Monday, July 29, 2013

View Business Spectator's new iPad app

Business Spectator?s new iPad app has been created to meet specific reader needs, with with key features designed in response to requests by users of our former app.

As well as combining easy-to-navigate news and commentary sections from Climate, Technology and Markets Spectator, the free app includes gesture navigation, landscape and portrait views, a search function and social integration as standard features.

New font size control and search functions have also been added, and video is now embedded in many articles.

?Many of our customers are frequent business travellers,? Business Spectator Head of Product and Operations Stuart Fagg said. ?So we have added the ability to download the app?s content quickly and easily for in-flight reading and usage.?

To preview or download the new app from Apple?s iTunes store, click here. ?

Source: http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2013/7/29/commercial/view-business-spectators-new-ipad-app

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Protect against breast cancer in simple steps

All women fear being diagnosed with breast cancer. However, there is still hope in the fight against this dreaded disease.

Advances in prevention, early detection and treatment have resulted in better survival rates. The oncologist specialist team at BNH HCG Cancer Center, a unit of HCG - Dr. Bhavana Parikh, Consultant, Medical Oncologist, Dr. Deepak Patkar, Consultant, Radiologist and Dr. Sanjay Dudhat, Consultant, Surgical Oncologist, help us understand breast cancer in simpler way.

Breast cancer symptoms such as lumps, discharge, pain and abnormalities on mammograms are extremely common. Although only a small percentage of these symptoms turn out to be caused by cancer, they produce a great deal of anxiety and worry among women.

Important facts

All women and some men are at risk of breast cancer.

1 out of 22 women is diagnosed with breast cancer in India. In fact, one women is diagnosed with the disease every 6.5 minutes.

The risk of breast cancer increases with age.

Most women diagnosed with breast cancer have no other known risk factors.

Around 8 to 10% breast cancer cases have hereditary or familial association.

When women face a possibly life-threatening condition, they wish to have the best possible care.

Earlier is easier

Although there is no absolute method to prevent cancer, we do know that early detection can save lives and require the least amount of medical intervention.

Warning signs

See your doctor if you notice any of these things in your breast:

Lump or thickening

Swelling, warmth, redness or darkening

Change in the size or shape

Dimpling or puckering of the skin

Itchy, scaly sore or rash on the nipple

Nipple discharge recent onset

What you can do

Perform monthly breast self-examination on the same day of every month.

Have a clinical breast examination every 6-12 months by your physician.

Have a yearly Mammogram starting at age of 40, or earlier if you have a family history of cancer.

Breast self-examination

Look:

Standing in front of the mirror.

Arms at your side

Arms above your head

Hands on your waist with your chest muscle tensed

Feel:

Lying down on your back with a pillow under your shoulder and your arm above your head.

Used the pads of your fingers and examine the breast tissue in a vertical pattern with a firm and gentle touch.

Examine all of the breast tissue from the collarbone, to the rib cage, to the breastbone, to the armpit.

Read more Personal Health, Diet & Fitness stories on www.healthmeup.com

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/health-fitness/health/Protect-against-breast-cancer-in-simple-steps/articleshow/21420998.cms

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A Step in the Right Direction: India Recognizes Dolphins as Non-Human Persons

In a continuation of the process that saw white supremacy become less acceptable, hopefully we can see human supremacy also begin to fade away. . . .

I?d say that the following is very welcome news!

India has officially recognized dolphins as non-human persons, whose rights to life and liberty must be respected. Dolphin parks that were being built across the country will instead be shut down.

One of the primal flaws of our culture is that human needs are almost always placed first, this fact combined with an ever growing human population, leads to humans becoming a type of cancer to the Earth?s biosphere.

However, news like this is a good sign, if only other countries will be motivated to follow in India?s footsteps we can begin to move in a better direction.

On a related note, here are links to a couple of other articles which deal with this issue:

Dolphins deserve same rights as humans, say scientists

And, this from Scientific American,

Are Whales Smarter Than We Are?

It would be nice if this recognition of non-human rights can be extended to the point where the rest of the bio-sphere is seen as important in its own right, and not some resource to be plundered for corporate profits.

Dolphins are people too!

Photo by Themeplus under Creative Commons license

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/firedoglake/fdl/~3/mSsuIhQJC-8/

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Monday, July 22, 2013

Mexican oil pipeline explodes, injuring seven

By Agence France-Presse
Sunday, July 21, 2013 18:20 EDT

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An oil pipeline exploded in a rural area of central Mexico early Sunday, igniting a huge blaze that injured seven people, authorities said.

Petroleos de Mexico, the state oil company, said on Twitter that the blast was caused by an attempted theft of crude oil.

Five policemen and two firefighters were injured when they responded to the explosion and fire, the state of Mexico?s secretary for security said.

Pemex said they got too close to the blaze and were injured in a secondary explosion.

Two patrol cars were incinerated by the fire.

The incident occurred in a corn field near the municipality of Tonanitla, about 40 kilometers (24 miles) from Mexico City.

?The fire in the oil pipeline in Tonanitla has been suppressed,? Pemex said.

In January, 37 people were killed at Pemex?s Mexico City headquarters when an accumulation of gas in its basement ignited.

A Pemex gas distribution plant in the northern city of Reynosa exploded in September 2012, killing another 30 people.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheRawStory/~3/RuWYWrydNH8/

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Analysis: Erdogan puts Turkish policymakers in dilemma

By Nick Tattersall and Asli Kandemir

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - With a powerful prime minister bent on pumping up growth ahead of elections but a sliding currency and rising borrowing costs, Turkish policymakers are caught between a rock and a hard place.

Rattled by weeks of anti-government protests and with a peace initiative for Kurdish militants looking increasingly fragile, the last thing Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan needs with an election cycle starting next year is an economic slowdown.

His rhetoric has become increasingly populist in recent weeks, vowing to "choke" speculators who he said were growing rich off "the sweat of the people", and blaming a "high interest rate lobby" for seeking to undermine Turkey's growth prospects.

Such words from a leader who has transformed the economy over the past decade, overseeing some of Europe's fastest growth and a near tripling of Turks' nominal wealth, has unnerved investors who have long bought in to the Turkey rising story.

"The Turkey narrative has certainly suffered," said Christian Keller, a former IMF representative in Turkey and now a senior economist at Barclays Capital in London.

Erdogan and the ruling AK Party he founded have built their reputation on Turkey's economic transformation, winning three successive parliamentary elections over the past decade as a burgeoning middle class grew richer.

But his determination to maintain that record has laid bare a rift between fellow populists such as Economy Minister Zafar Caglayan, a vocal critic of the central bank, and more moderate and voices such as Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan, viewed as a steadier hand trusted by the markets.

Erdogan's appointment of columnist and TV commentator Yigit Bulut, who last month suggested the prime minister's enemies were seeking to kill him by telekinesis, as his chief economic adviser, as well as probes into recent stock market transactions and currency trades, have done little to calm nerves.

"Turkey is a plane which has only reached the start of the runway ... Now it is time for the plane to take off," Bulut wrote in a newspaper column this week, saying the economy needed to be tripled in size over the next decade.

It faces strong headwinds.

Concern about the U.S. Federal Reserve's planned withdrawal of monetary stimulus, combined with Turkey's domestic unrest, sent the lira tumbling to its weakest ever this month and are doing little to support growth prospects.

Babacan acknowledged on Wednesday that any downward revision to the government's 4.0 percent growth forecast this year should come as "no surprise".

WORK ETHIC

Erdogan's disdain for bankers - this week he targeted lenders charging exorbitant credit card fees - may be partly playing to the gallery, but it is rooted in firmly-held beliefs.

The son of a poor sea captain from the Black Sea, he was hardened by a childhood in Istanbul's Kasimpasa, a tough district of newly arrived migrants from the countryside.

As a boy, he sold lemonade and bread rolls to help the family pay for a religious school, a background biographers say instilled in him Islamic piety, business pragmatism and a respect for hard graft.

His distrust of Istanbul's Western-facing financial elite may play well in Turkey's conservative Anatolian heartland, the bedrock of AK Party support, but it is viewed with growing concern elsewhere.

"Although Erdogan has a lot to gain from this language for domestic political purposes, taking concrete action is actually counterproductive for the country's economy which is desperate for external funding to finance its still-large current account deficit," said Naz Masraff, Europe analyst at Eurasia Group.

"The concern is that Erdogan is now surrounded by people like Bulut, and those that represent more mainstream views, such as Babacan, are very much sidelined."

Babacan has been a key figure in the cabinet since the AK Party came to power, overseeing the economy for all but a brief period when he served as foreign minister, and winning a reputation for prudent policy in the years after a 2001 crisis.

But he is serving his last term under party rules and there are questions over how strongly he will be able to defend the case for price stability and fiscal prudence as the polls loom.

Who succeeds him will be telling.

Erdogan keeps a tight control of government and ministers who do not have his ear find themselves sidelined.

He has been at odds with Babacan before, notably in 2011 when Erdogan rejected a fiscal rule plan aimed at enforcing cuts in spending which investors would have taken as a guarantee of budgetary discipline.

"Erdogan has been determining economic priorities and insists on their enforcement. When things get problematic then Babacan intervenes to fix the situation," said Ugur Gurses, Radikal newspaper columnist and a former central banker.

"He is the 'emergency person on call' ... Other economy-oriented ministers are following Erdogan's lead, not Babacan's. And this is creating mixed messages."

MONETARY POLICY IN CROSSFIRE

The central bank has been caught in the crossfire, spending $6.5 billion so far this year in forex sales trying to support a sliding lira without raising rates, while also trying to keep inflation down and prevent the current account deficit, running at around 7.1 pct of GDP, from widening further.

Central Bank Governor Erdem Basci, a contemporary and school friend of Babacan's, hinted on Monday that a rate hike would be on the agenda next week.

His rare announcement in the run-up to a monetary policy meeting came a day after Erdogan met with Babacan, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek and other economy officials, leaving some with the impression that he had been emboldened to act after receiving the government's blessing.

"The (government's) desire to pump prime growth is likely to be very high," said Timothy Ash, head of emerging market research at Standard Bank.

"The central bank will struggle to fight against this, and the weekend's policy meeting ... was hardly re-assuring in this respect, with the central bank appearing almost as having to get the sign off from the government to move to tighten."

Both government and central bank officials reject the notion that the central bank is anything other than independent, and say that divergent views within government can only be healthy.

"It listens to all views, it studies all analyses, it conducts its own analyses, but when it comes to reaching decisions, the monetary policy committee meets and does whatever is right," Babacan told a news conference on Friday.

He declined to comment on the details of Sunday's meeting.

Investors will be watching Tuesday's rate decision to see just how bold the central bank is prepared to be.

With Turkey's two-year benchmark bond yielding just below 9 percent, many argue only a rise of several hundred basis points in the overnight lending rate will have any impact, but most economists in a Reuters poll forecast a rise of just 50-100 bps.

(Additional reporting by Daren Butler. Editing by Mike Peacock)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-erdogan-puts-turkish-policymakers-dilemma-130449974.html

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Reminder That Baseball Isn't Forever Ruins Erik Bedard's No-Hitter Bid

Astros pitcher Erik Bedard was dominating the Mariners Saturday night, racking up ten strikeouts, five walks and no hits over 6 1/3 innings. Then, he decided not to pitch anymore.

Bedard had a legitimate reason to quit in the middle of a possible no-hitter; at that point, he had thrown 109 pitches. Bedard's 34, and although he used to be able to get away with high pitch counts with the Orioles, it's not worth it now. The Astros only signed him to a one-year deal, so if Bedard had exerted himself, it could have ended up poorly for his long-term future. He discussed his reasoning after the game:

"I've had three shoulder surgeries," Bedard said. "I'm not going over 110 (pitches). I'd rather pitch a couple more years than face another batter."

About a week ago, we watched Tim Lincecum of the Giants throw a 148-pitch no-hitter, but those were under different circumstances. Lincecum's 29 and has no concerning injury history?this is the freak who won't ice his arm regardless of an outing's length. Bedard doesn't want to gamble on that. He'd rather aspire for some more money over one day of glory and a large chunk of that night's Sportscenter dedicated to him. And who can blame him?

Besides Bedard's struggle with his old age, there's another point to take away from this: Houston held Seattle to one hit and still lost, 4-2. Go Astros!

Photo: Scott Halleran/Getty Images

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/deadspin/excerpts/~3/UEt38W_tRUE/reminder-that-baseball-isnt-forever-ruins-erik-bedard-857975453

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HOFFARTH SUNDAY Q & A: Why fantasy sports can read like an open book

How bad do you want to lose in your fantasy league?

I can get you from the overall first pick to the depths of last place faster than a Mark Sanchez butt fumble.

It was in everyone's best interest that two decades ago I swore off playing in rotisserie-style anything of any kind -- football, baseball, golf, Little League T-ball. I continue to enjoy this cleansing of the soul and maintain a purified outlook at just how messed up a fantasy league can be to the psyche and checkbook.

So, with that, I checkedout a new book by Matthew Berry.

In "Fantasy Life: The Outrageous, Uplifting and Heartbreaking World of Fantasy Sports from the Guy Who's Lived It" (Riverhead Books, $27.95, 338 pages), I hesitate to say fantasy looks real again.

Before I take that walk of shame again, I needed to track down Berry, who once lived in Sherman Oaks when he did TV sitcom writing but has since moved to Connecticut (perhaps the requirements of a witness protection program):

Q: Fantasy leagues took up too much of my time and energy and I was losing to guys who picked players with as much research as they would in making a $2 bet on a thoroughbred at Santa Anita. Why should I consider ever getting back into it? Can you convince me one way or another?

A: Unless you're anti-fun, and I don't get that sense, why would you not want to do it? You get to have a rooting interest in games you'd normally not care about. And if you're not a sports fan, you have a reason to watch. Now that you're older, you probably would have a little better perspective of all that.

Q: The perspective I have is feeling that sports fantasy leagues are too mercenary. It forces you to invest a rooting interest in a player which could be at the expense of rooting against a team you've already been emotionally tied to for many years. Is there a way to rectify that psychological hurdle?

A: It goes to your fandom. I don't think there's anything wrong with rooting for individual players over your 'real life' team. It really sounds more like you have some guilt issues, to be perfectly honest. So who cares? I get questions a lot, from those especially who are anti-fantasy, who say, 'That makes you root for players instead of teams.' I'm like, 'Who are you to legislate how I enjoy sports?' There are different ways to enjoy everything in life. Whether I'm rooting for the group of players I've selected on a fantasy team or you're rooting for another group of players that a general manager has selected, we're still rooting for groups of players. As long as we're both enjoying sports, who cares how we're doing it?

Q: I guess I've felt I had conflicted rooting interests. And I was spending way too much time away from my family in pursuit of winning.

A: Got it. In that case, maybe pick your teams a little better. If you want to win, it's not necessarily the best strategy to pick your favorite players, but I don't have an issue with that because in the end fantasy is supposed to be fun. That's what this book is supposed to show. It's not a book about how to win your fantasy league and crush your opponents. It's a book that celebrates all the things I love about fantasy sports -- the trash-talking, the punishments for losing, the trophies, the creative ways people have tried to cheat. There's a story from Senator Rick Santorum about how he had to do a fantasy draft on the day he dropped out of the presidential race. What's lost in there is he plays in an American League-only fantasy baseball league. The reason he does it is because he was from Pennsylvania, where he has the Pirates and Phillies as National League teams, and he didn't want to have to root against either of those teams. That was the idea.

Q: That makes sense. In reading the book, I get the sense you've become used to being a 'fantasy shrink,' where people confess to someone like you who'd understand where they were coming from. Is that how you feel?

A: There is the saying that the most interesting conversation in the world is all about your fantasy team. And the most boring conversation in the world is anyone else's fantasy team. Right? It's the new golf story or vacation pictures. No one cares about your team other than you. Except me. That's my job. I like to hear it. I want to hear it. And I'm amazed what people admit to me. I've been playing almost 30 years and there were many stories where I was like, 'Wow, I've never heard that one.' I thought I'd get a lot of stories about guys who drafted while their wives were giving birth, those kinds of things. I was shocked by the majority of the stories I got -- like a league that forced the loser to get a tattoo of Justin Bieber. A guy who continued drafting through a bombing while he was in Afghanistan. A league that forced its loser to dress like a lion while the other owners hunted him down with paintball guns. There's the league where a guy and his wife are owners and the wife passes away, so the husband starts making these trades with the dead wife ...

Q: You've also tapped into stories about a priest, a rabbi or and a minister in a league ... and all hell breaks loose?

A: Sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it's actually three different leagues. Cheating pastors! I couldn't believe that happens, but it has. In a league filled with other pastors at his church.

Q: You can justify fantasy leagues as something that "gives people who normally would not have a reason to interact an excuse to talk ... from the CEO and mailroom guys to your long-lost cousins and everyone in between." What if I wanted to be in a fantasy league and not talk to anyone? Does that defeat the purpose?

A: Not at all. Go to ESPN.com and sign up for an anonymous league. But now I'm sensing some conflict, more guilt, some anti-social behavior. I think you've got more issues to work through here.

Q: Maybe I'm just in the wrong leagues. What other fantasy leagues that you do?

A: I have a fantasy summer movie league with all my buddies who are screen writers and directors. There's about 30 of us; we threw up a website called summermovieleague.com to keep track of it -- anyone can play if they want -- and you just pick 10 movies you think will make the most money for the summer for your own fantasy studio. I do pretty well, but I think this year "The Lone Ranger" is going to keep me from winning the title.

Q: That darn Adam Sandler.

A: I know, and I didn't even pick "Grown Ups 2."

Q: I could have told you to take that one.

A: Maybe this is a league for you then.

Q: As long as I don't have to get a tattoo if I lose.

A: Make sure that's in the bylaws.

More Q and A with Berry on the blog: www.insidesocal.com/tomhoffarth

Note: Berry will sign books and do a fantasy 'Q and A' at Barnes and Noble at the Grove near Farmer's Market on Fairfax on Monday at 7 p.m.

thomashoffarth@dailynews.com"?@TomHoffarth on Twitter

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/sports/ci_23702189/sunday-q-and-fantasy-sports-can-read-like?source=rss

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Lone Anti-Gay House Democrat Nick Rahall House Joins GOP ?s Federal Marriage Amendment Effort

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Source: www.back2stonewall.com --- Friday, July 19, 2013
Even though John Boehner and his House cronies yesterday announced that they will no longer defend the remaining statutes similar to the Defense of Marriage Act that ban recognition of same-sex couples? marriages. But that is not stopping other anti-gay GOP House members from going forward with their proposed Federal Marriage Amendment, which would define marriage in the U.S. as ?only the union of a man and a woman.? The amendment introduced by Rep. Tim Huelskamp of Kansas after the Supreme Court struck down Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act deeming it unconstitutional has 38 sponsors but none of the senior members of the House GOP leadership team have signed on to co-sponsored the measure. Yesterday though West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall became the first Democrat to sign on to the proposed Federal Marriage Rahall was one of nine house democrats who voted in 2011 to uphold the Defense of Marriage Act. The proposed amendment would read, ? Marriage in the United States shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman. Neither this Constitution, nor the constitution of any State, shall be construed to require that marriage or the legal incidents thereof be conferred upon any union other than the union of a man and a woman.? Rahall is the most senior of five Arab American lawmakers in Congress. It?s so nice to see that the Democrats can keep their house in order. NOT! ? ? ? ...

Source: http://www.back2stonewall.com/2013/07/lone-anti-gay-house-democrat-house-joins-gop-s-federal-marriage-amendment-effort.html

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In zombies, Israelis and Arabs find common enemy

JERUSALEM (AP) ? In one of the central scenes of the summer blockbuster movie "World War Z," Israeli troops funnel Palestinian refugees to safety in Jerusalem behind a massive concrete wall. There, the Arabs and Jews embrace, dance and sing ? shortly before they are all engulfed by bloodthirsty zombies.

Even for such an over-the-top work of science fiction, in which billions of people come back from the dead as horrific zombies to terrorize Earth, one of the most improbable plotlines of the film is that Israelis and Palestinians are fighting on the same side.

Granted, the film assumes that a post-apocalyptic world and a supernatural common enemy are needed to achieve such harmony. But the image of an elusive Mideast peace, coupled with the film's overall positive portrayal of Israel, have not been lost among the region's war-weary moviegoers.

"It's a fantasy, and it seems ridiculous to those who live here, but it is still heartwarming to see Israelis and Palestinians coming together," said Yehuda Stav, a movie critic for the Israeli daily newspaper Yediot Ahronot.

At the core of the cinematic coexistence lies a towering barrier Israel is praised for building to keep out zombies and protect inhabitants of the Holy Land ? Jews and Arabs alike. In reality, Israel's separation barrier with the West Bank ? which Israel says is meant to keep out Palestinian suicide bombers ? is much smaller but much more contentious. Palestinians call it a symbol of occupation that steals their land, hinders their movement and damages their crops.

In the film, Israel is praised for its savvy, survival instincts and peaceful intentions. It is credited with predicting the zombie invasion and preparing proper defenses, making it one of only two nations to prevent a lethal outbreak.

The other, North Korea, adopts a more draconian solution: It extracts the teeth of all its citizen to prevent people from biting each other and spreading the deadly zombie virus.

The movie depicts the Israeli military as courageous and resourceful, the Israeli people as inviting and humane. Even Israel's often criticized system of West Bank checkpoints is portrayed as an effective tool to protect both sides.

"If it weren't for the zombies in the background, you'd think this was an engineered campaign of the Defense Ministry to strengthen Israel's status in the world," Israeli movie critic Chen Hadad wrote in City Mouse magazine. The movie opened in Israel last week.

Such a futuristic Israel in "World War Z" has sparked outrage in the real Arab world, where bloggers and moviegoers have slammed the film as a love song to Israel.

"It's free propaganda for Israel at a time when it occupies other people," complained Ramzi Taweel, a 38-year-old Palestinian cartoonist from Ramallah in the West Bank. "It portrays Israel as a moral power that protects human beings. It justifies the wall. ... The Israeli occupation army in the movie is a humane army that protects the world."

In Lebanon, it is showing in theaters, but some of the Israel scenes have been censored or edited out. It also has been widely distributed in the Gulf, where it has received some thumbs down.

"I don't think it was trying to justify Israel's occupation, but it was glorifying the Israelis by emphasizing peace and harmony of the two nations, which is far from the truth," moviegoer Aleena Khan told the Dubai-based Gulf News. "It was a very rose-tinted version of what the relationship between the Israelis and Palestinians actually is."

But even the fictional love fest comes at a cost. Since the zombies are drawn to noise, the raucous Israeli-Palestinian celebrations prove to be their demise. Their joint rendition of a popular Hebrew song of peace wakes the undead from their slumber, and they ultimately catapult over the wall and bite everything in sight.

Such scenes have raised philosophical debates in the blogosphere about whether the movie is actually for or against Israel's real-life separation barrier.

The setting of "World War Z" migrates to Jerusalem after its hero, Gerry Lane, played by Brad Pitt, arrives to figure out how the Israelis have created a safe zone from zombies. There he meets the chief of Israel's Mossad spy agency, who cites the experiences of the Holocaust, the 1972 massacre of Israeli Olympians in Munich and the surprise war Arabs launched on Israel the following year as lessons that taught the Jewish state to prepare for the unexpected. The spymaster tells Pitt's character that Israel envisioned the threat because officials are encouraged to play devil's advocate, with someone offering a dissenting view if everyone else agrees.

Once pandemonium breaks loose, Pitt manages to escape thanks to a cunning, courageous female soldier, played by Israeli actress Daniella Kertesz, who helps him save the world. Aside from her name, Segen, which is actually Hebrew for the rank of lieutenant, the Israeli depictions are fairly accurate. Though shot in Malta, the scenes appear authentic, as do the street signs, the uniforms and the characters' Hebrew accents.

The rare Hollywood focus on Israel has elicited local pride, with crowds cheering at the sight of the Israeli flag and giggling during Hebrew dialogue.

"It shows that we are strong, we fight to the end and don't give up, but also are willing to help others," Ohad Ben-Aharon, a 19-year-old soldier in the Israeli air force, said after a recent screening in Jerusalem. "It's fictional, but there is also an optimistic message ? that there can be peace."

Another moviegoer was Mark Regev, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's spokesman.

His takeaway?

"We hope the Palestinians indeed agree to live in peace with Israel before the zombies invade."

____

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank; Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; and Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed to this report.

____

Follow Heller on Twitter at www.twitter.com/aronhellerap .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zombies-israelis-arabs-common-enemy-152819024.html

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Re: How to install/recover Windows 8 to mSATA drive on Alienware 14?

I got this.

1. Download free Acronis Western Digital edition (look it up, its free with WD external drives but unlike Seagate edition it doesn't check for a drive to be present).

2. Back up the whole, all partitions, 750GB drive to some external drive with enough free space (for me it was about 16GB since laptop was the way it came from Dell and I haven't installed anything but Windows 8 updates)

3. Install mSATA drive

4. Change SATA to AHCI mode in BIOS

5. Restore your back up to the mSATA drive in Windows. Acronis will re-size partitions automatically so going from 750GB to 256GB is ok.

6. Change boot drive in BIOS to mSATA

7. Erase 750GB drive and delete all the partitions on it to have one full 750GB parting on it. I did that in Linux since Windows8 didn't let me delete Dell's recovery and diag partitions.

8. Format 750GB partition.

Done and it works.

Source: http://en.community.dell.com/thread/20414451.aspx

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Know What Happened To Dave Matthews This Week? Take The Fark Weird News Quiz

Fark.com:

Know why Dave Matthews was the news this week?

Take the Fark Weird News Quiz

Read the whole story at Fark.com

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/19/fark-weird-news-quiz_n_3625889.html

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