Friday, May 31, 2013

Fast-approaching asteroid has its own small moon

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128439/Fast_approaching_asteroid_has_its_own_small_moon

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US the focus in markets as Nikkei joins selling

LONDON (AP) ? Japanese shares dropped sharply Thursday as the country's investors responded to the big falls posted around the world in the previous session. Trading in markets elsewhere was fairly insipid ahead of key U.S. economic data.

Japan's Nikkei index tumbled 5.2 percent to close at 13,589.03, the latest in a series of eye-popping falls. Though the Nikkei remains around 30 percent higher for the year, it's down 13 percent from its peak on May 22. Japanese investors appear to be increasingly doubtful over whether the government's economic strategy can extricate the country from years of economic malaise despite a previous bout of euphoria.

The main reason why the Nikkei is still up strongly this year is the optimism that was initially generated by the Bank of Japan's aggressive new monetary stimulus. The prospect of more yen in circulation weighed on the currency, which has fallen sharply to the relief of the country's exporters. Some of that fall appears to be unwinding, and the yen is trading off its lows ? by late morning London time, the dollar was 0.3 percent lower at 100.88 yen.

Despite the sharp falls in Tokyo, trading elsewhere has been muted.

European shares recouped some of Wednesday's losses with the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares up 0.2 percent at 6,637. Germany's DAX rose the same rate to 8,355 while the CAC-40 in France was 0.4 percent higher at 3,991.

Wall Street was poised for a flat opening though much will likely hinge on figures released later ? Dow futures were unchanged while the broader S&P 500 futures fell 0.1 percent.

"Over the last couple of weeks, the negativity in Asia has followed through to the European session, but we're not seeing this today," said Craig Erlam, market analyst at Alpari. "Instead we're essentially seeing investors sit on the sidelines and see how things play out. Investors are clearly a very cautious at the moment, especially ahead of some major economic releases in the U.S. this afternoon."

The key focus later will likely be the second estimate of first quarter U.S. economic growth as well as weekly jobless claims.

The figures will be analyzed in terms of what they do to Fed policy. On Wednesday, investors were roiled by concerns that the Fed will start reducing the amount of financial assets it buys each month in an attempt to lower long-term interest rates and shore up the U.S. economic recovery. That new money has found its way into financial markets and given a number of assets, such as stocks, a big push.

"The key focus today will be on U.S. GDP which is expected to underpin the ongoing U.S. recovery with a 2.5 percent growth rate expected," said Brenda Kelly, senior market strategist at IG. "Any deviation from this number would be interesting and confounding; given the market obsession with Fed easing a better-than-expected number could well be equity-negative."

It will also be interesting to see the response in currency markets to the figures. Though the prospect of a change in Fed policy has helped the dollar advance across a range of currencies over recent weeks, its advance has gone into reverse this week as traders book profits. The euro, for example, was up a further 0.3 percent Thursday to $1.2984.

Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng shed 0.3 percent to 22,484.31 while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.9 percent to 4,930.70. China's Shanghai index fell 0.3 percent to 2,317.75.

Oil prices drifted lower, with the benchmark New York rate down 65 cents at $92.48 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-focus-markets-nikkei-joins-selling-110600236.html

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Oh, yeah? Well, don?t get so distressed. Did I happen to mention that I?m impressed? (Unqualified Offerings)

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

The drive for 'football' to be king in Australia

The symbolism of the name for the beautiful game is intertwined with the sport's place within the sporting landscapeThe Guardian is in town, and already it seems embroiled in everybody's favourite etymological debate: is the beautiful game called "football" or "soccer"?As the Guardian unveiled its Australian website on Monday, there were more than a few curious football fans taking a peek at its sports coverage. In Britain, the Guardian is home to one of the best football sections in the English-speaking world, and so it stands to reason that its...

Source: http://www.footballhq.co.uk/news/the-drive-for-football-to-be-king-in-australia

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NCAA Women's Tennis Champions Crowned

Thumbnail Photo is Courtesy of Stanford Athletics

URBANA, Ill. ? Nicole Gibbs won the NCAA Women?s Tennis Singles Championship, and USC?s Sabrina Santamaria and Kaitlyn Christian won the doubles championship on Monday afternoon at the Khan Outdoor Tennis Complex.

Gibbs successfully defended her singles crown from 2012 and became the NCAA?s first repeat singles champion since another Stanford Cardinal, Amber Liu, did it in 2003-04. Gibbs defeated Nebraska?s Mary Weatherholt in straight sets, 6-2, 6-4, to win the tournament. Gibbs did not lose a match in singles play in the singles tournament or team tournament and ended her career on a 14-match winning streak. Gibbs ends her career with a 30-1 career record in May.

Santamaria and Christian became the first doubles team from USC to win the NCAA Doubles Championship, defeating Skylar Morton and Robin Anderson from UCLA, 6-4, 6-3. The USC combo had previously won back-to-back Pac-12 and ITA National Indoor doubles crowns before completing the doubles sweep this year with a win at the outdoor championships.

Stanford Nicole Gibbs:

?I?m still a little bit shocked right now. This season has carried a lot of adversity for me. I haven?t been dominant throughout, so having this dominant of a performance is a big surprise and a very welcome one to me. It?s amazing to join the very elite club of people who have won two titles, and honestly, I don?t feel deserving. I?m just very happy with everything that?s happened these past few weeks.?

On her adversity this season?

?I had kind of a tough season; I ended the summer with an abdominal injury that kept me out, to varying degrees, of the fall season. I played a couple pro tournaments, but I wasn?t playing anything in college. When I came back, I wasn?t nearly as dominant as I had been at the one position at my school.?

On preparing for Mary Weatherholt?

?It was a little bit unsettling to play such a dark horse on such a big stage and important venue. I scouted her a little bit through the end of the week watching how she was winning her points. She?s a very solid player, hits a flat ball, so Lele and I went out after my match yesterday and just practiced fielding those lower balls, and that?s the only way I knew how to prepare for today.?

On becoming a full-time professional?

?Yes, that?s the plan; I?m leaving the day after finals to go to Wimbledon qualifiers. I?m getting an early start, I should only have to come back to finish my degree for one to two quarters so I?ve gotten enough of the way through that it shouldn?t be too much of a burden when I do come back.?

Nebraska senior Mary Weatherholt:

On the knee injury?

?I have a history with this knee. It was just three-all, first point I think, when she hit that short ball. I think I was just trying to not hit the net when I hit it. I felt it jam a little bit. I tried to walk it off through the next point. I just tried to fight through it. It didn?t make a difference in the match; (Gibbs) played really well.?

On her future?

?I honestly haven?t looked past today. I know I?ve talked about playing some mixed doubles at that US Open Playoff with (Nebraska Associate head coach) Hayden (Perez), depending on how my body recuperates. I love playing tennis; so even if it?s just for fun, I?d like to keep playing.?

?As a competitor, you want to win every match. I think anyone who gets to this level wants to win every match. Ultimately, that?s not what it?s all about. It doesn?t define who I am. It?s just been a fun tournament and a fun career here at Nebraska. I?m thankful for every opportunity on the court. Of course you always want to get it done, but you win some; you lose some. What can you do??

?I actually like playing people I haven?t played before, just because it?s always fun to play someone new and figure out their game. (Gibbs) played really well. I didn?t play my personal best, but part of that is she?s a good player. She was putting some pressure on me. She played well. I tried to adjust, but I missed too many balls. She came up with some good shots and good returns.?

?USC Kaitlyn Christian:

"It feels so nice, it feels great to be here with her (Santamaria) and to just have the opportunity to keep playing and to play at the US Open, so we're really excited."

On their performance this year?

"We finished tough last year with a first-round loss (at NCAAs), and we came into the season just staying really positive with each other, and after we won All-Americans we just kept rolling and were really having a lot of fun on the tennis court, and I think that's contributed to our success."

USC Sabrina Santamaria:

"I just feel blessed to have the best doubles partner in the world, the best doubles player in the country by my side. She's amazing, so honestly, I'm so blessed to be right next to her and go to the US Open."

On Anderson and Morton?

"They're definitely a respectable team, one of the best in the country, and we knew that they were gunning for us, and we knew it was going to be a really great match. We knew that if we just stayed solid and positive with each other, then the outcome would take care of itself."

?UCLA Skylar Morton:

?I think we tried to play more from the back and rally more, tried to lob it more.?

?UCLA Robin Anderson:

?We weren?t coming in to the net as much unless they really brought us in. We usually play at least one of us up or both of us, so that was different.?

??We had a really good performance. It?s always disappointing to lose in the final, but it was a great experience.?

Source: http://www.sportspagemagazine.com/content/ts/all-ts/art-all-ts/ncaa-womens-tennis-champions-crowned.shtml?56720

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Orb has gone from ordinary to extraordinary ? Artesia News

Kentucky Derby winner Orb looks on as he is cooled down after a workout at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Thursday, May 16, 2013. The Preakness Stakes horse race is scheduled to take place May 18. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Kentucky Derby winner Orb looks on as he is cooled down after a workout at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Thursday, May 16, 2013. The Preakness Stakes horse race is scheduled to take place May 18. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

BALTIMORE (AP) ? Growing up, Kentucky Derby winner Orb was just another horse who fit in with the crowd.

Never caused problems. Never raised a ruckus. Never got sick or hurt while frolicking in the fields of Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky., with his pals, or when he was learning how to be a racehorse at Niall Brennan?s farm in Ocala, Fla. Did everything asked of him.

?A model citizen,? says Claiborne Farm manager Bradley Purcell.

Brennan remembers the colt did everything right. ?His workouts, his focus, he didn?t fret about things, he was enjoying it,? he says.

And wouldn?t you know it: In his racing debut, last Aug. 18 at Saratoga, Orb leaped in the air as the gates opened and trailed by 14 lengths early on in the seven-furlong race. He made a remarkable recovery, though, and finished third, just 1? lengths behind the winner.

?He was so far behind,? recalled his jockey, Joel Rosario. ?He made up a lot of ground, and I was impressed. My agent told me, ?maybe he?s going to be a nice horse.??

Maybe?

A few more growing pains followed, like smacking his head in the starting gate in his second race. But a two-month break allowed trainer Shug McGaughey to work out the colt?s gate issues, and by his fourth start, Orb had found the winner?s circle ? a two-length victory at Aqueduct on Nov. 24.

He hasn?t lost since, winning three times at Gulfstream Park, including the Fountain of Youth and the Florida Derby, building confidence and gaining experience along the way. And then came the ultimate moment: charging down the stretch over a sloppy track and winning the Derby by 2? lengths.

?I wish I could tell you back then he looked like a horse who could win the Kentucky Derby,? Purcell said. ?He had good size, and strength. All we do is let them grow and Mother Nature does the rest.?

So far, so good, and a win over eight rivals in Saturday?s $1 million Preakness would send Orb back home to New York for the Belmont Stakes on June 8 with a chance to become racing?s first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed in 1978.

?I wouldn?t be telling the truth if I said I don?t think about (the Triple Crown), because I do,? McGaughey said. ?I try to block it out, but if you?re in this position, anybody would think about it. It?s a thrilling thought, but we?ve got to get by Saturday. If we do, the next three weeks will be a lot of fun.?

Orb seems to be enjoying it, too, appearing cool and calm around the Pimlico stakes barn in the mornings while hundreds of people are milling around, many angling for the best photo op in cramped quarters. He was the same way at Churchill Downs.

?He?s pretty laid back,? McGaughey said.

A bay son of Malibu Moon, out of the mare Lady Liberty, co-owner Stuart Janney III came up with the name.

?I like it. Every poet who refers to the moon, uses the word orb,? Janney explained. ?I try to name the horses to go with the mare and stallion.?

Orb?s bloodlines are filled with champions. Malibu Moon is a son of 1992 Horse of the Year A.P. Indy, and currently is North America?s second-leading sire. Lady Liberty is a daughter of 1990 Derby and Breeders? Cup Classic winner Unbridled.

Still, there was not much fanfare when Orb was born in February 2010. It was a ?textbook? birth, Purcell said, adding Orb was probably 120-130 pounds ? the average weight for a foal. He was among a group of eight colts who spent hours together in the same field. One of them, Departing, is running in the Preakness.

When Orb was sent to Ocala in August 2011, Brennan already had an idea of what he was getting since he?d been the Claiborne to chart Orb?s development, as well as dozens of other horses.

?He always looked good physically, but there were others that were the same,? Brennan said. ?At that time, it?s like kids on a soccer field playing around and as you get into early spring, they start separating themselves. You begin to see their athletic ability and Orb at this time a year ago was doing very well.?

Orb was among the first group of Brennan?s 2-year-olds to be sent out to their respective trainers. Also under his care at the time were two other Derby horses ? Revolutionary and Palace Malice ? and Den?s Legacy, who was on the Derby trail for a while.

Ogden Mills ?Dinny? Phipps, who co-owns Orb with Janney, remembers seeing the horse early on and not being overly impressed.

?I think we really thought he was just a horse,? Phipps said. ?I don?t think even Shug thought he was much better than that. But after he came back from the Fountain of Youth he came back looking bigger, better and stronger and then he did the same thing after the Florida Derby. And after the Derby. Let?s just hope that?s the way he?s headed (going into the Preakness).?

Despite Orb?s troubles at the start of his racing career, McGaughey now marvels at what may be the best horse he?s ever trained over a 34-year career that includes 1989 Belmont Stakes winner Easy Goer and many female champions topped by undefeated Personal Ensign.

?He has filled out so much physically,? McGaughey said. ?I look at him and I can?t believe what I?m seeing from last November to now. Mentally, everything has come together. He was a bit difficult at the gate all of his 2-year-old year and that?s all behind him. I couldn?t be more pleased with his development.?

During his win streak, Orb had a new rider for the Fountain of Youth and Florida Derby in John Velazquez because Rosario had a prior racing commitment. Rosario regained the mount for the Derby after Velazquez chose Verrazano as his Derby horse. On the day Orb won the Florida Derby, Rosario was in Dubai winning the $10 million World Cup aboard Animal Kingdom.

?This is very good,? he said of Orb?s win. ?He?s really getting much better. He showed it in the Kentucky Derby, and I hope he shows it on Saturday.?

Orb is considered a closer, but McGaughey says he?s versatile.

?He comes from back, but they don?t have to take him back,? McGaughey said. ?It depends on the color of the race. If it?s a fast pace, he?ll be off of it, but if it?s slow, I think he?ll actually be laying up close like he was in the Florida Derby within four, five, six lengths. And he has got enough of a punch that you don?t take him out of the game plan when you do lay up close.?

McGaughey does not take all the credit for Orb?s success. Credit also goes to exercise rider Jenn Patterson, who has spent as much time with Orb as anyone. She was with him in the weeks before the Florida Derby, and would make the weekly three-hour round trip drive from Gulfstream Park to Payson Park for Orb?s workouts.

?Without her, we wouldn?t be here,? McGaughey said. ?It?s not only her riding ability, it?s her horsemanship and dedication to the whole thing. Nobody will know how much I appreciate her and what I think of her and her abilities. The rapport we have between each other? I think it?s a pretty remarkable relationship.?

And because of it, Orb no longer fits in with the crowd. He stands out.

This entry was posted on May 16, 2013, 12:11 pm and is filed under Sports. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Source: http://www.artesianews.com/2013/05/16/ap-news/sports-ap-news/orb-has-gone-from-ordinary-to-extraordinary/

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Analysis: Iran election race opens up as surprise candidate enter

By Marcus George

DUBAI (Reuters) - After the huge protests that followed the 2009 election, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei may have hoped June polls would quietly install a loyal conservative president, but the surprise candidacies of two major independents may scupper that.

Both Esfandiar Rahim Mashaie, the nationalist prot?g? of rabble-rousing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president and Iran's best known political grandee, are seen as a threat to the leader's authority.

Khamenei personally intervened to block Mashaie becoming vice-president in 2009 - such was his disapproval of a man conservatives accuse of leading a "deviant current" within Islam that seeks to undermine the power of Muslim clerics.

Meanwhile, the supreme leader's rivalry with Rafsanjani, a seasoned political operator, goes back decades.

Little can be predicted at this stage but if Mashaie makes it through the vetting process, the election on June 14 could turn into a three-horse race between him, Rafsanjani and one of several "Principlist" candidates - those who are fiercely loyal to Khamenei and the principles of the Islamic Republic.

Even if they fail to win, big-name alternative candidates could attract greater public interest in the election, making Khamenei's plan to see an obedient conservative take office a great deal more difficult, despite his ultimate power and the Revolutionary Guards who back him.

Struggling with sanctions over its disputed nuclear program and embroiled in civil war in Syria, one of its few and closest allies, Iran's leadership must be keen to show the world it has a strong, harmonious, fully functioning political system.

Instead, the race may produce drama and perhaps the unexpected.

The contest not only reprises Rafsanjani's fight with Ahmadinejad's camp, which beat him to the presidency in 2005, but also brings into focus his troubled relationship with Khamenei, which disintegrated over his support for the defeated reformist opposition in 2009.

"Rafsanjani poses a challenge. He has said he wants to save the Islamic Republic by changing the hardline direction the country has taken in the past few years," said Farideh Farhi, an Iran analyst at the University of Hawaii.

"Principlists who have not been able to come up with a candidate that brings together all their competing wings will have to scramble in search of some sort of unity," she said.

PRAGMATIC POLICIES

As president between 1989 and 1997, Rafsanjani clashed with Khamenei and hardliners over his pragmatic plans to mend relations with regional states and liberalize Iran's economy.

But it was support for the reformist "Green Movement" protests against Ahmadinejad's disputed 2009 election win that cast him out in the cold.

Last week, Rafsanjani said he would not enter the fray without Khamenei's consent. But analysts say a last-minute agreement with the supreme leader may not have been the ringing endorsement the former president was looking for. "Khamenei can see this as a personal challenge or a means to enhance the legitimacy of the system as a whole," said Farhi.

Khamenei may also be unable to rein in conservatives and the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which wields both political and economic influence, from going on the attack. Rafsanjani is in some ways an easy target.

"Rafsanjani's wealth and business dealings present a huge vulnerability," said Shaul Bakhash, a politics professor at George Mason University in Virginia.

"Since Khamenei can't really control them, the conservative establishment, its clerical associates and the Revolutionary Guards are certain to mount a massive campaign against him."

A "DEVIANT" CAMP

The line-up also breathes new life into a seething squabble between Khamenei and Ahmadinejad, who has repeatedly challenged the authority of the supreme leader and only narrowly avoided being forced from office.

Tied to Ahmadinejad by the marriage of his daughter to the president's son, Mashaie is viewed with intense distrust and dislike by those unswervingly loyal to Khamenei.

Given the leader's own evident distaste for Mashaie, the fact that he even registered as a candidate amounts to a direct challenge to the authority of Khamenei.

Mashaie has inserted himself into religious debates and emphasized Iranian nationalism in his speeches - behavior that has outraged traditionalists.

But the Guardian Council, a conservative body of clerics and jurists that vets candidates, looks unlikely to approve Mashaie, analysts said, leaving Ahmadinejad and his allies with few options left to maintain influence and perhaps even their liberty once the current president's term ends.

"The cards are usually stacked against those who dare to challenge the Guardian Council's decision," said analyst Yasmin Alem, an expert on Iran's electoral system. "There's no reason to believe that this time will be any different."

But Ahmadinejad has shown himself capable in the past year of striking out at his political enemies, a prospect that could prove highly damaging to the Islamic Republic and its leader.

Ahmadinejad has said he has a wealth of potentially damaging information on a number of establishment figures.

"The question is whether Ahmadinejad will fulfill his threat to release all sorts of tapes of secret conversations and corruption. Releasing this will be something of a double-edged sword," said Ali Ansari of St Andrew's University in Scotland.

LOYAL LIEUTENANTS

Meanwhile, the Principlist coalition has lost its early momentum.

Two months ago the alliance - comprising charismatic Tehran Mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati and Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel, a former parliamentary speaker and adviser to Khamenei - was the most definite player in the contest.

The group now looks set to back Saeed Jalili, a hardline conservative war veteran who is seen as close to Khamenei and has led rounds of nuclear talks with world powers since 2007.

That in itself poses another problem for Khamenei, should he give his backing to Jalili, who lacks executive experience, said Farhi of the University of Hawaii.

"He (Khamenei) will again be accused of allowing inexperienced folks to take the executive helm of the country and economy in times of serious economic crisis," she said.

(Additional reporting by Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-iran-election-race-opens-surprise-candidate-enter-192900412.html

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Saturday, May 4, 2013

Obama doesn't foresee US ground troops in Syria

President Barack Obama and Costa Rica President Laura Chinchilla speak during their news conference at the National Center for Art and Culture in San Jose, Costa Rica, Friday, May 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama and Costa Rica President Laura Chinchilla speak during their news conference at the National Center for Art and Culture in San Jose, Costa Rica, Friday, May 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama said Friday he doesn't foresee any circumstance requiring the U.S. to send ground troops into Syria, even as Washington pursues more evidence about the regime's purported use of chemical weapons.

"I do not foresee a scenario in which boots on the ground in Syria, American boots on the ground, would not only be good for America but also would be good for Syria," Obama said at a news conference.

The president's declaration was in line with the apparent prevailing sentiment in Washington. Even one of Obama's chief antagonists on Syria, Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., has said he does not advocate sending ground troops, arguing that would be "the worst thing the United States could do right now."

Obama also said he had consulted with Mideast leaders who want to see Syrian President Bashar Assad's departure and agree with his assessment that the U.S. shouldn't send ground forces. After long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, another U.S. intervention in the region could further inflame anti-American sentiment.

Obama, who was meeting with Central American leaders in Costa Rica, was asked what the United States would do if its investigations find firmer evidence of Syrian use of chemical weapons. He repeated his earlier assertion that it would be a "game-changer."

"We will stay on this," Obama said. The United States has sent humanitarian aid to the Syrian rebels, but not arms. The two-year civil war that has left an estimated 70,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands of refugees.

On Thursday, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the Obama administration is rethinking its opposition to arming the rebels. Hagel said that the U.S. was consulting with allies and that and he personally hadn't decided whether it would be a wise move. Sending arms is considered risky partly because of fears that some would end up in the hands of al-Qaida-linked fighters and might someday be used against the United States.

Obama said the U.S. already is putting pressure on the Syrian government, including through humanitarian aid to the opposition. If systematic use of chemical weapons by Assad's forces were confirmed, he said, the United States would present that evidence to the international community.

"When it comes to using chemical weapons, the entire world should be concerned," he said.

He also stressed the importance of moving cautiously. The Syria question comes as the U.S. is leaving Afghanistan after more than a decade of war there, most of it fought as the nation was also at war in Iraq.

"When we rush into things, when we leap before we look, not only do we pay a price but oftentimes we see unintended consequences on the ground," Obama said. "It's important for us to do it right."

The administration announced last week that it believes Assad has used chemical weapons but said the intelligence wasn't clear enough to be certain that the regime has crossed a "red line" of definite chemical weapons use that he said would have "enormous consequences" for Assad's government.

Obama said Friday it's not yet clear when, where or how the weapons might have been used.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-05-03-LT-US-Syria/id-37da978cd0fa4c8c8762d90f88b1e933

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Relationship Advice About The Moments That Can Make Or Break A ...

  • You?re Going Separate Ways (Literally)

    Your husband works a half hour north, and you travel a half hour south. Your home is precisely midway. Fair, right? Yep, but maritally inauspicious -- that?s what <a href="http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022103112000467">Irene Huang and her colleagues at the Chinese University of Hong Kong found when they studied American couples that commute every day</a>. If, like many couples in the study, you and your partner commute in opposite directions, your marriage may be unhappier than you?d be if you were going in the same direction every day -- <i>even if you don?t leave for work together</i>. What happens in your subconscious, Huang and her colleagues wrote in the study, is that the commute takes on more general goal-related associations. Travel in the same direction, and you feel as if you?re sharing the same goals in life; travel in different directions, and you feel like you?re not.

  • You Eat Burgers At The Wrong Time

    We all know that creamy-buttery-lardy-cheesy stuff is bad for heart health. But Janice Kiecolt-Glaser and Ronald Glaser, researchers at Ohio State University, <a href="http://medicalcenter.osu.edu/mediaroom/releases/Pages/Marriage-Food-Stress-Study.aspx">think that high-saturated-fat foods may also hurt your relationship</a>. In an ongoing study, they?re asking married couples to eat meals in the lab -- one of the greasy-burger variety; the other, veggie-heavy. Once finished, the couples are encouraged to discuss vein-popping topics: money, in-laws, housework, and how to raise the kids. Based on their previous research, the researchers have a hunch that the participants? blood samples will show that fatty foods enhance the body?s stress response to marital spats. Eat unhealthily and your argument may spiral out of control more easily -- <em>and</em> you may run a higher risk of cardiac disease, inflammation, and diabetes over time. Any way you look at a fatty diet, it?s bad for your heart. (Stay tuned; the study ends in 2014.)

  • You Were Never The Smiley Type

    You knew those stiff-faced yearbook photos would come back to haunt you one day. But this finding?s unexpected: <a href="http://www.researchgate.net/publication/225924965_Smile_intensity_in_photographs_predicts_divorce_later_in_life">Women with ?low intensity? smiles in their childhood and college photos are five times likelier to get divorced as adults than those who smiled effusively</a>, found a 2009 study at DePauw University. A bright, wide smile represents an underlying positive disposition and worldview -- undoubtedly helpful in marriage. Lifelong smilers may be the type to seek and sustain lasting relationships, and because smiling is contagious, their partners may be happier too. The good news about smiling: If you want, you can ?fake it ?til you make it.? As we know from the facial feedback theory of emotion, smiling deliberately can make you feel happier, because facial expressions influence emotions.

  • You Don't Have The Marriage-Protector Mechanism

    Okay, you?d be lying if you said you don?t notice an attractive man when he smiles at you. We all do. And it?s perfectly fine for your married (or boyfriend-ed) self to admit it. But a funny thing happens when you?re truly, deeply committed: you?ll think that guy is <em>less</em> hot once it's clear he's an admirer. In a study led by John Lydon at McGill University, <a href="http://psp.sagepub.com/content/25/2/152">women (and men) who are deeply committed to their partners found an opposite-sex face significantly less alluring</a> when told that the person had singled them out as a potential match. It?s a protective mechanism; they might not even be aware of it. Meanwhile, women who aren?t very committed to their partners are just as attracted to a handsome guy when he comes out as a potential suitor. So if you?re in the habit of finding Don Juans equally (or more) gorgeous when they do something flirty, there is an upside: Now you've identified your own early-warning mechanism and can work on building a deeper commitment with your partner.

  • You Pop A Monthly Rent Check In The Mail

    The housing market crashes, and so does your marriage -- but often only if you rent your home. If you own it, you?re likelier to stick it out. This <a href="http://www.aeaweb.org/articles.php?doi=10.1257/aer.101.3.615">surprising connection between home ownership and the divorce rate comes</a> from a group of economists led by Purvi Sevak at Hunter College (CUNY). Why would it be so? In a housing downturn, owners tend to stay in their marriages because it?s harder to sell their property and they don?t want to lose money. They wait for the market to recover, and -- as time passes -- often reconcile. For better or for worse, your decision not to own joint property removes the wait-and-see lock-in -- making it easier to walk out the door.

  • You Buy His-and-Hers Hermes

    You thought you found your soulmate when you met a man who knows Louboutins from Manolo Blahniks. And he was smitten when you noticed that his tie was from the new line at Armani. By all expectations, this would be a marriage made in... well, if not heaven, at least Italy. But researchers at Brigham Young University know better. In a recent study, they found that <a href="http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15332691.2011.613306">couples who admit to loving money and ?stuff? score 10 percent to 15 percent lower on marriage stability</a> than couples who say money isn?t important to them. They bicker more about finances -- even if they?re financially well off -- and are less responsive to each other. A marriage between two materialists fares worse, in fact, than one with only a single spouse who's a shopaholic.

  • You Lunch With The Wrong Folks

    Your boss did it. Lisa in accounting did it. Your best friend, Lynn, did it. Even your upstairs neighbor did it (and noisily). Everyone?s doing it: getting divorced. Not you, you say. But you?re in a high-risk group, judging by the ?divorce cluster? data from a study led by Rose McDermott at Brown University. The people in your social network -- everyone you rub shoulders with habitually -- influence your attitude about relationships. <a href="http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1490708">People with divorced friends are 147 percent more likely to become divorced</a>. Statistically speaking, the more your friends, co-workers, siblings, and acquaintances have done it, the more likely it is that you might one day say to your husband, "Let?s do it. Let?s get divorced, too."

  • You Light Up Alone

    He kicked the cigarette habit, but you can?t. It?s a vicious cycle: You smoke, he complains, you fight, you stress, and then you need to smoke again. (Although correlation isn?t causation; there are other risk factors too.) A group at the Centre for Economic Policy Research in Australia found that <a href="http://econpapers.repec.org/paper/auudpaper/631.htm">smoking is not a very high-risk factor in a marriage if both spouses are smokers. But divorce rates increase significantly -- by 76 to 95 percent -- when only one spouse (especially the wife) has the habit</a>. Quitting saves your (love) life.

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/02/relationship-advice-relationship-moments_n_3195677.html

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    Thursday, May 2, 2013

    Pirate Party has electoral breakthrough in Iceland

    REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) ? Iceland, a nation of seafarers, has been stormed by pirates.

    They won't be forming the government, but the online freedom advocates, the Pirate Party, were still big winners in the country's election.

    The party took 5.1 percent of the vote in Saturday's poll, gaining three of the 63 seats in parliament.

    It is the biggest electoral trophy yet for a movement founded seven years ago in Sweden by a group of rebellious file-sharing geeks and hackers.

    Pirate policies include a direct-democracy project that will put ideas suggested by citizens before parliament, and passing laws intended to make Iceland a global beacon of media freedom.

    Pirate lawmaker Birgitta Jonsdottir says the party is "the political arm of the information revolution," dedicated to freedom of expression and political transparency, online and off.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pirate-party-electoral-breakthrough-iceland-123928846.html

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