Sunday, July 14, 2013

College Basketball: Mississippi Valley State Head Coach Suspended Indefinitely

Mississippi Valley State University suspended men's basketball head coach Chico Potts indefinitely on Friday, pending an investigation into his arrest earlier this month for domestic violence charges.

Assistant coach Marcus Thomas will serve as head coach while the university undertakes its investigation.

The Delta Devils are coming off of a 5-23 season, one season removed from their appearance in the First Four of the NCAA tournament, where they lost to Western Kentucky. After that NCAA appearance, head coach Sean Woods left to take the head coaching job at Morehead State, resulting in the promotion of Potts, who had been with MVSU for four years as an assistant coach.

Potts will be suspended with pay while the school looks into his arrest and domestic violence charges. The move is wise for the school: It allows it to get all the facts before making a final decision, and it allows the team to have some measure of stability in the meantime with Thomas taking over head coaching duties for the duration of the investigation.

Given the circumstances, MVSU did what was best for the basketball team and for the school overall.

While the uncertainty will be another obstacle to overcome for a team looking to bounce back from a tough season, all is not lost for the Delta Devils. Potts had signed two players from top high school programs in neighboring Alabama earlier this year, James Currington and Artis Cleveland. They will look to contribute immediately, and their arrivals will provide some much needed good news.?

The MVSU Delta Devils may be down, but as their scrappy performance en route to the 2012 NCAA tournament showed, they can never be counted out.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1703294-college-basketball-mississippi-valley-state-head-coach-suspended-indefinitely

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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Republicans defend Texas abortion proposal

Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, left, Sen. Wendy Davis, D-Fort Worth, center, and Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, right, walk into the Capitol rotunda as the Texas Senate takes a break from their debate an abortion bill, Friday, July 12, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill would require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, left, Sen. Wendy Davis, D-Fort Worth, center, and Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, right, walk into the Capitol rotunda as the Texas Senate takes a break from their debate an abortion bill, Friday, July 12, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill would require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Opponents and supporters of abortion rights gather in the State Capitol rotunda in Austin, Texas on Friday afternoon, July 12, 2013. The Texas Senate's leader, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, has scheduled a vote for Friday on the same restrictions on when, where and how women may obtain abortions in Texas that failed to become law after a Democratic filibuster and raucous protesters were able to run out the clock on an earlier special session. (AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa)

Abortion opponent Brandice Nelson, left, and abortion rights supporter Leslie Tisdale demonstrate at the Capitol in Austin, Texas on Friday, July 12, 2013. The Texas Senate's leader, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, has scheduled a vote for Friday on the same restrictions on when, where and how women may obtain abortions in Texas that failed to become law after a Democratic filibuster and raucous protesters were able to run out the clock on an earlier special session. (AP Photo/Austin American-Statesman, Jay Janner)

Abortion rights supporters rally on the floor of the State Capitol's rotunda in Austin, Texas on Friday, July 12, 2013. The Texas Senate's leader, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, has scheduled a vote for Friday on the same restrictions on when, where and how women may obtain abortions in Texas that failed to become law after a Democratic filibuster and raucous protesters were able to run out the clock on an earlier special session. (AP Photo/Tamir Kalifa)

Sen. Glenn Hegar, R-Katy, answers questions as the Texas Senate debates an abortion bill before the final vote, Friday, July 12, 2013, in Austin, Texas. The bill would require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, only allow abortions in surgical centers, dictate when abortion pills are taken and ban abortions after 20 weeks. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

(AP) ? Texas Republicans on Friday defended a sweeping abortion proposal against Democratic attempts to show the tough restrictions were not only unnecessary, but also unconstitutional.

The Senate's debate took place between a packed gallery of demonstrators, with anti-abortion activists wearing blue and abortion-rights supporters wearing orange. Security was tight, and state troopers reported confiscating bottles of urine and feces as they worked to prevent another attempt to stop the Republican majority from passing a proposal that has put Texas at the center of the nation's abortion debate.

Senators could hear hundreds of protesters outside of the chamber in the Capitol rotunda cheering, chanting and singing, "We're not going to take it anymore." Some wore gynecological devices around their necks. Supporters of the restrictions carried photos of fetuses and Bible verses, praying in the hallway for the bill to pass.

The Senate could vote on the abortion restrictions later Friday or early Saturday, sending the bill to Republican Gov. Rick Perry, who has said he will sign it. The Republican majority is expected to pass the bill, with Democrats left to do little more than enter into the legislative record material that could help defeat it in federal court.

The circus-like atmosphere in the Texas Capitol marked the culmination of weeks of protests, the most dramatic of which came June 25 in the final minutes of the last special legislative session, when a Democratic filibuster and subsequent protest prevented the bill from becoming law.

House Bill 2 would require doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, allow abortions only in surgical centers, limit where and when women may take abortion-inducing pills and ban abortions after 20 weeks. Only five out of 42 existing abortion clinics meet the requirements to be a surgical center, and clinic owners say they can't afford to upgrade or relocate.

Sen. Glen Hegar of Katy, the bill's Republican author, argued that all abortions, including those induced with medications, should take place in an ambulatory surgical center in case of complications.

Democrats pointed out that childbirth is more dangerous than an abortion and there have been no serious problems with women taking abortion drugs at home. They also introduced amendments to add exceptions for cases of rape and incest and to remove some of the more restrictive clauses.

Sen. Rodney West, a Dallas Democrat, asked why Hegar was pushing restrictions that federal courts in other states had suspended as possibly unconstitutional.

"There will be a lawsuit. I promise you," West said, raising his right hand as if taking an oath.

The bill under consideration mirrors restrictions passed in Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, Alabama, Kansas, Wisconsin and Arizona. In North Carolina, lawmakers are considering a measure that would allow state health officials to apply standards for ambulatory surgical centers to abortion clinics.

Passing the law in Texas would be a major victory for anti-abortion activists in the nation's second most-populous state. Hegar acknowledged working with anti-abortion groups to draft the legislation and said he monitored how similar bills did in other states. A lawsuit originating in Texas would also likely win a sympathetic hearing at the conservative 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on its way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Sen. John Whitmire, a Houston Democrat, said it was clear the bill was part of national conservative agenda attempting to ban abortion and infringe on women's rights one state at a time.

"What would concern me is the political aspect of a political movement across this country ... this rush to pass this for political purposes," Whitmire said.

He pressed Hegar on why the Texas Medical Association, Texas Hospital Association and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology opposed the bill. He asked Hegar how he could ignore these experts.

"There are differences in the medical profession," Hegar insisted, rejecting the criticism. "I don't believe this legislation will majorly impede the doctor-patient relationship."

Sen. Bob Deuell, a Greenville Republican and a doctor, defended the bill, saying abortion clinics "had not maintained the proper standard of care."

"We have to ensure that the women in Texas who want to have a legal abortion ... are not victimized or taken advantage of," he said.

The Senate's leader, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst, was determined to keep the vote on track. The Texas Constitution gives him the authority to jail anyone who breaks the chamber's rules of decorum, which stipulate that there can be no demonstrations or attempts to disrupt the Senate's work.

In addition to the jars of suspected urine and feces, officers took paint, glitter, confetti and feminine hygiene products from people seeking to ender the gallery.

The issue has been simmering for months in Texas.

Democrats successfully blocked the bill in the regular legislative session. Then, during the first special session, the Senate didn't take up the bill until the final day. That allowed Fort Worth Sen. Wendy Davis to use a filibuster to delay a vote. When Republicans rushed to try to pass the bill in the session's final 15 minutes, angry protesters began shouting and screaming from the gallery. Dewhurst could only watch with frustration as a half-dozen state troopers tried to remove more than 450 people.

Democrats see in the protests an opportunity that could help them break a 20-year statewide losing streak. They believe Republicans have overreached in trying to appease their base and alienated suburban women, a constituency that helped President Barack Obama win re-election.

___

Associated Press writers Will Weissert and Jim Vertuno contributed to this report. Follow Chris Tomlinson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/cltomlinson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-07-12-US-XGR-Abortion-Restrictions-Texas/id-a600d59c2b024e20b486d5cb8a9e77a5

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'NFL Total Access' recap: Pittsburgh Steelers' 2013 outlook

32 in 32: Pittsburgh Steelers

Shaun O'Hara said that health is always a big concern for the Pittsburgh Steelers, but they ranked No. 1 in defense last year so age isn't a good indicator of success. In the end, it's on the offense -- especially the running game -- to step up. O'Hara projects the Steelers to finish third in the AFC North, while Donovan McNabb sees them finishing second.

click to watch video
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap100...s-2013-outlook

Source: http://forums.steelersfever.com/showthread.php?t=99189&goto=newpost

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WE ARE THOMAS: Senior Account Manager / Client Partner ?40-42k Central London

Our client is one of the UK?s most successful lead generation consultancies in the business. Established in the mid 90?s they have perfected the lead generation process and currently partner with some of the biggest and brightest marketing agencies in the world right now!

As there approach is more about quality rather than quantity from the outset they are able to establish strong and trusted partnerships with their clients. And its due to this combination of skills and partnerships they have maintained pole position within their industry. Its home for the elite!

Due to their ongoing global success our client is seeking a Client Partner or Senior Account Manager who has an understanding of the new business process but more importantly has the gravitas to?speak to business owners and manage the relationship between both businesses?and take the lead on a number of top level accounts.?

As a Client Partner or Senior Account Manager, your day-to-day responsibilities will be to plan with your client the programme or other items from the services available. Typically this focuses on the client?s core proposition, targeting and marketing communications schedule and advising the client on the materials they need to develop ? case studies, viewpoints etc

As a Client Partner or Senior Account Manager you will also be ultimately responsible for heading up a team of Account Executives and other team members working with you on each of your clients, supporting you in prospecting, maintaining good data, research etc ? you would ensure that each of these individuals is delivering best practice so their clients can win business from your activity.

As a Client Partner or Senior Account Manager, if you have strong management skills and are confident advising business leaders/owners on best practice when it comes to business development then this could be the perfect opportunity for you.

In return for your skills and experience as a Client Partner or Senior Account Manager,?our client offers a competitive salary of up to ?40-42k, plus bonus.

So, if you think you?re the Client Partner our client is looking for, then we want to hear from you! Please contact Tom at tom.howe@wearethomas.com or click on the apply button below.

Specialists in Search & Selection, Recruitment and Career Coaching all within the UK and US Marketing and Creative arena.

Source: http://jobs.brandrepublic.com/job/537643/senior-account-manager-client-partner-40-42k-central-london/?TrackID=2

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Friday, July 12, 2013

Officials: Blast hits northern Iraqi city; 19 dead

(AP) ? A bomb struck a crowded coffee shop late Friday in the ethnically disputed northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, killing at least 19 and wounding more than two dozen in the latest in a string of bloody attacks pounding Iraq since the start of the holy month of Ramadan this week.

Iraq is being rocked by its deadliest and most sustained wave of bloodshed in half a decade. More than 2,600 people have been killed since the start of April, raising fears that the country is once again edging toward the brink of civil war a decade after Saddam Hussein was toppled in the U.S.-led invasion.

The blast exploded in the Classico Cafe in southern Kirkuk, 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of Baghdad, as patrons were enjoying tea and water pipes hours after the sunset meal that breaks the daylong Ramadan fast, police said.

Kirkuk is home to a mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen ? all with competing claims to the oil-rich area. The Kurds want to incorporate it into their self-ruled region in Iraq's north, but Arabs and Turkomen are opposed. Sunni Arab extremists, aiming to exacerbate ethnic tensions in the region, are believed to be behind frequent attacks in the area that pose a challenge to Iraq's Shiite-dominated government.

In addition to those killed, the attack wounded 26, a police officer and a hospital official said. It brought to 24 the number of people killed in attacks in the country on Friday.

Hours before the Kirkuk attack, Sunni cleric Salah al-Nuaimi urged calm among Iraqis during a joint Sunni-Shiite sermon Friday in Baghdad aimed at easing sectarian tensions.

"Enough is enough," al-Nuaimi told worshippers at a Baghdad mosque. "We all love Iraq, we are all Iraqis and we want to be united. We want to stop the bloodletting, and develop and build Iraq."

Earlier in the day, a suicide car bomber struck a police patrol outside the northern city of Mosul, killing four policemen, a police officer and a medical official said. Mosul is 360 kilometers (225 miles) northwest of the Iraqi capital.

And outside the northern city of Tikrit, 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of Baghdad, drive-by shooters armed with pistols fitted with silencers killed a senior police officer. The attack took place in the town Shirqat, a police officer said.

Officials also provided details of new attacks on Iraqi Shiites late the previous night.

In one of the attacks on Shiites, a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden motorcycle into a funeral tent for a Shiite family in the town of in Muqdadiyah, about 90 kilometers (60 miles) north of Baghdad, officials said. The late Thursday evening explosion killed 13 people and wounded 24, the officials said.

All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to journalists.

In the northern town of Dujail, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) from Baghdad, a parked car bomb went off outside a Shiite mosque late on Thursday. As people gathered around the blast site, another bomb went off. That twin bombing killed at least 11 people and wounded 25, mayor Nayif al-Khazrachi said. Two medical officials, who weren't authorized to speak publicly, confirmed the casualty figures.

The two attacks raised the overall death toll Thursday from a series of attacks, which included assaults on police stations in the cities of Ramadi and Fallujah west of Baghdad, to 40.

On Wednesday, gunmen launched an assault on an army checkpoint and special oil industry police assigned to protect a nearby pipeline in the western Iraqi desert, killing at least 14 troops there.

There has been no claim of responsibility for the latest attacks but al-Qaida's Iraq branch, which has been gaining strength in recent months, frequently targets Shiites, security forces and civil servants in an effort to undermine the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

___

Associated Press writers Sinan Salaheddin and Adam Schreck contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-12-Iraq/id-bd48dd8b09de44b2af3a4087784a9195

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Youth homicide rate hits lowest mark in 30 years

(AP) ? Health officials say the homicide rate for older children and young adults has hit its lowest point in at least three decades.

In 2010, the homicide rate for victims ages 10 to 24 was down more than half compared to 1993. That was during an explosion in crime tied to crack cocaine.

The government report released Thursday echoes earlier findings about a national decline in murders and other crimes in the last two decades. Youths account for about a third of homicide victims.

Researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention went back to 1981 and found youth homicide rate declines across the board ? in males, females, whites, blacks and Hispanics.

However, declines have slowed in the last 10 years.

___

Online:

CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-07-11-US-MED-Youth-Homicides/id-26dbf2c6400a453a83a3bd02da4ada54

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PICTURES: British Activists Scale London?s Tallest Building To Protest Arctic Drilling

(Credit: AP)

Six environmental activists began scaling the tallest building in London on Thursday morning in a symbolic protest against the oil company Shell and its practice of arctic drilling.

The activists, who Greenpeace identified as Sabine, Sandra, Victo, Ali, Wiola and Liesbeth, picked the building ? named The Shard ? because it is ?modelled on a shard of ice? and ?sits slap bang in the middle of Shell?s three London headquarters.? They started their ?ice climb? at 4:00 am London time, and plan to ?unveil a massive art installation at the top.?

At time of publishing, the climbers had reached 230 meters on their 72-story journey. You can watch a live feed of the climb here.

(Credit: @GreenpeaceNorge)

(Credit: PA)

(Credit: AP)

Shell is an obvious target for an anti-arctic drilling action. The company has been dedicated to arctic drilling, despite several failed attempts over the last year, including when an oil rig ran aground thanks to the company?s tax avoidance scheme.

Source: http://thinkprogress.org.feedsportal.com/c/34726/f/638927/s/2e86b25c/l/0Lthinkprogress0Borg0Cclimate0C20A130C0A70C110C22833610Cgreenpeace0Eshell0Eoil0Eshard0C/story01.htm

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Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week | Triangle Arts and Entertainment

Week-long dining extravaganza sizzles with special offerings to drive patrons to downtown Raleigh

DineDowntownRaleigh
RALEIGH, NC? ? Foodies rejoice with the return of Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week, a Downtown Raleigh Alliance (DRA) merchant program, scheduled for Monday, August 19-Sunday, August 25, 2013. To celebrate the event?s fifth year, the DRA launched a brand new website, DineDowntownRaleigh.com, to better showcase the popular event.? Each year, Restaurant Week invites patrons to renew their inner foodie and take advantage of the special offerings at participating downtown Raleigh restaurants during their normal dinner hours.

Participating dining establishments will offer tantalizing, three-course prix fixe dinners for either $20 or $30 per person, depending on the venue (tax, tip, and beverages not included). Select venues will offer a three-course beer or wine pairings for an additional $10 per person. Several venues will offer a $15 appetizer sampler featuring three appetizers with a selection of at least four options.? Although no tickets are required, reservations are strongly recommended (when applicable).

In addition to showcasing downtown Raleigh?s great dining options, Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week will spur both locals and out of town diners to revisit old favorites and, best of all, try new places. Downtown Raleigh restaurateurs praise the program as a great opportunity to increase customer loyalty through creative menu offerings and to stimulate growth during a season lull.
?Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week gives us the opportunity to reach new patrons and celebrate the brilliant chefs and restaurants in our community,? said Niall Hanley, Bia Restaurant owner. ?It?s always a busy week for us, and we look forward to it every year.?

To increase awareness, the DRA launched the new Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week website, DineDowntownRaleigh.com, with a sleek look and added functionality. Designed with the diner in mind, user-friendly features include: ease of navigation for visitors to find pertinent information in a quick and simple process; social media engagement to deliver real-time updates to the community via Twitter as well as instant access to Instagram, Pinterest and Facebook; menus posted as they are received; online reservation links powered by OpenTable.com (when applicable); and an interactive map to plan your restaurant route, parking, and means of transportation.

Special thanks to Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week Sponsors? Gold Sponsors:? Pepsi, US Foods; Silver Sponsors: Curtis Media Group, Triangle Downtowner Magazine; Supporting Sponsors: FreshPoint, The Independent Weekly, Live Work Play, News 14 Carolina, News & Observer, OpenTable.com, Triangle Blvd, triangle.com, United Restaurant Equipment Company, and Triangle Arts and Entertainment.org.

About Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week:
Downtown Raleigh Restaurant Week is a week-long merchant program produced by the DRA with a primary goal to create a critical mass of diners in downtown and drive business to the restaurants during a time of year that is otherwise slow. The week-long culinary extravaganza gives patrons the opportunity to take advantage of dining deals offered at a wide-variety of reputable restaurants and allows participating downtown establishments to showcase culinary talent by highlighting the diverse offerings.

About Downtown Raleigh Alliance (DRA)
DRA is an award-winning nonprofit organization whose mission is to continue the revitalization of Raleigh?s downtown. The Alliance enhances the quality of life and positively impacts the economic success of downtown through five services:? 1. Safety, Hospitality & Clean Ambassadors; 2. Strategic Branding & Community Communications; 3. Special Events Production & City Plaza Programming; 4. Retail Attraction & Merchant Promotions; and 5. Strategic Partnerships & Stakeholder Engagement. For more information about DRA, please visit www.youRhere.com.

Source: http://triangleartsandentertainment.org/2013/07/downtown-raleigh-alliances-launches-new-website-for-the-return-of-downtown-raleigh-restaurant-week/

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How to Know If You Really Need a Loan - Finance

When you need a loan

There are many times we all get caught in financial situations well over what we can manage. We may work overtime, take from our savings account, or we will make deals with our creditors. However, our best may not be good enough. We may be led to taking other measures, such as taking out a loan. Although we know it may lead us into another debt situation, sometimes it?s our only way out of a bad situation. The following reasons are how you would know if you really need a loan.

You Are Avoiding Creditors Phone Calls

Once you?ve gotten behind just a month or two in your bills, the company?s internal credit department will start calling you. This is just normally to see what they can do to help you out and set up a payment arrangement. After a few dodged calls and a few months of unresponsiveness, they will send your account to a collection agency. Once you have established a routine of avoiding any of your creditors phone calls and letters, you should realize you need a loan to help pay down some of your debt.

?You Don?t Have Money in Your Savings Account

Your savings accounts may be set up for extra or emergency spending. If you don?t budget properly, you may go through those accounts very fast. If that happens, you will not have money left for an emergency situation. If this is the case, you should take out a loan, only if you need a loan. If you can work additional hours or borrow from a friend, this would be better.

?You Have Multiple Loans

If you have multiple loans out to cover prior bills, this is also a good indication you need a loan. This is a situation where it may work to your advantage. Having multiple loans means you have multiple interest rates, payment amounts, and must keep up with each loan schedule. If you consolidate your loans into one payment, you will only have one payment due. You may be able to find a cheaper interest rate and pay your loans off sooner than you thought.

?You Find Yourself in a Crisis

Finally, there are many crises? we can face that would require a loan. If your automobile breaks down and you have no other means to work, this would be a perfect example for needing a loan. Also, in the tragic event that you are evicted from your home, you may need a loan to cover the hotel and security deposit for another home.

Related posts:

Tags: When you need a loan

Category: Loans

Source: http://www.financecategory.com/how-to-know-if-you-really-need-a-loan.html

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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Australia crime puzzle solved: Culprit was 19-foot python

AP Photo / Queensland Police

Police and employees captured a snake at a charity store, in Queensland, Australia, Wednesday.

CAIRNS, Australia ? Police were mystified by a chaotic crime scene including a hole in the ceiling and a smelly pool of vomit-like liquid ? until they found the culprit was a 19-foot python.

The massive snake, weighing in at 37 pounds, was captured a day after a suspected break-in was reported at a charity store in Queensland in northeastern Australia.

"Its head was the size of a small dog," Police Sgt. Don Auld said Wednesday.

Before they found the python, investigators' working theory was that a human burglar with an appetite for destruction ? and a serious illness ? had gone on a rampage inside the St. Vincent de Paul store in the small town of Ingham.

"We thought a person had fallen through the ceiling because the roof panel was cut in half," Auld said. "When they've hit the floor, they've vomited and then staggered and fallen over. That's what we thought anyway."

Police now suspect the python entered the store through the roof, which was damaged in a cyclone two years ago.

The animal then plummeted through the ceiling, knocking over dishes, clothes and other items, before relieving itself on the floor. It somehow managed to hide from officials until staff spotted it lying alongside a wall the next day.

The Associated Press

Related:

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2e782556/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C10A0C1939480A30Eaustralia0Ecrime0Epuzzle0Esolved0Eculprit0Ewas0E190Efoot0Epython0Dlite/story01.htm

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Spacewalkers leave space station for outside chores

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Tue Jul 9, 2013 1:13pm EDT

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - Two astronauts left the International Space Station on Tuesday for a day of maintenance tasks, including installing a power cable needed for a new Russian laboratory due to arrive later this year.

Veteran NASA astronaut Christopher Cassidy and rookie partner Luca Parmitano, the first Italian to make a spacewalk, left the station's Quest airlock shortly after 8 a.m. EDT as the orbital outpost sailed about 260 miles over the Arabian Sea.

"Have fun out there," crewmate Karen Nyberg radioed from inside the station, a $100 billion research complex owned by the United States, Russia, Japan and 11 European nations, including Italy.

Cassidy's first task was to replace a failed backup component of the station's Ku-band communications system, restoring redundancy.

Parmitano, meanwhile, maneuvered himself to the right side of the station's solar power truss to pick up a pair of science experiments that will be returned to Earth aboard a future Space Exploration Technologies' cargo ship.

The privately owned California-based company, also known as SpaceX, is one of two U.S. firms hired by NASA to fly cargo to the station following the retirement of the space shuttles in 2011.

SpaceX's Dragon cargo capsules, which also are being developed to fly astronauts, are the only ones that return to Earth. Other cargo ships, including those flown by Russia, Europe and Japan, incinerate in the atmosphere after they leave the station.

The spacewalkers' to-do list also included repositioning some equipment delivered aboard a Dragon capsule in March. The gear - two grapple bars - may be needed by future spacewalkers tasked to remove station radiator panels.

Cassidy, who was making his fifth spacewalk, installed a power and data cable from the station's Unity connecting node to the Russian part of the International Space Station, completing one of the main goals of the outing.

The cable is part of a system that will be needed for a new Russian multi-purpose laboratory called Nauka that is due to launch later this year.

The new module will replace Russia's Pirs airlock, as well as serve as a research laboratory and berthing port. Russian cosmonauts will install the rest of the cable during a future spacewalk.

Cassidy and Parmitano have a follow-up spacewalk themselves next week to re-route cables that control the station's electrical system.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/LYSyOK8J3wU/story01.htm

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Android Jelly Bean Now On 37 Percent Of Devices Google has released its latest...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/GeekyGadgets/posts/10151544966030967

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Microsoft Launches Critical Windows, Internet Explorer Updates

Microsoft rolled out a total of seven different updates on Patch Tuesday, six of which are rated as critical, while one is considered to be important.

Internet Explorer, the Kernel-Mode Driver, Media Format Runtime, GDI, and Silverlight have all received critical fixes, but Microsoft recommends users to prioritize the deployment of the first two.

?This security update resolves two publicly disclosed and six privately reported vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows. The most severe of these vulnerabilities could allow remote code execution if a user opens a specially crafted document or visits a malicious webpage that embeds TrueType font files. An attacker who successfully exploited this vulnerability could take complete control of an affected system,? Microsoft said in the description of bulletin MS13-053 aimed at Kernel-Mode drivers.

As usual, all patches are being delivered through the integrated Windows Update tool, so make sure you connect your computer to the Internet to deploy all fixes as soon as possible.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/Microsoft-Launches-Critical-Windows-Internet-Explorer-Updates-366846.shtml

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Tiny Love Magical Night Baby Mobile - Review and Giveaway

Tiny Love Magical Night Baby Mobile - Review and Giveaway 0 Flares 0 Facebook 0 Google+ 0 StumbleUpon 0 LinkedIn 0 Email -- Pin It Share 0 Filament.io -- 0 Flares ?

Source: http://ohsosavvymom.com/2013/07/tiny-love-magical-night-baby-mobile-review-and-giveaway/

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Gary Cypres' passion for baseball memorabilia leads to Sports Museum of Los Angeles

SUNDAY Q and A

Posted: ? 07/06/2013 10:44:22 PM PDT

Updated: ? 07/07/2013 02:18:39 PM PDT


Videos produced by the staff at the Los Angeles Daily News

Gary Cypres is owner of the Sports Museum of Los Angeles, one of the most impressive collections of sports memorabilia around. (Hans Gutknecht / Staff Photographer)

NOTE: Cypres opens his museum to L.A. News Group readers during a special townhall meeting with Dodgers general manager Stan Kasten on Wednesday from 6-9 p.m. Tickets have sold out.

By his own devices, Gary Cypres consciously surrounds himself with baseball history.

But the uber-collector admitted he didn't realize until maybe 10 or 15 years ago the front doors of his current Sports Museum of Los Angeles are just a pop-up away from one of the city's original hardball landmarks.

Cypres maintains his 32,000-square foot, two-story warehouse on the corner of Washington and Main, just southeast of the Santa Monica Freeway.

As it turns out, right across the street from a parking lot and furniture design center is the former site of Washington Park. Between 1911 and 1925, that served the home field of the Pacific Coast League's Los Angeles Angels and Vernon Tigers.

Prior to that, it was Chutes Park, created in 1887 as an amusement park that also had a baseball diamond used by the Angels.

"I hadn't known anything about it until someone told me," Cypres said. "What an interesting discovery to be on hallowed baseball grounds, something that was part of the baseball fabric of L.A."

Maybe it's just part of Cypres' karma.

"We'll leave that up to whoever believes in that," he replied with a smile.


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class="TXBody">It's more than just popular belief that Cypres, who made his fortunes in the finance and travel business, continues to maintain the largest and most provocative private collection of sports memorabilia around.

Once opened to the public in 2008, only to close a year later for business reasons, the Sports Museum of L.A. remains an important landmark.

Cypres allows charities to use it as a fund-raising gathering as well as stage events such

Gary Cypres is owner of the Sports Museum of Los Angeles, one of the most impressive collections of sports memorabilia around. (Hans Gutknecht / Staff Photographer)

as the one coming Wednesday, when Dodgers president Stan Kasten will appear for a town hall meeting attended by Los Angeles News Group readers.

Cypres, who has amassed his multimillion dollar collection through auctions and private contacts, collected his thoughts for us on various aspects of the sports memorabilia business as it stands today and continues to evolve:

Q: You've probably seen some of the things the Dodgers franchise has in its own collection. They've considered opening its own Hall of Fame or museum on its property. Is there any working relationship about either you or them buying items that come up in auctions?

A: No, because I think the Dodgers usually refer things that come up to me. Their view of it is mostly to duplicate things. For their purposes, it was quicker and more efficient to do that. That's not me. The heart of any museum is the real stuff. The Dodgers have their view and I have my view. I collect very deeply, anything with the Dodgers from balls to bats to contracts to correspondence, hats, trophies. I have a different purpose and different collecting feel as to what I want and what's important to me.

Q: Before the Internet, which makes things easier to find and connect with people, how did you network and get started on finding your treasures?

A: Like anything, start on the lowest end of the totem pole. I would stand in line at a card show for 45 minutes, go around and see everything, met the dealers, wrote to them to get brochures. Now, I can get in with an exhibitor pass. But I'm still making them rich and making me poorer in finances, but richer in memorabilia.

The amazing part of collecting, for awhile I got a lot of Dodger stuff, and a friend will email me with Dodger things from his collection and wondering if I'd buy it. So it's, all right, here I go again. It's like the forbidden fruit. I said enough, but then he'll say, well I have these, and it's oh, well. I wanted to relax for awhile. I'm getting old. I have estate issues. But somehow, maybe it's a good thing, I get drawn right back into it. It's like the famous line from "The Godfather." No matter how much I want to stop and consolidate, something comes up that I treasure and all these logical considerations stop and the collector comes out.

Q: This is a good time to be in the sports memorabilia business as far as having investments come to fruition?

A: Yes, this is a good time to be a seller and a buyer. From a seller, you're seeing substantial gains over things you've bought over the years. It's a strong market. The dynamic between seller and buyer is there especially for expensive things, you need that combination.

Q: The market isn't too saturated?

A: No. In fact, I think it's the opposite. For the first time, you see a lot of new buyers. All my friends in the auction business say there are new, younger, wealthy buyers. We saw a Babe Ruth uniform go for $4.4 million -- that's a milestone, like they'd have in contemporary art. You've broken through price-resistant barriers. You have to remember it takes two to create auction prices. The auction houses are having record years. More are coming in. It shows the industry is maturing.

Q: You've spent your time on your collection, but you also have a business, a family and a life. How do you divide time to what you want to focus on?

A: Given my druthers, I'd rather be playing down here (laughing). This is a wonderful man cave, probably the biggest man cave around. My wife collects contemporary art -- and I do, too -- and she has no interest in sports or in any of my collection. That's good. It leaves me to myself. My two boys, 22 and 24, I took them to all the sports shows since they were 5 and 6. There's a social part to this. The reality is, as a collector, there's some who want to open it up and share it, and there are some who personally want to get their satisfaction just from owning it. I'm in that first category.

I come in every morning, walk around here, say hello to all my old friends. I remember 25 years ago when I bought this piece, and that piece, and dwell on the fact it can't be 25 years because that's impossible.

From a collecting point of view, the fun is always in the chase. Anyone who's serious will tell you it's what's coming tomorrow. That's one of the problems if you stop collecting. It's that joy that really isn't money driven. It's the objects, seeing new stuff.

Collecting anything is wonderful. If it wasn't sports memorabilia, it would be folk art. Collecting is in my genes. You don't someday discover it, you have it or you don't. You get excited about collecting or you don't.

Q: You see some players' families donate items to the Hall of Fame. But sometimes those things get circulated in the memorabilia market, and the family can't figure out why that happens. Is there a problem today with things on the open market that don't belong, a need for better authentication?

A: Oh, yes. In 1999, Barry Halper, one of the most well-known collectors in the industry, became ill with cancer and died a few years later. His entire collection went up for auction. But prior to doing that, he sold many of his own items to the Hall of Fame. Unfortunately, it was discovered that a lot of it was bogus. Now, this is the Hall of Fame. You'd think they'd have the ability to siphon through that. For reasons I don't quite fathom, the Hall of Fame never made any issues about it, maybe because they were embarrassed to admit they paid millions for items that weren't real.

So, many of items that came out in the market were also bogus. Clearly, in the memorabilia field, especially 15 or 20 years ago, there weren't the procedures, and not the sophisticated methods to verify things, including things I owned.

A lot of authenticators have come up, and there are questions if they can do the job honestly. There are some federal cases ongoing against Mastro Auction for fraud charges, and they sold more than $40 million a year at one time. And quite honestly, I'm sure in my own collection, I've got some real bogus junk in here. It happens at museums, with forgeries occurring even in the best of circumstances. Every collection, no matter how diligent you are, has some degree of fraud.

Like everything in life, there's a risk. Hopefully, it's not too bad and inflation and price increases offset the losses you take. You hope it all balances out. But you still have the joy of collecting, right? That never goes away.

Q: What, then, are the key personality traits for someone who to become a sports collector -- patience, skepticism, sentimentality?

A: It's insanity. You missed that one (laughing). There's a loose screw up in your head. You had all the nice things there. Face it, to collect on a major scale you have to be slightly insane. I won't run away from that. I readily admit to being a little nuts in this area. But I don't know a serious collector who isn't a little irrational about all this. The auction houses are very smart. One thing they like about live auctions versus Internet auctions is this loss of discipline that occurs even with the most sophisticated business people. Two guys bidding against each other can go way over the value of something being auctioned. In any other situation, they would not let their associates do something like that. But they wind up overspending. That's their joy. That's human nature. We appreciate that we have excesses in live.

Q: And maybe buyer's remorse too?

A: You always have that, and then buyer's joy. I gotta tell you, sometimes it's 'Why did I do that? (groaning). I promised myself not to do this. Now what do I do?' Five years later, it's 'What a smart thing. Look how much it went up in price.' "

Q: Are you also driven by the fact your mom probably threw away all your baseball cards when you were a kid?

A: Oh, definitely. But then, if all the moms kept them they wouldn't be worth anything like they are today. Scarcity creates value, remember?

Q: If someone doesn't have the financial means to start collecting things the way you have done it, do you have a suggestion on how they can get started without bankrupting themselves?

A: I think you start with the idea that it's the collecting that's fun. If you have limited resources, even within the baseball world, there are all kinds of things to collect that doesn't have to be high-end stuff. Think of all the bobbleheads or other giveaways over the last 20 years for just the Dodgers. A funny story: A senior judge in the state of California came by here one day, very distinguished man, impeccable credentials, Ivy League educated -- he collects football programs. You'd never know what people collect. Football programs don't involve major dollars, but here's someone, an intellectual, sure as can be, just this quiet collector. It doesn't matter what profession. Collectors are collectors, in their blood from when they were little.

Q: So as collector, would you buy up a bunch of Yaseil Puig memorabilia right now and just put it away for safe keeping?

A: I would buy some of it, but I wouldn't spend a lot of money on it. First of all, it's much different today. Now, they could put on 1,800 uniforms because they're smart. Way back when, the players only got two a season. When you're buying something today, realize it doesn't have the same value. There could be 10 rookie uniforms for someone like him. It's not a money issue in making new uniforms. I want to let history begin to form the value.

Q: What's the future of your museum? It was open to the public for awhile, now you open it to those who do events. Is it feasible to open as a museum in the future?

A: I've wrestled with this. First, it costs a fortune to house all this stuff. From a business point of view, it's the worst thing I've ever done. It's horrible. It got really expensive to try to keep it open to the public because of security reasons. This is all readily accessible. It's not like the Hall of Fame where it's behind glass and you can't touch anything. That's not how this operates.

We could also put some of it on tour, like the Brooklyn Dodgers items to see if other places might want to house it. Maybe even the Dodgers some day? I don't think it'll ever go to Dodger Stadium, for whatever reason.

My instincts are to put all my Dodger stuff into a perpetual trust and hopefully find a home. When you amass a certain collection, now you have the history of a major historical thing. Probably unless someone says here's $30 million bucks. I don't think current owners are as interested in that. Ask yourself the question: Why don't more teams have museums of their own? The answer is that almost none of them do. They haven't saved their artifacts. Why? When Ebbets Field went, they auctioned off everything. I can't believe it. Gratuitously, I got a lot of it. Why is it? It's rare you have ownership that is both interested in historic things as well as the future of their ownership. That's been a great problem for museums now. Maybe owners are beginning to understand to have the artifacts important to the franchise.

Q: The event with Stan Kasten coming here, another opportunity to let fans see what you have, how do you feel about that opportunity leading to more exposure?

A: It's a wonderful opportunity for people who are really interested in seeing things about the Dodgers they could never see. It's unique, nothing else like it. For those interested in understanding the long history of the franchise, which is important in how they became established into this thing worth $2.5 billion, it had to come from somewhere. You can see how the brand was created, notice how almost every Dodger Hall of Famer came from Brooklyn, every retired number, you get a sense of how this was built. That's what the collection is for, to go back in time to see something that'll never be repeated from the 1950s in New York when you had the Dodgers, Yankees and Giants in one city and so competitive. If you took the Yankees away, do you realize how great the Dodgers would have been in history? They probably would have won five more world championships, maybe never had to move because of such great momentum, but that wasn't the case as attendance was declining.

Q: Is part of the joy of the collection being here and watching people react to it and marvel at what they're experiencing? And you get to be the historian who also explains it to them as well?

A: Yes, especially the older folks like me who love to reminisce; those in my age bracket can remember how it used to be. Sometimes, we just talk and have fun. The wonderful thing is seeing fathers explain to their kids the history. That's the greatest joy. It evokes wonderful memories of childhood with their parents. That's what I've witnessed.

More Q-and-A with Gary Cypres on the blog: insidesocal.com/tomhoffarth

Gary Cypres' list of his favorite Dodgers memorabilia: insidesocal.com/tomhoffarth

thomas.hoffarth@dailynews.com"?On Twitter @tomhoffarth

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Monday, July 8, 2013

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    U.S. judge denies Guantanamo inmate's request to end force-feeding

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