of Tunisian police and army surrounded Tunisia's religious center of Kairouan to prevent a conference by a radical Islamist movement that has been implicated in attacks around the country.

Security check points on the roads and patrols inside the city by some 11,000 police and soldiers prevented the ultraconservative Muslim group Ansar al-Shariah from holding its annual conference after authorities declared it a threat "to security and public order."

Police did briefly scuffle with stone throwing young men in downtown and fired tear gas to disperse them.

The leader of Ansar al-Shariah, Seifallah Ben Hassine is wanted for his involvement in a mob attack on the U.S. embassy in September and his followers have been accused of attacking art galleries, police stations and cinemas.

The robust response to the conference by security forces is unprecedented since the 2011 overthrow of President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, who presided over a strong police state.

The government, led by the moderate Islamist Ennahda Party, has long been accused by the opposition of being lax with attacks by ultraconservative Muslims, called salafis, on what they deem to be impious in the country.

Ansar al-Shariah's combative rhetoric, however, appears to have united the country against it. In a national dialogue conference involving unions, civil society and political parties Thursday, Ansar al-Shariah was widely condemned.

The spokesman of Ansar al-Shariah, Seifeddine Rais, was detained by authorities Sunday morning and an attempt by members to hold a rally in a lower income Tunisian suburb was also dispersed by tear gas.

Rais on Thursday said that the authorities would bear responsibility for any blood spilled if they tried to ban the conference.

Security has been high around Kairouan since Saturday, with police checking IDs and searching the cars of anyone entering the city.

Residents appeared to welcome the security and handed out roses to patrolling police, offering their encouragement.

Since the overthrow of Ben Ali in an uprising that heralded the region-wide Arab Spring, Tunisia's salafis have become increasingly aggressive about preaching their conservative version of Islam.

Last year's Ansar al-Shariah conference in Kairouan drew some 4,000 attendees and featured sword waving horse riders and martial arts displays, along with a great deal of fiery rhetoric.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-19-Tunisia-Salafis/id-881a3807fc1e405eb7724505f2bdfbe2

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Hofstra graduates honor student killed by police

MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) ? Students at Hofstra University wore white ribbons at their graduation ceremony to honor a fellow student who was accidentally killed by a police officer tackling an armed intruder.

Sunday's ceremony came two days after Andrea Rebello died when the masked man entered her off-campus home on Long Island.

A police officer aiming at the would-be robber opened fire, hitting the 21-year-old college junior as well as the ex-convict who had entered the house.

On Saturday evening, flags on campus were at half-staff and students held a silent outdoor in front of a photo of the young woman. Surrounded by candles and flowers, they sang "Ave Maria."

Rebello's funeral is scheduled for Wednesday in Sleepy Hollow, which is in Westchester County.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hofstra-graduates-honor-student-killed-police-161643997.html

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Sunday 19 May 2013

PFT: Pre-draft fears about Gronk coming true

MooreAP

On Monday, the Broncos will practice for the first time as a team since capping a stellar regular season with an epic postseason collapse, thanks to a 70-yard touchdown pass that allowed the Ravens to force overtime.

The throw from Joe Flacco landed in the hands of Jacoby Jones because Denver safety Rahim Moore jumped too soon and flailed clumsily at the ball.? After, of course, Moore allowed Jones to run right past the safety.

But the Broncos are still sticking with Moore.? From coaches to players, Moore has been absolved of responsibility.

?I think he?s over it; I think we?re all over it, you know,? Denver defensive coordinator Jack Del Rio told the Associated Press.? ?I think we all look back and see things that we could have done better.?

Linebacker Von Miller take responsibility for not getting to Flacco before he could launch the desperation pass.

?Rahim made a few key tackles that day. He was all over the place. It was just a football folly,? Miller said. ?I don?t blame Rahim.? I blame me and Elvis [Dumervil]: 70 yards to go, we know they?re going to pass the ball.? That?s why they bring me and Elvis to close the game out and neither of us got to the quarterback.? I took it hard.?

Coach John Fox and executive V.P. of football operations John Elway both believe that Moore?s better days are in front of him.

?Rahim?s focus is on getting better from a year ago,? Fox said. ?And there wasn?t one play.? It was a whole season.? He made great, great progress a year ago from his rookie year and we anticipate him to do that again.? He?s a very talented young man.?

?[H]e made tremendous strides from Year One to Year Two,? executive V.P. of football operations John Elway said.? ?And I think hopefully he makes those same strides.? He really had a good year last year and we want to watch him to continue to grow.? Safety-wise, we feel pretty good.?

But not good enough to resist kicking the tires of Charles Woodson.

While there?s no reason for the Broncos to bail on a second-round pick in the 2011 draft, Moore?s ability to forget after having months to stew will be critical to whether he can continue to play at a high level ? and to keep getting better.

If he does, last year?s gaffe will become a distant memory.? A very bad, awful memory, but distant nonetheless.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/18/pre-draft-gronkowski-concerns-could-be-coming-to-fruition/related/

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Danger and separation from families changing job of U.S. diplomats

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When the Yemen-based branch of al Qaeda placed a bounty on her husband's head, Mary Feierstein learned of it from a friend who called and said, "You must be a mess!"

U.S. Ambassador Gerald Feierstein was thousands of miles (km) away at the U.S. Embassy in Sanaa, without his wife and family on what is called an "unaccompanied" posting.

He is one of more than a thousand U.S. diplomats on such tours of duty in danger spots around the world, part of a trend that is changing the definition of being a diplomat.

Over time, his wife has learned to stay calm when the phone rings unexpectedly at her home outside Washington. For nearly five years, she has not lived in the same country as her husband, a career diplomat who specializes in the Middle East and South Asia.

After militants stormed the U.S. Embassy in Yemen last September, breaking through to the inner building and ripping plaques and lettering from the walls, Feierstein called his wife to tell her he was OK.

He had also called her a few years earlier when he was based in Islamabad, Pakistan, and a bomb went off near his residence. He was unhurt in that attack.

But when Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula - considered by U.S. officials to be al Qaeda's most dangerous affiliate - offered 3 kg of gold last December for the killing of Feierstein, it was Mary's turn to call her husband. He played down the danger.

"He said it was old news. They are constantly under threat, you know," Mary Feierstein said in her first media interview since the threat.

After a police officer came to her home to give her his card and tell her to call him if she needed any help, "that's when I got scared," Feierstein said.

The new perils for foreign service officers were spotlighted last September 11, when militants overran the temporary U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, killing four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens. Two other U.S. diplomats were killed in Afghanistan in the past year.

President Barack Obama, still grappling with controversy over the Benghazi attack, called on Congress on Friday to fully fund his $4 billion embassy security budget request.

In a memorial ceremony earlier this month at the State Department, Vice President Joe Biden said that diplomats "take risks that sometimes exceed those of the women and men in uniform."

Honored along with Stevens were Sean Patrick Smith, Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty, who died in Benghazi; and foreign service officers Anne Smedinghoff and Ragaei Said Abdelfattah, killed in Afghanistan in 2013 and 2012.

FIVE-FOLD INCREASE IN UNACCOMPANIED DIPLOMATS

The State Department says there are about 1,100 U.S. foreign service officers now at posts abroad where they are unaccompanied or there are limits on who can accompany them - usually meaning no children.

That is a five-fold increase in unaccompanied American diplomats over the past decade, and represents about 14 percent of U.S. foreign service officers serving overseas.

The change began with "civilian surges" into the war zones of Iraq and Afghanistan to help with stabilization and reconstruction. Over 400 unaccompanied diplomats are in those countries.

Then, the Arab Spring uprisings starting in 2011 added many unstable countries to the list where the State Department did not want to send families.

The fluctuating list now includes Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya and Tunisia, as well as the new African state of South Sudan, the State Department said.

The U.S. embassies in Algeria, Sudan and Lebanon are in the "limited accompanied" category as is the U.S. Consulate in Mexico's third-largest city, Monterrey, a focal point for drug-related violence.

The risks to diplomats are not all external. A 2007 State Department survey said 17 percent of employees who had served in dangerous posts indicated some symptoms similar to those of post-traumatic stress disorder. The department, following the military's lead, has set up a program to help diagnose and treat PTSD in its employees.

Mary Feierstein realized she was one of an expanding group of left-behind relatives when she started attending the year-end holiday parties the State Department throws for them, and noticed the crowd getting bigger every year.

She also noticed a lot of small children at those parties, and admitted to thinking, "At least my kids are grown." Her children, two daughters and a son, are all in their 20s. Her son has served two tours of duty with the Marines in Iraq.

Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attended the holiday parties, at which some of the unaccompanied diplomats were Skyped in from abroad. Feierstein said she thought Obama should attend too.

The president did call Gerald Feierstein to thank him for his service after the Yemen embassy was attacked last September 13, two days after the Benghazi assaults.

'NEW NORM'

The United States used to be quicker to evacuate its embassies and consulates when dangers arose, said Susan Johnson, president of the American Foreign Service Association, the official union representing the Foreign Service.

These days, Washington tries to manage risks by building up the physical security of posts and increasing diplomatic security personnel, she said.

"In the process, we seem to have built a new level of tolerance for the amount of risk our diplomats face," Johnson said, adding that unaccompanied tours were increasingly becoming "a new norm."

There is pressure on diplomats to do the dangerous tours in order to advance. It is perceived to be "almost mandatory" to serve at an unaccompanied post and "punch that ticket" during a Foreign Service career, she said.

The State Department said 20 percent of its current employees had served in Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan.

The department offers incentives such as danger pay and shorter tours. Unaccompanied posts can be just 12 months, with several breaks, and families can often be left behind at a previous post to minimize disruption.

The State Department has made considerable progress in supporting employees in unaccompanied posts, its inspector general said in a 2010 report. Still, it said, "many returnees experience problems adjusting to their follow-on assignments," and more counseling services may be needed.

Mary Feierstein was born in Pakistan and met her husband on his first tour there in the 1970s. She said he was one of some "really tough people" that the State Department keeps cycling through stressful, dangerous posts.

Gerald Feierstein served in Lebanon unaccompanied in 2003 and 2004, then returned to Washington for a few years and was a senior official in the State Department's counterterrorism office.

He was sent to Pakistan for the third time in his career in 2008, as deputy chief of mission in Islamabad. His family stayed in the United States. In September 2010, Feierstein went to Yemen, again without his family.

"We were planning to go later. ... After the Arab Spring, we haven't been able to go there at all," Mary Feierstein said.

At home, she volunteers for the local Democratic Party and supports causes like gun control. She last saw her husband in March.

While tired of the separation, she said she felt sorrier for her children, even though they are grown. "They miss him so much. They are so happy when he comes home."

(Editing by Warren Strobel and Peter Cooney)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/danger-separation-families-changing-job-u-diplomats-052021750.html

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Saturday 18 May 2013

Hangouts Easter Eggs put dinos and ponies in your chat

Hangouts Easter Eggs put dinos and ponies in your chat

If the 850 hand-drawn emoji included in Hangouts aren't enough for you, we've got some good news -- there's a small collection of Easter Eggs that add even more whimsy to your discussions. The commands are mostly initiated with an IRC-like "/" followed by certain words. For example "/ponies" sends a colorful little filly prancing across your window. There's also "/ponystream" which overruns your chat with young horses. Of course, you can also punch in the Konami code (if you don't know what that is by now, there's no hope for you) which will change your background to pleasant drawing of a mountain and a tree. Sadly, that one is only visible to the person doing the typing. So far we're having mixed results with the web interface for Hangouts and the commands don't work on the mobile version. But in the Chrome app, everything is golden.

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Via: Droid Life

Source: Moritz Tolxdorff (Google+)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/17/hangouts-easter-eggs/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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CSN: Nolan Ryan's son named Astros president

Nolan Ryan's son, Reid Ryan, has been named the next president of the Houston Astros on Friday.

George Postolos stepped down as the Astros president and CEO on Monday and Reid Ryan?s name surfaced late Wednesday night as a possible candidate.

Ryan was introduced in a news conference Friday.

Tal Smith, who was Astros team president from 1994-Nov. 2011 and spent more than 30 years as a baseball executive with the Astros feels adding Ryan is a solid move.

?A great choice,? said Smith. ?He?s been around the game his entire life and he?s accomplished in his own right. It?s good to have the Ryan name associated with the Astros again.?

Smith is currently a special adviser to the Sugar Land Skeeters.

?He?s personable and he can appeal to both fans and sponsors alike,? said Smith. ?And it will go a long way in mending fences.?

Ryan is credited with the idea of creating the Round Rock Express and Corpus Christi Hooks baseball clubs. He is actively involved in both serving as Founder and CEO for both the Express (Rangers)?and the Hooks (Astros).

Ryan also serves on the executive committee of the Pacific Coast League, on the Board of Trustees for Minor League Baseball and is the Board of Trustees representative for the Baseball Internet Rights Company (BIRCO).

Source: http://www.csnhouston.com/blog/astros-talk/reid-ryan-named-astros-president

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Idaho man heads to court after terrorism arrest

Federal authorities search an apartment in Boise, Idaho on Cassia Drive on Thursday afternoon, May 16 2013. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. Fazliddin Kurbanov, 30, was arrested at an apartment complex in south Boise on Thursday morning after a grand jury issued a three-count indictment as part of an investigation into his activities in Idaho and Utah. (AP Photo/The Idaho Statesman, Joe Jaszewski)

Federal authorities search an apartment in Boise, Idaho on Cassia Drive on Thursday afternoon, May 16 2013. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. Fazliddin Kurbanov, 30, was arrested at an apartment complex in south Boise on Thursday morning after a grand jury issued a three-count indictment as part of an investigation into his activities in Idaho and Utah. (AP Photo/The Idaho Statesman, Joe Jaszewski)

U.S. Attorney David B. Barlow, of Utah, walks off following an interview at his office Thursday, May 16, 2013, in Salt Lake City. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested Fazliddin Kurbanov, a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

U.S. Attorney David B. Barlow, of Utah, speaks during an interview at his office Thursday, May 16, 2013, in Salt Lake City. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested Fazliddin Kurbanov, a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Federal authorities search an apartment in Boise, Idaho on Cassia Drive on Thursday afternoon, May 16 2013. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. Fazliddin Kurbanov, 30, was arrested at an apartment complex in south Boise on Thursday morning after a grand jury issued a three-count indictment as part of an investigation into his activities in Idaho and Utah. (AP Photo/The Idaho Statesman, Joe Jaszewski)

Federal authorities search an apartment in Boise, Idaho on Cassia Drive on Thursday afternoon, May 16 2013. U.S. authorities in Idaho said they have arrested a man from Uzbekistan accused of conspiring with a designated terrorist organization in his home country and helping scheme to use a weapon of mass destruction. Fazliddin Kurbanov, 30, was arrested at an apartment complex in south Boise on Thursday morning after a grand jury issued a three-count indictment as part of an investigation into his activities in Idaho and Utah. (AP Photo/The Idaho Statesman, Joe Jaszewski)

(AP) ? An Uzbekistan national living in Idaho has been arrested on federal charges that he gave support, cash and other resources to help a recognized terrorist group in his home country plan a terrorist attack.

Fazliddin Kurbanov, 30, is expected to make his first appearance in U.S. District Court Friday morning, one day after federal agents arrested him during a raid of his small Boise apartment.

Kurbanov was arrested after an extensive investigation into his activities in Idaho and Utah late last year and this year. A federal grand jury indictment charges Kurbanov with one count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, and one count of conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists and possession of an unregistered explosive device.

A separate federal grand jury in Utah also returned an indictment charging Kurbanov with distributing information about explosives, bombs and weapons of mass destruction.

Wendy Olson, the U.S. attorney in Idaho, said Kurbanov is the only person charged, and any potential threat was contained by his arrest.

"He was closely monitored during the course of the investigation," she said. "The investigation has been underway for some time."

Olson declined to share any specifics of Kurbanov's alleged activities, including whether any potential terrorist threat or targets were domestic or abroad.

A statement from the U.S. attorney's office said Kurbanov is in the United States legally, but Olson declined to give specific details about his immigration status.

It was unclear when he moved to Idaho or the extent of his activities in Utah. An Idaho telephone number registered to Kurbanov has been disconnected.

The Idaho indictment alleges that between August 2012 and May 2013, Kurbanov knowingly conspired with others to provide support and resources, including computer software and money, to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which the U.S. has identified as a terrorist organization. The group's purpose is to overthrow the government of Uzbekistan, said David B. Barlow, U.S. attorney in Utah.

The alleged co-conspirators were not named.

In count two, the indictment alleges Kurbanov provided material support to terrorists, knowing that the help was to be used in preparation for a plot involving the use of a weapon of mass destruction.

The indictment also alleges that on Nov. 15, 2012, Kurbanov possessed an explosive device, consisting of a series of parts intended to be converted into a bomb. Those parts included a hollow hand grenade, a hobby fuse, aluminum powder, potassium nitrate and sulfur.

Meanwhile, in Utah, federal investigators said that for a 10-day period in January 2013, Kurbanov taught and demonstrated how to make an "explosive, destructive device, and weapon of mass destruction."

The grand jury alleges that Kurbanov provided written recipes for how to make improvised explosive devices and went on instructional shopping trips in Utah showing what items are necessary to buy to make the devices, Barlow said. Kurbanov also showed Internet videos on the topic, Barlow said.

The prosecutor declined to say whom Kurbanov took on the shopping trips in Utah but said that information will come out as the case moves through the courts.

The indictment from Utah also alleges that Kurbanov intended that the videos, recipes, instructions and shopping trips be used to make an explosive device for the "bombings of a place of public use, public transportation system, and infrastructure facility."

The arrest, Barlow said, shows that "there is no priority that is more important than the protection of the public and the prevention and disruption of alleged terrorist activities ? wherever they might occur."

According to Idaho's court system, Kurbanov has no criminal convictions but was ticketed for speeding violations twice in 2012 ? once in October, when he paid a $90 fine, and another instance in May when he paid $85.

___

Associated Press writers John Miller in Boise and Brady McCombs in Salt Lake City contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-05-17-Terrorism%20Charges-Idaho/id-08ef2595e3cf431eb0a03d0ab94fe338

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Friday 17 May 2013

Chris Brown Rests Face on Naked Karrueche Tran A$$, Wishes Her Happy Birthday

Source:

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Water Trapped For 1.5 Billion Years Could Hold Ancient Life

This map, from the United States Geological Survey, shows the age of bedrock in different regions of North America. Scientists found ancient water in bedrock north of Lake Superior. This region, colored red, was formed more than 2.5 billion years ago.

United States Geological Survey

This map, from the United States Geological Survey, shows the age of bedrock in different regions of North America. Scientists found ancient water in bedrock north of Lake Superior. This region, colored red, was formed more than 2.5 billion years ago.

United States Geological Survey

Scientists have discovered water that has been trapped in rock for more than a billion years. The water might contain microbes that evolved independently from the surface world, and it's a finding that gives new hope to the search for life on other planets.

The water samples came from holes drilled by gold miners near the small town of Timmins, Ontario, about 350 miles north of Toronto. Deep in the Canadian bedrock, miners drill holes and collect samples. Sometimes they hit pay dirt; sometimes they hit water, which seeps out from tiny crevices in the rock.

Recently, a team of scientists (who had been investigating water samples from other mines) approached the miners and asked them for fluid from newly drilled boreholes.

Greg Holland, a geochemist at Lancaster University in England, and his colleagues wanted to know just how long that fluid had been trapped in the rock. So they looked at the decay of radioactive atoms found in the water and calculated that it had been bottled up for a long time ? at least 1.5 billion years.

"That is the lower limit for the age," Holland says. It could be a billion years older. That means the water was sealed in the rock before humans evolved, before pterosaurs flew and before multicellular life.

As Holland announced this week in the journal Nature, this is the oldest cache of water ever found.

But how did it end up underneath that gold mine in northeastern Canada? Where did it come from?

"The fluids that we see now are actually preservations of ancient oceans," Holland says.

About 2.7 billion years ago, the landscape of small-town Timmins looked a bit different. Beneath prehistoric seas, tectonic plates were spreading, and magma was welling up to form new rock. As the rock matured under heat and pressure, water was trapped inside tiny cracks.

The rock drifted around the globe for eons, helping form continents and mountain ranges, and all the while it kept its cargo of water sealed up tight inside.

"It's managed to stay isolated for almost half the lifetime of the Earth," Holland says. It's a time capsule. And it doesn't just hold water. "There's a lot of hydrogen in these samples."

That's significant because hydrogen is food for some microorganisms. Hydrogen-eating microbes have been found deep in the ocean and in South African mines where chemical reactions in the rock produce a steady supply of hydrogen.

Mars, seen in this composite image, has a lot of water in its polar ice caps. If water is also trapped in the planet's crust, experts say, it could house microbial life.

NASA/JPL

Mars, seen in this composite image, has a lot of water in its polar ice caps. If water is also trapped in the planet's crust, experts say, it could house microbial life.

NASA/JPL

And that hydrogen, says Holland, "could provide the energy for life to survive in isolation for 2 billion years."

Holland's colleagues are now testing the water samples for evidence of microbes. They hope to have results within a year. If life is found, it would have evolved distinctly from the surface world and might give a unique insight into the earliest forms of life on Earth. Its discovery would also give hope to people searching for life in places that are even more remote.

Carol Stoker, a research scientist with NASA, is focused on searching for life on Mars.

"If you go back to the very early history of Earth and Mars, sort of the first billion years after the surfaces cooled, Earth and Mars looked very similar," Stoker says.

Both planets had vast surface oceans and thick atmospheres ? they were good places for life to begin. On Earth, it did.

"The logic is if that happened on Earth, why shouldn't it have happened on Mars?" she says.

As Mars got colder and drier, surface life would have died off. But Martian microbes might still survive deep in the planet's crust ? preserved in isolated pockets of water, just like the ones found in Canadian bedrock.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/05/16/183950854/water-trapped-for-1-5-billion-years-could-hold-ancient-life?ft=1&f=1007

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Better Business Bureau Alerts Consumers About Travel Discount ...

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').addClass('pl-'+video.id).addClass('row-fluid').attr('style', 'padding-bottom:4px; margin:0px;').append( $('

' ).find('a').click(function() { if($(document).data('first')) { $(document).data('second', true); } g_anvato_objects['tabbedplayerembed'].loadVideo(video.id, 24, 'GRTV'); $('.playlist_item').removeClass('current'); $('.pl-'+video.id).addClass('current'); $('.rec-'+video.id).addClass('current'); }).append( $('

').text(video.title) ) ) ) ) }); $('#tabbed-vod-player').attr('style', ''); $('#tabbed-vod-player').removeClass(); $('.pl-'+id+' a').click(); $(document).data('first', true); } function change_video(vidid,playerid,mcpid) { g_anvato_objects['playerembed'].loadVideo(vidid,playerid,mcpid); }

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The Better Business Bureau is expressing concerns about a company claiming to offer discounted travel packages after customers have complained about not receiving what they purchased.

A spokeswoman for the Better Business Bureau is not calling Omaha Travel a scam, but she said the company is at least being dishonest with consumers.

"They are falsely claiming to be BBB accredited, which we want to make sure consumers understand they are not," said Robbie Namee, a Better Business Bureau spokeswoman.

That is just one of the problems Namee's organization has with Omaha Travel.

The company claims to offer great travel deals. For example, it's website boasts travel packages to Italy that start at just $35. However, consumers are running into problems other than hidden fees, Namee said.

"They're not honoring their promises," she said. "On refunds, they're saying that the consumers didn't follow their procedures properly, so they're throwing it back on the consumer."

Two Better Business Bureau Investigators recently attended an event hosted by Omaha Travel. Namee said company representatives were unable to answer some of their questions.

"Who owns the company? When was the company started? Basic information," Namee said.

Most web search engines do not return results for Omaha Travel. The website, omaha-travel.com, does not include a business address. According to a Better Business Bureau consumer alert, past address provided by Omaha Travel have proven to be phony.

A call Wednesday to the customer service phone number listed on the Omaha Travel website was answered by an automated message sending the caller to a voicemail box. A message sent to the company's customer service e-mail has not been answered.

Namee said anybody looking for good travel deals should begin the search close to home with local travel agents.

"I think it's always good to stick with your community and do business within the community," she said. "I think that's important."

Source: http://www.kake.com/home/headlines/Better-Business-Bureau-Alerts-Consumers-About-Travel-Discount-Website-207653831.html

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Two mayors in South Florida set to face off in MMA bout for charity

Mayors in competing cities often place bets when there sports teams face off. Quite often, they offer the city's signature foods and gifts. For this year's Super Bowl, the San Francisco mayor spent a day in service in Baltimore after the Ravens won. But two mayors in south Florida are upending that tradition. They'll be the ones competing.

Carlos Hernandez, the mayor of Hialeah, and Michael Pizzi, the mayor of Miami Lakes, plan to square off for charity. It started as a discussion over dinner -- and a few drinks -- over who could beat each other up. It snowballed from there.

Hernandez, 52, says he has trained with the Gracies, one of MMA's most important families. Pizzi has another plan.

"Carlos is an athlete into aerobics," Pizzi said to MMA Junkie. "I'm of the Tank Abbott (and) Roy Nelson school of training, which is have a six-pack of beer, get off a bar stool and knock the guy out in the first three punches."

While Nelson does like to show off his belly, he's in a bit better shape than Pizzi says.

The two mayors haven't set a date for the bout yet as they are still looking for a promoter. The Miami Herald reports the fight will take place in Hernandez's home turf of Hialeah. Money they raise from the bout will go to programs benefiting children in each mayor's city.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/two-mayors-south-florida-set-face-off-mma-150241953.html

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Hands-on with Hangouts, Google's first step towards unified messaging

Hangouts

Lots of great new features, but this may not be the unified messaging service some hoped for

We've heard a whole lot about "Hangouts" as a headline feature of Google+ since its launch, but Google is repurposing that branding today for its latest group chat service. There was a whole lot of crazy speculation and expectation leading up to Google I/O about a unified messaging platform from Google, and unfortunately Hangouts just isn't that service quite yet. As if Hangouts coming to phones as an update to the Google Talk app wasn't a good indication, this is more of an instant messaging client then an all-encompassing messaging service.

That being said, if you and the people you talk to most are all-in with Google, this update just gave you a whole bunch of new features. Read on with us past the break for a little introduction to Hangouts, Google's next step in messaging.

More: Android Central @ Google I/O 2013

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/QukZk2RdKlM/story01.htm

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Thursday 16 May 2013

The Top Ten Cover Letter Fails Ever (as defined arbitrarily by yours ...

Fail RoadDepending on who you ask, sending a cover letter for a job application is either outdated and hopelessly dumb or is the defining factor for whether you get the job. Of course, if your cover letter looks like one of the ten atrocious ones below, you?ll probably agree with those who hold the former opinion.

I?ve been collecting my favorite examples of egregious cover letters for years. From simple yet unfortunate typos to bigger issues, these ten, culled from the Web and from applications I?ve received, are among the worst of the worst.

?


#10: I sh*t you not
I?m looking for work because even though my company was profitable last year, this year they are expecting a large defecate.

Sent to ad agency Killian Branding, this line underscores why you should never rely on spell-check to proofread your letters. Have a friend look over your work before you send it off.

?


#9: I prefer oysters, myself
Other skills I?ve learned are, being a proficient multi-tasker, handling detailed oriented documents with care, handling stressful situations with a clam demeanor, and joggling different projects with time management.

Another lesson for would-be hires: TELLING about your skills is much less effective than showing them. In this case, this supposedly detail-oriented applicant made at least four mistakes in one sentence, depending on how you count, undermining his or her own claims. (Source)

?


#8: This was for a job that specifically said the hire must be based in Washington, D.C.
My name is [redacted] and I was hoping I could still submit and work remotely, as I never lived or be in DC. Please look at my resume and accomplishments to see that I have excellent expertise working on my own with no supervision.

While some say you may have nothing to lose by applying when you clearly don?t meet the most basic qualifications of skills, experience, or in this case geography, you also have very little to gain by ignoring explicit instructions. This letter came in for a job I posted and went straight into the trash.

?


#7: Same job, different applicant.
Hello from California?

Are you even reading the ad?

?


#6: Is this a job application or a romance novel?
Taking notes and pictures on the floor of the Senate Finance Committee boardroom with an H&M skirt daintily covering my folded legs. This is Tim Geithner?s third testimony on the Hill this week alone, and his eyes dart around the room more than usual? It is at this moment I realize that reporting and I were meant to be. He has had his practice, I have had mine ? and it all comes down to this moment.

From our friends at FishbowlDC?I have no words.

?


#5: 35 pull-ups? You?re hired!
I continually challenge myself?that semester I achieved a 3.93, and in the same time I managed to bench double my bodyweight and do 35 pull-ups.

This letter went viral over a year ago and I still can?t figure out what pull-ups have to do with investment banking.

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#4: A letter from a prominent undergrad
I am a prominent undergraduate student in the communication studies department here, and from time to time even assist graduate students with brainstorming and analysis.

What does that even mean? The folks at Ragan couldn?t really figure it out either. It looks like a new grad trying to make up for a lack of experience. She?d have been better served to focus on her internships (she had one at a local radio station); this padding didn?t impress Ragan.

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#3: Another entry in the ?novel rather than cover letter? category
In every regard, my qualifications appear to be consistent with the desires expressed by your advertisement, and based on the voice of the Business Insider blogs and my critical evaluation of your newsroom and its inhabitants, I really think that I was meant to be a Contributors Editor for Business Insider.

Yep, someone sent this to BI. The BI of short, Huffington Post-esque slideshows and somewhat breathless writing about the stock market? Yeah, they?re going to love someone who writes the purplest prose this side of Bulwer-Lytton. Takeaway: Know your audience. And remember Mark Twain?s quip about never using a ?five-dollar word? when a cheaper one will serve the same purpose.

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#2: Who are you? Is this enterprise ashamed of itself?
Craigslist advises against providing personal information to anonymous posters, especially those using only a CL e-address.? Common sense concurs.? Why the secrecy?? Who are you?? Is this enterprise ashamed of itself, or ashamed that it?s seeking writing help??If you?re paying professional rates for professional work;
If you?re adults;
If you?re funded, and not secretive about it
?then please reply with contact information and some of the kinds of information you had to present to get funded.? I?ll be glad to reply with a CV and examples of work published or aired.?
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Every good wish,
[redacted]?

This was sent, perhaps obviously, to an anonymous Craigslist job ad for freelance contributors. Look, I get it. Anonymous job ads are ridiculous; freelancers do often get the short end of the stick. But starting the relationship out on a combative note is not going to make you any friends. And I love the ?every good wish? at the end. It?s like ordering a diet Coke to go with your Big Mac: pointless.

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And the number-one cover letter fail of all time:
#1: ?I wish to?appeal to your irrational masculine avatar?

Say what? This would-be law clerk?s letter is shocking in so many ways and it?s stuff like this that makes hiring managers say they?d rather not get a letter at all. With lines like ?My homogeneous person was slapped right in the face? and ?Hubris, however, was the only Greek concept I truly evinced during a near-graduation retrospection of my college years,? how could this guy not get hired? Listen. We media folk (and sometimes law clerks) have to emphasize storytelling in our cover letters. But the stories have to say something. All this one says, once you strip out the BS, is ?I went to college, graduated, and went to law school. Now I need a job.? Good one, buddy. As the original poster says, the best line of the letter may just be, ?I am extremely self aware.?

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Do you need help with your cover letter and want to avoid seeing yourself on one of these lists? Funny you should ask; I?ve written an e-book on cover letters for media pros. It?s on Amazon for your Kindle/tablet/phone/computer or on iTunes for your iPad. At $6.99, it?s not super expensive. You might like it!

Source: http://www.mediabistro.com/mediajobsdaily/the-top-ten-cover-letter-fails-ever-as-defined-arbitrarily-by-yours-truly-mjd-blogger_b14628

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