20.05.2012

Duffy relatives in court on terror charges

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20.05.2012

Italy in shock after school bomb blast kills teenager

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Italy was in shock on Saturday after an unexplained bombing at a school killed a 16-year-old girl and left five other teens gravely injured, sparking emotional protests across the country.

There were scenes of chaos and carnage when the powerful blast went off at 7:45 am (0545 GMT) near the entrance to the building as students were arriving for classes at the vocational high school in the southern city of Brindisi.

“There was huge black smoke, debris all over the place, piercing screams,” Corradino De Paolis, a passer-by who rushed to the scene, told AFP.

Debris including charred notebooks at the site of the blast was spread over a wide area as investigators combed the area in search of evidence.

Victim Melissa Bassi’s friend, Veronica Capodieci, also 16, was in a “very serious condition” with injuries to her chest, hospital doctors said.

The four other victims being treated were all suffering from extensive burns and five more had been discharged from hospital with lighter injuries.

No one has claimed responsibility for the blast and Interior Minister Anna Maria Cancellieri said investigators were looking into “numerous hypotheses.”

The explosive was composed of three gas canisters with a timer device hidden in a container next to a wall just outside the school, which teaches social work, tourism and fashion and is named in honour of a victim of the mafia.

The region where the attack took place is a hub of the Sacra Corona Unita (United Sacred Crown), a local mafia that has been under pressure from investigators in recent years and whose influence is seen as being on the wane.

The group, which is heavily involved in drug and arms smuggling through the Balkans as well as human trafficking, is believed to be behind a separate bomb attack in the region earlier this month against an anti-mafia campaigner.

Observers pointed to the fact that school is named after Francesca Morvillo, the wife of famous anti-mafia judge Giovanni Falcone, who was assassinated with her husband and three bodyguards by a mafia bomb 20 years ago on Wednesday.

But officials cautioned that it was unlikely the Sacra Corona Unita would target civilians in its own territory and said the device used was not sophisticated enough for an organisation that has easy access to explosives.

“Local mafia organisations want social consensus. This act would go against their interests because it would alienate any sympathy,” said local chief prosecutor Cataldo Motta, adding: “Too many coincidences could be just that.”

Thousands of young people led protests in several cities and many said they believed the attack could be linked to the mafia or political militancy at a time in which Italy is struggling through a painful economic crisis.

“Cowards!” read a banner held up at a protest in the heart of Rome.

“Every time someone tries to change something in Italy, there’s always something dramatic, an attack to terrorise people,” said one man in the crowd, Enrico Fontana from the anti-mafia group Libera.

Along with several other participants, he likened the school bombing to a wave of attacks carried out by far-right and far-left militants in the 1970s and 1980s in a period known as the “Years of Lead”.

Thousands also took to the streets of Brindisi to voice their anger.

“We have to react!” one student told the crowd in Victory Square.

“Crime in Brindisi is nothing new but it’s been hushed up. We can’t take it any more!” the student shouted to cheers from the crowd. “We don’t need a massacre to realise there’s a problem. We are strong, we must not be afraid!”

Speaking on the sidelines of a G8 summit at Camp David in the United States preoccupied with the economic crisis, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti condemned the bombing as a “tragic”, “criminal” and “unprecedented”.

He ordered flags to be flown at half-mast for three days across Italy.

Monti called for “maximum cohesion of all political and social forces to prevent the return to our country of subversive temptations.”

French President Francois Hollande, who was also at the summit, expressed his country’s “deep solidarity” with Italy in the face of this “odious attack”.

The Vatican called it a “an absolutely horrific and vile act.”

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20.05.2012

Bruno Wu To Finance John Woo-Produced Remake Of 'The Killer …

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(Cannes) May 18, 2012 ?? Bruno Wu?s Seven Stars Film Studios (SSFS) has agreed to finance John Woo and Terence Chang?s Lion Rock Productions ?THE KILLER?, the English language retelling of John Woo?s iconic 1989 action film. John H. Lee (A MOMENT TO REMEMBER, 71: INTO THE FIRE) will direct the script by Josh Campbell (ONE SQUARE MILE). Sarah Yan Li, China?s most promising rising star, will co-star in the thriller. Additionally, Li is a top graduate from China Central Academy of Performing Arts, China?s top performing art academy, and was recently selected as the spokesperson of China?s leading automaker Brilliance Automobile. Li is repped by CAA.

Lion Rock?s John Woo and Terence Chang will produce alongside Lion Rock?s Lori Tilkin, who will executive produce. Bruno Wu?s Seven Stars will finance the film which begins filming Q4 2012 in Toronto. Seven Stars? CEO Fred Milstein closed the deal prior to Cannes.

Bruno Wu, Chairman of Seven Stars Global Entertainment (SSGE), the parent company of SSFS, said: ?SSFS and Lion Rock is the perfect team to bring this iconic project to the global audience. I have always admired John Woo?s work and am confident he and John Lee are the ideal filmmaking duo.?

Lion Rock Productions John Woo said: ?THE KILLER? is one of my most beloved projects. I have wanted to make an English-language remake and thrilled to have John H. Lee on board to make that happen. Lee brings a perfect blend of emotion and stunning visuals to his films and I have supreme confidence he?ll bring this story to a new generation and do it justice.?

Set in present day Los Angeles, Jef, a highly skilled contract killer falls in love with the only living witness to his latest job, a female singer (Sarah Yan Li) who was blinded during the hit. Meanwhile, Detective Vaughn, the cop assigned to investigate Jef?s hit, has a chance to save his reputation when he correctly, and fatefully, suspects Jef to be the killer, but after witnessing Jef display an act of heroism, Vaughn?s perceptions of right and wrong begin to change.

John H. Lee?s award-winning film A MOMENT TO REMEMBER remains the highest-grossest Korean film in Japan to date and won the Grand Bell Award for its screenplay.

As recently announced, Harvest Seven Stars Media Private Equity (HSSMPE), which is a subsidiary of Seven Stars Film Studios (SSFS), will invest $800 million across two distinct areas: mergers and acquisitions in the media field and the development of a marketing and distribution platform in all media throughout China, plus the creation of content. In addition, the company recently tapped Fred Milstein President, International, HSSMPE and Chief Executive Officer of SSFS.

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19.05.2012

Google patent application could give Project Glass one true ring controller to rule them all

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Image

Let’s face it: right now, the head nods and other rudimentary controls of Google’s Project Glass are mostly useful for looking good, sharing photos and not much else. A US patent application submitted last September and just now published, however, raises the possibility of more sophisticated control coming from your hands. A ring, a bracelet or a even a fake fingernail with an infrared-reflective layer would serve as a gesture control marker for a receiver on heads-up display glasses. Having this extra control would give the glasses-mounted computing room to grow by learning gestures, and it could even depend on multiple ornaments for more sophisticated commands — at least, if you don’t mind looking like a very nerdy Liberace. We can imagine the headaches a hand-based method might cause for very enthusiastic talkers, among other possible hiccups, so don’t be surprised if Project Glass goes without any kind of ring input. That said, we suspect that Sauron would approve.

Google patent application could give Project Glass one true ring controller to rule them all originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 May 2012 12:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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19.05.2012

Days of ‘gizmo’ launches return: NASA team to test new vehicle-descent technologies

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ScienceDaily (May 18, 2012) ? NASA technologists will get a chance next summer to relive the good old days when Agency engineers would affix space-age gizmos to rockets just to see if the contraptions worked.

In what will be the first of four high-altitude balloon flights to begin in the summer of 2013, technologists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., and Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va., are preparing to test new deceleration devices that could replace current descent technologies for landing ever-larger payloads at higher elevations on Mars.

NASA hasn’t tested deceleration technologies supersonically since 1972 when it conducted four high-altitude tests of a supersonic parachute used during the Viking program. “We’ve been stuck with that design ever since,” said Mark Adler, NASA’s Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator (LDSD) program lead. NASA will use the same technology again this year when it delivers the Curiosity rover to Mars.

However, planetary landers of tomorrow will require much larger drag devices than any now in use. “What we need is new technology to slow larger, heavier landers from the supersonic speeds of atmospheric entry to subsonic ground-approach speeds,” Adler said.

The LDSD program is aimed at giving NASA a new and improved capability. Funded by NASA’s Space Technology Program, the JPL-led team plans to conduct full-scale, stratospheric tests of three potentially breakthrough technologies. The aim is to raise their technology-readiness levels to about six, which means they could be used in a flight project, perhaps as early as 2018.

The first two are supersonic inflatable decelerators, large pressure vessels that inflate around an entry vehicle and slow it from Mach 3.5 or faster to about Mach 2. One of these inflatable devices measures nearly 20 feet in diameter (six meters), the other nearly 26 feet (eight meters). The third technology is a 110-foot (33.5-meter) parachute to further slow the entry vehicle from Mach 2 to subsonic speeds needed for a safe landing. All three would be the largest devices of their kind ever flown at speeds several times greater than the speed of sound.

The design calls for the team to attach a test vehicle equipped with the decelerator and parachute to a Wallops-provided high-altitude balloon. Once the balloon reaches an altitude of about 22 miles (36 kilometers) above Earth’s surface, the rocket would fire its engines and carry the test vehicle to Martian atmospheric densities at an altitude of 31 miles (50 kilometers) at Mach 4. There, the test vehicle would deploy the supersonic decelerator, followed by the parachute.

Perfect Marriage of Capabilities

The project leverages the strengths of both organizations, said Scott Schaire, Wallops LDSD acting project manager. While NASA JPL and its contractors are developing the test vehicle, decelerators, and parachute, NASA Wallops is responsible for balloon operations, balloon instrumentation, and other operations associated with balloon launches.

One significant NASA Wallops-provided technology is an entirely new balloon launch system — an effort Schaire’s team undertook specifically for the supersonic tests. With this new system, the test vehicle will be suspended from a vertical, 80-foot tower. Its job is preventing the test vehicle from hitting the ground as the balloon begins to lift off. A modified apparatus that resembles a farm-irrigation system will help technicians lay out the balloon and a new spool vehicle will hold the balloon until launch.

In the first test as early as August 2013, the team plans to evaluate the performance of both the decelerator and parachute. “Launching small rockets from large balloons,” Schaire said. “What could be a better project for Wallops?”

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19.05.2012

Objectively the Best Ad Campaign for Any Fruit Juice, Ever [Video]

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18.05.2012

Jonathan Vilma Lawsuit: Saints Star Sues NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell

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Jonathan Vilma Lawsuit

This Oct. 30, 2011 file photo shows New Orleans Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma on the sideline during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the St. Louis Rams, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

18.05.2012

Analysis: U.S. bond bulls not ready to call off the charge

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NEW YORK (Reuters) – They are the few, the brave, the unloved, and among big investors, their number shrinks by the month.

They are the last of the bond bulls, the investors who believe long-term U.S. government bonds will extend a historic run that has already pushed interest rates to multi-decade lows.

Recent surveys show broad disdain for Treasuries among market cognoscenti. A cross-section of star money managers and investors, including Warren Buffett, BlackRock’s Larry Fink and even bond expert Dan Fuss of Loomis Sayles, have urged investors to switch to stocks, arguing yields have nowhere to go but up.

Yet the average retail investor keeps sending money to bond funds. And in the past few weeks, things have been moving in the bond bulls’ favor.

Fear of a Greek exit from the euro zone and JPMorgan Chase & Co’s unexpected $2 billion trading loss have ignited a rush out of bank stocks and other risky assets and into low-yielding Treasuries, sending the benchmark 10-year yield to 1.78 percent.

That has helped the Barclays Capital Treasury index, which rose 9.81 percent last year, erase early 2012 losses, while S&P 500′s gains have been halved since peaking in April .

The most bullish bond investors are betting the yield on the 10 year will tumble to 1 percent before it hits bottom.

The case for Treasuries, they say is a simple one: with Europe in recession, China’s economy slowing and hopes of robust U.S. growth fading, the global economy is simply too weak to stoke significant inflation or justify higher interest rates.

“With all the uncertainty in the world, it’s nice to hang your hat on something you can be sure of, which is that there is virtually no interest rate risk to owning bonds for the next several years,” said David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff, which manages about $6 billion.

Indeed, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has all but promised that short-term borrowing costs, pinned near zero since 2008, will likely stay there for at least another two years.

“Look at it this way: the Treasury market is like a casino,” says Robert Kessler, a Denver-based fund manager who runs Treasury-only portfolios for rich investors and institutions. “And the head of the casino is telling you that you can’t lose as long as you keep playing in his casino.”

30 YEARS AND COUNTING

Treasuries certainly were a gold mine for investors in 2011, when the U.S. economy grew just 1.6 percent.

The S&P 500, meanwhile, provided enough volatility to make even the most seasoned investor dizzy, only to end the year where it began for a total return of just 2.1 percent, including dividends. .

Kessler, whose fund earned clients 6.1 percent in 2011 and 7.85 percent in 2010, said he expects 10-year yields to hit 1 percent, while Rosenberg expects the 30-year yield, trading just below 3 percent, to end the year closer to 2 percent.

Depressed economic conditions and elevated anxiety have a lot to do with Treasuries’ recent stellar performance.

So has the Fed’s quantitative easing policy, an attempt to lower long-term interest rates and revive the housing market by purchasing $2.3 trillion of Treasury and mortgage-backed debt.

But doubters say 2011′s gains look like the last gasp of 30-year bull run, made possible by a steady decline in inflation.

Between 1981 and 2011, government bonds with maturities of 10 years or more provided an average total return of 11.4 percent, according to Standard & Poor’s data.

That puts them neck-and-neck with the S&P 500 index, which returned 11.9 percent for the period, and well ahead of bonds’ 85-year average of 6.2 percent.

“That kind of performance is just not repeatable for another 30 years,” said Dean Junkans, chief investment officer at Wells Fargo Private Bank, who prefers dividend-yielding stocks, high-yield corporate bonds and emerging market assets to Treasuries.

At some point, bond bears say, interest rates will have to rise as quicker growth stokes inflation, making government debt a terrible place to be.

“The minute we start to see yields rising and prices falling, we’ll see a substantial exodus from bonds,” said Jeff Sica, chief investment officer at Sica Wealth Management, which oversees $1 billion.

VERY DIFFICULT CONDITIONS

For a few weeks in March, it looked as if the exodus had begun. Several months of firmer economic data pushed stocks to a four-year peak and sent yields sharply higher.

But more recent data has been less impressive: the pace of hiring has slowed, keeping the jobless rate high, real incomes remain stagnant and household debt levels remain high.

“We’re looking at very difficult conditions, not only in the U.S. but worldwide,” said Lacy Hunt, chief economist at Hoisington Investment Management, which oversees $5.8 billion in fixed-income assets for institutional clients.

“Our view is long rates are low and likely to go lower because of poor economic conditions.”

The Wasatach-Hoisington U.S. Treasury mutual fund was down 3 percent through April 30 after gaining 41.2 percent in 2011.

Some indicators suggest there’s more conviction behind bonds than stocks. While the first quarter was the best for the S&P 500 in 14 years, trading volumes were off more than 10 percent from a year earlier, suggesting few new buyers were jumping in.

U.S.-domiciled taxable bond funds, according to Thomson Reuters’ Lipper data, have pulled in $137.58 billion so far this year after attracting $178.24 billion in 2011. Equity funds have reported a $24.09 billion inflow in 2012, after suffering an outflow in 2011.

KILLING THE EQUITY CULT?

What’s more, the days when stocks dominated U.S. investment portfolios — what Citigroup strategists call “the equity cult” — may be coming to an end.

In the early 1950s, U.S. private sector pension funds held just 17 percent of assets in stocks and 67 percent in bonds, Citigroup noted. But a decade of strong performance changed that, and by 2000, those percentages had switched.

Over the next decade, though, equities underperformed bonds. By Citigroup’s estimate, inflation-adjusted U.S. equity returns were a miserable -3.5 percent, while bonds returned 4 percent. That has caused the pendulum to start swinging the other way again, as pension funds and retail investors increase bond holdings.

“The 1990s represented the peak of a 50-year investor shift away from bonds to equities,” the strategists write. “At just 12 years old, the shift back the other way still looks immature.”

Some worry this means that investors, by immunizing themselves against past risks, are foregoing future opportunity.

“I’ve been asked what keeps me awake at night, and it’s that people’s portfolios are perfectly positioned for the past,” said Art Steinmetz, who directs management of $177 billion in assets as chief investment officer at Oppenheimer Funds in New York.

“I’m completely sympathetic to their fears … We’ve had a decade when stocks have performed very poorly. But I’m worried that people who got whacked on equities are going into fixed income and are going to get whacked on fixed income.”

Societe Generale strategist and 15-year bond bull Albert Edwards understands that view but warns it’s still too early to abandon Treasuries.

Over the next 12 to 18 months, he predicts that a new U.S. recession and a severe slowdown in China will push 10-year Treasury yields to 1 percent and spark a sell-off in equities.

“We understand what the pessimists are saying. Over the next five to 10 years, government bonds will prove to be a terrible investment,” he said. “But in the near term, if China hard-lands and the U.S. goes back into recession, I think people will look at a 1 percent yield and consider it a fantastic place to be.”

(Editing by Steve Orlofsky)

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18.05.2012

Are univerisites scared of the online learning movement?

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Mainline universities loudly proclaim their love of online learning ? and pedagogical innovation more generally ? while doing everything possible to slow it.

By Peter G. Klein,?Guest blogger / May 16, 2012

Harvard President Drew Faust, left, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology President Susan Hockfield speak during a news conference announcing a new partnership in online education earlier this month in Cambridge, Mass. Klein argues that despite offering more online courses, most universities would prefer the shift to online education not happen.

Bill Greene/The Boston Herald/AP/File

Enlarge

I posted last week on Organizations and Markets about the tepid,and entirely predictable, reaction of the higher education establishment to the information technology revolution. Mainline universities loudly proclaim their love of online learning ? and pedagogical innovation more generally ? while doing everything possible to retard it. The strategy has been to make a few easy, low-cost, conservative moves that preserve the status quo, such as putting some existing courses online, while trying to suppress the innovative outsiders like Phoenix, DeVry, TED, Kahn Academy, etc. It?s a classic example of what Clayton Christensen calls sustaining innovation ? incremental changes that keep the existing market structure intact. The last thing the higher-ed establishment wants is disruptive innovation that challenges its dominant incumbent position.

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This is the institutional blog of the Ludwig von Mises Institute and many of its affiliated writers and scholars commenting on economic affairs of the day.

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As Morgan Brown wrote earlier this year, universities are guilds, and it?s this organizational structure, not bad leadership or the wrong ideology, that underlies the universities? hostility to markets. If there is fundamental reform, it will surely come from outside the guild system, not within it. It?s great that Harvard and MIT and other elite universities are offering some classes online. But look instead to bolder experiments like the Mises Academy ? not a duplicate of the standard degree program, but a modular, flexible, focused approach to teaching Austrian economics and related subjects. Call it guerrilla teaching. Let?s see where this new movement can go!

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers’ own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. This post originally ran on stefanmikarlsson.blogspot.com.

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17.05.2012

Thrive in Cincinnati ? What are some simple DIY home improvement …

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Article by Fiona Livnat

If you are a home owner, with a certain amount of involvement, patience and creativity doing DIY projects for your house can be a very rewarding and cost effective experience. One of the most exciting aspects of owning a home are the vast number of changes that you can keep incorporating in your house to increase its value and looks. And when it comes to home improvement projects, it is not always essential to hand over every task to a professional.

So if you are a home owner and are thinking of simple and easy ways to begin DIY projects the following list of ideas will be surely helpful to get you going:

1. Indoor and outdoor painting ? One of the most easiest and effective way to give your house an instant facelift is to paint it yourself. Painting a home is one of the simplest DIY tasks as well as an inexpensive one. All you have to do is to choose colors that complement your rooms as well as the exteriors of your home. An important point to keep in mind while painting your home is to keep all the flooring, woodwork, switchboards well covered before starting your task.

2. Creative woodwork ? Though woodwork and carpentry requires practice as well as skill one can always begin with a simple task such as building a bird house in the garden or your porch area. You can look up a simple birdhouse design and include a bird bath as well as a feeder which will be sufficient to keep your home bright and chirpy with your winged guests.

3. DIY garden projects ? Your garden area is one the best places to do home improvement tasks which can give your whole residence a beautiful look. From mowing your lawns to pruning and weeding you can include a fountain, tree benches, hammocks as well as wind chimes and gravel paths.

4. Exterior lighting ? Lighting can beautifully enhance the exterior appearance of your home. You can experiment in diverse ways like putting up Victorian style lamp posts at the entrance or creating beautifully lit corners in your garden area.

5. Repair work ? Another great way to begin DIY home projects is to take up minor repair works such as electrical repairs and plumbing. For this you would need to invest in a good tool box as well as read up about home repair basics in order to perform your task safely and successfully.

With the large number of user friendly tools and DIY books as well as websites on the internet, improving your home has never been so convenient, enjoyable and economical. So go ahead and take up simple projects and you will soon be an expert at home improvement.

Fiona Livnat is an author with expertise on varied subjects. She has over ten years of experience in writing.Her commitment to help people is reflected in her writing. For more details please visit diy

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