Saturday, 18 May 2013

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

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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

read more

    


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.

?


#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.

?


#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.

?


#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.?
?
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.

?


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.?

?

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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