বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৮ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Russian officials searching Human Rights Watch

MOSCOW (AP) ? Russian officials are searching the Moscow offices of Human Rights Watch and the corruption watchdog Transparency International, intensifying the recent wave of pressure on non-governmental organizations.

Rachel Denber of Human Rights Watch said Wednesday that officials from the prosecutor general's office and tax police were conducting an "unannounced audit" and demanding documents.

Transparency's Russia chief Elena Panfilova said that her organization's office was also being searched.

Russian officials have searched as many as 2,000 non-governmental groups in the past month, according to Pavel Chikov, a member of the presidential human rights council, whose human rights law group is also being searched.

The searches began after President Vladimir Putin gave a speech to the FSB, the KGB's successor agency, in February, urging them to focus on groups receiving foreign funding.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-27-EU-Russia-NGOs/id-f5110c5b96b74d47b7a18933256ea796

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রবিবার, ১৭ মার্চ, ২০১৩

George Osborne says UK will compensate any troops and government workers whose bank accounts in Cyprus may be affected by ?10bn EU bailout levy

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Chavez' body makes final journey as government says he will not be embalmed (+video)

The former Venezuelan president's coffin made its way to the military museum that will be its final resting place. Officials ruled out a Lenin-style embalming of Hugo Chavez as too difficult.

By E. Eduardo Castillo and Jack Chang,?The Associated Press / March 16, 2013

Mourners carry Hugo Chavez' coffin in a procession, Friday, towards a military museum in Caracas where the Venezuelan president will be entombed.

Fernando Llano/AP

Enlarge

The road from the military academy where Hugo?Chavez's?body has been lying in state to the hilltop museum where he'll be displayed indefinitely is lined with some of the most dangerous slums on the planet. It runs under bridges in dire need of repair and past grocery stores with few groceries.

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Tens of thousands of Venezuelans gathered along that route Friday to watch the late president's body cross the city in yet another choreographed show designed to keep?Chavez?supporters in thrall, at least until an April 14 election to replace him. Afterward, people will have to go on living with the problems that?Chavez?left behind.

This tense, relentlessly gray capital embodies many of Venezuela's problems, with crumbling apartment towers and food lines often sharing the same sidewalk with cheering crowds eager to greet their departed Comandante.

RECOMMENDED:?Hugo Ch?vez 101: a quiz about Venezuela's president

"More than anything, the government continues fighting with everyone, and does everything badly," said Francisco Olivero, a 54-year-old carpenter who lives with his wife and five children in the poor neighborhood of Catia, just blocks from the funeral route.

Like many Venezuelans, Olivero said wartime-levels of street violence all over the city were his top worry.

"They kill people here every day," he said. "I've lost friends, relatives."

As thousands of bused-in police academy cadets gathered along the route to prepare for the procession, Olivero and his wife, Yelitza Acuna, hid from the sun while waiting in a block-long line to buy flour, coffee, butter and other food staples they said have been hard to come by for about two years.

The store, which sits along the most trafficked part of the route, happened to be selling the rare goods Friday, drawing a crowd of people desperate for a few bags of flour.

"The word spread in the street, and we all came running here," said Olivero's wife, who is a cook's assistant. Later,?Chavez's?coffin traveled down the street in a black hearse, to the roar of thousands of admirers.

Economists say government-imposed price controls designed to dampen inflation topping 20 percent have made it impossible for store owners to sell basic foods at a profit, sparking widespread shortages. For their part, officials have accused suppliers of hoarding the goods and have invaded warehouses looking for sugar, flour and other food items in short supply.

"You can't find anything," said 27-year-old lawyer Anglys Bericote, who rode a bus for four hours from the town of Cajigal to view the funeral cortege. Wearing a heart-shaped "I am?Chavez" pin, she said she was taking the opportunity to also stock up on basic goods. People in her town have even had to go without toothpaste and toilet paper, she said.

"It's all the plan of the private businesses," she said, repeating the government's line of attack. "They want to hold onto everything so that it riles up people."

A few blocks from the military museum, where a ceremonial fire awaited the arrival of?Chavez's?body, Jonathan Rodriguez watched government supporters pass by in red T-shirts bearing?Chavez's?image. Raw sewage trickled from a broken pipe down the street, and the 37-year-old insurance agent scolded his two sons for playing nearby.

"The majority of them don't complain about the problems here," Rodriguez whispered about the passing?Chavezsupporters. "It's as if they didn't exist."

Rodriguez said he doesn't have that luxury. Violent crime is so bad in his part of town that he and his family shut themselves inside their home every night by 6 p.m., only opening the?iron gate?covering his front door?the next morning. Yet for Rodriguez, staying indoors might not be enough to protect him and his family from the war outside. Several weeks ago, a stray bullet penetrated the zinc roof of a neighbor's house.

Almost all of Caracas' streets empty of people by dusk as residents live under the pall of a homicide rate 20 times that of the United States. On Thursday, the U.N. Development Program issued a study finding Venezuela had the world's fifth highest homicide rate, only behind Honduras, El Salvador, the Ivory Coast and Jamaica.

Rodriguez blamed his working-class neighborhood's ills on thugs who prowl the streets on motorcycles and said more police patrols could help retake the city.

Many, however, believe the police are a big part of the problem. In an astounding revelation, former Justice Minister Tareck El Aissami said in 2009 that police were responsible for up to 20 percent of the country's crimes.

"I just stay inside now," Rodriguez said. "Outside, it's not safe."

All along the funeral route were unmistakable signs that this 28 million-person country is not only unsafe, but that its basic services no longer work.

Chavez's?hearse started from the military academy, which is surrounded by bare-brick slums that cling to hillsides rising almost vertically into the Caribbean sky. More Venezuelans have moved into such slums duringChavez's?government, casualties of a housing deficit that the human rights group Provea estimates at 2 million units. Official figures say the number of houses deemed "inadequate" in the country grew from 295,000 in 1999 to more than 404,000 in 2011.

The growth of such neighborhoods has contributed to other problems. Due to crumbling or nonexistent infrastructure, sewage all over the city goes mainly to one place: the once-pristine Guaire River, which runs along most of?Chavez's?funeral route.

In 2005,?Chavez?had famously promised that Venezuelans would one day be able to swim in its waters. Trying to do that Friday, as soldiers and red-shirted Chavistas cheered on the hearse, would have been nothing less than life-threatening.

Retired truck driver Miguel Mosquera said he remembered the idyllic scene there decades ago, when the river was a perfect place to spend a sunny day.

He lives in the neighborhood of San Antonio, close to the river and within sight of the funeral route.

"The city grew too much," the 67-year-old said. "In the '30s and in the '40s, people bathed in this river. ... Here, when it rains, it's chaos, you see that the river sometimes spills over when it rains."

Jose Leal, who had stopped by a bakery near the route, said he had given up on any change under the current government, led by?Chavez's?hand-picked successor Nicolas Maduro.

"It isn't easy, brother," Leal said as?Chavez?supporters headed to the river to watch the cortege pass. "It's worrying. It creates stress, stress in the family, stress at work."

The hearse ended its journey winding through the?Chavez?stronghold of the "23 de enero" slum and stopping in front of the military museum overlooking Caracas.

Chavez's?coffin will remain at the museum, while authorities decide its final resting place. Maduro had said last week that?Chavez's?body would be perpetually displayed, but Information Minister Ernesto Villegas announced Friday night that the government had discarded that option.

With the nation watching, Maduro pledged that "we will construct socialism" as?Chavez?had attempted to do and that "we take on your cause."

In a bakery at the route's midpoint, Yaneth Solano said she wasn't so sure about such grand promises anymore.

"Nothing will change Venezuela now, only God."

RECOMMENDED:?Hugo Ch?vez 101: a quiz about Venezuela's president

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/DtLuyh2YDmM/Chavez-body-makes-final-journey-as-government-says-he-will-not-be-embalmed-video

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Canadian residential real-estate sales show signs of cooling | CTV ...

The Canadian Press
Published Friday, Mar. 15, 2013 9:25AM EDT
Last Updated Friday, Mar. 15, 2013 10:15PM EDT

OTTAWA -- Canada's residential real estate market continued to cool in February, a trend that the industry's main association says is fallout from tougher borrowing and lending rules brought in last summer.

The Canadian Real Estate Association also cut its forecast Friday for sales this year after a weak second half of 2012 that saw sales slow more than it expected some markets.

The association said 2013 sales are expected to total 441,500 units, down 2.9 per cent from 454,573 in 2012. The revised outlook compared with earlier expectations for a two per cent drop in sales.

The national average home price is forecast to slip by 0.2 per cent to $362,600.

"Mortgage rules are expected to remain as they are, so sales should be less volatile than they have been in recent years," said Gregory Klump, the association's chief economist.

"Interest rates are also expected to remain low as the economy grows and adds jobs, which is supportive for the resale housing market."

For February, CREA said sales were down 15.8 per cent compared with a year ago -- a decline that was exaggerated slightly by an extra day in February 2012.

Sales were down 2.1 per cent month-to-month in February -- reversing a small gain in January.

Klump noted the decline from early 2012 reflects reduced demand due to tighter mortgage rules brought in by the federal government last July.

"Until we get well into the summer months, year-over-year comparisons to months in the first half of 2012 are predictably going to be down significantly but not necessarily be indicative of further deterioration," Klump said.

"Rather, year-over-year comparisons will continue to reflect the long shadow cast by higher sales prior to last summer's policy tightening. Looking at the monthly trend since then shows that we've been seeing reasonably stable trends for demand and prices."

Of the 26 local markets tracked by CREA, all but one showed year-to-year declines in actual sales -- with Edmonton being the exception.

The association also said its house price index had its smallest year-to-year gain since March 2011, rising 2.7 per cent to 156.5 last month

The national average price for homes sold in February through its members was $368,895.

That was a one per cent decline from the same month last year -- although CREA said there would have been a small increase without Vancouver's numbers.

In 2014 however, CREA forecasts sales will gain 4.5 per cent to 461,200 due to a slow but steady improvement, while the national average price is expected to gain 1.7 per cent to $368,700.

Source: http://www.ctvnews.ca/business/canadian-residential-real-estate-sales-show-signs-of-cooling-1.1196787

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শনিবার, ১৬ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Journalist charged in hacking conspiracy suspended

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- News agency Reuters has suspended with pay a deputy social media editor after he was indicted on federal charges of conspiring with the hacking group Anonymous to deface an online story of the Los Angeles Times.

Reuters spokesman David Girardin told The Associated Press Friday in an email that Matthew Keys, 26, was suspended on Thursday with pay. He did not elaborate.

Federal authorities allege that in December 2010, Keys provided hackers with login information to access the computer system of the Tribune Co., the parent company of the Times that also owns a Sacramento television station Keys was fired from months before. Keys' Facebook page says he worked as an online news producer for FOX affiliate KTXL from June 2008 to April 2010.

Reuters hired Keys in 2012 as a deputy editor for social media. He didn't return a phone call or respond to email messages seeking comment.

"I'm okay," he tweeted Friday in response to a journalism colleague wondering how he was doing.

Investigators allege that Keys gave a hacker named "Sharpie" the login information in an Internet chat room frequented by hackers and urged the hacker to do some damage to the Tribune Co.

According to the indictment, Sharpie altered a Times news story posted Dec. 14 and 15, 2010, to read "Pressure builds in House to elect CHIPPY 1337," a reference to another hacking group. "Chippy 1337" claimed responsibility for defacing the website of video game publisher Eidos in 2011.

A second attempt to hack the Times was unsuccessful, according to the indictment.

Federal prosecutors allege in court papers that a legendary hacker and Anonymous leader named "Sabu" offered advice on how to infiltrate Tribune's systems. The FBI unmasked Sabu when it arrested Hector Xavier Monsegur on June 7, 2011. Monsegur secretly worked as an FBI informant until federal officials announced that he helped them arrest five other alleged hackers on March 6, 2012.

Federal officials declined to comment on whether Sabu assisted in the investigation of Keys.

The day after it was announced that Sabu was an FBI informant, Keys wrote a story for Reuters about "infiltrating" the hackers' chat room.

Keys is charged with one count each of conspiracy to transmit information to damage a protected computer, as well as transmitting and attempting to transmit that information. If convicted, the New Jersey native faces a combined 25 years prison and a $500,000 fine if sentenced to the maximum for each count. He is scheduled for arraignment April 12 in Sacramento.

The indictment comes after recent hacks into the computer systems of two other U.S. media companies that own The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. Both newspapers reported in February that their computer systems had been infiltrated by China-based hackers, likely to monitor media coverage the Chinese government deems important.

Anonymous and its offshoot, Lulz Security, have been linked to a number of high-profile computer attacks and crimes, including many that were meant to embarrass governments, federal agencies and corporate giants. They have been connected to attacks that took data from FBI partner organization InfraGard, and they've jammed websites of the CIA and the Public Broadcasting Service.

A computer security specialist said the LA Times attack would be an unusual hack if the government's charges are accurate.

"This is first case where I've heard of someone leaking stuff to Anonymous to have a site defaced, instead of defacing it himself," said Clifford Neuman, director of University of Southern California Center for Computer Systems Security. "He found some way to achieve his ends of defacing the website without having to do it himself."

A spokesman for the Chicago-based Tribune Co. declined to comment.

According to Keys' Facebook profile, he is single, lives in New York City and works at Reuters' New York office, where "I get paid to use Twitter and Facebook at work."

Reuters, a unit of New York-based Thomson Reuters Corp., has been expanding its business in the United States. This year, six of the Tribune's seven newspapers dropped The Associated Press for Reuters, citing cost savings. The Los Angeles Times stayed with AP.

___

Follow Paul Elias and Garance Burke on Twitter at https://twitter.com/paulelias1 and http://twitter.com/garanceburke

AP National Writer Martha Mendoza in Santa Cruz contributed to this report

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/journalist-charged-hacking-conspiracy-suspended-155749018.html

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Deal of the Day: Incipio DualPro Hard Case for Droid RAZR M

Deal of the Day The March 15 ShopAndroid.com Deal of the Day is the Incipio DualPro Hard Case for Droid RAZR M. Featuring a high quality polycarbonate plastic exterior embedded in a shock absorbing silicone core, this case provides sturdy protection without sacrificing style. The thin, lightweight design of the DualPro case makes it easy to utilize your device without unnecessary bulk. Comes in black and pink.

The Incipio DualPro Hard Case is available for just $17.00, 43% off today only. Grab yours while supplies last!

Never miss a deal. Sign up for Daily Deal alerts



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/sQWaKITz8io/story01.htm

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শুক্রবার, ১৫ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Stylists' star-making, brand-building power feted

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Tara Swennen and Kaley Cuoco at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Tara Swennen and Kaley Cuoco at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Abbie Cornish and Naomi Watts at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Jeanann Williams and Tara Swennen at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Carol McColgin and Naomi Watts at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

FILE - This Wednesday, March 13, 2013 publicity photo provided by The Hollywood Reporter shows Zoe Saldana at The Hollywood Reporter and Jimmy Choo Celebration of the Most Powerful Stylists in Hollywood, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/The Hollywood Reporter, Eric Charbonneau)

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (AP) ? Dianna Agron may be a sought-after actress, but she'll admit to a little stalking. Not for a plum role ? for a stylist.

"Not outside her house like a creepy person," the "Glee" star said of her pursuit of stylist Samantha McMillen, "but I knew some of the people that she was dressing and I said I want her."

McMillen was among those honored on the Hollywood Reporter's list of the industry's top 25 stylists. The trade paper doesn't rank the most powerful directors or producers in the industry, but it does recognize the top stylists, whose ability to effect image may be on par with those other big shots.

Stylists aren't just indispensable to stars, they're integral to the whole Hollywood marketing machine. They're curators of living, breathing, world-famous billboards; the key link between fashion brands and actresses and a critical component in how both are seen. In an industry that trades on image, stylists are the most powerful image makers.

This year's style-makers were celebrated at a luncheon Wednesday with Zoe Saldana, Naomi Watts and Reese Witherspoon on the rooftop patio of the private Soho House. Most of those on the list don't have famous names (except maybe for Rachel Zoe, who's third), but their work is seen worldwide in the form of glamorous looks on the most admired stars.

Saldana started working with Petra Flannery while filming "Avatar." The actress said having a stylist is "paramount to a person's image, especially when they work in this business."

"Not only are you respected by what you say, you're also respected and admired and reviewed on how you look, so that said, this is my office," Saldana said, pointing at herself. "You have to kind of see it that way and have fun with it."

Not only do stylists keep celebrities perfectly put together, they know the fashion world's top designers and can get them to custom-make clothes for their big-name clients, as list-topper Leslie Fremar did with Witherspoon's Louis Vuitton gown at last month's Academy Awards. Stylists are catalysts for lucrative partnerships between celebrities and luxury brands, which can elevate the profile of each.

"A dress they put on an actress that becomes talked about will set a fashion trend for the next year, or it'll drive what buyers are buying for major department stores," said Janice Min, editorial director of The Hollywood Reporter. "The decisions made by this small group of women and men in this room amount to millions if not billions of dollars' worth of business in the next year."

Jimmy Choo chief executive Pierre Denis said Hollywood's influence continues to grow globally. No ad campaign or editorial layout can match the impact of the right piece on the right person, and "the stylists, in the end, are the ones actually making style of the actresses," he said.

Though these stylists broker million-dollar looks ? and deals ? they still mostly operate behind the scenes, and on their own. The Hollywood Reporter luncheon, held for the first time last year, is a rare gathering.

For stylist Tara Swennen, who counts "The Big Bang Theory" star Kaley Cuoco among her clients, it was a chance to celebrate her work with her colleagues.

"We don't have a union or anything like that yet," she said, "so it's sort of nice to have something cohesive."

___

AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen is on Twitter: www.twitter.com/APSandy .

___

Online:

www.hollywoodreporter.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-15-Fashion-Hollywood%20Stylists/id-cddfc957d9a54ea79deabc84e655cd6c

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March Madness can sap job productivity, boost morale | Wichita Eagle

As March Madness descends, bringing brackets, pools and hundreds of hours of college basketball coverage, employers would do well to let workers know where they stand ? not on the topic of Indiana vs. Duke or Gonzaga vs. Kansas, but on their view toward monitoring sports events at work.

During the National College Athletic Association men?s basketball tournament, it?s not uncommon for a worker?s attention to wander. Starting with Selection Sunday and running to the championship game on April 8, this three-week stretch offers a great opportunity for distraction.

Interest is likely to be especially intense next week, when a steady stream of daytime games will be played.

Passing on work

Not long ago, employees who wanted to see early round games broadcast live had to dedicate a vacation day or two to lying on the couch, TV clicker in hand. Now, all 67 tournament games can be viewed live for a small fee from a computer, iPhone, iPad or Android device.

This can present a problem for employers who fear a game-time dip in productivity and a strain on IT resources. However, damage can be mitigated if employees have a clear understanding of their boss? position.

A company may already have the March Madness issue covered under a blanket Internet use policy. If Internet access is for work-related purposes only, it wouldn?t hurt to remind employees of that fact before the tourney begins.

Employees also should be aware that the company may monitor and audit their Internet use. Employees should not expect their computer use to be private and should be made aware of policies that might limit cellphone use during work.

?A reminder to employees around this time of year about policies may be all it takes to curb the kind of overzealous participation that kills productivity,? said Katie Loehrke, an editor with J.J. Keller & Associates Inc. ?No matter what the distraction, employees should always be held to the same standard of performance. If they can?t be part of a March Madness pool and still be productive, discipline may well be in order.?

Rally the team

Rather than trying to quash employee access to scores and games, employers might want to consider how they can make interest in the tournament work to their advantage. A company-wide pool that allows employees to fill out the brackets for fun ? and does not involve cash prizes or an entry fee ? could be an ice-breaker, and chatter about last-second victories and upsets offers an opportunity for employee bonding.

Employees might rally around a casual day that allows them to wear the colors of their favorite team, appreciate flexible hours that allow them to catch a big game, or watch the action at designated times during the day.

Get a game plan

When J.J. Keller asked human resources professionals from around the nation for their views on handling popular events such as March Madness, it found that company expectations are key.

When employees are clear about their responsibilities, putting a little play in the day can positively charge the workplace atmosphere. Employees who are closely attuned to a company?s goals may bring it upon themselves to find the balance between fun and job obligations when there?s a special event going on during the workday.

A company can work within its policies to allow workers access to information. For example, an organization that does not allow employees to bring their cellphones or other portable electronics into the office may let workers check scores online while on break or watch games during their breaks.

However a company handles the issue, managers, supervisors and employees should all be aware of the company?s stance. Clearly communicating the policy, and letting employees know what?s allowed and when, can keep morale and productivity high.

Properly handled, an event that generates high interest such as March Madness doesn?t need to be a negative. It can help a company boost morale while underscoring the importance of everyone?s contribution to the organization?s success.

Terri Dougherty is an associate editor at J.J. Keller & Associates, a compliance resource firm. More information is available at www.jjkeller.com

Source: http://www.kansas.com/2013/03/13/2715104/march-madness-can-sap-job-productivity.html

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Wounded Warriors to Participate in 2013 Bataan Memorial Death March

Disabled Sports USA and Bataan Memorial Death March organizers to sponsor a Team Warfighter Sports in a grueling 26.2-mile march in the desert of New Mexico

Rockville, MD (PRWEB) March 13, 2013

Disabled Sports USA (DSUSA) will again sponsor a team of approximately 50 wounded warriors and medical support staff to attend the 2013 Bataan Memorial Death March, as part of DSUSA?s Warfighter Sports program. The grueling 26.2 mile march will take place Sunday, March 17 in the high desert of White Sands Missile Range, NM.

The service members injured in Iraq and Afghanistan will join more than 6,000 other active duty, retired military and civilian marchers to test their endurance and strength while raising awareness of the abilities of our nation?s wounded warriors. The majority of the warriors participating will be from major military hospitals including Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, MD, and Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, TX. The warriors have suffered injuries including single or double arm and leg amputations, traumatic brain injuries, and other severe injuries.

This year marks the sixth consecutive year for DSUSA?s participation in the Bataan Memorial Death March to honor this generation?s military heroes. "Disabled Sports USA is honored to continue partnering with the Bataan Memorial Death March organizers to provide an opportunity for our nation?s wounded warriors to challenge themselves in one of the most demanding events they will attempt," said Kirk M. Bauer, executive director of DSUSA and disabled Vietnam veteran, who will also be participating in the march.

The Bataan Memorial Death March, now in its 24th year, honors World War II heroes who fought to protect the Philippines. The Warfighter Sports team is also supported by the event organizers and volunteers who come together to enable the service members to experience this challenging event.

About Warfighter Sports


Warfighter Sports, a program of Disabled Sports USA, offers sports rehabilitation for severely wounded warriors in military hospitals and communities across the U.S. through a nationwide network of over 100 community-based chapters. Since 1967, Disabled Sports USA has proudly served wounded warriors, including those injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, offering over 30 winter and summer sports at more than 100 events each year. Warfighter Sports rebuilds lives through sports by improving self-confidence, promoting independence and uniting families through shared healthy activities.

Contributions cover all expenses for participation of the warrior and a family member, including individualized adaptive instruction, adaptive sports equipment, transportation, lodging and meals. Since 2003, more than 6,200 of the most severely wounded and their families have been served, including those with amputations, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, visual impairments, and significant nerve and muscle damage. For more information, visit http://www.warfightersports.org.

Kyleen Davis
Disabled Sports USA
(240) 876-1429
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/wounded-warriors-participate-2013-bataan-memorial-death-march-191627421.html

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Samsung gets ready to counter-program the iPhone with the Galaxy S4

Samsung gets ready to counter-program the iPhone with the Galaxy S4

I'm in New York with our Windows Phone editor, Daniel Rubino and our videographer, Martin Reisch, to help Android Central's Phil Nickinson cover the ever-loving stuffing out of the Samsung Galaxy S4 event at Radio City Music Hall tonight. (Yeah, all of us can work cross-platform, go figure?)

What we're expecting is a bigger, badder-asser Galaxy S phone. So much has leaked already that there may not be too many surprises. The screen will likely be bigger (somewhere between the Galaxy S3 and the Note II?), processor will likely be more advanced (big.LITTLE dual quadcore), and Samsung will do what they do best -- throw a dizzying array of software features at us to see what sticks. Rumors range from eye-tracking to make sure we're paying attention to videos, to hover-mode for the touch sensor so you can gesture above, not just on the display, for even more options.

What's real and what's wishful blogging, we won't know until tonight. I'll be in Times Square with Martin if you're there and want to say hi, and get your picture in the Android Central feed. Otherwise we'll tweet what we can -- @reneritchie and @safesolvent -- but if you're at all interested in Apple's biggest competition to date, keep it locked on Android Central and the Samsung Galaxy S3

The iPhone 5 is almost 6 months old. The iPhone 5S is still months away. Samsung's picked the perfect time to counter-program Apple. It's their turn in the spotlight. While we wait on the next iPhone, let's see what Samsung can do.



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

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রবিবার, ৩ মার্চ, ২০১৩

SpaceX's Dragon carrying NASA cargo resupplies space station

Mar. 3, 2013 ? The Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) Dragon spacecraft was berthed to the International Space Station at 8:56 a.m. EST Sunday. The delivery flight was the second contracted resupply mission by the company under NASA's Commercial Resupply Services contract.

Space station Expedition 34 crew members Kevin Ford and Tom Marshburn of NASA used the station's robotic arm to successfully capture Dragon at 5:31 a.m. The capture came one day, 19 hours and 22 minutes after the mission's launch. The station was 253 miles above northern Ukraine. Following its capture, the spacecraft was installed onto the Earth-facing port of the Harmony module through ground commands issued by mission control at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston.

"The newly arrived scientific experiments delivered by Dragon carry the promise of discoveries that benefit Earth and dramatically increase our understanding of how humans adapt to space," said William Gerstenmaier, NASA's associate administrator for the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate in Washington. "Spaceflight will never be risk-free, but it's a critical achievement that we once again have a U.S. capability to transport science to and from the International Space Station. The science delivered and to be returned from the space station has the promise of giving us a unique insight into problems that we face on Earth. As the patch of Expedition 34 states: 'Off the Earth...For the Earth.'"

The Dragon spacecraft lifted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 10:10 a.m. Friday aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. Shortly after spacecraft separation from the rocket's second stage, the Dragon lost three of its four thruster pods. Solar array deployment was delayed while SpaceX engineers worked to purge blocked valves and get the pods back online. Ninety minutes after launch, Dragon's arrays were deployed. By 3 p.m., all four thruster pods were online and attitude control was regained.

Following a series of tests to ensure the spacecraft could safely approach the space station, Dragon was approved to approach the orbiting laboratory Sunday morning, one day after its originally planned arrival, which is not expected to impact any of the scientific investigations being delivered.

Dragon is loaded with about 1,268 pounds (575 kilograms) of supplies to support continuing space station research experiments and will return with about 2,668 pounds (1,210 kilograms) of science samples from human research, biology and biotechnology studies, physical science investigations, and education activities.

Newly delivered investigations include studies of how molecular biology, cells and plants grow in microgravity. One experiment, titled Coarsening in Solid Liquid Mixtures-3, will examine solid and liquid mixtures made of lead and tin that contain a small amount of tin branch-like structures called dendrites. By understanding how temperature and time control the growth of such dendrites, researchers hope to develop more efficient and economical means of producing higher-quality products derived from the casting of molten metals. New student experiments include observing how gravity changes the growth of E. coli bacteria, studying the long-term impact of space travel on small coin-cell-sized batteries, and producing ammonium aluminum sulfate crystals of higher purity than is possible on Earth.

Experiment samples coming back to Earth will help researchers continue to assess the impact of long-duration spaceflight on the human body. Returning plant samples will aid in food production during future long-duration space missions and enhance crop production on Earth. Crystals grown aboard and returning from the station could help in the development of more efficient solar cells and semiconductor-based electronics.

The Dragon capsule is scheduled to spend 22 days attached to the station before returning for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Baja California March 25.

This flight is the second of at least 12 SpaceX cargo resupply missions to the space station through 2016. The resupply contract with NASA is worth $1.6 billion.

NASA's Space Network, which includes the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System, provided space communications for SpaceX from launch through berthing with the space station.

SpaceX built and tested new cargo spacecraft under NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program. NASA initiatives like COTS and the agency's Commercial Crew Program are helping develop a robust U.S. commercial space transportation industry with the goal of achieving safe, reliable and cost-effective transportation to and from the space station and low Earth orbit. In addition to cargo flights, NASA's commercial space partners are making progress toward a launch of astronauts from U.S. soil within the next few years.

While NASA works with U.S. industry partners to develop and advance these commercial spaceflight capabilities, the agency also is developing the Orion spacecraft and the Space Launch System (SLS), a crew capsule and heavy-lift rocket to provide an entirely new capability for human exploration. Designed to be flexible for launching spacecraft for crew and cargo missions, SLS and Orion will expand human presence beyond low Earth orbit and enable new missions of exploration in the solar system.

For more information about the International Space Station, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/station

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/eSLpTgNDypQ/130303102211.htm

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শনিবার, ২ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Social Media in Your Job Search | UW-Green Bay Career Services

As you set out into the crazy world of the job search, it can sometimes be overwhelming.? But did you know that you probably already use some helpful job search tools every day?? Believe it!? Lindsey Pollak, bestselling author of Getting from College to Career: Your Essential Guide to Succeeding in the Real World, tells us about how social media can be an amazing tool when it comes to networking and building connections during a job search.

Known as the expert on the struggles ?Generation Y? will face in the job search, Pollak wrote an article for the February 2013 issue of Job Choices magazine.? In the article she outlines 10 steps that everyone can take to improve their networking skills and make connections using the social media tools they already have.?

1.????? Develop a Professional Presence.

2.????? Fill Your Profile With Keywords.

3.????? Use LinkedIn to Find Your Path.

4.????? Get Personal.

5.????? Be a Joiner (Of Groups and Online Communities

6.????? Tweet.

7.????? Blog.

8.????? Share.

9.????? Keep People Up to Date.

10.?? Use Social Media to Ace Interviews.

These ten steps are a great outline for you to get started using social media as a job search tool.? But don?t forget, it is always important to make sure that your online presence is professional.? Do you really want a potential employer to see what you did last weekend?? Didn?t think so.? Pollack also reminds us that social media is only a tool in the job search, not the only aspect.? Make sure to explore all forms of job search techniques to ensure a well-rounded and thorough experience.?

To view the full article from Lindsey Pollak, visit http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/nace/JobChoices0812_Diversity/index.php#/27

Source: http://blog.uwgb.edu/careers/social-media-in-your-job-search-2/

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SAfrica: Officers in dragged man case suspended

En esta imagen tomada de la televisi?n, cortes?a del peri?dico sudafricano Daily Sun, aparece un hombre con las manos esposadas en la parte posterior de una camioneta policial arrastrado por el veh?culo en Johanesburgo el 26 de febrero del 2013. Despu?s lo sueltan y la camioneta se lo lleva arrastrando por el piso. El hombre muri? poco despu?s de sus heridas. El video tomado por un espectador con un tel?fono m?vil tom? toda la escena (AP Foto/The Daily Sun) TV OUT

En esta imagen tomada de la televisi?n, cortes?a del peri?dico sudafricano Daily Sun, aparece un hombre con las manos esposadas en la parte posterior de una camioneta policial arrastrado por el veh?culo en Johanesburgo el 26 de febrero del 2013. Despu?s lo sueltan y la camioneta se lo lleva arrastrando por el piso. El hombre muri? poco despu?s de sus heridas. El video tomado por un espectador con un tel?fono m?vil tom? toda la escena (AP Foto/The Daily Sun) TV OUT

In this still frame from TV and courtesy of South African Daily Sun newspaper, showing a South African man with his hands tethered to the back of a police vehicle being dragged behind as police hold his legs up and the vehicle apparently drives off, east of Johannesburg Tuesday Feb. 26, 2013. The man died of his injuries. In video filmed on a mobile phone, uniformed police are seen trying to subdue the man, then tethering him to the back of a police vehicle which drives off, watched by a large crowd. Moses Dlamini of the Independent Police Investigative Directorate said early Thursday Feb. 28 2013 on ENCA TV network that his service has opened a murder probe. (AP Photo/The Daily Sun) TV OUT

In this still frame from TV and courtesy of South African Daily Sun newspaper, showing a South African man as he refuses to get into a police vehicle and seems to be tethered to the back of the vehicle before being dragged behind as police hold his legs up and the vehicle apparently drives off, east of Johannesburg Tuesday Feb. 26, 2013. The man died of his injuries. In video filmed on a mobile phone, uniformed police are seen trying to subdue the man, then tethering him to the back of a police vehicle which drives off, watched by a large crowd. Moses Dlamini of the Independent Police Investigative Directorate said early Thursday Feb. 28 2013 on ENCA TV network that his service has opened a murder probe. (AP Photo/The Daily Sun) TV OUT

(AP) ? South Africa's police chief announced Friday that eight officers allegedly involved in the death of a man who was bound and then dragged by a police vehicle have been suspended and that the local police commander has been removed from his post.

Gen. Riah Phiyega said Friday that she shares "the extreme shock and outrage" over the abuse of the Mozambican immigrant by police officers and supports the investigation by the police watchdog agency. The rights of Mido Macia, a 27-year-old from neighboring Mozambique, were "violated in the most extreme form," she said. The detention and dragging of the man, a taxi driver who had parked in the wrong spot, was videotaped by memebrs of a horrified crowd of onlookers.

The scandal is the latest to undermine confidence in South Africa's police force, which has expanded from 120,000 to nearly 200,000 over a decade.

"When dealing with 200,000 employees, it is never an easy environment," Phiyega said. "There will always be incident such as this."

Late Tuesday, a crowd in the Daveyton township east of Johannesburg watched as police officers tried to put Macia into the back of their police vehicle, bound his hands to the rear of it with his body on the ground, then drove off.

A murder probe by the Independent Police Investigative Directorate, the police watchdog agency, is underway on the evidence that Macia suffered head and upper abdomen injuries, including internal bleeding. The injuries could be from the dragging and he could also have been beaten later in police custody.

Phiyega said the police force would also have its own internal investigation and said the Daveyton station commander was removed "so that the investigations can proceed uninhibited."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-01-AF-South-Africa-Man-Dragged/id-a32e2b48f1be4614a8608d21ee6162a4

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Amity Gaige and Cary Goldstein

(L) Amity Gaige and (R) Cary Goldstein.

(L) Amity Gaige and (R) Cary Goldstein.

(L) Photo by Anita Licis-Ribak and (R) Photo by Gina LeVay

Cary Goldstein, publisher and editor-in-chief of Twelve, acquired Amity Gaige?s novel Schroder at auction from Gaige?s agent, Wendy Weil, in 2011. The novel is the intricate epistolary story of a German man who adopts a new identity in America and goes for an adventure with his 6-year-old daughter?an adventure that is not all it seems. Goldstein and Gaige talked about their editorial relationship, the impact the late Weil had on Gaige?s life and career, and the music of George and Martha yelling at each other.

Cary Goldstein: You had told me at some point about a novel you were writing that took place on one day in two nations, following?I may be misremembering this?two possible paths a Latvian woman's life could have taken. You even sent me a mix CD of the music fueling it. You can imagine my surprise when Schroder arrived on submission. What happened that made you drop one project to write an entirely new one?

Amity Gaige: Yes, my Great Latvian-American Novel. There was something too inevitable about it. I wanted?and still want?to tell my mother's story. She fled Stalin's army in 1944, leaving Latvia, which was to be occupied by the Soviets for the next 50 years, and arrived to the U.S. when she was 11. I wanted to create a what-if novel: What if she had stayed in Latvia? Who would she have been had she not been wrenched from her cultural context?

I got to spend time in Latvia?that was probably the best part of the whole escapade. I researched, I thought, I drank the local balsams, and what do you know, one morning I'm sitting in my Riga hotel and I read the "newspaper"?a fax of short news stories?they'd put by my breakfast plate, and there is this article about a man called Clark Rockefeller. The article was maybe 10 lines long, but in it I discovered this man was arrested after abducting his own daughter, whom he apparently adored, and in the course of things was revealed to be a fraud and a con-man?a German, no Rockefeller. I have to stress here that I never read a thing further about that real case. But the themes from my Great Latvian-American Novel ? exile, identity, longing?leapt into a new context.

Truth is, I think I was also experiencing a minor crisis of faith about the novel form itself. I liked my Parallel-Stories-What-If-Great-Latvian-American-Novel-With-a-Soundtrack. But I saw how I would go about it too well. I would use an architectonic form (? la Anna Karenina), and if I could just muster all of the details, build the elaborate scenery, I could write it convincingly. But one doesn't sign up to be a writer with the dream of writing "convincingly."

At least I have the soundtrack. Did you like it?

Goldstein: You called it ?Eddie Hearts Justine,? it's fantastic. Cocteau Twins, Dead Milkmen, the Sugarcubes ...

Gaige: The best bits of what I have on that novel?a hundred pages or so?happened to be these lively scenes between two American teenagers in 1989, loving one another across class lines, making out under a boom box on a window sill.

Goldstein: A hundred pages on two teens making out? I want to read that! It?s like Nicholson Baker by way of John Hughes. There is something in it that seems unmistakably you in its tight focus on two people?insular, intimate, with an almost claustrophobic intensity. It's what I so loved about your first novel, O My Darling. Only in Schroder, the bubble we're brought inside of isn't a lover's bubble, but a father and daughter's.

Gaige: I think marriage and family keeps being written about because that's where we keep our reputations with ourselves?I mean, we can't quite slip the truths we reveal about ourselves at home. I was and still am an Edward Albee devotee. Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is, to my mind, a work of perfect genius. Not only does it sizzle?no, burn?with every line, but it also demonstrates that in some ways, love is a performance, identity is a performance.

Goldstein: I remember telling an old boss of mine how much I loved George and Martha's sparring, how musical I found it. She looked at me with horror. She couldn't bear the sound of people yelling. In my house I guess it was the yelling that connected us. We allowed each other to announce our wounds and somehow knew that meant we loved and were loved. That's a far cry from playing Get the Guests, though.

Gaige: I feel like you and I love the same books. I'm always hollering, Yeah, I love that book, too! when you're talking about something. Revolutionary Road. Stoner. The Sportswriter. (Actually, didn't I turn you on to that one?)

Goldstein: Stoner?what an incurably lonely book, so beautiful and inevitable. I wasn't at all prepared for that book. I think my favorite writers can articulate something I wished I'd said myself. Or wished I'd noticed at all. Access points. And you absolutely did turn me on to The Sportswriter, which I hadn?t read. It is just lousy with access points, they're everywhere in it.

What role does reading play for you while you're writing?

Gaige: Reading while I'm writing ideally inspires my competitive side. When I read great writers, I want to be a better writer. I want to put my knife between my teeth and get to work already. It's not an unpleasant feeling, even when I feel unworthy of that writer's company. A great sentence can really do it, too. A perfect sentence. Like this one from John Banville?s The Sea, which I think was an influence on Schroder: ?The past beats inside me like a second heart.? Of course, it's a hazard of the profession to develop this scavenging nature to one's reading life. I become impatient with the deliberate, determined way many (even very good) novels set up their groundwork. I just want those lines, and those "access points," to borrow your phrase. Maybe because of this impatience, I favor reading poetry before I start to write. Poetry immediately puts me in the writing mind.

Goldstein: It was the poetry in your work that got me. I was turned on to O My Darling by a mutual friend of ours, and I vividly remember being stopped short by a scene in which the young wife and her husband's dead mother's dog square off in the corner of the bedroom, vying for territory. Gorgeous. So I sent you a fan letter.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=ff1b8458c62966b6fed307f156c94f2c

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Dale Robertson, actor in U.S. westerns, dies at 89

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Dale Robertson, the star of scores of Hollywood Westerns in the 1950s and 1960s, has died at the age of 89 in Southern California, Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla said on Thursday.

Robertson, who was best known for his role of special agent Jim Hardie in the NBC television series "Tales of Wells Fargo" from 1957-1962, died on Tuesday, the hospital said.

The "Sitting Bull" star had been in poor health for about two years and had a cancer diagnosis last week, his niece, Nancy Love Robertson, told The Oklahoman newspaper.

Born Dayle Lymoine Robertson in Harrah, Oklahoma, in 1923, the actor attracted the attention of Hollywood agents after a Los Angeles photographer posted his photo in a display window.

Robertson, who served in Europe and Africa during World War Two, starred in 60 films and television shows over his five-decades acting career, starting out with roles in 1950s Westerns such as "Devil's Canyon" and "Dakota Incident."

The actor was inducted in 1983 into the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum's Western Performers Gallery in Oklahoma City, alongside some of Hollywood's most famous on-screen cowboys including John Wayne and Roy Rogers.

Robertson is survived by his wife, Susan, and two daughters.

(Reporting by Eric Kelsey; Editing by Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/westerns-actor-dale-robertson-dies-age-89-201134534.html

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Idina Menzel to return to Broadway next year

FILE - This Sept. 12, 2012 file photo shows Idina Menzel at the West Coast premiere of "The Book of Mormon" at the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles. Menzel will return to Broadway since winning the Tony Award for "Wicked" to star in "If/Then," an original Broadway musical. The production will begin previews on Broadway on March 4, 2014 and will officially open on March 27, 2014. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, file)

FILE - This Sept. 12, 2012 file photo shows Idina Menzel at the West Coast premiere of "The Book of Mormon" at the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles. Menzel will return to Broadway since winning the Tony Award for "Wicked" to star in "If/Then," an original Broadway musical. The production will begin previews on Broadway on March 4, 2014 and will officially open on March 27, 2014. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, file)

FILE - This Sept. 12, 2012 file photo shows Idina Menzel at the West Coast premiere of "The Book of Mormon" at the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles. Menzel will return to Broadway since winning the Tony Award for "Wicked" to star in "If/Then," an original Broadway musical. The production will begin previews on Broadway on March 4, 2014 and will officially open on March 27, 2014. (Photo by Matt Sayles/Invision/AP, file)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Idina Menzel, who won a Tony Award as the green witch in "Wicked," is planning a return to Broadway.

Producers of a new musical by the creators of the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Next to Normal" announced Thursday that Menzel will star in their "If/Then," a Broadway-bound musical that first takes a stop this fall in Washington, D.C.

Tom Kitt will supply the music, Brian Yorkey will write the story and lyrics, and Michael Greif will direct. All three did the same jobs for "Next to Normal."

The new show will make its world premiere this November at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., and then go on to open on Broadway in March 2014.

Producers said the musical will center on the character of Elizabeth, who on the verge of turning 40, moves to New York. "Set against the ever-shifting landscape of modern day Manhattan, 'If/Then' is a romantic and original new musical about how choice and chance collide and how we learn to love the fallout," producers said in a statement.

Menzel made her Broadway debut in "Rent" and won a Tony as Elphaba in "Wicked." Her films include "Enchanted," ''Rent" and "Ask the Dust." She also has launched a solo recording career and had a recurring role on TV in "Glee."

"I've experienced the beauty of working on original musicals and was eager to find a project where the material was exciting and new and spoke to my heart. I'm thrilled to have finally found it - an original musical with a complex, flawed, and surprising central character that I cannot wait to bring to life onstage," she said in a statement.

"If/Then" is being produced by David Stone, who produced both "Wicked" and "Next to Normal."

___

Online: http://www.ifthenthemusical.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-02-28-US-Theater-Idina-Menzel/id-c90e500f1d2a49fc900902a415502ec0

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Anastacia cancels tour after cancer diagnosis

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) ? Managers for U.S. pop singer Anastacia say she has canceled a planned performance in Dubai and an upcoming European tour after being diagnosed with breast cancer a decade after her first battle with the disease.

A statement Thursday says the 44-year-old performer will cancel all appearances and travel until further notice.

Anastascia, who has had multi-platinum album sales in Europe, Australia and elsewhere, was scheduled to perform March 30 at the Dubai World Cup, the world's richest horse race.

Her European tour was set to begin in London on April 6.

She successfully battled breast cancer in 2003.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/anastacia-cancels-tour-cancer-diagnosis-130602316.html

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